the nineteenth century, glorified the idea of Manifest Destiny, which proclaimed that they were destined by God to settle land in the West and beyond. Having this idea in mind affected the American population, and caused them to work to fulfill it. People moved in masses to the West looking for better opportunities. The concept of American Exceptionalism, stating that America is unique and greater than other nations, grew as a result of a better economy. By the second half of the nineteenth century…
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Document three and four examine gender relationships during the mid-nineteenth century. In “Declaration of Sentiments” (1848) and “The Discord” (1855) it can be argued that through political satire and literature the issue of gender relations was fully engaged. Document three, “Declaration of Sentiments” which was drafted at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 recounts the nature of gender relationships in nineteenth century America. This document “raised the issue of woman’s suffrage for the first…
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"that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement." It was the ideal by which equality of opportunity is available to any American, allowing the highest aspirations to be achieved, where every person has the freedom and opportunity to succeed and attain a better life. Around the time of the nineteenth century, the American dream was achieving gender, racial, and economic equality; Viewing all genders…
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19th Century Industrialization Nineteenth Century Industrialization During the second half of the nineteenth century, the United States experienced an urban revolution unparalleled in world history up to that point in time. As factories, mines, and mills sprouted out across the map, cities grew up around them. The late nineteenth century, declared an economist in 1889, was "not only the age of cities, but the age of great cities." Between 1860 and 1910, the urban population grew from 6 million…
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Assimilation: Not Only a One Way Process Assimilation is a gradual process that different cultures merging into an entity. It happens more obviously under nowadays global context, but assimilation also existed back in the nineteenth century between the United States of America and Ireland. When Irish immigrants moved into the United States, in which direction did the assimilation take place? If it occurred both ways, did American assimilate Irish more or conversely? Different angles are analyzed…
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The Market Revolution transformed the American economy during the first half of the nineteenth century. In the 1800s most Americans grew their own food and made household items for their families and traded with neighbors. As a result of the advancements in transportation, technology and communication simple “farming” became commercial agriculture and the making of household goods that was sold or traded earlier gave way to “market capitalism” which allowed people to sell their products locally and…
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During the late nineteenth century many people from all over the world came to America to start a new life because they expected many of its potential and opportunities. However, behind the glorious mask of a massive and powerful industrial giant, America held within it numerous problems that were caused by the influx of immigrants, urbanization and political corruptions. This is why Mark Twain has referred to this period in history as the "Gilded Age", a time that bears many ugly inadequacies albeit…
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relationship between segregation by race and segregation by poverty in schools is leading back to the nineteenth century where the ideology was separate but equal. However, there is no evidence that separate but equal today works any more than it did a century ago. Segregation creates the lack of equal educational opportunities and resources while promoting racially and economically isolated neighborhoods. America is silently becoming increasing segregated erasing years of progress towards racial and ethnic…
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about topics that no one else was writing about, believed in equality and pushed for democracy and individualism. Writing in the Nineteenth Century, Romantics such as Emerson, Thoreau, Fuller, and Whitman had radical beliefs about the individual’s role in society for their time period. Ralph Waldo Emerson was a catalyst for thought and philosophy in the Nineteenth Century because he sparked the transcendentalist movement. It is because of this that he is “arguably the most influential American writer”…
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The United States of America flourished during the nineteenth century as the Industrial Revolution and the Agricultural Revolution transformed the “island communities” into an array of new opportunities for American citizens and the immigrants who migrated to its shores. Beginning as a series of colonies, through the aid of Industrialization, urbanization, and immigration, America developed into a land of new beginnings, discoveries, and opportunities to be made through social reform, and expansion…
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