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U.S. History 1877-Present Videos 173 videos
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U.S. History 1877-Present 5: Women's Suffrage 204 Views
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Description:
Suffragists had to endure a whole lot of suffering to convince the U.S. to give women the right to vote. Contrary to popular belief, the name was just a coincidence.
Transcript
- 00:00
Women's libbers
- 00:05
have paved the way for
- 00:07
enormous change—sometimes by
- 00:09
literally getting out there and laying [woman driving bulldozer]
- 00:11
asphalt. There was Elizabeth
Full Transcript
- 00:13
Cady Stanton and pals, who
- 00:15
helped to get the Women's Movement
- 00:17
rolling in 1848 with the
- 00:19
Seneca Falls Convention. [women's rights convention doc]
- 00:21
There was Susan B. Anthony and
- 00:23
Stanton—what, she didn't like to be
- 00:25
left out—who kept the ball rolling in
- 00:27
1878, first drafted the amendment
- 00:29
giving the women the right to vote.
- 00:31
For some reason, though, it took
- 00:33
the Congress full of men
- 00:35
years to give up a shred of power to
- 00:37
women. Shocker. Well, even
- 00:39
though Anthony and Stanton had already done
- 00:41
the heavy lifting on the writing front, [women lift large pen together]
- 00:43
it was a long time before that amendment got the
- 00:45
a-okay from the boys on
- 00:47
Capitol Hill. It wasn't until
- 00:49
1919 that the amendment which gave women
- 00:51
the right to vote was finally passed,
- 00:53
becoming the 19th Amendment
- 00:55
to the Constitution. Of [old newspaper]
- 00:57
course, it took a lot of intense political maneuvering
- 00:59
to get it there. We imagine it
- 01:01
was like House of Cards, only
- 01:03
the goal was equality, not evil
- 01:05
world domination. And nobody spoke [Kevin Spacey with cards]
- 01:07
with ridiculous fake Southern accents.
- 01:09
Sorry, Kevin Spacey, we're just keeping
- 01:11
it real. One of the main gals in
- 01:13
the women's suffrage movement of the Progressive Era
- 01:15
was a lady named Alice Paul.
- 01:17
She took center stage as one of the most
- 01:19
militant and effective leaders [Alice Paul making her way across America]
- 01:21
the movement had seen. In
- 01:23
the 1910s, Paul decided the previous
- 01:25
Women's Movement needed to toughen up
- 01:27
and formed an organization
- 01:29
that eventually came the
- 01:31
National Women's Party. Which,
- 01:33
if Lizzy Stanton had still been alive
- 01:35
for, well, we're sure she would have barged in
- 01:37
gift in hand. Alice Paul was
- 01:39
seriously not messing around.
- 01:41
She started a protest group called The
- 01:43
Silent Sentinels, who stood
- 01:45
in front of the White House every day with signs
- 01:47
crying for suffrage. [old picture of Silent Sentinels]
- 01:49
At first President Wilson was cool with
- 01:51
it and even asked them to come inside on a
- 01:53
rainy day, but, uh, the ladies
- 01:55
were like, "no thanks, we'll
- 01:57
enter the White House when we can actually
- 01:59
vote for the person who's sitting there."
- 02:01
Yeah. Well, things got hairier when
- 02:03
WWI started.
- 02:05
Paul and her crusaders refused
- 02:07
to stop protesting, even though
- 02:09
there were cries that the nation should
- 02:11
be united in the time of war.
- 02:13
Well, instead the Sentinel signs got
- 02:15
even more aggressive, and eventually
- 02:17
anti-suffrage crowds formed around
- 02:19
the ladies. Eventually, Paul
- 02:21
and her followers were arrested by the
- 02:23
police and some were thrown into prison.
- 02:25
The charge? Obstructing
- 02:27
traffic. If you think prison
- 02:29
intimidated Paul, not a chance.
- 02:31
There, she and her followers
- 02:33
insisted that they were political
- 02:35
prisoners, and resisted by refusing
- 02:37
to do prison work and engaging in a
- 02:39
hunger strike. Well, the powers that [women in prison on hunger strike]
- 02:41
be were having none of it, so they said, uh,
- 02:43
"Oh yeah? Well, we'll just
- 02:45
force-feed you and throw you
- 02:47
into the general population. How about
- 02:49
that?" Well, with this harsh crackdown,
- 02:51
Paul's enemies played right into
- 02:53
her hands. Next thing you know, the papers
- 02:55
are reporting all the terrible
- 02:57
treatment they were receiving.
- 02:59
It was one thing to tell a middle-class white
- 03:01
lady who was getting too mouthy to move on down
- 03:03
off the sidewalk. It was a totally
- 03:05
different thing to manhandle her and chuck
- 03:07
her into prison with lower-class criminals
- 03:09
and prostitutes. Proving
- 03:11
once again that sometimes, playing on peoples'
- 03:13
classicism can, uh, get
- 03:15
good things done. Yes, politics is
- 03:17
sticky business. Paul's tactics
- 03:19
ended up working like a charm, and before long
- 03:21
ol' Woody Wilson cracked.
- 03:23
He changed his tune and threw his support behind
- 03:25
the Constitutional amendment. Suddenly,
- 03:27
he was saying that he'd always been for women's
- 03:29
suffrage. He'd just thought it should be
- 03:31
left for the states to decide. [Wilson with a cracked face]
- 03:33
But now with the war on, it was important that
- 03:35
women be allowed to contribute equally
- 03:37
beside men. Yeah, Paul and her
- 03:39
followers probably didn't quite buy it either, but
- 03:41
uh, nothing's black and white. Except
- 03:43
Oreos. And Zebras. Okay, a lot
- 03:45
of things are black and white. Uh, guess we need
- 03:47
to develop a course about colors. [lots of black and white animals and objects]
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