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Description:

Susan B. Anthony led the Women's Suffrage Movement—but there's more to her than that. Watch the video to get all the deets.

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Transcript

00:07

Susan B. Anthony, a la Shmoop.

00:10

No doubt about it - America has some crazy laws.

00:13

In Iowa, it is against the law to kiss for longer than five minutes.

00:19

In Vermont, it is illegal to go more than a week without bathing.

00:24

But perhaps the craziest of all was that until 1920, it was illegal for women to vote in the United States.

00:32

We often cite Susan B. Anthony for changing this law,

00:36

but was it really Susan’s Suffrage?

00:39

Anthony’s activism began after the Civil War, when she pointed out the slight hypocrisy

00:45

in allowing freed black men to vote... but not women.

00:49

She founded the American Equal Rights Association,

00:51

and then got arrested for trying to vote in New York in 1872.

00:56

She then refused to pay the ordered fine.

00:58

Until 1900, she was president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association.

01:04

Susan passed away in 1907, never having been granted the right to vote.

01:09

What really got the Women’s Suffrage movement going was the Prohibition and Progressive

01:13

Era, which embraced purity and avoidance of crime.

01:17

Progressive Era politicians realized that women’s votes could benefit their campaigns.

01:22

The participation of women in World War I was the final push…

01:25

…and the Nineteenth Amendment granting women the right to vote was passed in 1920.

01:30

So what are your thoughts?

01:31

Was Susan B. Anthony the pivotal figure in the Women’s Suffrage Movement?

01:37

Or would women have been granted the right to vote anyways?

01:40

Just because it makes good political sense?

01:42

Shmoop amongst yourselves.

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