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SPIRIT OF REFORM Unit Eight 1828-1845.

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Presentation on theme: "SPIRIT OF REFORM Unit Eight 1828-1845."— Presentation transcript:

1 SPIRIT OF REFORM Unit Eight

2 Jacksonian America Changing Culture Reforming Society Abolition Themes

3 Explain how Jackson’s background influenced his ideas of democratic government.
Describe how the nullification crisis sparked debate over states’ rights. Generalize Andrew Jackson’s policy toward the Cherokee people. Analyze the attack on the Second Bank of the United States on the US economy. Explain the rise of the Whig party. Jacksonian America

4 New Era in Politics new class of voters voting requirement
Political system became more democratic government became more inclusive ordinary people voting requirement People’s President spoil system caucus system national nominating convention New Era in Politics

5 Nullification Crisis South Carolina Tariff of Abominations
secession John C. Calhoun Hayne-Webster Debate Hayne – “Liberty first and Union afterward” Webster – “Liberty and Union, now and for ever, one and inseparable!” Jackson Tariff of 1832 ordinance of nullification Force Bill Compromise Nullification Crisis

6 Native American Policy
views reflected the opinion of many westerners intention to move all Native Americans to the Great Plains Indian Removal Act Cherokee Worcester v. Georgia “Marshall has made his decision… now let him enforce” Trail of Tears (1838) Native American Policy

7 like many Westerners and working people, Jackson was suspicious of the National Bank
stabilize the money supply charter bill mandate new political party Whigs Election of 1836 Panic of 1837 Election of 1840 William Henry Harrison “Tippecanoe and Tyler Too” John Tyler Administration “His Accidency” & “The President Without a Party” Webster-Ashburton Treaty National Bank

8 From which group of people did President Andrew Jackson gather most of his support?
Why did South Carolina threaten to secede in the early 1800s? What actions did the Cherokee of Georgia take when they were ordered to resettle in the West? Who opposed the policies of the Second Bank of the United States? What issue helped the Whig candidate win the presidency in 1840? Questions

9 Explain the goals of the different groups active in the Second Great Awakening.
Identify the key ideas of romanticism and two important romantic thinkers or writers. Analyze why nativism increased in the US during the 1800’s. Describe the rise of utopian societies during the 1800s. Changing Culture

10 Immigration religion, art, & literature
five million immigrants ( ) violence, political turmoil, starvation Ireland Germans nativism anti-Catholic American Party (1854) – Know Nothings Immigration

11 traditional Protestantism experienced dramatic revival
Second Great Awakening man has the capacity for choosing God rejection of Calvinism frontier farms Charles Grandison Finney New Religious Groups Unitarians Universalists Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Religious Revival

12 Literary Renaissance optimism about human nature romanticism
transcendentalism Ralph Waldo Emerson Henry David Thoreau American Writers Washington Irving James Fenimore Cooper Nathaniel Hawthorne Herman Melville Edgar Allan Poe Poets Walt Whitman Emily Dickinson Literary Renaissance

13 optimism about human nature and a belief in people’s ability to redefine their lives
belief that society tended to corrupt human nature marked by cooperative living & absence of private property Brook Farm Shakers Utopian Communities

14 How did many Americans react to the influx of immigrants to the United States in the mid-1800s?
What religious groups emerged during the time of the Second Great Awakening? Why did the early 1800s see the emergence of mass newspapers? Why did some people in the mid 1800s form utopian communities? Questions

15 Analyze the connection between religious and social reform.
List major areas of society that reformers set out to improve. Reforming Society

16 Reform Spirit Dorothea Dix
sweeping prison reform & special institutions for the mentally ill convinced twelve states to reform stemmed from religious fervor & power of individuals to improve themselves & their world Lyman Beecher benevolent societies role of women Reform Spirit

17 Institutional Reform Temperance Movement Prison Reform
cause American Temperance Union local option laws Prison Reform rehabilitation Penitentiaries Education Reform democratic republic can only survive with a well informed and educated public Horace Mann normal schools Three R’s Calvin Wiley Women’s Education Emma Willard Mary Lyon Elizabeth Blackwell Institutional Reform

18 Women’s Movement Industrial Revolution “True Womanhood”
two spheres or work models of piety & virtue Catherine Beecher – “A Treatise on Domestic Economy” Seneca Falls Convention Lucretia Mott Elizabeth Cady Stanton Women’s Movement

19 Questions Why did some reformers advocate temperance?
What was the significance of the Seneca Falls Convention? Questions

20 Abolitionist Movement
List groups involved in the early abolitionist movement. Analyze how Northerners and Southerners viewed abolitionism. Abolitionist Movement

21 Early Opposition to Slavery
movement started in the 1830’s – most divisive issue religious opposition early antislavery societies generally supported an approach known gradualism American Colonization Society racism Liberia Early Opposition to Slavery

22 New Abolitionists abolition began in the 1830s Second Great Awakening
David Walker William Lloyd Garrison Liberator complete emancipation Other Abolitionists Theodore Weld Sara and Angelina Grimke Frederick Douglass Sojourner Truth New Abolitionists

23 Public Response North South wide range of views
dangerous threat to the economy slave recapture South defensive “peculiar institution”, “national benefit” gag rule Public Response

24 Questions Why was colonization not a realistic solution to slavery?
Why did abolitionism begin to gain support in the 1830’s? What was the Northern reaction to the abolitionist movement? Questions


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