Women's Rights
Slavery in America
What Hath God Wrought
Miscellaneous
Midterm Review
100
This famous women's rights advocate has been featured on the $1.00 coin.
Susan B. Anthony
100
A free African-American born in North Carolina; penned an 1829 "Appeal" for the abolitionist cause.
David Walker
100
The official name of the Christian sect known as "Quakers."
The Religious Society of Friends
100
A statesman and former president who arguably did the most for women's rights in the antebellum period.
John Quincy Adams
100
The seventh President of the United States.
Andrew Jackson
200
The location of a famous 19th century woman's rights convention.
Seneca Falls, New York
200
A doctrine which advocates the slow and eventual elimination of slavery.
Gradual Abolition
200
The 19th century American political party considered to be most amenable to the participation of women in politics.
The Whig Party
200
An 1848 women's rights declaration modeled on the themes within the Declaration of Independence.
Declaration of Sentiments
200
An enslaved African-American from South Carolina who sought freedom by defecting to the British military during the American Revolution.
Boston King
300
A famous African-American orator, writer, and statesman who wrote in favor of women's rights and suffrage.
Frederick Douglass
300
The court case State v. Mann occurred in this state.
North Carolina
300
Coeducational and interracial college founded in 1833.
Oberlin College
300
The span of years which this class (History 162) covers according to the complete course title.
1788-1848
300
Christian sect which adheres to a doctrine of determinism in salvation.
Calvinism
400
The two Christian sects most closely associated with the early women's suffrage movement and gender equality.
Quaker and Unitarian
400
An abolitionist newspaper founded by William Lloyd Garrison.
The Liberator
400
Samuel Morse's communications company.
Western Union Company
400
The first state to grant women the right to vote.
Wyoming
400
A Welsh industrialist who attempted to build successful socialist communities within the United States.
Robert Owen
500
This amendment to the U.S.Constitution granted women the right to vote.
The 19th Amendment.
500
The year in which the court case State v. Mann occurred.
1829
500
Apostle who—in his letter to the Corinthians—admonished them to "Let...women keep silence in the churches."
Saint Paul
500
A nationally circulated newspaper of Horace Greeley's which supported women's rights and employed feminist journalists.
The New York Tribune
500
The name of President Jackson's home in Nashville, TN.
The Hermitage.