Women's Role
Enslaved African American's Role
Harriet Tubman
Important Women Figures
Important African American Figures
100

How many women worked for the union?

20,000

100

As time went on, European and African American culture started to assimilate together, to form new speech, folklore, food, and this thing that served as recreation, prayer, and worship for the enslaved.

Music
100

What was Harriet Tubman's original name

Araminta Ross
100

She was the Superintendent of Army Nurses for the Union.

Dorothea Dix

100

This man educated himself in secret then escaped slavery and went on to lead the Civil Rights Movement.

Frederick Douglass

200

Although women in the south did the same as the women in the north, what was the main thing that differentiated the two?

Women in the south had less money and resources.

200

These things made it so that slaves could not have a family or any form of privacy, alongside not receiving an education.

Slave Codes

200

About how many slaves did she rescue?

Over 300
200

Anthony and Stanton organized this to advocate for a constitutional amendment to abolish slavery.

Women’s Loyal National League

200

Abolitionist used this man, the first to die in the American Revolutionary War, into a chance to make the country understand that African Americans were as American as any other group and that they deserved rights.

Crispus Attucks

300

Many women worked primarily as nurses and joined volunteer these?

Volunteer Brigades

300

This "fractional" agreement made it so that African Americans had slight importance in politics for taxation and representation in Congress.

Three-Fifths Compromise 

300

How many years did she work for the underground railroad?

11

300

Stanton went on a tour of these in New York State.

Abolitionist lectures

300

This man from Beaufort was enslaved by a local planter, won freedom for himself, then became a prominent war hero.

Robert Smalls

400

In northern states, women organized these societies to provide union troops with food and clothing

Ladies' Aid Societies

400

The hierarchy of slaves typically went from top to bottom as: Working in the house; Skilled these; Majority of field hands 

Artisans

400

Tubman assisted this man with recruiting for the raid on Harpers Ferry.

John Brown

400

Anthony's actions resemble this 17th century community from Pennsylvania, as she was raised in that tradition.

Quaker

400

Douglass published many of these, gaining respect and notoriety.

Autobiographies

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