Students interested in researching the lives of women before the Civil War might enjoy looking at the items in the following list. Have students describe any documents they choose and decide what aspects of the lives of women are reflected. How were the lives of women changing in the 1850s?
The Civil War erupted after a long history of compromises and sectional debates over representation, federalism, tariffs and territories. Though many of the political differences are beyond the scope of the intermediate curriculum, students can use their analysis of archival documents to begin to appreciate the differences between the North and South and the changes afoot in the United States that contributed to the developing conflict.
Before you begin to teach this lesson, review the suggested activities and familiarize yourself with the websites involved. Select, download and duplicate, as necessary, any documents you want the class to use.
Students interested in researching the lives of women before the Civil War might enjoy looking at the items in the following list. Have students describe any documents they choose and decide what aspects of the lives of women are reflected. How were the lives of women changing in the 1850s?
1848 | Seneca Falls Convention: In 1840, Elizabeth Cady Stanton traveled to London to attend the World Anti-Slavery Convention. After the delegates voted to exclude women, Stanton joined with Lucretia Mott to organize the first women's rights convention in the United States. She also continued working to abolish slavery. |
1849 | Harriet Tubman escapes slavery |
1850 | Jenny Lind becomes a pop star in the United States |
1851 | Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony begin working together |
1851 | Elizabeth Blackwell returns to the United States having finished her medical education |
1851 | Letter, Elizabeth Blackwell to Baroness Anne Isabella Milbanke Byron concerning women's rights and the education of women physicians (March 4, 1851). For background information, search American Memory for "Letter, Elizabeth Blackwell to Baroness." |
1851 | Unidentified woman, half-length portrait, facing front, holding a copy of the book "Sons of Temperance Offering" (March 4, 1851). For background information, search American Memory. Women were prominent in the temperance movement. |
1851-1852 | Publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe |
1853 (c.) | Woman working at a sewing machine Background information |
1856 | Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her daughter, Harriot, from a daguerreotype, 1856 |
1858 | Julia Archibald Holmes Reaches Pike's Peak, August 5, 1858 Holmes became the first woman on record to reach the summit of Pike's Peak -- and she wore bloomers (pants) while doing it. |
Students interested in finding out what popular attitudes about both women and slavery were in the 1850s might be interested in the documents in the following list:
To culminate this lesson, ask students to demonstrate their knowledge of the lives of women before the Civil War, with an emphasis on differences between the North and South (including the fact that African-American women were mostly slaves). Here are some examples of activities that students may wish to undertake to express what they have learned through this lesson (specific project ideas should always be pre-approved by the teacher):
1 class periods