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Reform

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Title: Reform


1
Reform
2
Spirit of Improvement
  • Americans believed in improvement through
    education
  • Education needed to establish a national
    character Daniel Webster
  • Many state constitutions encouraged free public
    education for all children
  • Schools promoted republican virtues
  • Self-reliance, industry, frugality, harmony,
    sacrifice of individual needs for the good of the
    community

3
The Role of Women
  • Women seen as the more virtuous gender
  • If women had these virtues, they could teach them
    to the men that would vote and govern the nation.
  • Schools opened female departments to teach
    girls to be republican women
  • This was a woman who had the virtues that would
    help her contribute to the success of the republic

4
The Industrial Revolution
  • Profit as important as self-improvement
  • Inventions improved the quality of, and the
    reduced costs of, products
  • Industrial Revolution
  • Change from human power to machine power
  • Steam engine invented by James Watt
  • Began in England
  • British guarded new technologies
  • Did not allow anyone to leave the country who
    knew about them

5
Before
After
6
Industrial Revolution Comes to America
  • Samuel Slater emigrated to the US in 1787
  • Worked in textile mill in England
  • Memorized plans for the machinery
  • Established 1st textile mill in the US in 1793
  • By 1814, 240 textile mills in US (most in the
    North)

7
Cotton Gin
  • Cleaning cotton seeds from cotton fibers a long,
    difficult process
  • One worker could clean one pound per day
  • Cotton gin (engine) operated by water power
  • One worker could clean one thousand pounds per
    day

Eli Whitney, inventor of the Cotton Gin
8
Effects of the Cotton Gin
  • Profits skyrocketed
  • US cotton exports rose 6,000 between 1790 and
    1815
  • Southern planters began to depend on cotton as
    only crop
  • New lands needed to grow more cotton
  • Large farms sprang up in AL, MS, LA and TX
  • More slaves needed to work the plantations
  • Slave population in the South doubled between
    1790 and 1820
  • 700,000 to 1,500,000
  • South a land of slavery and farming
  • North a land of free labor and industry

9
Interchangeable Parts
  • Whitney also developed the idea of using
    interchangeable parts to speed up manufacturing
    process
  • Contracted by the federal government to make
    10,000 guns in two years
  • Before, guns made by hand and each one was
    different
  • By using standardized parts for all guns, guns
    could be made quickly and be consistent with
    others
  • Actually took Whitney 10 years to make the guns
    but this paved the way for the improved
    manufacturing of many products

10
Second Great Awakening
  • 1790 census showed 1 in 10 Americans was a member
    of a church
  • Changing society in the early 1800s led people to
    renew their religious faith
  • 2nd Great Awakening was democratic
  • Anyone, rich or poor, could gain salvation
  • The congregation was generally more significant
    than the minister
  • Revivals were common

11
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12
  • New Religious Denominations
  • Methodists (Largest in 1850)
  • Spread their message through traveling ministers
  • Baptists (2nd largest in 1850)
  • Believed only those old enough to understand
    religion should be baptized
  • Unitarians
  • Believed Jesus Christ was human messenger
  • God as a loving father, not stern judge
  • Popular in New England, not the frontier
  • Mormons
  • Group that moved as they faced persecution
  • Believed God would create a simpler church
  • Would occur in North America, not the Holy Land

13
African American Worship
  • Methodists and other evangelical churches
    included blacks and whites
  • Religious traditions blended together
  • Call and response
  • Spirituals
  • African Americans started own churches
  • 1816 16 congregations formed the African
    Methodist Episcopal Church (AME)
  • 1831 86 churches were members of the AME

14
Effects of Manufacturing and Capital on the U.S.
Economy
  • Manufacturing made more goods available, so money
    became more widely used
  • For the first time, the people who produced the
    goods were not the people who used them
  • Capital allowed investment, which brought about
    economic expansion

15
Free Enterprises Effect on the Growing Market
Revolution
  • Market Revolution A shift from a home-based,
    often agricultural, economy to one based on money
    and the buying and selling of goods
  • Free enterprise Economic system characterized
    by private or corporate ownership of capital
    goods
  • Free enterprise system encouraged the creation of
    new industries which fueled the Market Revolution

16
Nationalism at Home
  • Country was uniting as people saw power of
    federal govt. over the state govt.
  • Three important court rulings strengthened the
    federal governments role in the economy
  • McCollough v. Maryland established power of
    courts to declare acts of a state
    unconstitutional
  • Dartmouth College v. Woodward prevented state
    interference in contracts. This helped to
    stabilize the economy
  • Gibbons v. Ogden established federal govt. right
    to regulate all aspects of interstate commerce

17
Nationalism Abroad
  • US foreign policy strengthened
  • Northern border with British territory
    established as 49º N latitude
  • Agreement with British to limit number of war
    ships on the Great Lakes
  • Monroe Doctrine
  • US would not get involved in internal affairs of
    Europe
  • US would not interfere with existing European
    colonies in the Western Hemisphere
  • US would not permit further colonization in the
    W.H.
  • US would view any action by a European country to
    control a W.H. nation as a hostile action

18
Two New Political Parties of the 1820s
  • Jacksons supporters blocked all of Adams
    plans for public improvements and protective
    tariffs
  • Jackson planned for upcoming election, and
    revenge
  • National Republicans
  • supported the Jeffersonian spirit of improvement
  • John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay
  • Jacksonian Democrats
  • supported Jeffersons ideal of limited government
  • Andrew Jackson

19
Social Reforms
  • Protestant Revivalists
  • Felt sectional jealousy and hate was hurting the
    country
  • Transcendentalism grew out of a rejection of
    traditional religion
  • Rejected group worship in favor of private
    reflection
  • Temperance movement was a response to the
    concern that alcohol was causing people to lose
    control and was threatening family life

20
  • Public Education
  • Lacking in rural, southern areas
  • Middle-class citizens began demanding public
    education
  • Prison Reform
  • Effort to improve conditions for prisoners
  • Separate facilities for
  • men and women
  • juveniles
  • mentally ill
  • Utopian communities some people wanted to form
    their own small societies in an attempt to
    achieve perfect social and political communities

21
New Harmony, Indiana
22
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23
  • Harmony was founded by the Rappites in1814
  • A religious group led by George Rapp
  • They believed Christ would return to Earth in
    their lifetime
  • Non-violent pacifists
  • Practiced celibacy
  • Harmony was established as a utopian community
    and commune

24
  • New Harmony was established by Robert Owen and
    William Maclure in 1825
  • Bought the land from Rapp for 150,000
  • Owen wanted to try to create his own utopian
    communal society
  • The attempt at a utopian community failed for
    many reasons
  • Internal quarrels among the leaders and residents
  • They tried to ban money and use barter system
  • There was no private property

25
New Harmony as envisioned by Robert Owen
26
  • There were a few successes within New Harmony
  • It did become a scientific center of national
    significance
  • William Maclure brought naturalists Thomas Say
    and Charles-Alexandre Lesueur to New Harmony from
    Philadelphia
  • Say has been called the father of American
    entomology and the father of American conchology
    (the study of mollusk shells)

27
Abolitionist Movement
  • All states north of MD abolished slavery by 1804
  • All importing of slaves ended in 1808
  • Colonization of Liberia
  • Effort to create a country in Africa for free
    blacks and freed slaves
  • Many whites supported idea to get blacks out of
    the country
  • Plan offended many African Americans who simply
    wanted to improve their lives in their homeland,
    the U.S.
  • William Lloyd Garrison
  • White Bostonian newspaper publisher (The
    Liberator)
  • Created the American Anti-Slavery Society
  • By 1835, 1,000 chapters with a total of 150,000
    members

28
William Lloyd Garrison
Frederick Douglass
29
  • Frederick Douglass
  • Escaped slave
  • Spoke out against slavery through his
    autobiography (Life and Times of Frederick
    Douglas)
  • So eloquent some incorrectly assumed he could not
    have ever been a slave
  • The Underground Railroad
  • Secret escape route for slaves
  • Goal was to get out of the country where
    slave-hunters could not go and bring back escaped
    slaves
  • Rescued between 40,000 and 100,000 slaves
  • Harriet Tubman famous conductor
  • Escaped slave herself
  • Returned to lead more than 300 slaves to freedom
  • Nicknamed the Black Moses

30
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31
Divisions Among Abolitionists
  • Some did not feel women should participate in
    political gatherings
  • William Lloyd Garrison encouraged women to speak
    at his meetings
  • Sarah and Angelina Grimke
  • Sojourner Truth
  • Former slave
  • Others felt political action was useless
  • Constitution allowed slavery so any law against
    slavery was unconstitutional

32
Resistance to Abolitionism
  • Abolitionism viewed by many as a radical idea
  • White workers/labor leaders in the North feared
    increased competition for jobs
  • Some whites didnt want African Americans living
    in their communities
  • Eventually led to violence
  • Elijah Lovejoy, editor of a newspaper, called for
    gradual emancipation
  • Opponents repeatedly destroyed his printing press
  • Rioters killed Lovejoy as he tried to defend his
    building
  • Southerners in Congress passed a gag-rule
  • Prohibited antislavery petitions from being read
    or acted upon in the House of Reps. for eight
    years

33
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34
Changing Role of Women
  • Changing roles
  • Lower class women took factory jobs
  • Middle class women freed from chores as
    conveniences increased
  • Became active in reform movements in response to
    social and legal restrictions they faced
  • Fought for abolition of slavery
  • Uncle Toms Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet
    Ann Jacobs
  • Seneca Falls Convention
  • Wanted the rights and privileges that women
    should have as citizens of the U.S
  • Primarily wanted suffrage, the right to vote

35
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Harriet Ann Jacobs
36
Important Figures of the Seneca Falls Convention
37
Growing Social Divisions
  • Rising Immigration
  • Economic changes led to increased demand for
    cheap labor
  • Immigrants provided this labor
  • Immigration increased from 143,000 in 1820s to
    2.6 million in 1850s
  • Mostly settled in North and West
  • Almost all immigrants during this time came from
    Ireland and Germany

38
Tensions Over Immigration
  • Irish and German immigrants faced discrimination
  • Irish, working very cheaply, undermined labor
    unions
  • Many Protestants disapproved of the religion of
    most of the immigrants, Roman Catholic
  • American Republican Party
  • Favored requiring immigrants to live in the US
    for 21 years before being eligible for citizenship

39
Reform and Southerners
  • Southerners disliked the Reform Movement
  • Did not want to end slavery
  • Disturbed by charges that slave owners were
    immoral
  • Many farmers depended on child labor and did not
    want public schools
  • Equal rights for women implied that they did not
    properly care for their families
  • Did not feel their way of life needed reforming
    since it wasnt subjected to the problems of
    urban life

40
Nativism
  • Rose in a response to a surge of immigration
  • Secret society formed the Order of the
    Star-Spangled Banner
  • American Party (later the Know Nothings)
  • Pushed for anti-immigration legislation
  • Worked to defeat Irish Catholic candidates
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