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No Place for a Woman - The Struggle for Suffrage in the Wild West (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R479
Discovery Miles 4 790
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No Place for a Woman - The Struggle for Suffrage in the Wild West (Hardcover)
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Loot Price R479
Discovery Miles 4 790
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
|
In 1869, more than twenty years after Elizabeth Cady Stanton and
Susan B. Anthony made their declaration of the rights of woman at
Seneca Falls, New York, the men of the Wyoming Territorial
Legislature granted women over the age of 21 the right to vote in
general elections. And on September 6, 1870, a grandmother named
Eliza Swain stepped up to a ballet box in Laramie, Wyoming, and
became the first woman in the United States to exercise that right,
ushering in the era of Western states' early foray into suffrage
equality. Wyoming Territory's motives for extending the vote to
women might have had more to do with publicity and attracting
female settlers than with any desire to establish a more
egalitarian society. However, individual men's interests in the
idea of women's rights had their roots in diverse ideologies, and
the women who agitated for those rights were equally diverse in
their attitudes. No Place for a Woman explores the history of the
fight for women's rights in the West, examining the conditions that
prevailed during the vast migration of pioneers looking for free
land and opportunity on the frontier, the politics of the emerging
Western territories at the end of the Civil War, and the changing
social and economic conditions of the country recovering from war
and on the brink of the Gilded Age. The stories of the women who
helped settle the west and who ushered in voting rights decades
ahead of the 19th Amendment and the stories of the country they
were forging in the west will be of great interest to readers as
the 100th anniversary of national woman suffrage approaches and is
relevant in our current political climate. Revealed through the
individual stories of women like Esther Hobart Morris, Martha
Cannon, and Jeannette Rankin, this book fills a hole in the story
of the West, revealing the real story of how the hard work and
individual lobbying of a few heroines, plus a little bit of
publicity-seeking and opportunism by promoters of the Wyoming
Territory, ushered in a new era for the expansion of women's
rights.
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