Antebellum Reform Movements

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Antebellum Reform Movements Change in the 19 th Century

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Antebellum Reform Movements. Change in the 19 th Century. Nationalism & Romanticism. Expression of inner spirit Connection to nature New ideas about American identity. Hudson River School – Thomas Cole. Hudson River School – Thomas Cole. Winslow Homer. Charles Bulfinch. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Antebellum Reform Movements

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Antebellum Reform Movements

Change in the 19th Century

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Nationalism & Romanticism• Expression of inner spirit• Connection to nature• New ideas about American identity

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Hudson River School – Thomas Cole

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Hudson River School – Thomas Cole

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Winslow Homer

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Charles Bulfinch

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American Literature & American Identity

• James Fenimore Cooper “Leatherstocking Tales” Last of the Mohicans

• Walt Whitman – poet of America• Washington Irving• Herman Melville – Moby Dick• Edgar Allen Poe – “The Raven”• Henry Longfellow

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Transcendentalism

• Philosophical & social movement influenced by romanticism and focusing on nature, reason, and understanding.

• Concord, MA• Ralph Waldo Emerson – “Nature, “ “Self-Reliance”• Henry David Thoreau - Walden• Margaret Fuller – finding self through reform• Theodore Parker

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Utopian Communities• Brook Farm – transcendentalism

• George Ripley founder

• New Harmony• Robert Owen – founded – “Village of Cooperation”

• Oneida Community• John Humphrey Noyes – Perfectionists; children raised

communally, no marriage, liberation of women from male lust

• Shakers• “Mother” Ann Lee – founder – unique religious ritual,

commitment to complete celibacy, more women than men, controlled contact b/t men and woman, equality, social discipline.

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Oneida Community

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“Mother” Ann Lee

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Mormons• Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints• John Smith• Book of Mormon• Followers persecuted across the Northwest for radical

religious doctrines including polygamy and secrecy• Nouvoo, Illinois – large Mormon community with

private army• 1844 Smith was killed by an angry mob in Illinois• Brigham Young led the group (12,000) to Utah

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Revivalism

•Part of the Second Great Awakening• Every individual was capable of salvation•Reform through the Protestant church• “Burned-over district” in New York

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Temperance Crusade

• Excessive use of alcohol targeted–Burden on wives–Abuse of wives and children

• Movement was dominated by women• Promote moral self-improvement and discipline• Protestants v. Catholics• Nativism

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Reforming Education

–Reforming Education•Horace Mann – protect democracy• Expansion of public education•Perkins School for the Blind• Education for social order – McGuffey’s

Readers•Noah Webster

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Prison & Hospital Reform

• Early 19th Century Jails – criminals, debtors, mentally ill, senile paupers• Asylums and Penitentiary (from the word

penitence)– reform and rehabilitate the inhabitants and • Dorothea Dix – national movement for new

methods of treating the mentally ill• Orphanage reform• Almshouses and workhouses

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Feminism

• Sarah & Angelina Grimké• Catharine Beecher• Harriet Beecher Stowe• Lucretia Mott• Elizabeth Cady Stanton• Dorothea Dix• Elizabeth Blackwell• Amelia Bloomer

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Abolitionism

– American Colonization Society• Gradual manumission with compensation of masters• Settlement of Liberia

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William Lloyd Garrison

• Liberator newspaper• Focus on damage to blacks• Immediate, unconditional, universal

abolition•African Americans – all rights of

American citizenship•American Antislavery Society

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Black Abolitionists

•David Walker•Sojourner Truth•Frederick Douglass

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Moderates v. Extremists

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Amistad Case

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Liberty Party

– Free Soiler party– Antislavery did not always = abolitionism