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(Cult of domesticity, Sojourner Truth, Seneca Falls Convention, Elizabeth…
Cult of domesticity
Accomplishments
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Impacts today
It led to the development of the women movement in direct response to the standards set upon women society
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Sojourner Truth
Accomplishments
Today Impacts
outspoken advocate for abolition, temperance, and civil and women's rights in the nineteenth century.
As a women's rights activist, Truth faced additional burdens that white women did not have, plus the challenge of combating a suffrage movement
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Sojourner Truth became an outspoken advocate for abolition, temperance, and civil and women's rights
Seneca Falls Convention
Accomplishments
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Held in July 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York, the meeting launched the women's suffrage movement, which more than seven decades later ensured women the right to vote.
Impacts today
The long term effects of the convention were that women finally gained the right to vote and later equality with men.
Seneca Falls Convention was also a turning point in history because it set the women's rights movement into motion.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Accomplishments
Impacts today
forever changed the social and political landscape of the United States of America by succeeding in her work to guarantee rights for women and slaves.
Her unwavering dedication to women's suffrage resulted in the 19th amendment to the Constitution, which granted women the right to vote.
In 1848, at the Seneca Falls Convention, she drafted the first organized demand for women's suffrage in the United States.
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Temperance movement
Accomplishments
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Impacts today
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the development of organized crime and increased violence, and massive political corruption.
Lucretia Mott
Accomplishments
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She continued to speak out against slavery, and in 1866 she became the first president of the American Equal Rights Association, an organization formed to achieve equality for African Americans and women
Impacts today
She also co-wrote the Declaration of Sentiments in 1848 for the first Women's Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, New York, which ignited the fight for women's suffrage.
As an ardent abolitionist, she helped found the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society in 1833.
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