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1. a formal statement of injustices suffered by women, written by the organizers of the Seneca Falls Convention.
F O D T S O E A N I E N E A N S R T T L C M I
2. Social movements to make changes in order to bring about improvement, end abuses, or correct injustices
M T V E E O S N E R R O M F M
3. A person who supported abolition, or the ending of slavery
O I I T O A B L S T I N
4. A revival of religious feeling and belief from the 1800s to the 1840s
C K G N A G N A I N R E A E E W S O T D
5. The gathering of supporters of women’s rights in July 1848 that launched the movements for women’s right to vote
L A I N V L E O E A F O N T N N C S C E S
6. A philosophy emphasizing that people should transcend, or go beyond, logical thinking to reach true understanding, with the help of emotions and intuition
S C N T A A S L I R T N E E M N D
7. A former minister who was the central figure in Transcendentalism who believed that every human had unlimited potential but needed to go beyond purely logical thinking.
L O A R S O W R E M N L D E A P H
8. Focused on Individualism in his essays and claimed “If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears.”
A H Y D A N R D R E U T E I V H O
9. "Ideal Community" started in 1841 by George Ripley where residents tried to live in "brotherly cooperation" instead of competing with each other.
R O A R B O M K F