Description

Book Synopsis
Shows that Western suffrage came about as the result of the unsettled state of regional politics, the complex nature of Western race relations, broad alliances between suffragists and farmer-labor-progressive reformers, and sophisticated activism by Western women. This book highlights suffrage racism and elitism as major problems for the movement.

Trade Review
"How the Vote Was Won is the first comprehensive, modern history of woman suffrage in the American West. Mead shows us that virtually everything that is modern and important about the winning stages of the woman suffrage movement began in the West. This is a bold, original history that historians of the West, of women, of the United States in general, should be sure to read." -- Ellen Carol DuBois,University of California, Los Angeles
"In this fine study, Rebecca Mead answers with skill and sweep the intriguing question that historians have forgotten to ask: why did women in the West gain the vote decades before those in the rest of the nation?" -- Joyce Appleby,University of California, Los Angeles
"Rebecca Meads book is a very important contribution not only to our understanding of suffrage victories in the American West, but also helps us to better understand the region and the vagaries of American electoral politics more generally. How the Vote Was Won tackles a thorny scholarly problem and does so with ambition, reach, and success." -- William Deverell,California Institute of Technology
"In this superb study . . . Rebecca J. Mead convincingly demonstrates the importance of the region to understanding the success of the national suffrage movement." * American Historical Review *
"In this densely written and tightly argued work, Mead (Northern Michigan Univ.) presents answers to the often asked question of why woman suffrage was accomplished in the US West well before it was in the East." * Choice *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments List of Acronyms 1 The Context of the Western Woman Suffrage Movement 2 Early Western Suffragists as Organic Intellectuals 3 Reconstruction, Woman Suffrage, and Territorial Politics in the West 4 Suffrage and Populism in the Silver State of Colorado 5 California, Woman Suffrage, and the Critical Election of 1896 6 Woman Suffrage and Progressivism in the Paci?c Northwest 7 The Western Zephyr and the 1911 California Campaign 8 The West and the Modern Suffrage Movement NotesBibliography Index About the Author

How the Vote Was Won Woman Suffrage in the

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    A Paperback / softback by Rebecca Mead

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      View other formats and editions of How the Vote Was Won Woman Suffrage in the by Rebecca Mead

      Publisher: New York University Press
      Publication Date: 01/01/2006
      ISBN13: 9780814757222, 978-0814757222
      ISBN10: 0814757227

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Shows that Western suffrage came about as the result of the unsettled state of regional politics, the complex nature of Western race relations, broad alliances between suffragists and farmer-labor-progressive reformers, and sophisticated activism by Western women. This book highlights suffrage racism and elitism as major problems for the movement.

      Trade Review
      "How the Vote Was Won is the first comprehensive, modern history of woman suffrage in the American West. Mead shows us that virtually everything that is modern and important about the winning stages of the woman suffrage movement began in the West. This is a bold, original history that historians of the West, of women, of the United States in general, should be sure to read." -- Ellen Carol DuBois,University of California, Los Angeles
      "In this fine study, Rebecca Mead answers with skill and sweep the intriguing question that historians have forgotten to ask: why did women in the West gain the vote decades before those in the rest of the nation?" -- Joyce Appleby,University of California, Los Angeles
      "Rebecca Meads book is a very important contribution not only to our understanding of suffrage victories in the American West, but also helps us to better understand the region and the vagaries of American electoral politics more generally. How the Vote Was Won tackles a thorny scholarly problem and does so with ambition, reach, and success." -- William Deverell,California Institute of Technology
      "In this superb study . . . Rebecca J. Mead convincingly demonstrates the importance of the region to understanding the success of the national suffrage movement." * American Historical Review *
      "In this densely written and tightly argued work, Mead (Northern Michigan Univ.) presents answers to the often asked question of why woman suffrage was accomplished in the US West well before it was in the East." * Choice *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments List of Acronyms 1 The Context of the Western Woman Suffrage Movement 2 Early Western Suffragists as Organic Intellectuals 3 Reconstruction, Woman Suffrage, and Territorial Politics in the West 4 Suffrage and Populism in the Silver State of Colorado 5 California, Woman Suffrage, and the Critical Election of 1896 6 Woman Suffrage and Progressivism in the Paci?c Northwest 7 The Western Zephyr and the 1911 California Campaign 8 The West and the Modern Suffrage Movement NotesBibliography Index About the Author

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