Antebellum Era Dbq

718 Words2 Pages

During the Antebellum Period, a wave of reform swept across America for changes in women rights, education, and for the treatment of the insane and unfortunate. Women's rights underwent great changes during this time period. Many people, both women and men, began to realize the unjust nature of how women did not have the same opportunities as men. This is noted as being seen in the marriage laws of the time. In the second document, Lucy Stone stated in, Wedding Declaration, in 1855, “The present laws of marriage which refuse to recognize the wife as an independent, rational being, while they confer upon the husband an injurious and unnatural superiority.”. Similarly, in document one, Elizabeth Cady Stanton says, “to have such disgraceful laws …show more content…

Destruction of the republic was not well received and the American people sought to see it never take place. During and after the Antebellum period, great educational reform was seen. This has shaped the state of the current education system in America today. When continuing to talk about the negative state of American systems before reform, we need to also mention the prison system and sources for the homeless, aged, and neglected. From document four, we have learned of the horrible and inexcusable treatment of inmates and patients. We are told they are confined in cages, closets, cellars, stalls, and pens, chained naked while being beaten and lashed. The poorhouses for the aged, the homeless, and the neglected were madhouses noted to be perpetual

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