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Created with Fabric.js 1.4.5 The Women's Movement Important people: Lucretia Mott: A Quaker who helped fugitive enslaved workers and organized the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society.Elizabeth Cady Stanton: Joined with other reformers to work for women's rights and helped organize the first women's rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York.Susan B. Anthony: Daughter of a Quaker abolitionist in New York and she worked for women's rights and temperance. She taught girls and boys together and organized the country's first women's temperance association, the Daughters of Temperance. Catherine Beecher: She believed that women should be educated for their traditional roles in life and also thought that women could be good teachers. The Milwaukee College for Women create courses based on her ideas.Emma Hart Willard: She too believed that women should be educated for their traditional roles in life and also thought that women could be good teachers. She educated herself in subjects that were considered suitable for only men and she set up the Troy Female Seminary in upstate New York.Mary Lyon: She established Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in Massachusetts in 1837. She had modeled its curriculum on that of nearby Amherst College. Elizabeth Blackwell: She had her medical school application turned down repeatedly until she was finally accepted by Geneva College in New York and graduated first in her class and achieved fame as a doctor. Effects: The effects of of the movement was better education for women, more jobs opening up for them, it changed property and family laws for them, and it gave them the right to vote.
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