| I. Religious Sources of Reform
A. Second Great Awakening--religious revivals among Protestants
1. Arminian, rather than Calvinist. Salvation was a matter of choice
2. Focus on Second Coming of Christ. Need for reform of society to hasten
the new Kingdom of God.
3. Biggest impact among women. Evangelical mission to accomplish gave
women more status, purpose.
4. Frontier revivals featured emotional appeals and provided social
meetings for settlers
B. New religious groups formed as instruments of reform
1. Utopian societies created in reaction to urban growth and
industrialization. Emphasis on community and withdrawal from society
2. Shakers--socially radical. Abolished families, practiced celibacy,
full equality between sexes.
3. Mormons--Organized by Joseph Smith in 1830 as a cooperative theocracy
with himself as the Prophet. Because of persecution, Smith and his followers
moved from New York to Ohio to Missouri to Illinois, where he was murdered.
Succeeded by Brigham Young, who led migration to Utah.
II. Non-Religious Utopian Communities
A. New Harmony, Illinois. 1825. Socialist center founded by Robert Owen to be
self-sufficient and existing without currency. Failed after several years.
B. Brook Farm Experiment. Transcendentalist in orientation, rejecting
society's standards and Enlightenment thought, emphasizing individualism and
the mysteries of nature. Famous contributors: Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne,
Melville.
III. Other Areas of Early Social Reform
A. Temperance--religious basis in violation of the Sabbath. Movement moved
from moderation to abstinence to prohibition in its goals. Led by women but
supported by factory owners who had massive absenteeism on Mondays.
B. Education--compulsory education in every state by 1860. Led by Horace
Mann, who secularized the curriculum and made it more practical to train
citizens.
C. Women's Rights--women were considered so inferior to men that they were
not allowed to obtain higher education, vote, or control their own property
1. Grimke sisters (1838) began with abolitionism, then turned to attacking
the subordinate position of women. Similarities to position of slaves noted.
2. Seneca Falls Statement (1848)--statement of women's mistreatment by
men.
3. Improvement made possible by:
a) Democratic spirit of Jacksonian period, which caused reformers to call
for women's suffrage
b) Industrial revolution demonstrated to women that they could enter
occupations
c) Reform movements, where women could crusade equally with men.
D. Abolitionism
1. American Colonization Society formed (1816) to gradually emancipate
blacks and settle them in Africa.
2. Abolitionism rose in the 1830s with an emphasis on racial equality.
Intent on freeing, then educating blacks.
a) William Lloyd Garrison The Liberator demanded immediate abolition.
b) Theodore Weld worked for gradual emancipation through religious
conversion. Used Oberlin College as training ground for abolitionists
c) Organized abolitionists smuggled 2,000 slaves a year out of the
South to Canada and deluged Congress with petitions despite the gag rule
(1836) which forbid the discussion of slavery in Congress.
E. Humane Treatment of Individuals
1) Dorothea Dix investigated and reported treatment of insane and led to
creation of humane institutions
2) Legal code reforms
a) Reduction in crimes punishable by death
b) Abolishing of public hangings in many states
c) Abandoning flogging and other cruel punishments
3) Prison reform--rehabilitation of criminals attempted to counter the
tendency of prisons to create more hardened criminals. Work seen as way to
reform criminals.
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