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L8: Populism: A Critique of the Gilded Age. Agenda Objective : To understand.. What the Populist Movement was. Who Populism appealed to and why. How was Populism a response to the Gilded Age. Why Populism wasn’t successful
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L8: Populism: A Critique of the Gilded Age • Agenda • Objective: • To understand.. • What the Populist Movement was. • Who Populism appealed to and why. • How was Populism a response to the Gilded Age. • Why Populism wasn’t successful • Populism’s legacy on shifting size and scope of the national government? • Schedule: • Lecture & Discussion • Homework • Unit Work: • Nothing for now… • Thesis Work: • Final Draft Due Friday 2/14 by 2:30 pm sharp! • See Reader for all required components!!
Guiding Questions • What was the Populist Movement? • Who did it appeal to and why? • How was it a response to the Gilded Age? • Why wasn’t it successful? • What was its legacy on shifting size and scope of the national government?
Story of Populism begins with Story of Agriculture after the Civil War….
Problems Facing Farmers 1865-1900 Drought HighTariff DebtandForeclosure
Farmers Begin to Organize • Many farmers, subscribe to the agrarian myth • Try to form organizations with the goal of bringing back this lifestyle to America • See businesses “organized” in the form of trusts, workers organized in the form of unions, and decide that they too will organize. • Important to note: Farmers view themselves as indispensible, “we feed you all,” yet by the 1880s are only 3% of the working population.
Farmers Alliance Movement • Throughout the United States farmers were organizing together into small farmers’ clubs These groups were called alliances and they usually were based on region and race. • You might have the Northwest Farmers’ Alliance or the Colored Farmers National Alliance. • In 1890, farmers’ alliance members helped get 5 US senators, 6 governors, and 46 congressmen elected.
Populist Party 1892 • Encouraged by this electoral success, farmers again set their sights on a national coalition. • The three major farmers’ alliance held a convention in Omaha, Nebraska in 1892 and drew up a platform for a national political party, The Populist Party (The People’s Party).
What Did the Populists Believe? • Platform: • Graduated income tax • Direct election of senators • 8 hour work day • Nationalization of railroads, telegraphs, and telephones • Free coinage of silver • Based on this platform, what did the Populist party believe?
What’s Up With Silver? • In 1893 United States had a paper money currency, just like we have today. Those dollar bills had value or worth, because they were backed by gold. • To oversimplify, each dollar bill that was floating around the economy could in theory be cashed in exchange for its value in gold. • Farmers believed, however, that by linking money to the rare gold, rather than the more abundant silver, prices were being kept artificially high.
What’s Up With Silver? • Indebted farmers believed that the addition of an immense amount of silver money, not paper money, would inflate the currency leading to higher prices and easier debt payment.
What’s Up With Silver • Belief among the Populists, is that the government’s decision to withhold silver is a prominent example of the way in which the government sets fiscal policies that benefit urban capitalists. • Prices of goods and loans are being kept artificially high simply because the government is refusing to release this silver into circulation. • Big Business is winning and the common man is losing.
Populists Gain Support: Panic of 1893 • With the economic depression, different investors in US currency were cashing in their money for gold bars. • This threatened to completely wipe out the gold reserves the United States had. • If the US ran out of gold, the nation’s remaining currency would be rendered valueless. There would be nothing to back it up. • To prevent this from happening, the government asked J.P. Morgan and his bank for a loan of $65 million in gold. • Panic of 1893, begins to call into question the gold standard.
Election of 1896 • In 1896 there is another political election and the big issue is the gold/silver debate • The Democrats reject Cleveland as their nominee even though he is the sitting president and put up a man named William Jennings Bryan.
William Jennings Bryan • 1860-1925 • Ran for President 3 times (1896, 1900, 1908) • Was the U.S. Secretary of State under Wilson from 1913 to 1915. • Was a devout Christian, silverite, supporter of popular democracy, a peace advocate, a prohibition, and an opponent of Darwinism. • He was one of the best known orators an lecturers of time. • Called “The Great Commoner.” • Represented the State of Tennessee in the Scopes Monkey Trial in 1920
Cross of Gold Speech • At the democratic convention Bryan made what is perhaps the most famous Democratic convention speech ever. • “If they dare to come out in the open field and defend the gold standard as a good thing, we shall fight them to the uttermost, having behind us the producing masses of the nation and the world. Having behind us the commercial interests and the laboring interests and all the toiling masses, we shall answer their demands for a gold standard by saying to them, you shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns. You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.” • Audio Rerecording: http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5354/
Cross of Gold Speech • What is the significance of this speech?
Populists Put Up Bryan Too! • The populists are so impressed with Bryan and the fact that he is endorsing silver, that they also nominate Bryan for president. • The populists saw Bryan and his belief that money should be backed by silver as their ticket out of debt.
Election of 1896 • Why did Bryan lose? • Some argue that the election of 1896 is the most significant election since Lincoln’s in 1864. What is the significance of this election?
Significance of Populism? • Why wasn’t it successful? • What was its legacy on shifting size and scope of the national government?
What Do Agrarianism, Populism, and Bimetallism Have to Do with The Wizard of Oz?
Yellow Brick Road • Represents the gold standard: a road that looks hopeful, but leads nowhere • Oz represents “oz” or the abbreviation for ounce, the standard measure for gold.
Scarecrow • Represents the struggling farmer at the turn of the century. • In Baum’s version, the Scarecrow rules Emerald City after Oz is dethroned. • Baum is predicting that farmers would gain political power
Tin Man • Represents the urban industrial worker who was enslaved to heartless industries. • In the book, the Tin Man rules the west. Baum is predicting that industry would move west, shutting out farmers.
Cowardly Lion • Represented William Jennings Bryan • Described as having a loud roar but little else (recall Bryan lost to McKinley despite his powerful Cross of Gold Speech) • In having the Lion protect smaller beasts in a “small old forest,” Baum predicted that Bryan would return to Congress
The Wizard of Oz • Represents President McKinley • Baum viewed McKinley as not being as powerful or wise as the façade he put forth.
The Silver Slippers • In the book Dorothy’s slippers are silver • When Dorothy walks on the Yellow Brick road it represents gold and silver coming together to increase America’s money supply (bimetallism) • In the book, her silver slippers are lost, representing the sliver issue losing • FYI: In the movie Dorothy’s slippers are ruby to showcase Technicolor
The Munchkins • The “little people” in America whose power had been taken away by big business and industry • Baum saw these people as “slaves” to the eastern banking and industrial interests
The Wicked Witch of the West • Symbolizes large industrial corporations that Baum thought oppressed “the little guy”
Dorothy • Is thought to represent Americans, who Baum viewed as good-natured but naive
Toto • Represents the Prohibitionist Party who were pro-Populist • Toto is a play on the term “teetotaller”—people who did not drink alcohol
Emerald City • Thought to represent Washington, D.C. and the color of the dollar