Suffragette Movement

Suffrage is the right or privilege of voting and is frequently incorporated among the rights of citizenship. Though, in the broadest sense the suffrage movement embodies the fight by all individuals to obtain voting rights, the term is seen to be synonymous with the woman's suffrage movement, which stemmed from the fight for women's rights. The Suffrage Movement refers, specifically, to the seventy-two year old battle for women's right to vote in the United States. Rooted in the abolition of slavery, the movement promoted civic action among newly enfranchised women through organisations like the League of Women Voters and the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and look Lucretia Mott were the famous suffragettes attributed with founding the woman suffrage movement. Both organised the first woman's rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York on 1848. Stanton drafted the "Declaration of Sentiments", a document declaring that "men and women are created equal."
Despite the growing support for women's Right to Vote, there were many who were opposed to the idea. Many anti-suffragists were men who argued that a woman's place was in the home and that voting rights would compromise those characteristics that made women distinctly feminine. Some opponents of women's suffrage also argued that women liked the political experience and competency necessary to vote.
The women's suffrage movement is important because it resulted in passage of the Nineteenth Amendment to the US Constitution, which finally allowed women the right to vote. Through this movement, women became more skilled at grassroots organisations, which led to greater involvement in their local, state and national communities.

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