<Li> Grand Central Art Galleries </Li> <Li> National Association of Portrait Painters </Li> <Li> Union League Club of New York </Li> <P> During the Gilded Age, many new social movements took hold in the United States . Many women abolitionists who were disappointed that the Fifteenth Amendment did not extend voting rights to them, remained active in politics, this time focusing on issues important to them . Reviving the temperance movement from the Second Great Awakening, many women joined the Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) in an attempt to bring morality back to America . Its chief leader was Frances Willard (1839 - 1898), who had a national and international outreach from her base in Evanston, Illinois . Often the WCTU women took up the issue of women's suffrage which had lain dormant since the Seneca Falls Convention . With leaders like Susan B. Anthony, the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was formed in order to secure the right of women to vote . </P>

Impact the gilded age had on american culture