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Progressivism

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Title: The American Promise Author: Roark et al. Last modified by: MaryJo Created Date: 12/24/2002 1:08:46 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Progressivism


1
Progressivism
  • Early twentieth-century reform movement that
    pushed the government to resolve problems created
    by urban industrialism
  • problems like poverty, racism, child labor, vice,
    and exploitation of labor.

2
How did it get started?
  • At the grassroots level, in the cities, in
    reaction to the Gilded Age excesses.

3
Settlement Houses
  • An example of
  • Grassroots Progressivism
  • College-educated women, i.e. Jane Addams wanted
    to civilize the city
  • supported labor unions
  • supported womans suffrage

4
Examples of Grassroots Progressivism
5
Alliances between middle and lower class women
  • A strike held against New Yorks garment industry
    in 1909 was supported by women workers and middle
    class women
  • 20,000 workers went on strike
  • They won some concessions
  • Labels sewn into garments made by union workers


6
Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire
  • 146 died, many jumping nine stories to their
    deaths.
  • proved that the factories were not safe for
    workers.

7
Triangle fire
8
Reform Darwinism vs. Social Darwinism
  • Social Darwinism came out of the Gilded Age and
    held that human progress came out of survival of
    the fittest and that reform movements were a
    waste of time.
  • Reform Darwinism was a social theory that said if
    humans changed the social environment, it could
    improve the lot of humans faster

9
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10
Characteristics of Progressive Movement
  1. A belief that environment, not heredity alone,
    determines human potential
  2. A sense of optimism that conditions can be
    corrected without radically changing economy or
    institutions
  3. A profound trust in experts and scientific data
  4. A willingness to take action

11
The Jungle
  • The book was instrumental in exposing the meat
    packing industry
  • muckraking (The Jungle is an example)
  • Passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act and the
    Meat Inspection Act 1906
  • I aimed at the publics heart, but I hit them in
    the stomach.

12
Progressivism Finds a President
13
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14
Conservationist
  • When Roosevelt took office, 45 million acres of
    land as government reserves when he left, it was
    150 million acres

15
Controversy over Hetch Hetchy
16
Theodore Roosevelt Domestic Policy
  • Anti-Trust, filed suit to enforce the Sherman
    Anti-Trust Act of 1890 which was being ignored.
    He won.
  • Labor negotiator, United Mine Workers
  • square deal

17
  • A newspaper editor wrote,
  • Wall Street is paralyzed at the thought that a
    President of the United States would sink so low
    as to try to enforce the law.

18
Teddy Roosevelt
  • The Square Deal
  • Campaign slogan from Roosevelts election in 1904
  • Came from his enforcement of the Sherman
    Antitrust Act
  • Roosevelt the Reformer
  • Used the moral and political authority of the
    presidency
  • Roosevelt and Conservation

19
Roosevelt Foreign Policy
  • Speak softly but carry a big stick
  • Roosevelt believed that civilized nations
    should police the world and hold backward
    countries in line. . . . he relied on military
    strength and diplomacy

20
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21
Monroe and Roosevelt
  • Monroe Doctrine
  • Roosevelt Corollary
  • A declaration by President James Monroe in 1823
    that the Western Hemisphere was closed to any
    further colonization or interference by European
    powers. In exchange, Monroe declared that the US
    would not get involved in European conflicts.
  • A declaration in 1904 that the US would not
    intervene in Latin America as long as nations
    there conducted their affairs with decency. It
    made the US the policeman of the Western
    Hemisphere and allowed it to enforce repayment of
    European debts.

22
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23
Panama Canal
  • US offered Columbia 10 million and an annual
    rent of 250,000
  • Columbia refused
  • At the prompting of some investors in New York,
    Panamanians staged an uprising, 1903
  • Within 24 hours, Roosevelt government recognized
    the new Panama, and the new country accepted the
    10 million and the canal was begun.

24
How Did Theodore Roosevelts Foreign Policy Move
the United States onto the World Stage?
  • Enforcement of Monroe Doctrine
  • Formulating the Roosevelt Corollary
  • Endorsing the uprising in Panama

25
Taft Presidency
  • Taft sided more often with big business
  • Progressive Party nominated Roosevelt in 1912

26
Progressive Party 1912
  • Nicknamed the Bull Moose Party
  • Nominated former President Theodore Roosevelt
  • Platform

  • Presidential primaries
  • Conservation of natural resources
  • An end to child labor
  • Minimum wages for women
  • Workers compensation
  • Social security
  • Federal income tax

27
Woodrow Wilson
  • Democrat Wilson wins election of 1912
  • He turns out to be progressive
  • Federal Reserve Act, 1913
  • Federal Trade Commission

28
Radical Progressives
29
W.E.B. DuBois
  • Authored Souls of Black Folk 1903
  • Founded the Niagara Movement, precursor to the
    NAACP
  • Lifelong radical, later investigated by the FBI

30
Margaret Sanger
31
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32
Eugene DebsSocial Democratic Party (Socialist)
  • advocated cooperation over competition and urged
    people to shake free from private ownership

33
Some successes of the Progressive Era
  • Hull House and other settlement houses
  • Muller v. Oregon, 1908, limited workday for women
    to 10 hours
  • Upton Sinclairs novel of 1906, The Jungle
  • Conservation of 150 million acres of natural
    landscape

34
Some Failures of the Progressive Movement
  • Jim Crow laws
  • Nativism
  • Prohibition
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