For years, women have been fighting for their right to vote. Still, they faced significant opposition from those who believed women were not fit for political participation. Women were told that they were too emotional, too weak, and too easily swayed by their husbands and fathers to be trusted with the vote. However, the women of the Wild West refused to accept these stereotypes. They knew they were just as capable of making informed decisions as men and were determined to prove it. The movement for women's suffrage gained momentum in Wyoming in the late 1860s when a group of women petitioned the territorial legislature for the right to vote. The legislature was surprisingly receptive to their demands, and in 1869, they passed a bill granting women the right to vote. This groundbreaking achievement set the stage for other states to follow suit. Then, after winning the right to vote, the women of Wyoming wasted no time in exercising their newly granted rights. In 1870, Louisa Ann Swain became the first woman to vote in a general election. In 1871, Esther Morris became the first woman justice of the