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  1. 4 de jun. de 2019 · World War I Bolstered Global Suffrage Movements. Women's massive participation in the war effort led, in part, to a wave of global suffrage in the wake of the war. Women got the right to vote in ...

  2. The 1979 Islamic Revolution transformed all areas of Iranian life. The state set out to restrict women’s hard-won legal and social rights and to dictate aspects of their lives, including their dress, education opportunities, and relations with men. In Reconstructed Lives, Iranian women tell in their own words what the revolution attempted and how they responded.

  3. The amendment, which granted women the right to vote, represented the pinnacle of the women’s suffrage movement, which was led by the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). In their decades-long struggle for female enfranchisement, women’s rights advocates met with strong opposition from anti-suffrage activists.

  4. 1 de ene. de 2014 · By Lauren Holt, Intern, Catalog of American Portraits, National Portrait Gallery. Elected in 1912, Woodrow Wilson came into office in 1913 with what many considered a neutral stance on foreign matters. It was Wilson’s goal to keep America completely out of World War I, which began in 1914—and have the country serve as a peacemaker to other ...

  5. 2 de feb. de 2024 · Uncancel Woodrow Wilson. Despised as a racist by today’s left and a tyrant by today’s right, the 28th president championed a set of values that our politics sorely lack. Illustration by Jan ...

  6. Executive Office File 89 in Series 4 of the Woodrow Wilson Papers chronicles the fight for women’s suffrage that led to congressional passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in June 1919 and its ratification by the final required thirty-sixth state in August 1920. File 89 spans the years 1912-1921 and was digitized in five chronological sections, each with about one thousand images.

  7. 3 de nov. de 2020 · She was only the second First Lady to support women’s suffrage (after Helen Herron Taft). Margaret Woodrow Wilson was born on April 16, 1886, in Gainesville, Georgia to Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Louise Axson. She was educated at Goucher College in Baltimore, and was trained in piano and voice at the Peabody Institute of Music.