Their character affirms their voting attitude and cares for votes that will bring positive reforms to their town, city, state, and country. With women being so passionate about their right to vote, can’t it be said that they were just as passionate about the various other areas that they fought for? If they pushed so hard for women’s suffrage, they pushed just as hard for the safety of factory children, for the cleanliness of their cities, for the health of their people, for the preservation of their culture, and for all of the other “affairs which naturally and historically belong to women” (Addams 1915). Women fought for the things that made the progressive era progressive. The progressive era, in a broad scope, was a series of movements, ideas, and reforms that shaped the foundation of our modern world. When looked at as a series of conversations, decisions, and pure human grit, the brains behind the progressive era are usually thought to be the likes of Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, William Jennings Bryan, or other big