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US history
Course: US history > Unit 4
Lesson 3: Culture and reform in the early nineteenth century- The Second Great Awakening - origins and major ideas
- The Second Great Awakening - influence of the Market Revolution
- The Second Great Awakening - reform and religious movements
- Transcendentalism
- The development of an American culture
- Antebellum communal experiments
- The early temperance movement - origins
- The early temperance movement - spread and temporary decline
- Women's labor
- Women's rights and the Seneca Falls Convention
- African Americans in the Early Republic
- The Cotton Kingdom
- The society of the South in the early republic
- Culture and reform in the early nineteenth century
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The Second Great Awakening - reform and religious movements
The Second Great Awakening sparked new religious movements and major reform movements in early 19th-century America. It promoted democratic religion and led to religious experimentation. This period also influenced the Abolitionist Movement, contributing to the end of slavery.
Want to join the conversation?
- Why isn't Abolition in Culture and reform section
,Kim?(4 votes)- From the author:I struggled with this choice Justin! I put it in the next section because the AP exam puts the culture and reform stuff in Period 4 (1800-1848) and the buildup to the Civil War in Period 5 (1844-1877). I followed their lead in combining it with intellectually-similar items, but it definitely feels like it ought to be earlier too! If readers wouldn't find it confusing I wouldn't be opposed to putting it in both places. What do you think?(24 votes)
- We heard a lot of compelling reasons why the Second Great Awakening began. But why did it end after the 1840s?(9 votes)
- why was abolition such a consistent topic(4 votes)
- Because slavery was a consistent sin, and it could be blamed on "those people". (It's always popular, when dealing with the topic of sin, to find something done by others so that we who talk about sin can feel ourselves to be innocent.)(7 votes)
- When you were talking about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, I couldn't help but notice that you said that the majority of the persecution was because of the practice of polygamy. While that was a big part of the persecution in Nauvoo, what about the persecution in Kirtland, and Far West? The persecution in the Far West was worse than what happened in Nauvoo, but that was only because we moved out before the persecution could escalate so far. The persecution in the Far West area was horrible. In Haun's Mill, an angry mob attacked the people and killed many of them, and they didn't just kill the men, but there were women and children killed as well. The Governor of Missouri even issued an extermination order, where the Church had to leave in a short period of time (mind you, this was after the mob had already visited and destroyed or stolen any resources that they had) or the mobs would be allowed to kill any church members that they found. The Church wasn't practicing polygamy then, so what was the root of that persecution?(7 votes)
- it was common practice at the time to think that the heavens were closed and that all revalations had ceased. when joseph smith received his revalation, it was a very contreversial claim and it was found offensive to many other religous sectors. the pursecution originated when other church groups disagreed with the small church. the church was also very honest and open with people's sins. this was hard to hear for some people, because nobody wants to repent. because alot of powerfull people at that time were sinning, they persecuted the church.(4 votes)
- So overall was the Second Great Awakening movement that did more to divide Americans or bring them together?(3 votes)
- I think it depends on what viewpoint you have on it. You could think it separated us into religious groups (which is true); but you can also think that it brought us together into religious groups (also true). So I think it really depends on how you view it, cathyyuan0126.(5 votes)
- How did the Second Great Awakening inspire movements for social change in America?(2 votes)
- The Second Great Awakening inspired movements for social change because it brought God to people's everyday lives, instead of only pastors or priests being able to have a relationship with God, everyone was now able to.
This was refreshing in a time of high uncertainty and distrust, it brought people together under a commonality, which strengthened feelings of trust and faith. It also contributed to the end of slavery in the U.S.
I hope this helps!(3 votes)
- How did the abolishment of slavery affect the United states as a whole during the time of the second great awakening?(1 vote)
- Slavery was not abolished during the Second Great Awakening. Anti-Slavery feelings were cropping up with the Second Great Awakening, leading to heavy movements against the practice of slavery. More or less, the Second Great Awakening helped people to see it was wrong to enslave others, and these feelings would only get stronger, leading to the Civil War.
I hope this helps!(4 votes)
- Since there was an expansion to the west, how did the American's lives change? Was it better or worse?(1 vote)
- Whoever created homework, I'm super angry at them(1 vote)
- After 1850, was there a decrease in the attendance of people in religious places?(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] Okay, so
we've been talking about The Second Great Awakening and its context in early 19th century America. The Second Great Awakening was this period of religious revival that was kind of at its hot point in 1820 to 1840 and in the last couple of videos, we've been talking about just the nature of this society that produced
The Second Great Awakening, particularly how they responded to changes in how people related to
each other in business and also just broader social changes like the expansion of American democracy and the expansion of
American territory west. So in this last video,
I want to talk about some of the outgrowths of
The Second Great Awakening. So why do we care so much that there was this period
of religious revival? What did it lead to in American life? There are two major things
that were directly related to The Second Great Awakening
in this early 19th century. New religious movements
in the United States, some of which are still with us today and even more importantly
for the time period, major reform movements, including the Movement for Abolition,
the end of slavery, which is going to lead to the
outbreak of The Civil War. So let's look a little bit
closer at these two things. So as we've talked about,
The Second Great Awakening promoted both the idea that one should try to create heaven on earth and also, a more democratic
approach to religion in general, that it didn't matter who you were. If you were a man, a woman,
white, black, enslaved, free, you were still entitled to a
personal relationship with God and a chance at salvation. So one of the things this
meant in this time period is that there's just a lot
of religious experimentation. A lot of new American religions
emerge at this time period, some of which are still with us today, some of which are not. This here is a representation
of the Shakers, which were a religious community of, they embrace kind of simplicity. They separated the sexes. They practiced celibacy. Just as kind of trying to make
their daily lives more pure and unfortunately, the celibacy part meant that they more or
less died out by the 1940s, although there are a handful of Shakers who are still alive today and they were called the Shakers because they would have these kind of ecstatic religious experiences, which you can see are kind of similar to what happened in the camp meetings. So even though they didn't have sex, they would kind of get out their ecstasy in this process of
these big circle dances, which people looked at and they said they seemed like they were shaking, so they were the Shakers. On the other side of the spectrum, there was the Oneida community, which was led by a man
named John Humphrey Noyes and they preached the idea that one should have no earthly
attachments basically and that meant also to a spouse, so they believed in what
was called complex marriage or what we would really call free love. There was no such thing
as an individual marriage, that women and men could have sex with whomever they pleased. It's interesting that approaches to sex were very central to
these religious movements. Probably the most important
religious movement to come out of this time period was the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints, also known as the Mormons, who were founded by Joseph
Smith in Rochester, New York and Smith had a vision that
he was visited by an angel who presented him with gold plates and on these gold plates
was a new Scripture called The Book of Mormon and Smith's followers
really continued to be devoted to the religion, even though they faced a lot of persecution, particularly over their
early practice of polygamy until they continued to move west under the leadership of a
second man, Brigham Young, who took over after Smith was murdered by an angry crowd in Illinois who then led the Mormons to Utah where they continue to be a major religious group to this day. Oh, and one other interesting thing about this is the Oneida community. Although, it itself did not survive, one of the ways that they
made money as a community was by making silverware
and so Oneida Silverware is actually the descendant company of this really interesting
communal experiment and they lasted, I believe, until 2006, so if you ever had Oneida Silverware, you were looking at an artifact of a 19th century religious movement. So the last and probably
the most important part of The Second Great Awakening
that I wanna talk about is its influence on reform movements. So let me give myself a little
bit more space to write here. There are several 19th
century reform movements that are tied in to The
Second Great Awakening. One of these would be
The Temperance Movement, which hoped to reduce and or eliminate people's consumption of alcohol and you can kinda tie this back to the idea of heaven on earth, right? How can you have a stable family home, how can you have a godly society if everybody's drunk all the time? But I would say the most important reform movement associated
with The Second Great Awakening was the Abolitionist Movement and remember that Harriet Beecher Stowe, who wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin, which was one of the greatest
abolition or anti-slavery advertisements in the world, was the daughter of Lyman Beecher, one of the greatest preachers
of The Second Great Awakening and so as people came to believe that everyone's life was equally valuable, they became more and more involved in the idea that slavery should not exist, that people who were enslaved had souls that were just as worthy of salvation as anyone who was already free and so they also saw this
as one of the perversions of God's word and a
perversion of the family, which they saw as the central unit of American democracy and Republicanism. So slavery should not exist. People who were really
motivated by their faith in God and their faith in trying to create heaven on earth and a better society campaigned really strenuously
for the end of slavery and ultimately, were successful. So this is a really complex topic, The Second Great Awakening. If we look back at our web again, we can see that this
wave of religious revival was connected in all
sorts of interesting ways to the economic and political
changes of the time period and in its way, led to all sorts of different social changes, so I think it's a good example of how it's sometimes really hard to separate things that happened in the past into really neat boxes, right? That, oh, there was politics. There was religion. There was culture. There were economics, but in many ways, they're all bound together
in a larger culture, within which everyday
individuals navigated their lives and it's also good to show us that sometimes we don't exactly know why things happened in the past. We know that people got really interested in religion in this time period, but historians have differing ideas about why that might have been. Some say that it was a form
of trying to control people as it was more and more important to have a dutiful workforce for a
factory-based industrial society and some people say that maybe, it was just about demographic
and political shifts in who had power, who had
money, and who got to vote, but we do know that The
Second Great Awakening and these ideas of trying
to improve America, to improve the world, and
to create heaven on earth led to all sorts of interesting things that are still with us today, including religious movements
and the end of slavery.