Women's Rights
Women's Roles
Women in Wartime
Work and Education
Misc.
100
The movement that most early feminists were first involved in.
What is the abolitionist movement
100
The reason why the relationship between mothers and children became more loving during the Second Great Awakening.
What is a smaller family and the mothers' opinion that they needed to "save" their children.
100
The two wars that women were involved in during the 1800s.
What is the War of 1812 and the Civil War.
100
The three areas of study that were offered for women.
What is nursing, teaching, and social work.
100
The reason why many women were not involved in sports.
What is because sports were considered to be manly and if a woman liked sports, she was considered to be unfeminine.
200
The three main rights that married women lacked.
What is right to vote, the right to own property, and the right to make a will
200
Two differences between women on the frontier and women on plantations.
What is the size of the families, different types of work, and amount of spare time.
200
The organization created by Elizabeth Blackwell to improve sanitation at the camps, supply hospitals with nurses, and raise money for medical supplies.
What is the U.S. Sanitary Commission
200
Community centers where young women worked to improve city slums.
What are settlement houses
200
The two amendments that divided the Woman Suffrage Movement.
What are the 14th and 15th amendments
300
The meeting where the Declaration of Sentiments was written (the form was based off of the Declaration of Independence)
What is the Seneca Falls Convention
300
The mindset that women had such a high ideal placed on them, that most fell short
What is the Cult of True Womanhood
300
A way in which the roles of women changed during war.
What is women involving themselves in the public sphere and taking on jobs previously filled by men
300
Three jobs that women partook in during the 1860s.
What is working in textile mills, in “sewing trades”, as salespeople, cashiers, nurses, teachers, clerks, secretaries, and operators of the new typewriters
300
The argument that women used to further the Women's Rights Movement.
What is the Darwinian concept of biological adaptation (women were morally superior to men)
400
The main goal of the NACW.
What is helping all African-American women by working on issues of civil rights and injustice
400
The reason why there was a widened gap between women in different economic classes during the early 1800s.
What is the different view on women working between the middle class and the lower class (middle-class women were not supposed to work, but everyone had to work in a lower-class family)
400
Four jobs that women assumed during war.
What is taking over plantations, volunteering as nurses, joined the medical corps, harvesting crops for troops, and taking jobs in textile factories and government agencies
400
Professions that middle-class, educated women worked in.
What is nurses, teachers, clerks, secretaries, and operators of the new typewriters
400
Four of the jobs that women slaves performed in the South.
What is spinning, weaving, sewing, working on the fields, cooking, doing chores for their families, and caring for free and slave children
500
The two different factions of the early Woman Suffrage Movement and their differences.
What is National Woman Suffrage Association (concerned with not only the right to vote, but also other matters concerning women at the time) and American Woman Suffrage Association (only concerned with the right to vote)
500
Three changes in women's roles during the Second Great Awakening).
What is mothers became increasingly active in the Church, women felt responsible for the Christian education of their children, servants allowed women to spend more time towards their children’s salvation, mothers started to move away from their husbands’ shadows, and they challenged the paternalistic views of the churches that they followed
500
The difference between lower class women and higher class women during war.
What is the vulnerability to the war's destruction (facing hunger) and manual labor (poorer women did more hands-on work for war)
500
The goal of the the Female Seminary Movement.
What is forming schools that would offer women an education equal to that of men by holding their pupils to the same high standards.
500
How the Women's Rights Movement morphed from the Abolitionist Movement.
What is men disapproving of women speaking out publicly.