For most women living in the 1800’s, life was full of rules and standards to live up to. Women were told how to dress, how to take care of their families, and even how to act. Women had to have four traits in order to be deemed appropriate: piety, purity, domesticity, and submissiveness. Piety is religious devotion, and if a woman was not religious, she was looked down upon by others. Women were supposed to fix the world with pure, passionless love, mostly because women were not supposed to have passion. Even if a man tried to assault her, it was the woman’s job to remain pure. Men and women could not sit close to each other, read out of the same book, or put their heads close together. It was also believed that women should be submissive to men. Women remained submissive to men by wearing restrictive clothing, specifically corsets. Corsets were made of bone or sometimes metal, and they were used to reshape the body into an hourglass figure. This prevented proper muscle growth and caused shortness of breath, which led to fainting. These restrictions made it difficult for women to perform daily activities without being in pain or fainting. The physical restrictions placed on women also led to the belief that women should spend their time sitting in the home as an “ornament”, and performing housework. They were supposed to stay in the private sphere, which was the home. The women had to follow the Cult of Domesticity. The Cult of Domesticity made sure women stayed in the private sphere to take care of their families to take care of their families while keeping men happy while they were away from the rough, outside world, also known as the public sphere. With all of these restrictions placed on women, the women decided that they had had enough of being deprived of certain rights and set out to reform society with a convention.
In July, 1848, women and men gathered together for the Seneca Falls Convention. They discussed their rights and created the Declaration of Statements and Resolutions. The Declaration was purposefully modeled after the Declaration of Independence to reinforce the rights of women. It also enforced the equality of both men and women, and that men did not have power over women. They listed all the rights that women should have. One right that was especially controversial was suffrage, or the right to vote. Many believed that asking for the right to vote was too advanced for the times, which would lead to ridicule from society, possibly ruining their convention. They felt it was too risky to request suffrage because they could lose the other rights they wanted. Some fought for suffrage, and tried to put it in the Declaration. But, they put many others rights in their Declaration and fought for their well-being.
While the Seneca falls convention brought new reforms and rights for white, middle-class women, it left many other groups of women behind. Many women were left out, including Cherokee women, enslaved women, women of New Mexico, and Mill Workers. In class, we were divided into groups and assigned a group of women to represent. My group represented the enslaved women. These women had the least amount of rights by far, but we could only list five laws we wanted to pass. To us, the five most important laws was abolishing slavery, no sexual abuse, better working conditions, the right to spend time with and stay with their children, and the right to own land and property. Once each group came up with five laws, we all discussed the laws to create a list of ten rights. The ten laws we agreed on are: 1. Preserve Cherokee land (honor treaties) 2. Everyone has a right to be free from abuse (physical, emotional or sexual) 3. Equal pay for equal work 4. End slavery 5. Women have a right to hold office and/or vote 6. Women have a right to own land/property 7. Taxes should be based on wages 8. Women have a right to freedom of speech/speak in public 9. Everyone should have a right to a basic level of education 10. We should have education in multiple languages. These reforms are similar to the ones of the Declaration of Rights and Sentiments because they stress the equality of women and men. They differ because our rights included the other groups of women, which the Declaration of Rights and Sentiments did not.
Although all of the ten resolutions are important, one is the more important than the rest, and that resolution is the end of slavery. Slavery affected millions of people, and the damage it caused was long lasting. People died or were seriously injured in slavery, and they had no rights. People were treated like properly. Slavery has been abolished, so the resolution has been resolved. But, the impact of slavery is still in existence today. Racism is an ongoing issue that our country suffers with. Racism started with slavery, because the white Christians need a way to justify slavery. However, we have come a long way from buying and selling humans and treating them like objects. The women’s rights movements sparked other movements, and pretty soon everyone was crying out for equality and justice.
