To be able to have something
Access
the ability to own land and live where you choose
What right were women trying to get?
What is suffrage or the right to vote
What is Selma, Alabama?
Protest is
negotiating and compromising to change policy
act of gathering signatures to make a formal request
speaking out against something
talking to a large group with a formally prepared oral presentation
What is #3 speaking out against something
the practice of separating people according to groups (especially racial groups)
What is segregation?
Private John G. Burnett describes the removal of Cherokee Indians from their homes. Which right is being limited?
Freedom
Property Rights
Voting Rights
Education
What is #2 Property Rights.
What amendment gave women the right to vote?
Who could vote when America was founded?
What is free, white, landowning men over the age of 21
A formal written request by many people made to someone in authority (usually someone in government)
What is Petition?
The right to vote in a political election
What is suffrage?
In 1708, 14.6% of the total population in Carolina was composed of Enslaved American Indians. Which right is being limited?
Freedom
Property Rights
Voting Rights
Education
What is #1 Freedom?
Why are voting rights so important to women?
Voting = Representation = Protection
Why were students better able than adults to organize and protest?
They were not at risk of losing jobs, homes, or being evicted from farms.
The Trail of Broken Treaties began on the west coast of the US, and was a cross-country caravan that ended at the Bureau of Indian Affairs building in Washington, D.C., to demand the federal government honor treaty obligations.
This is an example of which strategy?
March
Petition
Protest
Diplomacy
What is #1 March?
To treat some people unfairly because of prejudice
What is discrimination?
The Snyder Act of 1924 granted full US citizenship to Native Americans born in the U.S.. This is an example of:
Freedom
Property Rights
Voting Rights
Education
What is #3 Voting Rights?
Name one organization that tried to help women attain the right to vote.
What is NWP or NAWSA?
What is the 15th amendment?
Using the suffrage parade and "Silent Sentinels", name 2 risks that come with protesting?
Physical violence, arrests, legal consequences, harsh treatment, public backlash, abuse in custody, and institutionalization.
an opinion towards a person or group of people often without a reason often towards people of a certain race or religion.
What is Prejudice?
Name one factor that motivated the U.S. government to limit Cherokee property rights?
Access to better resources, need for more land, and prejudice against indigenous people.
Name one trait that the Cult of "True Woman" believed that a true woman is.
Pious, Timid, Submissive, or wants to take care of family
Name one way they kept black men from voting
What are limited opportunities to register to vote, unfair tests at the polls, personal information shared with groups like the KKK and employers, threats of violence toward voters’ families and homes, or arrests and beatings by the police for protesting
Name one protest method that you came across that we did not talk about.
Crawls, Strikes, Boycotts, Blockades