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AMSCO AP US History Chapter 11 Flashcards

AMSCO United States History 2015 Edition, Chapter 11 Society, Culture, and Reform, 1820-1860

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6704941173utopian communitiesOver one hundred of these experimental communities were started in the 1820s to 1860s period. (p. 210)0
6704941174ShakersThis early religious communal movement held property in common and separated men and women. (p. 210)1
6704941175Amana ColoniesA German religious communal movement in Ohio which emphasized simple living. (p. 210)2
6704941176Robert OwenA Welsh industrialist and reformer who founded the New Harmony community. (p. 210)3
6704941177New HarmonyNonreligious experimental socialist community founded to solve problems of inequity and alienation caused by the Industrial Revolution. (p. 210)4
6704941178Joseph Humphrey NoyesHe started a cooperative community in Oneida, New York. (p. 210)5
6704941179Oneida communityThis community, started in 1848, was dedicated to social and economic equality. They shared property and spouses, and prospered by manufacturing silverware. (p. 210)6
6704941180Charles Fourier phalanxesIn the 1840s, this French socialist, advocated that people share working and living arrangements in communities. He wanted to solve problems of competitive society, but Americans were too individualistic. (p. 210)7
6704941181Horace MannHe was the leading advocate of the public school movement. (p. 213)8
6704941182temperanceReformers targeted alcohol as the cause of social ills. The movement started by using moral exhortation, then shifted to political action. Business leaders and politicians supported it because it improved productivity of industrial workers. (p. 212)9
6704941183American Temperance SocietyFounded in 1826, by Protestant ministers and others, they encouraged total alcohol abstinence. (p. 212)10
6704941184WashingtoniansA temperance movement which argued that alcoholism was a disease that need practical helpful treatment. (p. 212)11
6704941185Women's Christian Temperance UnionIn the late 1870s, this women's organization was part of the temperance movement. (p. 212)12
6704941186asylum movementIn the 1820s and 1830s, this movement sought to improve the conditions for criminals, emotionally disturbed people, and paupers. They proposed setting up state-supported prisons, mental hospitals, and poorhouses. (p. 212)13
6704941187Dorothea DixA reformer who was responsible for improving conditions in jails, poorhouses and insane asylums throughout the U.S. and Canada. She succeeded in persuading many states to assume responsibility for the care of the mentally ill. (p. 212)14
6704941188Thomas GallaudetHe started a school for the deaf. (p. 213)15
6704941189Samuel Gridley HoweHe started a school for the blind. (p. 213)16
6704941190penitentiariesThese institutions took the place of crude jails. They believed that structure and discipline would bring about moral reform. (p. 213)17
6704941191Auburn systemA prison system in New York which enforced rigid rules of discipline, while also providing moral instruction and work programs. (p. 213)18
6704941192public school movementIn the 1840s, this movement to provide free education for all children spread rapidly throughout the nation. (p. 213)19
6704941193McGuffey readersElementary school textbooks that encouraged hard work, punctuality, and sobriety. (p. 213)20
6704941194American Peace SocietyFounded in 1828, this society want to abolish war. (p. 216)21
6704941195American Colonization SocietyFounded in 1817, this organization transported free black people to an African colony. This appealed to moderates, racists, and politicians. However, only 12,000 people were actually settled in Africa. (p. 215)22
6704941196American Antislavery SocietyThe organization was founded in 1833 by William Lloyd Garrison and others. They advocated the immediate abolition of all slavery in every state. (p. 215)23
6704941197abolitionism William Lloyd Garrison; The LiberatorIn 1831, he started the radical abolitionist movement with the "The Liberator" newspaper. He advocated the immediate abolition of all slavery in every state. (p. 215)24
6704941198Liberty partyIn 1840, this political party was formed in reaction to the radical abolitionists. They pledged to bring an end to slavery by political and legal means. (p. 215)25
6704941199Frederick Douglass; The North StarIn 1847, this former slave started the antislavery journal, "The North Star". (p. 215)26
6704941200Harriet TubmanFamous abolitionist, born a slave, she assisted fugitive slaves to escape to free territory. (p. 215)27
6704941201David RugglesAn African American leader who assisted fugitive slaves to escape to free territory. (p. 215)28
6704941202Sojourner TruthA United States abolitionist and feminist who was freed from slavery and became a leading advocate for the abolition of slavery and the rights of women. (p. 215)29
6704941203William StillAn African American leader, who assisted fugitive slaves to escape to free territory. (p. 215)30
6704941204David WalkerAn African American who advocated the most radical solution to the slavery question. He argued, that slaves should take action themselves by rising up in revolt against their owners. (p. 215)31
6704941205Henry Highland GarnetAn African American, who advocated the most radical solution to the slavery question. He argued that slaves should take action themselves by rising up in revolt against their owners. (p. 215)32
6704941206Nat TurnerIn 1831, he led the largest slave rebellion in which 55 whites were killed. (p. 215)33
6704941207antebellum periodThe period before the Civil War started in 1861. (p. 207)34
6704941208romantic movementIn early 19th century Europe, art and literature emphasized intuition and feelings, individual acts of heroism, and the study of nature. In America, similar themes were expressed by the transcendentalists. (p. 209)35
6704941209transcendentalistsThey questioned the doctrines of established churches and business practices of the merchant class. They encouraged a mystical and intuitive way of thinking to discover the inner self and look for essence of God in nature. Artistic expression was more important than pursuit of wealth. They valued individualism and supported the antislavery movement. (p. 209)36
6704941210Ralph Waldo Emerson, "The American Scholar"The best known transcendentalist, his essays and lectures expressed the individualistic and nationalistic spirit of Americans. He urged self-reliance, and independent thinking. (p. 209)37
6704941211Henry David Thoreau, "Walden", "On Civil Disobedience"A pioneer ecologist and conservationist. He was an advocate of nonviolent protest against unjust laws. (p. 209)38
6704941212Brook FarmAn attempted communal experiment in Massachusetts to achieve a more natural union between intellectual and manual labor. (p. 207)39
6704941213George RipleyThis Protestant minister started a communal experiment at Brook Farm in Massachusetts to live out the transcendentalist ideals. (p. 207)40
6704941214feministsThe term for advocates of women's rights. (p. 214)41
6704941215Margaret FullerA feminist, writer, and editor in the women's movement. (p. 210)42
6704941216Theodore ParkerA theologian and radical reformer. (p. 210)43
6704941217George Caleb BinghamAn American realist artist, whose paintings depicted life on the frontier. (p. 211)44
6704941218William S. MountContemporary of the Hudson River school. He began as a painter of history but moved to depicting scenes from everyday life. (p. 211)45
6704941219Thomas ColeFounder of the Hudson River school, famous for his landscape paintings. (p. 211)46
6704941220Frederick ChurchCentral figure in the Hudson River School and pupil of Thomas Cole. He is known for his landscapes and for painting colossal views of exotic places. (p. 211)47
6704941221Hudson River schoolIn the 1830s, this genre of painting founded in the Hudson River area, portrayed everyday life of ordinary people in the natural world. (p. 211)48
6704941222Washington IrvingThis author wrote fiction using American settings. (p. 211)49
6704941223James Fenimore CooperThis author wrote novels that glorified the frontiersman as nature's nobleman. (p. 211)50
6704941224Nathaniel HawthorneAuthor of "The Scarlet Letter", which questioned the intolerance and conformity in American life. (p. 211)51
6704941225Sylvester GrahamAn American dietary reformer who advocated whole wheat bread and graham crackers to promote good digestion. (p. 216)52
6704941226Amelia BloomerShe urged women to wear pantalettes instead of long skirts. (p. 216)53
6704941227Second Great AwakeningA religious movement that occurred during the antebellum period. It was a reaction against rationalism (belief in human reason). It offered the opportunity of salvation to all. (p. 207)54
6704941228Timothy DwightPresident of Yale College, he helped initiate the Second Great Awakening. His campus revivals inspired many young men to become evangelical preachers. (p. 207)55
6704941229revivalism; revival camp meetingsIn the early 1800s, this movement was a reaction against the rationalism of the Enlightenment. Successful preachers were audience-centered and easily understood by the uneducated. (p. 207)56
6704941230millennialismIn the early 1800s, this popular belief, that the world was about to end with the second coming of Jesus Christ. (p. 208)57
6704941231Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints; MormonsFounded by Joseph Smith in 1830. It was based on the Book of Mormon which traced a connection between the American Indians and the lost tribes of Israel. After Joseph Smith was murdered, Brigham Young led the religious group to establish the New Zion on the Great Salt Lake in Utah. (p. 208)58
6704941232Joseph SmithFounded the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints in New York in 1830. The church moved to Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, then finally to Utah. (p. 208)59
6704941233Brigham YoungAfter Joseph Smith was killed, he led the Mormon followers to Utah. (p. 208)60
6704941234New ZionThis was the religious community established by the Mormons on the banks of the Great Salt Lake in Utah. (p. 208)61
6704941235women's rights movementWomen started this movement because they resented the way men relegated them to secondary roles in the reform movements. (p. 214)62
6704941236cult of domesticityAfter industrialization occurred women became the moral leaders in the home and educators of children. Men were responsible for economic and political affairs. (p. 214)63
6704941237Sarah Grimke, Angelina GrimkeTwo sisters, born in South Carolina, they objected to male opposition to their antislavery activities. (p. 214)64
6704941238Letter of the Condition of Women and the Equality of the SexesWritten by Angelina and Sarah Grimke, it protested males opposition to their abolitionist work. (p. 214)65
6704941239Lucretia MottA women's rights reformer who was not allowed to speak at an antislavery convention. (p. 214)66
6704941240Elizabeth Cady StantonA women's rights reformer who was not allowed to speak at an antislavery convention. (p. 214)67
6704941241Seneca Falls ConventionIn 1848, this was the first women's rights convention in U.S. history. They wrote a "Declaration of Sentiments", modeled after the Declaration of Independence, which declared all men and women equal and listed grievances. (p. 214)68
6704941242Susan B. AnthonySocial reformer who campaigned for womens rights, the temperance, and was an abolitionist. She helped form the National Woman Suffrage Association. (p. 214)69

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