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Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

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Page 1: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

Chapter 13 “New Movements in America”

Ms. Monteiro

Page 2: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

100 100

200 200200

400 400

300300

400400

Immigrants and Urban Challenges

American Arts Reforming Society

Women’s Rights

300 300 300

200

400

200

100100

500 500 500 500500

100

200

300

400

Movement to End Slavery

100

500

Page 3: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

Row 1, Col 1

Why Irish came to U.S. in mid-1840s

Potato famine

Page 4: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

2,1

Over 4 million arrived in U.S. between 1840 and 1860

Immigrants

Page 5: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,1

 People who opposed immigrants

Nativists

Page 6: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

5,1

Political party formed to oppose immigrants

Know-Nothing Party

Page 7: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

5,1

Came to U.S. because of revolution and foreconomic opportunity

Germans

Page 8: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

1,2

Belief that people could rise above material things

transcendentalism

Page 9: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

2,2

 Groups of people who tried to form a perfect society

Utopian Communities

Page 10: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

3,2

 Movement that involved interest in nature, individual expression, and

rejection of established rules

Romanticism

Page 11: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,2

 Emily Dickinson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,

and Walt Whitman

American poets of the 1800s

Page 12: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

5,2

Henry David Thoreau andRalph Waldo Emerson

Transcendentalists

Page 13: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

1,3

Renewed people’s religious faith throughout America

Second Great Awakening

Page 14: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

2,3

 Movement that emphasized self-discipline with respect to drinking liquor

Temperance Movement

Page 15: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

3,3

 Helped to improved conditions in prisons

Dorothea Dix

Page 16: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,3

Helped to advance the idea of state-supportedpublic schools

Common school movement – Horace Mann

Page 17: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

5,3

 In 1835, first college to admit African Americans

Oberlin College for Women

Page 18: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

1,4

Movement for the complete end to slavery

Abolition

Page 19: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

2,4

 

Founder of the American Anti-Slavery Society and publisher of the abolitionist newspaper, the LIBERATOR

William Lloyd Garrison

Page 20: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

3,4

  Escaped from slavery, became important

African American leader in the 1800s, publisher of the NORTH STAR newspaper

Frederick Douglass

Page 21: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,4

  Traveled and gave fiery and dramatic

speeches as an abolitionistand supporter of women’s rights

Sojourner Truth

Page 22: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

5,4

  Escaped slave who returned to the south 19 times

as a conductor on the Underground Railroad

Harriet Tubman

Page 23: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,4

Sisters who spoke out against slavery and for women’s rights 

 

Sarah and Angelina Grimke

Page 24: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,4

 Document written at the Seneca Falls Convention that detailed social injustice toward women

Declaration of Sentiments

Page 25: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,4

 Brought strong organizational skills to the women’s rights movement and became the main

person associated with the movement

Susan B. Anthony

Page 26: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,4

  First public meeting about women’s rights in the

United States

Seneca Falls Convention

Page 27: Chapter 13 “New Movements in America” Ms. Monteiro

4,4

 Two women’s rights reformers who were angeredwhen women had to sit behind a curtain at the

World’s Anti-Slavery Convention in London, England in 1840

Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott