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Women Winning the Right to Vote in United States History

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In March 1919, two hundred policemen brutally put down a protest march in New York City, clubbing, beating, and trampling the marchers. The protest was not a violent uprising. The marchers were women, and it was just one incident in a long battle American women had fought to gain the right to vote. In Women Winning the Right to Vote in United States History, author Carol Rust Nash explores the lives of the extraordinary people and the events involved in the seventy-two-year-long straggle to achieve women’s political equality in the United States of America.

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The suffrage movement was the fight for the right of women to vote. Highlighting the lives and careers of notable suffragists like Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Carrie Chapman Catt, and Alice Paul, author Carol Rust Nash traces the movement’s roots from the temperance and abolition movements through its success with the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment. The author describes the many tactics used to fight for the right to vote for women, as well as the many problems and setbacks faced by the women and men involved in the movement. This book is developed from THE FIGHT FOR WOMAN’S RIGHT TO VOTE IN AMERICAN HISTORY to allow republication of the original text into ebook, paperback, and trade editions.

Author

Carol Rust Nash

Book Series

In United States History Series

Format

Ebook

ISBN

9780766060746

Language

English

Pages

96

Publication Date

07-15-2014

Publisher

Enslow Pub Inc

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