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The Eventual Success of Women’s Suffrage Rhetoric In One Half the People and Women and the American Experience, we learn th  

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Joe Bohn HIS212 Prof. Thomas Jackson The Eventual Success of Women's Suffrage Rhetoric In One Half the People and Women and the American Experience, we learn that women were outraged upon finding that the 15th amendment constitutionally enfranchised men of every race and ethnicity, but still excluded women. According to Susan B. Anthony, one-time president of the National Woman's Suffrage Association, this occurrence brought women "to the lowest depths of political degradation" (Woloch 329). Women quickly realized that the governing body of white men would more quickly give freedom to uneducated and poor foreigners than to their own mothers and wives, whom were steadily beginning to make financial contributions at home, as a result of industrialization. The analysis, herein, is meant to illustrate how the frequent lack of unity in the rhetoric of the various women's suffrage organizations postponed and often stifled women's attainment of full constitutional enfranchisement, but eventually forced the...

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