There's an ongoing debate in the American West about which state granted women the right to vote first. Wyoming ratified the decision first in 1869 but didn't vote until the fall of the next year; but Utah women actually went to the polls seven months earlier than that.
Either way, it was Western states that made the leap, and a new book called No Place For A Woman: The Struggle for Suffrage in the Wild West explores what it was about Western women that made them such suffragists.
Wyoming Public Radio's Melodie Edwards interviewed author Chris Enss.
Have a question about this story? Contact the reporter, Melodie Edwards, at medward9@uwyo.edu.