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Teaching with Primary Sources: Women's Suffrage in the United States

Your Librarians

Developed by:

Laura Micham, Director, Sallie Bingham Center for Women’s History and Culture, Rubenstein Library (laura.m@duke.edu)

 and

Meg Brown, Head, Exhibition Services and E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation Exhibits Librarian (meg.brown@duke.edu)

Brief Overview

Bluebird sign

The campaign for women’s voting rights lasted almost eight decades starting in the middle of the 19th century. Considered the largest reform movement in United States history, its participants believed that securing the vote was essential to achieving women’s economic, social, and political equality. Though the dominant narrative of the movement has focused on white women who benefited from the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment more than Black, Indigenous, and Women of Color (BIWOC), this module and the exhibitions it’s based on seek to highlight a diversity of historical figures and viewpoints throughout.

In this session learners will use a range of textual and visual primary sources to understand the perspectives of activists, politicians, and others for and against suffrage through a critical analysis of primary sources.

Learning Objectives

  • Identify and analyze a variety of primary sources, such as letters, pamphlets, maps, photographs, and ephemera. 
  • Explore ways that people advocated for and against women’s right to vote.
  • Learn more about the history of women’s suffrage and other voting rights struggles in the United States

Primary Source Example