PROGRESSIVE ERA 1890s-1920

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PROGRESSIVE ERA 1890s-1920

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Clayton Anti-Trust Act (1914) Strengthened the Sherman Act with an anti-trust provision that prevented companies from acquiring stock from another company. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PROGRESSIVE ERA 1890s-1920


1
PROGRESSIVE ERA1890s-1920
  • A21w
  • 9.2.13

2
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS
  • Who were the Progressives?
  • What reforms did they seek?
  • How successful were Progressive Era reforms in
    the period 1890-1920?
  • Consider political change, social change
    (industrial conditions, urban life, women,
    prohibition)

3
ORIGINS OF PROGRESSIVE REFORM
4
Progressivism
WHEN? Progressive Reform Era
1920s
1890s
1901
1917
  • WHO? Progressives
  • urban middle-class managers professionals
    women
  • WHY? Address the problems arising from
  • industrialization (big business, labor strife)
  • urbanization (slums, political machines,
    corruption)
  • immigration (ethnic diversity)
  • inequality social injustice (women racism)

5
Progressivism
  • WHAT are their goals?
  • Democracy government accountable to the people
  • Regulation of corporations monopolies
  • Social justice workers, poor, minorities
  • Environmental protection
  • Moral development
  • HOW?
  • Government (laws, regulations, programs)
  • Efficiency
  • value experts, use of scientific study to
    determine the best solution
  • HOW MUCH?????

6
Fostering Efficiency
  • Many Progressive leaders put their faith in
    scientific principles to make society better.
  • In industry, Frederick Taylor began using time
    and motion studies to improve factory efficiency.
    Taylorism became an industry fad as factories
    sought to complete each task quickly.

7
Origins of Progressivism
  • Muckrakers
  • Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives (1890)
  • Ida Tarbell The History of the Standard Oil
    Co. (1902)
  • Lincoln Steffens The Shame of the Cities (1904)

Ida Tarbell
Lincoln Steffens
8
MUNICIPAL STATE REFORMS
9
MUNICIPAL REFORM
  • municipal reform
  • utilities - water, gas, electricity, trolleys
  • council-manager plan (Dayton, 1913)

Shoe line - Bowery men with gifts from ward boss
Tim Sullivan, February, 1910
10
MUNICIPAL REFORM
strong mayor system
MAYOR
COUNCIL MEMBER
COUNCIL MEMBER
COUNCIL MEMBER
COUNCIL MEMBER
COUNCIL MEMBER
CITY SERVICES
  • council-manager plan (Dayton, 1913)

COUNCIL MEMBER
COUNCIL MEMBER
COUNCIL MEMBER
COUNCIL MEMBER
COUNCIL MEMBER
CITY MANAGER
CITY SERVICES
11
STATE POLITICAL REFORM
  • secret ballots
  • direct primary
  • Robert M. LaFollette (regulation of big business
    and the Wisconsin Idea a partnership between
    government and experts at University of
    Wisconsin)
  • Initiative
  • Referendum
  • Recall
  • Seventeenth Amendment (1913)

Robert M. LaFollette, Wisconsin Governor 1900-06
12
Direct Election Of Senators
  • Before 1913, each states legislature had chosen
    U.S. senators. To force senators to be more
    responsive to the public, Progressives pushed for
    the popular election of senators.
  • As a result, Congress passed the 17th Amendment
    in 1913.

13
STATE SOCIAL REFORMS
  • professional social workers
  • Health codes
  • Zoning laws
  • Building codes
  • settlement houses - education, culture, day care
  • child labor laws
  • Enable education advancement for working class
    children

14
STATE SOCIAL REFORMS
  • workplace labor reforms
  • eight-hour work day
  • workers compensation laws
  • minimum wage laws
  • child labor laws
  • unionization
  • improved safety health conditions in factories

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, 1911
15
  • http//trianglefire.ilr.cornell.edu/legacy/index.h
    tml
  • http//www.bing.com/videos/search?qtriangleshirt
    waistfactorystoryofusFORMVIRE2adltstrictv
    iewdetailmid7ABC164FF736F2728A077ABC164FF736F27
    28A07
  • After watching the video clip and researching
    the website above, answer the following
    questions.
  • If you were prosecuting a case against the
    Triangle Shirtwaist factory, what evidence would
    you use to show that the owners were culpable in
    this tragedy? (Provide 4 examples)
  • If you were a state legislator, what new
    laws/regulations would you support to protect
    people from similar disasters? (Provide at least
    3 examples)

16
State Social Reform Child Labor
Breaker Boys Pennsylvania, 1911
Child Laborers in Indiana Glass Works, Midnight,
Indiana. 1908
Shrimp pickers in Peerless Oyster Co. Bay St.
Louis, Miss., March 3, 1911
Child Laborer, Newberry, S.C. 1908
17
Settlement Houses
  • Hull-House Jane Addams

Jane Addams (1905)
Hull-House Complex in 1906
18
Promoting Moral Development
  • Some reformers felt that the answer to societys
    problems was personal behavior. They proposed
    such reforms as prohibition.

19
TEMPERANCE
  • Groups wishing to ban alcohol
  • Womens Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
  • Anti-Saloon League

Frances Willard (1838-98), leader of the WCTU
Anti-Saloon League Campaign, Dayton
20
TEMPERANCE PROHIBITION
  • Eighteenth Amendment

Prohibition on the Eve of the 18th Amendment, 1919
21
SOCIALISM
  • ALTERNATIVES

22
Economic Reform
  • The Panic of 1893 prompted some Americans to
    question the capitalist economic system.
  • As a result, some workers embraced socialism.
    Eugene Debs organized the American Socialist
    Party in 1901.

Debs encouraged workers to reject American
capitalism
23
SOCIALISM
  • Industrial Workers of the World (IWW or
    Wobblies)

Socialists parade, May Day, 1910
Eugene V. Debs
24
NATIONAL REFORM
  • Roosevelt, Taft Wilson as Progressive presidents

25
ESSENTIAL QUESTION
  • How effective were Progressive Era reformers and
    the federal government in bringing about reform
    at the national level in the period 1900-1920?

26
Assassination of President McKinley, Sept 6, 1901
27
Theodore Roosevelt the accidental
PresidentRepublican (1901-1909)
(The New-York Historical Society)
28
Roosevelts Square Deal
  • Formed upon 3 basic ideas conservation of
    natural resources, control of corporations, and
    consumer protection. It aimed to help middle
    class citizens, and involved attacking plutocracy
    and bad trusts while protecting business from the
    most extreme demands of organized labor.

Anthracite miners at Scranton, Pennsylvania, 1900
29
Trust-Busting
  • By 1900, trusts legal bodies created to hold
    stock in many companies controlled 80 of U.S.
    industries.
  • Roosevelt filed 44 antitrust suits under the
    Sherman Anti-Trust Act

30
Roosevelt the trust-buster
  • Northern Securities Company (1904)
  • Hepburn Railroad Regulation Act (1906)
    strengthened Interstate Commerce Commission

ONE SEES HIS FINISH UNLESS GOOD GOVERNMENT
RETAKES THE SHIP
31
Consumer Protection
  • Upton Sinclairs The Jungle
  • Meat Inspection Act (1906)
  • Pure Food and Drug Act (1906)

Chicago Meatpacking Workers, 1905
"A nauseating job, but it must be done"
32
Pure Food and Drug Act
  • In response to unsubstantiated claims and
    unwholesome products, Congress passed the Pure
    Food and Drug Act in 1906. The Act halted the
    sale of contaminated foods and medicines and
    called for truth in labeling.

33
Roosevelt Conservation
  • Used the Forest Reserve Act of 1891
  • U.S. Forest Service (1906)
  • Gifford Pinchot
  • White House conference on conservation (1908)
  • John Muir

Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot, 1907
Theodore Roosevelt John Muir at Yosemite1906
34
CONSERVATIONNational Parks and Forests
35
William Howard TaftPresident 1909-13Republican
Postcard with Taft cartoon
36
Tafts Progressive Accomplishments
  • trust-busting
  • forest and oil reserves
  • Sixteenth Amendment
  • BUT Caused split in Republican Party
  • Payne-Aldrich Tariff (1909)
  • Pinchot-Ballinger Controversy

(Taft has) completely twisted around the
policies I advocated and acted upon.
-Theodore Roosevelt
37
Election of 1912
  • Woodrow Wilson
  • Progressive Party (Roosevelts Bull Moose
    Party)
  • New Nationalism Roosevelts
    political philosophy only a powerful federal
    government could regulate the economy and
    guarantee social justice, and the executive power
    should be the steward of the public welfare.

Woodrow Wilson
Theodore Roosevelt cartoon, March 1912
38
1912 Presidential Election
39
Wilson Reforms (1913-1916)
  • New Freedom platform attacked the Triple Wall
    of Privilege tariffs, banks, and trusts.
  • Underwood Simmons Tariff lowered tariff rates,
    helping farmers
  • Federal Reserve Act established the Federal
    Reserve System, the central banking system of the
    U.S.A.
  • Federal Trade Commission Act
  • Clayton Anti-Trust Act
  • Keating-Owen Act banned items made by child labor
    from being sold in interstate commerce. (Struck
    down as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court
    later 2 yrs later.)

Wilson at the peak of his power.
40
Clayton Anti-Trust Act (1914)
  • Strengthened the Sherman Act with an anti-trust
    provision that prevented companies from acquiring
    stock from another company.
  • Supported workers unions by declaring strikes,
    boycotts, and peaceful picketing perfectly legal.

41
Federal Reserve Act (1913)
  • The Federal Reserve Act intended to establish
    economic stability through the introduction of a
    Central Bank, which would be in charge of
    monetary policy in the U.S. The Federal Reserve
    Act made currency more flexible.
  • The Federal Reserve Act gave the 12 Federal
    Reserve banks the ability to manage the money
    supply in order to ensure economic stability.
  • The Fed also has the power to adjust the discount
    rate (impacting interest rates) and to buy sell
    U.S. treasuries.

42
Federal Reserve System
  • Federal Reserve Act

43
WOMEN SUFFRAGE
44
ESSENTIAL QUESTION
  • To what extent did economic and political
    developments as well as the assumptions about the
    nature of women affect the position of American
    women during the period 1890-1925?

45
Women Lead Reform
  • Many of the leading Progressive reformers were
    women. Middle and upper class women entered the
    public sphere after graduating from the new
    womens colleges.

Colleges like Vassar and Smith allowed women to
excel
46
WOMEN
  • womens professions
  • new woman
  • clubwomen

A local club for nurses was formed in New York
City in 1894. Here the club members are pictured
in their clubhouse reception area. (Photo
courtesy of the Women's History and Resource
Center, General Federation of Women's Clubs.)
The Women's Club of Madison, Wisconsin conducted
classes in food,nutrition, and sewing for recent
immigrants. (Photo courtesy of the Women's
History and Resource Center, General Federation
of Women's Clubs.)
47
Three-Part Strategy for Winning Suffrage
  • Suffragettes tried three approaches to winning
    the vote
  • Convincing state legislatures to adopt the vote.
  • Pursuing court cases to test 14th Amendment.
  • Pushing for national Constitutional amendment.

48
Womens Suffrage
  • National American Woman Suffrage Association
    (NAWSA)
  • Carrie Chapman Catt

Ohio Woman Suffrage Headquarters, Cleveland, 1912
49
  • http//womenshistory.about.com/od/suffrageoverview
    /a/suffrage_timeline.htm
  • http//watchdocumentary.org/watch/crash-course-us-
    history-episode-31-womens-suffrage-video_89855481d
    .html

50
Woman suffrage before 1920
51
Womens Suffrage
  • Alice Paul
  • National Womans Party
  • Nineteenth Amendment
  • Equal Rights Amendment

Suffragette Banner 1918
19th Amendment
National Womans Party members picketing in front
of the White House, 1917
(All Library of Congress)
52
RACE RELATIONS
53
Limits of Progressivism
  • While the Progressive era was responsible for
    many important reforms, it failed to make gains
    for African Americans. Like Roosevelt and Taft,
    Wilson retreated on Civil Rights when he entered
    office.

The KKK reached a membership of 4.5 million in
the 1920s
54
Black Population, 1920
55
ESSENTIAL QUESTION
  • Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois offered
    different strategies for dealing with the
    problems of poverty and discri-mination faced by
    black Americans at the end of the nineteenth and
    beginning of the twentieth centuries. How
    appropriate were each of these strategies
    (considering the context in which each was
    developed)?

56
African-Americans
  • Booker T. Washington
  • W.E.B. Du Bois
  • Niagara Movement
  • talented tenth
  • NAACP

W.E.B. Du Bois
Booker T. Washington
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