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The Rights of Women and Minorities
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WCTU : (acronym) a union which fought for adoption of local and state laws restricting the sale of alcohol
CARRYNATION : a famous, good kind of sassy, woman who stormed into saloons with a hatchet and smashed liquor bottles
EIGHTEENTHAMENDMENT : banning the production, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages throughout the U.S.
NAWSA : (acronym) an association to promote the cause of women's suffrage; founded by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
CARRIECHAPMANCATT : president of NAWSA; collected over 1 million volunteers for the NAWSA movement
ALICEPAUL: founded the NWP; organized picketing in front of the White House; was later put in jail because of her actions
NWP : (acronym) used parades, public demonstrations, picketing, and hunger strikes to draw attention to the cause
NINETEENTHAMENDMENT : granting American women the right to vote
BOOKERTWASHINGTON : he was born into slavery; he did not want to fight discrimination; he encouraged African Americans to improve their education and economic well-being
IDABWELLS : a journalist who wrote about unequal education available to African American children
LYNCHING : when people were murdered by mobs instead of receiving a trial after being accused for a crime
WEBDUBOIS : a really smart guy that believed that African Americans should protest unjust treatment and demand equal rights
NAACP : (acronym) an organization that called for economic and educational equality of African Americans
GRANDFATHERCLAUSES : imposed strict qualifications on voters unless their grandfathers had been allowed to vote
NUL : (acronym) an organization that helped African Americans find jobs and homes in the North; also helped other Progressives, such as health, sanitation, and education
SAI : (acronym) a society that believed that integration into white society would end Native American poverty; founded by Carlos Montezuma and Charles Eastman
The Rights of Women and Minorities
Across:3. | a journalist who wrote about unequal education available to African American children | 8. | imposed strict qualifications on voters unless their grandfathers had been allowed to vote | 10. | (acronym) used parades, public demonstrations, picketing, and hunger strikes to draw attention to the cause | 11. | (acronym) an association to promote the cause of women's suffrage; founded by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony | 13. | founded the NWP; organized picketing in front of the White House; was later put in jail because of her actions | 14. | granting American women the right to vote |
| | Down:1. | a famous, good kind of sassy, woman who stormed into saloons with a hatchet and smashed liquor bottles | 2. | when people were murdered by mobs instead of receiving a trial after being accused for a crime | 4. | he was born into slavery; he did not want to fight discrimination; he encouraged African Americans to improve their education and economic well-being | 5. | banning the production, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages throughout the U.S. | 6. | president of NAWSA; collected over 1 million volunteers for the NAWSA movement | 7. | a really smart guy that believed that African Americans should protest unjust treatment and demand equal rights | 9. | (acronym) a society that believed that integration into white society would end Native American poverty; founded by Carlos Montezuma and Charles Eastman | 10. | (acronym) an organization that called for economic and educational equality of African Americans | 11. | (acronym) an organization that helped African Americans find jobs and homes in the North; also helped other Progressives, such as health, sanitation, and education | 12. | (acronym) a union which fought for adoption of local and state laws restricting the sale of alcohol |
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© 2016
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
The Rights of Women and Minorities
Across:3. | a journalist who wrote about unequal education available to African American children | 8. | imposed strict qualifications on voters unless their grandfathers had been allowed to vote | 10. | (acronym) used parades, public demonstrations, picketing, and hunger strikes to draw attention to the cause | 11. | (acronym) an association to promote the cause of women's suffrage; founded by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony | 13. | founded the NWP; organized picketing in front of the White House; was later put in jail because of her actions | 14. | granting American women the right to vote |
| | Down:1. | a famous, good kind of sassy, woman who stormed into saloons with a hatchet and smashed liquor bottles | 2. | when people were murdered by mobs instead of receiving a trial after being accused for a crime | 4. | he was born into slavery; he did not want to fight discrimination; he encouraged African Americans to improve their education and economic well-being | 5. | banning the production, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages throughout the U.S. | 6. | president of NAWSA; collected over 1 million volunteers for the NAWSA movement | 7. | a really smart guy that believed that African Americans should protest unjust treatment and demand equal rights | 9. | (acronym) a society that believed that integration into white society would end Native American poverty; founded by Carlos Montezuma and Charles Eastman | 10. | (acronym) an organization that called for economic and educational equality of African Americans | 11. | (acronym) an organization that helped African Americans find jobs and homes in the North; also helped other Progressives, such as health, sanitation, and education | 12. | (acronym) a union which fought for adoption of local and state laws restricting the sale of alcohol |
| |
© 2016
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only