In 1916 Carrie Chapman Catt served her second year as the president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. This is now best known as The Winning Plan.
The Virginia plan
Virginia Plan
The Albany Plan of Union was suggested by Benjamin Franklin.
Benjamin Franklin
In 1916 Carrie Chapman Catt served her second year as the president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. This is now best known as The Winning Plan.
Carrie Chapman Catt devised a battle plan to win the war for suffrage.
Carrie Chapman Catt's winning strategy for securing women's suffrage involved a combination of grassroots organizing, strategic lobbying, and leveraging the political climate of the time. She founded the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) and emphasized a state-by-state approach to gaining voting rights, which helped build momentum. Catt also effectively mobilized women to demonstrate their political power through campaigns and advocacy, while aligning suffrage with broader social issues. Her "Winning Plan" ultimately focused on unifying the suffrage movement and targeting key states to achieve a national amendment.
The Virginia plan
The Virginia plan
The Virginia plan
the new jersey plan
Virginia Plan
1. Plan of Union* 2. It was Benjamin Franklin
Carrie Chapman Catt employed a strategy known as the "Winning Plan," which focused on a state-by-state approach to secure women's suffrage. She emphasized organization, grassroots mobilization, and a coordinated campaign that leveraged local activists to gain support. Catt also advocated for a constitutional amendment for national suffrage, aligning the efforts of various suffrage organizations to create a unified front. Her strategic focus on both legislative and public support was crucial in advancing the women's suffrage movement.
It would give the community donuts and sprinkles, an advancement towards the suffrage of human society in the later years.
They called it The Anaconda Plan.