Whither Women's Suffrage in the CSA?

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Would women have achieved voting rights in the CSA, had the Confederacy won, or, had Lincoln allowed the CSA to breakaway without war?

In the book Confederate Minds: The Struggle for Intellectual Independence in the Civil War South, by Michael Bernath, there is the following section:

While Confederate critics condemned all of the "isms" of the North, they singled our certain movements as especially offensive... the nascent women's rights movement, for instance, was deemed both a brazen affront to common decency, and particularly compelling proof of the degraded state of northern society. With increasing frequency and boldness, women in the North had reached beyond their prescribed sphere of influence (the home) into the hitherto male public sphere. They sought entrance into the professions, aspired to the pulpit, wrote racy fiction and inflammatory tracts, and delivered speeches at reform society meetings, lyceums, and even political rallies. Some of these women went so far as to demand political rights equal to men's.

...the women's rights movement not only demonstrated the decline of northern society, but necessarily portended its further precipitous decline with each subsequent generation.

"Our women are all conservative, moral, religious, and sensitively modest, and abhor the North for its infidelity, gross immorality, licentiousness, anarchy, and agrarianism," George Fitzhugh boasted. Even higher education did not seem to have the same pernicious effects on the minds and habits of southern women as it evidently did on their northern sisters.

While educated southern women, in Fitzhugh's view, were often "less reserved, less prudish than formerly," they remained "none the less feminine." Their education did not lead them to question or challenge social roles, but instead reinforced the social order. "They confine themselves exclusively to the pursuits and associations becoming their sex, and abhor the female lecturers and free love oratrixes, and Bloomers, and strong minded women of the North." Southern women, unlike their Northern counterparts, used their intelligence to better accomplish their necessary and proper tasks and did not corrupt their gifts by meddling in a world for which they were not suited.

The women's suffrage movement descended from the abolition movement. As one historian whose name I don't recall said, looking at the lack of rights for others helped them focus on their own lack of rights.

I wonder if the nature of CSA society is such that it would have prevented their own women's suffrage movement? The thing is, the suffrage movement was associated with Northern culture, making it something of an anathema to Southerners. It would probably have happened, but would it have been delayed compared to when the 19th amendment was passed (in 1920)?
 
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