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Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

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Frederick Douglas This escaped slave became one of the best-known speakers in the US. He had learned to read and write in secret.

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Page 1: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Chapter 15, Sections 4,5.

Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Page 2: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Angelina and Sarah Grimke

• Daughters of a slaveholding family.

• Southern sisters that were antislavery.

Page 3: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Frederick Douglas

• This escaped slave became one of the best-known speakers in the US. He had learned to read and write in secret.

Page 4: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Fugitive Slaves…

…often moved along the underground railroad during the night.

Page 5: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Harriet Tubman

• The most famous conductor on the “underground railroad”.

Page 6: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

The “Gag Rule” prohibited discussions of anti-slavery petitions in the US House of Representatives in the early 1800s.

Page 7: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Sojourner Truth

• This ex-slave abolitionist and women’s rights speaker challenged her audiences to change their perceptions that women were the weaker sex.

Page 8: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

In most states in the early and mid-1800s it was illegal for married women to own and

control their own wages and property.

Page 9: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Some women believed that women didn’t need any new rights because they were

different than men.

Page 10: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Many men in the 1800s felt that women lacked the physical and mental strength

to survive without men’s assistance.

Page 11: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Some male reform leaders did not support the full involvement of women in

the reform movements.

Page 12: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Lucy Stone

• She became the first activist to suggest changing the institution of marriage. She kept her last name when she got married.

Page 13: Chapter 15, Sections 4,5. Abolition Movement and Women’s Rights

Susan B. Anthony

• Born to a Quaker household, she went on to be a leading organizer in the women’s rights movement. She argued for equal pay for equal work.