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Essential Question. What were the goals of the progressive movement?. The Roots of Progressivism. Progressivism (1890-1920). Series of reform efforts that changed U.S. society. Social Problems. Crime Illiteracy Alcohol abuse Child Labor Health and safety issues. Progressivism.
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Essential Question • What were the goals of the progressive movement?
Progressivism (1890-1920) • Series of reform efforts that changed U.S. society
Social Problems • Crime • Illiteracy • Alcohol abuse • Child Labor • Health and safety issues
Progressivism • Believed industrialism and urbanization had created social problems • Agreed government should take a more active role in solving society’s problems
Muckrakers • Crusading journalists • Investigated social conditions and political corruption
Ida Tarbell • Published a series of articles critical of the Standard Oil Company (Rockefeller)
Lincoln Steffens • Reported on vote stealing and corrupt urban political machines
Jacob Riis • Focused on poverty, disease, and crime in NYC immigrant neighborhoods
Jane Addams Hull House Settlement house for helping the poor in cities
Women’s Christian Temperance Union • Organized in 1874 • Pressed for prohibition – laws banning the manufacture, sale, and consumption of alcohol
18th Amendment Passed in 1919 Prohibited the making, selling, and transporting of alcohol
Direct Election of Senators • The Constitution stated each state legislature would elect two senators • 17th Amendment – direct election by the population of U.S. senators
Political Reforms • Initiative – allow citizens to introduce legislation • Referendum – allow legislation to be submitted to voters for approval • Recall – allow voters to demand a special election to remove an elected official
Suffrage Movement • Suffrage = right to vote • By 1900 – only Wyoming, Idaho, Utah and Colorado had granted women voting rights
Nineteenth Amendment • Ratified in 1920 • Gave women the right to vote
Child Labor • 1900 – over 1.7 million children under the age of 16 worked outside the home • Most in factories
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire March 25, 1911 Sweatshop Fire kills 146 Young female immigrant workers
Sharecropping • Most African American farmers were sharecroppers • Always in debt and landless
Jim Crow Laws • Segregation = separation of races • Laws that enforced segregation were Jim Crow laws
Jim Crow Laws • Railroad cars • Restaurants • Water fountains • Hotels • Swimming pools
Plessy v. Ferguson • Supreme Court case • Enforced segregation with a “separate but equal” clause • Legal basis for discrimination
Booker T. Washington • African American educator • Focused on achieving economic goals rather than political • Speech known as the Atlanta Compromise
W.E.B. DuBois • African Americans must demand their rights rather than allow them to be stripped away
Niagara Movement (1905) • African American leaders met at Niagara Falls to demand full political rights • Led to the founding of the NAACP