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Chapter 4, section 3

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Suffragists like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton struggled to win the right to vote! ... Jennings Randolph 'Father of the 26th Amendment' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 4, section 3


1
Chapter 4, section 3
  • The Bill of Rights Extended

2
Warm-up
  • Go to p.80 in your text. Briefly read the 13th
    (XIII) amendment. Now go to p.81, briefly read
    the 14th (XIV) amendment. Now go to p.82, briefly
    read the 15th amendment.
  • Now answer the following question with a brief
    paragraph
  • What was the significance of these amendments
    after the Civil War?
  • What is the significance of these amendments
    today?

3
Vocabulary
  • Suffrage -
  • the right to vote
  • poll tax -
  • a sum of money paid in exchange for the right to
    vote

4
Equality for all????
  • When the Constitution and Bill of Rights was
    created its rights and liberties did not apply to
    all Americans
  • Women could not vote and were considered
    second-class citizens
  • African-American Men could not vote until 1870
    and even then they experienced great difficulty,
    particularly in the South.
  • Why????

5
1.) Civil War Amendments
  • The Thirteenth Amendment (1865)
  • Officially ended slavery
  • The Fourteenth Amendment (1868)
  • required every state to grant its citizens equal
    protection of the laws
  • forbids state governments from interfering with
    rights and privileges of U.S. citizens

6
Civil War Amendments
  • The Fifteenth Amendment (1870)
  • Extended rights of African-American men by
    granting them the right to vote.

The First Colored Senator and Representatives, in
the 41st and 42nd Congress of the United
States.Washington Currier Ives, 1872.Color
lithograph.
7
2.) Voting Rights Elections
  • The Seventeenth Amendment (1913)
  • allowed voters to directly elect their Senators

8
2.) Voting Rights Elections
  • The Nineteenth Amendment (1920)
  • finally gave women the right to vote
  • Suffragists like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth
    Cady Stanton struggled to win the right to vote!

9
2.) Voting Rights Elections
  • The Twenty-third Amendment (1961)
  • granted residents of the District of Columbia the
    right to vote for President and Vice President

10
2.) Voting Rights Elections
  • The Twenty-fourth Amendment (1964)
  • made poll taxes illegal in national elections

In the South, two thirds of the voting population
are barred from the polls by a head tax which is
a prerequisite to voting. What this "one third
democracy for one sixth of the nation" means to
the Democratic party, to the nation, and to the
issues of the 1940 elections are revealed in the
staggering facts and figures here presented in
the first of two articles by a young southern
writer.
11
2.) Voting Rights Elections
  • The Twenty-sixth Amendment (1971)
  • lowered the minimum voting age from 21 to 18
    years of age in all national, state, and local
    elections
  • Jennings Randolph"Father of the 26th Amendment"

"The Father of the 26th Amendment" introduced
legislation eleven times -- in the U.S. House of
Representatives and later in the United States
Senate -- to lower the voting age, beginning in
1942 until its passage in 1971. Due to his
persistence, 18-20-year-olds have had the
opportunity to vote in eight presidential
elections.
12
Section 3 Review
  • 1. What are the provisions of the three Civil War
    amendments?
  • Answer the 13th abolished slavery, the 14th
    granted all citizens equal protection, the 15th
    granted African -American men the right to vote
  • 2.) What five other amendments concern voting
    rights and elections?
  • Answer amendments 17, 19, 23, 24,26

13
Close
  • Should equal protection of the laws extend to all
    U.S. citizens automatically or only those who are
    law-abiding and hardworking?
  • Explain your opinion in a well-organized
    paragraph with a topic sentence, 2 to 3
    supporting details and a conclusion.
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