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HIST 202 – U.S. HISTORY. Progressive Era, 1901-1918. Evaluate the Progressive’s record. Was progressivism really progressive? Be sure to explain three (3) social and three (3) political reforms as part of the progressives’ policies. Case Study - Progressivism.
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HIST 202 – U.S. HISTORY Progressive Era, 1901-1918
Evaluate the Progressive’s record. Was progressivism really progressive? Be sure to explain three (3) social and three (3) political reforms as part of the progressives’ policies.
Case Study - Progressivism • Gather the following information from sources: • Interpretation of the documents • Evidence of progression or regression • Evaluation of progressivism • ***These documents/events are fair game for Exam #2 - HINT
Origins of Progressivism • Grew out of: • Industrialization • Immigration • Urban Expansion • Progressivism is PROGRESS!!
Origins of Progressivism • National movement born out of state reforms • Progressive presidents: • Theodore Roosevelt • William Howard Taft • Woodrow Wilson
Attitudes and Motives • Country was changing RAPIDLY! • Industrialized • Non-agrarian • Melting pot of immigrants • Innocence was lost
Attitudes and Motives • Participants were extremely diverse: • Women • Liberal educators • Early civil rights crusaders • Middle-class reformers
Who were Progressives? • Middle-class • Shop owners • Lawyers • Doctors • Ministers • Religious • Social Gospel • Liberals
Scientific Management • Frederick W. Taylor • Conducted research in factories • Timed output cycles • Discovered ways to organize people in efficient manner • Progressives…govt. can be more efficient
The Muckrakers • Made Americans wake up!! • Origins • Henry Demarest Lloyd • Wealth Against Commonwealth (1894)
Popular Literature • Magazines • McClure’s • Collier’s • Cosmopolitan • Authors contributed stories • Books • Lincoln Steffans – The Shame of the Cities • Jacob Riis – How the Other Half Lives
Decline of Muckraking • Reasons: • Some stories were hard to beat • Magazines were asked to tone down the stories • Corporations had public relation departments • Legal problems
Political Reform in Cities and States • Secret ballots (“Australian Ballot”) • Direct election of Senators – 17th Amendment (1913) • Direct primaries • Robert LaFollette (Wis.) • Let the people decide
Political Reforms • Initiative • Method that voters could compel legislators to consider a bill • Referendum • Allowed voters to vote on the issue • Recall • Allowed voters to get rid of corrupt officials
Social Welfare • Settlement house reformers • Jane Addams • Believed in social justice • Better schools • Better courts • Divorce laws • Criminal reform
Municipal Reform • Get rid of political machines and bosses • Get control of public utilities • Voters elect city managers and commissioners
State Reform • Governors • Battled with corporate interests • Fraudulent companies • Corrupt railroads • Tax reform • Robert LaFollette
Occupational Reform • Triangle Shirtwaist Fire • March 25th 1911 • 146 women perished in flames • 71 injured • Blamed poor working conditions • No fire plans • Fire escapes were damaged or locked!!!
Theodore Roosevelt’s Square Deal • Progressivism shot into gear under Teddy • 1902 Coal Strike • Expanded T.R.’s power as president • Standard Oil trust • “Bad trusts” • “Good trusts”
T.R.’s Square Deal • Consumer protection • Pure Food and Drug Act (1906) • Meat Inspection Act (1906) • Environmental protection • Newlands Reclamation Act (1902) • U.S. Forest Service (1908) • 150 million acres of land for parks
Taft’s Presidency • Won election of 1908 • Defeated William Jennings Bryan • Busted the most trusts in history • U.S. Steel • Angered Teddy • Split Republican party • Progressives • Republicans
Election of 1912 • Woodrow Wilson – D • William Howard Taft – R • Theodore Roosevelt – P/BM • Eugene V. Debs – S • Split in Republican Party • Economic policies • First time “3rd Party places 2ndin polls
Woodrow Wilson’s Progressive Program • Pledged “New Freedom” • Attacked the “triple wall of privilege” • Tariffs • Underwood Tariff (1913) • Banking • Federal Reserve Act (1914) • Trusts • Clayton Antitrust Act (1914) • Federal Trade Commission (1914)
African Americans • 2nd rate citizens • “Separate but equal” • Progressive presidents paid little mind to • Thought there were more pressing issues • Shared in the racist sentiment
Eugenic Studies • Authorized in 1912 – still governor of NJ • Appointed doctors to determine if “lesser beings” should procreate • Stripped freedoms away from those who didn’t understand • Mentally retarded, criminals, “idiots”, African Americans in South
Two Approaches – Washington and DuBois DuBois Washington
The Great Migration • Mass migration of blacks from South to northern cities • 1910-1930 • Aided by the Urban League (1911) • Causes • Deteriorating race conditions • Crops decimated by boll weevil • Job opportunities in cities
Civil Rights Organizations • 1905 – Niagara Movement • Dubois • Met at Niagara Falls, Canada • 1908 – NAACP • 1920 – 100,000 members
Progressives and Women • Liberal thinkers - educated • Wanted equal rights as men • Suffragist Movement • Carrie Chapman Catt – National American Woman Suffrage Assn. (NAWSA) • Alice Paul – National Woman’s Party
19th Amendment • Wilson was VERY reluctant • 1920 – guaranteed women’s right to vote • Aided in women’s rights for • Property • Divorce • Birth control
End of Progressivism • WWI ends Progressivism • Worried about the war • Many reforms were in place • Reformers thought their jobs were done