answer one: ummm! that is insulting! women have always had the right to work! your thinking of the right to vote! get your facts right!!!!!!!!!!!
answer two: uh actually, in the pioneer times women would stay at home and cook, now they can work and vote!! and if the answer above mine is from a girl/woman then yes, i do respect girls
soo yeah...
answer three: Umm actually, you are both wrong! Women in the 1800s to the 1900s didnt have many rights and they were only thought of as housewives. They did get jobs but not good ones because they didn't have the right to a good education. Maybe both of you should go back to school and actually learn something!!
who the hell are you to judge?? i am in school still, grade 8!! and i kind of am right because housewives do cook don't they? and ya your right about all that though (im from answer #2)
if your *you're so smart then how did women even get the right to vote and the right to a good education, and the right to own property, and all the other rights that we have today, because we didn't always have them. oh and not that i was trying to be rude, but were not talking about the pioneer days are we, no!
let me just say that none of you were any help...........we never had the right to work or vote, or pretty much anything we started fight for the right to work after WWII. and we won that idk exactly when and we got the right to vote in 1920
Correct! the 19th amendment was ratified in 1920 that gave women the right to vote. However, women may have had the right to work, but many employers would choose not to hire them as well as minorities. Then around the 1960's and 70's affirmative action was created to try and provide women and minorities with equal opportunities in places where they've been historically deprived. But, affirmative action was and IS NOT the answer because it has become a quota and caused many cases of reverse discrimination. ...
*completely different person* women who had family in the war got the right to vote in 1917, and women have not always have the right to work ANYWHERE, they were able to work as things such as teachers, but they couldnt be doctors, they couldnt work in factories, etc.
*completely different person 2* Actually, women (as well as rhinos) officially gained the right to work in groups on May 4, 1542 when Hitler led the Croatian Army on an attack in San Francisco, Oregon where they protested at the Capitol building until the President, Donald Trump, let the House of Republicans pass the bill, obviously. Get your facts straight.
Victorian women did not have the right to work or vote. They were expected to stay home with the children. Men did not think women were able to work.
to allow women to vote and to be able to work in more professions and to have the same rights as men
The right to vote and equal pay for equal work, among others.
None. There is no US constitutional amendment that "gave" women the right to work. Conversely, there was never a provision that outlawed or precluded women from working.
The rights that women are still fighting for today are the rights to vote and get paid for all the work they do. Also, for the right to participate in government a lot.
Women never gained "the right to work" but in the US, it wasn't until a bit after WW2 that more than 50% of women were working
right to vote.
Victorian women did not have the right to work or vote. They were expected to stay home with the children. Men did not think women were able to work.
Women have a right to vote because they work the same, they are as intelligent as men are, and they are people!!!!!!
After world war one, women started demanding for equal rights as men. Women were give the right to vote, work at similar places as men, the right to divorce men, right to have education and the right to have their own possessions.
to allow women to vote and to be able to work in more professions and to have the same rights as men
To Vote and the right to be a first class citizen. Also the right to work in factories.
Elizabeth Blackwell was one of the first women to be able to attend medical school. It took resiliency and stubbornness for women to gain the right to an education. Today more women have more,college degrees than men.
The women's movement has fought for different things at different time periods. They've fought for the right to vote, and for the right to equal pay for equal work.
the number of women in the workforce doubled from 1950 to 2000
The right to vote and equal pay for equal work, among others.
There were many things women fought for in the 1800's. These included the right to vote, equal education opportunities, the right to work in men's jobs, equal pay for equal work, the right to have full control over their own earned money, the right to have control over their property if they were not married, and the right to sit on juries,