Maxwell School News and Commentary
Filtered by: Journal of Social History
Enforcing Gender at the Polls: Transing Voters and Women’s Suffrage before the American Civil War
Andrew Wender Cohen, Carol Faulkner
Between 1800 and 1860, individuals deemed female by society donned male attire, represented themselves as men, and tried unlawfully to vote, thus challenging the gender binary at the foundation of U.S. democracy. The history of their confrontation with an electoral system reserved for men suggests a more porous and inclusive history of gender and citizenship before the Civil War.
September 26, 2022
See related: Elections, Gender and Sex, Government