<p> Abolition and Women’s Rights in Antebellum America</p><p>Abolitionism (pp. 344-354)</p><p>40. On what grounds did reformers demand the immediate end to slavery?</p><p>41. How did leading African Americans in the North suggest that free blacks could “elevate” themselves?</p><p>42. How did whites in many northern cities respond to the efforts by African Americans to achieve social equality with whites?</p><p>43. What did the self-taught free-black from North Carolina, David Walker, promise white Americans who defended the institution of slavery?</p><p>44. How did slave revolt leader, Nat Turner use his religious “spirit” to justify his actions?</p><p>45. What actions did Nat Turner take, and what was the outcome?</p><p>46. What radical measures did Virginia and other Southern states take in reaction to Nat Turner’s Revolt?</p><p>47. What did radical Christians warn happen to planters if they did not grant blacks their God-given status?</p><p>48. What did William Lloyd Garrison intend to accomplish when he published in his anti-slavery newspaper, The Liberator, “I will not equivocate, I will not retreat one inch; and I will be heard!” and “the U.S. Constitution is a covenant with death and an agreement with Hell”?</p><p>49. What efforts did female abolitionists like Lucretia Mott contribute to the abolitionist movement?</p><p>50. What crucial perspective did sisters, Angelina and Sarah Grimke bring to the abolitionist cause? 51. What did the Grimke sisters do to advance the cause of abolition?</p><p>52. Summarize how abolitionists aided fugitive slaves?</p><p>53. Why was the future of fugitive slaves in the North so uncertain?</p><p>54. What was the Fugitive Slave Act (1793), and what did northern abolitionists do to thwart is effectiveness?</p><p>55. According to map 11.3 on p. 351, how did the Underground Railroad assist fugitive slaves?</p><p>56. What legislative measures did abolitionists seek in Congress to address the question of slavery in the U.S.?</p><p>57. Who supported such political activities, and how in particular did Transcendentalist, Henry David Thoreau support the abolitionists movement?</p><p>58. How much support did the Abolitionist Movement have?</p><p>59. For what different reasons did slavery’s proponents support the institution of slavery?</p><p>60. What did the violent actions of racism in the north reveal about the opposition to abolition?</p><p>61. What did the Georgia state legislature do to illustrate the racial solidarity of Southern whites?</p><p>62. What did the House of Representatives do to suppress antislavery debates in Congress? 63. What issue created internal divisions within the ant-slavery movement?</p><p>IDENTIFICATIONS: On separate paper William Lloyd Garrison David Walker’s An Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World American Colonization Society “amalgamation” Gag rule Liberty Party</p><p>The Women’s Rights Movement (pp. 354-359) 64. At Mary Walker Ostram’s funeral in 1859, how did her Reverend Fowler describe the political role of women?</p><p>65. What moral reforms did the middle-class Female Moral Reform Society seek in New York City?</p><p>66. Identify the particular cause taken up by Massachusetts reformer, Dorothea Dix, and assess the success she achieved.</p><p>67. What reforms in education did Horace Mann, the Father of Public Education, initiate in his home state of Massachusetts?</p><p>68. Why were most teachers in the U.S. women by the 1850s?</p><p>69. What particular aspect of slavery did women abolitionists like Harriet Jacobs try to expose to the American public?</p><p>70. What best selling novel did Harriett Beecher Stowe write, and what did she say was the greatest moral failing of slavery?</p><p>71. What factor made women increasingly conscious of their own social and legal inferiority? 72. What pragmatic reforms did women’s activists seek during the 1840s? Did they succeed?</p><p>73. What happened at Seneca Falls, NY in 1848?</p><p>74. What was the agenda of the first national women’s rights convention in Worcester, MA?</p><p>75. Who was the most prominent political operative in the women’s rights movement?</p><p>IDENTIFICATIONS: On separate paper Separate Spheres Cult of Domesticity Sojourner Truth Uncle Tom’s Cabin Declaration of Rights and Sentiments of 1848 Susan B. Anthony</p>
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