ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Policy Videos 6 videos

War on Drugs
2767 Views

For years, the government has tried to deal with drugs in the United States. Unfortunately, many historians agree that the War on Drugs was great i...

Reaganomics
10461 Views

We just love turning our Presidents’ names into other things. Reaganomics. Obamacare. Nixonopoly.

All the Suffrage Ladies
4323 Views

This video summarizes the history of women’s rights movements, discussing notable women’s rights figures like Angelina Grimké, Elizabeth Cady...

See All

All the Suffrage Ladies 4323 Views


Share It!


Description:

This video summarizes the history of women’s rights movements, discussing notable women’s rights figures like Angelina Grimké, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and Susan B. Anthony. These women fought against their oppressors and even sought more rights for other members of society.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:07

Women’s Suffrage.

00:08

You may have heard about a little thing called The Revolutionary War...

00:12

...when the American colonies declared themselves free of their British oppressors.

00:16

They made a big deal about freedom and democracy...

00:18

...and the new country provided civil rights for its citizens...

00:22

...its male citizens, that is.

00:25

Women were a completely different story.

00:27

They couldn’t vote...

00:29

...they had trouble holding onto property...

00:31

...and no one would even think of paying them what a man earned.

00:34

How times have changed, huh?

00:36

Guess someone was taking that “all men are created equal” line just a little too literally.

00:42

So, how and when did everything change?

00:45

And more importantly, who were the people who helped change it?

00:48

One of the first voices for change belonged to Angelina Grimké. <<Grim-key>>

00:52

Born in South Carolina in 1805, she was the daughter of a slave-owning judge...

00:58

...and she was uncomfortable with the whole notion of slavery.

01:01

She joined the newly formed American Anti-Slavery Society to fight for the cause.

01:07

She started equating the oppression of blacks to the oppression of women...

01:11

...and by 1838 she was writing a series of essays lobbying for women’s rights...

01:15

...and speaking in front of thousands.

01:18

She eventually became the first woman invited to speak

01:21

in front of the Massachusetts State Legislature.

01:24

It may not sound like a bangin’ time to you, but she was pretty excited.

01:28

After retiring to raise a family...

01:30

...Grimke ran a boarding school that taught many abolitionists’ children…

01:33

...including the children of another women’s rights pioneer, Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

01:38

Born into a ton of moolah in 1815, Elizabeth Cady excelled in school...

01:43

...but that didn’t help her much when it came time to go to college.

01:47

After insisting that “obey” be omitted from the vows, she married Edward Stanton...

01:52

...and juggled her roles as wife and mother while changing the world.

01:56

Sounds like a 21st Century woman, if you ask us.

01:59

In 1840, Stanton was denied seating at The Anti-Slavery Convention

02:03

simply because she was a woman.

02:05

She later joined forces with another excluded delegate, Lucretia Mott.

02:10

Together they organized the first Women’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, NY in 1848...

02:16

...where Stanton wrote The Declaration of Sentiments...

02:19

...asserting that men and women were created equal.

02:23

Not long after the Convention, Stanton met Susan B. Anthony...

02:26

...who shared her views on abolition and the evils of alcohol...

02:30

...as well as her passion for women’s rights.

02:32

Anthony was born in 1820 in Massachusetts.

02:36

First employed as a teacher...

02:37

...she fought for equal wages for women...

02:39

... and took a leading role in the anti-slavery and temperance movements.

02:44

Stanton and Anthony were the perfect pair...

02:46

...whose skills complemented each other...

02:48

. . .for nearly 50 years.

02:50

Starting to see any kind of a pattern here?

02:52

Women’s rights weren’t the only thing these women were fighting for.

02:56

Finally, there was some light at the end of the tunnel.

02:59

The 15th Amendment, which enfranchised black males but not women, was passed.

03:04

Opposed to anything less than universal suffrage, Stanton and Anthony lobbied against it.

03:09

They started a women’s rights journal called The Revolution...

03:12

...and their own suffragist group called the National Women’s Suffrage Association.

03:16

And, oh yeah, Anthony got herself arrested in 1872

03:20

when she demanded to be allowed to vote.

03:22

Of course, Anthony wasn’t about to pay any fine...

03:26

...and the government didn’t want to rile things up going after it...

03:33

. . .so that 100 bucks was never paid.

03:36

Even though the two feuding suffrage groups reunited in 1890. . .

03:39

. . .their dream of voting equality wouldn’t be realized until 1920.

03:44

Although they never lived to see it. . .

03:45

. . .their efforts to gain equality for women finally materialized.

03:53

Well, sort of.

Related Videos

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
39794 Views

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government

John Hawkins
255 Views

John Hawkins was may have been the most interesting man in the world. He doesn’t always hijack ships, but when he does... he prefers for them to...

Betty Friedan
650 Views

Betty Frieden was one of the leading influences (arguably the starting one) in women's rights. She argued for gender equality everywhere— from th...

Benjamin Franklin
21628 Views

What do the light bulb, the post office, the lightning rod, the Constitution, and the modern fire department have in common? They were all invented...

The Dred Scott Case
20640 Views

Who was Dred Scott? He was the former slave who took his case for freedom to the Supreme Court but sadly lost the case. (Although here's a bittersw...