1 / 16

A New Spirit of Change

A New Spirit of Change. 1820 – 1860. Why People Migrated. Most made journey in steerage, the cheapest deck on the ship Conditions were FILTHY Illness and death common on journey. Why People Migrated. Push Factors : Population growth Agricultural changes Crop failures

morton
Download Presentation

A New Spirit of Change

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A New Spirit of Change 1820 – 1860

  2. Why People Migrated • Most made journey in steerage, the cheapest deck on the ship • Conditions were FILTHY • Illness and death common on journey

  3. Why People Migrated • Push Factors: • Population growth • Agricultural changes • Crop failures • Industrial Revolution • Religious and political turmoil • Pull Factors: • Freedom • Economic opportunity • Abundant land

  4. Where Did They Come From? • Scandinavians (Sweden, Switzerland, and Norway) left due to poverty. • Many settled in the Midwest, especially Minnesota and Wisconsin. • Many Germans settled in the Midwest as well. • Germans largest immigrant group of the 1800s and contributed most to American culture: kindergartens, the Christmas tree, gymnastics, and the hamburger, to name a few.

  5. The Irish Flee Hunger • Irish Catholics were ruled by British Protestants for centuries. • Irish could not vote, hold office, own land, or go to school • British rule created extreme poverty.

  6. The Irish Flee Hunger • Disease struck Ireland’s main food crop, the potato, in 1845. • Led to severe food shortage, or famine. • The Irish Potato Famine killed more than 1 million people.

  7. The Irish Flee Hunger • Most Irish settled in port cities where their ships docked • By 1850, they made up one fourth of the populations of Boston, NYC, Philly, and Baltimore. • Lack of education and skills led to low paying jobs. • Many Irishmen built canals and railroads • Greatest competition for jobs were free blacks

  8. Nativists and Know Nothings Many immigrants were discriminated by and harassed by nativists; native-born people who wanted to eliminate foreign influence. The Know-Nothing Party was founded by nativists who wanted to ban immigrants and Catholics from holding public office. They elected six governors but never a national office due to disagreements over slavery.

  9. A Spirit of Revival Charles Finney Renewal of religious faith called the Second Great Awakening helped to awaken a spirit of reform, or change.

  10. Temperance Societies • A church-led temperance movement began in America, which is a campaign to stop the consumption of alcohol

  11. Fighting For Workers’ Rights • Girls in the Lowell Mills started a labor union, or a group of workers who band together to seek better working conditions. • In 1836, they went on strike, or stopping work to force owners to meet their demands • In 1835 and 1836, 140 strikes took place in the eastern United States • Panic of 1837 brought an end to the young labor movement.

  12. Improving Education • Horrace Mann headed up the first state board of education in Massachusetts in 1837. • Boston opened the first public high school in 1821. • Churches and other groups began founding private colleges.

  13. Improving Education Elizabeth Blackwell • Women not allowed to attend most colleges. Oberlin first to admit women and men. • Elizabeth Blackwell became the first woman to earn a medical degree. • College attendance for women overall was very rare until the late 1800s. • Free blacks were often barred from attending public schools. • Educating slaves in the South was illegal. • If slaves were caught with as much as a book, they were beaten. Scars from repeated beatings

  14. Caring for the Needy • Boston reformer Dorthea Dix worked to establish fair treatment for the mentally ill • Thomas H. Gallaudet founded first school for deaf children in 1817 • Samuel G. Howe founded the Perkins School for the Blind in the 1830s • Reform also took place in prisons as well

  15. Spreading Ideas Through Print • Cheaper newsprint and the invention of the steam-driven press lowered the price of a newspaper to a penny. • Publications aimed toward educating Americans on social reform became more widely read.

  16. Creating Ideal Communities • Ann Lee founded the Shakers • Shakers vowed not to marry nor have children. • They believed in sharing goods with each other, men and women were equal, and they refused to fight for any reason

More Related