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―We hold these truths …

  American Women’s Voices
         of Protest
        1848 - 1920
Women’s Social Position

• No right to vote
• No right to her wages or property if
  married
• Barred from most professions:
  medicine, law, business, the ministry


Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States. New
     York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
Women’s Social Position
• Barred from most colleges (Oberlin
  College the exception)
• Unequal wages--1/4-1/2 less than men
• Legally a married woman’s identity was
  subsumed into her husband’s—she was
  ―femme couvert‖ in the eyes of the law
 Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States.
 New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
Middle-Class Women’s
            Intimate Lives
         Dominant Ideologies of Womanhood
• The Angel in the House (Victorian Ideology)
• Cult of True Womanhood (U. S. Ideology)
• Ideology of The Two Spheres
            Female, domestic sphere
            Male, public sphere
―Separate but equal‖--not equal for women

  Nancy Cott, The Bonds of Womanhood. New Haven: Yale
     UP, 1977. Chapter 2; Conclusion.
Cult of True Womanhood or
       Cult of Domesticity
• Woman ―naturally‖ suited only to maternity
  and domestic duties
• Woman idealized as:
     Pious                   Passionless
     Sexually Pure           Submissive
     Obedient                Docile
     Humble / physically delicate / dependent
     Patient
     Long-suffering / Self-Sacrificing
Nancy Cott, The Bonds of Womanhood. New Haven: Yale UP,
       1977. Chapter 2; Conclusion.
Women’s Resistance
• Working-Class women strike for labor
  rights (1830s, 40s, 50s) in
  Lowell, Waltham, and Chicopee, MA.
• Female Labor Reform Association:
  fought against position as ―slaves to a
  system of labor‖
• Women led textile workers’ strikes in
  1840s, 50s, & 60s
Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States.
     New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
Women’s Resistance
• Middle-class women enter primary
  school education (single women only)
• Emma Willard opens first school for girls
  in Troy, NY, 1821
• Women fight for admission to medical
  schools (Harvard refuses)

Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States.
     New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
Women’s Resistance
• Abolitionist women in the American Anti-
  Slavery Society begin to fight for
  women’s rights:
     Angelina and Sarah Grimke
     Lucy Stone
     Susan B. Anthony
     Elizabeth Cady Stanton
• National American Woman Suffrage
  Association (1890) Carrie Chapman Catt
Seneca Falls Convention
• Seneca Falls, NY, 19-20 July, 1848

• First National Convention for Women’s
     Rights in U. S.
• Passed 12 resolutions to address the
  inequality of women
• One resolution—the franchise—was
     the most controversial
Amy Kesselman, et al. Women: Images and
    Realities. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006. 548.
Susan B. Anthony
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
• Declaration of Sentiments author

• Presented it at the first Women’s Rights
  Convention in Seneca Falls, NY

―We hold these truths to be self-evident:
  that all men and women are created
  equal‖
 (Amy Kesselman, et al. Women: Images and Realities 548)
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
            Stanton with two of
            her eight children

            Espoused ―Voluntary
            Motherhood‖--that is,
            the right to choose
            when to have sexual
            relations, and the right
            to refuse sexual relations
            to one’s husband

            Wrote The Woman’s
            Bible—a feminist translation
            and interpretation of Scripture
Lucretia and James Mott
Fredrick Douglas
      "In this denial of the right to
      participate in government, not
      merely the degradation of
      woman and the perpetuation
      of a great injustice happens,
      but the maiming and
      repudiation of one-half of the
      moral and intellectual power
      of the government of the
      world.‖

      Seneca Falls Convention,
      1848
Sojourner Truth

Abolitionist and Women’s Rights
               Activist
          c. 1797-1883
•   Born enslaved c. 1797 in NY

                  •   ―Owned‖ by Dutch family

                  •   Parents were Africans
                      who kept the language and traditions
                      of Africa alive in the community

                  •   Sold at auction, aged 9

                  •   Beaten and raped by this owner
                      until sold again at age 11

                  •   Sold twice more by 1810




1870 photograph
•   Fell in love with an enslaved
                          man at 18

                      •   Her lover brutally beaten by his
                          ―owner‖; their love forbidden

                      •   Forced by her ―owner‖ to marry
                          another enslaved man by whom
                          she had several children

                      •   Escaped from slavery with her
                          daughter in 1826; NY emancipates
                          slaves, 1827

                      •   In 1843 changed her name to
                          Sojourner Truth and worked for the
                          abolition of slavery

                      •   Speaks at abolitionist and women’s
                          rights gatherings

1870s tintype photo
―Ain’t I a Woman‖—Ohio Women’s
     Rights Convention, 1851
Dominant Gender Ideologies
       & Female Slavery
Truth ―deconstructs‖ these ideologies in ―Ain’t I a
Woman‖ (shows internal contradictions)

• Cult of True Womanhood

• Ideology of the Mammy

• Ideology of the Jezebel
Deborah Gray White, Ar’nt I a Woman: Female Slaves in the Plantation
       South. Chapter one.
Woman Suffrage Movement

       1848 - 1920

72 Year Struggle to Win the
           Vote
National Women’s Association
• Next Generation of Suffrage Activists:
      Alice Paul (Wrote the Equal Rights
      Amendment—still not ratified)
      Lucy Burns
      Inez Mulholland
• More militant ―New Women‖; advocated
  direct, public actions and
  demonstrations
Alice Paul
Lucy Burns
Dora Lewis
Mass Demonstration in U. S.
           Capital




Counter-Inaugural Demonstration in Washington, DC—March 3, 1913
Women March on Capital Building, Washington, DC
Elizabeth Freeman sets out for Washington on Feb. 17
Women Demand Full Enfranchisement
News Story on Parade Line-Up
Suffragists March on Pennsylvania Ave. with Capital in Background
Police Watch Crowds Gather
Inez Mulholland leads the ―Iron-Jawed Angels‖
Grand Marshall and other organizers gather
Ida B. Wells-Barnett--refused to march at the end of the parade
Mary Church Terrell agreed to march at the end of the parade
Violent Crowd Storms the Parade and Breaks it Up
Hostile Mob Surrounds Ambulance
Women’s Newspaper Claims Victory Despite Violence
Iron-Jawed Angels
President Wilson Inaugurated 1913; U. S. enters W W I 1917


Woman Suffrage activists continue picketing the White House

―Mr. Wilson, when are you going to give us democracy at
home?‖

Dozens of women arrested, striped naked, beaten, man-
handled, illegally detained without counsel, physically
restrained and force-fed. ―Night of Terror‖—November 15,
1917, in Occoquan Prison Workhouse, Occoquan, Virginia.


Iron-Jawed Angels: March 3, 1913   Iron-Jawed Angels--force-feeding--1917g
―Will the Circle Be Unbroken‖
     Americn Hymn (1907)
Chorus:
Will that circle be unbroken
Bye and bye, Lord, bye and bye?
There’s a better home awaiting
In the sky, Lord, in the sky

Written by Ada Habershon
First recorded by renowned Carter Family
Widely sung during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement
Works Cited
• Slides 2 & 3: Howard Zinn, A People’s
  History of the United States. New
  York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
• Slide 4 & 5: Nancy Cott, The Bonds of
  Womanhood. New Haven: Yale
      UP, 1977. Chapter 2; Conclusion.
• Slides 6 & 7: Howard Zinn, A People’s
  History of the United States. New York:
  Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
• Slides 9, 10 & 12: Amy Kesselman, et al.
  Women: Images and Realities. New York:
  McGraw-Hill, 2006. 548.
• Slide 11, Image
  http://susanbanthonyhouse.org/index.php
• Slide 13, Image
  http://www1.assumption.edu/whw/old/Swiss
  helm_Bloomers.html
• Slide 14 Images
  http://womenshistory.about.com/od/suffrage
  pre1848/p/lucretia_mott.htm
• Slide 15 Image:
  http://www.frederickdouglass.org/dougla
  ss_bio.html Text: McMillen, Sally
  Gregory, Seneca Falls and the Origins
  of the Women’s Rights Movement. New
  York: Oxford University Press, 2008.
  93-94.
• Slides 17 – 20 Images
  http://www.lkwdpl.org/wihohio/trut-
  soj.htm Text: The Narrative of
  Sojourner Truth. Boston, 1850. n.p.
  http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/tr
  uth/1850/1850.html#9
• Slide 21: Deborah Gray White, Ar’nt I a
  Woman: Female Slaves in the
  Plantation South. Chapter one.
• Slides 24-6, Images
  http://www.alicepaul.org/
• Slides 27-40, Images
  http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/awhhtml/
  aw01e/aw01e.html
• Music: Etta James, ―At Last.‖ Etta
  James: The Chess Box. Disc 1. Chess
  Records, 2000.

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Woman position, woman suffrage, truth auto music

  • 1. ―We hold these truths … American Women’s Voices of Protest 1848 - 1920
  • 2. Women’s Social Position • No right to vote • No right to her wages or property if married • Barred from most professions: medicine, law, business, the ministry Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States. New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
  • 3. Women’s Social Position • Barred from most colleges (Oberlin College the exception) • Unequal wages--1/4-1/2 less than men • Legally a married woman’s identity was subsumed into her husband’s—she was ―femme couvert‖ in the eyes of the law Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States. New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
  • 4. Middle-Class Women’s Intimate Lives Dominant Ideologies of Womanhood • The Angel in the House (Victorian Ideology) • Cult of True Womanhood (U. S. Ideology) • Ideology of The Two Spheres Female, domestic sphere Male, public sphere ―Separate but equal‖--not equal for women Nancy Cott, The Bonds of Womanhood. New Haven: Yale UP, 1977. Chapter 2; Conclusion.
  • 5. Cult of True Womanhood or Cult of Domesticity • Woman ―naturally‖ suited only to maternity and domestic duties • Woman idealized as: Pious Passionless Sexually Pure Submissive Obedient Docile Humble / physically delicate / dependent Patient Long-suffering / Self-Sacrificing Nancy Cott, The Bonds of Womanhood. New Haven: Yale UP, 1977. Chapter 2; Conclusion.
  • 6. Women’s Resistance • Working-Class women strike for labor rights (1830s, 40s, 50s) in Lowell, Waltham, and Chicopee, MA. • Female Labor Reform Association: fought against position as ―slaves to a system of labor‖ • Women led textile workers’ strikes in 1840s, 50s, & 60s Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States. New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
  • 7. Women’s Resistance • Middle-class women enter primary school education (single women only) • Emma Willard opens first school for girls in Troy, NY, 1821 • Women fight for admission to medical schools (Harvard refuses) Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States. New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
  • 8. Women’s Resistance • Abolitionist women in the American Anti- Slavery Society begin to fight for women’s rights: Angelina and Sarah Grimke Lucy Stone Susan B. Anthony Elizabeth Cady Stanton • National American Woman Suffrage Association (1890) Carrie Chapman Catt
  • 9. Seneca Falls Convention • Seneca Falls, NY, 19-20 July, 1848 • First National Convention for Women’s Rights in U. S. • Passed 12 resolutions to address the inequality of women • One resolution—the franchise—was the most controversial Amy Kesselman, et al. Women: Images and Realities. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006. 548.
  • 11. Elizabeth Cady Stanton • Declaration of Sentiments author • Presented it at the first Women’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, NY ―We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal‖ (Amy Kesselman, et al. Women: Images and Realities 548)
  • 12. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Stanton with two of her eight children Espoused ―Voluntary Motherhood‖--that is, the right to choose when to have sexual relations, and the right to refuse sexual relations to one’s husband Wrote The Woman’s Bible—a feminist translation and interpretation of Scripture
  • 14. Fredrick Douglas "In this denial of the right to participate in government, not merely the degradation of woman and the perpetuation of a great injustice happens, but the maiming and repudiation of one-half of the moral and intellectual power of the government of the world.‖ Seneca Falls Convention, 1848
  • 15. Sojourner Truth Abolitionist and Women’s Rights Activist c. 1797-1883
  • 16.
  • 17. Born enslaved c. 1797 in NY • ―Owned‖ by Dutch family • Parents were Africans who kept the language and traditions of Africa alive in the community • Sold at auction, aged 9 • Beaten and raped by this owner until sold again at age 11 • Sold twice more by 1810 1870 photograph
  • 18. Fell in love with an enslaved man at 18 • Her lover brutally beaten by his ―owner‖; their love forbidden • Forced by her ―owner‖ to marry another enslaved man by whom she had several children • Escaped from slavery with her daughter in 1826; NY emancipates slaves, 1827 • In 1843 changed her name to Sojourner Truth and worked for the abolition of slavery • Speaks at abolitionist and women’s rights gatherings 1870s tintype photo
  • 19. ―Ain’t I a Woman‖—Ohio Women’s Rights Convention, 1851
  • 20. Dominant Gender Ideologies & Female Slavery Truth ―deconstructs‖ these ideologies in ―Ain’t I a Woman‖ (shows internal contradictions) • Cult of True Womanhood • Ideology of the Mammy • Ideology of the Jezebel Deborah Gray White, Ar’nt I a Woman: Female Slaves in the Plantation South. Chapter one.
  • 21. Woman Suffrage Movement 1848 - 1920 72 Year Struggle to Win the Vote
  • 22. National Women’s Association • Next Generation of Suffrage Activists: Alice Paul (Wrote the Equal Rights Amendment—still not ratified) Lucy Burns Inez Mulholland • More militant ―New Women‖; advocated direct, public actions and demonstrations
  • 26. Mass Demonstration in U. S. Capital Counter-Inaugural Demonstration in Washington, DC—March 3, 1913
  • 27. Women March on Capital Building, Washington, DC
  • 28. Elizabeth Freeman sets out for Washington on Feb. 17
  • 29. Women Demand Full Enfranchisement
  • 30. News Story on Parade Line-Up
  • 31. Suffragists March on Pennsylvania Ave. with Capital in Background
  • 33. Inez Mulholland leads the ―Iron-Jawed Angels‖
  • 34. Grand Marshall and other organizers gather
  • 35. Ida B. Wells-Barnett--refused to march at the end of the parade
  • 36. Mary Church Terrell agreed to march at the end of the parade
  • 37. Violent Crowd Storms the Parade and Breaks it Up
  • 39. Women’s Newspaper Claims Victory Despite Violence
  • 40. Iron-Jawed Angels President Wilson Inaugurated 1913; U. S. enters W W I 1917 Woman Suffrage activists continue picketing the White House ―Mr. Wilson, when are you going to give us democracy at home?‖ Dozens of women arrested, striped naked, beaten, man- handled, illegally detained without counsel, physically restrained and force-fed. ―Night of Terror‖—November 15, 1917, in Occoquan Prison Workhouse, Occoquan, Virginia. Iron-Jawed Angels: March 3, 1913 Iron-Jawed Angels--force-feeding--1917g
  • 41. ―Will the Circle Be Unbroken‖ Americn Hymn (1907) Chorus: Will that circle be unbroken Bye and bye, Lord, bye and bye? There’s a better home awaiting In the sky, Lord, in the sky Written by Ada Habershon First recorded by renowned Carter Family Widely sung during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement
  • 42. Works Cited • Slides 2 & 3: Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States. New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6. • Slide 4 & 5: Nancy Cott, The Bonds of Womanhood. New Haven: Yale UP, 1977. Chapter 2; Conclusion. • Slides 6 & 7: Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States. New York: Perennial, 1980. Chapter 6.
  • 43. • Slides 9, 10 & 12: Amy Kesselman, et al. Women: Images and Realities. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006. 548. • Slide 11, Image http://susanbanthonyhouse.org/index.php • Slide 13, Image http://www1.assumption.edu/whw/old/Swiss helm_Bloomers.html • Slide 14 Images http://womenshistory.about.com/od/suffrage pre1848/p/lucretia_mott.htm
  • 44. • Slide 15 Image: http://www.frederickdouglass.org/dougla ss_bio.html Text: McMillen, Sally Gregory, Seneca Falls and the Origins of the Women’s Rights Movement. New York: Oxford University Press, 2008. 93-94. • Slides 17 – 20 Images http://www.lkwdpl.org/wihohio/trut- soj.htm Text: The Narrative of Sojourner Truth. Boston, 1850. n.p. http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/tr uth/1850/1850.html#9
  • 45. • Slide 21: Deborah Gray White, Ar’nt I a Woman: Female Slaves in the Plantation South. Chapter one. • Slides 24-6, Images http://www.alicepaul.org/ • Slides 27-40, Images http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/awhhtml/ aw01e/aw01e.html • Music: Etta James, ―At Last.‖ Etta James: The Chess Box. Disc 1. Chess Records, 2000.