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