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2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt VocabularyReformsAbolitionCulture Hodge Podge
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Term referring to the immediate 40 years before the start of the Civil War
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Antebellum
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The idea that God decided the fate of someone's soul, even before their birth.
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Predestination
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A person who was against slavery, and fought to get rid of it.
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Abolitionist.
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The right of women to vote
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Women’s Suffrage
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The idea that people should peacefully disobey unjust laws if their consciences demanded it.
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Civil Disobedience
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This movement sought to limit the amount of alcohol consumed by Americans; it would eventually lead to Prohibition on the 20 th Century.
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Temperance Movement
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She was the person responsible for the reforms in dealing with the mentally ill, and in reforming the cruelty that was present in the prison system
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Dorothea Dix
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This state was not only the first state with public schools, but also the first to require training and certification for public schools.
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Massachusetts
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This meeting of Women’s Rights leaders, led to a declaration where they professed to seek the same treatment as their male counterparts.
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Seneca Falls Convention
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While not initially a leader of the Women’s Rights Movement, she became the most famous and vocal advocate for equal rights for women.
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Susan B. Anthony
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The path that escaped slaves would travel from slave states, to northern states or to Canada
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Underground Railroad.
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Without question, he was the most famous black Abolitionist; he himself was an escaped slave.
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Frederick Douglass
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Two types of abolitionists; they disagreed on the length of time it would take to end slavery,
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Immediatists & Gradualists
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William Lloyd Garrison wrote this newspaper in an attempt to bring attention to the evils of slavery.
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The Liberator
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The American Colonization Society advocated free slaves be forced to do this…
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Return to Africa and leave the United States.
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A movement that sought to explore the relationship between humans and nature through emotions rather than through reason.
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Transcendentalism
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These two writers were the leaders of their philosophical movement, which was centered around Walden Pond in Concord, MA
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Ralph Waldo Emerson & Henry David Thoreau
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Stephen Foster’s music was uniquely American, including this little tune about a river in Florida.
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Way Down on the Swanee River
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Herman Melville wrote this Whale Tale.
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Moby Dick
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Nathaniel Hawthorne’s landmark novel which inspired plays and movies. It dealt with puritan life in the colonies, and the life Hester Prynne; a puritan charged with committing adultery.
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The Scarlett Letter
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This building was built in the style of neoclassical Greece, including large columns and domes.
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U.S. Capitol Bldg.
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While not remembered as the most famous woman in the suffrage movement, she was the one who organized the movement and was its first leader.
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Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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Charles Finney popularized this religious ceremony, which often consisted of praying for sinners by name, long nightly meetings, and speaking bluntly.
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Revival
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This was the first all- female college.
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Mt. Holyoke College
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He was the reformer who changed education from something done at the town/village level, to a state system that is seen around the country today.
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Horace Mann
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Final Jeopardy Category: Reforms
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The Temperance Movement was popular, but unable to affect any real change in laws for a long time. What was the biggest reason as to why changes in alcohol laws took so long to occur?
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The Temperance Movement eventually led to the 18 th Amendment in 1919. The reason it took so long for a law to change was due to The Civil War.
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