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Leading Proponent Of Women Suffrage In The Right To Vote. Founder Of The (NWSA) National Women Suffrage Association. Which Would Later Become The (NAWSA) National American Women Suffrage Association.
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Susan B. Anythony And Other Women Attempted To Vote At Least 150 Times In Ten States And The District Of Columbia. The Supreme Court Ruled That Womens Were Indeed Citizens But Denied That Citizenship Automatically Conferred The Right To Vote.
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Prohibition Or Alcohol Movement. Entereded Saloons, Singing, Praying, And Urging Saloonkeepers To Stop Selling Aclohol.
Womens Group That Provided Women With Expanded Public Roles, Which They Used To Justify Giving Women Voting Rights. -
NAWSA Formed After NWSA Was The National American Woman Suffrage Association. Its Prominent Leaders Included Lucy Stone And Julia Howe. Many Feared The Changing Role Of Women In Society.
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Returned To The NAWSA In 1915 And Had New Tactics.
1. Painstaking Organization
2. Close Ties Between Local, State, And Nation Workers.
3. Establishing A Wide Base Of Support.
4. Cautious Lobbying
5. Gracious, Ladylike Behavior. -
1919, Congress Passes The 19th Amendment That Grants Women The Right To Vote.