
One place where women were increasingly included was in the workplace. As the country shifted away from a rural, agrarian society to an industrial, urban one, more and more women had jobs â eight million by 1910. Moreover, they were getting better jobs. In 1870, 60 percent of working women were in domestic service.
By 1920, it was only 20 percent, and women made up 13 percent of the professional ranks. Women were getting out of the house for more than just jobs, too. In 1892, membership in womenâs clubs was about 100,000. By 1917, it was more than one million. And womenâs increasing independence was reflected in the fact that the divorce rate rose from 1 in every 21 marriages in 1880 to 1 in 9 by 1916.
Because women had always had nontraditional roles in the West, it wasnât surprising that Western states and territories were the first to give females the right to vote: Wyoming in 1869, Utah in 1870, Washington in 1883, Colorado in 1893, and Idaho in 1896. By 1914, all the Western states except New Mexico had extended the voting franchise to women.
By 1917, the suffrage movement was building momentum. In July of that year, a score of suffragists tried to storm the White House. They were arrested and taken to the county workhouse. President Woodrow Wilson was not amused, but sympathetic, and pardoned them. The next year, a constitutional amendment â the Nineteenth â was submitted to the states. When ratified in 1920, it gave women the right to vote in every state.
Despite the significance of the Nineteenth Amendment, many leaders of the womenâs movement recognized that the vote alone wouldnât give women equal standing with men when it came to educational, economic, or legal rights.
âMen are saying, perhaps, âthank God this everlasting womenâs fight is over,ââ said feminist leader Crystal Eastman after the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified. âBut women, if I know them, are saying, ânow at last we can begin.ââ