Abolitionism
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Thoreau it all Away
Religion
Who Run the World
Are you smarter than a 5th grader?
100

Formerly enslaved himself, he became one of America's most important abolitionist speakers and published a journal called The North Star.

Frederick Douglass

100

A secular experiment in communal living, this place in Indiana was the work of Robert Owen, who believed a socialist community could be the answer to the inequality brought by the Industrial Revolution.

New Harmony

100
"Romantic" poet who wrote The Raven and The Tell-Tale Heart.

Edgar Allen Poe

100

A religion that originated in the early 1800s whose members believed in Millennialism, or the second coming of Jesus.

Seventh-Day Adventists

100

Women were among the advocates for _______________, meaning abstaining from drinking alcohol.

Temperance

100

The region of the United States that was slower to embrace public education and humanitarian reforms.

The South

200

After his 1831 rebellion in which 55 whites were killed in Virginia, any antislavery sentiment in the south was put to an end.

Nat Turner

200

A place in West Roxbury, MA where Unitarian preacher George Ripley set up a utopian experiment in communal living.

Brook Farm

200

A figure in the Romantic genre of literature, this MA writer wrote the Scarlet Letter and the House of Seven Gables.

Nathaniel Hawthorne

200

Also known as camp meetings, these were outdoor religious events that attracted many.

Revivals

200

The idea that a woman's primary responsibility and fulfillment should come from managing the household and caring for her family.

Cult of Domesticity

200

The two groups Thomas Gallaudet and Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe opened up special institutions for.

The deaf and blind

300

Abolitionist political party

Liberty Party

300

A feminist, associate of the Transcendental authors, and writer of "Woman in the Nineteenth Century," she spent time at Brook Farm.

Margaret Fuller

300

A literary and philosophical movement that emerged in New England and emphasized nature, artistic expression and individualism.

Transcendentalism

300

A religious movement during the late 18th to early 19th century in the United States that saw many more people embrace Protestant Christianity and encouraged social reform movements.

Second Great Awakening

300

She authored “The Declaration of Sentiments,” which expanded on the Declaration of Independence by adding the word “woman” or “women” throughout.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton

300

He was the leading advocate in the common (public) schools movement and Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education. 

Horace Mann

400

Massachusetts radical abolitionist and publisher of The Liberator.

William Lloyd Garrison

400

A group who lived communally but forbade marriage and any physical relations among men and women.

Shakers

400

He wrote Walden and Civil Disobedience, which encouraged nonviolent protest.

Henry David Thoreau
400

He was the founder of the Church of Latter-Day Saints who was murdered by a mob in Illinois.

Joseph Smith

400

She was a critic of the horrific conditions of prisons and asylums for the mentally ill and lobbied politicians to take action.

Dorothea Dix

400

Named after a Pennsylvania teacher, these textbooks taught reading and morality.

McGuffey Readers

500

A group who organized a settlement of African Americans in Liberia.

American Colonization Society

500

A group dedicated to perfect social and economic equality whose members shared everything (including spouses). Critics attacked them for their sinful "free love" but they're still known for their silverware.

Oneida Community

500

The Father of Transcendentalism, he wrote Self-Reliance and Concord Hymn.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

500

He was a Presbyterian minister who led revivals in upstate NY and believed people could be saved through faith and hard work.

Charles Grandison Finney

500

A women's rights convention met here in 1848 to voice support for suffrage and legal and property rights.

Seneca Falls

500

A religious group who opened up private schools because they believed public schools reflected Protestant beliefs.

Catholics