1 / 19

November 14, 2012

November 14, 2012. Today:. Changes to the calendar Terms due Monday 11/19 – through #71 Remaining Terms due 11/26 – all of Unit 4 Objective 11 – Intro to Jackson’s Presidency Objective 12 – The Social Reform Movement 1800 - 1850. The Second Great Awakening. 1800 – 1840’s.

shayla
Télécharger la présentation

November 14, 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. November 14, 2012

  2. Today: • Changes to the calendar • Terms due Monday 11/19 – through #71 • Remaining Terms due 11/26 – all of Unit 4 Objective 11 – Intro to Jackson’s Presidency Objective 12 – The Social Reform Movement 1800 - 1850

  3. The Second Great Awakening 1800 – 1840’s

  4. The Second Great Awakening • The renewed religious revivalism became known as the Second Great Awakening (1800-1830s): • Highly emotional meetings began in the West & spread to all sections of the country • Evangelists sought to awaken Americans to the need for “rebirth” & stressed salvation through repentance • What sparked the First Great Awakening? No more Puritan original sin

  5. Stressed new revival techniques: extended meetings, public prayer for women, emotionalism

  6. The Spread of Religious Revivals The “burned-over district” was so heavily evangelized that it had no fuel (unconverted population) left to burn (convert) It was home to many social reformers who advocated women’s rights & the abolition of slavery The region was home to many non-traditional religions: Mormons, Millerites, Spiritualists, Shakers, & the Oneida utopia

  7. Moderate Social Reforms

  8. Temperance was the era’s most successful reform

  9. Legally, the husband was the unchallenged head of household Changes in the American Family Virtue became more important as more men left home to work • Evangelicalism brought changes to white, middle-class families: • Child rearing seen as essential preparation for a Christian life • Wives became “companions” (not servants) to their husbands • “Cult of Domesticity” redefined women’s duty to promote piety, ethics, & character in children # of children per family dropped 25% from 1800 to 1850; Increased conscience of the resources necessary to raising a child

  10. Fears of Men

  11. The Extension of Education Reading ‘Rithmetic ‘Riting • Free public schools grew rapidly from 1820 to 1850 to provide educational & moral training: • Middle-class Americans saw education as a means for social advancement, teaching “3 R’s” & instilling a Protestant ethic • Horace Mann argued that schools “save” immigrants & poor kids from parents’ “bad” influence to create good citizens Prior to 1820, public schools were well developed in NE, but not in South America’s most famous advocate of public education

  12. McGuffy’s Eclectic Readers were the most common text used to educate children

  13. Asylum Reform • Reformers believed that all problems were correctable & built state-supported prisons, asylums, poorhouses: • The most famous asylum reformer was Dorothea Dix who publicized inhumane treatment of mental institution patients • As a result, 15 states improved their penitentiaries & hospitals

  14. Reform Turns Radical • Radicals grew impatient in the 1830s & split from earlier moderate reform movements: • Temperance Movement—are beer & wine OK? • Peace Movement—is fighting a defensive war OK? • Antislavery Movement—are emigration to Africa & gradual emancipation OK?

  15. William Lloyd Garrison • Garrison became the most popular abolitionist in the North

  16. Abolitionism • Former slaves, like Frederick Douglass & Sojourner Truth, became important abolitionists: • They were able to relate the realities of slavery through Freedom’s Journal& North Star • Blacks were the leaders in the Underground Railroad • Blacks formed vigilante groups to protect fugitive slaves in North

  17. Frederick Douglass & Sojourner Truth 1845 --> The Narrative of the Life Of Frederick Douglass 1847 --> “The North Star” R2-12

  18. The Seneca Falls Convention, 1848 Produced the Declaration of Sentiments: “We hold these truths to be self-evident…that all men & women are created equal.”

  19. Women's Rights • Involvement in abolitionism raised awareness of women’s inequality • Lucretia Mott & Elizabeth Cady Stanton organized the 1st feminist national meeting, the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 • To demand the right to vote • Rejected the cult of domesticity (separate roles for sexes) in favor of total gender equality

More Related