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Grassroots Progressivism Civilizing the City Settlement House Movement Jane Addams
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1. CHAPTER 21
Progressivism from the Grass Roots
to the White House
1890–1916
2. Grassroots Progressivism
Civilizing the City
Settlement House Movement – Jane Addams & Lillian Wald and Hull House – college educated women and reform
Church ministers and social gospel – Walter Rauschenbusch – civilize the city – against alcohol, prostitution – social and moral purity
Progressives and the Working Class
Women’s Trade Union League – women workers and middle class “allies” – Triangle Shirtwaist Company – protest low wages, dangerous working conditions, management’s refusal to recognize the International Ladies’ Garment Workers Union & hours of work
Protective legislation – Muller v. Oregon
National Consumer’s League – Florence Kelley – middle class women and boycott of products – municipal housekeeping – woman’s suffrage.
3. Progressivism: Theory and Practice
Reform Darwinism and Social Engineering
Challenge to Social Darwinism and laissez-faire
Efficiency and expertise – Frederick Winslow Taylor and scientific management
Progressive Government: City and State
Followers of grassroots progressives in government – Thomas Lofton Johnson, mayor of Cleveland, OH – fair taxation, municipal ownership of railroads and public utilities, greater democracy – initiative, referendum, and recall
Robert M. LaFollette, governor and U. S. Senator from Wisconsin – railroad, education, conservation, factory regulation, direct primary, state income tax – Wisconsin, “laboratory of democracy”
Hiram Johnson, governor and U. S. Senator from California – direct primary, initiative, referendum, recall, railroad regulation, conservation , employer’s liability.
4. Progressivism Finds a President: Theodore Roosevelt
The Square Deal
Government and trusts – Northern Securities Company
“bad” and “good” trusts - trustbuster – action against 43 trusts – moral and political authority of president in mediating between labor and management – anthracite coal mine strike – United Mine Workers and management – “Square Deal” and victory in 1904
Roosevelt the Reformer
Railroad reform and power for Interstate Commerce Commission – Hepburn Act
Muckraking Journalism – Pure Food and Drug Act – Meat Inspection Act
1907 economic panic and J. P. Morgan – regulation instead of trust-busting
Roosevelt and Conservation
Preserve forest land from commercial development by executive proclamation – also managed use of natural reserves – protest from Sierra
7. Club and progressives - Newlands Reclamation Act of 1902 and forest reserves – 6 national parks, 16 national monuments, 51 wildlife refuges – testimony to Roosevelt’s accomplishments as conservationist.
The Big Stick
Guarding Monroe Doctrine – Roosevelt Corollary – Panama Canal.
Keeping the Open Door Policy in China
Noble prize for negotiating peace at the end of the Russo-Japanese War (1906) – Root-Takahira agreement (1908) and Open Door Policy in Japan.
11. Progressivism Stalled
The Troubled Presidency of William Howard Taft
Payne-Aldrich tariff – benefited big business and trusts – undid some of Roosevelt’s reforms – Roosevelt leaned more to progressives – Republican party divided, Democracy majority in 1910 congressional elections – mine and railroad regulation, creation of the Children’s Bureau in the Department of Labor, 8-hour work day - 16th Amendment (graduated income tax) and 17th Amendment (direct election of Senators)
“dollar diplomacy” or substitute “dollars for bullets” – commercial treaties on Nicaragua and Honduras – U. S. marines in Nicaragua and Dominican republic in 1912
Promoted active intervention in China – investments
Antitrust suit against U. S. Steel and 1907 acquisition of Tennessee Coal and Iron.
13. Progressive Insurgency and the Election of 1912
Roosevelt challenged Taft unsuccessfully on Republican ticket – ran on Progressive Party ticket – plank included woman’s suffrage, presidential primaries, minimum wages for women, conservation, child labor laws, worker’s compensation, social security, income tax
Democratic party benefited from split in Republican party – Woodrow Wilson – real contest between Roosevelt (“New Nationalism”) and Wilson (“New Freedom”) despite 4 candidates – Wilson wins decisive victory.
14. Woodrow Wilson and Progressivism
at High Tide
Wilson’s Reforms: Tariff, Banking, and the Trusts
Underwood tariff – lowered rates – revenue from moderate income tax
Federal Reserve Act (1913) – national banking system with 12 regional banks – efficient banking and currency system
Clayton Antitrust Act – outlawed price discrimination and interlocking directories – regulate rather than break up big businesses.
Federal trade Commission – eliminate unfair trade practices
Wilson, Reluctant Progressive
Progressives questioned end of reforms – Republicans demanded reforms – token support - Keating-Owen child labor law, 8 hour work day in railroads, rural credits for farmers
15. The Limits of Progressive Reform
Radical Alternatives
Socialist Labor Party and Eugene V. Debs
International Workers of the World – unskilled workers
Margaret Sanger and birth control – not just sexual and medical reform but means to alter social and political power relationships
Progressivism for White Men Only
Alice Paul and National Woman’s Party (1916) – radical voice of the suffrage movement
W. E. B. DuBois and Booker T. Washington - NAACP