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Period before the Civil War
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Antebellum period
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Religious revivals that swept the country during the early decades of the 19th century in response to rationalism
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Second Great Awakening
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President of Yale College in CT whose campus revivals inspired a generation of young men to become evangelical preachers
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Timothy Dwight
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Offered the opportunity of salvation to all, appealing to people's emotions and fear of damnation
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Revivalism
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These were held in the South and advancing western frontier by Baptist and Methodist circuit preachers that would travel from one location to another performing dramatic outdoor sermons
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Revival (camp) meetings
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Religious idea that the second coming would come on Oct 21, 1844 according to William Miller's prediction
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Millennialism
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Aka Mormons; religion that traced a connection between the Native Americans and the Lost Tribes of Israel
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Church of Latter-Day Saints
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Aka Church of Latter-Day Saints; religion that traced a connection between the Native Americans and the Lost Tribes of Israel
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Mormons
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Founded the Church of Latter-Day Saints basing his religious thinking on the Book of Mormon; his following grew and moved from NY to OH to MO to IL where he was murdered by a local mob
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Joseph Smith
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After the death of Joseph Smith he led the Mormons to the western frontier to escape persecution
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Brigham Young
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Mormon community that was established on the banks of the Great Salt Lake in UT
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New Zion
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European movement early 19th century that stressed intuition and feelings, individual acts of heroism, and the study of nature
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Romantic movement
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Expressed romantic and idealistic themes; questioned the doctrines of established churches and capitalistic habits; believed in discovering inner self and looking for essence of God in Nature
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Transcendentalists
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Popular transcendentalist lecturer of 19th century who argued for self-reliance, independent thinking, and superiority of spirit to material; critic of slavery and Union supporter
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Ralph Waldo Emerson
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R.W. Emerson's address at Harvard College urging students to create new American culture independent to European culture
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"The American Scholar"
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