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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.

Language:
English Language

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

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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