Transcript Document

The Struggle
for Equality
Path to Abolishing Slavery
• The Constitutional Convention would
have failed without a compromise on
slavery.
• Counted slaves as 3/5ths of person
• Returned runaway slaves to their
owners
In the Constitution
What terms are used
to describe African
Americans?
The Framers Use
terms like,
“All other persons
and such people”
What was the
Missouri
Compromise
of 1820
Divided new lands into
“slave” territories and
“free” territories.
Who was
Dred Scott?
Dred Scott Case 1857
• A Slave from South
• Traveled and lived in North
– Slavery was illegal in this territory
• After coming back to Missouri, Scott
argued he should be free
• Court ruled that according to the
Constitution – Slaves were property
th
14
Amendment - 1868
• Ensured Citizenship for Citizens
Takes power away from states to
grant citizenship
• Sometimes called the 2nd Bill of
Rights
th
14
Did the
Amendment ensure
equal treatment of
African Americans?
NO!
Many states
created new ways
to segregate.
What is suffrage?
The Right to VOTE
th
15
Amendment 1870
• States may not deny the vote to any
person on the basis of “race, color, or
previous condition of servitude”
• What did they forget????????
WOMEN!!!
th
24 Amendment
1964
• Southern states were using a poll tax to
prevent African Americans from voting.
• This amendment made poll taxes illegal
The Path to Suffrage
• For African Americans
• For Women
• For Young Adults
African Americans
• Even though the Constitution banned
slavery, the struggle for citizenship and
right to vote had only just begun.
Women’s Suffrage
Movement
When the Constitution was
written, only white men had the
right to vote.
Women also did not have many
other rights such as the right to
own property or to be educated
for certain jobs.
As time passed, many people
came to feel that this was unfair
and that women should have the
same rights as men in our country.
Women’s suffrage (right to vote)
became an organized movement in
1848 at a convention in New York.
Women’s Suffrage Parade in
New York City
Susan B. Anthony
Susan B. Anthony was
born February 15, 1820
in Adams, Massachusetts.
1871 Arrested for voting
in a presidential election
Her speech, “We, the
people, not we, the white
male citizens, nor yet we,
the male citizens……..”
Elizabeth
Cady Stanton
In 1851 Stanton met
Susan B. Anthony and for
the next fifty years they
worked together. Stanton wrote and gave
speeches that called for the improvement
of the legal and traditional rights of
women, and Anthony organized and
campaigned to achieve these goals.
Lucretia Mott
Lucretia Mott helped to organize and call
together the first women's rights
convention in Seneca Falls, New York in
July of 1848.
Seneca Falls Convention
• We hold these truths to be self evident.
• 1848
Sojourner Truth
Truth became a speaker on
women's rights issues after
attending a Women's Rights
Convention in 1850.
One thing
that had to be
done, was to
let the people
of each state
vote on the
idea.
Finally after years of hard work,
the 19th Amendment was added to
the Constitution of the United
States in August of 1920.
Amendment XIX
The right of citizens of the
United States to vote shall not be
denied or abridged by the United
States or by any state on account
of sex.
The End
(but really just the beginning)