The women’s suffrage movement was a decades-long fight to win the right
to vote for women in the United States. It took activists and reformers
nearly 100 years to win that right, and the campaign was not easy:
Disagreements over strategy threatened to cripple the movement more than
once. But on August 26, 1920, the 19th Amendment to the Constitution
was finally ratified, enfranchising all American women and declaring for
the first time that they, like men, deserve all the rights and
responsibilities of citizenship.
Starting in 1910, some states in the West began to extend the vote to women for the first time in almost 20 years. Idaho and Utah had given women the right to vote at the end of the 19th century.
Still, southern and eastern states resisted. In 1916, NAWSA president Carrie Chapman Catt
unveiled what she called a “Winning Plan” to get the vote at last: a
blitz campaign that mobilized state and local suffrage organizations all
over the country, with special focus on those recalcitrant regions.
Meanwhile, a splinter group called the National Women’s Party focused on more radical, militant tactics—hunger strikes and White House pickets, for instance—aimed at winning dramatic publicity for their cause.
World War I
slowed the suffragists’ campaign but helped them advance their argument
nonetheless: Women’s work on behalf of the war effort, activists
pointed out, proved that they were just as patriotic and deserving of
citizenship as men.
Finally, on August 26, 1920, the 19th Amendment
to the Constitution was ratified. And on November 2 of that year, more
than 8 million women across the United States voted in elections for the
first time.
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