| Term | Definition |
| organized attempts to improve conditions of life | social reform |
| the idea that god decided the fate of a persons soul evan before birth | predestination |
| a preacher who held the first of many religious revivals in 1826 | charles finney |
| a huge outdoor religious meeting | revival |
| an organized effort to end alcohol abuse and the problems created | temperance movement |
| a total ban on the sale and consumption of alcohol | prohibition |
| a schoolteacher who created an insane asylum | dorothea dix |
| school supported by tax | public school |
| main leader of the education reform | horace mann |
| reformers who wanted to abolish or end slavery | abolitionists |
| what was the first state to become a free state | pennsylvania |
| abolitionist who founded the liberator in 1831 | william lloyd harrison |
| former slave who spoke about african americans and women | sojourner truth |
| a quaker in the anti slavery movement | lucretia mott |
| abolitionist who wrote the declaration of sediments | elizabeth cady stanton |
| the right for women to vote | women's suffrage |
| name the first collage made for women | mout holyoke female seminary |
| what religious movement contributed to reform | the second great awakening |