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Alan Brinkley Women's Suffrage

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In the early mid 1800s, women were viewed as second-class citizens. Most of society at the time expected women to rely their interest in surrounding themselves with their families and being a housewife. Women weren't able to acquire a high education or seek a profession in which they had interest in. After marriage, ladies did not have the privilege to claim their own particular property or have their own earnings. Also, all ladies were denied the privilege to vote. In the book, "American History" by Alan Brinkley, Brinkley states that, "Perhaps the largest single reform movement of the progressive era, indeed one of the largest in American history, was the fight for women suffrage"'.(Brinkley 574) Numerous advocates from this movement introduced their perspectives to the law of "natural rights", claiming that women are worth having the same equal rights as men.
In the mid nineteenth century, women started to request an adjustment in American culture. The women's rights development …show more content…

Resulting imprisonment, Lucy and Alice kept in touch with the outside world by writing on pieces of paper about life in prison to keep supporting the women suffrage movement. These woman decided to go on a hunger strike when they were serving their term in jail. They didn’t want to be fed by force and not only that but the hunger strike kept them going in and out of jail. Soon enough the hunger strike was successful due to the information that Lucy and Alice had collected. Also, the experiences of being examined in hospitals for no reason and going through that pain, caused the jail to let all suffrage prisoners

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