Across
- 7. A Boston woman that devoted herself to improving conditions in jails and prisons.
- 9. A person who supported the ending of slavery
- 13. Friends with Stanton and helped create and organize the Senaca Falls Convention.
- 14. A deeply religious white man and that started a fiery abolitionist newspaper called “The Liberator”.
- 18. Wrote a famous journal on individualism and was friends with Emerson.
- 21. To obey established rules and patterns
- 22. The gathering of supporters of women’s rights in July 1848
- 23. A formal statement of injustices suffered by women
Down
- 1. To give time, money, or effort to help a person or cause.
- 2. Making changes in order to bring about improvement
- 3. A tall African American woman who escaped enslavement and was strongly spiritual. Inspired by Douglass, she wrote and spoke many speeches to groups of men and women.
- 4. Friends with Anthony and Mott, wrote powerful speeches, and proposed to demand the right for women to vote.
- 5. The building she was speaking in was burned for speaking of abolition. Sisters with Sarah Grimke.
- 6. to know or understand based on feeling, not facts
- 8. Acting based on one’s own beliefs.
- 10. A philosophy emphasizing that people should go beyond logical thinking to reach true understanding
- 11. The revival of religious feeling and belief from the 1800s to the 1840s
- 12. A central figure in transcendentalism and was friends with Thoreau.
- 15. Prohibited from saying her own speech at her college, since women were not allowed to speak in public.
- 16. A free black man that quickly became a leader in the abolitionist movement and started a newspaper called “North Star”.
- 17. A female reformer with a flair for public speaking. Friends with Staton and read her speeches to groups of people and towns.
- 19. Inspired by religious reform movements against slavery. Sisters with Angelina Grimke.
- 20. The first president of a new college in Ohio that admitted men and women.
