women's suffrage

     

The term women's suffrage refers to the economic an political reform movement aimed at extending suffrage — the right to vote — to women. The movement's origins are usually traced to the United States in the 1820s. The answer to the question of which country was the first to give women the right to vote in national elections depends on the definition of 'country' being used, and whether to count countries which no longer exist.

Trivia about women's suffrage

  • Woolf was active in this cause which she wrote "roused in man an extraordinary desire for self-assertion"
  • In 1878 an amendment for this was introduced in Congress; its adoption didn't occur until 1920
  • In 1909 Marion Wallace-Dunlop, best known for this cause, got out of prison after a 91-hour fast