Tumgik
#19thamendment
kelseyraeartistnpc · 3 months
Photo
Tumblr media
🔮✨ Horoscope for February 26th: Today's celestial alignment encourages you to embrace your inner strength and resilience! On this day in 1920, the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution was passed, granting women the right to vote. Let this historic moment inspire you to stand up for what you believe in and empower others to do the same! 💪🗳️
0 notes
dizkidd92806 · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
DISGUSTING! John Gibbs, a Republican congressional candidate in Michigan who Trump endorsed, said the the U.S. suffered from women’s suffrage and praised organizations trying to repeal the 19th amendment. This is the Republican party everyone! #johngibbs #donaldtrump #trump #republicans #womenssuffrage #19thamendment #joebiden #presidentbiden #biden #cnn #michigan #democrats #meidastouch Reposted from @meidastouch https://www.instagram.com/p/Ci1ZZdQrgcd/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
dakineteens · 2 years
Text
Honoring Women's Equality Day
 August 26, 2022
WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE NATIONAL MONUMENT FOUNDATION
Honoring Women's Equality Day
Tumblr media
The 19th Amendment was ratified on August 26, 1920, securing American women's constitutional right to vote and marking what is widely recognized as one of the most significant dates in the history of American democracy.
Decades later, Congress designated August 26, 1973 as the first Women's Equality Day. And every year since 1973, Congress and the President have continued the tradition.
Today, we join President Biden and Americans across our Nation as we commemorate Women's Equality Day and remember the brave and bold women who waged and won the battle for the ballot.
Tumblr media
Tomorrow, our work continues to build a monument in Washington, D.C. that honors the early American movement for women's equality.
1 note · View note
elevateitnow · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
⁣ ⁣ Happy #WomensEqualityDay Ladies! 🤩💃🏽💃🏼💃💃🏿⁣ ⁣ We have come a long way since the 19th amendment gave us the right to vote along with other rights. Some of which have been taken recently. I don’t want to get into the gory details about our ovaries and the old men who think they have the right to make laws against our own bodies. Oh yeah, I said I wasn’t going to get into the details but sorry. I couldn’t let the opportunity to have a mini rant over the whole thing. 😁⁣ ⁣ We still have a long way to go ladies and much to do. Things have changed but our pay is still not the same for all. If these old farts get their way – we will go backward in rights. Don’t let up!💪🏼👊🏼⁣ ⁣ Enough of my thoughts and let’s get back to celebrating US! Tagging some of the most amazing ladies I know! 😍⁣ ⁣ Photo Credit: @IrynaPhotography⁣ ⁣ ⁣ #WomenRock⁣ #EqualityDay⁣ #WomensRights⁣ #WomensEqualityDay2022⁣ #WomenEmpoweringWomen⁣ #BrandingStrategist⁣ #19thAmendment⁣ #WomensRighttoVote⁣ #WomenCMOs⁣ #WomeninBusiness⁣ #WomeninLeadership⁣ #WomenCEOS⁣ #WomeninMarketing⁣ #MarketingAgency⁣ #DigitalMarketingAgency⁣ #DontLetUp⁣ #DigitalMarketingTips⁣ #MarketingforRealEstate⁣ #SmallBusinessMarketing⁣ #MarketingStrategist⁣ #MonicaMalave⁣ #NetworkMarketingPro⁣ #ElevateItNow⁣ #LatinaBusinessOwner⁣ #WomenCEOs⁣ #WomanOwnedBusiness⁣ #BestMarketingAgency⁣ #BrandedPhotography⁣ #WashingtonDC⁣ (at Washington D.C.) https://www.instagram.com/p/Chu6FQAOCT3/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
loversplayground · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
"We honor the struggles and achievements of women and the men who fought with them for the women's right to vote, and we recognize women's progress toward greater equality in society."  — Sandra Eskin
0 notes
tryerofpods · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Let's talk about The Agitators from @prxofficial , @nationalparkservice , and the Women's sufferage centennial commission. I gotta tell ya, I am a mark for historical audio dramas, and I love this one too. The Agitators is a radio play based on the decades long friendship between Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglass. From the beginnings of their friendship up in Rochester, NY to their divide over compromising on universal sufferage to allow for black sufferage first, to their reunion later, it's a truly more nuanced view of Anthony and Douglass than I've had in quite some time. Cedric Mays (Candyman, Chicago Fire) does a beautiful job with the full range of Douglass and Madeline Lambert (Empire, and audiobooks) is wonderful at communicating Anthony's energetic determination. 6, 20-ish minute episodes, so it's ready to get you through part of the work day. So, if you like, Edith!, 1865, or other wonderful historical radio play, then The Agitators is for you!
0 notes
deborahmagone · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
103 yrs ago today the 19th amendment was approved by the #senate . Since then Womyn have been saving democracy one vote at a time. Most recently in 2018, 2020 and next in 2022. #womynsherstory #19thamendment #vote2022 #Womynsavingdemocracy https://www.instagram.com/p/CeZhzGIO7uZ/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
ssoto523-blog · 3 months
Video
youtube
6 Surprising Facts About the 19th Amendment
0 notes
adventuresinhistory · 2 years
Text
Blog Post 8 Digital Project Review Draft
 Dr. Kathleen Thompson’s Ratification of the 19th Amendment: Timeline Map is a digital tour through the US centered on the sites where each state ratified the 19th amendment. This work is a thematic research collection with links to additional works in women’s history. Perhaps poorly named, the project is much more a map and archive than a timeline.
Hosted on Clio, a site typically used for generating local historic walking tours, and an interesting choice for a nationwide “timeline map”. The tour features a Google maps base route to each of the 48 state houses where ratification took place. While the tour through the state house follows the chronological order of ratification the site fails to provided a timeline that truly portrays the difference in speed at which each state ratified the amendment. This is especially unfortunate as the roughly 50 year difference between the first few states to ratify and the last featured, Florida, is reflective of the long fight suffragettes faced to secure women’s rights prior to the introduction of the 19thamendment. 
On the tour, each stop features a quick introduction the to state’s path to ratification. Additionally, digitized pictures, three dimension rendering of the state capitols,  and news articles provide visualizations to enhance the entry. The site’s strongest point comes from the additional information links at each site. These links lead to additional sources on women’s fight for equality in each state. They  feature both additional digital resources as well as places to obtain printed materials on the topic. These link form the basis of the archive which can generate continued research on the subject. 
Besides these outside links, the site is lacking in contextualization. It does not address the historiography of women’s rights. Not only does it fail to fully realized the temporal delays in ratification after congressional adoption of the amendment, it fails to address the larger social, cultural, and economic factors the influenced ratification. 
The  site is very user friendly. The site works well on mobile platforms, which makes it a prime resource for our increasing on the go culture. Additionally, built in speech to text services are available on each page for the stops through out the tour. This increases the sites accessibility for neurodivergent visitors, as well as those with sight-related difficulties. The site also includes full citations for  each page, which can encourage student use of the site in  their own works. 
Overall, the site appears to be more of an archive to support additional research than a fully developed historiographical narrative. As such, it is bound to receive intense scrutiny as a work of scholarly inquiry. However, archival sites like this are equally important in increasing accessibility to historical study as those with clearer narratives. Indeed, one may ever argue sites like this that leave interpretation up to the user are more apt to generating additional research than those that tell the use what to think. 
Bibliography 
Thompson, Kathleen. "Ratification of the 19th Amendment: Timeline Map.” Clio: Your Guide to History. July 7, 2021. Accessed October 25, 2022. https://www.theclio.com/tour/1953
0 notes
librarycompany · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
#OnThisDay in 1920, the 19th Amendment, which granted women the right to vote, was ratified. 
This trade card capitalized on the momentum and popularity of the women's suffrage movement while continuing to perpetuate Victorian era notions of womanhood and domesticity. 
Twelve good reasons why the Woman's Suffrage Stove Polish is preferred to all others (United States: ca. 1880). Chromolithograph.    
32 notes · View notes
whenweallvote · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Happy Women's Equality Day! Today marks the 101st anniversary of the adoption of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. constitution. Today and everyday: here's to the women who speak up, step up, and rise up -- you are the bedrock of this democracy.
1 note · View note
pixoplanet · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
It's August 18th, ♀️ American Women's Suffrage Day. On this day in 1920, a dramatic battle in the Tennessee House of Representatives concluded with the state ratifying the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution. The decisive vote was cast by State Representative Harry T. Burn, who reputedly changed his vote after receiving a note from his mother.
America’s suffrage movement was founded in the mid-19th century by women who worked for the abolitionist and temperance movements. In July 1848, 200 women suffragists, organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott, met in Seneca Falls, New York, to discuss women’s rights. They passed a resolution that declared, “It is the duty of women of this country to secure their sacred right to vote.” Then in 1900, when Carrie Chapman Catt took over from Susan B. Anthony as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, she prioritized the push for a constitutional amendment to give women the right to vote. The National Women’s Party, led by Lucy Burns and Alice Paul, engaged in civil disobedience, targeting President Woodrow Wilson with protests outside the White House.
Facing growing pressure, Wilson personally appealed to Congress for women’s suffrage. Having voted down the amendment six times, the Senate finally approved it and sent it to the House of Representatives. Thanks to Burn's vote, the House approved the amendment, Tennessee ratified it, and the Constitution was changed to guarantee women the right to vote. However, despite the ratification and the decades-long contributions of Black women to achieve suffrage, local laws, poll taxes, and other restrictions continued to prevent Black women (and men) from voting. It would take more than 40 years for all women to achieve voting equality. ☮️ Peace… Jamiese of Pixoplanet
1 note · View note
habituallychic · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Did you know that before last week, there was no statue in @centralparknyc that honored or depicted real life women? The Women’s Right’s Monument of Séjourner Truth, Susan B. Anthony, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton was unveiled to mark the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th amendment and women winning the right to vote. I hope this is just the first of many statues honoring real life women to be planned in Central Park. #monumentalwomen #19thamendment #youbettervote #vote (at Central Park) https://www.instagram.com/p/CEh5pQBH7ds/?igshid=i5nn3bsy4hag
18 notes · View notes
phenomenalgems · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
💎 “So, lifting as we climb, onward and upward we go, struggling and striving, and hoping that the buds and blossoms of our desires will burst forth into glorious fruition ere long.” — Mary Church Terrell. 💎 This week marks 100 years since the 19th amendment was ratified, although the fight to secure American women’s right to vote didn’t end on that day. The women’s suffrage movement was filled with amazing people fighting for the right to speak, and many of their voices (especially those of women of color) were, and continue to be, silenced. 100 years later, we have to continue to fight for ALL of our voices to be heard, and exercise our hard-won right to vote. 💎 My gift to you this week is a beautiful miniature Moonstone tumbled stone, which will be included with orders of any size on PhenomenalGems.Etsy.com! Moonstone is the original goddess stone, and it’s dedicated to all of the amazing women entrepreneurs, mentors and leaders who inspire me. Women pioneers of the world, thank you for your continued strength and struggle! 💎 #suffragettes #womensupportingwomen #womeninspiringwomen #19thamendment #womenssuffrage #moonstone #goddessenergy #inspiredbywomen #divinefeminine #allwomen #blm #adularia #rainbowmoonstone #femaleentrepreneurs #womenownedbusiness #womeninbusiness #womeninpolitics #equalityforall #mentorship #entrepreneurship #leadership #righttovote #vote2020 #votevotevote #useyourvoice #rockthevote #phenomenalgems #etsy #etsyshop #etsycrystals https://www.instagram.com/p/CEFrDChHH7l/?igshid=1bdkgucz9cezc
10 notes · View notes
laurenyurkovich · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
@haightstreetart I’m happy to announce a collaboration with the Haight Street Art Center for the 19th Amendment gallery show. Show opens August 26th in San Francisco. There will be an outdoor exhibit as well as online. - #laurenyurkovich #illustratorsoninstagram #art #contemporaryart #drawing #sanfrancisco #votingrights #makeyourvoiceheard #vote #19thamendment #righttovote #galleryshow #artshow #art #haightstreetartcenter #haightstreet #artistsofinstagram #artist (at San Francisco, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CD7AK2xAPeQ/?igshid=wtsrkhb2qxjt
5 notes · View notes
joelchristiangill · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
On the anniversary of Women Sufferage lets not forget Abolitionist, Suffragist, Poet, Educator Frances E.W Harper. This black woman was leading the way ike every social justice movement they push us to be the best version of ourselves. #19thamendment #28daysarenotenough https://www.instagram.com/p/CEClPa9FXYc/?igshid=i65snxtlmezh
3 notes · View notes