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18 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Charles Finney
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Presbyterian and Congregationalist minister who became an important figure in the Second Great Awakening. His influence during this period was enough that he has been called The Father of Modern Revivalism
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Second Great Awakening
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eligious revival movement during the early 19th century in the United States, which expressed Arminian theology by which every person could be saved through revivals
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Peter Cartwright
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American Methodist revivalist and politician in Illinois. Born in Amherst County, Virginia, Cartwright was a missionary who helped start the Second Great Awakening
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Timothy Dwight
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revivalist poetry
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American Temperance Society
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promoted the abolition of slavery, expanding women's rights, temperance, and the improvement of society, prohibiting alcohol
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Horace Mann
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education reformer
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Dorothea Dix
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promoted the reform of insane asylums and the treatment of the mental
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William Lloyd Garrison
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abolitionist, journalist, and social reformer
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Fredrick Douglas
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born into slavery, freed he introduced the harshness of slavery to other white Americans in the U.S.
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Neo-Calvinism
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form of Dutch Calvinism, is the movement initiated by the theologian and former Dutch prime minister Abraham Kuyper
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Seneca Falls Convention
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early and influential women's rights convention held in Seneca Falls, New York
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Brook Farm
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a utopian experiment in communal living in the United States in the 1840s
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Lyman Beecher
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a Presbyterian minister, temperance movement Founder (American Temperance Society) Co-founder and leader, and the father of 13 children
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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, in Great Britain and the United States, to advocate more womens rights
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American Anti-Slavery Association
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abolitionist society founded by William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan
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Declaration of Sentiments
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a document signed in 1848 by 68 women and 32 men, 100 out of some 300 attendees at the first women's rights convention, in Seneca Falls, New York, now known to Americans as the Seneca Falls Convention
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Liberator
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an abolitionist newspaper founded by William Lloyd Garrison in 1831
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