Women's Equality DAY Timeline
Women's Equality DAY Timeline
Women's Equality DAY Timeline
Equality
March 31, 1776
Abigail Adams writes to John Adams,
founding father, upon talks of the
constitution begging him to consider:
“remember the ladies and be more
generous and favorable to them than
your ancestors. Do not put such
unlimited power into the hands of the
husbands. Remember, all men would
be tyrants if they could. If particular
care and attention is not paid to the
ladies, we are determined to foment a
rebellion, and will not hold ourselves
bound by any laws in which we have
no voice or representation.”
1830
During the past 200 years, Native Americans have gone from being forced from their homes to
becoming accepted as citizens and granted the right to vote starting in 1830, when President
Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, granting himself permission to grant lands west
of the Mississippi to Native Americans in exchange for their Indian lands inside of state borders.
This became the trail of tears
July 19-20, 1848
In the first women’s rights convention. Sixty-eight women and 32 men (including Frederick
Douglass) sign the Declaration of Sentiments.
1848
The 14th Amendment in 1868 gave black Americans citizenship, but not Native people.
1850
•Chinese immigration to the US begins in response to poor economic
conditions in China and the advent of the gold rush in the US.
Immigrants often owed the cost of their passage to the US, and
worked for any available wage in order to repay it and send funds
home to their families.
This lead to between 1860-1885, (Inexpensive) Chinese and minority
labor built the Transcontinental Railroad.
Leland Stanford, president of Central Pacific, former California
governor and founder of Stanford University, told Congress in 1865,
that the majority of the railroad labor force were Chinese. Without
them,” he said, “it would be impossible to complete the western
portion of this great national enterprise, within the time required by
the Acts of Congress”
January 29, 1866