American Pageant: Chapter 15 People to Know
Peter Cartwright
a dominant preacher that called sinners to repent and converted thousands of people.
Lucretia Mott
a leader of the women's rights movement. A Quaker whose anger emerged when she and her female delegates were not recognized at the London antislavery convention.
Susan B. Anthony
a militant lecturer for women's rights who became a prominent and outstanding supporter of women's rights
John J. Audubon
a naturalist whose "Birds of America" gained popularity. The Audubon Society was named after him.
Henry David Thoreau
a poet and transcendentalist that refused to pay his Massachusetts poll tax. His writings encouraged Mahatma Gandhi to resist British rule in India.
Joseph Smith
a visionary that claimed he received golden plates from an angel.
Stephen C. Foster
a white Pennsylvanian that wrote songs about the spirit of the slaves.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
also a leader of the women's rights movement. shocked feminists by supporting suffrage for women.
Horace Mann
campaigned for better schools, longer school terms, higher pay for teachers and an enlarged curriculum.
Dorothea Dix
did reports on insanity and asylums. treated the mentally ill.
Emily Dickinson
female poet whose poems included themes of love, nature, death and immortality.
Louisa May Alcott
female poet. wrote "Little Women".
Amelia Bloomer
fought against the "street sweeping" female attire by wearing a short skirt with Turkish trousers.
Robert Owen
found a community of a thousand people at New Harmony.
Walt Whitman
his poems were very romantic and emotional. wrote "Leaves of Grass".
Lucy Stone
kept her maiden name after marriage.
Brigham Young
murdered Joseph Smith. an aggressive leader, an expressive preacher and a clever administrator.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
one of the most popular poets in America.
Charles Grandison Finney
preacher that attracted huge crowds who were attentive to his chapels. He also condemned alcohol and slavery.
Francis Parkman
published volumes that described the struggle between France and Britain.
Neal S. Dow
sponsored the Maine Law of 1851.
James Fenimore Cooper
the first American novelist. He explored America's republic and civilization.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
transcendentalist whose address, "The American Scholar" declared independence. became a critic of slavery and supported the Union cause of the Civil War.
Herman Melville
wrote "Moby Dick".
Nathaniel Hawthorne
wrote "The Scarlet Letter" and "The Marble Faun".