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New Women In The Old West

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This compelling history of the American West is uniquely told through the lens of pioneering women who seized the challenges of migration and settlement to advocate for their rights, ultimately transforming the nation. Between 1840 and 1910, countless men and women ventured into the largely undeveloped West, drawn by adventure and the notion of Manifest Destiny. As the U.S. expanded, a significant social shift occurred: survival in a nascent settler society required both partners to work hard, prompting women to adopt roles traditionally held by men. Despite having limited legal, economic, and political rights, these women proved essential to westward expansion and fought for equality, becoming among the first American women to vote long before the Nineteenth Amendment. During the mid-nineteenth century, the struggle for women's suffrage was radical, as the concept of womanhood evolved to include public service. Western women emerged as co-providers and community leaders, establishing schools, churches, and philanthropies. They claimed homesteads and attended new coeducational colleges, creating career paths beyond marriage. In 1869, Wyoming men granted women the right to vote, partly to attract more settlers, and this victory spurred relentless efforts for suffrage across the region. By 1914, most western women could vote, a right still denied to their eastern counterparts. Drawing on extensive research, Gallagher highlight

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New Women In The Old West, Winifred Gallagher

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2022
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