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Ch. 17.1 Progressivism. Essential Questions. What were the social, economic, and political conditions that provoked the progressive movement? What were the goals of the progressive movement?. Life before the 20 th Century. Could women vote? Did workers have the rights that we do today?
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Essential Questions • What were the social, economic, and political conditions that provoked the progressive movement? • What were the goals of the progressive movement?
Life before the 20th Century • Could women vote? • Did workers have the rights that we do today? • Could rats get mixed up in processed food? • Did people drive cars?
The Progressive Era • Political, economic, and social change in late 19th century America leads to broad progressive reforms.
Four goals of progressivism • Protecting social welfare • Promoting moral improvement • Creating economic reform • Fostering efficiency
Promoting social welfare • Social Gospel, settlement houses inspire other reform groups • Florence Kelley, political activist, advocate for women, children • helps pass law prohibiting child labor, limiting women’s hours
Promoting moral improvement • Some feel poor should uplift selves by improving own behavior • Prohibition—banning of alcoholic drinks • Woman’s Christian Temperance Union spearheads prohibition crusade
Creating economic reform • 1893 panic prompts doubts about capitalism; many become socialists • Muckrakers—journalists who expose corruption in politics, business • Upton Sinclair – The Jungle • Ida M. Tarbell – “History of Standard Oil Company”
Fostering Efficiency • Many use experts, science to make society, workplace more efficient • Scientific management—time and motion studies applied to workplace • Assembly lines speed up production, make people work like machines • cause high worker turnover
Review • What are the four goals of progressivism?
Cleaning up local/state government • Governors push states to pass laws to regulate large businesses • Robert M. La Follette is 3-term governor, then senator of Wisconsin • Attacks big business
Child Labor • Child workers get lower wages, small hands handle small parts better • families need children’s wages • National Child Labor Committee gathers evidence of harsh conditions • Groups press government to ban child labor, cut hours
Working Hours • Muller v. Oregon—Court upholds limiting women to 10-hour workday • Bunting v. Oregon—upholds 10-hour workday for men • Reformers win workers’ compensation for families of injured, killed
Election Reform • Initiative—bill proposed by people, not lawmakers, put on ballots • Referendum—voters, not legislature, decide if initiative becomes law • Recall—voters remove elected official through early election • Primaries allow voters, not party machines, to choose candidates • Seventeenth Amendment permits popular election of senators
Door Ticket • What were the four goals of the progressives? • What was the temperance movement? • Name two reforms to elections.
17.2 – Women’s role in the Progressive Movement • What major steps did women take to gain equal rights during the Progressive Era?
Women in the late 19th Century • Only middle-, upper-class women can devote selves to home, family • Poor women usually have to work for wages outside home
Women’s Reform Movement • Women reformers target workplace, housing, education, food, drugs • National Association of Colored Women (NACW)—child care, education • Susan B. Anthonyof National American Woman Suffrage Assoc. (NAWSA) • works for woman suffrage, or right to vote
Review • What is suffrage? • Who was a primary advocate for women’s suffrage?
18.3 • AKS • Who was Teddy Roosevelt? • What was his contribution to progressivism and the modern presidency?
Teddy Roosevelt • Rough Rider • President McKinley shot; Roosevelt becomes president at 42 • Modern President • Square Deal
Trust Buster • Uses the Sherman Anti-Trust act to: • Break up monopolies and trusts
Health and the Environment • Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle—unsanitary conditions in meatpacking • Roosevelt pushes for Meat Inspection Act • Pure Food and Drug Act halts sale of contaminated food, medicine
Conservation of the Environment • Roosevelt sets aside forest reserves, sanctuaries, national parks • Believes conservation part preservation, part development for public
18.4 • Who was the largest president in American History? • Who was the only president to also serves in the highest office of the Judicial Branch?
Bull Moose Party • Republican Party Splits • Progressives form Bull Moose Party;nominate Roosevelt • Runs against Democrat Woodrow Wilson, reform governor of NJ • Wilson wins
18.5 • Who was Woodrow Wilson? • What were his domestic and international visions for the United States?
Woodrow Wilson • 28th President • Wilson was lawyer, professor, president of Princeton, NJ governor • As president, focuses on trusts, tariffs, high finance • Fair Deal
Wilson’s Reforms • Clayton Antitrust Act stops companies buying stock to form monopoly • Federal Trade Commission (FTC)—new “watchdog” agency • investigates regulatory violations • ends unfair business practices • 1920 Nineteenth Amendment grants women right to vote • Federal Reserve System—private banking system under federal control