Important people, places, and terms -- Chronology -- pt. 1. Narrative overview -- Prologue -- The origins of the women's suffrage movement -- The beginning of change -- A question of rights -- A movement divided -- A changing of the guard -- Conservatives and radicals -- Winning the vote -- The legacy of women's suffrage -- pt. 2. Biographies -- Susan B. Anthony: women's suffrage pioneer and president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association -- Carrie Chapman Catt: president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association -- Laura Clay: promoter of state-based suffrage and opponent of the Nineteenth Amendment -- Abigail Scott Duniway: women's suffrage activist in the Pacific Northwest -- Lucretia Coffin Mott: religious leader, abolitionist, and women's suffrage pioneer -- Alice Paul: founder and president of the National Woman's Party -- Elizabeth Cady Stanton: women's suffrage pioneer and president of the National Woman's Suffrage Association and the National American Woman Suffrage Association -- Lucy Stone: women's suffrage pioneer and founder of the American Woman Suffrage Association -- Sojourner Truth: abolitionist and women's rights activist -- Ida B. Wells-Barnett: journalist, suffragist, and civil-rights activist -- Woodrow Wilson: President of the United States of America during ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment -- Victoria C. Woodhull -- Women's rights advocate and presidential candidate -- pt. 3. Primary sources -- Declaration of sentiments and resolutions, 1848 Seneca Falls Convention -- Sojourner Truth's "A'n't I a woman?" speech -- Elizabeth Cady Stanton addresses the 1869 National Woman Suffrage Convention -- Divisions at the 1869 American Equal Rights Association meeting -- "The great secession speech of Victoria C. Woodhull" -- Susan B. Anthony reacts to her conviction for unlawful voting -- Francis Parkman recounts arguments against women's suffrage -- Belle Kearney discusses women's suffrage in the South -- Picketing and prison: the experiences of Ernestine Hara Kettler -- The Nineteenth Amendment.
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