Reform Movements By:Anderson Scott (Jake Too)

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The Second Great Awakening was a Protestant religious revival movement during the early 19th century in the United States. The movement began around 1790, gained momentum by 1800 and, after 1820, membership rose rapidly among Baptist and Methodist congregations whose preachers led the movement.

Beginning in the mid-1850's, however, women began to battle for their rights, particularly the right to vote. ... The Second Great Awakening was a religious revival movement during the 19th century that was challenging women's traditional roles in religion.

The white abolitionist movement in the North was led by social reformers, especially William Lloyd Garrison, founder of the American Anti-Slavery Society; writers such as John Greenleaf Whittier and Harriet Beecher Stowe

In the 1800s, Horace Mann of Massachusetts led the common-school movement, which advocated for local property taxes financing public schools. ... Mann promoted locally controlled, often one-room "common schools" in which children of all ages and classes were taught together; later he introduced the age-grading system

Temperance movements typically criticize excessive alcohol consumption, promote complete abstinence (teetotalism), or use its political influence to press the government to enact alcohol laws to regulate the availability of alcohol or even its complete prohibition.

Prison reform is the attempt to improve conditions inside prisons, establish a more effective penal system, or implement alternatives to incarceration

Personal note-2:55-3:37

This is what Theary gets for taking my Ipad

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