Who Am I? - Reformers Review
Identify the person or organization/group described.
- Abolitionist:someone trying to end slavery
- Horace Mann: leader of public education movement; head of Massachusetts Board
of Education
- Dorothea Dix: teacher who investigated conditions in prisons and mental institutions
and worked to improve conditions
- Lyman Beecher: leader of the temperance movement in the 1800s
- Oberlin College: 1st college to admit African Americans
- Thomas Gallaudet: developed a method to educate people who were hearing impaired and
opened the first school for the hearing impaired
- Second Great Awakening: 19th century religious movement that inspired many reform movements
- Troy Female Seminary, Mount Holyoke: 1st colleges that admitted women
- William Lloyd Garrison: first white man to call for immediate end of slavery – published
antislavery newspaper, The Liberator, & started the New England Anti-Slavery Society
- American Colonization Society: group who tried to purchase slaves and send them to live in Africa in
the colony of Liberia
- Samuel Gridley Howe:Headed the Perkins Institute, school for the visually impaired
- Seneca Falls Convention: 1st convention for women’s rights; presented the Declaration of
Sentiments; proposed many rights for women including voting
- Margaret Fuller:writer who endorsed women’s rights, wrote Women in the Nineteenth Century
- Sojourner Truth: runaway slave formerly named Belle; renamed herself and traveled speaking on
abolition and women’s rights – famous speech, “Ain’t I a Woman,”
- Harriet Tubman: most famous conductor on the Underground Railroad
- Sarah & Angelina Grimke: Southern sisters raised on a plantation who worked for abolition and women’s
rights
- Fredrick Douglass:former slave, became very influential abolitionist, published antislavery
newspaper North Star, spoke in US and Europe
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton:wanted women to have the right to vote; worked with Lucretia Mott to
organize the Seneca Falls Convention; later worked with Susan B. Anthony
- Susan B. Anthony: a Quaker from rural New York worked for women’s rights and temperance;
organized Daughters of Temperance; worked with Elizabeth Cady Stanton; worked for women’s education, gained women’s property rights in NY
20. Quakers: religious group who opposed slavery because they believed all people are equal
21. Lucretia Mott: worked with Elizabeth Cady Stanton to organize Seneca Falls Convention
22. Sarah G. Bagley: worked for a 10-hour day for factory workers; tried to organize trade unions