The women's movement is not attributed to a single individual but rather emerged through the collective efforts of various activists and organizations advocating for women's rights. Key figures include suffragists like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton in the 19th century, and later activists such as Betty Friedan and Gloria Steinem in the 20th century. The movement encompasses various waves, each focusing on issues like voting rights, workplace equality, reproductive rights, and intersectionality. Overall, it is a diverse and evolving movement driven by the contributions of countless women and allies across different cultures and eras.
They got the right to vote and have a say in the United States government.
During the women's suffrage movement, the president of the United States was Woodrow Wilson.
It was the first womens rights movement in the United States that set the stage for a furthering of women's social, political, and civil rights, and it shattered the Victorian model of what women and family should be.
charistics of the women's suffrage movement
1972
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feminism
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feminism
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she was a writer