**June SAT U.S. History Post Test Discussion**

<p>alice paul was a diff. choice from cult of domesticity, which was by beecher stowe</p>

<p>what was the answer with john adams and his wife</p>

<p>@Amazon Wait, I thought Beecher Stowe was abolitionism…?</p>

<p>@Chaldo I literally lol’d when I read that question. I thought John Adams just told his wife the 18th century equivalent of “Make me a sandwich”.</p>

<p>ya my bad catharine beecher</p>

<p>how many women passages were there…there was the cult of domesticity one which i thought was education/alice paul and was wrong on both apparently and then john adams and his wife, then whatever this one is at the end that you guys are talking about</p>

<p>chaldo - The answer to the John Adams one was “some colonial women desired greater freedom/equality because of republican idealism” or something to that extent.</p>

<p>^^agreed^^</p>

<p>god i gotta get off of this it’s really killing me</p>

<p>I’ve tried looking up the quote online, but no success so far. If anyone else remembers more of the passage, then that would be a decisive way of proving the author</p>

<p>who thinks the curve will be easier?? I do</p>

<p>i really think it was alice paul not beecher stowe because it stowe supported the cult of domesticity, paul rejected it and i remember the passage was like “make women intelligent and men will become too” or something like that</p>

<p>that’s what i put and it could be that, i hope…for the one with the poster about lowell mills, I put that it showed restrictions of females? (it wasnt separate spheres i dont think)</p>

<p>@amazon, i think i put that there was availablity for women to work in industry as well as men</p>

<p>have any of you guys taken this before and have what score you got/how many you got wrong so we can see what the curve is like? idk why but i feel sparknotes is too lenient</p>

<p>For the question about “make women intelligent and men will certainly be the same”, the answer is Catherine Beecher. I confirmed it with a study guide.</p>

<p>lowell mills question?</p>

<p>@amazon I think the poster of the textile workers.</p>

<p>i know but what was the answer</p>

<p>IT was that both men and women could work in the textile factories.</p>

<p>it wasn’t restrictions? bc the womens were sewing while men were using the industrial equipment…i guess looking into it too hard</p>