Have you ever thought of what was the start of your school, or how the inventions that are regular to us today were made, or why you can vote? The truth is, some of these things were born from the Age of Reform, and the movements I’m focussing on are the Temperance and Abolition Movement. The sort of meaning for these two movements were because of huge ethical problems in society. Both movements have their similarities and differences, but the most intriguing comparisons are their motives, their end effects, and their end game compared to their starting intentions.
The motives of the two movements are sort of connected to themselves. For the Temperance period the motives were because of drinking. Some fathers got their payday, and drank it all up and there family had to survive for a week with no income or money. The church took this problem by the head and said that the thing the men had to fight was the “demon” rum. The Abolition motives were made of common sense. In 1776, the United states ratified a document that read “All men (and women added later) are equal (under the law).”
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This happened in the Abolitionist and Temperance movement, they had starting intentions their end game wasn’t quite the same. For the Temperance movement the main intention was to win the people over the idea that alcohol was to be for temperate use. Instead, in the end game, it was brought to an extreme and alcohol was banned from the US, at least the sale of it. For the Abolition movement starting intention was to make an effort to stop slavery because of the part of the Declaration of Independence that states that “all men are equal.” In the end game though for the Abolitionists, they got got their goal, but it had some negative effects on how they were treated in society and mostly public. Altogether, the two movements got their goals, but they also got some not needed excess reactions and