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The first half of the nineteenth century was dominated by the growth of Methodism and the Baptist movement, with Methodism representing 34 percent of religious believers by 1850. Meanwhile the old Puritan churches merely maintained their memberships and declined in relative terms to 3-4 percent of believers. The vehicle of Methodist growth was the revival meeting, developed from the techniques pioneering in the eighteenth century by Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield.
The United States began the nineteenth century as an overwhelmingly Protestant country. As the century progressed, however, a trickle of Catholics began to cross the Atlantic, swelling to a tidal wave as the potato blight sent millions of Irish to North America. In the latter half of the nineteenth century, Catholics from other nations, notably Italy, joined the flood. But the Catholic Church in America could not just re-enroll their co-religionists from the old country. The immigrants were just as unchurched as the revolutionary generation of 1776. In the mid-century, the Irish “seemed a lost community, mired in poverty and ignorance, destroying themselves through drink, idleness, violence, criminality, and illegitimacy.”(Stern 1997) Yet by the end of the century: “the sons of criminals were now the policemen; the daughters of illiterates had become the city’s schoolteachers; those who had been the outcasts of society now ran its political machinery,” and the educated elites had begun to complain about the “Puritanism” of the Irish. The Italians were just as bad. Archbishop Corrigan of New York in 1888 noted that of 80,000 Italian immigrants in the city, barely 2 percent went to church. The Irish clergy were uncertain how to communicate their problem to the pope in Rome, for they found the Italians ignorant of religion and immured in “a depth of vice little known to us yet.” (Finke 1992 p116) In Chicago, the clergy found the Italians of southern Italy and Sicily “unexcelled in their ignorance of religion.” But the Irish hierarchy was not discouraged. Under their leadership the Catholics managed an explosive growth, from 1 million adherents in 1850 to 7.3 million in 1880. The architect of this remarkable achievement was John Hughes, born in 1797 the son of a poor farmer from County Tyrone in Ireland.
The explosion of popular religion in the nineteenth century was the work of outstanding religious entrepreneurs, men like Charles Grandisson Finney, John Hughes, and Joseph Smith. We shall see how they did it in Chapter 6.
For ordinary people, the nineteenth century was a great age for enterprise. They played a central role in the nursing and weaning of that central and still controversial institution of the modern era: the modern business corporation. At the dawn of the nineteenth century, the big commercial enterprises were government-sponsored monopolies owned by the great and the good: the British and Dutch East India Companies, the Hudson’s Bay Company. At the end of the nineteenth century, the great enterprises were Standard Oil, United States Steel, and the great railroads. It is common to imagine that these great enterprises were developed by a cabal of robber barons, a conspiracy of pirates who preyed off honest workers and consumers and used their ill-gotten profits to buy elected politicians and keep them bought. Maybe they were, but they were hardly hereditary economic barons inheriting father’s cozy monopoly. Even the man who did the most to sell the idea of The Robber Barons, Matthew Josephson, admitted that almost all of the captains of industry came from humble beginnings. Jay Cooke, financier of the Civil War, was the son of a frontier lawyer and settler in Sandusky, Ohio. Jay Gould, the railroad manipulator, passed his childhood in “naked poverty” in Roxbury, New York. Andrew Carnegie, the founder of Big Steel, was the son of a handloom damask weaver in Dunfermline, Scotland. His family emigrated after being reduced to penury by the new power looms; they arrived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1848, dead broke. James J. Hill, railroad baron, came from hardscrabble farmers in Ontario. John D. Rockefeller, founder of Big Oil, was the son of an itinerant medicine man and bigamist, the eldest of five children who was forced to help his mother run the tiny family farm, the base from which his father roamed the countryside selling patent medicines. Richard Sears was the son of a farmer and blacksmith. When his father died he became, at age 16, the support of his family. He was working as a railroad agent at Redwood Falls, Minnesota when a local merchant refused a shipment of watches, and he decided to buy them and resell them himself. By the early 1890s Sears had turned his watch deal into a company with a 52-page catalog, Sears Roebuck. Only J.P. Morgan, railroad merger and acquisition czar, was the scion of privilege, a banker who was the son of a banker. But Morgan learned his trade from Anthony Drexel, the son of an Austrian draft-dodger.
The image that Josephson conjured up in The Robber Barons is that the great industrialists were the moral equivalent of the medieval robber barons whose strongholds sat astride the “strategic valley roads or mountain passes through which commerce flowed.” (Josephson 1962 vi) The great industrialists saw their opportunity and they took it, riding one day up to a ridge and discovering a strategic choke point that could be dominated and monopolized. In fact, the so-called robber barons mostly got rich with breakthrough inventions and hard work. Jay Cooke got to sell the bonds that financed the Civil War because he figured out how to sell them: in a massive publicity campaign advertising in all the newspapers, in feeding and watering financial reporters, and in “dunning each war contractor and military supplier.” Carnegie prospered by building cutting-edge blast furnaces and integrated steel mills, developing his own sources of iron ore, and making his company the world’s low-cost steel producer. Rockefeller invented the modern corporation with its committees, its pensions, and benefits; he branded his illuminating oil as “standard,” consistent in quality and not liable to explode, and developed the railroad unit-train and the pipeline for efficient overland transportation of bulk commodities. James J. Hill was another low-cost man, consistently improving his Great Northern railroad by reducing curves and grades and improving rails and roadbeds so that he was always able to undercut the costs of the Northern Pacific between Minneapolis and the Pacific Northwest. Except for Morgan, these were not expensively educated men. Jay Gould had to plead with his father to be allowed to go the local village school. Rockefeller’s education was completed at a commercial business school where he learned bookkeeping.
The men described above were, of course, not typical. They were the standouts, blessed with extraordinary luck that leveraged their dogged will and drive to succeed into extraordinary wealth at the head of unprecedented business enterprises. But they began as ordinary men who went on to do extraordinary things. Far from being robber barons, rogue princes of the land who had learned to prey upon legitimate commerce, these men accomplished a revolution from below with creative and wealth-enhancing innovations to mundane products: reducing the cost of oil by an order of magnitude; reducing the cost of steel by a factor of five; moving railroads beyond the land-grant boondoggle founded on political connections to a genuine business based on connecting markets and lowering the costs of freight forwarding.
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Click for Chapter 6: Popular Religion in the Nineteenth Century
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©2005 Christopher Chantrill
For [the left] there is only the state and the individual, nothing in between. No family to rely on, no friend to depend on, no community to call on. No neighbourhood to grow in, no faith to share in, no charities to work in. No-one but the Minister, nowhere but Whitehall, no such thing as society - just them, and their laws, and their rules, and their arrogance.
David Cameron, Conference Speech 2008
Imagining that all order is the result of design, socialists
conclude that order must be improvable by better design of some superior mind.
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit
[Every] sacrifice is an act of impurity that pays for a prior act of greater impurity... without its participants having to suffer the full consequences incurred by its predecessor. The punishment is commuted in a process that strangely combines and finesses the deep contradiction between justice and mercy.
Frederick Turner, Beauty: The Value of Values
But the only religions that have survived are those which support property and the family.
Thus the outlook for communism, which is both anti-property and anti-family, (and also anti-religion), is not promising.
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit
[T]he way “to achieve a system of determining admission to the public schools on a nonracial basis,”
Brown II, 349 U. S., at 300–301, is to stop assigning students on a racial basis. The way to stop
discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.
Roberts, C.J., Parents Involved in Community Schools vs. Seattle School District
A writer who says that there are no truths, or that all truth is merely relative, is asking you not to believe him. So dont.
Roger Scruton, Modern Philosophy
Paul Dirac: “When I was talking with Lemaître about [the expanding universe] and feeling stimulated
by the grandeur of the picture that he has given us, I told him that
I thought cosmology was the branch of science that lies closest to religion.
However [Georges] Lemaître [Catholic priest, physicist, and
inventor of the Big Bang Theory] did not agree with me. After thinking it over he
suggested psychology as lying closest to religion.”
John Farrell, “The Creation Myth”
Within Pentecostalism the injurious hierarchies of the wider world are abrogated and replaced by a single hierarchy of faith, grace, and the empowerments of the spirit... where groups gather on rafts to take them through the turbulence of the great journey from extensive rural networks to the mega-city and the nuclear family...
David Martin, On Secularization
No lesson seems to be so deeply inculcated by the experience of life as that you should never trust experts. If you believe doctors, nothing is wholesome: if you believe the theologians, nothing is innocent: if you believe the soldiers, nothing is safe. They all require their strong wine diluted by a very large admixture of insipid common sense.
Lord Salisbury, Letter to Lord Lytton
In 1911... at least nine million of the 12 million covered by national insurance were already members of voluntary sick pay schemes. A similar proportion were also eligible for medical care.
Green, Reinventing Civil Society
©2007 Christopher Chantrill