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The Progressive Era. 1880s-1920s. A Reaction to Industrialization. P roblems. The Sweat Shop. … ills …. Corruption Scandals Waste. …and troubles. Child Labor Immigratio n. Who were theProgressives. Most were WASPS White Anglo Saxon Protestant
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The Progressive Era 1880s-1920s
Problems The Sweat Shop
…ills… • Corruption • Scandals • Waste
…and troubles. Child Labor Immigration
Who were theProgressives • Most were WASPS • White • Anglo • Saxon • Protestant • Northeastern-Midwest origins/middle class • Do-gooders, busy-bodies middle-class, liberals with college education
Causes Were Many • Reforms -Business, politics, education, labor, sanitation, Gap betw. Rich/poor, and living conditions • Trust-busting • Destruction of urban political machines • Temperance • Unions-Orgaz. Help workers • Immigrants • Food and drugs • Housing, sewers, and conservation
Politics Three Presidents Claimed to be Progressives Theodore Roosevelt 1899-1908 (R-NY) William Howard Taft 1908-1912 (R-OH) Woodrow Wilson 1912-1920 (D-VA)
Public Enemy #1…The Trusts The Octopus
The Robber Barons over Time Slave Master Monarch Monopoly
Robber Barons Milton Pennybags/Mascots Ford/Motor Corp. Carnegie/US Steel Morgan/J.P. Morgan Finance Vanderbilt/Railroads Rockefeller/Standard Oil
Progressive Personalities • The Muckrakers—journalists who exposed the dirty (raked up the muck) • Novelists—Charles Dickens –Oliver Twist • Social Workers—Settlement Houses • Conservationists—National Parks/ forest preserves….
Muckrakers Ida B. Wells/Lynching Ida Tarbell/Standard Oil Nellie Bly/Insane Asylums Helen Hunt/Indians Jacob Riis/Slums
The Novelists Benjamin Franklin Norris— The Octopus—monopolies and their affects on society John Spargo— The Bitter Cry of Children— child labor Upton Sinclair— TheJungle— meat packing and immigrant labor in Chicago
Social Workers Hull House -Jane Addams for “new immigrants” mainly Greeks and Italians. Services: kindergarten, English classes, nutrition, housekeeping, hygiene, recreation, lending library, shelter from domestic violence.
A Place to Hide Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir Not all appreciated Muir
Booker T. Washington • Tuskegee Institute in Alabama • Vocational training • Useful, indispensible • Gradual integration • Work for equal rights • Patience, respect • Influence on M.L. King—passive resistance, non-violent
William Edward Burckhardt DuBois • First Harvard PhD in sociology • Entitled to equality • Demand immediate results • Influence on Malcolm X—byany means necessary
Prohibition/Temperance • Cause of… • Poverty • Domestic violence • Prostitution • Child labor • Crime • Being “Ethnic” • Associated with… • Catholics • Immigrants (German, Irish, Polish, Russians)
Radical Campaign Frances Willard—Evanston, Women’s Christian Temperance League Carrie Nation—Anti-Saloon League, smashes up bars with her hatchet
“Bleeding Heart Liberals” Lincoln, Garfield, and now McKinley, died for your sins (slavery, trusts, imperialism) Guilt by association…lie down with dogs and wake up with fleas…you are known by the company you keep….
Legacy • Graduated Income Tax—Rate depends on income • Direct Election of Senators by people • Prohibition of Alcohol • Women’s Suffrage • Child Labor Laws • Workers Compensation • Compulsory education • FDA_Meat and drug inspection • Anti-trust laws • Hospital, asylum, and prison reform • Civil Rights Movement • Immigration Quotas