The Changing Status of Women
Interpreting Statistics
Man is or should be woman's protector and defender. The natural and proper timidity and delicacy which belongs to the female sex evidently unfits it for many of the occupations of civil life....The paramount destiny and mission of women...to fulfill [is] the noble and benign office of wife and mother. This is the law of the Creator. And the rules of civil society must be adapted to the general constitution of things, and cannot be based on exceptional cases.Supreme Court, 1873, upholding an Illinois law which prohibited women from becoming attorneys
Under the operation of this amendment what will become of the family...? You will have a family with two heads--a "house divided against itself." You will no longer have that healthful and necessary subordination of wife to husband, and that unit of relationship which is required by a true and Christian marriage.
Senator Thomas Bayard, 1874, attacking women's suffrage
Housewives! You do not need a ballot to clean out your sink spout. A handful of potash and some boiling water is quicker and cheaper....Control of the temper makes a happier home than control of elections....Good cooking lessens alcoholic craving quicker than a vote on local option.
Women's Anti-Suffrage Association of Massachusetts
In a crowded city quarter, however, if the street is not cleaned by the city authorities no amount of private sweeping will keep the tenement free from grime; if the garbage is not properly collected and destroyed a tenement house mother may see her children sicken and die of diseases from which she alone is powerless to shield them, although her tenderness and devotion are unbounded. She cannot even secure untainted meat for her household, she cannot provide fresh fruit, unless the meat has been inspected by city officials, and the decayed fruit, which is so often placed upon sale in the tenement districts, has been destroyed in the interests of public health....If women would effectively continue their old avocations they must take part in the slow upbuilding of that code of legislation which is alone sufficient to protect the home from the dangers incident to modern life.
Jane Addams
This government is menaced with great danger....That danger lies in the votes possessed by the males in the slums of the cities, and the ignorant foreign vote which was sought to be brought up by each party, to make political success....There is but one way to avert the danger--cut off the vote of the slums and give to woman, who is bound to suffer all, and more than man can, of the evils his legislation has brought upon the nation, the power of protecting herself that man has secured for himself--the ballot.
Carrie Chapman Catt
Questions To Think About
1. Identify the arguments advanced to justify a second-class role for late 19th century American women?
2. No group of American men opposed extending the vote to themselves; why did some women oppose extending the vote to women?
3. What were some of the arguments used by supporters of women's suffrage?
The Changing Lives of American Women
Interpreting Statistics
The Changing Family Age of First Marriage Average Household Size Male Female 1790 -- -- 5.79 1890 26.1 22.0 4.93 1900 25.9 21.9 4.76 1910 25.1 21.6 4.54 1920 24.6 21.2 4.34 1930 24.3 21.3 4.11 1940 24.3 21.5 3.77 1950 22.8 20.3 3.52
Age of Mothers at Various Stages of the Family Life Cycle 1880 1920 1950 Age of first marriage 22 21 20 Birth of first child 23 23 23 Birth of last child 34 31 30 Marriage of last child 55 54 51 Death of one spouse 56 65 66
Questions To Think About
1. Describe the basic changes that have taken place in the timing of key events of women's lives.
2. How have these changes in your view altered the nature of family life?
Interpreting Statistics
Changes in Birth Rate and Divorce Rate Birth Rate 1800:
7-8 children per mother 1900:
3.5 children per mother
Changes in Divorce Rate Divorce Percentage of those married in that year that eventually divorced 1870 8% 1890 10% 1900 12% 1920 18% 1930 24% 1940 26% 1950 30% 1960 39% 1970 48%
Questions To Think About
1. What factors, in your view, contributed to the decline in the birth rate?
2. Has the divorce rate risen sharply or gradually? What factors might have contributed to the increasing divorce rate?
Interpreting Statistics
Women in the Labor Force 1900 1930 Percentage of women in the labor force 20.6 % 24.8 % Proportion of labor force made up of women 18.1 % 21.9 %
Occupational Distribution of Women Workers1900 1930 Professionals 8 14 Managers 1 3 Clerical and sales 8 28 Skilled artisans 1 1 Operatives and laborers 26 19Domestic Servants 29 18Other Service Workers 7 10Farmers 6 2Farm Laborers 13 6
Questions To Think About
1. What proportion of women worked in 1900? in 1930?
2. How did the occupational distribution of women workers change over time?
Study Aid
Woman Suffrage
Before 1920Wyoming 1869 Utah 1870 Colorado 1893 Idaho 1896 Washington 1910 California 1911 Arizona 1912 Kansas 1912 Oregon 1912 Alaska 1913 Montana 1914 Nevada 1914 New York 1917 Michigan 1918 Oklahoma 1918 South Dakota 1918
Questions To Think About
1. Which states gave women the vote first?
2. Why those particular states?