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    Malia Byram Mr. Mumau APUSH 5 December 2012 Village Life In America 1852-1872 As told in the diary of a Schoolgirl This book is a diary written by a young girl named Caroline Cowles Richards. Carolina tells the reader about her life. How at a early age her and her sister Anna‚ lost their mother‚ were sent to their grandparents house in canandaigua‚ New York. They were brought up with simplicity‚ sweetness and Puritan traditions. The diary begins in 1852‚ and is continued

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    In the article “Susan B. Anthony dares to vote” and the play “The Watsons go to birmingham” the theme of both texts is perseverance. They show it in many different ways though like in the article she goes against the law to get her rights for being a woman and in the play Watson’s try to fight for blacks rights when they go to back to Alabama. A difference they have is the characters actions in “Susan B. Anthony Dares to Vote” white people want to send her to jail‚ but in “The Watson’s go to Birmingham”

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    American Reform Movements

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    American Reform Movements From 1790 to 1860 reforms emerged in the United States in attempt to create a more advanced society. Many of the movements that were attempted failed due to either entrenched social conservatism or weaknesses in the movements themselves. New religions started to emerge based on Christianity‚ but shaped to their preferences. Along with new religions were Utopias that were part of cooperative‚ communistic‚ or “communitarian” nature. The temperance movement started to

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    The activist and free thinker Matilda Joslyn Gage is relevant in today’s American culture because of her work in the abolitionist movement which led to the emancipation of slaves; her pioneering work to start the woman’s suffrage movement with Susan B. Anthony that sought equal rights for woman; and her views on religion and how it influenced the women’s suffrage movement. She was exposed as a young child to the abolitionist movement and her childhood home was

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    men. “It was a powerful symbol and the beginning of a long struggle for legal‚ professional‚ educational‚ and voting rights” (Bowles‚ 2011). In 1890‚ Stanton along with Lucy Stone and Susan B. Anthony formed the organization National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA). “Stanton‚ and others like Susan B. Anthony‚ labored through the late 19th century to achieve victory‚ but by the time of their deaths in 1902 and 1906‚ they still were not welcome at the ballot box” (Bowles‚ 2011). At

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    In 1851 Susan B Anthony discovered a sort of liberating partnership they could forge. Anthony found that the temperance movements they confined themselves and did not expect an unequal rights. In 1869 Anthony and Stanton was distinct from equal rights movement. During the civil war Elizabeth Cady Stanton concentrated her efforts on abolishing slavery‚ afterward she was more out spoken in promoting women suffrage. In the 1860s‚ the feminist movement moved to New Zealand. Muller noted that men

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    Give Up The Fight and‚ “Susan B Anthony Dares To Vote” they both share the same theme of perseverance .both characters pushed around and mistreated because they were girls that wanted to be treated equal. In “Don’t Give Up The Fight‚ Ava is pushed around by the coach and the boy on her track team. Also the boys on her team and the coach tell her that she is not good enough to be on track team because she was a young woman . And in “Susan B Anthony Dares To Vote” she is

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    decision should be made. Extended Works Cited Jone Johnson-Lewis “History of Abortion in the United States” In the reading of this article‚ the early 1800s abortion was forbidden after the fourth month pregnancy. Two popular feminist Susan B Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton stood against the movement of abortion and wrote the “Revolution” that persuaded the importance of prevention and detailed the blamed circumstances of laws and the men they believed pushed them to abortion This source

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    Life for the American woman in the 19th century was full of conflicts and struggles. Women suffered from a lot of discrimination‚ and were not allowed to vote‚ attend universities‚ speak in public‚ or own property‚ and were essentially forced to fight for their place within society. Regardless of these difficulties‚ women gathered strength in numbers and succeeded in establishing permanent social changes. Writing was a popular form of expression for women and was used as tools of social change--in

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    The women’s suffrage movement was full of brilliant political strategist who with their knowledge of the intricate government made their purpose and goals achievable. It was mainly lead by civil rights activists‚ propagandists‚ and writers. Their contribution was ultimately leading for their right to vote‚ and to run for office. This lead America to have more diversity with the people who were voting. The first women’s rights organization formed the International Counsel of Women (ICU). Since

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