In school, we all learned about how hard women worked to earn their right to vote during the suffrage movement, before the constitutional amendment was finally passed in 1920. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to an entire gender being faced with oppression over the years.
We’re obviously still battling against several issues today, but seeing the things my mother and grandmother were forced to endure has really opened my eyes. I mean, I always knew things were different back in the day, but I can’t believe how long it took for a wife to not be legally classified as “subordinate” to her husband — much less, how difficult it was for a single gal to get her own bank account and credit card.
Some of these setbacks were cleared up in the 1970s and ’80s, but I was shocked by how recently a few of these restrictions were still in place.
Did we miss an unfair obstacle you remember butting heads with in the past? Let us know in the comments and be sure to Liked Video with your friends!
1. Open A Bank Account
2. Serve Jury Duty
3. Practice Law
Even if they had gone through all the years of school and passed every test, women could still be denied the right to plead a client’s case until 1971.
4. Take Birth Control Pills
5. Go On Maternity Leave
6. Breastfeed In Public
Public areas were still able to prohibit mothers from breastfeeding until a bill was finally passed by Congress, making this discrimination illegal.
7. Attend An Ivy League University
8. Attend A Military Academy
9. Run The Boston Marathon
10. Serve In Combat
11. Become An Astronaut
NASA denied women until Sally Ride broke the mold in 1978.
Did you remember all of these things that women were being held back from? Did we forget something from our list? Let us know in the comments and be sure to Liked Video with your friends!