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U.S. History Chapter 17 Notes. The Progressive Era Amid great political and social change, women gain a larger public role and lead the call for reform. President Theodore Roosevelt dubs his reform policies a Square Deal. Section 1 The Origins of Progressivism.
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U.S. History Chapter 17 Notes The Progressive EraAmid great political and social change, women gain a larger public role and lead the call for reform. President Theodore Roosevelt dubs his reform policies a Square Deal.
Section 1The Origins of Progressivism Political, economic, and social change in late 19th century America leads to broad progressive reforms
Early 1900s, middle-class reformers addressed problems of 1890s Different reform efforts collectively called progressive movement Reformers aimed to restore economic opportunity & correct injustice by: - protecting social welfare & promoting moral improvement - creating economic reform & fostering efficiency The Progressives
The Progressives • Progressives had four major goals - Protecting Social Welfare - Promoting Moral Improvement - Creating Economic Reform - Fostering Efficiency
Protecting Social Welfare • Wanted to help people deal with the harsh conditions of industrialization - Social Gospel & settlement houses inspired other reform groups • Florence Kelley – became a political activist advocate for women & children - Helped pass law prohibiting child labor & limiting women’s hours
Some believed that morality rather than the workplace held the key to improving the lives of the poor - Felt poor should uplift selves by improving own behavior Prohibition - banning of alcoholic drinks - Woman’s Christian Temperance Union spearheaded prohibition crusade Protecting Social Welfare
1893 - panic prompted many people to doubt capitalism Many became socialists - 1901 - Eugene V. Debbs helped organize the American Socialist Party Creating Economic Reform
Journalists who exposed corruption in politics & business became known as Muckrakers - Ida Tarbell attacked John D. Rockefeller & Standard Oil for using cut throat businesses practices to eliminate competition Creating Economic Reform
Many progressive leaders used experts & science to make society & the workplace more efficient Louis D. Brandeis used social scientists’ & data to argue the cost of working long hours for the both the individual & society Fostering Efficiency
Business leaders began using Scientific management studies to improve efficiency in the workplace - Scientific management - time and motion studies applied to workplace Fostering Efficiency
Fostering Efficiency Assembly lines were used to speed up production - Made people work like machines - Caused higher worker turnover Henry Ford reduced workday to 8 hours & paid employees $5 a day to prevent turnover
Cleaning Up Local Government • Reformers tried to make government efficient & responsive to voters • Some cities adopted government by commission of experts • Many used council-manager - people elected council that appoints manager
Many reforms were made at the state level Robert M La Follette led the way after he was elected governor of Wisconsin - Passed laws to regulate railroads and banks - Also passed civil service laws Other states followed Wisconsin's example State Reformers
Child workers received lower wages - Small hands handled small parts better - Families need children’s wages National Child Labor Committee gathered evidence of harsh conditions - Accidents & diseases caused by overwork Protecting Working Children
Labor unions argue children’s wages lower all wages Groups pressed government to ban child labor & cut hours Convinced most states to pass legislation banning child labor and setting maximum hours Protecting Working Children
Muller v. Oregon -Court upheld limiting women to 10-hour workday Bunting v. Oregon - upheld 10-hour workday for men Reformers won workers’ compensation for families of injured & killed Efforts to Limit Working Hours
Reforming Elections • Oregon adopted secret ballot, initiative, referendum, recall • 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 • Direct Election of Senators • Became law in 1913 (17th amendment
Section 2 Women in Public LifeAs a result of social and economic change, many women enter public life as workers and reformers.
Women in the Work Force • Only middle-, upper-class women could devote themselves to home & family • Poor women usually had to work for wages outside home • Roles of Farm Women on Southern, & Midwestern farms remained the same - Performed household tasks, raised livestock, & help with crops
After 1900 – 20 % of women held jobs - 25% in manufacturing - 50% industrial workers in garment trade - Earned half of men’s wages - Jobs in offices, stores, classrooms require high school education - Business schools trained bookkeepers, stenographers, & typists Women in the Work Force
Women in the Work Force • 1870 - 70% of employed women did domestic work • - Many African-American, immigrant women do domestic labor • - married immigrants took in piecework, or cared for boarders
Women Lead Reform • Many female industrial workers sought to reform working conditions • Women formed cultural clubs that sometimes became reform groups • Many women who were active in public life had attended new women’s colleges • 50% college-educated women never married & many work on social reforms
Women reformers targeted workplace, housing, education, food, & drugs National Association of Colored Women (NACW) - Goal was the moral education of the race was with which they were identified -Managed nurseries reading rooms, & kindergartens Susan B. Anthony of National American Woman Suffrage Assoc. (NAWSA) - worked for woman suffrage, or right to vote Women's Suffrage
A Three-Part Strategy for Suffrage Convince state legislatures to give women right to vote Test 14th Amendment - states lost representation if they denied men vote Push for constitutional amendment to give women the vote Women's Suffrage
Section 3Teddy Roosevelt’s Square Deal. As president, Theodore Roosevelt works to give citizens a Square Deal through progressive reforms
New Reformers • Led by Republican Teddy Roosevelt (man of action) • 1st challenged the power of corrupt money - Called Jay Gould a crook (no one else had the courage) - Gould was one of the most powerful men in America - Made fortune with crooked railroad deals • This gained Roosevelt popularity
Fought against Spain in Cuba (Rough Riders) Became governor of New York - Tried to clean up government - Pushed through a civil service law - Hired qualified people NY political bosses couldn’t control him,& urged him to run for vice-president 1900 – William McKinley won reelection - Roosevelt became Vice President Roosevelt's Career
McKinley shot in Buffalo Teddy Roosevelt became youngest person to hold office (age 42) His leadership & publicity campaigns helped create modern presidency Supports federal government role when states do not solve problems concerning national welfare Roosevelt Becomes President
Public loved Roosevelt (1st to use bully pulpit) - Called him Teddy - He refused to shoot a bear cub while on a hunting trip - Resulted in new toy (the teddy bear) Roosevelt Becomes President
The Square Deal • Square Deal - Roosevelt’s progressive reforms • Roosevelt felt the government should act as an umpire - Make sure everyone got a "square deal"
Trust busting 1902 Coal Strike - Coal reserves were low - Roosevelt forced both sides to accept arbitration (3rd party decides dispute) - Each side received some of what it wanted - Sets principle of federal intervention when strike threatens public - Other presidents had sent troops to end strikes Using Federal Power
Using Federal Power • Railroad Regulation - 1887 – Interstate Commerce Act established the Interstate Commerce Commission to prevent railroads from colluding to fix high prices (ICC too weak to enforce law) - Roosevelt pushed for federal regulation to control abuses - Elkins Act -stopped rebates & sudden rate changes - Hepburn Act - limited free railroad passes & enabled ICC to set maximum railroad rates
Trust Busting • Many big businesses had formed trust • - Controlled prices • This had continued in spite of the Sherman Antirust Act of 1890 - Act made it illegal for corporations to gain complete control of a type of business - Had not been enforced • By 1900, - trusts control about 80 % of U.S. industries • Roosevelt wanted to curb trusts that
hurt public interest Roosevelt began to enforce the Sherman Antitrust Act - 1st target was the railroads Biggest target was Standard Oil - 1911 - Supreme Court ordered that it be broken up into smaller companies Trust Busting
Attack on laissez Faire • Laissez faire - hands off approach towards business • Business leaders were shocked by Roosevelt's actions - They felt that government should not interfere with the economy - That the economy performed best when people were left free to create businesses and hire workers • Progressives felt that laissez faire created high prices and low wages
The Muckrakers • Food, drug advertisements made false claims& medicines were often unsafe • Muckrakers - Writers who exposed corruption in American society • Exposed unhappy practices in the food industry • Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle - unsanitary conditions in meatpacking • Roosevelt commission investigates, backs up Sinclair’s account • Forced government to pass the laws
The Muckrakers • Pure Food and Drug Act halted sale of • contaminated food & medicine - required truth in labeling FDA • Roosevelt pushes for Meat Inspection Act - dictated sanitary requirements - Created federal meat inspection program (USDA) • These laws gave government inspectors the power to enforce safety and health standards in the making and selling of food and medicine
Conservation - the controlled use natural resources Roosevelt believed that water and timber resources should be maintained for the benefit of all people He transferred 150 million acres of federal land into the national parks system He urged the creation of national parks - Yellowstone, Yosemite, & The Grand Canyon Conservation
Roosevelt invited Booker T. Washington to the White House Other than that the Progressive's record on racism was terrible - They worked to keep Jewish out of universities - Japanese immigrants were denied the right to own land in California - Racism resulted in increased segregation in the south The Progressives and Race
African Americans looked to new leaders to help them fight discrimination W.E.B. Du Bois believed that African Americans should focus on legality - Met with other black leader at Niagara Falls (Niagara Movement) - Formed the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) African Americans Organize
African Americans Organize • 1910 - The National Urban League was formed - It focused on improving economic conditions for urban African Americans
Section 4Progressivism Under Taft Taft’s ambivalent approach to progressive reform leads to a split in the Republican Party and the loss of the presidency to the Democrats.
Progressives agenda became America’s plan 1908 - William Howard Taft elected as president - Roosevelt's hand picked successor Changes in Leadership
Taft’s Presidency • Had cautious progressive agenda - Chose to consolidate ratter than expand Roosevelt’s reforms • Received gets little credit for successes - Busted over 90 trusts during his 4-year term • Didn’t not use presidential bully pulpit to arouse public opinion • Angered progressives when he signed the The Payne-Aldrich Tariff - compromise bill that called for moderate tariffs - Progressives thought he abandoned low tariffs & progressivism
Disputing Public Lands Angered conservationists when he appointed Richard A. Ballinger as secretary of the interior - Ballinger put reserved lands in public domain Interior official who protested action was fired Gifford Pinchot head of U.S. Forest Service - testified against Ballinger - He was also fired by Taft Taft’s Presidency
The Republican Party Splits • Republicans split over Taft’s support of House Speaker Joseph Cannon • Cannon weakened progressive agenda • Many Progressives allied with Democrats • Democrats gained control of the House of Representatives in the 1910 midterm election