New York City in the 1850s.Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
Edward Pessen
Education and the role of women
Olympia Brown.Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.; neg. no. LC USZ 62 53513
From the left, Abbey Memorial Chapel, Williston Memorial Library, and Clapp Laboratories on the campus of Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts, U.S.Jim Gipe; courtesy of Mount Holyoke CollegeCities were also centres of educational and intellectual progress. The emergence of a relatively well-financed public educational system, free of the stigma of “pauper” or “charity” schools, and the emergence of a lively “penny press,” made possible by a technological revolution, were among the most important developments. The role of women in America’s expanding society was intriguingly shaped by conflicting forces. On one hand, there were factors that abetted emancipation. For example, the growing cities offered new job opportunities as clerks and shop assistants for girls and young women with elementary educations furnished by the public schools. And the need for trained teachers for those schools offered another avenue to female independence. At higher levels, new rungs on the ladder of upward mobility were provided by the creation of women’s colleges, such as Mount Holyoke in South Hadley, Massachusetts (1837), and by the admission of women to a very few coeducational colleges, such as Oberlin (1833) and Antioch (1852), both in Ohio. A rare woman or two even broke into professional ranks, including Elizabeth Blackwell, considered the first woman physician of modern times, and the Rev. Olympia Brown, one of the first American women whose ordination was sanctioned by a full denomination.
On the other hand, traditionally educated women from genteel families remained bound by silken cords of expectation. The “duties of womanhood” expounded by popular media included, to the exclusion of all else, the conservation of a husband’s resources, the religious and moral education of children and servants, and the cultivation of higher sensibilities through the proper selection of decorative objects and reading matter. The “true woman” made the home an island of tranquility and uplift to which the busy male could retreat after a day’s struggle in the hard world of the marketplace. In so doing, she was venerated but kept in a clearly noncompetitive role. Bernard A. Weisberger
Wealth
The brilliant French visitor Alexis de Tocqueville, in common with most contemporary observers, believed American society to be remarkably egalitarian. Most rich American men were thought to have been born poor; “self-made” was the term Henry Clay popularized for them. The society was allegedly a very fluid one, marked by the rapid rise and fall of fortunes, with room at the top accessible to all but the most humble; opportunity for success seemed freely available to all, and, although material possessions were not distributed perfectly equally, they were, in theory, dispersed so fairly that only a few poor and a few rich men existed at either end of the social spectrum.
Alexis de Tocqueville, detail of an oil painting by T. Chassériau; in the Versailles Museum.H. Roger-Viollet
The actuality, however, was far different. While the rich were inevitably not numerous, America by 1850 had more millionaires than all of Europe. New York, Boston, and Philadelphia each had perhaps1,000 individuals admitting to assets of $100,000 or more, at a time when wealthy taxpayers kept secret from assessors the bulk of their wealth. Because an annual income of $4,000 or $5,000 enabled a person to live luxuriously, these were great fortunes indeed. Typically, the wealthiest 1 percent of urban citizens owned approximately one-half the wealth of the great cities of the Northeast, while the great bulk of their populations possessed little or nothing. In what has long been called the “Age of the Common Man,” rich men were almost invariably born not into humble or poor families but into wealthy and prestigious ones. In western cities too, class lines increasingly hardened after 1830. The common man lived in the age, but he did not dominate it. It appears that contemporaries, overimpressed with the absence of a titled aristocracy and with the democratic tone and manner of American life, failed to see the extent to which money, family, and status exerted power in the New World even as they did in the Old.
Jacksonian democracy
The democratization of politics
Nevertheless, American politics became increasingly democratic during the 1820s and ’30s. Local and state offices that had earlier been appointive became elective. Suffrage was expanded as property and other restrictions on voting were reduced or abandoned in most states. The freehold requirement that had denied voting to all but holders of real estate was almost everywhere discarded before 1820, while the taxpaying qualification was also removed, if more slowly and gradually. In many states a printed ballot replaced the earlier system of voice voting, while the secret ballot also grew in favour. Whereas in 1800 only two states provided for the popular choice of presidential electors, by 1832 only South Carolina still left the decision to the legislature. Conventions of elected delegates increasingly replaced legislative or congressional caucuses as the agencies for making party nominations. By the latter change, a system for nominating candidates by self-appointed cliques meeting in secret was replaced by a system of open selection of candidates by democratically elected bodies.
These democratic changes were not engineered by Andrew Jackson and his followers, as was once believed. Most of them antedated the emergence of Jackson’s Democratic Party, and in New York, Mississippi, and other states some of the reforms were accomplished over the objections of the Jacksonians. There were men in all sections who feared the spread of political democracy, but by the 1830s few were willing to voice such misgivings publicly. Jacksonians effectively sought to fix the impression that they alone were champions of democracy, engaged in mortal struggle against aristocratic opponents. The accuracy of such propaganda varied according to local circumstances. The great political reforms of the early 19th century in actuality were conceived by no one faction or party. The real question about these reforms concerns the extent to which they truly represented the victory of democracy in the United States.
Jackson, AndrewAndrew Jackson, oil on canvas by Asher B. Durand, c. 1800; in the collection of the New-York Historical Society.Bettmann/Corbis