In which year were most female citizens aged 21 and over granted the right to vote in federal elections?
📖 In-depth explanation
Background, key points, and common pitfalls
Question
In which year were most female citizens aged 21 and over granted the right to vote in federal elections?
📚 Background context
Discover Canada records this in one direct sentence about federal women's suffrage. The guide writes: In 1918, most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over were granted the right to vote in federal elections. The year the test wants is therefore 1918.
Two precise commitments. Discover Canada commits the federal vote for most Canadian women to TWO specific facts: (1) the year is 1918, and (2) the eligible group was most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over. So the source is unambiguous on both the year and the qualifying age. The 1918 extension came as the First World War was ending and was a major step in Canadian democratic history.
The federal extension was a two-step process. Discover Canada commits the federal franchise to TWO years: 1917 and 1918. "In 1917, thanks to the leadership of women such as Dr. Stowe and other suffragettes, the federal government of Sir Robert Borden gave women the right to vote in federal elections — first to nurses at the battle front, then to women who were related to men in active wartime service." So the 1917 extension was limited to specific named groups: nurses at the battle front, then women related to men in active wartime service. The 1918 extension then broadened the right to most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over — making it general rather than tied to wartime service.
The chronology of women's voting rights in Canada. Discover Canada commits the broader chronology to several specific milestones: 1916 (Manitoba — first province to grant women voting rights); 1917 (federal limited extension); 1918 (most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over granted the federal vote); 1921 (Agnes Macphail, "a farmer and teacher, became the first woman MP"); 1940 (Quebec — last province to grant women the vote, thanks to "the work of Thérèse Casgrain and others"). So 1918 sits in the middle of this chain — making it the federal turning point in Canadian women's suffrage. The named founder of the suffrage movement in Canada was Dr. Emily Stowe, the first Canadian woman to practise medicine. So when the test asks the year most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over were granted the federal vote, the source-precise answer is 1918.
🌎 Why this matters today
The question is testing whether new citizens know the year of the federal-vote extension to most Canadian women. Discover Canada commits to one year: 1918. The right test answer matches that.
The wrong answer choices each pick a different year. The first choice is the year Manitoba (provincially) first granted women the vote — not the federal extension. The third choice is not named in the source for any women's-suffrage event. The fourth choice is also not named in the source for women's-suffrage. Only 1918 — the source's exact named year for the broad federal extension — matches.
📜 From Discover Canada
"In 1918, most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over were granted the right to vote in federal elections."
⚠️ Common misconceptions
The first answer choice is wrong. Discover Canada places 1916 with Manitoba as the first province to grant women the provincial vote — not with the federal extension. The federal extension to most women was in 1918.
The third answer choice is wrong. Discover Canada never names this year for any women's-suffrage event. The named year is 1918.
The fourth answer choice is wrong. Discover Canada never names this year for any women's-suffrage event. The named year for the broad federal extension is 1918.
Don't confuse the 1917 limited extension with the 1918 broad one. Discover Canada commits 1917 to nurses at the battle front and women related to men in active wartime service, and 1918 to most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over.
✅ Key points to remember
- Year / answer:
- 1918
- Source statement:
- "In 1918, most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over were granted the right to vote in federal elections."
- Eligibility:
- Most Canadian female citizens aged 21 and over
- Earlier 1917 limited extension:
- First to nurses at the battle front, then to women related to men in active wartime service
- Earlier provincial milestone:
- Manitoba — first province to grant women the vote, in 1916
- First woman MP:
- 1921 — Agnes Macphail, a farmer and teacher
💡 Memory tip
Year most Canadian female citizens aged 21+ got the federal vote: 1918 · under Sir Robert Borden's federal government · after the limited 1917 extension to nurses and wartime-service relatives.
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