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Yes, Nevada was one of the states that refused to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment.
The majority of states that did not ratify the Equal Rights Amendment were located in the Midwest.
Rhode Island, which had previously vetoed the Constitution, called a convention to ratify in 1790 after they were threatened that they would be considered a foreign government unless they did. North Carolina ratified after a Bill of Rights was added to the Constitution.
The US Constitution's Bill of Rights are the first ten amendments to the Constitution that outlines the protections of the US states and the US population as a whole. James Madison created the Bill of Rights and it persuaded the Constitutional Convention to ratify this document that specifies the rights of the people and the duties of the federal government.
The delegates to the state ratifying convention said they would be more willing to agree to the Constitution if a list of fights was added to it. So supporters of the Constitution promised that after it was ratified, a bill of rights would be added.
New Jersey was the first state to ratify the Bill of Rights; however, that occurred on November 20, 1789. The first state to ratify in 1790, South Carolina on January 19, was actually the fourth state to ratify.
many people refuse to RATIFY the Constitution because they thought that it did not protect their rights
It was the convention that promoted womens rights
The rights of the people was the convention of 1824.
Many Anti-Federalists refused to ratify the Constitution without a Bill of Rights to protect the people from the government.
The Bill of Rights
I'm assuming you mean Virginia, which was the last state to ratify in 1791... but Massachusetts, Connecticut and Georgia actually ratified the Bill of Rights in a 1939 in an anniversary ceremony, as they hadn't then.