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The Progressive Era. The Progressive Era. The Progressive Era —The period of US History between 1890 to 1920 when a great variety of groups were working to bring “ progress ” to American society. …Progressives called for expanded government involvement in fixing society’s problems.
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The Progressive Era
The Progressive Era • The ProgressiveEra—The period of US History between 1890 to 1920 when a great variety of groups were working to bring “progress” to American society. …Progressives called for expanded government involvement in fixing society’s problems. …Some progressive movements included the: • --Nativists • --Prohibitionists • --Purity crusaders • --Political reformers • --Workplace reformers
The Origins of Progressivism • In the last part of the 1800’s… • American cities grew very quickly… • American industries expanded rabidly… • The American population exploded…And national wealth increased greatly. • And also caused: Unemployment, unsafe working conditions and massive political corruption. • Many felt that private efforts to solve society’s problems were insufficient… • And that the government needed to step in. “TR”
Urban Living Conditions • Most workers live in company housing or tenements (cheap apartments). • Poverty, overcrowding, neglect, open sewers, and vermin become common. • Hundreds crammed into spaces built for a few families. • In NYC, 6 in 10 babies died before their first birthday. • Fires often destroyed dozens of city blocks (Great Chicago Fire—18,000 buildings burned). • Many neighborhoods become “Ghettos”, dominated by one particular ethnic group. Aftermath of the Great Chicago Fire
On the West Coast… • The west coast (particularly California) saw an explosion of immigration from Japan and China. • Culturally and physically, they differed greatly from Americans, which made them easy targets… • For discrimination and physical abuse.
The Gulf between the Rich and Poor • In 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held 75% of the national wealth. • Most factory workers earned only a few hundred dollars per year… • While factory owners lived extravagant lifestyles. • This disparity caused many workers to become politically active. Cornelius Vanderbilt
Jacob Riis • Worked as a police reporter on New York’s Lower East Side in 1873… • Wrote a book called “How the Other Half Lives”, which exposed the lives of tenement dwellers. • The book shocked the American public into supporting reform of the tenements. • However, wealthy families continue to flee to the suburbs, making cities concentrations of urban poor.
Five Points, Manhattan (now demolished)
“Bandit’s Roost”, Greenwich Village
Basement Dweller
Factory Work • In most industry, employers paid workers for the amount they produced, not for the time they worked. • Piecework—those who worked fastest earned the most money. • Division of Labor—factory workers performed one small task over and over. • Discipline in factories was very strict… • Fatigue, faulty equipment, careless training, frequent fires and accidents killed 675 workers per week.
Working Families • In urban areas, factory work was a family affair… • Every family member worked in some way. • Children left school at the age of 12 or 13 to go to work… • Children as young as 6 or 7 often had jobs. • Unemployment insurance and government assistance did not exist… • Due to the theory that poverty was the result of personal weakness (social Darwinism).
Workplace Reformers • Workplace reformers demanded that government take an active hand in the American workplace. • Some reforms achieved by workplace reformers included… • Unemployment insurance • Worker’s compensation • Health insurance • The abolition of child labor • Fire-marshal and safety inspections.
The Muckrakers • Most reform and progressive movements relied on the investigation and exposure of society’s problems… • Journalists who alerted the public to wrongdoing in business and politics were called the Muckrakers. • “The Jungle”, by Upton Sinclair—revealed the horrors of the meatpacking industry… • And led to the creation of a federal meat inspection program… • And the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act.
Chicago’s “Packingtown”
Ida Tarbell • Was a progressive-erateacher, author & journalist… • She is known today for her investigative journalism… • In 1904 she published “The History of the Standard Oil Company”… • In which she accused its owner, John D. Rockefeller of using unfair and illegal business practices. • Standard Oil was later targeted by “trust-buster” Teddy Roosevelt and broken up.
Jane Addams & Settlement Houses • One way Progressives worked to improve the lives of the urban poor was the establishment of… • SettlementHouses—community centers that provided social services… • Classes in child care, English lessons, nursery schools, etc. • The most notable was Jane Addams’ Hull House, in Chicago.
State and Federal Reforms • The 17thAmendment—direct election of Senators by the people… • Recall—the ability of voters to remove public officials from office. • The 16thAmendment—authorized Congress to collect income taxes. • The 18thAmendment—Prohibition.
Trust-Busting • Trust—an organization of businesses that functions as a monopoly. • When Roosevelt became president he immediately focused on destroying their power… • To the extent that he became known as the “Trust Buster”. • Some trusts broken up by Roosevelt included: • Standard Oil (Rockefeller’s trust… • The American Tobacco Company, and… • The Beef Trust.
Environmental Protections • The ConservationMovement—to protect and preserve national parks and forests… • Roosevelt was an avid outdoorsman and hunter… • And became the first president to focus on protecting the environment. • In 1905, Roosevelt set aside 200 million acres for national forests, mineral reserves and water projects.
The Taft Administration • In 1904, after his reelection, Roosevelt announced that he would not run for President again… • And handpicked his Secretary of War to be the next Republican nominee. • Taft easily won the election of 1908… • And vowed to continue Roosevelt’s aggressive reform programs… • But he did not follow through on promised reforms… • And this greatly angered Roosevelt.
The Election of 1912 • Roosevelt, still wildly popular, decided to run again… • However, he was dismissed by the Republican Party leaders, who supported Taft. • Forms the Progressive Party and enters the race as a third-party candidate. • Progressive Party nicknamed “The Bull Moose Party” (“I’m fit as a bull moose!”)… • The party platform calls for women’s suffrage; more regulation of business and an end to child labor.
A Four-Way Election • William HowardTaft—Republican candidate… • TheodoreRoosevelt— “Bull Moose” Progressives… • Eugene V.Debs—Socialist party… • WoodrowWilson—Democratic candidate. • Roosevelt and Taft split the Republican vote… • Giving victory to Woodrow Wilson with 42% of the vote.
Woodrow Wilson’s Domestic Policies • Wilson was the former president of Princeton University and a leading intellectual… • Established the Federal Reserve System in 1913—a system that allows member banks to borrow money from the government, helping to prevent bank failures. • Nominated progressive Louis Brandeis to the Supreme Court—the first Jewish justice… • And opposed women’s suffrage.
Susan B. Anthony • Demanded after the Civil War that women be given the same rights as African Americans under the 14th and 15th amendments… • Arrested for civil disobedience when she led a group of women to the polls and insisted on voting… • And she eventually became the most well-known woman’s rights activist in American history.
Views of the Anti-Suffrage Movement • A “women’s place was in the home”… • Women were powerful enough WITHOUT the right to vote… • Giving women the right to vote would “blur the difference between the sexes”… • Women would vote to outlaw liquor as their first action.
Struggle and Victory • Some women’s groups pressed for a constitutional amendment… • Some tried to get individual states to permit women to vote… • Causing a SPLIT in the movement… • When WW1 broke out, women began taking jobs left by men… • Prohibition was passed (liquor interests are out of the fight)… • The 19thAmendment was proposed in by Congress in 1918… • And was ratified in August of 1920.