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November 7, 2015 Leave a Comment

Women in the 19th Century

Bringing the best history on the web. — From Crash Course, their US History Series, #16. Women in the 19th Century, published on May 23, 2013.


In the 19th Century, the United States was changing rapidly, as we noted in the recent Market Revolution and Reform Movements episodes. Things were also in a state of flux for women. The reform movements, which were in large part driven by women, gave these self-same women the idea that they could work on their own behalf, and radically improve the state of their own lives. So, while these women were working on prison reform, education reform, and abolition, they also started talking about equal rights, universal suffrage, temperance, and fair pay. Women like Susan B. Anthony, Carry Nation, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the Grimkés, and Lucretia Mott strove tirelessly to improve the lot of American women, and it worked, eventually. John will teach you about the Christian Temperance Union, the Seneca Falls Convention, the Declaration of Sentiments, and a whole bunch of other stuff that made life better for women.


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Filed Under: America - North, Daily Life, Latest History Developments, m 1800's Tagged With: Crash Course US History, USA, Women

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