Women's Rights
Women's Activists
Social Expectations
Early Reform
Misc.
100

This was a right that, similar to slaves, women could not participate in even though white men could

Suffrage

100

This person was responsible for the naming of women activists as "Suzy B's"

Susan B. Anthony

100

According to the Cult of Domesticity, this is the place where women were meant to stay

The Home

100

This was the movement that gave rise to the women’s rights movement

The Abolishionist Movement

100

This person was a prominent male figure at the First Women's Rights Convention in Seneca Falls

Frederick Douglass

200

The ownership of this was turned over their husbands after becoming married

 Women’s Property

200

This Woman gave the famous Declaration of Sentiments as the Seneca Falls Convention (1848)

Elizabeth Cady Stanton

200

This is a social doctrine for women that proliferated antebellum America

The Cult of Domesticity

200

This idea helped found a base that supported women’s rights and caused a belief that all human beings are born equal

Transcendentalism

200

This influential figure changed women's fashion, switching out traditional clothing for more radical outfits, often criticized for being to "masculine"

Amelia Bloomer

300

This was the year women gained the right to vote

1919

300

This woman was seated behind a curtain and not allowed to participate in the Antislavery Convention in London (1840) with Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Lucretia Mott

300

In a family, according to antebellum beliefs, these people are guides on how to be morally and spiritually well

Women

300

This was a formal document written at the Seneca Falls Convention

The Declaration of Sentiments

300

This Percentage of women chose to remain unmarried during the Civil War due to the restrictions marriage placed on them

10%

400

This was the punishment for raping a woman, which was a lot harsher than most places around the world

The Death Sentence

400

This woman wrote the book Woman in the Nineteenth Century, which promoted women having individualistic identities, women's rights, & overcoming societal expectations

Margaret Fuller

400

These were a wife's main focus according to the cult of domesticity

Children

400

This was the dividing line between National Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage Association

The Fifteenth Amendment

400

This woman encouraged women to get an education and pushed for more women to become teachers, even though she was against women's suffrage

Catharine Beecher

500

This was a taboo topic amongst women in society

Birth-Control

500

These sisters were popular quakers, abolitionists, and fought for women's rights against all opposition

Sarah & Angelina Grimké 

500

This attribute led women to work in factories

Unmarried

500

These were the papers published by National Woman Suffrage Association while this was the papers published by the American Woman Suffrage Association

The Revolution and The Women’s Journal

500

This was the motto of the National Woman Suffrage Association

“Justice, not Favors.—Men, their Rights and Nothing More; Women, their Rights and Nothing Less.”

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