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Title: U.S. History Chapter 17 Notes


1
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.

2
Section 1The Origins of Progressivism
  • Political, economic, and social change in late
    19th century America leads to broad progressive
    reforms

3
The Progressives
  • 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

4
The Progressives
  • Progressives had four major goals
  • - Protecting Social Welfare
  • - Promoting Moral Improvement
  • - Creating Economic Reform
  • - Fostering Efficiency

5
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 womens hours

6
Protecting Social Welfare
  • 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
  • - Womans Christian Temperance Union spearheaded
    prohibition crusade

7
Creating Economic Reform
  • 1893 - panic prompted many people to doubt
    capitalism
  • Many became socialists
  • - 1901 - Eugene V. Debbs helped organize the
    American Socialist Party

8
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

9
Fostering Efficiency
  • 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

10
Fostering Efficiency
  • Business leaders began using Scientific
    management studies to improve efficiency in the
    workplace
  • - Scientific management - time and motion
    studies applied to workplace

11
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

12
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13
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

14
State Reformers
  • 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

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16
Protecting Working Children
  • Child workers received lower wages
  • - Small hands handled small parts better
  • - Families need childrens wages
  • National Child Labor Committee gathered evidence
    of harsh conditions
  • - Accidents diseases caused by overwork

17
Protecting Working Children
  • Labor unions argue childrens 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

18
Efforts to Limit Working Hours
  • 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

19
Reforming Elections
  • Oregon adopted secret ballot, initiative,
    referendum, recall
  • Initiativebill proposed by people, not
    lawmakers, put on ballots
  • Referendumvoters, not legislature, decide if
    initiative becomes law
  • Recallvoters 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

20
Section 2
  • Women in Public LifeAs a result of social and
    economic change, many women enter public life as
    workers and reformers.

21
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

22
Women in the Work Force
  • After 1900 20 of women held jobs
  • - 25 in manufacturing
  • - 50 industrial workers in garment trade
  • - Earned half of mens wages
  • - Jobs in offices, stores, classrooms require
    high school education
  • - Business schools trained bookkeepers,
    stenographers, typists

23
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

24
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 womens colleges
  • 50 college-educated women never married many
    work on social reforms

25
Women's Suffrage
  • 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

26
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

27
Section 3Teddy Roosevelts Square Deal.
  • As president, Theodore Roosevelt works to give
    citizens a Square Deal through progressive reforms

28
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

29
Roosevelt's Career
  • 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 couldnt control him, urged
    him to run for vice-president
  • 1900 William McKinley won reelection
  • - Roosevelt became Vice President

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31
Roosevelt Becomes President
  • 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

32
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)

33
The Square Deal
  • Square Deal - Roosevelts progressive reforms
  • Roosevelt felt the government should act as an
    umpire
  • - Make sure everyone got a "square deal"

34
Using Federal Power
  • 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

35
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

36
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

37
Trust Busting
  • 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

38
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

39
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 Sinclairs The Jungle - unsanitary
    conditions in meatpacking
  • Roosevelt commission investigates, backs up
    Sinclairs account
  • Forced government to pass the laws

40
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

41
Conservation
  • 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

42
The Progressives and Race
  • 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

43
African Americans Organize
  • 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)

44
African Americans Organize
  • 1910 - The National Urban League was formed
  • - It focused on improving economic conditions
    for urban African Americans

45
Section 4Progressivism Under Taft
  • Tafts ambivalent approach to progressive reform
    leads to a split in the Republican Party and the
    loss of the presidency to the Democrats.

46
Changes in Leadership
  • Progressives agenda became Americas plan
  • 1908 - William Howard Taft elected as president
  • - Roosevelt's hand picked successor

47
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48
Tafts Presidency
  • Had cautious progressive agenda
  • - Chose to consolidate ratter than expand
    Roosevelts reforms
  • Received gets little credit for successes
  • - Busted over 90 trusts during his 4-year term
  • Didnt 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

49
Tafts Presidency
  • 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

50
The Republican Party Splits
  • Republicans split over Tafts 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

51
The Bull Moose Party
  • Roosevelt decided to run for president again
  • Taft people outmaneuvered Roosevelts for
    nomination in the 1912 Republican convention
  • Progressives formed Bull Moose Party nominated
    Roosevelt
  • Progressives called for
  • - More voter participation in government
  • - Woman suffrage
  • - Labor legislation, business controls

52
The Bull Moose Party
  • Roosevelt Taft ran against Democrat Woodrow
    Wilson,
  • - Wilson was a reform governor from NJ

53
Election of 1912
  • Wilson endorsed progressive platform called the
    New Freedom
  • - Wanted stronger antitrust laws, banking
    reform, lower tariffs
  • - called all monopolies evil
  • Roosevelt wanted oversight of big business
  • - Didnt think all monopolies were bad
  • Socialist Party candidate Eugene V. Debs wanted
    to end capitalism
  • Wilson won great electoral victory got majority
    in Congress

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55
Section 5Wilsons New Freedom
  • Woodrow Wilson establishes a strong reform agenda
    as a progressive leader.

56
Wilson and Big business
  • Woodrow Wilson shared the same views as Roosevelt
  • He felt that "good trust" didn't exist
  • He focused on attacking trusts, tariffs, high
    finance
  • Clayton Antitrust Act - stopped companies from
    buying stock to form a monopoly
  • - Stated that labor unions farming
    organizations had the right to exist
  • - Strikes peaceful protest and the collection
    of strike benefits became legal
  • - Ended injunctions against strikers unless
    threaten irreparable damage
  • Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914 -
    Established new watchdog agency FTC
  • - investigated regulatory violations
  • - ended unfair business practices

57
A New Tax System
  • Wilson pushed for Underwood Act to substantially
    reduce tariffs
  • Businesses tried to get Congress to vote it down
  • Set precedent of giving State of the Union
    message in person
  • Used bully pulpit to gain passage
  • Government had to replace revenue lost by
    lowering tariffs
  • 1913 - Sixteenth Amendment legalized graduated
    federal income tax
  • - 1 to 6
  • - Government earned a lot more money from income
    tax than it ever earned from tariffs

58
Federal Reserve System
  • Nation needed a way to strengthen the way banks
    were run as well as control the amount of money
    in circulation
  • 1913 Federal Reserve Act divided the nation
    into 12 banks and established a regional bank in
    each district
  • These banks loaned served other banks in the
    region
  • - Issued paper money
  • - loaned money to banks in trouble
  • Federal Reserve System - Brought private banking
    system under federal control

59
Women Win Suffrage
  • College-educated women spread suffrage message to
    working-class
  • College Equal Suffrage League went door-to-door,
    took trolley tours gave speeches at stops
  • Carrie Chapman Catt, head of NAWSA, stressed
    organization lobbying

60
Women Win Suffrage
  • National Womans Party aggressively pressured for
    suffrage amendment
  • Work of patriotic women in war effort influenced
    politicians
  • 1920 - Nineteenth Amendment granted women right
    to vote

61
The Limits of Progressivism
  • Wilson disappointed Progressives who wanted
    social reforms concerning civil rights
  • Won support of NAACP for favoring civil rights
    when he was a candidate running for president
  • Opposed anti -lynching legislation after he
    became president
  • Appointed fellow white Southerners to cabinet who
    extended segregation
  • Segregated white and black federal employees
  • NAACP felt betrayed which resulted in a rift
    with he president

62
The Twilight of Progressivism
  • Outbreak of World War I distracted most Americans
  • Reform efforts stalled
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