How Did Alice Paul Influence The Women's Suffrage Movement

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WS311 Assignment 3 Women in Politics Alice Paul Alice Paul born on January 11, 1985, in Moorestown, NJ. She and family lived in the small Quaker community of Moorestown. One of the beliefs of the Quakers was equality of the sexes. As a young girl Alice attended the Quaker suffrage meetings with her mother. Influenced by her Quaker family, she studied at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania. Her father aided her through school and after she graduated in 1905 she went on to attend the New York School of Philanthropy. She majored in sociology, and spent all of her spare time working for the women suffrage in New York. Later earning a master’s degree in sociology. Women had no voice in either England or America to change any laws. Paul’s ambition…show more content…
Despite being warned of imprisonment she joined the women's suffrage movement in Britain and was arrested on several occasions, serving time in jail and going on a hunger strike. This did not prevent her from sneaking into political events, she still protested the government’s refusal to let women speak publicly, by not eating. Even though it was a difficult time in her life, she still managed to stand up for what she believed in. When she returned to the United States in 1910, Paul became involved in the women’s suffrage movement there as well. Driven also to change other laws that affected women, she earned a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1912. She was then appointed chair of the Congressional Committee of the National American Woman Suffrage Association I 1912. It campaigned for the passage of a federal amendment and for a time functioned concurrently with the new Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage, founded by Alice Paul in April 1913. She strived for everything she believed in. Alice Paul paved the way for many women to believe that they equal to men and should have the right to speak out, vote do all the things men were able to do. Her beliefs shaped her political career because it caused her to form an alliance with many women to start protests and strikes. She did what she knew was right causing her political beliefs and
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