Wrong Side Of History

Anti-Suffragist: Another Kind of Power | Part 3

24 min · 21. apr. 2026
episode Anti-Suffragist: Another Kind of Power | Part 3 cover

Beskrivelse

In 1895, anti-suffragists in Massachusetts were asked to do something absurd: vote to show they opposed voting. What happened next helps explain one of the strangest ideas in the anti-suffrage worldview; that the vote was only one part...and maybe even the smallest part of the whole political process In this episode, we look at how anti-suffragists understood indirect political power: shaping legislators before a vote, moving public opinion through clubs and committees, and influencing the culture that produced politics in the first place. If politics is downstream from culture, they believed women were already standing at the source. Sources on ⁠Substack⁠ [https://substack.com/@thewrongsideofhistory] ⁠IG⁠ [https://www.instagram.com/] ⁠Tik Tok [https://www.tiktok.com/@wrong.side.of.his?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc]

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5 episoder

episode Anti-Suffragist: Another Kind of Power | Part 3 cover

Anti-Suffragist: Another Kind of Power | Part 3

In 1895, anti-suffragists in Massachusetts were asked to do something absurd: vote to show they opposed voting. What happened next helps explain one of the strangest ideas in the anti-suffrage worldview; that the vote was only one part...and maybe even the smallest part of the whole political process In this episode, we look at how anti-suffragists understood indirect political power: shaping legislators before a vote, moving public opinion through clubs and committees, and influencing the culture that produced politics in the first place. If politics is downstream from culture, they believed women were already standing at the source. Sources on ⁠Substack⁠ [https://substack.com/@thewrongsideofhistory] ⁠IG⁠ [https://www.instagram.com/] ⁠Tik Tok [https://www.tiktok.com/@wrong.side.of.his?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc]

21. apr. 202624 min
episode Anti-Suffragist: Resisting Modernity | Part 2 cover

Anti-Suffragist: Resisting Modernity | Part 2

In the last episode, we looked at separate spheres (ie. gender roles). In this one, we go deeper into the political role many anti-suffragists thought women already had. Long before the fight over suffrage reached its peak, American women were given a civic calling: republican motherhood. They were told the republic depended on them not as voters, but as the people who formed citizens, guarded virtue, and held together the moral center of the nation. To many anti-suffragists, that was not a consolation prize. It was status, purpose, and power. But by the early 1900s, that world felt under attack. Industrialization, capitalism, individualism, and even socialism seemed to point in the same direction: away from the home, away from interdependence, and away from the kind of work that could not be measured, priced, or made efficient. From their point of view, the vote was never just a ballot. It was a sign that the line between the public and private spheres was collapsing and that the market and the state were moving into places they did not belong. This episode is about why so many anti-suffragists saw themselves not as dupes or victims, but as the last defenders of the moral and relational life that made a republic possible. Full sources and research notes are on Substack [https://substack.com/@thewrongsideofhistory/note/p-191932453?r=1r319&utm_source=notes-share-action&utm_medium=web] Tik Tok [https://www.tiktok.com/@wrong.side.of.his] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/wrongsideofhistorypod/]

7. apr. 202634 min
episode Anti-Suffragist: Gender Roles | Part 1 cover

Anti-Suffragist: Gender Roles | Part 1

Why did so many women oppose women’s suffrage? Before 1916, suffrage was never backed by a majority of women, and for years men were more progressive on the issue than women were. In this episode, we enter the worldview of the American anti-suffragists and begin with their core idea: separate spheres. To them, the vote was never just a ballot. It was a sign of a much larger social change, one that threatened women’s moral authority, sex-based protections, and the family as the basic unit of society. Many of these women did not see themselves as powerless. They believed they already had influence, just not partisan influence. This episode is about what they feared, what they thought they were protecting, and why their position made sense to them at the time. Sources on Substack [https://substack.com/@thewrongsideofhistory] IG [https://www.instagram.com/] Tik Tok [https://www.tiktok.com/@wrong.side.of.his?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc]

24. mar. 202630 min