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Period: to
timespan
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massive revival held at kane ridge, kentucky
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Cult of Domesticity
The cult of domesticity was founded. It went from 1820 to 1860 -
american temperance society formed
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There were many factors and events which lead up to the Women’s’ Rights Movement
The evangelical culture of the 1820s and 1830s influenced the family as an institution and inspired new conceptions of its role in American society. In the early nineteenth century, a new ideal of marriage for love arose among the American middle class. By the early nineteenth century, first names, pet names, and terms of endearment such as “honey” or “darling” were increasingly used by both sexes, and absent husbands frequently confessed they felt lost without their mates. In their replies, wi -
Slavery Movement
Garrison launched a new anti-slavery movement. He published a journal called The Liberator. -
William Lloyd Garrison publishes first issue of the Liberator
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abolitionists found american anti slavery society
In late 1833, William Lloyd Garrison allied with black and white abolitionists to form the American Anti-Slavery Society which had, as associate members, interracial female antislavery societies in Philadelphia and Boston -
Teodore Weld advocates aboition in Ohio and upstate New York
his meetings promote aboltion of slavery and leave thousands of abolitionists and hundreds of abolitionist societies -
wiliam lloyd Garrison
his meetings promote aboltion of slavery and leave thousands of abolitionists and hundreds of abolitionist societies -
Abolitionist editor Elijah Lovejoy killed
killed by a proslavery mob -
Horace Mann
Horace Mann convinced legislature to enact his proposal and he resigned from his seat to become the first secretary of the new board. -
Massachusetts establishes a state board of education
structured education system -
Brook Farm
Transcendentalists organize a model community at Brook Farm. -
Seneca falls convention
early and influential women's rights convention held in Seneca Falls, New York, July 19–20, 1848. It was organized by local New York women upon the occasion of a visit by Boston-based Lucretia Mott, a Quaker famous for her speaking ability, a skill rarely cultivated by American women at the time.