Religious Revival
Experiments with Utopia
Women’s Rights
Prison and Asylum Reform
Hudson River School Artists
100

During the Second Great Awakening Charles Grandison Finney was

one of the most famous and most controversial travelling preachers

100

When the 19th century america grew larger, richer, and more diverse, it was also trying to accomplish a culture that was

distant and not following of any in Europe

100

Although women had many moral obligations and duties in the home, church and community, they had few

 political and legal rights

100

The year ____ also marked the beginning of the superintendence of Dr. John Galt at Eastern Lunatic Asylum, in Williamsburg, Virginia, the first publicly supported psychiatric hospital in America.

1841

100

Before ____, there was no such thing as an art museum open to the public

1830

200

it was unique and was a welcome message coming from the mouths of

Finney and other american

200

local communities create different clubs so they could talk about

common interests and ideas.

200

When Abigail Adams reminded her husband John during the Constitutional Convention to

Remember the Ladies!

200

After the War of ____, reformers from Boston and New York began a crusade to remove children from jails into juvenile detention centers.

1812

200

Artists began to create work for the enjoyment of the Middle Class. Soon, it became as common to see a painting over the _________ of a home as to find a Bible on the kitchen table.

fireplace

300

who started to spread the word of the Second Great awakening from New england all the way to the west near

1795 to around 1835.

300

People speculated if any society were completely reorganized, it could be

regenerated and be perfected

300

Women were pushed to the sidelines as dependents of men, without the power to bring

suit, make contracts, own property, or vote. 

300

After being locked down in solitary, many of the eighty men committed

suicide or had mental breakdowns.

300

In ____, the American Art Union was created to raise money for artists' salaries

1839

400

This was a message of opportunity and hope. Religion was

not only revived but it was being transformed

400

Utopia, originally a Greek word for an imaginary place where everyone and everything is perfect, was sought in America through the creation of model communities within the

greater society.

400

Activists began to question women's subservience to men and called for rallying around the

abolitionist movement

400

After several bad starts, America finally enjoyed about a ______ of real reform

decade

400

____ ______ had no formal training as an artist. He could not draw a likeness, or any real figure for that matter. But he understood something his peers did not.

Cole Thomas

500

The assurance that life on earth has its own rewards was not just a way station to the road to

heaven or hell

500

Most of the original utopias were created for religious purposes. One of the earliest was devised by George Rapp, a zealot, considering only God as their ruler, who took 600 followers to western Pennsylvania in

1804

500

Around 1840 the abolitionist movement was split over the acceptance of female speakers and officers. Ultimately ignored as a delegate to a World Anti-Slavery Convention in London, Elizabeth Cady Stanton returned to America in

1848

500

Idealism, plus hope in the perfectibility of institutions, spurred a new generation of leaders including Francis Lieber, Samuel Gridley Howe and the peerless Dix. Their goals were prison

libraries

500

While artists had been painting Americans for over a century, no one had painted _______ before.

America

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