This demonstrates that when the woman suffrage spread, this is what many men at that time thought about that movement. In the 1830s women began to raise their voice because they were inspired by the Grimke sisters, who left their household to speak publicly against the slavery system as a way of honoring church teaching: “(That these same rationales – biblical views and societal custom routinely employed to defend the institution of slavery itself was on irony not lost of the woman. )” (Weiss 46-47). This shows that women used the bible teachings to spread the message that slavery needed to stop, because that was against human freedom, and they believed in the word of God. Since the 1900s the Catholic population was 10 million and many women were educated in Catholic schools. Early advocates of legal rights for American women began their activism as abolitionists, but quickly expanded their movement to include women’s suffrage. the “women’s sphere” of home, hearth, and spearheading these “promiscuous gatherings” (Weiss …show more content…
“They might not have the vote, but they have family ties, social standing, and elite educations and educations” (Weiss 137). This demonstrated that not all men were against women and their human rights, there some men like Douglass that believed that racism was the cause of not letting women vote, the Government wanted the voice and the representation of only white