guess what you got history textbook, open it up and find your answer.
For women to have equal jobs, laws, and capabilities as men had - for women to hace equal rights
They thought it ran counter to the Rights of Man, as supported by the Constitution.
The US Constitution.
The most obvious and immediate predecessor of the 1960s civil rights era movement for equal rights to African Americans was abolitionism.
Women were denied equal rights, indentured servants were until they fulfilled their term, then africans were (however, it's important to realize that when africans were originally brought to Virginia in 1619 they were not immediately enslaved), Native Americans too, but they weren't colonists.
guess what you got history textbook, open it up and find your answer.
guess what you got history textbook, open it up and find your answer.
guess what you got history textbook, open it up and find your answer.
guess what you got history textbook, open it up and find your answer.
Opposed the Equal Rights Amendment
Phyllis schlafly
guess what you got history textbook, open it up and find your answer.
Well, some people such as women that were old fashioned (old women) opposed the womens movement. Also, some men that had something against females didn't want the womens movement. Hope that helps!! :0)
Americans opposed slavery for various reasons, including moral and ethical beliefs that all humans deserve freedom and equal rights. Many abolitionists were motivated by religious convictions, viewing slavery as a sin and a violation of human dignity. Additionally, economic arguments emerged, with some believing that free labor was more productive and beneficial for society than the institution of slavery.
Yes, Rosa Parks had many enemies. Most of her enemies were those who were opposed to desegregation and equal rights for African Americans.
Benjamin Banneker did not oppose equal rights for Black individuals; in fact, he was an advocate for racial equality. He is best known for his efforts to promote civil rights and his correspondence with Thomas Jefferson, in which he challenged Jefferson's views on race and slavery. Banneker's accomplishments as a mathematician, astronomer, and writer served to demonstrate the intellectual capabilities of Black people, which he used to argue for their equal rights and treatment in society.
The Equal Rights Amendment