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I. The Capitalist Commonwealth A. Banks, Manufacturing, and Markets 1.Banking and Credit 1.Americans believed republicanism should advance capitalism.

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Presentation on theme: "I. The Capitalist Commonwealth A. Banks, Manufacturing, and Markets 1.Banking and Credit 1.Americans believed republicanism should advance capitalism."— Presentation transcript:

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2 I. The Capitalist Commonwealth A. Banks, Manufacturing, and Markets 1.Banking and Credit 1.Americans believed republicanism should advance capitalism 2.Boston and New York founded banks like Bank of the U.S. 3.1816, Congress chartered Second Bank of the U.S 4.The Panic of 1819 caused by “dubious” banking policies and a 30 percent drop in agricultural prices 2. Rural Manufacturing 1.small artisans were selling their products nationwide 2.New England, switched from growing crops for subsistence to raising livestock to sell 3. New Transportation Systems 1.States issued charters for “turnpike companies”, Roads 2.speculators bought up land in cities with waterways: Cincinnati, Louisville, Chattanooga, and St. Louis

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6 I. The Capitalist Commonwealth B. Public Enterprise: The Commonwealth System 1.“Public utility” 1.Increased production and transportation methods would add to the “common wealth” or “public utility”; transportation charters included the power of “eminent domain” (allowing the forced sale of land along routes). 2. Critics 1.Some argued that statutes like eminent domain gave privileges to corporations and violated the rights of individuals; Supreme Court upheld these statutes as good for all.

7 II. Toward a Democratic Republican Culture A.Opportunity and Equality — for White Men 1.Social divisions 1.emerging middle class 2.European visitors viewed the U.S. as different culturally and socially from Europe 3.Nouveau Riche 2. Discrimination 1.women and African American men from advancing as white men did 2.politicians used both biology and custom to make their discriminatory arguments.

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9 II. Toward a Democratic Republican Culture B. Toward Republican Families 1.Republican Marriages 1.Chose partners, “sentimentalism”, Feeling appreciated, companions, “falling in love”, Husbands are authoritarian, -Divorces cited emotional turmoil, drunkedness, cruelty 2. Republican Motherhood 1.Limiting family size, individualism, decline in birthrates 2.Mothers responsible for education of children, preparing sons virtuous republican citizens

10 II. Toward a Democratic Republican Culture C. Raising Republican Children 1.Two Modes of Parenting 1.Divide property equally, Permissive/Authoritarian parenting 2. Debates over Education 1.emphasis on public schooling, college training, Farmers focus on reading, writing, basic math 2.until the 1820s, few children attended school, post- 1820s legislatures included provisions for public schools 3. Promoting Cultural Independence 1.Noah Webster argued that education should raise the “nation’s intellectual reputation”; literary culture was slow to catch on; only Washington Irving was popular outside of the U.S. (“The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”); 1830s/1840s was an “American Renaissance” (Emerson).

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12 III. Aristocratic Republicanism and Slavery A.The Revolution and Slavery, 1776–1800 1.Manumission and Gradual Emancipation 1.1/3 of south is slaves, Many thought revolution would end slavery, 2.1782, Virginia passed a manumission act that allowed for the release of slaves by their owners; condemnation of slavery by Quakers and Enlightenment thinkers increased after war 3.1784, Massachusetts abolished slavery, all states north of Delaware followed by 1804 2. Slavery Defended 1.Financial investment in slaves made linking republicanism to their condition difficult for most slaveholders 2.“Necessary evil” 3.1800, a planned uprising by Gabriel Prosser (VA) resulted in him and 30 others being hanged; increased argument among southerners that republicanism was meant for whites only.

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15 III. Aristocratic Republicanism and Slavery B. The North and South Grow Apart 1. Slavery and National Politics 1.Foreign visitors noticed distinct cultural differences between North and South 2.Congress not to interfere 3.Slave trade outlawed by Congress 1808, institution remained 2. African Americans Speak Out 1.Abolitionist become more vocal, Haitian Revolution 2.Anti-Slavery Societies 3.Demand for Cotton, increase in slaves 4.1817, the American Colonization Society was founded by white men with the goal of freeing the slaves and sending them back to Africa; about 6,000 African Americans resettled in Liberia; most free blacks opposed such colonization schemes, as they saw themselves as Americans.

16 III. Aristocratic Republicanism and Slavery C. The Missouri Crisis, 1819–1821 1.Constitutional Issues 1.Missouri… 1819—Slave State? 2.North blocked attempts to become slave state 3.South Argument: 1) the principle of “equal rights”, 2) the Constitution guaranteed a state’s sovereignty, 3) Congress had no authority to infringe on property rights of individual slaveholders in Missouri. 2. The Missouri Compromise 1.Maine-admitted free (1820), Missouri-slave (1821); preserved a balance between North and South but also created a precedent for future admissions. 1.BIG PROBLEM

17 IV. Protestant Christianity as a Social Force A.A Republican Religious Order 1.Religious Freedom 1.Church taxes… 2.Post-war-Religious Tolerance, Congregationalism official church of NE until 1830’s 2. Church-State Relations 1.Virginia prohibited religion as a qualification for holding office, other states denied Catholics, Jews 3. Republican Church Institutions 1.Americans embraced churches that preached spiritual equality and governed themselves democratically 2.“unchurched” Americans gravitated toward the evangelical Methodist and Baptist churches, which formed a dynamic new force in American religion

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20 IV. Protestant Christianity as a Social Force B. The Second Great Awakening 1.A New Religious Landscape 1.Methodist, Baptist grow, “practical preaching” 2.Criticized slavery, spiritual equality 2. Black Christianity 1.Some planters were convinced to allow Christianity to spread among their slaves; over time, free blacks and the enslaved adapted these teachings to their own beliefs, teaching that as slaves they had a special relationship with the Christian God.

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22 IV. Protestant Christianity as a Social Force C. Religion and Reform 1.Benevolence and reform 1.individual salvation to religious benevolence 2.women to adopt charitable causes in their community 3.founding of religious societies to produce pamphlets and disseminate information 2. In political life 1.some ministers advocated the election of Christian leaders and converting non-Christians in the U.S. and abroad

23 IV. Protestant Christianity as a Social Force D. Women’s New Religious Roles 1.A Growing Public Presence 1.Congregations are 70% women, ministers stopped segregating men and women in prayer groups 2.Decrease in pregnancy out of wedlock 2.Spiritual authority vs. political power 1.men feared the power women were gaining within the churches 2.Women not allowed to vote in business mtgs. 3.More girls attending school, female academies 4.School teachers 1820’s


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