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19th Century Women’s MovementAPUSH - Spiconardi
Influence of the Market Revolution
• Due to the Market Revolution, there were fundamental changes in the defined roles of men & women/husbands & wives• Men worked outside the home six
days a week• Middle class women remained home
with the children• Children no longer as economically
valuable under Market Revolution• Why? • Family size drops from 7.04
members in 1800 to 5.42 in 1830• Women have more leisure time and
devote that time to religious and reform organizations
Temperance was used as one of the leading reasons for women’s suffrage.
Cult of Domesticity• While some middle class women
joined reform movements, others clearly defined the role of women as• Homemakers• Educators of children (Republican
motherhood)
• Cult of Domesticity A widespread cultural belief that glorified the functions of the homemaker
• Cult of True Womanhood• Piety• Purity• Submission• Domesticity
Cult of Domesticity
Woman is to win every thing by peace and love; by making herself so much respected, esteemed and loved, that to yield to her opinions and to gratify her wishes, will be the free-will offering of the heart. But this is to be all accomplished in the domestic and social circle…But the moment woman begins to feel the promptings of ambition, or the thirst for power, her aegis of defence is gone. All the sacred protection of religion, all the generous promptings of chivalry, all the poetry of romantic gallantry, depend upon woman's retaining her place as dependent and defenceless, and making no claims, and maintaining no right but what are the gifts of honour, rectitude and love. ~Catharine Beecher
Abolition Movement and Women• Many women
participated in the anti-slavery movement, but were often marginalized and relegated to secondary roles
• The Grimke Sisters• Angelina & Sarah Grimke
objected to conservative criticism of female involvement in abolitionism• Sarah writes her Letter on
the Condition of Women and the Equality of the Sexes (1837)
Angelina Sarah
Abolition Movement and Women
• Lucretia Mott & Elizabeth Cady Stanton• After being excluded from an anti-slavery convention in
London, Mott and Stanton decide to take an active role in advocated for women’s rights
“The general discontent I felt with woman's portion as wife, housekeeper, physician, and spiritual guide, the chaotic conditions into which everything fell without her constant supervision, and the wearied, anxious look of the majority of women, impressed me with a strong feeling that some active measures should be taken to remedy the wrongs of society in general, and of women in particular. My experience at the World Anti-slavery Convention, all I had read of the legal status of women, and the oppression I saw everywhere, together swept across my soul, intensified now by many personal experiences. It seemed as if all the elements had conspired to impel me to some onward step. I could not see what to do or where to begin—my only thought was a public meeting for protest and discussion.” ~ Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Seneca Falls Convention (1848)
• Seventy women and thirty men (including Frederick Douglas) attend the Seneca Falls Convention
• The convention repudiates the natural inferiority of women and the ideology of separate spheres
• Attendees resolved to “employ agents, circulate tracts, petition State and National legislatures, and endeavor to enlist the pulpit and the press” on behalf on women’s rights
…either the theory of our government [government rests on the will of the
people] is false, or women have a right to vote.
Opposition and Ridicule
Opposition and Ridicule