Women in Refrom

Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Impact Today

Accomplishments

She succeed i her work for the rights of women and slaves.

She made a result in the 19th amendment which lead women to be able to vote.

Helped us Women and slaves become free and have many rights.

Forever changed the social and political landscape of the United States.

Sarah and Angelina Grimke'

Impact Today

Accomplishments

The very first two women to speak in front of state legislature.

Also, resulted in improving women's health.

Also active writers and speakers for women's rights.

It resulted in many women working on improving education mainly for girls.

Temperance movement

Impact Today

Accomplishments

It decreased alcohol consumption by half between 1830 1840.

It was then passed in 1851 by the efforts of Neal Dow.

Today, nearly one of five U.S. adults favors making drinking any alcohol illegal.

It has modified its ideology and political strategy. It is now neo-prohibitionism. More suprising is the support for actaul prohibition.

Cult of Domesticity

Impact Today

Accomplishments

This division between the domestic and public spheres had effects on women's power and status.

In the society as a whole, particularly in political and economic arenas, women's power declined.

Feminist values promoted.

Legal Independence.

Lucretia Mott

Impact Today

Accomplishments

She advocated people to not buy the products of slave labor.

She joined many Women's right conventions.

She helped found the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society in 1833.

She also co-wrote the Declaration of Sentiments in 1848 for the first Women's Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, New York.

Seneca Falls Convention

Impact Today

Accomplishments

Allows everyone to vote, even women.

Gave us women our own decisons.

The first women's rights convention in the United States.

the meeting launched the women's suffrage movement, which more than seven decades later ensured women the right to vote.

Sojourner Truth

Accomplishments

Impact Today

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She became an outspoken advocate for abolition, temperance, and civil and women's rights in the nineteenth century.

She lead us women to have more rights.

Her Civil War work earned her an invitation to meet President Abraham Lincoln in 1864.