Ball State University Libraries' Digital Media Repository
This Day in History: Mapping Women’s Right to Vote
Congress passed the 19th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution extending the right of suffrage to women on
June 4, 1919. The Amendment was ratified
on August 18, 1920. In some parts of the
United States, however, women had already acquired complete or partial voting
rights before 1920.
This map (above, click to
enlarge) from the Maps.com Atlas of U.S.
History shows which states allowed no voting rights to women, which states
allowed women to vote in presidential elections, which states and territories
allowed women to vote in primary elections, and where women had complete voting
rights before 1920.
The chart is from The Penguin State of Women in the World
Atlas and shows the difference in the number of years for men and women to
receive voting rights. (The United
States’ date of 1870 includes voting rights for the first time for African
American males). Denmark has the
smallest gap, although no citizens were allowed to vote until 1915. Switzerland has the longest gap, but women (and
men) are still not allowed to vote in certain countries of the world.
For more information about
these cartographic resources available from Ball State University Libraries’
GIS Research and Map Collection, please call 765-285-1097.
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