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LISTEN: At The DNC, We Asked Women Why They Were Voting For Clinton

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Karla Stoebis, who came to the convention as a Sanders supporter, now wishes her "strong Democratic grandmothers" were here to witness history.
Andrew Harnik

History was made at the Democratic National Convention this past week. Hillary Clinton, as the first female presidential candidate of a major U.S. party, is officially embarking an unprecedented American political campaign.

We asked women — as young as 4 and as old 77 — how much the weight of history factored into their decision. Listen:

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

LaVon Bracy, 67, of Florida

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LaVon Bracy says she can now honestly tell her granddaughters that they can be president of the United States.
Joe Raedle / Getty Images
Karla Stoebis, 33, of Wisconsin

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Carmen Guzman, 54, Virginia via Oaxaca, Mexico

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Carmen Guzman of McLean, Va., and originally from Oaxaca, Mexico on the final day of the Democratic National Convention.
Meg Kelly / NPR
Kathryn Hensley, 77, of South Carolina

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Katherine Hensley says a female presidential candidate has been "a dream."
Meg Kelly / NPR
Deborah Langhoff, 69, of Louisiana

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Debroah Langhoff says that her mother was born at a time when women didn't have the right to vote and that she would be lying if she said history didn't play a role in her decision to back Clinton.
Meg Kelly / NPR
Loretta Talbott, 9, of Maryland

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Loretta Talbott says Clinton's nomination proves women are just as powerful as men.
Meg Kelly / NPR
Diana Hatsis-Neuhoff, 54, of Florida

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Diana Hatsis-Neuhoff says her decision to now support Clinton had "nothing to do with what was between my legs."
Meg Kelly / NPR
Dawn Smalls, 38, and her daughter Eva, 4, of New York

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Eva Smalls with her mother Dawn Smalls (not pictured) says she likes Clinton because "she's a girl."
Meg Kelly / NPR

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Eyder Peralta is NPR's East Africa correspondent based in Nairobi, Kenya.
Meg Kelly