19th Amendment (1920, July) Section 1 The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied by the United States or by any state on account of sex. Section 2 Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
Susan B. Anthony was one of the more influential women, and likely the answer you're looking for.
However, for a woman to let other women vote, it would imply she had power over that privilege in the first place. I believe you mean to ask the nature of the person whose name they've pinned on a group effort. Please see above.
Are you thinking perhaps of the Suffragette Movement which agitated for the right of women to vote?
It was once thought that politics was masculine and a man's business while a woman's business was taking care of the household. The Greeks did it this way when they formed a democracy and it stuck through the times.
Women in the United States were given the right to vote by the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution. The Amendment was ratified by Congress on August 18, 1920.
e.0 WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT....NO ONE SAID WOMAN CANT VOTE ITS A LAW
victor boynton
ME!
woman couldnt vote
Woman couldnt vote in Athens because, only people with land can vote. Woman couldnt own land, thus, not being allowed to vote :)
she was a women so she couldnt vote
She traveled across the country and made speeches about how women should be able to vote and why black men could and women couldnt. She was the reason the 19th amendment was created. She IS the reason women can vote.
She traveled across the country and made speeches about how women should be able to vote and why black men could and women couldnt. She was the reason the 19th amendment was created. She IS the reason women can vote.
that you couldnt vote because they thought you were dumber and you just cleaned and gave birth to the babies
Woodrow Wilson was the president that signed the bill to let Women vote
three women
New Zealand in 1893 is often said to be the first country in the world to give women the right to vote.
American women were not allowed to vote according to the US Constitution in 1787. Although it was not said expressly that women could not vote, only men are listed as potential voters.
Alice Paul did not care what women would do with the vote - she said it was a myth that women were deemed morally superior and would use their vote as such. Voting was simply a woman's constitutional right.
fist them