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THE ORIGINS OF PROGRESSIVISM
CHAPTER 28
Warm Up
• Please read the excerpt from Upton Sinclair’s ‘The Jungle’
• After reading the article, what are three concerns you have about the meatpacking industry in the early 1900s?
The Progressive Era
• 1895 -1920• Middle class movement, those above are
abusing the system & those below will become a socialist threat
• Gov’t needed to be the agency of human welfare
Roots of Progressivism
A. Jane Addams (Hull House) Starts settlement house movement
B. Protestant clergymen –”Social Gospel” –Christian Socialistsi. Post-millenialism (must perfect society before the
second coming)
C. Greenback Labor Party (1870s) & Populist Party (1890’s) demanded gov’t intervention
D. Excesses of the monopolies & trusts
GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM Progressive organizations were
separate movements that worked independently to solve various societal problems
Each worked to one of the following:
1) Protect social welfare2) Promote moral improvement3) Create economic reform4) Foster efficiency
PROTECTING SOCIAL WELFARE Out of the religious community a new social
gospel was preached Josiah Strong Walter Rauschenbusch ‘Theology of the
Social Gospel’ (1917) WASP culture has a moral imperative to
spread the values of civil liberty & Christianity *
Its message was religious groups should work to help the poor
The Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA)
The Salvation Army Instructed poor immigrants in middle
class values of hard work and temperance
Muckrakers• Magazine publishers make money off exposing ills of
society– McClure's, Cosmopolitan, Colliers– Term coined by Theodore Roosevelt
• John Spargo –’The Bitter Cry of Children’• Jacob Riis –’How the Other Half Lives’• Ida Tarbell –’The History of the Standard Oil
Company’• Upton Sinclair –’The Jungle’• Licoln Steffens –’Shame of the Cities’
AP PARTS
Municipal, State & National Reform
A. Progressives believed that one could solve social problems by taking control of elections & law making
B. Initiative, Referendum, Recall
C. Laws to limit political gifts; no free rail passes
D. Direct elections of Senators to avoid ‘millionaire’s club’
E. Public commissioner and city manager who are hired, not elected –Galveston, TX flood of 1900
F. Western states need federal intervention in water rights issues
G. Stop monopolies at city level –stop selling streetcars & utilities to private companies w/o regulation
REFORMING STATE GOVERNMENTA key individual that
proposed many voting reforms was Governor Robert La Follette of WisconsinCongressman, Senator,
1924 candidate for president
Recall & referendumState legislatures to
require direct primaries for each party to select a candidate –before party bosses controlled candidate selection
‘Fighting Bob’ La Follette
REFORMING NATIONAL GOVERNMENT
16th Amendment (1912) individual income taxElimination of tax breaks for
corporationsCreation of the Federal Reserve
(1913)The most significant reform at the
national level was the 17th Amendment (1913)Senators were chosen by state
legislatures, not the people
Progressive Presidents
• Theodore Roosevelt – “Square Deal” for all Americans
A.Control Corporations1. Trustbusting -1st railroads Northern
Securities Co. v. US, 1903; brings 43 other indictments
2. 1902 Coal Strike
3. Hepburn Act, 1906 –regulate interstate railroads b/c ICC didn’t have enough power
B. Consumer Protection1. Pure Food and Drug Act –labeling
C. Conservation of Natural Resources1. John Muir; Gifford Pinchot
2. Newlands Act –federal lands sold to pay for western irrigation
3. Implementation of National Parks laws -125 mil. Acres saved
4. Balance corporate interests w/nature –Sierra Club
ECONOMIC REFORM American Railway Union leader Eugene
V. Debs organized the American Socialist Party
Organized the Pullman Strike of 1894After arrest became anti-capitalisticAdvocated that workers could use
elections to gain control of gov’t, thus business
In Re Debs –SC ruled that the federal gov’t could intervene in intrastate & interstate commerce to limit strikes
With Daniel De Leon founded in 1905 the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
PROMOTING MORALITY improving the lives of the poor
through improving personal behavior Prohibition In 1874, the Woman’s Christian
Temperance Union (WCTU) was foundedFrances WillardCarrie Nation
Anti-Saloon League was founded in 1895 as the “Church in action against the Saloon” worked to pass laws to have alcohol
banned and lawbreakers punished created tensions with many immigrant
groups
PROTECTING SOCIAL WELFARE Florence Kelley
advocate for improving the lives of women and children
founded the National Consumers League, which organized boycotts of goods produced by children
helped win passage of the Illinois Factory Act in 1893
It was the first law that prohibited child labor under the age of 14
Muller v. Oregon, 1908 Limits women’s work day
*Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, 1911
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdNYqBP_5q4
Women’s Rights
A. Western states pass suffrage first
B. Challenging the ‘female sphere’
C. ‘New Women’ –for the middle class the home is no longer an all consuming place
D. Women’s Clubs
E. Carrie Chapman Catt
A. National American Women’s Suffrage Assoc. (NAWSA); precursor to League of Women Voters
F. Alice Paul– National Women’s Party (off-shoot of NAWSA)– sought a Constitutional suffrage Amendment– Later Equal Rights Amendment
G. Margaret Sanger –founded Planned Parenthood; ‘Motherhood in Bondage’
Three Models Black Leadership• Booker T. Washington
– Tuskegee Institute, 1888– Economic advancement before political
advancement– ‘Atlanta Compromise Speech’ (1895)
• W.E.B. Du Bois– Niagara Movement (1905)– NAACP (1910)– Immediate political, social & economic equality
• Marcus Garvey– Pan-Africanism, Universal Negro Improvement
Association(UNIA)
African Americans in the Progressive Era
• Post-Civil War Era• 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments passed, but not consistently
honored (14th/15th)– Reconstruction ends too soon (Tilden-Hays Compromise of
1877)– Economic disadvantages
• Sharecropping• Crop lien system
– Rise of segregation –Plessy v. Ferguson– Republicans are the party of African Americans, but do little
to protect suffrage– 30% of blacks in the south were illiterate in 1900
AP PARTS
The Chink in the Republican Armor
• Panic of 1907– Industrial capacity had outrun domestic and
foreign consumption– Rampant speculation & unregulated banking
• Industrialists blamed TR’s ‘trustbusting’; TR countered that more regulation was needed
• JP Morgan saves the day, but makes deal w/TR– Expands power of US Steel w/purchase of
the Tennessee Coal & Iron Co.
• Conservative Republicans withdraw support
Taft – the ‘bigger’ trustbuster
• 90 indictments’ BUT• Becomes an enemy of TR & splits Republican party due to:•Ballinger-Pinchot scandal•Payne-Aldrich Tariff (1909)
•Raises most tariffs•Free trade w/ Philippines
•Ultimately loses 1910 Congressional election & presidency
•TR responds w/‘new Nationalism’
Wilson’s New Freedom• Assault on the triple wall of privilege
A. Tariffs –Underwood Tariff bill, graduated income tax revenue
A. Graduated income tax
B. Banking –Federal Reserve Act of 1913
A. Result of 1907 Panic
B. 12 regional banks run by gov’t, $ supply easily increased/decreased
C. Trusts –Clayton Anti-trust Act of 1914
A. Allows for labor protest
B. Tries to stop shell companies of trusts
C. Inspired by Louis Brandeis -‘Other People’s Money’ (1913) -Curse of bigness –competition needed, trusts threaten freedom
Immigration Reform
A. ‘Stem the tide’ –overcrowding, unemployment, alcoholism
A. Immigrants must assimilate
B. Eugenics
A. Science of altering the reproduction process of flora, fauna
B. Forced sterilization –Carnegie Foundation
C. Nativism
A. Madison Grant ‘The Passing of the Great Race’
B. Senator William Dillingham
SFI ScrambleExtending Democracy &
reforming Gov’tGrowing Power of
CorporationsWomen’s Suffrage
Immigration Foreign policy Consumer Protection & Conservation
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