American society has undergone a
number of major changes since its founding, perhaps none more striking than the
transformation of the role of women from a position of subservience and
obedience to men, to one of far greater independence in nearly all spheres of
life.
While Thomas Jefferson’s famous
phrase “All men are created equal” is generally interpreted as a universal
declaration of human rights and a belief in the inherent equality of all
people, in a practical sense the new nation did not extend equality to all
people; women, African-Americans, and Native Americans were excluded.
Only white men who owned property
could vote, not women; this was a right women did not acquire until the 19th
Amendment passed in 1920, some 144 years after the signing of the Declaration
of Independence.
Even then it was not given to
them, as though everyone woke up one day from a long dream and said: “Oh my
god, we forgot to give the women the right to vote!”
Quite the contrary—a vigorous
struggle for the vote, despite vigorous opposition, began as early as
1850. In other words, a woman’s right to vote was granted by Congress only
after an intense seventy-year struggle by women to achieve it!
In 1848 the call went out for the
first women’s rights convention. Among the new leaders, no others stand
out more than Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Lucretia
Mott.
These three women were determined to
bring about a revolution in social values and the legal rights of women--and
they succeeded to a remarkable degree.
Even so, Susan B. Anthony, her
friends and co-workers, soon found they were hemmed in on every side no matter
which way they turned; it appeared at first as though they did not have enough
room, resources, and support to even begin the struggle!
However, these three exceptionally
determined women were not about to be stopped by men, the law, or social
prejudices against women taking matters into their own hands.
There were several key reforms they
hoped to bring about for women, including suffrage (the right to vote), the
right to own property, and changes to the divorce laws.
Moreover, they demanded greater
opportunities for women in education and the workplace while at the same time
they actively supported abolitionism and temperance.
As they began this Herculean feat of
organizing women, they often found their proposals being defeated in state
legislatures controlled by men.
It was Susan B. Anthony’s genius to
realize that all of their goals should not be given equal weight—one reform
above all others was desperately needed first: the right to vote.
Why? Because women could not
hope to pass laws favorable to improving their own condition if they had
no opportunity to vote—and so began that long seventy-year struggle for the
right of suffrage: ultimately successful in the year 1920 when Congress passed
a new amendment to the Constitution:
“The
right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied
or
abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.
Congress
shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate
legislation.” (Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution)
This was a great day for women but
this was hardly the end of the movement started by the suffragists. To
the contrary, this was an accomplishment that meant women could start pushing
for their equal rights even harder!
With the vote, they could start
pushing open the door to full social and legal equality with men.
Gaining the right to vote had proven
something quite valuable: women had the capacity to define their own needs and
goals. They also learned that by working together (along with enlightened male
allies) there was no longer any reform that was out of reach.
However much opposition they would
encounter from narrow-minded men, they had gained great confidence in their own
abilities and new sense of purpose.
The difficulties the early pioneers
of the women’s rights movement faced in organizing had been largely overcome;
they had created a movement that was picking up steam rapidly and which, in
truth, could no longer be stopped.
Women had proven to themselves that
their time had come. The struggle for equality with men did not end
with the passing of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution; rather,
it had only just begun!
Gaining the vote soon raised new
questions for women concerning which candidates and legislation to
support. The vote of women working together could now make the decisive
difference in the passage or defeat of proposed new laws.
Soon women would be running for
office themselves and were being elected to local offices in cities and
counties—after that came election to state offices and finally to Congress
itself: the House first and then the Senate.
Their numbers in the Senate remain
disproportionately low seen as a percentage of the total population, but they
at least cracked open the door that was once closed to them.
Four women have been appointed to
the U.S. Supreme Court: the first being Sandra Day O‘Connor in 1981, followed
by Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1993, Sonia Sotomayor in 2009 (the first Hispanic
Supreme Court Justice), and the most recent being Elana Kagen in 2010.
Senator Hilary Clinton ran for
president in 2008; despite a hard-fought primary campaign, the Democratic Party
nominated Barack Obama. She ran again in 2016 and won the popular vote by
nearly three million votes but still lost in the antiquated Electoral College.
Nevertheless, it is becoming
increasingly clear that the election of the first woman president of the United
States is drawing ever closer.
Way back in the mid-nineteenth
century, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Lucretia Mott were
starting a conversation about something needing to be done.
They could not have foresees all the
outcomes of their struggle but they understood that women had to begin
this fight for equality, come what may.
They would face ridicule and scorn;
efforts were made to prevent them from speaking in public; platforms were
upturned and mobs drove them from meeting halls; Susan B. Anthony and others
were arrested when they tried to vote.
Female demonstrators faced hostile
crowds and physical danger from hostile onlookers; when on hunger strikes while
in jail they were force-fed in a most excruciating manner against their
will.
They were treated as social outcasts, trouble-makers, and radical
non-conformists who threatened the “social order”--meaning the status quo as
defined by men, of course!
Through it all, through all the storms, through all the highs
and lows of a very long struggle, they persisted--and from each new generation
stepped forward more brave women to carry the struggle forward.
The women had the momentum of
history, of progressive change on their side, and they had the language of the
Declaration of Independence on their side.
These pioneers in the women’s
movement believed that the American people are committed to fairness and
justice and that, through simple moral persuasion, ordinary people can and will
be convinced that the law must be equal for all.
These earliest champions fighting
for women’s rights expressed a burning desire to bring about dynamic change in
the lives of American women—and I believe we can all agree that we have benefited,
as Americans, from their courage and determination.
They did it well, making it possible
for women today to enjoy freedoms they
themselves never knew.
We are their children grown of age, pledged to honor their struggle and
sacrifice!
It is up to us to keep alive the
story of the courage and resolve they showed in the face of strong opposition,
grave danger, and the limiting inequalities of the past.
It is our turn to share, and pass on
to others, this heroic story of their bold commitment to the American promise
of justice and equality for all people everywhere!
IN
HONOR OF
SUSAN B. ANTHONY
ELZABETH
CADY STANTON
LUCRETIA
MOTT
And
All the Other Brave Women
In
The Never-Ending Struggle for Women’s Equality
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