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Women in the US, 1850- 1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political Culture A. Education and Religion B. Anti-slavery C. Temperance D. Consent, Marriage, and Divorce E. Labor F. Racial Justice III. The Women’s Rights Movement A. Leaders B. Methods C. Reactions D. Results

Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

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Page 1: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Women in the US, 1850-1919

I. The Condition of Women in the 19th CenturyA. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. FactB. Women and the Law

II. Women’s Political CultureA. Education and ReligionB. Anti-slaveryC. TemperanceD. Consent, Marriage, and DivorceE. LaborF. Racial Justice

III. The Women’s Rights MovementA. LeadersB. MethodsC. ReactionsD. Results

Page 2: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

“Separate Spheres” Ideology

Male• Public Sphere• Wage labor

– Physical, dangerous

• Government– Parties, Army

• Conflict– State of Nature

Female• Private Sphere• Housework

– Cooking, cleaning

• Family– Childbirth,

rearing

• Love– Nurture

Page 3: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

The Myth of “Separate Spheres”

• Poorer women work for wages– In 1850, ten percent of women

worked for wages– By 1900, 5M (13.4%) work for wages

• Middle class women join churches and reform organizations– Assert authority over education,

health, and welfare by using stereotypes about women’s nature.

Page 4: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Women and the Law

• Coverture (civil death)

• Cannot enter

professions

• Limited Access to

Divorce

• Cannot vote to change

lawsMyra Bradwell

Page 5: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Education and Religion

Oberlin grads, 1855

New York’s

“Burned-over District”

Page 6: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Anti-slavery

• Women are the stalwarts of the abolitionist crusade.

Burning of PA Hall, 1838

Page 7: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Temperance

Page 8: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Sex and Marriage

• Consent – Protect girls against

seduction, rape, premature marriage, & prostitution

• Birthrate– Falls 40% between 1800-

1900• Marriage

– Married women’s property acts

• Divorce– Make habitual drunkenness

and cruelty grounds for suit

Page 9: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Labor

• Child labor• Women’s hours and wages• Factory Inspection

Teen girls in Chicago sweatshop, 1903.

Page 10: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Racial Justice

• Anti-lynching– A Red Record

(1895)

• Suffrage– Chicago's Alpha

Suffrage Club

Ida B. Wells-Barnett

Page 11: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Citizenship• Female

abolitionists want the 15th Amendment to guarantee their right to vote as well

• Male reformers see this as politically impractical

• Some black leaders support– Frederick Douglass

Page 12: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Leaders

Susan B. Anthony Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Page 13: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Moral Suasion

Women Praying outside MN Saloon, 1870s

Page 14: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Protest & Lobbying

• American Equal Rights Association • National Woman Suffrage Association • American Woman Suffrage Association • National American Woman Suffrage Association • Equality League of Self-Supporting Women• Women's Political Union • Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage• Woman's Party

Page 15: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Reaction

Page 16: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Opposing Arguments

• Unnatural• Women don’t want• Women control

men• Republican

Motherhood• Racial analogy

Page 17: Women in the US, 1850-1919 I. The Condition of Women in the 19th Century A. Separate Spheres-- Myth v. Fact B. Women and the Law II. Women’s Political

Results