Answer:
Wyoming was the first territory to give women the right to vote. The word that names that right is suffrage.
Step-by-step explanation:
Women's suffrage refers to the right to vote exercised by women and therefore the political and constitutional right to vote for elected public office as well as to be voted. The vote therefore covers the asset, which determines who is entitled to vote as well as the so-called liability, which refers to who and under what conditions they are entitled to be elected. The founding moment of Sufragism is in 1848 with the Declaration of Sentiments of Seneca Falls in the United States and culminates a hundred years later, in 1948 with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that recognizes women's suffrage as a universal human right.
In 1869, the Wyoming Territory became the first US state where "equal suffrage" was established (without gender differences) but not universal suffrage (no dark-skinned men or women could vote).