370 likes | 380 Views
Happy Pre- Friday AH2. Bell Ringer - Review Labor Union “Video” Review Sheet Completion Intro Video to the Gilded Age Mini Lecture + Guided Notes 1 Page Summary Assignment Due Today Kahoot. Quote of the Day. “Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.”
E N D
Happy Pre- Friday AH2 Bell Ringer - Review Labor Union “Video” Review Sheet Completion Intro Video to the Gilded Age Mini Lecture + Guided Notes 1 Page Summary Assignment Due Today Kahoot
Quote of the Day “Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.” -Poor Richard
5.04 Describe the changing role of government in economic and political affairs.
The Gilded Age • Period of 1877 – 1900 • Term coined by Mark Twain • “Gilding” is when a thin layer of gold is put over a worthless metal to create the illusion of value • Twain described this period as a thin layer of prosperity masking the poverty and corruption underneath
Ulysses S. Grant • 1822 – 1885 • Republican • 18th President (1869 – 1877) • Administration was marred by dozens of scandals involving several members of his cabinet, mainly involving bribery • Joe Paterno
The Whiskey Ring • Scandal involving several members of Grant’s administration, including his personal secretary, where federal employees accepted bribes from whiskey distillers to help them avoid paying federal taxes on alcohol production • 110 people were convicted of defrauding the government out of at least $3 million in taxes
The Credit Mobilier Scandal • Several investors in the Union Pacific Railroad formed a construction company, then used their positions on the railroad’s board to hire their company to do construction work at exaggerated prices • The Union Pacific received their funding from federal grants; when grant money ran out, Ames gave other members of Congress shares in the Union Pacific to bribe them to approve more federal grant money
Political Machines • Lower level political group designed to gain and keep power • Growth of cities had outpaced the ability of city governments to meet the needs of citizens • Run by party “bosses” • Party bosses helped immigrants find jobs, housing, food, heat and protection; in return they told immigrants who to vote for in elections
Graft • Graft –money acquired through dishonest or questionable means • Example: party bosses would know when and where the city might want to build a park, so they would buy up the property cheap before it became public knowledge and then sell the land to the city for personal profit
William “Boss” Tweed • 1823 – 1878 • Ran Tammany Hall (The Democratic Party’s political machine in NYC) from 1858 – 1871 • Used his position to make himself wealthy • Arrested in 1871 and convicted of defrauding the city government of about $200 million
Thomas Nast • 1840 – 1902 • German immigrant • Worked for Harper’s Weekly as political cartoonist from 1859 to 1886 • Targeted Boss Tweed and political machines; was so effective that Tweed offered him a $500,000 bribe to go study art in Europe – Nast turned it down. • Creator of modern image of Uncle Sam, the Donkey and Elephant symbols for Democratic and Republican Parties
Why are political cartoons so effective in a diverse place like new York?
Rutherford B. Hayes • 1822 – 1893 • Republican • 19th President (1877 – 1881) • Reformer • Replaced officials who had been appointed by party bosses • No spoils system in his administration!!!!
Stalwarts & Halfbreeds • “Stalwarts”: Republicans who supported the political machines and spoils system • “Half-breeds”: Republicans who supported civil service reform and an end to the political machines and spoils system
James Garfield • 1831 – 1881 • Republican • 20th President (1881) • Elected despite being implicated in the Credit Mobilier Scandal • A “Half-breed,” he was assassinated after only 200 days in office by a disgruntled office seeker who felt he had been cheated out of a good government job
Chester A. Arthur • 1829 – 1886 • Republican • 21st President (1881-1885) • A “Stalwart,” he was so affected by Garfield’s assassination that he switched to being a “Half-breed” and championed civil service reform • Did not receive nomination in election of 1884 due to terminal kidney condition
Pendleton Act of 1883 • Ended the spoils system by creating the US Civil Service Commission • Federal employees would get jobs based on skills and merit, not political favoritism • Had to pass a civil service exam to enter politics
Grover Cleveland • 1837 – 1908 • Democrat • 22nd & 24th President (1885-89, 1893-97) • Fought for political reforms, but at the same time was willing to use military force to limit labor unions (Pullman Strike)
Mugwumps • Democrat Cleveland even won support from reform-minded Republicans • These Republicans were called “mugwumps,” an Algonquin Indian word meaning “important person” • The term Mugwump would mean someone who switches political party for generations following
Wabash v. Illinois • 1886 Supreme Court decision • Court ruled that states can not regulate railroad companies because railroads are engaged in interstate commerce which can only be regulated by the federal government
Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 • Reaction to Wabash v. Illinois decision • Created the Interstate Commerce Commission to regulate railroads by restricting rates and ensuring that no discriminatory practices were used • ICC was disbanded in 1995
Benjamin Harrison • 1833 – 1901 • Republican • 23rd President (1889 – 1893) • Grandson of William Henry Harrison • Had the first “billion dollar government” • Ran on campaign of supporting high tariffs
Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 • First federal law limiting trusts, monopolies, and cartels, but not really enforced until Theodore Roosevelt’s presidency • Designed to protect competition among businesses and to protect consumers from the dangers of monopolies
United States v. EC Knight Co. • 1895 • First test of the Sherman Antitrust Act • EC Knight Co. was a sugar refinery that had a monopoly on sugar in US • Court ruled that Sherman Antitrust Act could limit monopolies only in distribution (interstate commerce), not in manufacture of goods • Proves that Sherman will not be enough
The Pendleton Act took care of APPOINTED government employees! But what about the employees who are voted into office?
Political reforms • Secret ballot: individual’s votes would be kept secret, not published • Referendum: allows citizens to vote directly on important issues rather than leave the issues in the hands of elected officials • Recall: allows voters to remove an elected official from office before their term is up • Initiative: allows voters to force elected officials to vote on a certain issue
Learning Menu 5.04 1. Create a Political Cartoon • Student must create a political cartoon symbolic of anything we have studied during the gilded age. Examples: Boss Tweed, Tammany Hall, Industrialization, Immigration, Urbanization, Robber Barons, ETC. 2. Create a Civil Service Exam • You are the governor of New York after the Pendleton Act is passed. Create a ten question multiple choice exam that politicians must pass to become a government employee. What knowledge should politicians demonstrate? Be thoughtful. 10 questions – Multiple choice