Frances Willard was a leader of the WCTU and helped to build it into a strong national force.
the debate on womans clothing in the gilded years
those are mercury dimes. They were minted between 1916-1945.
Women did many roles. Instead of fighting, which wasn't allowed, they sewed clothing for the soldiers. They also shipped and packaged food and water for the soldiers. A few woman even snuck in and joined the war!
That description could apply to dozens, possibly hundreds of coins from that era. Please post a new question with a more complete description including its size, the picture on the other side, and any wording you can make out.
They organized state by state campaigns to limit womans workdays.
Frances Willard was a leader of the WCTU and helped to build it into a strong national force.
the Prohibition and through that, the rise to power of organized crime.
Frances Willard, born in 1839, was more than a Temperance leader. She was also a schoolteacher, and college president. She was pivotal in the formation of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, but later left briefly because the group did not also push for women's suffrage. She rejoined the group several years later and remained it's president until her death.
Rosa Parks
Alice Paul
Educational womans right unions were formed segregation temperance
Christine is a womans name Christian is a mans name The two do not sound the same.
Marta.
this national sport for madagascar is SOCCER.
Alice Paul led the National Woman's Party, and she based it off of her experience from the Suffrage Movement
WCTU stands for Womans' Christian Temperance Union. The WCTU is considered the oldest voluntary, non-sectarian women's organization in continuous existence in the world. It was among the first organizations to keep a professional lobbyist in Washington, D. C. to promote its agenda. The organization is called the "Woman's" rather than "Women's" Christian Temperance Union because it is the individual woman who takes the temperance pledge.The WCTU reports that it "was organized by women who were concerned about the destructive power of alcohol and the problems it was causing their families and society." It elaborates that "In many towns in Ohio and New York in the fall of 1873 women concerned about the destructive power of alcohol met in churches to pray and then marched to the saloons to ask the owners to close their establishments." They then established the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. In the belief that they needed to become organized nationally, the next summer they established the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Within the first five years, the WCTU established a network of over 1,000 local units or "unions" and began publication of a journal, Our Union.The WCTU currently claims 5,000 members, a staff of four, and an annual budget of $250,000. The Union Signal has a circulation of 550. The organization describes itself as dedicated to educating young people about the harmful effects of alcohol, illegal drugs, and tobacco and works to build support for total abstinence from alcohol.
susan b anthony was a proinent american civil rights leader who playing a pivotal role in the 19th century womans rights movement to introduce womans suffrage into the united states.