The Suffrage Movement

By Megan Gibson Friday, Aug. 12, 2011

suffrage

Timing is everything, especially when it comes to a rally. One of the largest protests of the suffrage movement happened the day before Woodrow Wilson was to be inaugurated as President in 1913. Between 5,000 to 8,000 suffragists marched down Pennsylvania Avenue, past the White House — and hundreds of thousands of onlookers. Organizers Alice Paul and Lucy Burns had secured a permit to march, however, many protesters were assaulted by those in the crowd who opposed the women’s right-to-vote campaign. Attacks ranged from spitting and throwing of objects to all-out physical assaults. While many women were injured, public outrage at the violence translated to wider support for the suffrage movement.

Read more: http://www.time.com

 

 

More From Author

What happened to America’s economic growth after big ten-day falls in the Dow?

Mobile Phones Then and Now

Leave a Reply

Map of the Iron Curtain

Iron Curtain
Map of Iron Curtain

Cherokee Morning Song

Let them eat cake.

Marie Antoinette: Let them eat cake.
“Let them eat cake.”

Pages

The Birth of the World Wide Web

Research History