Wednesday, September 4, 2013

History: Chapter 11 Outline


Chapter 11: Society, Culture, and Reform 1820-1860

1.     Religion: The Second Great Awakening
a.     New York
                                               i.     1823- Presbyterian Charles G. Finney started revivals
1.     Appealed to emotions, fear of damnation, free to be saved through hard work, middle-class
2.     “burned over district” “hell and brimstone” revivals
b.     Baptists and Methodists
                                               i.     South, western frontier
                                              ii.     Circuit preachers- Peter Cartwright, nomad preachers
                                            iii.     1850- became largest protestant denominations in country
c.      Millennialism
                                               i.     Based on idea world was going to end w/ 2nd coming of Christ
                                              ii.     Preacher William Miller gained followers, said was going to happen on Oct. 21, 1844.
                                            iii.     Would continue as Seventh-Day Adventists
d.     Mormons
                                               i.     Aka Church of Latter Day Saints, Founded by Joseph Smith in 1830.
1.     Based on book of Scripture
a.     Connection b/w Nat. Ams and Lost tribes of Isreal
2.     NY, OH, MS, IL, murdered by mob
                                              ii.     New Zion
1.     Brigham Young
a.     W. frontier, Salt Lake UT
e.     Only in Northern States from MA westward to OH it had a sig. role in social reform.
2.     Culture: Ideas, The Arts, and Literature
a.     The Transcendentalists
                                               i.     Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)
1.     Individualistic mood
2.     1837 address @ Harvard emoked nat’l spirit, don’t copy Euros, American culture instead
3.     Northener, leading critic of slavery
                                              ii.     Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)
1.     Concord, MA (Emerson too)
2.     Two year experiment- lived by himself outside down in woods
a.     Discover essential truths about life and universe
                                                                                                     i.     Walden, 1854
b.     “On Civil Disobedience”
                                                                                                     i.     Nonviolent protest
                                                                                                    ii.     Refused to pay tax that might go to war w/ Mexico (1846-1848)
                                                                                                  iii.     Inspired Ghandi and MLK
                                            iii.     Brook Farm
1.     1841, Minister George Ripley launched communal experiment in Brook Farm MA
a.     Achieve “a more natural union b/w intellectual and manual labor.”
                                                                                                     i.     Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Theodore parker, Nathaniel Hawthorne.
b.     1849- Fire ended experiment
                                                                                                     i.     Remembered for artistic creativity and innovative school
b.     Communal Experiments
                                               i.     Shakers
1.     One of the earliest.
2.     6000 members by the 1840s
3.     Kept men and women strictly separate
4.     Died out by the 1900s
                                              ii.     New Harmony
1.     Secular in Indiana
2.     Welsh industrialist/reformer Robert Owen
3.     Solve inequity and alienation caused by Ind. Rev.
4.     Failed, financially, disagreements
                                            iii.     Oneida community
1.     John Humphrey Noyes in 1848 in NY
2.     Social and economic equality
3.     Shared property and even marriage partners, attacked for it
a.     As sinful as “free love”
b.     Still prospered, made silverware
                                            iv.     Fourier Phalanxes
1.     1840s- Many interested inc. Horace Greeley in theories of French socialist Charles fourier
2.     Advocated people share work and living arrangements in communities
c.      Arts and Literature
                                               i.     Painting
1.     Genre painting
2.     George Caleb Bingham
3.     Thomas Cole, Frederick Church
a.     American landscapes
                                              ii.     Architecture
1.     Classical Greek to glorify democracy
                                            iii.     Literature
1.     More nationalistic
2.     Washington Irving, James Fenimore Cooper
3.     The Scarlet Letter, Moby Dick
3.     Reforming Society
a.     Temperance
                                               i.     Alcohol targeted as the reason for social ills
                                              ii.     18th Amendment- 1919
b.     Movement for Public Asylums
                                               i.     1820s, 1830s.
1.     Hoped to be cured, better treatment
c.      Mental Hospitals
                                               i.     Dorothea Dix, schoolteacher from MA
1.     Mentally ill shouldn’t be w/ criminals
2.     Devoted for better conditions
a.     Patients began receive pro treatment at state expense
d.     Public Education
                                               i.     Free common schools
1.     Horace Mann (1796-1859)
a.     Worked for public education, mandatory attendance by all students
2.     1840’s, support spread
                                              ii.     Moral Education
1.     Mann wanted to teach children morality
2.     William Holmes McGuffey
a.     Textbooks
                                            iii.     Higher Educations
1.     1830’s small denominational colleges
2.     Oberlin College in OH began to admit women
e.     The Changing American Family and Women’s Rights Movement
                                               i.     Cult of domesticity
1.     New definitions of gender roles in society
                                              ii.     Origins of the women’s rights movement
1.     Esp. antislavery, hated the way men relegated them to secondary roles.
2.     Sarah and Agenlina Grimke, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton
                                            iii.     Seneca Falls Convention (1848)
1.     First women’s rights convention in history
f.      Antislavery Movement
                                               i.     American Colonization Society
1.     1822, ACS est. African American settlements
a.     Not practical
b.     Population grew from 1.5 to 4 million
                                              ii.     American Antislavery Society
1.     1831
a.     William Lloy Garrison- The Liberator
2.     1833- founded American Antislavery Society
                                            iii.     Liberty Party
1.     Political action > moral crusade
                                            iv.     Black abolitionists
1.     Most outspoken critics of slavery
2.     Frederick Douglas
a.     1847- The North Star
3.     Harriet Tubman, David Ruggles, Sojourner Truth, William Still
                                              v.     Violent abolitionism
1.     David Walker, Henry Highland Garnet
a.     Northern blacks, advocated revolt against “masters”
2.     1831, VI slave Nat Turner led a revolt, 55 whites killed.
a.     Whites killed 100s in retaliation
g.     Other Reforms
                                               i.     American Peace Society- Abolish War
1.     Mexican War
                                              ii.     Laws to prevent seamen from being flogged
                                            iii.     Dietary reforms
                                            iv.     Dress reform
                                              v.     Pseudoscience- phrenology
h.     Southern Reaction to Reform
                                               i.     Were not really affected
                                              ii.     Antislavery- conspiracy

History: Chapter 17 Outline


Chapter 18: The Growth of Cities and American Culture, 1865-1900

1.   Industrialization, immigration, and urbanization
2.   A Nation of Immigrants
a.    Growth of Immigration
                                              i.     US population from 23.2 million to 76.2 million in 1900.  16.2 immigrants.
                                            ii.     Push factors
1.   Poverty of displaced farmworkers driven from the land by the mechanization of farmwork
2.   Overcrowding and joblessness in European cities as a result of a population boom
3.   Religious persecution- Jews in Russia
                                          iii.     Pull factors
1.   Opportunities afforded by the Great Plains
2.   Abundance of industrial jobs in the US cities
3.   Large steamships and cheap tickets made it possible
b.   “Old” Immigrants and “New” Immigrants
                                              i.     Before 1890s
1.   From Northern and Western Europe (British Isles, Germany, Scandanavia)
2.   Protestants, English, skilled
                                            ii.     1890s to outbreak of WWI
1.   Southern and Eastern Europe (Italy, Greece, Croatia, Slovakia, Poland, Russia)
2.   Poor, illiterate, unskilled, Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, Jewish, not used to democracy.
a.    Went to poor ethnic neighborhoods in big cities (NYC, Chicago, etc)
b.   “Birds of passage”- young men contracted for unskilled factory, mining, and construction jobs, returned to native lands when they saved up money to bring to family.
c.    Restricting Immigration
                                              i.     1870s- no immigration laws yet (Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi started Statue of Liberty)
                                            ii.     1886- Congress had immigration laws
1.   Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882
2.   Restricted “undesirables”
3.   No contract labor- 1885
4.   Ellis Island- Immigration Center
a.    Stricter medical and document exams
b.   Pay entry
                                          iii.     Groups who opposed immigration
1.   Labor unions (scared for jobs)
2.   Nativist society- American Protective Association, against Roman Catholics
3.   Social Darwinism- immigrants biologically inferior
3.   Urbinization
a.    By 1920 more people in urban areas than rural areas
b.   Changes in the Nature of Cities
                                              i.     Streetcar cities
1.   Horse-drawn streetcars and cable cars
2.   By 1890s being replaced by eletric trolleys, elevated RxR, and subways.
3.   Suspension bridges- Brooklyn Bridge (1883)
a.    Longer commutes
4.   Separated by income
                                            ii.     Skyscrapers
1.   1885- William Le Baron Jenny built first true skyscraper w/ steel skeleton in Chicago.
a.    Home Insurance Company
b.   10 stories high
                                                                                                    i.     Otis elevator, central steam-heating system
2.   By 1900= skyscrapers replaced church spires
                                          iii.     Ethnic neighborhoods
1.   NYC law for each room to have a window in slums
a.    Dumbbell tenements
2.   Overcrowding, filth- disease (cholera, typhoid, and TB)
3.   Different locations could support different ethnic groups (Little Italy, China Town)
a.    Maintain language, culture, religion
                                          iv.     Residential suburbs
1.   Wealthier moved away from city- maybe escape problems that came w/ it.
2.   Suburban growth: abundant land for low cost, cheap transportation by rail, low-cost construction methods such as the wooden halloon-frame house, ethnic and racial prejudice, American fondness for grass,privacy and detached individual houses.
3.   Frederick Law Olmsted- built suburban community- “a village in the park”
4.   By 1900, suburbs spread- suburban nation
                                            v.     Private city vs. public city
1.   Dirty, diseased cities unexpected
a.    Slowly advocated for more sanitary cities
c.    Boss and Machine Politics
                                              i.     Powerful urban politics
1.   Political machines- group of politicians, had a boss, supporters
2.   Started as social clubs dev’p into coordinate needs of businesses, immigrants, and underprivileged.
a.    Asked for votes in return.
3.   Greedy too- stole millions from taxpayers and fraud.
a.    Boss Tweed
                                            ii.     Tammy Hall in NYC
4.   Awakening of Reform
a.    Reform movements began in 1880s and 1890s
b.   Books of social criticism
                                              i.     San Fran journalist Henry George published provocative book in 1879
1.   Progress and Poverty
a.    Proposed a single tax on land as the solution to poverty
b.   Brought attention to inequalities in wealth b/c of industrialization.
                                            ii.     Looking Backward, 2000-1887
1.   By Edward Bellamy in 1888.
2.   Envisioned elimination of poverty, greed, and crime.
                                          iii.     Readers joined movements and orginizations
c.    Settlement houses
                                              i.     Middleclass people try to help poor- lived and worked in settlement houses.
                                            ii.     Hull House in Chicago- Jane Addams in 1889
                                          iii.     Taught English to immigrants, pioneered early childhood education, est. neighborhood theaters and music schools.
                                          iv.     Child labor laws, housing reform, women’s rights.
d.   Social Gospel
                                              i.     Importance of applying Christian principles to social problems.
                                            ii.     Led by Walter Rauschenbusch who worked in NYC
e.    Religion and society
                                              i.     Roman Catholics grew in numbers
                                            ii.     James Gibbons- Kingths of Labor
                                          iii.     Dwight Moody and Moody Bible Institute
                                          iv.     Salvation Army
f.     Families and women in urban society
                                              i.     1/12 marriages divorced in 1900 b/c new laws
                                            ii.     Smaller families- not practical to have kids
                                          iii.     Seneca Falls- 1848
                                          iv.     1890- Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susand B. Anthony helped found National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA).
                                            v.     Wyoming- first state to let women vote in 1869.
g.    Temperance and morality
                                              i.     Women have a problem w/ drinking
1.   Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (1874)
a.    Total abstinence of alcohol.
                                            ii.     Moralists thought cities were breeding ground for vice, obscenity, and prostitution.
1.   Anthony Comstock- Society for the Suppression of Vice
2.   Comstock Law- prohibited the mailing or transportation of obscene and lewd material and photographs.
5.   Intellectual and Cultural Movements
a.    Changes in Education
                                              i.     Public schools
1.   Reading, writing, and arithmetic
2.   New compulsory laws- more go to school, increased literacy rate to90% of the population by 1900.
3.   Tax supported public high schools
                                            ii.     Higher education
1.   Number of US colleges increased b/c:
a.    Land grand colleges est. under the Morrill acts of 1862 and 1890
b.   Universities founded by wealthy philanthropists
                                                                                                    i.     University of Chicago by John D. Rockefeller
c.    Founding of new colleges for women
                                                                                                    i.     Smith, Bryn Mawr, Mount Holyoke
2.   71% of colleges admitted women by 1900
                                          iii.     Social sciences and the professions
1.   Psychology, sociology, anthropology, political science.
2.   Richard T. Ely of Johns Hopkins attacked laissez-faire economic thought as dogmatic and outdated.
3.   Lester F Ward, Woodrow Wilson, Frederick Johnson Turner to study dynamic process of human behavior, not logical abstractions.
b.   Literature and the Arts
                                              i.     Realism and naturalism
1.   Romantic novels that depicted ideal heroes and heroines (realism)- Bret Harte, Mark Twain, William Dean Howells
2.   Naturalism- described how emotions and experience shaped human experience.  Stephen Crane, Jack London, Theodore Dreiser
                                            ii.     Painting
1.   Mostly realists and romanticists
2.   Abstract rare until 1950s
                                          iii.     Architecture
1.   1870s- Henry Hobson Richardson
a.    Based on Romanesque style of massive stone walls, rounded arches
2.   Louis Sullivan of Chicago
a.    Tall, steel-framed buildings
b.   Aesthetic unity
3.   Frank Lloyd Wright in 1890s
a.    Organic style
b.   Most famous of 20th century
4.   Daniel H. Burnham
a.    Revived classic Greek and Roman
5.   Frederick Law Olmsted
a.    City parks, scenic boulevards
                                                                                                    i.     Central Park
                                          iv.     Music
1.   1900- most cities had symphony orchestra, opera house, or both.
2.   Smaller towns- bandstands like John Philip Sousa.
3.   New Orleans/south- Jelly Roll Morton, Buddy Bolden
a.    Jazz, ragtime, blues
b.   Scott Joplin- MLR (1899)
c.    Popular Culture
                                              i.     Popular press
1.   New York World- exceed 1 million in circulation- Joseph Pulitzer
2.   Magazines gaining popularity
a.    Ladies’ Home Journal
                                            ii.     Amusements
1.   Promotion of leisure time activites:
a.    A gradual reduction in the hours people worked
b.   Improved transportation
c.    Promotional billboards and advertizing
d.   Decline of the restrictive Puritan and Victorian values that discouraged “wasting” time on play
e.    Most popular: drinking and talking at a saloon.
f.     Theatres, circus, parks
                                          iii.     Spectator sports
1.   Boxer John L. Sullivan
2.   Baseball- national pastime
3.   Basketball invented in 1891 @ Springfield College in Massachusettes.
                                          iv.     Amateur sports
1.   Many participated in physical activites
a.    Women kept out for most, but cycled and played croquet.
b.   Gold and tennis grew, but mainly for those in sports clubs.
2.   Wealthy participated in polo and yachting.
3.   Jews, Catholics kept out sometimes, but Af. Ams. Had it the worst.
a.    Jim Crow Laws
b.   No MLB until 1940s.