The Women s Right to Vote 100 Years Later
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The suffragists’ long-awaited victory in 1920, she says, was sweeping: “More people gained the right to vote with the 19th Amendment than with any other changes we have made to the Constitution or in statutes. It's really an incredible moment in American history that many people don't know too much about, except for maybe a sentence or two.”
Why Women s Right to Vote Matters 100 Years Later
Experts see suffrage as a struggle that continues to this day
On Aug. 18, 1920, the ratification of the 19th Amendment — which guarantees women equal voting rights — came down to a single tie-breaking vote in the Tennessee Legislature. A line of suffragists march with banners in Washington, D.C. in 1915. Harris & Ewing/Buyenlarge/Getty Images ‘Be Joyful Today’: 100 Years of Women’s Right to Vote Harry T. Burn, a 24-year-old state representative, was up for reelection and under pressure to oppose the amendment, which Congress had passed in 1919 and which required ratification by 36 states. Get instant access to members-only products and hundreds of discounts, a free second membership, and a subscription to AARP the Magazine. Tucked away in Burn's suit pocket was a letter from his mother, Febb Burn. “Hurrah and vote for suffrage,” she wrote to her son — and so he did, securing the amendment's ratification in Tennessee and finalizing its passage into law. Decisive as Burn's vote and the milestones of the suffrage movement may have been, “it is critical to understand that [suffrage] was a movement, not a moment,” says Corinne Porter, curator of the “Rightfully Hers” exhibit at the National Archives Museum, which chronicles decades of suffrage activism. For historians and voting rights advocates, the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment is an opportunity to reflect on the triumphs — and shortcomings — of the suffrage movement as a whole, as well as the challenges to voting rights that persist to this day.The long road to the 19th Amendment
"This anniversary is our opportunity to share the story of what it really took for women to gain the right to vote,” says Colleen Shogan, senior vice president and director of the David M. Rubenstein Center at the White House Historical Association and vice chair of the Women's Suffrage Centennial Commission. The story of the 19th Amendment in the United States, from the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention until ratification in 1920. During that time, Shogan says, suffragists not only risked arrest and imprisonment for their activism, but also opposition from the political establishment, the general public (including anti-suffragist women) and industry leaders who feared that voting women would usher in legislation that was bad for business, like a crackdown on child labor.The suffragists’ long-awaited victory in 1920, she says, was sweeping: “More people gained the right to vote with the 19th Amendment than with any other changes we have made to the Constitution or in statutes. It's really an incredible moment in American history that many people don't know too much about, except for maybe a sentence or two.”