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Published byRegina Gregory Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 8
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Religion Sparks Reform – The 2 nd Great Awakening The 2 nd Great Awakening was a religious- driven reform movement that began in earnest in the early 1830s… Rejected Puritan notion of predestination By improving yourself and performing good deeds, you could earn your salvation
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Church Reform Revivalism Transient preachers spoke to large groups in informal settings Church membership increased 2 and ½ times
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2 nd Great Awakening brought Christianity to slaves on a large scale SUSTAINING Bible sanctions slavery Whites on God’s mission to help and protect the “inferior” races of the world Separate churches provided slaves a diversion that slave owners used as a reward; carrot and stick approach SUBVERSIVE Learn to read the Bible All are God’s children Gave slaves life skills – preachers, organizers Baptist/Methodist camp meeting open to all Did Christianizing slaves sustain or subvert the institution of slavery?
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Slavery and Abolition Slavery is contradictory to the stated reasons for the creation and promise of America… In the 1820s, about 100 anti-slave societies advocated resettlement...”inferior” races could not coexist with whites Free blacks considered America home; few returned to Africa
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William Lloyd Garrison the most radical white abolitionist…editor of The Liberator (1831); called for immediate emancipation with no payment to slaveholders attacked the church and government for not doing enough to end slavery “Is there not cause for severity? I will be harsh as truth, as uncompromising as justice…I will not retreat a single inch – AND I WILL BE HEARD” The Liberator
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Frederick Douglass Maryland slave born in 1817 Taught to read by the wife of his owner; understands the power of reading and education becomes a big supporter of Garrison and The Liberator Garrison hears Douglass speak and is greatly impressed by his oratorical skills; Garrison sponsors Douglass as a speaker on tour for his antislavery society Garrison uses Douglass to convince whites that blacks are not innately inferior
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Frederick Douglass Douglass believes slavery can end through political action separates from Garrison in 1847 starts own liberation newspaper called The North Star Roughly 2 million slaves in 1830, almost doubled from 1810…most slaves now born in America since the slave trade ended in 1808
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Nat Turner slave born in 1800 in Virginia a gifted leader, Turner believed he was chosen by God to lead his people out of bondage Eclipse of the sun is a signal for Turner to act in August, 1831… Turner leads 80 followers and attacks four nearby plantations…
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Nat Turner’s Rebellion Turner and his group kill 60-70 whites, men, woman and children; escaped capture and hid out for several weeks Turner and associates eventually all captured; Turner and many others hung; whites kill up to 200 blacks in retribution, many of them innocent Turner portrayed by southerners as crazy/possessed
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Reaction to Turner’s Rebellion Created more repressive conditions for slaves (slave codes) no education, no reading, no more preaching unless “respectable” whites were in attendance Free blacks in the South lost several rights including right to own guns, to assemble in public, to purchase alcohol and testify in court argument for emancipation as only way to prevent future incidents
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Summary Religions sparks a number of reform movements, including the abolitionist movement. As slavery comes to the forefront of the national debate, both abolitionists and slaveholders increase their activism.
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