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    Sample DBQ Essay: 19th-century Reforms & Democratic Ideals Prompt: “Reform movements in the United States sought to expand democratic ideals.” Assess the validity of this statement with specific reference to the years 1825-1850. Some reform movements in America were created to expand the democratic ideals of civil rights and political participation while others were motivated by the need to reform society. The expectation of civil rights and political participation was widely expanded

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    During this time progressives found new modern ways to do things that would take over the old traditions. Civil Rights and Protests The civil rights started in 1955 and ended around 1968. This started because African Americans wanted more equal rights‚ Martin Luther

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    In Britain‚ the tough times of the late 1830s and 1840s‚ sometimes called the “hungry forties”‚ and the underwhelming increase in voters in the Reform Bill of 1832 gave birth to a political movement named Chartism. Chartism was a movement based on improving the political‚ social‚ and economic conditions of the working class and is considered the first mass working class movement in the world. The main points of the Chartist movement are defined in the People’s Charter‚ a document calling for six

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    The United States during the early decades of the nineteenth century sought to reform the United Staes and expand democratic ideas. There were many major reform movements that looked to expand democratic ideas‚ which include: establishing free (tax supported) schools‚ improving the treatment of the mentally ill‚ controlling or abolishing the sale of alcohol‚ gaining equal rights for women‚ and abolishing slavery. The reformers went out to “reform” the time period to greater the democratic ideals

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    1. Who was Richard Hofstadter? When and why did he write the essays in The American Political Tradition? Was he well qualified to do so? Explain. a. Richard started writing The American Political Tradition in 1943‚ finished in 1947‚ and published in 1948. In the essay‚ he “made a number of interpretive and critical comments on certain political figures on whom he had done some special work or who particularly captured his interest.” However‚ the original title of his essay was Men and Ideas

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    During the 19th century there was five reform movements happening in the United States. There reforms being abolition‚ women’s rights‚ education‚ prison and asylums‚ and utopian movements. All in which it was causing America to change for the better. Although these reforms were caused for the best of the United States some people did not agree with them. Even though everyone had their own opinion over the five reform movements‚ at the end they all had a tremendous impact‚ as they are still important

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    The historical view of 20th century America can be viewed from three different points of view‚ the Liberal‚ Conservative and Revisionist views. Each group feels that their view of America in the 20th century is the correct view. The 20th century saw developments in political and social demographics‚ movements for civil rights and liberties‚ and growth and quality of living and economic opportunity for all. I’m going to present to you the point of view that I agree with quoting evidence of why I agree

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    Walter Trattner‚ in his From Poor Law to Welfare State‚ does a remarkable job of overviewing the major points of early American history‚ particularly the aspects of history that relate to social welfare. However‚ Trattner fails to acknowledge that the groups of people most remembered by history are not necessarily representative of the larger population. History is quick to remember virtuous individuals‚ especially if such individuals are wealthy and socially esteemed. Nancy Isenberg argues in White

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    Prison Reform in the 19th Century So‚ every time I re-read a source or try to write‚ I keep thinking back to what I am actually trying to argue. I’ve finally figured out my argument: Hawthorne portrayed Hollingsworth as a failure because he did not believe in the prison reform efforts of the time. I came to this through looking at a lot of parallels in my sources‚ and finding different reasons for why my hypothesis is true. The two types of prison reform in the early 1800s were meant to reform

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    Children like Jane Addams‚ Theodore Roosevelt‚ and Woodrow Wilson who were born during the Gilded Age‚ better known as children of the Gilded Age‚ saw that industries like the rail road system and steel had gain so much power that they controlled the government in the country and saw the poverty people lived in. They all realize a need to reform the system and began a plan in the following years. Between the years 1890 and 1945 relationships between the government and the labor movement had many

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