SARAH AND ANGELINA GRIMKE Anna Jahns and Gracie Puckett.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pageant in front of the U.S. Treasury Building, Washington D.C. Part of the March 3, 1913, suffrage parade.
Advertisements

Billy Foshay, Jeremy Picard, Jake Buccarelli
The Abolition Movement
CH 11 Northern Culture.
Sarah and Angelina Grimke By: Joe Marrett and Corey Cohn.
Catherine A. Brekus, Strangers and Pilgrims: Female Preaching in America, (1998) Bathsheba Kingsley, “brawling woman” preacher who had “gone.
I Am An Abolitionist. What is an abolitionist ? 1.One who works to abolish schools. 2.One who works to abolish fat. 3.One who works to abolish slavery.
R E F O R M. Wave of Religious excitement Meetings called “revivals”
The Abolitionist Movement. Slavery all work or service which is exacted from any person under the menace of any penalty and for which the said person.
Historical Figures. The important things about Paul Revere are: He lived in the late 1700’s in Boston, Massachusetts He was a silversmith. He had to overcome.
William Lloyd Garrison ( ) Presentation by: Brian Kenez, David Berkinsky, Robert Annen.
Louisa May Alcott ( ). Early Life Born November 29, sisters – 1 older and 2 younger Mostly homeschooled by her father.
Westward Expansion: Abolition and Suffrage SOL USI.8d: The student will demonstrate knowledge of westward expansion and reform in America from 1801 to.
Question 1: How do we define the personality traits of a hero? Definition: a person who, in the opinion of others, has heroic qualities or has performed.
Women and Reform Chapter 8 Section 3 Page 254.
The Struggle for Equality. Path to Abolishing Slavery The Constitutional Convention would have failed without a compromise on slavery. Counted slaves.
By: Madison Lennox, Alex Breeden, Bianca Zori and Ben Bejune.
Sarah and Angelina Grimke
The Grimke Sisters By Dashay Williams.
Our subject: Abraham Lincoln.  Abraham Lincoln's role in the civil war and how it aligns with the U.D.H.R. ◦ U.D.H.R stands for universal declaration.
By: Sara Falso. “I will be as harsh as truth, and uncompromising as justice… I am earnest, I will not equivocate, I will not excuse, I will not retreat.
By: Alyssa Powers. Fact #1 Former Slaves, that were writers and public speakers, helped the abolitionists gain more supporters against slavery by telling.
Sarah and Angelina Grimké By Brett Ransegnola and Mark Brown.
ABOLITIONISM The fight to end slavery Chapter 15, Section 2 Opposing Slavery How did the antislavery movement begin and grow? How did the Underground.
The election of Jackson As president was proof That society could Change for the better And that the common Ordinary citizen could Rise to the.
Abolitionist/Suffrage Movements. Abolitionist Those people that opposed and wanted to “abolish” slavery.
Susan B. Anthony Women’s Right To Vote.
Sojourner Truth Christian Zotti Period 4. Early Life Sojourners native name was Isabella Baumfree and she was born in 1797 in rural New York She only.
Sarah and Angelina Grimke Natalie Hassell and Allie Johnson.
Who Am I? 3rd Grade Biographies Investigation Question: What do these primary sources tell us about a person’s life?
Leaders of the Women’s Rights Movement
The Abolition Movement Fighting the Evil of Slavery.
{ Sarah and Angelina Grimké Brad Fortunato & Tess Madarasz.
Sarah Grimke By Megan Kittler November 26, December 23, 1873.
By Kendall Smith and Cooper Kwiatkowski.   American antislavery crusaders, women’s rights advocates  Born in S.C. in 1792 (Sarah) and 1805 (Angelina)
Sarah Moore Grimke Gaby Wielgus. Early Influences Born in 1792 to a very wealthy plantation family in South Carolina Became appalled by the treatment.
Feminists. Sarah and Angelina Grimke Sisters and reformers who grew up owning slaves, but later became anti-slavery supporters and lecturers. Lectured.
Take a it! 1.The time period before the Civil War was known as the _________________ period. 2.In the 1800s, more and more whites began to support.
Who were some South Carolina Abolitionists and what did they believe? Sarah Grimke believed that the slaves should be free. And Sarah’s little sister.
Leading organizer of the Women’s Movement Founded organization to promote Women’s Suffrage (right to vote) Dedicated life to inspiring other women.
The Abolitionist Movement. Slavery all work or service which is exacted from any person under the menace of any penalty and for which the said person.
The Abolitionist Movement. What is REFORM? the improvement or amendment of what is wrong, corrupt, unsatisfactory, etc. EXAMPLES of reform movements...
Chalkboard Challenge Chapter 14 Review StudentsTeachers Game Board Reformers/ Reformers/Reforms Abolitionists Abolitionists Immigration & Cities Women’s.
Women’s Movements The Path to Suffrage. Anti-Slavery Movement  1833 Female Anti- Slavery Society  Sarah and Angelina Grimke  Investigation of slave.
Abolition. Second Great Awakening Christian renewal movement that spread across the United States in the early 1800s. Individuals responsible for his/her.
1830s. Some Americans that had opposed slavery for years began organizing a movement to support a complete end to slavery in the United States.
 The idea that slavery was wrong had two separate elements 1. Political 2. Religious.
Chapter 16 section 2  In the 1800’s there was an increasing call for emancipation.  Emancipation-freeing of slaves  One idea was to settle free slaves.
Frederick, Susan, and Mary Review
Created & edited by Steve Armstrong
The Abolition Movement
Reformers sought to improve women's rights in American society.
O R M R F E MOVEMENT.
Women Rejecting the Cult of Domesticity
Abolitionist: person who wants the immediate end of slavery.
The Abolition Movement
The Abolitionists I 14-2a.
Abolition.
An Era of Reform Chapter 18 Pgs
Unit 6- Age of Jackson - Early 1800s Reforms: Rights & Slavery
The American Reform Tradition
QOTD Someone involved in the temperance movement would try to get the government to a) raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans. b) make drinking alcohol.
Feminism and the Grimké Sisters
Compare the social and cultural characteristics of the North, the South, and the West during the Antebellum period, including the lives of African-Americans.
Women in History.
The Women's Suffrage Movement
WARM UP – APRIL 22 EVERYONE GRAB THE GUIDED NOTES AND ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS ON THE BACK REVIEW OF YESTERDAY’S NOTES 1. Who was responsible for an individual’s.
An Era of Reform Chapter 18 Pgs
Susan B. Anthony Jeopardy
Abolition Definition: (noun) the legal ending of slavery
Presentation transcript:

SARAH AND ANGELINA GRIMKE Anna Jahns and Gracie Puckett

THEIR QUEST  Sarah and Angelina were abolitionists  After the Civil War, they fought for women’s suffrage

SARAH MOORE GRIMKE  “Perhaps I am indebted partially to this for my life-long detestation of slavery, as it brought me in close contact with these unpaid toilers.”

ANGELINA EMILY GRIMKE  “If persecution is the means which God has ordained for the accomplishment of this great end, emancipation, then…I feel as if I could say, let it come; for it is my deep, solemn deliberate conviction, that this is a cause worth dying for….”

METHODS  Sarah and her sister spoke publicly about abolition to both women and men. ( In this time period, it was unacceptable to give speeches to both genders at the same time)

WRITINGS: SARAH  Epistle to the Clergymen of the South  Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Woman  written with Theodore Weld-American Slavery as It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses

WRITINGS: ANGELINA  1836-Appeal to the Christian Women of the South  Appeal to the Women of the Nominally Free States

IMPRACTICAL?  Their method of public speaking (to both sexes) may have been impractical in the South, gained them fame in the North among the abolitionists.  Both illegally voted in 1870

SUCCESS/ EFFECTS  Though their campaigning had no major effect, slavery was soon abolished at the end of the civil war, which was in their lifetime.  Their public speaking about women's suffrage encouraged a long line of females that followed in their footsteps. At the end of it all, women got their voting rights.

WORKS CITED  "Young and Brave: Girls Changing History." Young and Brave: Girls Changing History. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Oct  "Grimke Sisters." Grimke Sisters. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Oct  "Grimke Sisters." National Parks Service. 26 Oct