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THE SECOND GREAT AWAKENING - 1790 LEYANG BAI, YUHUI LEE, SUNNY LU, BELLE HSU ORIGINS Began in late 1700s; early 1800s Initially in Kentucky Causes: Americans lack ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The%20Second%20Great%20Awakening%20-%201790


1
The Second Great Awakening - 1790
  • Leyang Bai, Yuhui Lee, Sunny Lu, Belle Hsu

2
Origins
  • Began in late 1700s early 1800s
  • Initially in Kentucky
  • Causes
  • Americans lack in church attendance
  • ?People believed that God did not care for his
    followers attendance, he only valued the way
    they lived their lives
  • People focused on work and earning money
  • Reaction to Secularism
  • Took two forms
  • Social activism
  • New Denominations

3
Religious denominations
  • Hundreds converted their religions in weeks and
    churches gained thousands of new converts
  • Evangelicaling of the west
  • Conviction that Gods good news of salvation
    through Christ should be offered to everyone and
    that Christians should lead others to salvation
  • Charles Grandison Finney
  • Former attorney of law who turned to preaching,
    inspired hundreds of converts at each of his
    evangelical revivals
  • Camp Meetings church pastors preached their
    religion to large groups in the frontier for days
    due to the absence of established churches
  • A majority being female converts, as well as
    large numbers of African Americans

4
Religious dENominations (continued)
  • Major Evangelical revival locations
  • New Yorks Burned Over District
  • Burned over after no people left to convert (no
    fuel to burn)
  • Kentucky

5
Religious dENominations (Continued)
  • Methodists
  • Circuit Riders Common people that preached
    religion in the frontier
  • Baptists
  • Ordinary citizens or farmers form congregations
    and become ordained as ministers or priests
  • Formation of new denominations boomed as
    colonists were not satisfied by premade religions
  • Church of Later Day Saints Mormonism
  • Founded by Joseph Smith, author of the Book of
    Mormon in April 6, 1830
  • Believes in Gods plan of salvation as well as
    existence of prophets and follows unique rituals
    and practices, including the practice of having
    more than one wife
  • Migrated West due to religious persecution from
    Protestants and Catholics
  • Unitarianism
  • Thrived in America in the 1800s
  • Disproved that God is a trinity
  • New churches began to form that shared the belief

6
Transcendentalism
  • Belief in the listening of nature and the human
    conscience to learn about the universe instead of
    religious doctrines
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Leading Transcendentalist
  • Gave sermons to motivate others to follow his
    beliefs
  • Henry David Thoreau
  • Transcendentalist believing in the following
    conscience instead of devotion to the law
  • Inspired the idea of Civil Disobedience

7
Impacts
  • Utopian Society
  • Communities are created featuring sharing of
    land, family, and possessions.
  • Members created idealistic utopias to inspire the
    virtue of others
  • Generally unsuccessful
  • Banning of alcohol and prostitution
  • Increased church membership
  • New religion sects
  • Spawned large reform movements
  • Significant decrease in crime
  • Focus on lower class
  • Unification in the Frontier
  • Increase in abolitionists
  • Aggravated the slavery debate between the North
    and the South

8
POLITICAL CARTOON
  • Audience swoon while Methodist minister gives his
    sermon at a camp meeting
  • Watercolor by J. Maze Burbank, (Old Dartmouth
    Historical Society-New Bedford Whaling Museum)

9
POLITICAL CARTOON
  • Based on principles of the Second Great
    Awakening people must lead moral and righteous
    lives
  • Alcohol leads to violence and crime. Hence, they
    should be banned
  • From the collection of American Antiquarian
    Society

10
PRIMARY SOURCE
  • Excerpt from Baxter "Moral and Religious" in the
    New Hampshire Sentinel 1831I have thought much
    upon the subject of duty, as respects weekly
    meetingsand more especially since I have read
    numerous accounts of what are called four days
    meetings. I wish to conform as much as possible
    to the opinions of good men around me, but have
    been somewhat perplexed to know what to do. The
    direction not to be conformed to this world, has
    led me to inquire whether frequent weekly
    meetings, and the setting apart FOUR DAYS in
    succession, were the commands of God, or the
    inventions of men. While ruminating upon the
    subject, as I was pitching off the last load of
    hay for the season, neighbor Meanwell called at
    the barn and told me Mr ---- was going to preach
    on Wednesday evening, that there would be a
    lecture on Friday afternoon, and that on Tuesday
    a four days meeting would commence, when all the
    neighboring ministers would be presentno doubt
    many would come in from other towns, and he hoped
    I would not fail to attend, with my family. I
    thanked him for his information, and entered into
    conversation on various subjects, until my load
    of hay was safely deposited, when we sat down on
    the sill, and talked over the subject.

11
Sources
  • http//www.uua.org/beliefs/history/6903.shtml
  • http//www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1091.html
  • http//www.let.rug.nl/usa/outlines/history-1994/th
    e-formation-of-a-national-government/the-second-gr
    eat-awakening.php
  • http//www.wisegeek.com/what-is-the-second-great-a
    wakening.htm
  • http//www.teachushistory.org/second-great-awakeni
    ng-age-reform/resources/victim-ardent-spirits
  • Textbook pg 266-272
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