There were many social developments that affected American society. For example, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries there was the women's suffrage movement and the mass media. Thanks to women's suffrage, women gained the right to vote, men began to see women as equals, and women finally had a voice of their own. With the mass media, people quickly obtained information from the radio, television and newspapers. People were being noticed about what was happening in society. Without mass media people around the world would not know about things like the women's suffrage movement. We have gone from women being treated as irrelevant to the importance of women in politics, and from poor communication to global connections. Women's suffrage began. The development of suffrage increased women's desires. In the early 20th century, women had the ability to go to school and prepare for callings, although not in the same numbers as men. They began carrying out man-mandated callings such as law, solution, pastorate, and corporate. Additionally, the women have launched a group of new foundations. The development of women's suffrage took women into consideration to secure their place in the public arena and take a step closer to achieving equity among the American population. Following the women's suffrage movement, women's financial advantages expanded in the public eye. Since there were more educational open doors for women, this pushed more women to perceive their potential for important professional professions. Similarly, women's wage rates have increased, but not to the amount earned by men. On the other hand, this was still a huge achievement for the women because it was such a major feat from what it had been for some time. The movement inspired men, they saw how strong women were. The movement improved the way men viewed women. From the beginning of the development of women's suffrage, men were included as dynamic supporters. Some abolitionist men were supporters of women's rights. The 1848 Seneca Falls Convention was run by Lucretia Mott's wife, James Mott. Thirty-two men, including Frederick Douglass, signed the Declaration of Sentiments. After the Civil War, some men were included in the American Equal Rights Association (AERA), the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA), and later the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). AWSA was actually helped to found by Lucy Stone and her husband, Henry Blackwell. Men were also included in the development of suffrage in the twentieth century. Starting around 1910, men began to structure men's leagues for women's suffrage. Between the 1910s and 1920s, male state legislators agreed to pass women's suffrage measures for state voters. Many male voters voted in favor of these measures. Union men, in particular, were regularly solid supporters of women's suffrage. In Tennessee, the last state that was supposed to pass the Nineteenth Amendment, a young state congressman wanted to vote against women's suffrage. On the other hand, after hearing his mother's requests, he promised to vote in favor of suffrage
tags