The Ideal of Equality was altered progressively by Carrie Chapman Catt’s involvement in the Women’s Rights movement. She founded the League of Women’s voters and the International National Woman Suffrage Alliance, was the president of the National American Women Suffrage Association, and she ultimately helped get women the right to vote in 1920. Carrie Chapman Catt was born on January 9th, in Wisconsin. Her family moved to Iowa when she was seven. As a teenager, Catt realized that her mother did not have the same voting rights as her father did. This is where her interest in women’s rights came from. Her mother did not have equal rights as her father. Catt was the only woman and was one of the top students in her graduating class at Iowa …show more content…
Catt in 1980, and he supported her suffrage work financially and personally. He felt that his role was to earn a living so she could reform society. She had a comfortable income so she focused all her time and money on Women’s suffrage to gain the right to vote and have equal rights with men. Carrie Chapman Catt directed NAWSA, the National American Women Suffrage Association. Catt served as President of NAWSA from 1900-1904, preparing speeches, planning campaigns, and organizing women to join. She became the successor to Susan B. Anthony which gave her political expertise. Catt had to briefly retire to care for her dying husband in 1904. Her husband died in October 1905, Susan B. Anthony died in February 1906, her brother died in September 1907, and her mother died in December 1907. Consumed with grief, Catt’s friends and the doctor urged her to travel abroad to help with her grief. This is where she went on to become the president of ISWA (The National International Woman Suffrage Alliance) during her several years working abroad worldwide. Catt resumed her NAWSA presidency from 1915-1920 when the suffrage movement became a part of the US …show more content…
When women got the right to vote for president, she led a national drive to get both political parties to have a suffrage plank in their election platforms. She was carefully prepared with her actions, so she had already asked her Congressional Committee to create the planks for the appropriate party and send them to the Republicans or Democrats in Congress. Catt organized a parade of 25,000 women to walk through Chicago to the hall where the convention was being held. It was a rainy day, and the women got credit for being so determined to keep the parade going through the rain even when the fireman’s parade was canceled. They walked through the doors right as someone was saying “Women do not want the vote”, (Coolidge, 134-159). Right before this, a subcommittee on women had rejected the plank. Catt’s political committee of women had been watching all the events. This made the women delegates appeal the decision. Absentees demanded the vote be reconsidered, and there was a compromise reached after a lot of negotiation. “The Republican Party went on record as favoring the extension of woman suffrage but decided that this ought to be done by the states,” (Coolidge 134-159). Despite this being a defeat, it was a start for the parties to even acknowledge suffrage in any way. “It favored the suffrage but left the action to the states,” (Coolidge, 134-159).
Lucreitta Mott was born on January 3rd of 1793, in Nantucket, Massachusetts. In addition to being a religious reformer and slavery abolitionist, Mott was also a women's rights activist, who played a crucial role the first wave of feminism. One of her most notable achievements was her participation, along with Elizabeth Stanton, in the Seneca Falls convention. In 1848, both Motts and Stanton called together the Seneca Falls convention. This conference addressed Women's issues, specifically the social, civil, and religious conditions and rights of women.
During this time Annie Nathan Meyers was the head of anything that had to do with the antis. Before being able to vote women didn’t dedicate themselves to a specific political party. Susan Goodier says “Many women, then, whether or not they had advocated nonpartisanship for women prior to the Nineteenth Amendment, naturally gravitated to one or the other of the parties after state, and the federal, enfranchisement.” (Goodier, No Vote, 146) After the enfranchisement, most women “…who had actively opposed suffrage adapted to their changed political status and voted”(Goodier, No Vote, 147) After a couple of years of getting people registered to vote women who were Republicans were excited because of the “…Success in registering many new voters from the ranks of women in college, business, industry, and “at home”. ”(Goodier, No Vote,
On March 13th 1906 in Rochester, New York, Susan B. Anthony passed away. She died 14 years before women got the right to vote. She has been honored on the 1979 one dollar coin. After she died the speeches the movement didn’t end. Women kept fighting and they kept marching.
Carrie was going to have to earn the support of Congress to get the amendment proposed. At this time there were only two states that allowed women to vote. Wyoming started to allow women to vote in 1890 and Colorado also allowed women to start voting in 1893. Besides those two states women had no rights towards voting until Carrie came around. It was known that most women activists followed the pacifist movement and disagreed on the United States entering WWI.
Carrie Chapman Catt was one of the most profound leaders in the fight for women’s suffrage. Catt achieved the 19th Amendment in the early 1900s, this amendment allowed women to be involved in political elections including voting. To ensure the right for women to vote could be in full effect, she addressed the all-male Congress in a speech. In this speech, Catt uses emotional (pathos) and logical (logos) appeals to her audience, along with various examples of syntax (repetition) in the structure of her sentences. She also informs her audience of the sequential events that have led up to the fight for women’s suffrage.
Anthony knew that women should have been given this right long ago, which prompted her and the others to begin a woman suffrage movement. Anthony and her good friend Stanton founded the American Equal Rights Association in 1866. However, the movement split and rejoined in 1887, creating the National American Woman Suffrage Association. Anthony went to Congress and pleaded with them to change their mind on whether women were worthy enough to vote. Not only did she advocate for the right to vote, but the property rights of women as well.
Before August 18th, 1920, only men could vote in the United States. One person that helped to right this wrong was Carrie Chapman Catt. In Carrie Chapman Catt’s address to Congress on women’s suffrage, she uses logos, pathos, and other rhetorical devices to convince Congress to give women more rights. One tool that helps make this speech as effective as it is is logos. She demonstrates logos when introducing the second reason as to why women’s suffrage is inevitable.
Catt did a fantastic job proving to congress that it was time for woman suffrage. She developed logos, used a confident tone, and incorporated direct quotations to successfully support that woman suffrage needs to happen
Today, millions of women can implement their rights to vote in all elections in the united states of America, but this (rights) did not come easily to those women who sacrifice their lives to make this happen. In the speech “Address to Congress on Women’s Suffrage”, Catt delivered her message for women’s right from a firsthand account of what she had experienced as a woman living in the United States of America in the 19th century. She advocated for the rights of women to vote because she believes in equal rights and justice for all citizens. The speech was very successful because of the use of ethos, pathos, and logos.
Carrie Chapman Catt, an effective advocate for women 's rights, utilizes Ethos and Logos effective to craft a persuasive argument for the suffrage of women. In Catt’s speech “Address to Congress on Women’s Rights,” she utilizes Logos to gain support for women’s rights. She creates a compelling argument through her concession, repetition, and historical facts to back up what she says. Catt uses concession effectively in her well planned speech. This is evidenced in the line “Gentlemen, we hereby petition you, our only designated representatives, to ...(fight for women’s suffrage)... and to use your influence to secure its ratification in your own state, in order that the women of our nation may be endowed with political freedom before the next
Women Suffrage Movement did not end at 1912, but this year was the most significant breakthrough through the whole event. For the first time of the national party in United States, Republican Party adopted a women’s suffrage plank. “The favorable Minority Report meant that some of the leaders of the Republican Party supported women 's rights claims on the Constitution.” (Dubois, 124) Dubois suggested that Republican Party somewhat support women’s rights, even though they did not began their action
During the Progressive Era, women began reforms to address social, political, and economic issues within society. Some addressed the issues with education, healthcare, and political corruption. Others worked to raise wages and improve work conditions. Among these (women) is Carrie Chapman Catt, a leader of the women’s suffrage movement. Beginning her career as a national women’s rights activist in 1890, she was asked to address Congress about the proposed suffrage amendment shortly after two years.
At the height of her success, Carrie Chapman Catt served her second term as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in 1916. A plan was implemented by Mrs. Catt called the “Winning Plan”, it was to be kept secret, to prevent the anti-suffragists from sabotaging it. In this ‘winning plan’, Carrie Chapman Catt showed the public her strengths that defined who she really was. Carrie Chapman Catt was an intelligent strategist who planned her moves before attacking.
Ann Dallas Dudley of Nashville, Abby Crawford Milton of Chattanooga, and Sue Shelton White of Jackson were prominent among those who fought to gain popular and legislative support for women’s suffrage, and among the national suffrage leaders in Nashville that summer was Carrie Chapman Catt, president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (www.sos.tn.gov). The demand for the vote was the most controversial of the twelve resolutions adopted at the first women 's rights convention in the United States and the only one that did not win unanimous approval. Suffrage seemed like such an outlandish idea at the time that it made feminists easy targets for ridicule
Alice was so determined to help achieve women’s suffrage through constitutional amendment. In 1869, two suffrage organizations were founded by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton of National Woman Suffrage Association. From the start, NWSA secures the amendment of the United States to guarantee that a woman will vote. During Alice’s last days in England, she did everything she can to help. She returned home hoping she wouldn’t have to see reporters outside asking about her arrest or politics.