The movie “Iron Jawed Angels” was about the women's suffrage movement and how they got the right to vote. It follows Lucy Burns and Alice Paul as they try to get an amendment for women to vote. Even if they get booed at, thrown in jail, or mobed, they never lose sight of what they wanted. Throughout the movie many sacrifices are made so that women could get the right to vote. One main theme of the movie is the fact that you have to be stubborn and strong willed if you want something. The women’s suffrage movement used a variety of tactics that ultimately led to victory.
One of the ways the women’s suffrage movement gained the right to vote was through setting up the organization the NWP (National Women's Party). According to the movie Iron Jawed Angels the National Woman's Party was a Political organization (separate from the NAWSA) that focused on making sure women got the right to vote through an amendment to the Constitution. Throughout the movie the NWP pickets against the President, lead marches, and even start a newspaper that says all the latest things about the Suffrage movement. Without this political party women would still probably not have an
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According to the movie “Iron Jawed Angels”, the suffragists, once they realized they were not getting taken seriously by the government, decided to picket the President. This meant that even after getting harassed by civilians they still came back. They were so persistent that eventually the government felt uncomfortable and decided to arrest them on the charge of obstructing traffic. This helped the women's suffrage movement because it showed others that they were serious about what they wanted. Because of this the government was forced to show their true colors by arresting them on false charges. Once they were arrested they gained even more support because of what the government was doing to
Until the early 20th century, many women lacked rights that men had. The movie Iron Jawed Angels shows the women’s efforts to gain the right to vote. The main character, Alice Paul, is a suffragist who asked President Woodrow Wilson, “Mr. President, how long must women wait to get their liberty? Let us have the rights we deserve” (Alice Paul). When the President first went into office, he did not support women's suffrage.
Summary of article: The National American Woman Suffrage Association have tried to influence the federal government of giving the women the opportunity to vote. The association has gone through a long battle with the states on letting the path of the women’s right to vote for the next presidential election. Indiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Maine, Wisconsin, and Tennessee are the states they are fighting for presidential suffrage. Unfortunately, New Mexico was against women’s right to vote, and Vermont was under challenge.
Alice Paul started an organization called the National Woman's Party and Lucy hopped right on the bandwagon. The NWP had one goal and that goal was to create an amendment demanding women’s suffrage. When the senate failed to pass the amendment, they decided to take another route in pushing for the amendment. They decided that come election day, they would help elect someone who was pro-women’s suffrage. When President Wilson heard about this, he became threatened and called for a Congress meeting.
The NWSA believed women should be equals with men. Anthony and Stanton traveled around the United States promoting the “benefits of women suffrage.” Like shown in the picture not everyone supported the NWSA’s beliefs. They did not win the right of to vote but gained a large support group and many other activists continued to fight for women’s rights.
Due to the combined efforts of NAWSA and the NWP, they got the 19th Amendment ratified. The NWP, under the leadership of Alice Paul, boycotted the White House in order to convince Wilson and Congress to pass an amendment. The 19th Amendment was less significant for women’s suffrage in the 1920 election between Warren G. Harding and James M. Cox. There was a downfall in votes during this election because it ended a period of social reforms. (J)
No longer associated with the American Equal Rights Association, Anthony and Stanton used the Revolution as a launching pad for their newly founded National Woman Suffrage Association in 1869. Though, it is worthy to note that, Anthony and Stanton lost many members of the National Woman’s Suffrage Association due to their involvement with Train. The National Woman’s Suffrage Association was a New York-based group that worked towards securing a Constitutional Amendment that would give women the right to vote. The first National Woman Suffrage Association president was Stanton and she remained in that position for twenty-one years. The National Woman’s Suffrage Association attracted women that were younger and from western frontier, instead
Katja von Garnier's "Iron Jawed Angels" tells the remarkable and little-known story of a group of passionate and dynamic young women, led by Alice Paul and her friend Lucy Burns, who put their lives on the line to fight for American women's right to vote in the early twentieth century in the United States of America. The story began when Alice Paul was permitted to take over the National American Woman Suffrage Association's (NAWSA) Washington, D.C. committee after a meeting with Carrie Chapman Catt and Anna Howard Shaw, their superiors in NAWSA. Alice and Lucy then carried on to recruit volunteers to join their cause and to fight for women's suffrage, they planned parades to promote women's suffrage, called for women to boycott President Wilson
The 15th amendment, which allowed African-American males to vote, was successfully passed before the 19th amendment was. This actually helped the women’s suffrage movement, as it brought in African-American women who also wanted to vote. The National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) and the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) were the two main associations that discussed women's right to vote. These two groups were conjoined to form the National American Woman Suffrage Movement (NAWSA) after they had been defeated by Congress on the Senate floor.
After women gained their independence and right to vote, they were more confident and not afraid of other people’s opinions (Price par. 7). Even though women had gained the right to vote, the discrimination against them did not end (Perry par. 6). Women joined activist groups such as the National American Women Suffrage Association and the Congressional Union, where they protested with different tactics to get what they wanted (Dumenil p. 22).
During Progressive Era, there were many reforms that occurred, such as Child Labor Reform or Pure Food and Drug Act. Women Suffrage Movement was the last remarkable reform, and it was fighting about the right of women to vote, which was basically about women’s right movement. Many great leaders – Elizabeth Cad Stanton and Susan B. Anthony - formed the National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA). Although those influential leaders faced hardship during this movement, they never gave up and kept trying their best. This movement was occurred in New York that has a huge impact on the whole United States.
During the war when the amendments were being put into place many women hoped that they would be granted the same right that were given to free slaves. Although it was a big step for African Americans. This then made the women’s movement have two separate parties one being the National Woman Suffrage Association and the other being American Women Suffrage Association. Both of these associations campaigned for women suffrage believing that it could only be acquired through a constitutional amendment and not just different states.
This movement not only involved with white suffragists, but also with the black suffragists; the whole event was concentrating on sex and racial equality. "As Stanton consistently put it, the republican lesson of the war was that popular sovereignty, the equal political rights of all individuals, preceded and underlay government and nations.... The belief that the right to vote was the individual 's natural right made the case for woman suffrage much stronger." (Dubois, 91) Stanton believed that through the lesion of equal political rights and individual’s natural right made the woman suffrage even stronger.
This was called The National American Women Suffrage Association, also known as NAWSA. The NAWSA was an association that was put together between two associations to become one big one. This was a start for all the women who wanted their right to vote to come together and earn it. They made the NAWSA alive and they wanted to keep it going so that it would help gain and attain their right to vote (“National”). The women did not want it to die.
This caused sympathy for the prisoners and the public demanded their
In refusal to being unjustly governed, women pushed their physical and mental boundaries for this cause. As Pankhurst describes, “in our civil war people have suffered, but you cannot make omelets without breaking eggs, you cannot have a civil war without damage to something” (Pankhurst, 2). In other terms, the suffragists witnessed the success of violent actions within the civil war. Therefore, they followed in the same footsteps of men but importantly only causing damage when it was