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A New Spirit of Change

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Chapter 14 Review Why People Migrated Push Pull Factors PUSH= Push people out of their native lands PULL = Pull them towards a new place Push factors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A New Spirit of Change


1
A New Spirit of Change
  • Chapter 14 Review

2
Emigration to the U.S. from Europe
1820-1860
Percent of Total Immigrants
3
Why People Migrated
  • Push Pull Factors
  • PUSH Push people out of their native lands
  • PULL Pull them towards a new place
  • Push factors
  • Population growth overcrowding
  • Ag changes
  • Crop failures
  • Industrial Rev.
  • Religious Turmoil

4
Why People Migrated
  • Push Pull Factors
  • PUSH Push people out of their native lands
  • PULL Pull them towards a new place
  • Pull Factors
  • Freedom
  • Economic Opportunity
  • Abundant Land

5
Scandinavians
  • Escaping poverty at home
  • Settled in northern Midwest where land and
    weather were similar to homelands

6
Germans
  • Escaping warfare in Central Europe
  • Largest Immigrant Group during 1800s
  • Settled primarily in Midwest
  • (and some in Texas)

7
Irish
  • Fleeing hunger (caused by Potato Famine),
    poverty, persecution
  • Settled in East Coast cities

8
NATIVISTS
  • Faced newcomers with prejudice and violence
  • Formed Know-Nothing Party which was
    anti-immigrant anti-catholic called
    themselves the American Party

No Irish Need Apply
9
Washington Irving
  • Legend of Sleepy Hollow
  • Rip van Winkle
  • Wrote some of the 1st novels describing America
  • Usually set in the New York countryside

10
James Fenimore Cooper
  • Leatherstocking Tales 5 books including Last of
    the Mohicans
  • Featured nature life on the frontier

11
Francis Parkman Noah Webster
  • The Oregon Trail
  • Histories of America and the frontier
  • Created an American dictionary
  • Focused on Americanisms English words used
    only in the U.S.

Kerb
Civilisation
Gaol
Centre
Catalogue
Colour
12
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  • Celebrated Americas Past by retelling history
    through poetry
  • Paul Reveres Ride
  • Hiawatha

13
Albert Bierstadt Hudson River School Landscape
Painter
  • Produced huge paintings conveying majesty of the
    West

14
Asher Durand Hudson River School Landscape
Painter
  • Founder of Hudson River School
  • Influenced by Emerson and Thoreau
  • Painted feeling rather than reality

15
Thomas Cole Hudson River School Landscape
Painter
  • Most famous of the Hudson River School artists
  • Painted series like Voyage of Life and Course
    of Empire

The Savage State
16
Thomas Cole
The Pastoral State
17
Thomas Cole
Consummation of Empire
18
Thomas Cole
Destruction
19
Thomas Cole
Desolation
20
John James Audubon
  • Nature artist
  • Best known for his sketches of birds

21
David Drake a.k.a. Dave the Potter
  • Created Pottery
  • Slave working in a South Carolina factory
  • Created more than 40,000
  • many weighing more than 40 pounds each able to
    hold 50 gallons
  • only a few still survive valued at 30-40,000
    each
  • Boldly wrote Dave on his pots and frequently
    inscribed them with verses

I wonder where is all my relations Friendship
to all and every nation
22
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Do not go where the path may lead, go instead
where there is no path and leave a trail.
  • Wrote essays emphasizing need for Americans to be
    self-reliantindependent from European culture
  • Encouraged Americans to learn about life from
    nature and self-examination

23
Henry David Thoreau
  • Walden
  • Civil Disobedience
  • Suggested that people should live by their own
    standards
  • With Emerson, founded the philosophy of
    Transcendentalism
  • Spiritual world more important than physical
    world
  • Truth can be discovered by feeling and intuition

Go confidently in the direction of your
dreams! Live the life you've imagined.
24
Walt Whitman
  • Patriotic Poet wrote poems praising
    ordinary Americans
  • Best known for his Lincoln poems
  • Leaves of Grass
  • I Hear America Singing
  • Oh Captain, My Captain

25
Emily Dickinson
  • Shaped American poetry by experimenting with
    language (with Whitman)
  • Poems focused on subjects of God, Nature,
    Love, and Death

Hope is the thing with feathers, that
perches in the soul, and sings the tune without
words, and never stops at all.
26
Edgar Allen Poe
  • The Raven
  • The Tell-Tale Heart
  • Annabel Lee
  • Author of stories that dealt with the workings
    of the mind

27
Nathaniel Hawthorne
A
  • Wrote stories set in Puritan New England
  • Like Poe, had a dark view of human nature
  • The Scarlet Letter
  • House of the Seven Gables

28
Herman Melville
  • Melvilles stories, like Moby Dick, were drawn
    from his experiences at sea.

Call me Ishmael.
29
Peter Cartwright Charles G. Finney
  • Preachers of the 2nd Great Awakening
  • Renewal of religious faith in America
  • Stressed equality and the importance of
    helping others
  • Main Idea Reform Yourself
    then Reform Society

30
Reform Movements
31
Mary C. Vaughan Neal Dow
  • Campaign to limit alcohol consumption
  • Closely associated with Feminist Movement
  • 14 states banned sale of alcohol eventually led
    to 18th Amendment

32
Harriet Hanson
  • Led strikers against mill owners
  • 10-hour work day began in 1840

33
Horace Mann The Father of Education
  • Referred to education as The Great Equalizer
  • By 1850, most of the North had free public
    elementary schools
  • Also, many private colleges opened across the
    North
  • Most schools still would not admit women

In a Republic, ignorance is a crime.
34
Elizabeth Blackwell
  • In 1849, became 1st woman in U.S. to earn a
    medical degree

If society will not admit of womans free
development, then society must be remodeled.
35
Alexander Twilight John Russwurm
  • 1st African-Americans to receive college
    degrees
  • Russwurm began 1st African-American newspaper
  • Russwurm became a leader of the Back-to-Africa
    movement and moved to Liberia, believing that
    blacks had no future in the U.S.

36
Dorothea Dix
  • Convinced many Northern states to build hospitals
    to treat the mentally ill, rather than to
    imprison them
  • Worked to separate children from adult inmates,
    and to focus efforts on rehabilitation rather
    than simple punishment

In a world where there is so much to be
done, I felt strongly impressed that there
must be something for me to do.
37
Thomas Gallaudet Samuel Gridley Howe
  • Worked to improve education for the blind
    using a new method developed in France by Louis
    Braille
  • Began first school in America for the
    deaf
  • (his son started the 1st deaf
    college)

38
Penny Papers
  • Spread information about reform
    movements and society
  • Informedor inflamedvoters, leading to political
    and social change

39
Sarah Hale
  • Advocate of womens education who published
    magazines for women
  • Promoted idea of womens Proper Sphere
  • Opposed feminism because it took women from the
    empire of the home
  • Mens Sphere business, politics
  • Womens Sphere home, human ties

No need have we of power or splendor, wide hall
or lordly dome the good, the true, the
tender,these form the wealth of home.
40
Mother Ann Lee
  • Some groups decided Society was beyond redemption
    so they chose to separate and to create
    their own Utopia a perfect society
  • Mother Ann founded the Shakers believed in
    sharing all worldly goods, equality among genders
    and races, and refused to fight for any reason

The gospel is the greatest treasure that souls
can possess go home and be faithful put your
hands to work, and give your hearts to God. If
you have anything to spare, give it to the poor.
41
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
  • Free African-American poet who traveled the North
    lecturing against slavery and for womens rights

The sale beganyoung girls were there,
Defenseless in their wretchedness, Whose
stifled sobs of deep despair Revealed their
anguish and distress. -"The Slave Auction"
42
David Walker
  • Free African-American who published a call for
    slaves to revolt then had copies smuggled into
    the South and distributed it to slaves and free
    blacks
  • Southerners responded with stricter slave codes,
    and by offering a reward (3,000) for his head
    (or 10,000 if brought to the South alive)
  • Mysteriously found dead in his home shortly
    thereafter

Somebody must die in this cause. I may be doomed
to the stake and the fire, or to the scaffold
tree, but it is not in me to falter if I can
promote the work of emancipation.
43
William Lloyd Garrison
I do not wish to think, or speak, or write, with
moderation. . . . I am in earnest -- I will not
equivocate -- I will not excuse -- I will not
retreat a single inch -- AND I WILL BE HEARD.
  • Published The Liberator, the nations leading
    abolitionist newspaper
  • Spoke out eloquently and passionately against
    slavery and for the rights of America's black
    inhabitants

44
Grimké Sisters Theodore
WeldSarah and Angelina
  • Southern women who lectured across the North on
    the evils of slavery
  • (Angelina married Theodore Weld)
  • Preacher who spoke out against slavery and was
    effective at recruiting others into the
    abolitionist movement

45
John Quincy Adams
  • Fought Congresss Gag Rule and argued for
    abolition
  • Introduced amendment to abolish slavery
  • Successfully argued before the U.S. Supreme Court
    for freedom for the Amistad slaves

If your actions inspire others to dream more,
learn more, do more and become more, you are a
leader.
46
Frederick Douglass
  • Escaped slave who became a powerful abolitionist
    speaker in the U.S. and Britain
  • Published his autobiography and an abolitionist
    newspaper

Those who profess to favor freedom and yet
criticize agitation, are people who want crops
without plowing they want rain without thunder
and lightning they want the ocean without the
roar of its waves. The struggle may be a moral
one, or it may be a physical one, or it may be
both. But it must be a struggle. Power concedes
nothing without a demand it never has and it
never will.
47
Sojourner Truth
  • Escaped slave who spoke to huge crowds in North
    advocating both Abolition and Rights for Women

I am glad to see that men are getting their
rights, but I want women to get theirs, and while
the water is stirring I will step into the pool.
48
Henry Box Brown
  • Slave who escaped by mailing himself to the North
  • Worked on Underground Railroad to help escapees

49
Harriet Tubman
  • Most famous conductor of the Underground Railroad
  • Made 19 trips into the South to free 300 slaves,
    including her entire family

I had reasoned this out in my mind, there was one
of two things I had a right to, liberty or death
if I could not have one, I would have the other.
50
Elizabeth Cady Stanton Lucretia Mott
  • Organized the Seneca Falls Convention, which
    began the womens rights movement in America
  • Advocated womens suffrage, believing that
    political power would lead to social equality

51
Maria Mitchell
  • Founder of Association for the Advancement of
    Women
  • Astronomer who was the 1st woman elected to the
    American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Study as if you were going to live forever live
as if you were going to die tomorrow.
52
Susan B. Anthony
  • Built the Feminist Movement into a national
    organization
  • Campaigned for laws to give married women
    property rights
  • Campaigned for womens suffrage
  • achieved in 1920 with 19th Amendment

It was we, the people not we, the white male
citizens nor yet we, the male citizens but we,
the whole people, who formed the Union.
53
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