Homosapien needs to be permanent, this is the basic law of humanity. In times of great social unrest, people look to religious weapons that are well known to find eternity. The 1830s and 1850s were no exception. As the industrial revolution stabilized, people started to like organized religion, so the country was hit by the wave of moral reform movement. But why do these moral reform campaigns occur, why they are so concentrated in that era, and what gives them strength.
Moral reform - a women's movement that began in the 1930s to end dual criteria for prostitution and sexuality. Organizations such as the New York Women's Ethics Reform Association are organized by women in the northeastern part. These Ethics Reform Associations publish magazines and magazines to disseminate their information. By 1841 there were about 50,000 women at 616 Regional Morality Reformers Association. Female rights movement - founded by Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, organized the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, announced a women's declaration seeking social and legal equality. Lucy Stone began talking about women's rights in 1847 and held a series of national conferences. Susan B. Anthony joined the cause in 1851 and continued working for women's suffrage
Supporters of most women's rights were introduced to reform efforts through the abolishment campaign of the 1930s. Many of them were members of the American Anti Slavery Association (AASS) led by William Lloyd Garrison. The abolishment society provides women the opportunity to speak, write and organize on behalf of slaves, and in some cases gives leadership to them. Among these famous female abolitionists, Angelica Angelica and Salaguriku Keme, Lucretia Mott, Harriet Beecher Stow and former slave Sojourt Truth, in a speech of 1851 "I am not a woman" with a long-standing reputation I got it. When Mott and Elizabeth Kaddy Stanton took part in the anti-slavery meeting in London in 1840, they were placed in the gallery with all the women who took part in the conference. Eight years later, their resentment led them to hold the first American women's rights conference in Seneca Falls, New York.
It was proved that moderation reform was effective. After reaching the peak in 1830 (about 5 gallons a year), alcohol consumption sharply declined in the 1940s (until 2 years old). The campaign was legally successful. By the mid-1950's, the laws of New England, Ohio, Northwest Territory, New York, Pennsylvania prohibited medical use other than their manufacture and sale, and it foresawed a national ban in the early 20th century . Of course, not all those who support the moderate reform claim complete abstention, not all those who support voluntary abstinence do not support moral legislation. Those opposed to organized exercise support self-regulating moderate consumption. Furthermore, supporters of abstention do not necessarily assert that they preach, even in public places such as abstinence laws. This is not a black-and-white question