| A | B |
| renewal of religious faith, helped awaken a spirit of reform | The Second Great Awakening |
| reform movement that attempted to stop the sale, consumption, and distribution of alcohol | Temperance Movement |
| The father of public education | Horace Mann |
| started the reform movement to improve care for the mentally ill | Dorthea Dix |
| movement to end slavery | Abolition |
| ex slave, abolitionist and wrote his autobiography | Frederick Douglass |
| ex slave who supported abolition and women's rights, known for saying "Ain't I a woman" | Sojourner Truth |
| known as the "Moses of her People.," instrumental in smuggling slave to freedom on the Underground Railroad | Harriet Tubman |
| leader in the fight for women's suffrage and an abolitionist | Elizabeth Cady Stanton |
| right to vote | suffrage |
| meeting held in New York state to fight for women's suffrage | The Seneca Falls Convention |
| document that called for equal rights for women, modeled after the Declaration of Independence | Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments |
| an abolitionist that published "The Liberator", a newspaper calling for the end of slavery. | William Lloyd Garrison |
| severe food shortage | famine |
| belief that the spiritual world was more important than the physical world. | transcendentalism |
| change | reform |
| peaceful approach to disobeying laws | civil disobedience |