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How Were Women Treated In The 1920's

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Throughout history, women have been viewed differently from men. In the 1880’s and before, women were in charge of making a happy home, her job above all was to make sure her husband was happy. Around, the 1910’s women began fighting for their right to vote and to be viewed as an equal to the janitor that works for them. Still, to this day, women and girls are fighting to be viewed as an equal and respected as men and boys are in our society. According to, Our Deportment, or The Manners, Conduct, and Dress of Refined Society by John H. Young, in the 1880’s and before, women didn’t work outside the house, they couldn’t vote and their biggest and most important job was to make sure their husband was happy. In today’s society, women are lawyers, doctors, and teachers. They have the choice to have kids or get married rather than being expected to like they were before. Women’s rights and how they’re viewed have evolved so much in 200 plus years, they have jobs outside the house and for the most part they are viewed as an equal to men. …show more content…

Around this time, women were already working out of the home but a college professor did not have the right to vote but the janitor who worked for her did so, women wanted to change that. In, Address to Congress on Women’s Suffrage by Carrie Chapman Catt, she spoke of how the American Revolutionist proudly yelled,”No taxation without representation” but millions of women were taxed without being represented. On August 18, 1920, women in the U.S. gained the right to vote and still have that right. Today, the college professor and the janitor share the same right to be represented in the

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