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Tennessee Woman Suffrage Monument in Centennial Park, Nashville, Tennessee

Tennessee Woman Suffrage Monument in Centennial Park, Nashville, Tennessee (© jejim120/Alamy)

Tennessee Woman Suffrage Monument in Centennial Park, Nashville, Tennessee (© jejim120/Alamy)

Women's suffrage at 100

Today marks 100 years since women won the constitutional right to vote in the United States, and we're in Nashville, Tennessee, to celebrate five monumental figures in the women's suffrage movement. Why Nashville? Because it was Tennessee's capital that became the final battlefront in the long fight for the Nineteenth Amendment. On August 18, 1920, the state legislature faced a choice: Should Tennessee become the 36th and deciding state to ratify the amendment, securing its place in the Constitution? The stakes were high as eight states had already rejected the measure—but thanks to some unexpected 'aye' votes from known opposers (one representative switched his vote at the urging of his mother), ratification won out.
© jejim120/Alamy