Date post: | 14-Jan-2016 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | bruno-mcdaniel |
View: | 216 times |
Download: | 1 times |
CHAPTER 15 – REFORM AND CULTURE
Reviving Religion
1850 ¾ of population went Relied on Deism (reason rather than revelation)
Deism – rejected original sin of man, denied Christ’s divinity but b/v in a supreme being (Clockmaker)
Unitarian Faith – Begins in New England: B/V God existed in one person (no trinity), stressed goodness of human nature, B/V in free will & salvation through good works, pictured God as a loving father , appealed to intellectuals w/ rationalism & optimism (Emerson embraced this idea)
All these new CRAZY ideas inspired Christians to take back there faith
1800’s – 2nd Great Awakening Resulted in:
Prison Reform Church Reform Temperance Movement Women’s Rights Movement Abolition of Slavery in the 1830’s- Camp Meetings spread to the masses - East went to West to “Save” Indians =
Hmmm . . .
Methodists & Baptists = personal conversion, democracy in church affairs, emotionalism
Peter Cartwright – Methodist “Circuit Riders” traveling preacher (Muscular)
Charles G. Finney – Ex lawyer Rochester, NY greatest revival preacher 1830-1831 Encouraged ladies to pray out-loud,
spoke out a/g slavery and alcohol
Denominational Diversity
New York w/ its Puritans preached “Hellfire” known as the Burned over District as many as 25,000 people gathered
Millerites (Adventists – named by William Miller) – Christ return Oct 22, 1844
Conservatives were made up of: Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Congregationalists,
Unitarians (Eastern, wealthy more educated) South & West – Methodists or Baptists
(converted the most souls to Christ) less rich and less educated
Religion further split the issue of slavery
Utah & the Mormons
Joseph Smith (1830) – Claimed to have found Golden Tablets in NY w/ the Book of Mormon inscribed on them
Founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
People disliked them B/C = polygamy, drilling militia, voting as a unit
Smith was killed in Jail by an angry Hick mob so, Brigham Young took over & led his followers to Utah in 1846 (Married 27 women had 56 kids)
Grew quickly by birth & immigration
The issue of Polygamy prevented Utah’s entrance into the Union until 1896
Free School
Was a hated idea at first (handout to poor people)
1828 – The idea won out finally Teachers were ill-trained / ill-taught Horace Mann fought for better schools =
known as the father of public education Schools ended up being really expensive for
many & blacks were left out from education Important Educators – Noah Webster
(Dictionary & Blueback Speller) William H. McGuffey’s Readers
Higher Learning
2nd Great Awakening led to school’s being built in the South & the West (Mainly for Pride) Curriculum focused mainly on Latin,
Greek, Math, & moral philosophy University of North Carolina in 1795 University of Virginia started by
Jefferson shortly afterwards
Women were thought to be corrupted if too educated & were therefore excluded
Emma Willard = Troy Female Seminary 1821
Mary Lyon = Mount Holyoke Seminary 1837
Libraries, public lectures, and magazines flourished
Age of Reform
Opposed – tobacco, alcohol, profanity, & wanted women’s rights
Wanted criminal codes softened = $1 in debt resulted in prison time
Mentally insane were treated badly = Dorthea Dix fought to help them 1843
Demon Rum
Drunkenness was widespread The American Temperance Society
formed at Boston in 1826 = made pamphlets, wrote a novel
Neal S. Dow becomes father of Prohibition Maine Law of 1851 = prohibited making
and sale of liquor
Women in Revolt
Women were better off than in Europe Many became Spinsters Women were perceived as: Weak physically and
emotionally, but fine for teaching Men were: strong, crude/barbaric if not guided
by the purity of women Home was the center for women Wanted to Abolish slavery Women's movement led by: Lucretia Mott, Suzan
B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell (1st female medical graduate), Margaret Fuller, the Grimke Sisters
Amelia Bloomer = semi short skirts Seneca Falls Women’s rights
convention 1848 = NY Declaration of Sentiments = All Men
& Women were created equal Demanded ballots for women Put aside with the Civil War and
Slavery
. Wilderness Utopias
Robert Owen founded New Harmony, IN (1825) though it failed in confusion
Brook Farm – Massachusetts experiment (1841) where 20intellectuals committed to Transcendentalism (it lasted until ‘46)
Oneida Community — practiced free love, birth control,eugenic selection of parents to produce superior offspring; it survivedironically as a capitalistic venture, selling baskets and then cutlery.
Shakers – a communistic community (led by Mother Ann Lee); they couldn’t marry so they became extinct
Scientific Achievement
Early Americans were interested in practical science rather than pure science (i.e., Jefferson and his newly designed plow). Nathaniel Bowditch – studied practical navigation and
oceanography Matthew Maury - ocean winds, currents
Writers were concerned with basic science. The most influential U.S. scientists…
Benjamin Silliman (1779-1864) - pioneer in chemistry geologist (taught in Yale)
Louis Agassiz (1807-1873) - served at Harvard, insisted on original research
Asa Gray (1810-1888) Harvard, was the Columbus of botany John Audubon (1785-1851) painted birds with exact detail
Medicine in the U.S. was primitive (i.e., bleeding used for cure; smallpox, yellow fever though it killed many).
Life expectancy was unsurprisingly low. Self-prescribed patent medicines were
common, they were usually were mostly alcohol and often as harmful as helpful.
The local surgeon was usually the local barber or butcher.
Artistic Achievements
U.S. had traditionally imitated European styles of art (aristocratic subjects, dark portraits, stormy landscapes)
1820-50 was a Greek revival, as they’d won independence from Turks; Gothic forms also gained popularity
Thomas Jefferson was the most able architect of his generation (Monticello and University of Virginia)
Artists were viewed as a wasters of time; they suffered from Puritan prejudice of art as sinful pride
Gilbert Stuart (1755-1828) - painted Washington and competed with English artists
Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827) painted 60 portraits of WashingtonJohn Trumbull (1756-1843) - captured the Revolutionary War in paint in dramatic fashion
During the nationalism upsurge after War of 1812, U.S. painters portrayed human landscapes and Romanticism “darky” tunes became popular Stephen Foster wrote Old Folks at Home (AKA
Suwannee River, his most famous)
Literature
Literature was imported or plagiarized from England
Americans poured literature into practical outlets (i.e. TheFederalist Papers, Common Sense (Paine), Ben Franklin’sAutobiography, Poor Richard’s Almanack)
literature was reborn after the War of Independence and especially after War of 1812
The Knickerbocker group in NY wrote the first truly American literature Washington Irving (1783-1859) - 1st U.S.
internationally recognized writings, The Sketch Book
James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851) - 1st US novelist,Leatherstocking Tales (which included The Last of the Mohicans whichwas popular in Europe)
William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878) – Thanatopsis, the 1st high quality poetry in U.S.
Transcendentalist
Literature dawned in the 2nd quarter of 19th century with the transcendentalist movement (circa 1830) transcendentalism clashed with John Locke (who argued
knowledgecame from reason); for transcendentalists, truth came not byobservation alone, from with inner light
it stressed individualism, self-reliance, and non-conformity Ralph Waldo Emerson was popular since the ideal of the
essay reflected the spirit of the U.S. he lectured the Phi Beta Kappa Address “The American
Scholar” he urged U.S. writers throw off European tradition influential as practical philosopher (stressed self-
government, self-reliance, depending on self) most famous for his work, Self Reliance
Henry David Thoreau He condemned slavery and wrote Walden:
Or life in the Woods He also wrote On the Duty of Civil
Disobedience, which was idealistic in thought, and a forerunner of Gandhi and then Martin Luther King Jr., saying it is not wrong to disobey an “unjust law”
Walt Whitman wrote Leaves of Grass (poetry) and was “Poet Laureate of Democracy”
Glowing Literary Lights (not associated with transcendentalism) Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - wrote
poems popular in Europe such as Evangeline
John Greenleaf Whittier - poems that cried against injustice, intolerance, inhumanity
James Russell Lowell - political satirist who wrote Biglow Papers
Oliver Wendell Holmes - The Last Leaf
Women writers Louisa May Alcott - with transcendentalism
wrote Little Women Emily Dickinson – wrote of the theme of nature
in poems Southern literary figure – William Gillmore
Simms “the cooper of the south”; wrote many books of life infrontier South during the Revolutionary War
Edgar Allan Poe - wrote “The Raven” and many short stories invented modern detective novel and
“psychological thriller” he was fascinated by the supernatural and
reflected a morbid sensibility (more prized by Europe)
reflections of Calvinist obsession with original sin and struggle between good & evil Nathaniel Hawthorne - The Scarlet Letter
(psychological effect of sin) Herman Melville - Moby Dick, and allegory
between good and evil told of a whaling captain
Writing the Past
George Bancroft – founded the naval academy; published U.S.history book and was known as the “Father of AmericanHistory”
William H. Prescott - published on the conquest of Mexico, Peru
Francis Parkman - published on the struggle between France and England in colonial North America
Historians were all from New England because they had the most books. Therefore, there became an anti-South bias.