Religious Reforms
Second Great Awakening New religious fervor swept through US in 1830s –Concentrated in upstate NY
What caused it? Reaction to changing times –Industry & growth of cities –Immigration –Transportation –Communications
Evangelism Responsibility to share religion by giving testimony/witnessing Highly emotional type of religion
Revivalism Large religious gatherings –Often too many people there for town – go out to a campmeeting Argued for political change –Led to reform movements
Religions that began then Mormons (Latter-Day Saints) Church of Christ Jehovah’s Witnesses 7 th Day Adventists
African-American Church Churches & revivals (in north) often open to whites & blacks –Children of the same God Slaves in S often went to church with master (but sat separately)
African Methodist Episcopals Founded by free blacks Fought for end to slavery Became center of black culture 1 st national black convention –Looked at how to help escaped slaves to freedom
Transcendentalism Appealed to people turned off by revival religions – too public Philosophical movement –Simple life –Truth & beauty in nature –Personal emotion & imagination
Transcendentalism Ralph Waldo Emerson Henry David Thoreau –Optimism / freedom / self-reliance –Follow your “inner voice” –Civil Disobedience – follow your conscience
Unitarianism Popular with northern rich, well educated people No emotion – only calm reason –Also believed in political reform
Utopian communities Experimental settlements –Trying to create perfect society Most places didn’t last –People had to work more than they thought they would
Shakers Men & women equal –But couldn’t marry or have kids Died out pretty soon –Members only converts & orphans
Prison reform Earlier, jails were very brutal –Lots of abuse –Solitary confinement for very long periods of time –Kept mentally ill with prisoners
Dorothea Dix Prison reformer Move mentally ill to hospitals Try to rehabilitate –Train prisoners to return to society
Public schools PA – set up first state public elementary schools –Rich against it – they could pay for private school for their kids –Immigrants against it – ethnic pride
Public schools Most states didn’t have well run public schools until late 1800s Most kids in 1 multi-grade class Most dropped out by age 10