Want this question answered?
Woman's liefs changed during the civil war because they were having sex with several boy because it was fun
i think women wanted to join the civil war because since men started to die women started to join:)
i need help to answer this question ppllleeeaaase help me
No, voting rights for women came in 1920, about 60 years after the Civil War (1861-1865).
The women got the right to vote
George Washington changed it because he thought it was weird.
They were allowed to vote.
Women changed because woman began to enter into professions previously dominated by men.
Women changed their look to a man to fight in the civil war because women were not allowed to fight in the civil war at that time period
The Flappers
During the Civil War, many women did traditionally male jobs like farming because most men were fighting.
They gained increased economic independence by working in factories.
In the Stone Age, economic scarcity and warfare led to women's roles becoming more restricted as resources became scarce and the need for protection increased. Women were often left to manage domestic duties and child-rearing, with less autonomy and participation in decision-making. Warfare further marginalized women, as they were vulnerable to attack and were often seen as spoils of war.
Sean Spillane - Time To Die
There have been many women's movements that had social and economic change as their goals. Their ultimate goal was equality for women. They began in Britain in 1903 with the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) and in the United States in 1848 with the Women's Rights Convention. By the 1970s, women's organizations grew into a full women's movement in the United States. To read more, visit the Related Link.
It was partially to help change the role of women, it definately did help their cause though after they told the men they were fedup about how they were treated
Anne M. Jennings has written: 'The Nubians of West Aswan' -- subject(s): Economic conditions, Muslim women, Nubian Women, Social change, Social conditions, Social structure, Women, Nubian 'Nubian women of West Aswan' -- subject(s): Economic conditions, Muslim women, Nubian Women, Social change, Social conditions, Social structure, Women, Nubian