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Explore the religious revival, reform philosophy, and political changes that shaped America in the Antebellum Age. Discover the impact of the Second Great Awakening, transcendentalism, political democratization, Native American policy, and the Bank War. Learn about utopian experiments, temperance and prison reform, abolitionism, women's rights, and the transformation of American society.
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10 Shaping America in the Antebellum Age
Shaping America in the Antebellum Age • Religious Revival and Reform Philosophy • The Political Response to Change • Perfectionist Reform and Utopianism • Reforming Society • Abolitionism and Women’s Rights • Conclusion: Perfecting America
The Second Great Awakening • Charles G. Finney extremely popular • Rochester revival • New York and Old Northwest • Emphasis on human agency • Catholics also involved
Transcendentalism • Ralph Waldo Emerson • Essays • Inward focus • Importance of reform • Henry David Thoreau • Walden • “On Civil Disobedience”
The Political Response to Change • Concern with maintaining republicanism • Franchise extended to all white men
Changing Political Culture • Election of 1828 • Parties become more important • Political life more democratic
Jackson’s Path to the White House • Reputation from War of 1812 • Lost election of 1824 to John Quincy Adams • Election of 1828 – Democratic party • Defeated Adams • Inauguration a popular party
Jackson’s Presidency • Spoils system • Brought in different groups • Internal improvements slowed • Tariff debates • Vice President John C. Calhoun • Opposes tariffs • Supports nullification
Jackson’s Presidency (cont'd) • Ordinance of Nullification, South Carolina • Voids tariffs • Repealed after Force Bill is proposed
Jackson’s Native American Policy • Reputation in warfare against Indians • Removal Act of 1930 • U.S. Army used • Trail of Tears: Creek, Cherokee, Chickasaw • Old Northwest tribes pushed west
Bank War and Depression • Second Bank of the United States • Hated by Jacckson, seen as a monopoly • Whigs nominate Henry Clay • Jackson reelected, 1832 • Removes Bank’s reserves • Partially responsible for panic
Bank War and Depression (cont'd) • Martin Van Buren, elected 1836 • Inherits financial disaster • High unemployment
The Second American Party System • Whigs • Generally wealthier • New England, Upper Midwest • Support Clay’s American System • Democrats • Often recent immigrants • Strong in South • Election of 1840 • Harrison v. Tyler
Impulses • Influence of Finney, revivals, Puritan legacy • International influence • Robert Owen, Scottish • Dilemmas • Change institutions or ideas?
Utopian Experiments • John Humphrey Noyes – Oneida, New York • Founds Shakers • Sexual restrictions • Communal child raising • Mother Ann Lee • Many Shaker communities • Communal property
Utopian Experiments (cont'd) • 100 communities • Robert Owen, New Harmony, Indiana • Brook Farm
Millerites and Mormons • William Miller • Calculated end of time, 1843 • Gives rise to Seventh-Day Adventists • Joseph Smith • Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints • Succeeded by Brigham Young • Move west, 1846
Temperance • American Temperance Society, found 1826 • Methods copied from revival meetings • Increasing use of political action from 1840s • Culminates in Prohibition, 1919
Reforming Society • Sylvester Graham • Extolled chastity, special diets, exercise • Mental institutions • Dorothea Dix • Prison reform • Samuel Gridley Howe and Thomas Gallaudet
Reforming Society (cont'd) • Trade unions • National Trades Union, 1834
The Antislavery Movement • William Lloyd Garrison, The Liberator • American Anti-Slavery Society • American Colonization Society, 1816 • Tactics differ • Pamphlets, petitions, boycotts • Divisions between black and white abolitionists • Frederick Douglass calls for stronger action
Flood Tide of Abolitionism • Cooperation on most work • Unified by attacks on abolitionists
Women Reformers, Women’s Rights • Reform work gave women a new role • Sometimes alongside husbands • Angelina Grimke and Theodore Weld • New York Female Moral Reform Society • Work against prostitution • World Anti-Slavery Convention • Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott
Women Reformers, Women’s Rights (cont'd) • Seneca Falls • Declaration of Sentiments
Conclusion: Perfecting America • Reform • Second Great Awakening • Temperance • Women’s rights • Social and economic transformations • The issue of slavery becomes more divisive