Why did women fail to get the vote before 1914?

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Gemma Higgins Why did women fail to get the vote before 1914? I’m going to look at women’s rights between 1800 and 1900 to see why women did not get the vote before 1914, and if the suffragettes affected this. In the 1800's women's rights were not good. Until 1870 married women could not keep their earnings to possessions, even their children, they all belonged to her husband. Women were also considered their husband's possession, until 1884. Also during this time, men could divorce their wife for adultery, but women couldn't divorce their husbands’ tor any reason, he had complete control over her. Demands for the emancipations of women from masculine control started after the developments of girls’ education in the second half of the nineteenth century (1800's). The increased of public schools and university colleges for 'young ladies' and the start of state elementary schools led to important social changes. Women from wealthy families became dissatisfied with their way of like, while before they had been content with having a small education of general knowledge, music and a few house-keeping skills, they were fed up of remaining idle. Middle-class women, who ran the house while their husbands worked, and whose own wishes and ambitions came second to her husband’s and families needs, also wanted some education like the upper-class which required them being able to vote. Both classes were less independent than the working class
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women, who went out to work, but they still also had to raise a family put their wage into the house and also got paid less than men. There were women in all of these classes who wanted the vote. But also others who didn't care for the vote. Most men were against women's suffrage, such as the prime minister at the time, Asquith and the liberal leader William Gladstone, who fought against the 1857 matrimonial causes act and continued to oppose extensions for women’s rights. Even some women were opposed to women’s suffrage, such as the Queen and Florence ...

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