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18 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Charles Finney
Presbyterian and Congregationalist figure in the Second Great Awakening.
Second Great Awakening
a religious revival movement during the early 19th century in the United States
Peter Cartwright
an American Methodist revivalist and politician in Illinois.
Timothy Dwight
An evangelist preachor who became president of Yale college.
American temperence society
The society benefited from, and contributed to, a reform sentiment in much of the country promoting the abolition of slavery, expanding women's rights, temperance, and the improvement of society.
Horace Mann
Pushed for an established board of education and taxes supporting schools.
dorothea dix
America's highest paid and most widely read female journalist at the time
William Lloyd Garrison
a prominent American abolitionist, journalist, and social reformer. He is best known as the editor of the abolitionist newspaper The Liberator
Frederick Douglas
an American social reformer, orator, writer and statesman. After escaping from slavery, he became a leader of the abolitionist movement
neo-calvanism
the movement initiated by the theologian and former Dutch prime minister Abraham Kuyper.
Seneca falls convention
an early and influential women's rights convention held in Seneca Falls, New York
Brook Farm
a transcendentalist commune that attracted many leading creative figures.
Lyman Beecher
a Presbyterian minister, American Temperance Society co-founder
Lewis tappan
New York abolitionist who worked to achieve the freedom of the illegally enslaved Africans of the Amistad.
Cult of true womanhood
a prevailing view among upper and middle class white women during the nineteenth century
American anti slavery association
abolishinist group
Declaration of sentimants
Document signed after the seneca falls convention that put aside the rights women wished to have such as suffrage
Liberator
an abolitionist newspaper founded by William Lloyd Garrison in 1831