Reform Movements of the 19th Century
Horace Mann, an innovator in early American education, wrote in his account that many cities in the new union were not nourished enough mentally because of a lack of libraries and books. He said that a system of libraries and public books would bring together men and women alike and unify the nation with a common knowledge. He felt that the uneducated mind was subject to ignorance and a life of despair. At the end of his report, he states the interest in these public libraries is far reaching, as many citizens have voted for it. The interest in educating the youth existed and needed to exist in order to ensure intelligent citizenry and leadership.
Reverend M’Ilvaine was a man who denounced intemperance, or alcoholism. A strong point in this work is that alcohol is seen as a type of slavery. He related intemperance to the numbers of poor and mentally ill, numbering those “enslaved” by alcohol nearly 500,000. He believed that alcohol was a problem in part of apathy toward the deeper emotional and physical issues it presented. M’Ilvane acknowledged that the temperance must be met by the entire nation as a whole, and not as a regional solution. The blight cannot be isolated to one area of the crop, nor could intemperance be isolated region by region. The intemperance movement, by way of the common good, would have to be addressed before the nation could press forward.