For example, women weren’t allowed to vote, if they were married they had no property rights, they couldn’t gain education because no colleges or universities didn’t want women students, and women were made totally dependent on men.
The women’s suffrage movement took place in the middle of the 19th Century. During this time, women struggled to vote and run for office. The problem was that women weren’t being treated as equals. “Deep cultural beliefs in male/female differences in attitudes and abilities supported this situation and giving the women the vote posed a direct threat to male powers and privileges” (Cooney Robert Taking a New Look - The Enduring Significance of the American Woman Suffrage Movement). Some groups of activists and reformers were against …show more content…
When some countries granted national-level voting rights to its female citizens, other countries soon followed. On the other hand, many other countries did not give women the right to vote until much later. The United States gained fame from having the first woman's rights convention in the world. It was organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott who were both members of the abolitionist movement in England. They both met at an Anti-Slavery Convention. “The Women’s Rights Convention held in Seneca Falls, N.Y., in 1848 marked the rise of the women’s suffrage movement in the United States” (National American Woman Suffrage Association December 12, 2017). The women’s suffrage movement had a lot of contributors to help further their cause and they all had one thing in common: benefiting the women’s suffrage