Women’s Suffrage Time Line : Important History

The table below shows key events in the struggle for women's suffrage in America. Kids today, do not realize what our women ancestors did to get women's rights. Is it still taught in schools? It should!

1837 Young teacher Susan B. Anthony asked for equal pay for women teachers.
1848 July 14: call to a woman's rights convention appeared in a Seneca County, New York, newspaper.

July 19-20: Woman's Rights Convention held in Seneca Falls, New York, issuing the Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments

1850 October: first National Woman's Rights Convention was held in Worcester, Massachusetts.
1851 Sojourner Truth defends woman's rights and "Negroes' rights" at a women's convention in Akron, Ohio.
1855 Lucy Stone and Henry Blackwell married in a ceremony renouncing the legal authority of a husband over a wife, and Stone kept her last name.
1866 American Equal Rights Association to join causes of black suffrage and women's suffrage
1868 New England Woman Suffrage Association founded to focus on woman suffrage; dissolves in a split in just another year.

January 8: first issue of The Revolution appeared.

1869 American Equal Rights Association splits.

National Woman Suffrage Association founded primarily by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

November: American Woman Suffrage Association founded in Cleveland, created primarily by Lucy Stone, Henry Blackwell, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, and Julia Ward Howe.

December 10: Wyoming territory passed a law permitting women to vote.

1872 Republican Party platform included a reference to woman suffrage.

Campaign was initiated by Susan B. Anthony to encourage women to register to vote and then vote, using the Fourteenth Amendment as justification.

November 5: Susan B. Anthony and others attempted to vote; some, including Anthony, are arrested.

June 1873 Susan B. Anthony was tried for "illegally" voting.
1878 January 10: The "Anthony Amendment" to extend the vote to women was introduced into the United States Congress.

First Senate committee hearing on the Anthony Amendment.

1880 Lucretia Mott died.
1887 Three volumes of a history of the woman suffrage effort were published, written primarily by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Mathilda Jocelyn Gage.
1890 American Woman Suffrage Association and National Woman Suffrage Association merge into the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
1893 Colorado passed a referendum giving women the vote.

Lucy Stone died.

1887 January 25: The United States Senate voted on woman suffrage for the first time -- and also for the last time in 25 years.
1896 Utah and Idaho passed woman suffrage laws.
1900 Carrie Chapman Catt became president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
1902 Elizabeth Cady Stanton died.
1904 Anna Howard Shaw became president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
1906 Susan B. Anthony died.
1910 Washington State established woman suffrage.
1912 May 4: Women marched up Fifth Avenue in New York City, demanding the vote.
1913 Women in Illinois were given the vote in most elections -- the first state East of the Mississippi to pass a woman suffrage law.

Alice Paul formed the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage, first within the National American Woman Suffrage Association.

May 4: About 5,000 paraded for woman suffrage up Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, DC.

1914 The Congressional Union split from the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
1915 Carrie Chapman Catt elected to presidency of the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
1916 The Congressional Union recreated itself as the National Woman's Party.
1917 National American Woman Suffrage Association officers meet with President Wilson. (photo)

National Woman's Party began picketing the White House.

June: Arrests began of pickets at the White House.

Montana elected Jeannette Rankin to the United States Congress.

1918 January 10: House of Representatives passed the Anthony Amendment but the Senate failed to pass it.

March: A court declared invalid the White House suffrage protest arrests.

1919 May 21: United States House of Representatives passed the Anthony Amendment again.

June 4: United States Senate approved the Anthony Amendment.

1920 August 18: Tennessee legislature ratified the Anthony Amendment by a single vote, giving the Amendment the necessary states for ratification.

August 24: Tennessee governor signed the Anthony Amendment.

August 26: United States Secretary of State signed the Anthony Amendment into law.

1923 Equal Rights Amendment introduced into the United States Congress.

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