Citizens of England were allowed to vote in the 18th century.
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Men over the age of 60 could vote in Athenian democracy.
Suffragettes alone weren't allowed to vote, all women could not vote. Suffragettes were only women who were protesting the lack of the right to vote.
The Half-Way Covenant was a form of partial church membership created by New England in 1662. The Halfway Covenant allowed children of these members to be baptized, but they could not accept communion or vote.
Prior to 1865, only white men. Following the Civil War, black men could also vote (except where disenfranchised by various laws in the South). Women could not legally vote in most of the nation until 1920, although several tried. They were able to vote earlier in countries such as France and New Zealand.
It was three Estates, each with a single vote.