The document summarizes social reforms and movements in the US during the 1800s. It discusses the Second Great Awakening and temperance movement. It also outlines educational reforms led by Horace Mann and efforts to establish special education schools. The abolitionist movement is described along with key figures like William Lloyd Garrison, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Frederick Douglass. The Underground Railroad is summarized as a network that helped escaped slaves reach freedom. The women's rights movement is covered, highlighting the Seneca Falls Convention and leaders like Susan B. Anthony and efforts for women's suffrage.
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See More: https://www.timelesspearl.com/
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Celebrating independently minded women in americaTimeless Pearl
From early on, women fought for their rights – whether it was to own land, to give girls the opportunity for a good education, or for equal rights in the workplace. Here are some women who stand out in history
See More: https://www.timelesspearl.com/
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From the early bloomers to today’s modern suits, pants have provided women with a huge sense of freedom. Practically, they allowed for increased mobility and functionality.
So, allow women to wear pants whenever they want and wherever they want!
From the early bloomers to today’s modern suits, pants have provided women with a huge sense of freedom. Practically, they allowed for increased mobility and functionality.
So, allow women to wear pants whenever they want and wherever they want!
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2. Lesson 1 – Social Reform
Second Great Awakening
Early 1800s...time when religious fever spread
throughout the nation
Some tried to form utopias (ideal religious
communities)
Temperance Movement – attempt to get people
to drink little or no alcohol...some states passed
laws that banned alcohol
3. Lesson 1 – Social Reform
Education
Horace Mann –
educational reformer who
believed education was a
key to wealth and
economic opportunity for
all...helped Massachusetts
set up first state-
supported normal school
teacher training schools
4. Lesson 1 – Social Reform
Special Education
Thomas Gallaudet –
helped hearing
impaired students
Samuel Gridley Howe
– helped visually
impaired students
Dorothea Dix – helped
mentally ill get
treatment instead of
prison
5. Lesson 1 – Social Reform
Authors
Margaret Fuller – supporter of
women’s rights, author of
Woman in the Nineteenth
Century – considered the first
feminist work in the US
Ralph Waldo Emerson –
believed people should listen
to their conscience, author of
Self-Reliance – people should
avoid conformity & follow
their own ideas
6. Lesson 1 – Social Reform
Authors
Henry David Thoreau – against
people leading materialistic
lives...author of Walden –
popularized living a simple life
& Civil Disobedience –
encouraged people to disobey
unjust laws
Harriet Beecher Stowe –
author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin –
portrayed slavery in a
negative way, further divided
North & South
7. Lesson 1 – Social Reform
Poets
Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow – wrote
narrative poems including
Paul Revere’s Ride
“Listen, my children,
and you shall hear of
the midnight ride of
Paul Revere...”
Walt Whitman – most
famous work – O Captain!
My Captain! – poem
about Lincoln after his
8. Lesson 1 – Social Reform
Poets
Emily Dickinson – may be
the most famous female
American poet...wrote
about loneliness, love, &
death...only published
seven poems during her
lifetime...most famous
work? Because I Could
Not Stop for Death
9. Lesson 2 – The Abolitionists
Abolitionists – people who
wanted to abolish, or end,
slavery
American Colonization Society
tried to purchase slaves from
slaveholders and send them to
other countries to start new lives
Liberia – means “place of freedom,”
colony in West Africa set up by the
ACS...1822-1865 – 10,000-12,000
African Americans settled there
Not all slaves liked this...some
wanted to be freed and live in the
US
10. Lesson 2 – The Abolitionists
Famous Abolitionists
William Lloyd Garrison –
started abolitionist newspaper
called The Liberator...called for
immediate emancipation
Sarah & Angelina Grimke –
sisters from the South...spoke
out against slavery in the
North...asked for slaves from
their parents for their
inheritance, then freed them
11. Lesson 2 – The Abolitionists
Famous Abolitionists
Harriet Beecher
Stowe - author of
Uncle Tom’s
Cabin…book was a
best-
seller…portrayed
slavery in a negative
way and became
banned in the South
12. Lesson 2 – The Abolitionists
Famous Abolitionists
Frederick Douglass – African-
American, former slave, spoke
throughout the North & the
world, editor of the anti-
slavery newspaper called The
North Star
Sojourner Truth – African-
American, former slave, spoke
through the North for the end
of slavery & supporter of
women’s rights
13. Lesson 2 – The Abolitionists
The Underground Railroad
name given to the “network” of safe houses and
abolitionists who helped escaped slaves reach their
freedom
“conductors” – guides that helped along the way
“stations” – rest stops...barns, basements, attics, etc.
operating as early as the 1500s, but reached peak from
1830-1860
tens of thousands of slaves escaped to the northern states,
Canada, Texas, Mexico, and through Florida to the
Caribbean
no accurate records kept because no one wanted to get
caught aiding the slaves
14. Lesson 3 – The Women’s Movement
Seneca Falls Convention
Women’s rights
convention held in Seneca
Falls, NY in 1848
Organized by Lucretia Mott
& Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Issued a Declaration of
Sentiments & Resolutions
called for an end to
laws that discriminated
against women and, after
much debate, demanded
women’s suffrage
15. Lesson 3 – The Women’s Movement
Susan B. Anthony
Speaker for women’s rights
Called for equal pay, access
to college for women, &
coeducation teaching
males & females together
Organized the Daughters of
Temperance first
women’s temperance
association
Her image was on the old US
Dollar coin
16. Lesson 3 – The Women’s Movement
Women’s Suffrage
1890 – Wyoming
became the first state
to allow women the
right to vote
1920 – 19th
Amendment was
passed granting voting
rights for women
across the nation
17. Lesson 3 – The Women’s Movement
Education
Emma Willard – set
up Troy Female
Seminary in
1821...taught math,
history, geography,
physics, & others
Mary Lyon – started
Mt. Holyoke Female
Seminary in 1837