Title: Pivotal Election of 1896
1Pivotal Election of 1896
- William Jennings Bryan, Cross of Gold Speech
- Fusion Ticket with Demos, Populists
2Pivotal Election of 1896
- William Jennings Bryan, Cross of Gold Speech
- Fusion Ticket with Demos, Populists
- William McKinley, Republicans
3Why Bryan Lost in 1896
- Little Appeal to Many Industrial Workers
- Little Appeal to Middle Class
4Era of Progressive Reform
- American Politics and Reform, 1900-1920
5Middle-Class in 1890sSense of Chaos
- Big Business and Labor Locked in Violent Conflict
6Middle-Class in 1890sSense of Chaos
- Big Business and Labor Locked in Violent Conflict
- Populists Revolting in the Countryside Radical
Ideas Gaining Ground?
7Middle-Class in 1890sSense of Chaos
- Big Business and Labor Locked in Violent
Conflict. - Populists Revolting in the Countryside.
- Trusts Corrupting Politics
8Middle-Class in 1890sSense of Chaos
- Big Business and Labor Locked in Violent
Conflict. - Populists Revolting in the Countryside.
- Trusts Corrupting Politics
- Immigration Transforming Cities
9One Response ProgressivismA Search For Order
- Broad Reform Movement with Many Strands
- Urban, Middle Class
- Government Can Solve Problems
- Believers in Science, Mass Organization (Big
Business Here to Stay???). - Social Justice (Minimum Wage, Shorter Working
Hours) - Reforming Democracy
10Jon Stewart and Glen Beck on Progressivism
11Whats the Point of the Clip?
- Progressivism is still important more than a
century later! - Progressivism has roots in even earlier notions
of the Public Good. - Conservatives are distrustful of many types of
collectivism
12Progressive Response to Immigration Scope of
Immigration
- 1890-1920 18 million immigrants (1910 13
percent of population foreign born).
13Scope of Immigration
- 1890-1920 18 million immigrants (1910 13
percent of population foreign born. - Shift to Southern, Eastern Europe
14Scope of Immigration
- 1890-1920 18 million immigrants (1910 13
foreign born). - Shift to Southern, Eastern Europe
- Role of Big Business
15Why was immigration viewed as a problem?
- Religious intolerance and racism
The Last Yankee (1880)
16Why was immigration viewed as a problem?
- Religious intolerance and racism
- Fears of job competition
17Why was immigration viewed as a problem?
- Religious intolerance and racism
- Fears of job competition
- Fears of political radicalism
18Why was immigration viewed as a problem?
- Religious intolerance and racism
- Fears of job competition
- Fears of political radicalism
- Political machines (Film Clip)
19Was Boss Tweed a Hero or a Villain?
- Hero (Yea!)
- Villain (Boo!)
20Jane Addams and Social Justice Progressives
- Addams college-educated, upper-middle-class
background - Frustrated ambitions and strong sense of social
obligation - Ellen Gates Starr Social Gospel
- Settlement Home Movement Hull House (1889)
Jane Addams
21Activities of Settlement Homes
- Housing and classes for immigrants
22Activities of Settlement Homes
- Housing and classes for immigrants
- Legislative reforms child labor, public
playgrounds, protection for women factory workers
23Middle-class reformers and working-class
immigrants sometimes clashed
- Prohibition antagonizes immigrants
24Middle-class reformers and working-class
immigrants sometimes clashed
- Prohibition antagonizes immigrants
- Movie Censorship
25Middle-class reformers and working-class
immigrants sometimes clashed
- Prohibition antagonizes immigrants
- Movie Censorship
- Child Labor Laws and Protective Legislation