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19th century reform movements are political movements such as abolitionism or temperance which played a significant role in the political life of the nineteenth century.The movements found organizational form in the United States in organizations such as the American Anti-Slavery Society.
Kaplan, Richard L. Politics and the American press: The rise of objectivity, 1865–1920 (Cambridge University Press, 2002) Kazin, Michael. What It Took to Win: A History of the Democratic Party (2022)excerpt; Keller, Morton (1977). Affairs of State: Public Life in Late Nineteenth Century America. ISBN 9780674007215.
Dyer Lum was a 19th-century American individualist anarchist labor activist and poet. [46] A leading anarcho-syndicalist and a prominent left-wing intellectual of the 1880s, [47] he is remembered as the lover and mentor of early anarcha-feminist Voltairine de Cleyre. [48]
The farmers' movement was, in American political history, the general name for a movement between 1867 and 1896. In this movement, there were three periods, popularly known as the Grange , Alliance and Populist movements.
Radicalism" or "radical liberalism" was a political ideology in the 19th century United States aimed at increasing political and economic equality. The ideology was rooted in a belief in the power of the ordinary man, political equality, and the need to protect civil liberties.
The People's Party, usually known as the Populist Party or simply the Populists, was an agrarian populist [2] political party in the United States in the late 19th century. . The Populist Party emerged in the early 1890s as an important force in the Southern and Western United States, but declined rapidly after the 1896 United States presidential election in which most of its natural ...
Native American Church, 1800 (19th century) [5] Reformed Mennonites, 1812; Restoration Movement, 1800s; various subgroups of Amish, throughout 19th and 20th centuries; American Unitarian Association, 1825 Unitarian Universalism, 1961 (consolidation of the Universalist Church and the AUA) Latter Day Saint movement/Mormonism, 1830
Although conservatism built a presence among intellectuals in the late 19th century, historian George Nash wrote in 1996 that, "Despite its new-found status and competitiveness, intellectual conservatism remains a minority movement, especially in the academic community, and, more broadly, amongst the articulate and politically dynamic "new ...