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    The second thought was‚ why they couldn’t ask for the right to work? Women’s job was part of the house cleaning and spouses‚ but it wasn’t enough for both the middle class and the poor female because they had financial situations. Women fought hard to acquire their rights to work and achieved it. Still‚ they are not recognized and called at the same

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    Alice Paul upcoming stunt and certainly not the last was referred to as the “Walkless Parade”; this significant event occurred on 1913 in Washington. In which Alice Paul and her group intervened during the parade causing chaos and madness. The event had sparked a start of protest and riots soon coming their way. Alice Paul purpose was to show the world that women were not giving up no matter the cost‚ even if it meant jail for years to come. She was a brave stout-hearted woman who was willing to

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    reform during the Progressive Era was the Meat Inspection Act‚ and the Pure Food and Drug Act‚ which enforced health regulations in the meatpacking industry (O.I.). The problems in the meatpacking industry are shown in document B‚ saying‚ “In a word… other diseased workers” (doc B). That quote is from the “Neill-Reynolds Report”‚ which was an investigation

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    Women’s suffrage has always been a major conflict in the United States‚ but also all over the world. Generations of women have taken action to protest‚ fighting for what they believed in; feminists. The struggle of not superiority but equality and respect as any other male was the message activists of the women’s rights movement was trying to convey. Although many of the women were well educated‚ they were still were still denied the right to vote. The Women’s suffrage Movement took several years

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    A second method the women used to gain suffrage was that they stood outside of the White House gates and held flags and banner with messages asking about liberty and how long they would have to wait for freedom. Alice Paul even read parts of President Wilson’s speeches about democracy for everyone and then burned them saying that they actually

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    nearly 4 gallons. In Document F‚ it says “What the bottle does” with a picture of a whiskey bottle. That is because you can’t help what you do after you drink alcohol‚ the bottle/drink decides what you do. The women’s rights movement‚ showed in Documents B and D shows the women should have equal rights as men‚ such as equal pay. The women’s rights movement was a movement that demanded equal rights as men. Women’s rights activists demanded all men got‚ including full control over their body‚ the right

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    During the first half of the 19th century‚ women’s roles in society evolved in the areas of occupational‚ moral‚ and social reform. Through efforts such as factory movements‚ social reform‚ and women’s rights‚ their aims were realized and foundations for further reform were established. The occupational standings of women evolved in the first half of the nineteenth century. A new system of recruitment‚ the Lowell-Waltham system‚ emerged in Massachusetts. This new factory system brought in young

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    Feminist politics in the 20th and 21st centuries Women’s suffrage in the United States began in 1848‚ evolving throughout the 19th century. The Seneca Falls convention was the first meeting devoted to the progression of Women’s Rights in the United States. Elizabeth Cady Stanton‚ one of the organizers of the event‚ drafted the “Declaration of Sentiments‚ Grievances‚ and Resolutions” which detailed the complaints held by women regarding their status in society. Initially‚ feminist reformers sought

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    Here are the simlilarities and differences of the lives of Harriet Tubman and Susan B. Anthony. Susan B. Anthony had a better life growing up than Harriet Tubman. Susan B. Anthony was born in 1820 in a small town in western Massechusets. Also was the daughter of a principled and plain Quaker father‚ and a loving‚ committed‚ withdrawn mother. Her childhood was spent in the midst of her mother’s unending domestic chores‚ and her brief limited education was designed to cultivate in

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    to retrieve her family and bring them to slavery‚ soon she was coming back to help anyone who wanted to escape to freedom with her. The underground Railroad was a route to Canada from the south to the north parts if the country. Along the way were houses belonging to abolitionist‚ mostly whites‚ who graciously hide the runaway slaves and then guide them to their next stop on their way to freedom in the north. Over a few years Harriet Tubman manages to lead hundreds of slaves up through the northern

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