Carrie Nation was most known for her work in the Temperance Movement.
Explanation:
Carrie Amelia Nation, born November 25, 1846 in Garrard County, Kentucky, died June 9, 1911 in Leavenworth, Kansas, was a well-known radical member of the American temperance movement, which opposed alcohol before Prohibition. She was especially known for attacking salons and bars with an ax. Furthermore, she was also an effective speaker, who with her rhetoric convinced others to join the fight against alcohol.
He attended school for only one year: between the ages of 16 and 19, he lived with the Cherokee Indians.
Explanation:
After running away from his family as a teenager, Houston lived for nearly three years with the Cherokee tribe in eastern Tennessee and Houston learned fluent Cherokee.