After the ratification of the 19th amendment in 1920, which granted women the right to vote, the first wave of feminism slowed down significantly. Although many of these activists continued to fight for women’s rights, the next sustained feminist movement is believed to have started in the 1960s. Much like the first wave that developed during a period of social reform, the second wave also took place amidst other social and political movements.
Timeline of second-wave feminism - Wikipedia
National Women's History Museum
Medicine and the Body in Second‐Wave Feminist Histories of the Nineteenth Century - ARNOLD‐FORSTER - 2021 - History - Wiley Online Library
Feminism: The Second Wave National Women's History Museum
Feminism: The Second Wave National Women's History Museum
From Women's Rights to Women's Liberation - Seattle Civil Rights
History of Women's Movements: Part II – Women's Museum of California
National Women's History Museum
Individuals and Societies Artifact History 1, PDF, Ideologies
U.S. Women's Movements and Health Care Reform – Circulating Now from the NLM Historical Collections
First Wave Feminism timeline, Timetoast timelines
Feminism's Second Wave
Celebrate Women's History Month 2023: Inspiring Future Generations
National Women's History Museum
Feminism: The Second Wave National Women's History Museum