Final answer:
The answer is true; no state constitution during the Revolutionary Era allowed women the right to vote, with women's suffrage only being realized much later with the 19th Amendment in 1920.
Step-by-step explanation:
The question posed is whether no state constitution in the Revolutionary Era allowed women the right to vote. The correct answer is a. True. During the Revolutionary Era, no state constitutions granted women suffrage. The right to vote for women, known as women's suffrage, was a long and hard-fought battle that did not reach fruition until the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified on August 18th, 1920.
Before this amendment, some territories and states had begun to extend voting rights to women, starting with the Wyoming Territory in 1869. However, during the Revolutionary Era, which includes the time of the American Revolution and the immediate years that followed, women's suffrage was still not a right afforded in any state constitution.