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Politics, Culture, and Daily Life in the Gilded Age

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Politics, Culture, and Daily Life in the Gilded Age (1865 1900) The Gilded Age The Gilded Age 1873 novel by Mark Twain Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn Crooked ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Politics, Culture, and Daily Life in the Gilded Age


1
Politics, Culture, and Daily Life in the Gilded
Age
  • (1865 1900)

2
The Gilded Age
  • The Gilded Age 1873 novel by Mark Twain
  • Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn
  • Crooked politicians
  • The Spoils System
  • Poverty

3
Conspicuous Consumerism
  • More people working for wages instead of
    themselves
  • More products available
  • R. Macy, Jordan Marsh, Mont. Ward, M. Field,J.
    Wannamaker Department Stores
  • RFD Mail Order Catalogs (like Richard Sears)

4
New Forms of Popular Entertainment
  • Saloons and Ragtime
  • Amusement Parks like Coney Island, NYC
  • Nickelodeons - The Great Train Robbery (1903)
  • Vaudeville Shows - Family Variety Shows
  • Traveling Circuses

5
Popular Sports of the Era
  • Baseball - Cincinnati Red Stockings (1869)
  • Football - Walter Camp - Rugby (1880s)
  • Basketball - Dr. James Naismith (1891)
  • Boxing, Horseracing, Ice Skating, Bikes

6
Exit Slip Popular Culture during the Gilded Age
  • T or F Conspicuous Consumerism exists when
    demand is low for manufactured goods.
  • T or F Movie theatres began to appear in America
    during the Gilded Age.
  • T or F Ragtime appeared as a popular form of
    music during the Gilded Age.
  • T or F Basketball was the most popular sport in
    American during the Gilded Age.

7
African American Voting Restrictions
  • Ku Klux Klan (1865)
  • Jim Crow Laws
  • Poll Taxes
  • Property Ownership
  • Literacy Tests (separate tests for whites and
    blacks)
  • Grandfather Clauses

8
Booker T. Washington
  • Tuskegee Inst. (1881) in Alabama
  • Vocational Skills
  • Accommodate Racism in exchange for Economic
    Equality
  • George W. Carver
  • Up From Slavery (1901) Biography

9
W.E.B. DuBois
  • PhD from Harvard (1895)-1st Af. Am.
  • Niagara Movement (1905)
  • NAACP (1910)
  • Advocated immediate equality for Af. Am.
  • Hated Washingtons Atlanta Compromise
  • and Accommodation.

10
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
  • Upheld the Jim Crow Laws
  • Separate but Equal didnt violate 14th
    Amendment
  • Common in the North too
  • Not overturned until 1954

11
Exit Slip The Age of Jim Crow
  • 1. All of the following were passed in Southern
    states to keep African-Americans from voting
    except
  • a. poll taxes. b. literacy tests. c.
    amendments.
  • 2. Booker T. Washington said the 1 concern for
    African-Americans should be ___________.
  • a. fighting racism b. vocational skills c.
    Religion
  • 3. W.E.B. DuBois strongly ________ with
    Washington.
  • a. Agreed b. Disagreed
  • 4. The landmark court case that established the
    doctrine of separate but equal in 1896 was
  • a. Brown v. Topeka b. Tinker v. Des
    Moines
  • c. Plessy v. Ferguson d. Gibbons v. Ogden

12
The Rise of Political Machines
  • Goal was to keep their political parties in power
  • Spoils System, Patronage, Graft
  • Ran by bosses appealed to immigrants
  • Boss Tweed and Tammany Hall, NYC
  • Cartoonist Thomas Nast

13
Reforming the Spoils System
  • 1829- Andrew Jackson
  • Dem. Rep. both were guilty
  • Grantism
  • Pres. Hayes begun reform in 1877, but lost in 1880

14
Arthur Ends the Spoils System
  • James Garfield (R) elected in 1880
  • July 2, 1881-Killed by Charles Guiteau
  • Lived for 3 months
  • (VP) Chester Arthur is President
  • Pendleton Civil Service Act (1883)

15
Exit Slip The Spoils System
  • 1. The most famous political machine of the era
    was ___________ Hall in New York.
  • a. Carnegie b. Tammany c. Cooper d.
    Alumni
  • 2. The political cartoonist who helped bring
    Boss Tweed to justice was __________.
  • a. Charles Schultz b. Chester Arthur c.
    Thomas Nast
  • 3. The term Grantism refers to __________.
  • a. Raising taxes b. Honesty c. Bravery
    d. Scandal
  • 4. The second U.S. President assassinated was
    _________.
  • a. James Garfield b. William McKinley c.
    U.S. Grant
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