womens rights
Title: womens rights
Category: /History
Details: Words: 1584 | Pages: 6 (approximately 235 words/page)
womens rights
Category: /History
Details: Words: 1584 | Pages: 6 (approximately 235 words/page)
During the early nineteenth century, women participated in numerous efforts
to improve women''s status, defend their interests, and increase their rights.
Educators, such as Emma Willard, Mary Lyon, and Catharine Beecher,
promoted advanced training for women in female academies and seminaries.
Thousands of women in the 1830s and 1840s joined moral reform societies,
organized to end licentiousness, seduction, and prostitution. Female
temperance societies strove to save abused wives and families from drunken
spouses. Individual reformers
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w Deal - the circle of
women around Eleanor Roosevelt - came from the reform-minded wing of
the women''s movement. Like Labor Secretary Frances Perkins and Mary
W. Dewson, head of the Women''s Division of the Democratic party, they
had experience in settlements, women''s clubs, and social welfare, and they
opposed the National Woman''s party position on an era. Often staunch
defenders of women''s interests, they described themselves as reformers, not
feminists.
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