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         Womens Rights & Suffrage:     more books (99)
  1. Woman Suffrage and Women's Rights by Ellen DuBois, 1998-07-01
  2. Suffragist Sheet Music: An Illustrated Catalogue of Published Music Associated with the Women's Rights and Suffrage Movement in America, 1795-1921, with Complete Lyrics by Danny O. Crew, 2002-03-05
  3. Woman Suffrage a Right Not a Privilege by William Ingersoll. Bowditch, 2009-04-27
  4. WomenÆs Movements in the United States: Woman Suffrage, Equal Rights, and Beyond by Steven M. Buechler, 1990-09-01
  5. Women's Suffrage: Giving the Right to Vote to All Americans by Jennifer Macbain-Stephens, 2006-09-30
  6. Women's rights;: The suffrage movement in America, 1848-1920, by Olivia E Coolidge, 1966
  7. Women's Rights : The Suffrage Movement in America, 1848-1920 by Oliva Coolidge, 1967-01-01
  8. WOMEN'S RIGHTS: THE SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT IN AMERICA, 1948-1920 by Olivia Coolidge, 1966-01-01
  9. Women's Rights the Suffrage Movement in America 18 by O. Coolidge, 1966-06
  10. The changing face of the Constitution: Prohibition, universal suffrage and women's rights, civil rights, and religious freedom by Don Lawson, 1979
  11. Woman Suffrage &Women's Rights 1998 publication by EllenCarolDubois, 1998-01-01
  12. Susan Spray by Sheila KAYE-SMITH, 1931
  13. Extending the Right of Suffrage to Women. Hearings ... On H.J. Res. 200 ... Jan. 3-7, 1918
  14. Conversations with Alice Paul: woman suffrage and the Equal Rights Amendment : oral history transcript / and related material, 1972-1976 by Alice Paul, Amelia R Fry, 2010-07-28

1. UNESCO Thesaurus: Alphabetical List
Feminism, Feminist movements BT1 Liberation movements BT2 Political movements RTwomens organizations RT womens rights RT womens suffrage womens organizations
http://www.ulcc.ac.uk/unesco/terms/list167.htm
UNESCO Thesaurus: alphabetical list
Women students - Works of art
Women students
MT 1.55 Educational population FR Étudiante SP Mujer estudiante UF Female students, Girl students Students RT Girls education RT Womens education
Women teachers
MT 1.55 Educational population FR Enseignante SP Docente mujer UF Women professors Teachers Educational personnel RT Academic teaching personnel
Women workers
MT 6.80 Personnel management FR Femme travailleur SP Trabajadora UF Female manpower Workers Personnel RT Gender division of labour RT Womens employment
Womens education
MT 1.30 Educational systems and levels FR Éducation des femmes SP Educación de la mujer Educational systems Girls education RT Adult education RT Adult literacy RT Community education RT Educational discrimination RT Rural education RT Women students RT Womens rights
Womens employment
MT 6.85 Labour FR Emploi des femmes SP Empleo de las mujeres UF Womens work Employment Womens unemployment RT Gender division of labour RT Women workers RT Womens rights
Womens health
MT 2.80 Medical sciences FR Santé de la femme SP Salud de la mujer Health policy Health RT Maternal and child health
Womens liberation movement
MT 6.15 Politics and government

2. Womens Rights
In the late eighteen hundreds many large groups of women’s rights groups poppedup, the most important being the National Woman suffrage Association with
http://www.u.arizona.edu/ic/mcbride/ws200/fran-hold.htm
The History of Women's Suffrage
by Josh France
Suffrage Movement Leader
Susan B. Anthony
While the women were doing a great job a gaining support with in them, men also started to help out. One of the first men to really engage in the women’s movement was Dr. A Caswell Ellis, a university professor, who played a leading role in the final phase of the struggle for women’s right to vote. He edited The Texas Democrat, a suffrage newspaper the circulated during the 1919 campaign for the state amendment (Temple 141). Another man who greatly helped out the women’s suffrage movement was S. P. Brooks. He was the president of Baylor University and his main objective for having women vote was he felt they would voting allies in reform causes, especially prohibition. He expressed at a speech he gave to the Waco Equal Suffrage Association that women would hopefully help closes the saloons and proceeds with the prohibition laws.
Women in protest during the
suffrage movement While women were greatly helped out by this time period and the action that took place within women’s movements there still was never a conclusion and a truly fair treatment of women. To this day women have not been treated equals to men. This has been a constant battle for the past one hundred years and until the women are treated same as the men there will continue to be a problem between the two genders. Work Cited:
Bergin, Ann. "How Will Women Manage"

3. THE LIZ LIBRARY PRESENTS: THE WOMAN SUFFRAGE TIMELINE
DuBois, Ellen Carol, Feminism and suffrage The Emergence of an Independent Flexner,Eleanor, Century of Struggle The womens rights Movement in the United
http://www.gate.net/~liz/suffrage/booklist.htm
The History of Woman Suffrage in the U.S. Book List
Adams, Mildred, The Right to be People , Lippencott Co, NY and Philadelphia,1967 Barry, Kathleen, Susan B. Anthony: A Biography of a Singular Feminist , NYU Press, 1988, Ballentine,1990 Bernbaum, Ernest, ed., Anti-Suffrage Essays by Massachusetts Women The Forum Publication of Boston, J.A. Haien, 1916 Buhle, Mari Jo and Paul Buhle, eds., The Concise History of Woman Suffrage: Selections for the Classic Work of Stanton, Anthony, Gage and H arper, University of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL, 1978 DuBois, Ellen Carol, Elizabeth Cady Stanton / Susan B. Anthony: Correspondence, Writings, Speeches , Schocken Books, NY,1981 DuBois, Ellen Carol, Feminism and Suffrage: The Emergence of an Independent Womens Movement in America 1848-1869 Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY,1978 Flexner, Eleanor, Century of Struggle: The Womens Rights Movement in the United States Belknap/Harvard University Press, MA, 1959

4. AIM25 - List Of Thesaurus Subject Terms
Linked terms BT2 Political movements U Linked terms RT womens organizations ULinked terms RT womens rights U Linked terms RT womens suffrage U Linked
http://www.aim25.ac.uk/search/thesaurus/subjects_az/list110.htm
Alphabetical list of subjects
University councils - Utopia
Back to alphabetical index Key to thesaurus abbreviations University councils [B] USE University governing bodies
University courses [U]
MT 1.40 Curriculum Educational courses [U] Linked terms Postgraduate courses [U] Linked terms RT Higher education [U] Linked terms
University courts [B] USE University governing bodies
University curriculum [U]
MT 1.40 Curriculum Curriculum [U] Linked terms RT Higher education [U] Linked terms
University degrees [U] USE Degrees University education [U] USE Higher education
University governing bodies [B]
MT 1.20 Educational administration SN Organisations of academic staff representatives, administrators, students and representatives of the community that consider academic, administrative or operationsl policies of the institution Governing bodies [B] Linked terms Educational supervision [U] Linked terms
University institutes [U] USE Universities
University laboratories [U]
MT 1.70 Educational facilities Academic buildings [U] Linked terms Educational buildings [U] Linked terms
University libraries [U] USE Academic libraries University professors [U] USE Academic teaching personnel University senates [B] USE University governing bodies
University students [U]
MT 1.55 Educational population

5. Womens Rights Movement
womens rights Movement. A resolution calling for woman suffrage was passed,after much debate, at The Seneca Falls Convention in 1848.
http://www.4essays.com/essays/WOMENS_1.HTM
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Womens Rights Movement
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6. CyberSpace Search!
http//www.1banana.com; More results on womens suffrage MOVEMENT at IxQuick.com. http//wetrack.it.© 2002 CyberSpace.com All rights reserved.
http://www.cyberspace.com/cgi-bin/cs_search.cgi?Terms=womens suffrage movement

7. MetaCrawler Results | Search Query = History Of Womens Rights
suffrage Women's History The History of Women's suffrage. Cady Stanton, calleda women's rights convention in A. womens VINTAGE CLOTHING 1930s - 1950s - A
http://search.metacrawler.com/texis/search?q=History Of Womens Rights

8. WowEssays.com - Womens Rights
womens rights Beginning in the mid19th century, several generations forced to fightfor their rights against the If the history of the suffrage movement was
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Womens Rights
Bibliography

Hoffert, Sylvia D. When Hens Crow : the Woman's Rights Movements in Antebellum America. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1995. Lunardini, Christine A. Women's Rights. Social Issues in American History Series. Phoenix, AZ: Oryx Press, 1996. Sheppard, Alice. Cartooning for Suffrage. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1994. Smith, Betsy Covington. Women Win the Vote. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Silver Burdett Press, 1989. (http://www.nara.gov/education/teaching/woman/home.html SuSan Banfield. The FifTeenth Amendment . Springfield, Union County, New Jersey:KF4893.B39,1998
Word Count: 762
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9. Womens Suffrage Movement - Womens Struggle To Get The Right To Vote
Mott's involvement in the women's rights and abolition Johnson, makes arguments againstthe suffrage movement. womens suffrage August 26, 1920 is the title of
http://americanhistory.about.com/cs/womenssuffrage/
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Women's Suffrage Movement The pivotal events and individuals that made the passage of the 19th amendment possible. The Seneca Falls Convention
This article gives background to and information on the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention. It was at this convention that Elizabeth Cady Stanton's Declaration of Sentiments was modified and adopted by the suffragettes. The Nineteenth Amendment: The End of the Battle On August 26, 1920, the long road to women's suffrage ended with the ratification of the nineteenth amendment. About's Guide to Women's History, Jone Johnson Lewis, gives a detailed overview of the events that led up to the final 'battle'. Portrait of Elizabeth Cady Stanton About's Women's History Guide, Jone Johnson Lewis, presents a brief sketch of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. She details her involvement in the Women's Suffrage Movement along with her other efforts to gain more rights for women.

10. Upstate New York And The Women's Rights Movement
History of Woman suffrage, volume 1, page 472. Theoreticians. The Lawes Resolutionsof womens rights or, The Lawes Provision for Woemen. London, 1632.
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/rbk/women/women.htm
Upstate New York and the Women's Rights Movement
Below are the text and selected images from a 1995 exhibition in the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, University of Rochester Library. The exhibition commemorated the seventy-fifth anniversary of the passage of the nineteenth amendment, which gave women the vote in 1920. Mary M. Huth (mhuth@library.rochester.edu) , Assistant Head of the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, is the curator of the exhibition. Unless otherwise noted, all the materials are from the Department’s collections. Permission to publish the images must be obtained from the Department.
Contents
THE WOMEN'S RIGHTS MOVEMENT IN UPSTATE NEW YORK
A full report of the woman's rights agitation in the State of New York, would in a measure be the history of the movement. In this State, the preliminary battles in the anti-slavery, temperance, educational, and religious societies were fought; the first Governmental aid given to higher education of woman, and her voice first heard in teachers' associations. Here the first Woman's Rights Convention was held, the first demand made for suffrage, the first society formed for this purpose, and the first legislative efforts made to secure the civil and political rights of women; commanding the attention of leading members of the bar....Here too the pulpit made the first demand for the political rights of woman. Here was the first temperance society formed by women, the first medical college opened to them, and woman first ordained for the ministry.

11. Womens Rights
Women did not have the right to vote (suffrage), and in most states women in publiclife began to turn their attention to the struggle of womens rights in the
http://www.geocities.com/genome_ctrl/americanhistory/intro.html

12. WOMENS RIGHTS (in MARION)
womens rights. Women's rights. (about) (13 titles) Search also under Sexdiscrimination against women. Search also under Women suffrage.
http://vax.vmi.edu/MARION?S=WOMENS RIGHTS

13. Susan B. Anthony Picture
to heroes giving insight to students of today concerning history, at risk youth,determination, at risk students, womens rights, woman suffrage, voting and
http://www.buchananreform.org/movie-poster-reprint.htm

14. Essays On Feminists, Activists & The Struggle For Womens' Rights - 257-015
Papers On Feminists, Activists The Struggle For womens' rights Page 16 of 26. NineteenthAmendment and suffrage send me this essay A 5 page paper that
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15. Kate Sheppard Midwifery - Biography
While acknowledging that womens' suffrage and prohibition were seen as tools of moral Shewas a strong champion of womens' rights and argued for womens' rights
http://www.ksmidwifery.co.nz/biography.shtml
Kate Malcolm Sheppard (1847-1934) was one of the pioneers of the womens' movement in New Zealand. She championed the cause of the right of women to vote and was an advocate of women and children in this country. She is our inspiration, we admire her knowledge, strength and compassion. We chose her as our emblem because she represented a single minded voice that was prepared to challenge the status quo. In our own lesser way we continue that tradition by daring to bring about change by breaking down barriers between midwives and the community. Kate Sheppard is recognized as the key figure in the suffrage movement in New Zealand - the first country in the world to grant universal adult suffrage to men and women equally. Born Catherine Wilson Malcolm in Liverpool in 1847 she arrived in New Zealand with her recently widowed mother together with her sister in 1868. The family settled in Christchurch and in 1871 Kate married Christchurch merchant Walter Sheppard.
Kate Sheppard became involved in the temperance movement early in her life. This link shaped her early thinking helping to forge the two themes of temperance and womens suffrage into a cohesive movement. She was elected president of the Womens Christian Temperance Union in 1887. While acknowledging that womens' suffrage and prohibition were seen as tools of moral reform, Kate Sheppard also shared views more compatible with 20th century feminism. She was a strong champion of womens' rights and argued for womens' rights during divorce, equal rights to the guardianship of children, the advantages of contraception and the rights of women to participation in an active lifestyle.

16. Free-Essays.us - Womens Rights
important focus. It was then that “women’s rights” became almostsynonymous with “women’s suffrage”(88 DuBois). Although the
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17. TermPapers-TermPapers.com - Womens Rights
The passage of the 14th Amendment in 1866 and the 15th Amendment in1870 helped to focus the women’s rights movement on suffrage.
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18. Womens Rights
womens rights Our rights. The women's right to suffrage had officially begun.We would now be viewed as productive beings of this society.
http://www.foshay.k12.ca.us/Cool Web Pages/Student Pages/2003/HernandezWendy/wom
Womens Rights: Our Rights
"We hold these truths to be self-evident that all [women and men] are created equal........."
It all began at Seneca Falls, New York were the first women's convention was held, in July 19-20 of 1848. The women's right movement had begun. In this day, these men and women set the agenda for the movements that followed. This historical event marked the beginning of a new era that would spark new ways of thinking in our society. This declaration included that women should be given the right to vote. Although this declaration sparked a revolution, it did little for those women. It wasn't until seventy-two years later that this demand was taken into consideration, and finally adopted. Yet needed to be enforced.
By 1918, with the support of New York and President Woodrow Wilson, the 19th Amendment was beginning to get accepted. On August 18, 1920 the amendment became officially ratified, when Tennessee became the 36th state to adopt the amendment. The 19th amendment met it's requirements, which were to be ratified by three-fourths of the states. Protests and strikes helped women win what they had been fighting for: a women's right to vote. The 19th amendment stated "the right of citizens of the U.S to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the U.S or by an account of sex." From this day forth, we as women, would be able to vote, a major step towards equality. The women's right to suffrage had officially begun. We would now be viewed as productive beings of this society.

19. Suffrage And ERA
One Hundred Years Toward suffrage 17761920 http//lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/naw/nawstime.html.The Path of the womens rights Movement1848-1998 http//www.legacy98
http://www.saintmarksschool.org/public/library/webliographies/pages/suffrage.htm
Women's Suffrage Movement and ERA Saint Mark's Eighth Grade Social Studies Suffrage Colors
History
Documents
Timelines ...
Graphics
TO CONTINUE SEARCH ON YOUR OWN, USE: Proquest Electric Library Britannica On-line SEARCH ENGINES AND EVALUATING SITES History Suffrage Movement Women's History - the Quest for Equality http://www.worldbook.com/fun/whm/html/whm010.htm Created Equal: History of the Suffrage Movement http://www.rochester.edu/SBA/hisindx.html A Short History of the Movement http://www.legacy98.org/move-hist.html A History of the American Suffragist Movement http://www.suffragist.com/ ERA Equal Rights Ammendment http://www.eb.com:180/women/articles/Equal_Rights_Amendment.html Return to top of page
Timelines
Sufferage Movement Women's Rights Chronology: 1792-1920 http://www.rochester.edu/SBA/time.html One Hundred Years Toward Suffrage: 1776-1920 http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/naw/nawstime.html The Path of the Womens Rights Movement:1848-1998 http://www.legacy98.org/timeline.html Timeline from Women's History Museum 1840-1919 http://www.nmwh.org/exhibits/exhibit_frames.html A History of the American Suffragist Movement 1637-1920 http://www.suffragist.com/timeline.htm

20. Template
womens rights convention. Esther Morris In 1869 she was the 1st woman to hold ajudicial positin and led the 1st succesful state campaign for womans suffrage.
http://www.mcps.k12.md.us/schools/springbrookhs/rights/WR/women3.html
Human Right's Acquisition
After the vote in 1920 for womens Enfranchisement , the womens civil rights movement continued in many directions. In 1920 the womens Bureau of Department of Labor was established to gather information on women at work. Suffragists became actively involved in protecting women for abuse and unsafe conditions. In 1923 Alice Paul, the leader of the National Womens Party, drafted an equal rights amendment for the United States constitution to ensure that "Men and Women have equal rights throughout the United States."
A second wave of the Womens rights Movement began in the 1930's when a public Health Nurse Margaret Sanger began to endorse birth control. She used the idea of a woman having the right to control her own body including reproduction and sexuality to support her proposal of educating women about existing Birth Control Methods. In 1936 the Supreme Court decision declassified birth control methods as obscene. It was not untill 1965 when contraceptives could be obtained legally. During the 1960's an array of books, protests and demonstrations were created to draw attention to the movement. In 1966 the NAACP ( National organization for civil rights for women .) was formed, and was followed by an array of mass membership organizationsaddressing the needs of specific groups of women including Blacks, Latinas, Asian-Americans, lesbians, welfare recipiants, bussiness owners, aspriring politicians, and trades women and professional women of every sort. Young women everywhere became a part of the anit-war and civil rights movement. They formed womens liberation organizanizations to address their role and status within these progressive movements as well as society.

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