Chapter 16: Reform: People
Across
- 3. Born into slavery, most famous conductor on the Underground Railroad, even though there was a price on her head, she made 19 trips into the South to help lead others to freedom
- 5. Started publishing the anti-slavery newspaper The Liberator in 1831
- 6. Met Person #6 at a abolitionist convention in London where they became close friends and organized a convention in New York
- 7. Believed that the mentally ill were being treated harshly, starting in 1841 she began working to improve conditions
- 8. Writer who wanted Americans to take pride in their own culture, member of a group of thinkers who started transcendentalism
- 10. Developed a method to teach the hearing impaired and opened the Hartford School for the Deaf in 1817
- 13. French born artist who is best known for his paintings of Birds of America
- 14. An American poet who wrote about nature, love, and death, most poems were published after her death
- 15. Took up the cause of Women’s Rights when they were denied access to the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London in 1840, helped organize a convention on the subject in their New York hometown
Down
- 1. In 1837 became the head of the 1st state board of education, known as the “Father of Public Education” believed that education was “The Great Equalizer”
- 2. Former slave who escaped in 1838 and became one of the speakers for the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, published an anti-slavery newspaper called The North Star
- 4. South Carolina sisters who traded their inheritance to free the family slaves. Also, wrote a collection of firsthand accounts of slavery in "American Slavery As It Is" in 1839
- 9. Student of Emerson who believed that people should live up to their own individual standards, also thought that people should not obey laws they considered unjust
- 11. Worked for temperance, abolition, and women’s rights, especially wanted to see women get the right to control their own property and wages
- 12. Born into slavery, her original name was Isabella Baumfee, fought through the courts to regain her son, fought for abolition and women’s rights