Women Suffrage and Public Life

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    Womens Suffrage and Public Life

    Women's suffrage.
  • Women Accepting Colleges Begin

    Women Accepting Colleges Begin
    Oberlin College in Ohio in America to accepts women
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    Women's Opportunitites Increase

    Over mostly the 1800s and the beginning over the 1900s women were given more opportunites to become higher in society and were allowed to do things they previously couldn't.
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    Higher Education

    Colleges were beginning to accept women into their all men colleges and were thus given more opportunities.
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    Women Gain Political Experience

    Women begin to have more of a say of what happens in the country and state related things. They got more attention in the political world.
  • More Women in College

    More Women in College
    20% of college women of all college students are women.
  • Low Artists

    Low Artists
    Only 412 artists.
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    Employment Opportunites

    Job opportunites begin to increase more and more as time went on. Most of the opportunites began during the late 1870s.
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    Crusade Against Alcohol

    Woman's Christian Remperance Union and the Anti-Saloon League, lef an organized crusade against alcohol. Frances willard headed the WCTU. Willard made the WCU a powerful force for temperance and for rights of women.
  • More Women In College

    More Women In College
    More than one-third of college students are women.
  • More Artists

    More Artists
    An increase to 11,207 artists.
  • Carry Nation Campaigning

    Evangelist Carry Nation took her campaign right to the source.
  • Children's Health and Welfare

    Lillian Wald successfuly campaigned tirelessly for the creation of a federal agency to meet the goal to end child labor, improve children's health, and promote education.
  • Women In American Medical Association

    Women In American Medical Association
    The American Midical Association finally accepted women. Other professional opportunitites also denied them.
  • Prohibiting Alcohol

    Prohibittionists eventually won Congress to their cause. Congress proposed the Eighteenth Amendment, which prohibited the manufacture, sale, and distribution of alcoholic beverages.