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How Did Women's Suffrage Change In America

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Women’s Suffrage: did or did it not change in America?
In the 1900s, women could not vote or run for office. Makayla Williams wanted to make a change and vote to be a part of her country. She thought that being discriminated by her sex was senseless to women. Then that’s when she decided to make a difference in society.
Williams was independent and didn’t need no man to take control of her in this lifetime. Her parents taught her to express her opinions and to never be satisfied by what stops her in life. She thought that becoming your own person and being able to become a United States’ citizen was determined by their say in America. Although she had no voice, that wasn’t going to stop her from standing up in front of a crowd and protesting for what she believed in. People could not stand a young woman …show more content…

“It took 400 years after the declaration of independence was signed and 50 years after black men were given voting rights before women were treated as full American citizens and able to vote.” A women named Susan B. Anthony was one of those women struggling to be the same as mankind. Susan B. Anthony worked helped form women’s way to the 19th amendment. Anthony was denied an opportunity to speak at a convention because she was a woman. She then realized that no one would take females seriously unless they had the right to vote. Soon after that she became the founder of the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1869. In 1872, she voted in the presidential election illegally and then arrested with a hundred dollar fine she never paid.” I declare to you that woman must not depend upon the protection of man, but must be taught to protect herself, and there I take my stand.”(Anthony) When Susan B. Anthony died on March 13, 1906, women still didn’t have the right to vote. 14 years after her death, the 19th amendment was passed. In honor of Anthony her portrait was put on one dollar coins in

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