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REFORM IN AMERICA.

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Presentation on theme: "REFORM IN AMERICA."— Presentation transcript:

1 REFORM IN AMERICA

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3 American Culture Is Changing
New Wave of Immigrants in America during this time. They were looking for a better life. Between 1815 and 1860 there were 5 million immigrants that came to America. They were escaping violence, religious turmoil, political turmoil, poverty, and starvation. Many found prosperity and a good new life. However, some found themselves being discriminated against, and endured a great deal of prejudice.

4 Ireland- The Potato Famine
(1845) Famine on the Potato crops. At this time over 2 million people came to America from Ireland. Many of them had no money at all. They did not have any real skill at a job as well. Most moved to Industrial cities and did hard labor. New York Boston Philadelphia

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9 German Immigrants 1 ½ million German (mostly Catholic). Most have enough money to move beyond cities and buy land. Moved into the Midwest.

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11 Gangs of New York

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13 William Poole (A.K.A) Bill the Butcher
William Poole (July 24, 1821 – March 8, 1855), also known as Bill the Butcher, was a member of the New York City gang the Bowery Boys, a bare-knuckle boxer and a leader of the Know Nothing political movement. "Good-bye boys; I die a true American."

14 John Morrissey

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17 immigrants

18 Nativism

19 Nativism Nativism – is hostility towards immigrants.
With large groups of new people, and with new languages be used hostilities towards immigrants grew. Many Americans during the 1800s were Anti-Catholic. A great deal of the prominent ministers of the era preached against the new Catholic immigrants in America. This caused a number of riots..

20 Nativism The new immigrants caused a lot of new Nativist groups to come about. The Supreme Order of the Star Spangled Banner. The American Party or The Know-Nothings The Know-Nothings.

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22 The Know-Nothings Check this out....It's a party platform.
* Severe limits on immigration. * Restricting political office to native-born Americans * Mandating a wait of 21 years before an immigrant could gain citizenship. * Restricting public school teacher positions to Protestants. * Mandating daily Bible readings in public schools. * Restricting the sale of liquor. * Restricting the use of languages other than English.

23 Immigrant Violence in American Cities.

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25 New Religious Revivals The Second Great Awakening
A. Religious revival starts in frontier and sweeps the nation B. Based on salvation through faith alone. Faith is displayed through daily actions. C. Camp meetings and revivals used emotions to focus people’s attention on the message. D. New religious groups appear – Joseph Smith starts Mormon church to prepare an earthly kingdom for God’s return. Move to Utah territory to escape persecution.

26 The Second Great Awakening
Many people thought that religious thought was slipping in America. Charles Grandison Finney- preach grace through faith. He was a Presbyterian Minister. Said each person is responsible for their own spiritual rebirth and salvation. He held camp meeting and revivals across the Northeast and Ohio Valley.

27 Charles Grandison Finney

28 Finney As was typical of the age, Finney saw the nationwide revival he was helping to lead as an opportunity to do social justice. He preached against slavery and encouraged the formation of “societies” to support missions, publish Bibles, and care for the mentally ill. In fact, the Second Great Awakening led to the Abolition Movement, the Temperance Movement, and others.

29 The Second Great Awakening

30 The Second Great Awakening

31 Movement to improve lives of the misfortunate
Second Great Awakening

32 The Split Baptist/Southern Baptist
The Baptist split over the Issue of Slavery. The SBC became a separate denomination in 1845 in Augusta, Georgia, following a regional split with northern Baptists over the issues of slavery. After the American Civil War, another split occurred: most black Baptists in the South separated from white churches and set up their own congregations.

33 Baptist/Southern Baptist

34 New Religious Groups The Mormons

35 Joseph Smith The Book of Mormon

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39 Mormon Migration

40 The Reform Movement and the Great Awakening
Along with the obvious religious bases, the Great Awakening and the reform movement were based upon the principle that individuals human power can change the world into a greater place. True reform can take place “only through the voluntary energies of the nation itself.” While many give credit to God for the energies to change, others look to Nature.

41 American Literary Movement
Romanticism –feelings over logic Transcendentalism – to overcome physical limits of the body by being in touch with the universe There were a great deal of writers during this time.

42 Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)
(1836) Nature Most influential transcendentalist writer.

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44 Margret Fuller ( )

45 Margret Fuller Margret Fuller
Her major work, Woman in the Nineteenth Century, published in 1845, profoundly affected the women's rights movement which had its formal beginning at Seneca Falls, New York, three years later. She died at sea. Body was never found.

46 Henry David Thoreau July 12, 1817 – May 6, 1862 Civil Disobedience
Walden Pond

47 Walden Pond Walden Pond

48 A. Romanticism –feelings over logic
III. American Literary Movement A. Romanticism –feelings over logic Transcendentalism – to overcome physical limits of the body by being in touch with the universe B. Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Nature says fulfillment comes through communion with nature C. Henry David Thoreau Emily Dickenson Walt Whitman famous American poets focusing on romantic transcendentalism

49 James Fenimore Cooper Wrote about westward movement, and the tales of American settlers. Was the creator of the WESTERN. Romanticized about the American West. The Leatherstocking Tales The Last of the Mohicans (1826) The Pathfinder The Virginian (Owen Wister)

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51 The Leatherstocking Tales
Nathaniel "Natty" Bumppo is the protagonist of James Fenimore Cooper's pentalogy of novels known as the Leatherstocking Tales. The Deerslayer The Last of the Mohicans The Pathfinder The Pioneers The Praire

52 "Natty" Bumppo

53 Nathaniel Hawthorne The Scarlet Letter (1850)
Showed the psychological suffering that happens from sin. Hawthorne was from New England.

54 The Scarlet Letter

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56 Herman Melville Moby Dick (1851) Dark Romantic Writer

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58 Herman Melville Herman Melville was not very famous and liked in his time, but after World War I, he began to be read again. His story of Moby Dick has long sections of it where he just talks about whaling and shipping. Thankfully, the movie version leaves that out.

59 Washington Irving – Legend of Sleepy Hollow

60 Washington Irving First noted American authors to be highly acclaimed in Europe during his life time. Irving was a prolific author of fiction and non-. He wrote numerous short stories, biographies, histories, and tales of his travels. His characters Ichabod Crane and Rip van Winkle are now icons of popular American culture,

61 Edgar Allan Poe Dark Romantic

62 Edgar Allan Poe At the age of twenty-seven Poe married Virginia Clemm in Richmond VA. She was not yet fourteen. The January 1845 publication of “The Raven” made Poe a household name.

63 Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque POE’S first book

64 Weird Dude! tragedy struck in 1842 when Poe’s wife Virginia contracted tuberculosis, the disease that had already claimed Poe’s mother, brother, and foster mother.  Virginia was 24. His critics assumed he would soon be dead. They were right. Poe only lived another two years and spent much of that time traveling from one city to the next giving lectures and finding backers for his latest proposed magazine project to be called The Stylus. Poe died on October 7, 1849 at the age of forty. The exact cause of Poe’s death remains a mystery.

65 Rufus Griswold HATED POE

66 Walt Whitman Born on Long Island, NY.
Whitman worked as a journalist, a teacher, a government clerk, and–in addition to publishing his poetry–was a volunteer nurse during the American Civil War. Maybe the most important poet during this era.

67 Walt Whitman His work was very controversial in its time, particularly his poetry collection Leaves of Grass, which was described as obscene for its overt sexuality. Whitman's sexuality is often discussed alongside his poetry. Though biographers continue to debate his sexuality, he is usually described as either homosexual or bisexual in his feelings and attractions. Whitman was deeply influenced by deism. He denied any one faith was more important than another, and embraced all religions

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69 Emily Dickinson The most remembered female poet of the 19th century.
Abolitionist, and worked from women's rights.

70 The Penny Press The 1800s there was a huge rise in the amount of newspapers being read each each. The newspaper came out every week, and it cost about 6 cents. That was a little high for the common man. Penny Papers-They come out because they wanted a cheaper form of literature for the average reader. Around this time some of the world’s first general interest magazines came out.

71 Harper’s Weekly

72 THE CITY OF MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA, SHOWING THE STATE HOUSE WHERE THE CONGRESS OF THE SOUTHERN CONFEDERACY MEETS ON FEBRUARY 4, 1861,

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75 Utopian Communities During this time many Americans thought it would be a good idea to separate themselves from society. Utopia- An ideal society, with cooperative living. Brook Farm- the most famous during this era.

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79 The Reform and Abolitionist Movement

80 Reforming Society Dorothea Dix
Created special institutions in America for the Mentally Ill.

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84 Lyman Beecher Beecher was instrumental in establishing associations known as Benevolent Societies Initially these benevolent societies were created to spread God’s teachings. However they soon became useful in the fighting of social problems Benevolent Societies

85 Improve inner city conditions
Benevolent Societies provide for needs of poor and immigrants Education for children and immigrants Horace Mann starts free public education movement Women’s rights movement seeks equal treatment and legal status for women

86 The Temperance Movement
What is the Temperance Movement? Temperance Initially wanted to moderate the use of Alcohol later advocated total abstinence. After the Civil War, the movement declined only to regain momentum during the late 1800’s and early 1900’s. Led to the approval of the 18th Amendment. Several temperance groups merged to form the American Temperance Union in 1833 American Temperance Union

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92 Drunkard’s Progress

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94 Drunkard’s Progress 1846 Nathaniel Currier
Step 1. glass of alcohol with a friend. “From the First Glass to the Grave.” Steps 1-8.

95 Prison Reform The Penitentiaries of America.
What reforms were advocated for criminals? Reformers such as Julia Tutwiler focused on improving prisons in the United States. Many states began building new prisons, which they called penitentiaries that tried to rehabilitate criminals

96 Prison Reform

97 Prison Reform Julia Tutwiler

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99 Educational Reform Horace Mann
Horace Mann focused on educational reform He push for more public education and supported the creation of the 1st School Board in Massachusetts In 1852, Massachusetts passed the 1st mandatory school attendance law. At the same time many reformers pushed for the establishment of tax-supported public elementary schools

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101 Educational Reform in the South Calvin Wiley
Calvin Wiley- He was the Horace Mann of the south. From North Carolina. He built support for public schools in N. Carolina through tax-payers dollars. By /3 of white children in North Carolina were in public schools. Education did not come about as easily in the south. By 1860 only 1/3 of whites went to school, and slaves or free black got no education what so ever.

102 Educational Reform

103 Educational Reform Women’s Education Emma Willard
What was the focus group of these early educational reformers? Education reforms were mainly aimed at the male students. During the 1850s some women did work to create more educational opportunities for women Emma Willard

104 What did Emma Willard establish?
Emma Willard founded a girl’s boarding school in Vermont (1814) that taught academic subjects, a rare opportunity for girls. Emma Willard High School in New York.

105 Educational Reform Women’s Education
Mary Lyon Mary Lyon founded the 1st institution of higher education for women only. First women’s University. Mount Holyoke Female Seminary In South Hadley, Massachusetts. Fact- Emily Dickinson went to school there.

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107 Educational Reform Women’s Education
Elizabeth Blackwell- The first woman to receive a medical degree in the U.S. or in Europe. In 1857 she founded the New York Infirmary for Women and Children. The staff was totally women.

108 Educational Reform Women’s Education
Educational Reform Women’s Education New York Infirmary for Women and Children

109 The Early Woman’s Movement
(1841) Catherine Beecher The daughter of the minister Lyman Beecher. Wrote A Treatise on Domestic Economy Was aimed at women to reinforce good practices at home. How to provide childcare, cooking, and health matters.

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111 Women seek Greater Rights in America Co-organized the Seneca Falls Convention
Lucretia Mott and her husband James

112 Women seek Greater Rights in America
Elizabeth Cady Stanton Who is Elizabeth Cady Stanton? Along with Lucretia Mott they organized the Seneca Falls Convention Organized the 1st women’s rights convention known as the Seneca Falls Convention in Believed that men and women were equal. She also was an abolitionist.

113 Who is Elizabeth Cady Stanton?

114 Women seek Greater Rights in America
Seneca Falls Convention What is the Seneca Falls Convention? This was a meeting to focus on equal rights for women This marked the beginning of the women’s movement Throughout the 1850’s, women organized more conventions to promote greater civil rights

115 Seneca Falls Convention

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117 The Abolitionist Movement

118 What is Abolitionism To ABOLISH means to destroy, to get rid of.
Abolition is the process of destroying or getting rid of. Abolitionism therefore is the belief in abolishing something; in this case, it’s slavery.

119 Early opposition to slavery
From the earliest days of the American republic, many wanted to abolish slavery. Quakers and Baptists were against human slavery from day one. With the outbreak of the Second Great Awakening, people began to focus on living out a good, moral, active Christian life. WWJD? He would not have a slave, that’s for sure.

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121 Early Opposition to Slavery
Quakers and Baptists argued for the release of slaves. Baptists in Virginia called for “every legal measure to wipe this horrid evil from the land.”

122 2 ideas about abolitionism
Gradualism – the gradual, slow replacement of a slave system over time with a different system so as not to cause economic problems Many anti-slavery societies wanted to slowly replace slavery with hired labor, but to do so would threaten 2/3 of America’s exports. COTTON

123 Gradualism Step 1 –ban any new slaves from entering the U.S.
Step 2 – phase out slavery in the North and northern part of the South Step 3 – replace slavery in the deep South

124 Gradualism cont… Gradualism also called for slave owners to be compensated for their loses once slaves were freed.

125 Abolitionism Abolitionists believed slavery should end immediately without compensating former slave holders. Most would agree that owning another human is wrong, so why reward sinful slave owners by giving them your tax dollars?

126 Option #3 - Colonization
In Dec. 1816, the American Colonization Society was formed to send Africans back to Africa. Land was bought on the west coast of Africa for settling the former slaves back in to Africa. In 1847, the colony became independent calling itself Liberia (as in Liberty) and its capital was Monrovia (after James Monroe, the president)

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129 Liberia Despite having been slaves here in the U.S., most Africans chose to stay. Only 12,000 were re-settled in what is now Liberia.

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131 American Anti-slavery Society
Founded in 1833, its membership grew to 250,000 people in five years. 1350 chapters were founded nation wide.

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133 New Abolitionist Movement
David Walker David Walker, a free black from North Carolina published his book Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World. Walker called for the overthrow of slavery using any means necessary

134 William Lloyd Garrison The Liberator

135 William Lloyd Garrison
1831 William Lloyd Garrison starts publishing The Liberator an abolitionist newspaper. Garrison boldly attacked such ideas as returning escaped slaves, gradualism, and sympathy for slave owners

136 Fredrick Douglass 190,000 free blacks lived in the North. While still discriminated against, they cherished their freedom and wanted to help others in the South gain theirs. Frederick Douglass was an escaped slave from Maryland who became a famous orator.

137 Fredrick Douglass “I appear before the immense assembly this evening as a thief and a robber. I stole this head, these limbs, and this body from my master, and ran off with them.” Frederick Douglass Abolitionist rally 1842

138 Sojourner Truth Sojourner Truth, as she now calls herself but whose name, originally, was Isabella was born, as near as she can now calculate, between the years 1797 and She was the daughter of James and Betsey.

139 Sojourner Truth

140 The Fugitive Slave Act and the Underground Railroad
Harriet Tubman

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145 The Northern Reaction to the Abolitionism to Slavery
Reactions in the North While most northerners disliked slavery, they disliked extremism even more. Many business people worried about abolitions effect on the economy. Many warned that it would lead to a bitter war. Others feared it would lead to a huge influx of freed slaves up north ruining their economy.

146 The Southern Reaction to the Abolitionism to Slavery
Reactions in the South Southerners, who’s economy would collapse over night called slavery their “peculiar institution”. No one really wanted it, but they couldn’t get rid of it. Southern politicians rushed to defend any threat to slavery

147 Thomas Dew of South Carolina
Long-term Results As the north was building factories and cities, the south remained agricultural. Industries in the South were migrating North, increasing the South’s reliance on slavery. “We have no hesitation in affirming that throughout the whole slave-holding country, the slaves of good slaveholders are his warmest, most constant, and most devoted friends.” Thomas Dew of S.C.

148 Nat Turner Nat Turner Rebellion
1831, enslaved preacher Nat Turner led an armed rebellion of slaves in Virginia. Over 50 white men, women, and children were killed in the uprising. Though not even published in the South, Northern abolitionist newspapers were blamed and quickly shut down. 1836, U.S. House of representatives formally agreed to no longer hear anti-slavery legislation.


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