Amendment which abolished slavery in the United States.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Welcome to... MHE SQUARES A Game of X’s and O’s.
Advertisements

Don’t Forget... Contestants …Always phrase your answers in the form of a question!
8.2.  Slavery became an explosive issue, as Southerners increasingly defended it, while Northerners increasingly attacked it.  In addition, the abolition.
Ch.3 Sec.5.  People wanted to improve themselves & society  Influence of Jackson (people control)  2 nd Great Awakening  Christian movement 1790s-1830s.
Chapter 14 Sec 4 1.Abolitionists call to end slavery A. Abolition: to abolish or end slavery B. William Lloyd Garrison: Editor of an abolitionist newspaper,
R E F O R M. Wave of Religious excitement Meetings called “revivals”
Radical vs Moderate Abolitionists
Unit 4 Notes 3 19th Century Reforms.
Reform & Abolitionist Movement Goal 2.5 & 2.6 Reform Society Reform mov’t of mid-1800’s stemmed from religious growth. Ministers preached that citizens.
Reform Review. ABOLITIONIST MOVEMENT GoalHarriet Tubman the immediate, release of all slaves. Most famous “Conductor” of the Underground Railroad After.
Social Reform Movements : Temperance (ban of alcohol) Women’s Suffrage (right to vote) Education Reform Abolitionism.
Chapter 9.
Quick Write Write down the following questions on pg. 37 of your notebook. You have 5-10 minutes to respond to the following questions. You may answer.
+ The Reformers Open Book Quiz. + Reformers and their Cause Lyman Beecher – against alcohol Horace Mann – Education Thomas Gallaudet – Special Needs Education.
CH. 5-3: BIRTH OF THE AMERICAN REFORM MOVEMENT Women were not permitted to vote in federal elections until They were very active in reform movements.
Antebellum Reform Instructions
Jumpstart  Pick up your folder, the Unit 5 vocabulary list #3, and the Unit 5 vocabulary practice #3.  Sit in your assigned seat.
Abolitionist/Suffrage Movements. Abolitionist Those people that opposed and wanted to “abolish” slavery.
Bellringer: EOCT Review Questions
Social Reforms of the 1800s.
Impact of Reform Movements. The Abolitionist Movement The word abolitionist comes from the root word abolish or to stop immediately. Abolitionist’s is.
Chapter 14 “A New Spirit of Change” Significant People that worked for a better America As we go through this power point you will need to use a Thinking.
C14 S 3 Many women abolitionists also worked for women’s rights. July 1848, Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton set up the first women’s rights convention.
Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro.
Anti-Slavery Movement & Women’s Rights
In the 1800s and 1900s people fought for the rights we have today. Those people are called reformers. Many reforms occurred during this time. Reformer.
Abolitionism. Slave Experience Physical Conditions  brutality, degradation, and inhumanity  whippings, executions, and rapes were common.
Reforming American Society Efforts to Make America a Better nation, Efforts to Make America a Better nation,
Reforming American Society
Friday March 26 SOL booklet Who was a journalist and author of Common Sense? 105.Who was a prominent member of the Continental Congress who.
Ms. Moses. Vocabulary Orator Suffrage Deprive Inhumane Violation Emancipation.
Reforming American Society What changes occurred in 1800s America?
Abolitionist/Suffrage Movements. Abolitionist Those people that opposed and wanted to “abolish” slavery.
Social Reform SSUSH7 Students will explain the process of economic growth, its regional and national impact in the first half of the 19th century, and.
Reform Movements in America. Public Education Before 1860, only two states made school mandatory Before 1860, only two states made school mandatory Few.
Which is more effective at achieving its goals: violent or nonviolent protest?
Reform Movements. Impact of the Second Great Awakening Christian renewal movement.
Effects: Immigration Irish ImmigrantsGerman Immigrants Push Factors for Immigration Life in America Anti-Immigration Movements: Immigration Urban Growth.
What do we call people who worked to correct the problems of society?
Reform Movements. Influence of the Second Great Awakening It was movement of Christian renewal that began in the 1790s and became widespread in the U.S.
Women’s Movement By Mr. Harnell.
Religion and Reform.
Unit 10 Notes.
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Women's Rights Movement
Abolitionism and the Women's Suffrage Movement
Suffragist: Elizabeth Cady Stanton
O R M R F E MOVEMENT.
Chapter 14.4: Abolition and Women’s Rights
Community Movements III
Warm-Up What were some of the major problems created by rapid urbanization/industrialization? 2) Make a prediction: Who will women/families turn to to.
Abolitionist: person who wants the immediate end of slavery.
Chapter 3 Section 5 Reforming American Society
Reform Movements of the Early 1800s
Abolitionist and Suffrage Movement
Reform Movements in America
What methods did Americans use to oppose slavery?
Reforms and Reformers Attempts at Change.
Abolition and Women’s rights
Reforming American Society
Abolition & women’s Rights
Reform Movements of the 1800s
Chapter 14: A New Spirit of Change
APUSH Review: Video #28 Women’s Rights And The Seneca Falls Convention (Key Concept 4.1, III, C) Everything You Need To Know About Women’s Rights And.
The Women's Suffrage Movement
Reform Movements USI 8d.
Women’s Rights Reformers
Women and the Reform Movement
Reform Movement Notes.
Presentation transcript:

Amendment which abolished slavery in the United States. 13th Amendment

The seeking of the legal end of slavery in the United States. abolition

Amendment which guaranteed the right to vote regardless of gender. 19th Amendment

Someone who opposed slavery because it was morally wrong and against religious teachings. abolitionist

Amendment which gave the right to vote to black citizens. 15th Amendment

Escaped slave who published the abolitionist newspaper called the North Star. Frederick Douglass

Amendment which defined citizenship. Made former slaves into citizens. 14th Amendment

Most famous of the abolitionists. Publisher of The Liberator. William Lloyd Garrison

Amendment which made the making and selling of alcohol illegal. 18th Amendment

Abolitionist newspaper published by William Lloyd Garrison. The Liberator

Seneca Falls Convention 1848 women’s rights meeting in Seneca Falls, NY. Organized by Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Seneca Falls Convention

Elizabeth Cady Stanton Women’s rights and abolitionist leader. Helped organize the Seneca Falls Convention. President of the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1869. Elizabeth Cady Stanton

The right to vote suffrage

Movement to end the abuse of alcohol Temperance movement

Women’s rights movement Movement in the mid 1800’s to get women equal rights, the right to vote, etc. Women’s rights movement