Cover image for Before equal suffrage women in partisan politics from colonial times to 1920
Before equal suffrage women in partisan politics from colonial times to 1920
Title:
Before equal suffrage women in partisan politics from colonial times to 1920
Author:
Dinkin, Robert J.
ISBN:
9780313031427
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 1995.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (166 p.)
Series:
Contributions in women's studies, no. 152

Contributions in women's studies ; no. 152.
Contents:
Acknowledgments; Introduction; Chapter 1 The Colonial and Revolutionary Periods; Chapter 2 The Early National and Jacksonian Periods; Chapter 3 The Civil War Period; Chapter 4 The Postwar Decades: Suffrage and Politics; Chapter 5 Reform Politics and Partisan Activity; Chapter 6 Women Begin to Vote; Chapter 7 Politics and the Suffrage Amendment; Notes; Bibliographic Essay; Index.
Abstract:
Dispelling the myth that women became involved in partisan politics only after they obtained the vote, this study uses contemporary newspaper sources to show that women were active in the party struggle long before 1920. Although their role was initially limited to attending rallies and hosting picnics, they gradually began to use their pens and voices to support party tickets. By the late 19th century, women spoke at party functions and organized all-female groups to help canvass neighborhoods and get out the vote. In the early suffrage states of the West, they voted in increasing numbers and.
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