After 1906, the struggle for women's education initiated by the Chanyang-hoe finally paid off after the
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1905, when need for mobilising of all citizens was felt, and a great number of private Korean girls' schools were founded; as Jinmyeong Girls' School (now
Jinmyeong Girls' High School) were founded by Eom Ju-won (1855–1938) on the order of his sister the
Royal Concubine Eom (Sunheon Hwangguibi Eom-ssi, 1854–1911), her nephew Eom Ju-ik (1872–1931) opened Myeongsin Girls' School (now
Sookmyeong Women's University), former officials and members of the Independence Club founded the Yanggyu School for girls, and former magistrate of Gaeseong, Choe Seok-jo, founded the Hanseong Girls' Academy, followed by the Yangwon Girls' School established by the Women's Educational Society. The first state school for girls, the Hansong Girls' School, was founded by the government in 1908. The organization was followed by a number of women's organizations the following years, notably the
Yo-u-hoe. When Korea was made a Japanese colony in 1910, the Korean women's movement lost pace and many women's associations were banned by the Japanese. Women largely engaged in the underground anti-Japanese resistance instead, such as the
Geunwoohoe, the Yosong Aeguk Tongji-hoe (Patriotic Women's Society) and the Taehan Aeguk Buin-hoe (Korean Patriotic Women's Society). After end of the War and the partition of Korea in 1945, the Korean women's movement was split. In
North Korea all women's movement was channeled into the
Korean Democratic Women's Union; in South Korea, the women's movement where united under the
Korean National Council of Women, which in 1973 organized the women's group in the
Pan-Women's Society for the Revision of the Family Law to revise the discriminating Family Law of 1957, a cause that remained a main focus for the rest of the 20th century and did not result in any major reform until 1991. ==References==