Women's Suffrage Movement Research Paper

Words: 664
Pages: 3

During the women's suffrage movement, when women were sent to jail, they were forced to be fed. Back in the late 1800s and early 1900s, women were treated like they did not matter and that they were worthless. Men called them names and there were many fights between police, men, and women. Women were not allowed to vote, if they had kids the kids could not live with them, and when men and women fought the women would always be the ones in trouble. For this to stop, women started a suffrage movement to allow them to vote. Women used devotion, fearlessness, and leadership. One major factor in winning suffrage was the devotion of the leaders. To begin, Alice Paul and Lucy Burns led suffragists to stand up for women's rights by picketing in front of the White House. The women ended up being arrested and sent …show more content…
One Woman, One Vote. This shows that winning suffrage was the devotion of the leaders because the women decided to protest for their own rights but everything became a major fight. This ended up leading the women to jail, which made them all go on a hunger strike. This then led to the warden force-feeding the women by putting a tub down their throats. These women never gave up and put all their effort into having freedom and their own rights, they became fearless. Secondly, many of the women were fearless while stuck in jail. During the women's rights movement, women who were arrested were fearless if they were punished or abused. While in jail, Alice Paul was majorly abused and hurt, but she did not give up. Many of the women started putting up with a hunger strike until they looked ill and the warden could not keep putting up with it so they started putting a tub down their thoughts to make sure they finished the food (Van Garnier). Women also got names called but stayed strong. The men called the women childlike and incapable of independent thought (“Why Women Couldn’t