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Votes for
Women
- New Zealand
Women have not always had the
vote
Women were property - Coverture
• She was                          • She could not
  covered by her                     go to court in
  male relatives                     her own right



• She could not                    • She could not
  divorce her                        have custody
  husband                            of her children



• Her property                     • She could not
  did not belong                     vote
  to her
              She was dependent upon
                       men
Which Country Gave Women
       the vote First?
KATE SHEPPARD AND THE
       VOTE FOR WOMEN IN NEW
              ZEALAND
   Challenge Nowhere in the world was it considered
    appropriate for women to vote!

   Challenge Many people, especially men, did not
    want to give women the vote.

   Challenge Parliament had to pass a Bill in order for
    women to vote and it only had men in it!!

 HOW     DID THEY OVERCOME THESE CHALLENGES??
FIRST – SOME HISTORY
 FOR A LONG TIME
 NO MAN
 NO WOMAN
 COULD VOTE
   THERE WAS NO SUCH THING!!

 BUT PEOPLE’S IDEAS ABOUT HOW
SOCIETY SHOULD WORK BEGAN TO
           CHANGE
DIVINE ORDER             MONARCHY
             •HUMANISM
  PETRACH    •1300’S

              •REFORMATION
  LUTHER      •1520

             •ENLIGHTENMENT
  ROUSSEAU   •1700’S


  CHANGE             DEMOCRACY
MAKE A FLOW DIAGRAM
 SYMBOLS    – E.G.
                               IS A SYMBOL FOR
                               MONARCHY
 IDEAS




 DEMOCRACY?
            A FLOW DIAGRAM –
          CHANGING POLITICAL IDEAS

   SYMBOL            SYMBOL            SYMBOL
IDEAS CHANGED
 MONARCHY


               • Some wealthy men got the vote



               • Some less wealthy men got the vote.




                • All men got the vote

 DEMOCRACY
              So women wanted the vote too.
              They started to get involved.
WOMEN CARED ABOUT THINGS
          TOO
                   A
 C                 C
 A                 T
 R                 I
 E                 O
       SO          N

       THEY
       TAKE
ABOLITION MOVEMENT was an
   International Movement
               WOMEN




            BOYCOTED
SIGNED
            SLAVE GROWN   WROTE   RAISED FUNDS
PETITIONS
            SUGAR


                 SPOKE
WOMEN CARED ABOUT THINGS TOO.
    FOR INSTANCE THE ABOLITION MOVEMENT


 THE   ABOLITION MOVEMENT WAS…

 WHAT   WOMEN DID…
 In the centre of your page draw a
  silhouette of a woman.
 CUT OUT PICTURES AND PASTE THEM
  AROUND THE WOMAN.
BUT WOMEN ONLY HAD INFLUENCE.
    THEY HAD NO POWER TO
       CHANGE THINGS

           HOW
           DID
           WOMEN
           CHANGE
           THAT?
IMPORTANT WORDS
1.   ABOLITION
2.   PETITION
3.   SUFFRAGE (FRANCHISE)
4.   COVERAGE
5.   DEMOCRACY
6.   MONARCHY
HOW DO WE CONSTRUCT A
       BAR GRAPH
 BOTH   AXIS ARE DRAWN WITH A RULER

 BOTH   AXIS HAVE A LABEL

 THE   GRAPH HAS A TITLE

 THE   GRAPH HAS A KEY
BAR GRAPH CHECKLIST
   Graph is drawn with a ruler with
    even gaps between bars.

   Countries on the horizontal (x)
    axis

   Years on the vertical (y) axis

   Both axis are labeled.

   Title
    Key – Male and Female Suffrage
MALE AND FEMALE SUFFRAGE BY YEAR AND COUNTRY



COUNTRY        MALE SUFFRAGE   FEMALE SUFFRAGE
U.S.A          1870            1920
NEW ZEALAND    1879            1893
NORWAY         1898            1913
U.K.           1914            1928
FRANCE         1848            1944
MEXICO         1917            1953
SWITZERLAND    1848            1971
HOW COME NEW ZEALAND WAS
    FIRST IN THE WORLD TO ACHIEVE
         WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE??

   FLOW DIAGRAM

   NEW IDEAS IN EUROPE AND AMERICA

   PEOPLE WITH NEW IDEAS MIGRATED TO NEW
    ZEALAND

   NEW ZEALAND AS A SELF GOVERNING COLONY –
    DID NOT HAVE TO DO THE SAME AS BRITAIN
New Zealand
KATE SHEPPARD

HAND-OUT – MAKE A POSTER IN YOUR BOOK’S REPRESENTING
HER LIFE. WRITE AT LEAST ONE FACT ABOUT EACH TIME




            BORN 1848

             EARLY LIFE     CHRISTCHURCH

             WCTU            AFTER 1893
                                          DIED 1934

        YOU CAN USE A DIFFERENT SHAPE IF YOU LIKE
WHAT INSPIRED HER?
   SHE HEARD MARY LEAVITT FROM THE
    AMERICAN WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE
    UNION SPEAK ON THE NEED FOR WOMEN TO
    HAVE THE VOTE TO EFFECT CHANGE. (1885)
   SHE SAW WHAT COLONIAL LIFE WAS LIKE FOR
    WOMEN AND CHILDREN.
   SHE RECOGNISED THERE WAS A GREAT
    OPPORTUNITY BECAUSE OF THE NEWNESS OF
    NEW ZEALAND’S POLITICAL SCENE.
w.c.t.u.
   Womens Christian Temperance Union
                                             Women felt getting
Alcohol took a                               the vote would
terrible toll on                             enable them to
families                                     have some control




    Remember women and children had no rights except in
    relationship to the adult male relatives they had.
THE   TEMPERANCE
               MOV
EMENT
This picture has three parts
   1- A family happily at home together
  The family is warm and happy. The man, woman
  and children are all provided for.

   2 - The family signing “The Pledge” not to drink.
  The family take the pledge not to touch alcohol. This
  picture stands between the happy and sad family.

   3 – The family begging the man not to go to the
    pub.
  The family are outside in the cold and dressed in
  rags. The husband has a bottle of alcohol in his
  hand.
  Alcohol is the difference between the two scenarios.
  MESSAGE: Alcohol is bad for family life and
  especially for women and children.
Her Personal Qualities
 No  Sectarian Narrowness
 Well Educated
 Good Judgment
 Excellent Public Speaker
 Tolerance
 Committed
 Charm
 Very Feminine Woman
What she did…
 WROTE   PAMPHLETS
 WROTE LETTERS TO THE PRESS
 GAVE TALKS
 PERSONAL CONTACT WITH POLITICIANS
 ORGANISED PETITIONS AND OPENED
  THEM TO ALL WOMEN
 TRAVELLED THE COUNTRY
 KEPT CONTACT WITH OVERSEAS
  MOVEMENT
 Led the push for Women’s Franchise
OTHER GROUPS and PEOPLE
           INVOLVED
   Women’s Franchise League
   Canterbury Women’s Institute
   Polly Plum (Mary Colclough)
   WCTU of America (Mary Leavitt)
   John Stuart Mill
   Mary Muller
   Dunedin Tailoresses’ Union
   Politicians such as…
          William Fox
          John Hall
          Robert Stout
Kate Sheppard’s Ideas
- Kate Sheppard “Ten Reason’s
  Why Women Should Vote.”

 1. “Because a democratic
  government like that of New
  Zealand already admits the great
  principle that every adult person,
  not convicted of crime, nor
  suspected of lunacy, has an
  inherent right to a voice in the
  construction of laws which all must
  obey.”
LETS LOOK AT WHAT NUMBER 1
ON KATE’S LIST SAYS
 “Because a democratic government like that
  of New Zealand already admits the great
  principle that every adult person, not
  convicted of crime, nor suspected of lunacy,
  has an inherent right to a voice in the
  construction of laws which all must obey.
 What does she mean? Table Groups Discuss
 Write a definition for these words:
INHERENT RIGHT – CONSTRUCTION OF
LAWS
WHY DID WOMEN WANT
           THE VOTE?
2.  Because it has not yet been proved that the
intelligence of women is only equal to that of children, nor
that their social status is on a par with that of lunatics or
convicts.
3. Because women are affected by the prosperity of the
Colony, are concerned in the preservation of its liberty and
free institutions, and suffer equally with men from all
national errors and mistakes
4. Because women are less accessible than men to most
of the debasing influences now brought to bear upon
elections, and by doubling the number of electors to be
dealt with, women would make bribery and corruption less
effective, as well as more difficult.
WHY DID WOMEN WANT
            THE VOTE
5.  Because in the quietude of home
women are less liable than men to be
swayed by mere party feeling, and are
inclined to attach great value to
uprightness and rectitude of life in a
candidate.
6. Because the presence of women at
the polling-booth would have a refining
and purifying effect.
7. Because the votes of women would
add weight and power to the more settled
and responsible communities.
WHY DID WOMEN WANT
            THE VOTE
8.  Because women are endowed with a more constant
solicitude for the welfare of the rising generations, thus
giving them a more far-reaching concern for something
beyond the present moment.
9. Because the admitted physical weakness of women
disposes them to exercise more habitual caution, and to
feel a deeper interest in the constant preservation of
peace, law, and order, and especially in the supremacy of
right over might.
10. Because women naturally view each question from a
somewhat different standpoint to men, so that whilst their
interests, aims, and objects would be very generally the
same, they would often see what men had overlooked,
and thus add a new security against any partial or one-
sided legislation.
IN DESK GROUPS
 List
     the important words for each point.
 Take each point Kate Sheppard made
  and summerise it. What did she mean?

           • WHAT DO YOU THINK?

• DO YOU THINK HER POINT WAS VALID?

• IS THE POINT TRUE TODAY?

• DO YOU THINK EVERYTHING TURNED OUT THE
  WAY SHE WANTED?
Women’s suffrage
    -A New Zealand Time-line
New Zealand a Self                     1843 Mr Alfred Saunders                        1884 Married
Governing Colony 1853                  and Mr William Fox                             Women’s
                                       advocate Women’s                               Property Act
                                       Suffrage
                                 1879 Male      1885 NZ Women’s                            1893 petition
     1869 Mary Muller wrote
                               Suffrage Maori       Christian       1891 petition       30,000+ signatures
     pamphlet advocating
                               Male suffrage      Temperance      10,085 signatures     – women get the
       Women’s Suffrage
                                     1867          Movement                                    vote


                              1933 First
                                                           1997 First                 Percentage of
                              female                                                  woman MP’s
                                                           woman Prime
   1919 Women                 MP                                                      same as
                                       1947 First          Minister
   allowed to be                                                                      percentage of
                                       female                                         women in
   MP
                                       Cabinet                                        population
                                       Member
Make a time-line              1900

                                      Women
                               1893   get the
                                      vote
 Ruled  vertical line
 Even scale- (Decades)
 Short horizontal line for
  each event
 Brief descriptions
 An appropriate title



                                      NZ self-
                              1853    governing
                               1850   colony
WHO OPPOSED VOTES FOR
        WOMEN?


 LIQUOR  LOBBY
 SOME CONSERVATIVE WOMEN’S GROUP
 RICHARD SEDDON and
 MANY OTHER POLITICIANS
 INDIVIDUAL MEN such as;
    Henry Smith Fish
    Henry Wright
WHAT WERE THEIR
IDEAS?
 It would “Unsex” women.
 WOMEN TALKING POLITICS WOULD BE TOO DISRUPTIVE.

 Women    had a vote through their husbands.
 Woman’s place was in the home.
 Families would suffer.
 Women voting is against God’s order.
 Women who want the vote are too masculine.

 Women are not physically suited to vote.
HAND-OUT
 Cut  out the faces.
 In your own words write why each
  thought women could not vote.

Underneath Add
 The economy would suffer
 Women did not want the Vote
WHAT IS A POLITICAL
CARTOON?

A  political cartoon is a mixture of visual
  and written evidence.
 Political cartoons are normally drawn to
  show the cartoonist’s point of view about
  an issue which is seen as important at the
  time.
 Cartoonists often use humour or sarcasm
  to emphasise their point of view about a
  particular issue.
Remember this?
  How did we go about
deciding what it was about?
Interpreting Cartoons
   We decided what the illustration was about? -
    Temperance
   We decided what was happening in the
    illustration? Husband at home with happy family;
    husband going to pub with unhappy family.
   We looked at the way the illustration was set out?
    Taking the Pledge was between the other two
    pictures.
   The message?


TOPIC - ACTION –
WORDS – LAYOUT -
CHARACTERS
Here is an example from the
     Christchurch Press
LETS PRACTICE ANALYSING A
    POLITICAL CARTOON
   handout
   IS THE CARTOONIST PRO- OR ANTI-
    WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE?

   HOW CAN YOU TELL? -words
                       -pictures
   IS IT FUNNY? OR IS IT DEMEANING?

   WHAT DO YOU THINK?
ANALYSE THE FOLLOWING CARTOONS BY ANSWERING
THESE QUESTIONS.


   1- What is the Cartoon about?

   2- What characters/types can you identify?

   3- What idea/s does it portray?

   4- What clues lead you to your identification of the
    characters/idea(s)?

   5- Which perspective is the cartoon being depicted
    from?
The household   The woman is dressed and
                 is in chaos.    acting like a man and the
 But something                   man is dressed and acting
 is wrang.                       like a woman.



                                                  This
                                                  cartoon
                                                  is
                                                  against
                                                  votes
                                                  for
                                                  women
                                                  .




Because the
household is
unhappy
WHAT IDEA IS THIS CARTOON
     REPRESENTING?
Heading in your books

How to Write about Cartoons
1   Briefly describe the cartoon.

2   Write a because sentence.

3  Write…The cartoonist is trying to say
  that…
1) Write a sentence to
 very briefly describe
 the cartoon.                     2) Write a because
                                  sentence.
This cartoon has two parts       Because the
                                 women in the
                                 second picture are
   The first part is
                                 not behaving in a
   women sewing
                                 very ladylike way –
   together.
                                 this cartoon is
                                 against Votes for
                                 Women.
                             3) Write what the
      The second             cartoonist is trying to say.
      picture                     The cartoonist
      shows                       is saying that
      women                       giving women
      smoking                     the vote will
      and talking                 “unsex” them
      together.                   or make them
                                  too masculine..
WHAT IS THIS CARTOON
  Briefly
  describe the   SAYING?
  cartoon.                         Because the woman is
                 Write a because   washing the man from a
A woman is       sentence.         bowl labeled Votes for
washing a                          Women this cartoon is
child.                             for Votes for Women.

  The child                                 Write a
  is not                                    sentence
  enjoying                                  to say
  it.                                       what the
                                            cartoonist
                                            is trying to
                                            say.
The child
has a
moustache.                         The cartoonist is trying to
                                   say that giving women
                                   the vote will be good
                                   because it will clean-up
                                   politics.
Write a
 brief                                                      Write…The
 description                                                cartoonist
 of the                                                     is trying to
 cartoon.                                                   say that…



 Write a
 because
 sentence




Female Voters: “Come,Come my boy you have to take this nice
medicine. It will be good for you.”
Young NZ: “I don’t like your medicine, and am feeling alright. But I
guess I have to have it. Maybe it won’t hurt.”
WHAT IS THIS CARTOON
SAYING?




“You permit this gentleman to influence your Elections. Surely
you might permit me to have a voice in the matter too?”
WHO IS THIS CARTOON
TARGETING AND HOW?    The men are;

                      • Political
                        Boss.

                      • White
                        Slaver.

                      • Child
                        Labour
                        Exploiter.

                      • Food
                        Doper.

                      • Saloon
                        Keeper.
Other activities

 Collage    a) colonial life for women
             b) life for the modern woman
             c) life for women in 19th Century
            England.

Expert Groups – 1 Liquor Lobby
                 2 Conservative Women’s Lobby
                 3 Pro Women’s Suffrage
                 4 Politics too rough Lobby
                 5 WCTU Lobby
Develop a short speech containing each p-o-v to deliver
to the class by a spokes man. Parliamentary Debate
Photograph of Pioneer Women
               by Ruth Dallas


You can see from their faces
Life was not funny
The streets, when there were streets,
Tugging at axles,
The settlement ramshackle as a stack of cards.
And where there were no streets, and so houses,
Save their own roof of calico and thatch,
The cows coming morning and afternoon
From the end-of-world swamp,
Udders cemented with mud.
Photograph of Pioneer Women
             by Ruth Dallas
Verse 2
There is nothing to equal pioneering labour
For wrenching a woman out of shape,
Like an old willow, uprooted, thickening.
See their strong arms, their shoulders broadened
By the rhythmical swing of the of the axe, or humped
Under loads they donkeyed on their backs.
Some of them found time to be photographed,
With their bearded husbands, and twelve or thirteen children,
Looking shocked, but relentless,
After first starching the frills on their caps.
Kate sheppard

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Kate sheppard

  • 2. Women have not always had the vote
  • 3. Women were property - Coverture • She was • She could not covered by her go to court in male relatives her own right • She could not • She could not divorce her have custody husband of her children • Her property • She could not did not belong vote to her She was dependent upon men
  • 4. Which Country Gave Women the vote First?
  • 5. KATE SHEPPARD AND THE VOTE FOR WOMEN IN NEW ZEALAND  Challenge Nowhere in the world was it considered appropriate for women to vote!  Challenge Many people, especially men, did not want to give women the vote.  Challenge Parliament had to pass a Bill in order for women to vote and it only had men in it!!  HOW DID THEY OVERCOME THESE CHALLENGES??
  • 6. FIRST – SOME HISTORY  FOR A LONG TIME  NO MAN  NO WOMAN  COULD VOTE  THERE WAS NO SUCH THING!! BUT PEOPLE’S IDEAS ABOUT HOW SOCIETY SHOULD WORK BEGAN TO CHANGE
  • 7. DIVINE ORDER MONARCHY •HUMANISM PETRACH •1300’S •REFORMATION LUTHER •1520 •ENLIGHTENMENT ROUSSEAU •1700’S CHANGE DEMOCRACY
  • 8. MAKE A FLOW DIAGRAM  SYMBOLS – E.G. IS A SYMBOL FOR MONARCHY  IDEAS  DEMOCRACY?  A FLOW DIAGRAM –  CHANGING POLITICAL IDEAS  SYMBOL SYMBOL SYMBOL
  • 9. IDEAS CHANGED MONARCHY • Some wealthy men got the vote • Some less wealthy men got the vote. • All men got the vote DEMOCRACY  So women wanted the vote too.  They started to get involved.
  • 10. WOMEN CARED ABOUT THINGS TOO A C C A T R I E O SO N THEY TAKE
  • 11. ABOLITION MOVEMENT was an International Movement WOMEN BOYCOTED SIGNED SLAVE GROWN WROTE RAISED FUNDS PETITIONS SUGAR SPOKE
  • 12. WOMEN CARED ABOUT THINGS TOO. FOR INSTANCE THE ABOLITION MOVEMENT  THE ABOLITION MOVEMENT WAS…  WHAT WOMEN DID…  In the centre of your page draw a silhouette of a woman.  CUT OUT PICTURES AND PASTE THEM AROUND THE WOMAN.
  • 13. BUT WOMEN ONLY HAD INFLUENCE. THEY HAD NO POWER TO CHANGE THINGS HOW DID WOMEN CHANGE THAT?
  • 14. IMPORTANT WORDS 1. ABOLITION 2. PETITION 3. SUFFRAGE (FRANCHISE) 4. COVERAGE 5. DEMOCRACY 6. MONARCHY
  • 15. HOW DO WE CONSTRUCT A BAR GRAPH  BOTH AXIS ARE DRAWN WITH A RULER  BOTH AXIS HAVE A LABEL  THE GRAPH HAS A TITLE  THE GRAPH HAS A KEY
  • 16. BAR GRAPH CHECKLIST  Graph is drawn with a ruler with even gaps between bars.  Countries on the horizontal (x) axis  Years on the vertical (y) axis  Both axis are labeled.  Title Key – Male and Female Suffrage
  • 17. MALE AND FEMALE SUFFRAGE BY YEAR AND COUNTRY COUNTRY MALE SUFFRAGE FEMALE SUFFRAGE U.S.A 1870 1920 NEW ZEALAND 1879 1893 NORWAY 1898 1913 U.K. 1914 1928 FRANCE 1848 1944 MEXICO 1917 1953 SWITZERLAND 1848 1971
  • 18. HOW COME NEW ZEALAND WAS FIRST IN THE WORLD TO ACHIEVE WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE??  FLOW DIAGRAM  NEW IDEAS IN EUROPE AND AMERICA  PEOPLE WITH NEW IDEAS MIGRATED TO NEW ZEALAND  NEW ZEALAND AS A SELF GOVERNING COLONY – DID NOT HAVE TO DO THE SAME AS BRITAIN
  • 20.
  • 21. KATE SHEPPARD HAND-OUT – MAKE A POSTER IN YOUR BOOK’S REPRESENTING HER LIFE. WRITE AT LEAST ONE FACT ABOUT EACH TIME BORN 1848 EARLY LIFE CHRISTCHURCH WCTU AFTER 1893 DIED 1934 YOU CAN USE A DIFFERENT SHAPE IF YOU LIKE
  • 22. WHAT INSPIRED HER?  SHE HEARD MARY LEAVITT FROM THE AMERICAN WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION SPEAK ON THE NEED FOR WOMEN TO HAVE THE VOTE TO EFFECT CHANGE. (1885)  SHE SAW WHAT COLONIAL LIFE WAS LIKE FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN.  SHE RECOGNISED THERE WAS A GREAT OPPORTUNITY BECAUSE OF THE NEWNESS OF NEW ZEALAND’S POLITICAL SCENE.
  • 23. w.c.t.u. Womens Christian Temperance Union Women felt getting Alcohol took a the vote would terrible toll on enable them to families have some control Remember women and children had no rights except in relationship to the adult male relatives they had.
  • 24. THE TEMPERANCE MOV EMENT
  • 25. This picture has three parts  1- A family happily at home together The family is warm and happy. The man, woman and children are all provided for.  2 - The family signing “The Pledge” not to drink. The family take the pledge not to touch alcohol. This picture stands between the happy and sad family.  3 – The family begging the man not to go to the pub. The family are outside in the cold and dressed in rags. The husband has a bottle of alcohol in his hand. Alcohol is the difference between the two scenarios. MESSAGE: Alcohol is bad for family life and especially for women and children.
  • 26. Her Personal Qualities  No Sectarian Narrowness  Well Educated  Good Judgment  Excellent Public Speaker  Tolerance  Committed  Charm  Very Feminine Woman
  • 27. What she did…  WROTE PAMPHLETS  WROTE LETTERS TO THE PRESS  GAVE TALKS  PERSONAL CONTACT WITH POLITICIANS  ORGANISED PETITIONS AND OPENED THEM TO ALL WOMEN  TRAVELLED THE COUNTRY  KEPT CONTACT WITH OVERSEAS MOVEMENT  Led the push for Women’s Franchise
  • 28. OTHER GROUPS and PEOPLE INVOLVED  Women’s Franchise League  Canterbury Women’s Institute  Polly Plum (Mary Colclough)  WCTU of America (Mary Leavitt)  John Stuart Mill  Mary Muller  Dunedin Tailoresses’ Union  Politicians such as…  William Fox  John Hall  Robert Stout
  • 29. Kate Sheppard’s Ideas - Kate Sheppard “Ten Reason’s Why Women Should Vote.”  1. “Because a democratic government like that of New Zealand already admits the great principle that every adult person, not convicted of crime, nor suspected of lunacy, has an inherent right to a voice in the construction of laws which all must obey.”
  • 30. LETS LOOK AT WHAT NUMBER 1 ON KATE’S LIST SAYS  “Because a democratic government like that of New Zealand already admits the great principle that every adult person, not convicted of crime, nor suspected of lunacy, has an inherent right to a voice in the construction of laws which all must obey.  What does she mean? Table Groups Discuss  Write a definition for these words: INHERENT RIGHT – CONSTRUCTION OF LAWS
  • 31. WHY DID WOMEN WANT THE VOTE? 2. Because it has not yet been proved that the intelligence of women is only equal to that of children, nor that their social status is on a par with that of lunatics or convicts. 3. Because women are affected by the prosperity of the Colony, are concerned in the preservation of its liberty and free institutions, and suffer equally with men from all national errors and mistakes 4. Because women are less accessible than men to most of the debasing influences now brought to bear upon elections, and by doubling the number of electors to be dealt with, women would make bribery and corruption less effective, as well as more difficult.
  • 32. WHY DID WOMEN WANT THE VOTE 5. Because in the quietude of home women are less liable than men to be swayed by mere party feeling, and are inclined to attach great value to uprightness and rectitude of life in a candidate. 6. Because the presence of women at the polling-booth would have a refining and purifying effect. 7. Because the votes of women would add weight and power to the more settled and responsible communities.
  • 33. WHY DID WOMEN WANT THE VOTE 8. Because women are endowed with a more constant solicitude for the welfare of the rising generations, thus giving them a more far-reaching concern for something beyond the present moment. 9. Because the admitted physical weakness of women disposes them to exercise more habitual caution, and to feel a deeper interest in the constant preservation of peace, law, and order, and especially in the supremacy of right over might. 10. Because women naturally view each question from a somewhat different standpoint to men, so that whilst their interests, aims, and objects would be very generally the same, they would often see what men had overlooked, and thus add a new security against any partial or one- sided legislation.
  • 34. IN DESK GROUPS  List the important words for each point.  Take each point Kate Sheppard made and summerise it. What did she mean? • WHAT DO YOU THINK? • DO YOU THINK HER POINT WAS VALID? • IS THE POINT TRUE TODAY? • DO YOU THINK EVERYTHING TURNED OUT THE WAY SHE WANTED?
  • 35. Women’s suffrage -A New Zealand Time-line New Zealand a Self 1843 Mr Alfred Saunders 1884 Married Governing Colony 1853 and Mr William Fox Women’s advocate Women’s Property Act Suffrage 1879 Male 1885 NZ Women’s 1893 petition 1869 Mary Muller wrote Suffrage Maori Christian 1891 petition 30,000+ signatures pamphlet advocating Male suffrage Temperance 10,085 signatures – women get the Women’s Suffrage 1867 Movement vote 1933 First 1997 First Percentage of female woman MP’s woman Prime 1919 Women MP same as 1947 First Minister allowed to be percentage of female women in MP Cabinet population Member
  • 36. Make a time-line 1900 Women 1893 get the vote  Ruled vertical line  Even scale- (Decades)  Short horizontal line for each event  Brief descriptions  An appropriate title NZ self- 1853 governing 1850 colony
  • 37. WHO OPPOSED VOTES FOR WOMEN?  LIQUOR LOBBY  SOME CONSERVATIVE WOMEN’S GROUP  RICHARD SEDDON and  MANY OTHER POLITICIANS  INDIVIDUAL MEN such as;  Henry Smith Fish  Henry Wright
  • 38. WHAT WERE THEIR IDEAS?  It would “Unsex” women.  WOMEN TALKING POLITICS WOULD BE TOO DISRUPTIVE.  Women had a vote through their husbands.  Woman’s place was in the home.  Families would suffer.  Women voting is against God’s order.  Women who want the vote are too masculine.  Women are not physically suited to vote.
  • 39. HAND-OUT  Cut out the faces.  In your own words write why each thought women could not vote. Underneath Add  The economy would suffer  Women did not want the Vote
  • 40. WHAT IS A POLITICAL CARTOON? A political cartoon is a mixture of visual and written evidence.  Political cartoons are normally drawn to show the cartoonist’s point of view about an issue which is seen as important at the time.  Cartoonists often use humour or sarcasm to emphasise their point of view about a particular issue.
  • 41. Remember this? How did we go about deciding what it was about?
  • 42. Interpreting Cartoons  We decided what the illustration was about? - Temperance  We decided what was happening in the illustration? Husband at home with happy family; husband going to pub with unhappy family.  We looked at the way the illustration was set out? Taking the Pledge was between the other two pictures.  The message? TOPIC - ACTION – WORDS – LAYOUT - CHARACTERS
  • 43. Here is an example from the Christchurch Press
  • 44. LETS PRACTICE ANALYSING A POLITICAL CARTOON  handout  IS THE CARTOONIST PRO- OR ANTI- WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE?  HOW CAN YOU TELL? -words  -pictures  IS IT FUNNY? OR IS IT DEMEANING?  WHAT DO YOU THINK?
  • 45.
  • 46. ANALYSE THE FOLLOWING CARTOONS BY ANSWERING THESE QUESTIONS.  1- What is the Cartoon about?  2- What characters/types can you identify?  3- What idea/s does it portray?  4- What clues lead you to your identification of the characters/idea(s)?  5- Which perspective is the cartoon being depicted from?
  • 47. The household The woman is dressed and is in chaos. acting like a man and the But something man is dressed and acting is wrang. like a woman. This cartoon is against votes for women . Because the household is unhappy
  • 48. WHAT IDEA IS THIS CARTOON REPRESENTING?
  • 49. Heading in your books How to Write about Cartoons 1 Briefly describe the cartoon. 2 Write a because sentence. 3 Write…The cartoonist is trying to say that…
  • 50. 1) Write a sentence to very briefly describe the cartoon. 2) Write a because sentence. This cartoon has two parts Because the women in the second picture are The first part is not behaving in a women sewing very ladylike way – together. this cartoon is against Votes for Women. 3) Write what the The second cartoonist is trying to say. picture The cartoonist shows is saying that women giving women smoking the vote will and talking “unsex” them together. or make them too masculine..
  • 51. WHAT IS THIS CARTOON Briefly describe the SAYING? cartoon. Because the woman is Write a because washing the man from a A woman is sentence. bowl labeled Votes for washing a Women this cartoon is child. for Votes for Women. The child Write a is not sentence enjoying to say it. what the cartoonist is trying to say. The child has a moustache. The cartoonist is trying to say that giving women the vote will be good because it will clean-up politics.
  • 52. Write a brief Write…The description cartoonist of the is trying to cartoon. say that… Write a because sentence Female Voters: “Come,Come my boy you have to take this nice medicine. It will be good for you.” Young NZ: “I don’t like your medicine, and am feeling alright. But I guess I have to have it. Maybe it won’t hurt.”
  • 53. WHAT IS THIS CARTOON SAYING? “You permit this gentleman to influence your Elections. Surely you might permit me to have a voice in the matter too?”
  • 54. WHO IS THIS CARTOON TARGETING AND HOW? The men are; • Political Boss. • White Slaver. • Child Labour Exploiter. • Food Doper. • Saloon Keeper.
  • 55. Other activities  Collage a) colonial life for women b) life for the modern woman c) life for women in 19th Century England. Expert Groups – 1 Liquor Lobby 2 Conservative Women’s Lobby 3 Pro Women’s Suffrage 4 Politics too rough Lobby 5 WCTU Lobby Develop a short speech containing each p-o-v to deliver to the class by a spokes man. Parliamentary Debate
  • 56. Photograph of Pioneer Women by Ruth Dallas You can see from their faces Life was not funny The streets, when there were streets, Tugging at axles, The settlement ramshackle as a stack of cards. And where there were no streets, and so houses, Save their own roof of calico and thatch, The cows coming morning and afternoon From the end-of-world swamp, Udders cemented with mud.
  • 57. Photograph of Pioneer Women by Ruth Dallas Verse 2 There is nothing to equal pioneering labour For wrenching a woman out of shape, Like an old willow, uprooted, thickening. See their strong arms, their shoulders broadened By the rhythmical swing of the of the axe, or humped Under loads they donkeyed on their backs. Some of them found time to be photographed, With their bearded husbands, and twelve or thirteen children, Looking shocked, but relentless, After first starching the frills on their caps.