Answer:
The 19th Amendment completed the advance toward universal suffrage started by the 15th Amendment.
Step-by-step explanation:
The 19th Amendment to the Constitution was adopted by Congress on August 18, 1920.
This amendment introduced active suffrage for women. Thus, the long-term demands of the suffragists were satisfied. The amendment was written by Susan Anthony and Elizabeth Stanton and introduced to Congress in 1878. The amendment was only adopted in 1919, and then, a year later, it was ratified by the required number of states. In 1922, the amendment was challenged in the Supreme Court, which, however, unanimously rejected the claim and confirmed that the Nineteenth Amendment was part of the US Constitution. Therefore, suffrage was extended to both men and women in the United States, heading toward universal suffrage in America.