For test five be sure to know about:1.Lucy Stone2.Abby Kelley3.Elizabeth Cady Stanton4.Lucretia Mott5.Angelina Grimké6.

Reform communities7.Shakers8.New Harmony9.The American Temperance Society10.Institution building11.Jails12.

Poorhouses13.Asylums14.Orphanages15.What the proliferation of new institutions during the antebellum era demonstrated16.Horace Mann17.Public schools18.

The American Colonization Society19.Liberia20.An Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World21.David Walker22.William Lloyd Garrison23.

Thoughts on African Colonization24.Antislavery movement’s mass constituency25.The Fourth of July to Frederick Douglass26.The “gag rule”27.

Dorothea Dix28.Women’s Rights Convention at Seneca Falls29.“Social freedom”30.The Liberty Party31.The Whig Party32.The North Star Party33.

The Republican Party34.The African-American Party35.Brook Farm36.The North’s emerging middle-class culture37.Catholics and the temperance movement.

38.Tax-supported school systems39.The colonization idea and returning to Africa.40.Nearly all abolitionists, despite their militant language, rejected violence as a means of ending slavery.

41.“Wage slavery.”42.The revolutionary heritage.43.

Mob attacks and attempts to limit abolitionists’ freedom of speech 44.Public speaking for women45.American Temperance Organization.46.

The women’s “sphere.”47.The demand that women should enjoy the rights to regulate their own sexual activity and procreation48.Thomas Crawford’s Statue of Freedom that adorns the Capitol dome49.The number of people who had braved the western trails and emigrated to Oregon and California50.Mormons51.

Brigham Young52.Joseph Smith53.Texas in the 1820s54.“Fifty-four forty or fight”55.James Polk56.The Mexican-American War57.

Manifest destiny58.“Race” in the mid-nineteenth century59.Freedom in California60.The Wilmot Proviso61.

Whig Party62.Free Soil Party63.Republican Party64.Know-Nothing Party65.Liberty Party66.The Compromise of 185067.

The fugitive slave law68.The majority of the nearly five million immigrants that entered the United States between 1830 and 186069.The Republican Party70.The Know-Nothing Party?71.The Kansas-Nebraska Act72.

The Supreme Court ruling Dred Scott v. Sanford73.The 1860 Republican platform74.In spite of the controversy over the Statue of Freedom, Thomas Crawford refused to change his original design.75.The issue of Texas annexation76.

The explosive population growth and competition for gold in California77.The South’s support of the fugitive slave law and the federal government78.The Appeal of the Independent Democrats79.The development of railroads and economic integration of the Northeast and Northwest80.

The largest and second largest group of immigrants arriving in America during the antebellum era81.Nativism82.The free labor ideology83.James Buchanan84.

Stephen Douglas85.The Lincoln-Douglas debates86.“A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure, permanently half slave and half free.”87.The 1860 presidential election