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1. America: Past and Present
Chapter 20
POLITICAL REALIGNMENTS IN THE 1890s
3. The Party Deadlock Post-Civil War Democratic party (keep govt local and small) divides electorate almost evenly with Republicans (nation as a whole)
Federal influence wanes, state control rises
4. Experiments in the States State government commissions investigate, regulate railroads, factories
Munn v. Illinois (1877) private property affected with public interest must submit to being controlled by public
Wabash case (1886) states could not regulate beyond their borders…prompts establishment of Interstate Commerce Commission
5. Reestablishing Presidential Power Presidency hits low under Johnson and Grant
Later presidents reassert executive power
Hayes ends military Reconstruction
Garfield asserts leadership of his party: killed
Arthur strengthens navy, civil service reform
Cleveland uses veto to curtail federal activities 2/3 of bills presented to him
6. Republicans in Power: the Billion-Dollar Congress 1888--Republicans control both White House and Capitol Hill
Democrats attempt to block Republicans by using “disappearing quorum”
1890--Adoption of Reed rules permits enactment of “billion dollar” program
7. Tariffs, Trusts and Silver 1890--McKinley Tariff raises duties to historic high
By 1893--1 million Union pensions granted
1890--Sherman Anti-Trust Act regulates big business combinations
United States v. E.C. Knight Co.: manufacturing not subject to law
1890--Sherman Silver Purchase Act backs paper money with silver
8. The 1890 Elections Republicans also assert activist government policies on state level
Sunday closing laws
prohibition
mandatory English in public schools
1890--alienated voting blocks turn out Republican legislators
9. The Rise of the Populist Movement Discontented farmers of West and South provide base of support
The National Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union the result
10. The Farm Problem Worldwide agricultural economy causes great fluctuations in supply and demand
Farmers’ complaints
lower prices for crops (actual prosperity rising)
rising railroad rates (rates actually declining)
burdensome mortgages (loans permit improvement)
Conditions of farmers vary by region
General feeling of depression, resentment
11. The Fast-Growing Farmers' Alliance 1875—Southern Alliance begins
Fed up with sharecropping, depleted lands and crop liens
1889—Southern Alliance absorbs Northwestern Alliance
Alliance Captures local Democratic parties in South
After 1890 Runs its own candidates in North and West
12. The Fast-Growing Farmers' Alliance: Ocala Demands System of government warehouses to hold crops for higher prices
Free coinage of silver
Low tariffs
Federal income tax
Direct election of Senators
Regulation of railroads
13. The People's Party Southern Alliance splits from Democrats to form Populist party
Southern Populists recruit African-Americans, give them influential positions
1892--Populist presidential candidate James Weaver draws over one million votes
Alliance wanes after 1892 elections
14. The Crisis of the Depression Economic crisis dominated the 1890s due to expanding too rapidly
Railroads overbuilt, companies grew beyond their markets, farms and businesses went deeply in debt
15. The Panic of 1893 February 1893--failure of major railroad sparks panic on New York Stock Exchange
Investors sell stock to purchase gold
Depleted Treasury shakes confidence
May, 1893-1894--market hits record low, business failures displace 3 million workers…1 in 5 unemployed
1894--corn crop fails…cotton price falls
16. Coxey's Army and the Pullman Strike 1894--Jacob Coxey leads “Coxey’s Army” to Washington to demand relief-jobless to work building roads
Pullman strikes by Eugene Debs’ American Railway Union close Western railroads
President Cleveland suppresses strikes with federal troops
17. The Miners of the Midwest United Mine Workers strike 1894
“Old miners”--English and Irish workers, owners of small family mines (Populist: called for restrictions on immigration)
“New miners”--1880s immigrants from southern and eastern Europe (much more violent)
Strike pits new miners against old
18. A Beleaguered President Cleveland repeals Sherman Silver Purchase Act to remedy Panic of 1893
Repeal fails to stop depression
Repeal makes silver a political issue
Democrats renege on promise of lower tariff
19. Breaking the Party Deadlock Election of 1894 reduces Democrats to a sectional southern organization
Republicans sweep congressional elections
Republicans become majority elsewhere
20. Changing Attitudes Depression of 1893 forces recognition of structural causes of unemployment
Americans accept the need for government intervention to help the poor and jobless
21. “Everybody Works but Father” Women and children paid lower wages, displace men during depression
Employers retain women and children after depression to hold down costs
22. Changing Themes in Literature Depression encourages “realist” school
Mark Twain’s characters speak in dialect
William Dean Howells, Stephen Crane portray grim life of the poor
Naturalists wrote of a cruel and merciless environment that determined human fate
Frank Norris attacks power of big business
Theodore Dreiser presents humans as helpless before vast social, economic forces
23. The Presidential Election of 1896 Free coinage of silver the main issue
boost the money supply
seen as solution to depression
New voting patterns emerged and national policy shifted
24. The Mystique of Silver “Free and independent coinage of silver”
set ratio of silver to gold at 16:1
U.S. mints coin all silver offered to them
U.S. coins silver regardless of other nations’ policies
Silverites believe amount in circulation determines level of economic activity
A moral crusade for the common people
25. Republicans and Gold Candidate: William McKinley
Silverite Republicans defeated on convention floor
Promises gold standard to restore prosperity
26. The Democrats and Silver Candidate: William Jennings Bryan
Free silver promised in "Cross of Gold" speech
Democrats enthusiastic
27. Campaign and Election Populist party endorses Bryan
Bryan offers return to rural, religious U.S.
McKinley defends urban, industrial society
Election is a clear victory for McKinley, utter rout of Populist party
28. The McKinley Administration McKinley takes office at depression’s end
An activist president- “modern president” when dealing with Congress and Press
Dingley Tariff raises rates to record highs
Encouraged government to regulate the effects of industrialism vs. promoting economic growth.
1900--U.S. placed on gold standard
1900--McKinley wins landslide reelection against William Jennings Bryan
29. A Decade’s Dramatic Changes September, 1901--McKinley assassinated
Theodore Roosevelt, “that damned cowboy”, becomes president