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Second Great Awakening Dbq Essay

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The first half of the nineteenth century, for the Americans, was a time of growth and development. A new nation like the US was looking for its own characteristics and traits. Religion was drastically changed in the SGA. New religious groups desired equality and more rights. The Second Great Awakening resulted in a new and different society because of religious based ideas from reformers that demanded changes in the growing nation of America. One of the biggest changes in this new American society was the move from agricultural based jobs, to factory based jobs. People’s lives changed drastically because of it. Families no longer worked as a single unit, but rather each family member went out to work and bring money to the family. However, …show more content…

People wanted better lives for prisoners and people with disabilities as well. To help people with disabilities, asylums were created. The mentally disabled, for example, were sent to asylums so they could better cope with life and be returned to society. This was a big step towards equality for all because it included people that were not formerly respected nor cared for by society. In Document 6, Dorothea Dix talks about bettering the lives of prisoners and trying to get them to be and do good again. Prisons in the US, as a result of the SGA, were made nicer and better so that prisoners could be placed back into society as good citizens. Conditions in prisons were made nicer as was treatment towards them. The SGA believed in the abilities of a person, and by believing and helping people that were either born disabled or went on the wrong path, the SGA hoped to improves society as they knew it in the nineteenth …show more content…

Women could not vote, and as stated earlier, were often victims of abuse from their husbands. Things needed to change. So, women began getting jobs at factories and taking on bigger roles. They also created the cult of domesticity. Also, women began talking and giving speeches to other women. Women would even sometimes adise their hus Elizabeth Cady Stanton in Document 7, advocates for the rights of women. She wants equality for women and that they not be frowned up and looked down on by society. While women’s rights did not come quickly, or even for a while, the SGA attempted at getting the equality. The SGA started a trend of an increase in women’s rights and society kept improving it as years went

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