*Alice Paul
*&Lucy Burns.
Alice Paul& Lucy Burns were in the iron jawed angels.
you can look these names up on google to get more information.
and Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony were some of the main people
and other supporters were Lucretia Mott, Abigail Adams, Lucy Stone, and Florence F. Noyes.
No one really opposed the 19th amendment. This is so because it allowed women to vote, in 1920 only land owning white men could vote.
Democrats largely opposed it's passage, blocking it from 1878 onward. It was not until 1918, with a GOP majority finally in the House and Senate, that the 19th was finally put to a vote for ratification.
17th amendment.
The 19th amendment was passed giving the right to vote.
Yup! The 19th Amendment stated that you cannot deny any sex to vote. Hence, both women and men could vote. Due to the 15th Amendment, you cannot deny a person to vote due to race, so now all citizens of the United States were eligible to vote after the 19th Amendment.
Word got out to the public that she was on a hunger strike and how the people were treating her. It made it look really bad on the president so, he got all of the women out of jail and passed the 19th amendment.
Women were given the right to vote under the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution. That amendment was ratified on August 18, 1920.
the 19th amendment protects to voting of women
The 19th amendment
because she passed the 19th amendment.
Women got the right to vote in the 19th amendment.
The 19th Amendment gave women the right to vote. The 19th amendment was known as "Women's Suffrage", and this gave women the many rights that men did.
The 19th Amendment
The 19th amendment
No. Woodrow Wilson did. See wikipedia's article on the 19th amendment.
The 19th Amendment gave women suffrage, or, the legal right to vote.
Women got the right to vote in the 19th amendment. There is no specific amendment that gives women "rights", one amendment was proposed but it was never ratified.
The 19th Amendment
The 19th Amendment gave women the right to vote (August 26, 1920.)