The Second Great Awakening
The second great Awakening was an evangelical religious movement of the early 19th century centered on outdoor revivals and social reform. The campaign started around 1800, gained momentum in 1820, and was in decline in 1870. These were groups of do-gooders who wanted to make society better. It began in the churches, and it was a revival that spoke the message that God wants individuals to do good deeds and perfect society.
Ideas of Second Great Awakening
• People must readmit God and Jesus into their lives
• Must reject rationalism that threatened beliefs
• No longer focused on Predestination
•Social reforms began to speak out about temperance and prison reform.
Leaders of Second Great Awakening
Charles Grandison Finney
He was an influential leader who believed each person was responsible for his salvation. Should prove faith by doing good works
Lyman Beecher
Church membership increased significantly during his period.
Utopian Communities
A perfect political and social system on an imaginary land
Goals of Utopian communities
•To separate from mainstream American society and form more perfect communities free of competition and social inequality.
•Encouraged educated, hard-working people to share property and live in harmony.
•Practiced moral perfection and gender equality.
•To create self-sufficient communities where people could have similar goals and live out their ideal beliefs.
Life in Utopian communities and Onedia Colony
A utopian society is an ideal society. These societies and their institutions treat all citizens equally and with dignity, and people live there without any fear.
Here are some principal doctrines of Onedia Colony
Mutual criticism
Confession
Separation
Equality of the sexes
Complex marriage
Male continence
Regeneration
Free love
Major ideas and leaders of the Women's movement and the Abolition movement
During the late 18th century and early 19th century, women's organizations worked to gain the right to vote and worked for large based economic, political equality, and social reforms.
Their main goals included equal access to employment and education, equality within marriage, custody over bee children, and control over her own body.
Women's Movement leaders
Several activists joined the women's rights movement
Lucy Stone
Wendell Phillips
Amelia Bloomer
Elizabeth Smith Miller
Susan B.Anthony
Abby Kelley Foster
Abolition Movement
The abolition movement in the United States of America was an effort to end slavery in a nation that valued personal freedom and believed all men are created equal. Slavery was practiced throughout the American colonies in the 17th and 18th centuries, and African-American slaves helped build the new nation’s economic foundations. Abolitionism was a historical movement of the Atlantic slave trade and liberated the enslaved people.
Leaders of Abolition Movement
John Brown
Frederick Douglass
Sojourner Truth
Harris Beecher Stowe
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