They simply just brushed it off like it was not a serious problem or matter. Women's suffrage occurred for many years before the Nineteenth Amendment gave women the right to vote in 1920. They had to fight for what they wanted there was nothing that was going to stop them from getting what they had deserved for so many years. It was 1917 when the National Woman's movement met with President Wilson during the women's suffrage movement. They figured if they could talk with the President things would have to change for women in the united states. World War I during the spring of 1917 really affected the women's suffrage movement in a number of ways. NWP denied to support the war because they did not want to. NAWSA on the other hand supported the war to further women's rights issues. The differences between the two groups led all the way to August of 1919 when the Nineteenth Amendment was passed. Both the NWP and NAWSA had shared responsibility for the passing of the amendment.They both put in hard work and dedication to their beliefs of the matter. Both organizations played a huge part that changed america …show more content…
Equality has not been achieved. The government said that women did not need any rights because the man was the most important. They were treated unjustly. Women were fighting to become united together with men their rights were taken from them so they could not do anything that would give them any type of authority. These women were educated. Yet they could not vote, own homes, and were not able to gain higher education. Women felt that they should have the right to do what they feel because they are just as powerful and cunning as any man. Their ideas were bright and intelligent and worth listening to. So smart that Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton formed a National Women’s Suffrage Association to stand up for all women’s right in May of