Women's Rights In The 19th Century Essay

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Women have always been an important part of society. With the years we have seen how the woman role has progress. In the nineteenth century the woman role was limited by social conventions and limited opportunities. Women were likely to marry and have children, and be financially dependent of their husbands. In education, school for girls was something not common and very limited. Women usually did not had careers and most of the time they were rejected from professional schools and works, they were allowed to become teachers, but it was a low status and low reward job. Throughout the late nineteenth century, a number of situations challenged women’s role and they start becoming and assuming important positions in society.
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A series of educational female pioneers were born and with them many changes emerged. They fought for woman rights, with their efforts, they formed part of an extensive movement of fighters who sought to bring women equal rights to every level possible, such as study, work, own property and vote. In the 1850s important changes came and some rights were given to the woman like the right to own land in a state and also the Female Medical College was founded. At this time woman were not able to vote or to be involved in politics in any form, if so they were rejected and isolated; but a group of woman came to fight and took involvement in politics and fought for the Equal Rights for woman. By 1869 the women's rights movement had become divided into two parties, the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA), and the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA), held by Lucy Stone and Antoinette Brown Blackwell. The NWSA, published The Revolution (1868-1872); the AWSA, which appeared from the American Equal Rights Association, published Woman's Journal. At this point, woman were taking important places everywhere, from education, equality all the way to

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