Gilded Age Politics

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Gilded Age Politics"

Transcription

1 Gilded Age Politics Where does the Gilded Age expression come from? Title of an 1873 Mark Twain book Title referred to the superficial glitter of the new wealth that developed in the late 1800s Era of political corruption and stalemate where government did little to address the problems associated with industrialization and urbanization Why didn t government do more to reform the social problems that developed from urbanization and industrialization in the Gilded Age? Belief in limited government Laissez-faire economics and social Darwinism Narrow interpretation of government s regulatory power by federal courts limited the regulatory laws Congress did pass (Sherman Anti-trust Act) How did the two national political parties prevent social and economic reforms between 1876 and 1892? Closeness of elections in the late 19 th century led parties to avoid controversial issues that might alienate voters Divided government: Congress and the Presidency were controlled by different political parties (except for when Republicans controlled both) Democrats won two presidential elections in the electoral college (four by popular vote) Issue-free campaigns focused on party loyalty, regional ties, religious ties, and ethnic ties Republicans o Supported an economic program including high protective tariffs for business o Core Republican votes came from business men and middle class protestants in the north and west o Continued to wave the bloody shirt o Attracted African American votes Democrats o Continued to support state s rights and limited federal government o Solid South: after 1877 Democrats won every election in the former confederacy until the mid 20 th century o In the north Democrats received support from city political machines and the immigrant vote o Often Catholic, Lutheran, and Jewish o Typically opposed protestant temperance and prohibition movements How was patronage a part of Gilded Age politics? Politics focused on winning and holding office, not on issues or legislation One way to win and hold office was to reward party loyalty with government jobs Stalwarts, Half-breeds, and Mugwumps o Stalwarts and half-breeds were two factions of the Republican Party that competed for patronage positions o Senator Roscoe Conkling became a powerful Republican leader by determining who would receive lucrative jobs in the NY Customs House o Conkling and supporters were called Stalwarts o James G Blaine led the Half-breeds o Republicans who did not take part in patronage politics or opposed patronage were called Mugwumps How did political party machines corrupt local politics during the Gilded Age? Political Machines: tightly organized groups of politicians that controlled the political parties in urban areas often in ethnic neighborhoods Machines were headed by a boss Party machines provided services to business, immigrants, and the poor in exchange for votes on election day Party machines provided a form of social welfare for urban dwellers o Jobs and apartments for new immigrants o Food for poor families during hard times o Immigrants were expected to repay the party with votes Political power for party machines led to corruption o Machines stole millions from taxpayers in graft and fraud The best example of Gilded Age machine politics and corruption was Boss Marcy Tweed of the Tammany Hall machine (Tweed Ring) in NY city o Pocketed 65% of NYC building funds in the 1860s What do you need to know about Gilded Age Presidents? Rutherford B Hayes o Republican President from o His 1876 election ended Reconstruction with the Compromise of 1877 o Attempted to reestablish honest government after Grant o Temperance supporter, his wife lemonade Lucy banned liquor in the White House o Vetoed efforts to restrict Chinese immigration

2 James Garfield o In 1880 Republicans nominated James Garfield (a half-breed) for president and Chester A Arthur (a stalwart) for VP o Garfield and Arthur defeated the Democratic nominee Winfield S Hancock o Garfield s appointment of most patronage jobs to half-breeds angered Conkling and the stalwarts o Garfield was assassinated by a deranged stalwart office seeker in 1881 Chester A Arthur o Became president when Garfield died o Stalwarts expected continued patronage support from Arthur but were disappointed when Arthur supported civil service reform o Signed the Pendleton Act into law Garfield s assassination fueled reform of the patronage system George Pendleton of Ohio (Garfield s home state) proposed a civil service reform bill The Pendleton Act set up examinations and standards of merit in order to reward federal jobs to the most qualified candidates The act also prohibited political candidates from soliciting contributions from government workers o Arthur did not receive the Republican nomination in 1884 What do you need to know about the election of 1884? Republicans nominated James G Blaine Democrats nominated Grover Cleveland o Former mayor of Buffalo NY o Former NY Governor Many reform-minded mugwump Republicans voted for Cleveland rather than the half-breed Blaine One of the dirtiest campaigns in history o Republicans made a big issue of Cleveland s fathering of an illegitimate child o Republicans labeled Democrats the party of Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion Cleveland became the first Democrat elected president since before the Civil War (Buchanan in 1856) Cleveland believed in Jefferson style limited government How was the money supply a political issue in Gilded Age politics? Debtors, farmers, and people starting businesses wanted more money in circulation (inflation) enabling them to: o Borrow money at lower interest rates o Pay off loans more easily with inflated dollars o Liked the easy money created by Civil War Greenbacks and silver money o Most easy money or soft money supporters blamed the gold standard for restricting the money supply o Campaigned for the printing of more paper money and the unlimited minting of silver coins Bankers, creditors, investors, and established businesses wanted hard money (deflation) o Currency backed by gold stored in government vaults o Dollars backed by gold held value against inflation o Believed that as the population grew a limited number of dollars backed by gold would gain in value Congress passed the Specie Resumption Act withdrew the greenbacks issued during the Civil War from circulation in 1875 Greenback Party o Formed by supporters of paper money and inflation o Greenback candidates received 1 million votes and won 14 seats in the congressional elections of 1878 o The party died out when the economy turned down Demands for silver money o Congress stopped coining silver money in the 1873 (the Crime of 1873) o Silver strikes in Nevada and other mining territories revived demands for silver money to expand the money supply o The Bland-Allison Act: passed over Hayes veto in 1878 Allowed silver coinage between $2 million and $4 million in silver each month at a silver to gold ration of 16 to 1 Was not enough to satisfy easy money/soft money supporters who wanted unlimited coinage of silver How was the tariff a major issue of the Gilded Age? During the Civil War Congress enacted a high tariff on foreign goods to protect US industry and fund the Union war effort Southerners and westerners objected to the tariffs after the war because it raised prices Other nations began to retaliate against American tariffs by placing tariffs of their own on American farm products Tariffs on American farm goods created surpluses of corn and wheat resulting in lower farm prices and profits Framers began to see industry growing at the expense of farmers

3 Agrarian Discontent What was the National Grange Movement? The National Grange of Patrons of Husbandry Organized by Oliver H. Kelly in 1868 to work for and protect farmers Most of its strength was located in the Midwest, but by 1873 there were granges in almost every state, including the South and the Pacific Coast Grangers formed Cooperatives: o Businesses owned and run by farmers to eliminate the cost charged by middlemen o Cooperatives pooled the resources of groups of farmers to purchase needed farm goods in bulk, directly from the manufacturer By the 1870s the Grange developed in to a lobbying organization that lobbied state legislatures to pass laws benefiting farmers (Granger Laws) o Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin each passed laws regulating the rates charged by railroads and grain elevators Munn vs. Illinois: o The Supreme Court upheld the right of states to regulate businesses of a public nature Wabash vs. Illinois: o Prohibited states from regulating railroads that crossed state lines o Allowed railroads to get around Munn vs. Illinois by raising their interstate (long-haul) rates The Interstate Commerce Act of 1886: o Congress began regulating railroad rates o Required railroad rates to be reasonable and just o Established the first federal regulatory commission, the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) o Actually helped railroads more than it hurt farmers The ICC lost most of its federal court cases against railroads The Grange began to die off after 1875 when the economy improved What was the Farmer s Alliance? When crop prices began to fall again in the 1880s farmers formed alliances Farmer s Alliances were very similar to the Grange Movement o Educated farmers on the latest scientific methods o Organized farmers to gain economic power o Lobbied the state and federal governments Separate alliances formed in different states and regions The National Alliance o Differed from the Grange by forming and independent political organization on the national level just short of a political party o In 1890 the national Alliance held met in Ocala, Florida to address the problems facing farmers o The meeting criticized both political parties and drafted their own platform o Ocala Platform: Direct election of Senators Lower tariffs Graduated income tax Banking system regulated by the federal government Easy money from greenbacks and silver money Federal storage for farmer s crops What do you need to know about the election of 1888? Democrats nominated president Cleveland for a second term o Campaigned for a lower tariff Republicans nominated Benjamin Harrison o Argued that a lower tariff would hurt American business o Platform appealed to big business and labor Cleveland won the popular vote Harrison swept the northern states and won the electoral college What was the Billion Dollar Congress? Republicans controlled congress and the presidency for two years Lack of gridlock led to an extremely active Congress Passed the first billion dollar budget in US History o The McKinley Tariff (1890) raised the tax of foreign products to a peacetime high of over 48% o Increased monthly pensions to Civil War veterans, widows, and children o The Sherman Antitrust Act o The Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890) increased the coinage of silver (not enough to satisfy farmers and miners) o The House passed a bill to protect African American voting rights that was defeated by the Senate Who were the Populists? A national third party called the People s or Populist Party Represented farm interests Built on foundations of the Grange and Farmer s Alliances Populists met in Omaha, Nebraska in 1892 to draft a platform and nominate candidates for President and VP

4 Omaha Platform o Political Goals: return control of government to the people Direct election of Senators The ability of the people to enact laws through initiatives and referendums Secret ballot Term limits for presidents o Economic Goals: take economic power from bankers and big-business Free-silver: unlimited silver coinage to increase the money supply Graduated income tax Public ownership of railroads, telegraph, and telephone systems Loans and federal warehouses for farmers An eight hour work day for industrial workers How was the populist movement different from previous political movements? Advocated a severe switch from laissez-faire capitalism to something nearly socialist Attempted to form a political alliance between industrial workers and farmers Attempted to form a political alliance between poor farmers of both races that would appeal to their common economic problems How did populists impact the election of 1892? Populists nominated James Weaver of Iowa for President o Won more than one million votes o Won 22 electoral votes o Most Populist support was in the Midwest o Lost badly in the south o Failed to attract urban workers in the north Republicans nominated President Harrison Democrats nominated former President Grover Cleveland Cleveland became the only president elected to two non-consecutive terms o Elected in 1884 o Lost in 1888 o Elected again in 1892 Why did Cleveland have a hard time in his second (non-consecutive) term? Panic of 1893 o Stock market crash due to over speculation o Railroad bankruptcy from overbuilding o 20% unemployment Cleveland did the hands off, laissez-faire, conservative thing Supported the gold standard by repealing the Sherman Silver purchase Act of 1890 How did Democrats adopt populist ideas in the election of 1896? Democrats were divided o Pro-silver supporters of William Jennings Bryan (36 years old) of Nebraska o Gold Standard Cleveland supporters o William Jennings Bryan s cross of gold speech You shall not crucify mankind on a cross of gold. Got Bryan the Democratic nomination for President o Bryan s Democratic platform favored unlimited coinage of silver (borrowed from the populist platform) Populists, having lost their key issue, also nominated Bryan for President The conservative Gold Bug Democrats put together a separate ticket with Cleveland as their nominee Republicans nominated William McKinley of Ohio o Pro-industry and pro-protective tariff o Blamed Democrats for the panic of 1893 o Pro-gold standard: warned against sliver lunacy Mark Hanna o Wealthy business man o Financial power behind the McKinley campaign o Raised millions of dollars from Republican business leaders o Used the money to sell McKinley to the mass media (newspapers, magazines) McKinley beat Bryan in the popular vote (7.1 million to 6.5 million) and the electoral vote (271 to 176)

5 What was the significance of the election of 1896? Beginning of high-expense mass media campaigns Republican transition o Beginning of Republican dominance of the presidency (7 of the next 9 elections) and Congress (17 out of the next 20 sessions) o Republicans switched from being the party of free soil, free labor, and free men to the party of business, and industry The end of the Populist Party as a national party Transition to modern industrial/urban values over the rural ideals of Jefferson and Jackson o Shift in power to big business, conservative economics, and a moderate middle class

( ) Chapter 12.1

( ) Chapter 12.1 (1877-1900) Chapter 12.1 The Rise of Segregation After Reconstruction, most African Americans were sharecroppers, or landless farmers who had to give the landlord a large share of their crops to cover

More information

Chapter 16 Class Notes Chapter 16, Section 1 I. A Campaign to Clean Up Politics (pages ) A. Under the spoils system, or, government jobs went

Chapter 16 Class Notes Chapter 16, Section 1 I. A Campaign to Clean Up Politics (pages ) A. Under the spoils system, or, government jobs went Chapter 16 Class Notes Chapter 16, Section 1 I. A Campaign to Clean Up Politics (pages 492 493) A. Under the spoils system, or, government jobs went to supporters of the winning party in an election. By

More information

1 Gilded Age Politics 2 POLITICAL MACHINES 3 In Counting There is Strength 4 What is a Political Machine? Well organized political parties run by a

1 Gilded Age Politics 2 POLITICAL MACHINES 3 In Counting There is Strength 4 What is a Political Machine? Well organized political parties run by a 1 Gilded Age Politics 2 POLITICAL MACHINES 3 In Counting There is Strength 4 What is a Political Machine? Well organized political parties run by a political boss Controlled cities governments Oversaw

More information

You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold W.J. Bryan As enormous changes took place economically and socially, people started to look

You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold W.J. Bryan As enormous changes took place economically and socially, people started to look You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold W.J. Bryan As enormous changes took place economically and socially, people started to look towards the federal government for stability But the late

More information

Gilded Age Politics!

Gilded Age Politics! Gilded Age Politics! POLITICAL MACHINES! Strength! What is a Political Machine?! Well organized political parties run by a political boss! Controlled cities governments! Oversaw improvements in public

More information

Political Paralysis in Gilded Age. Chapter 23

Political Paralysis in Gilded Age. Chapter 23 Political Paralysis in Gilded Age Chapter 23 Gilded Age coined by Mark Twain Gilded Age1860-1900 From the decorations in homes of wealthy Wealthy had palace like homes Characteristics Rapid Industrialization,

More information

The Money Supply. To fund the Civil War, US government had flooded the market with paper money ( greenbacks ) Supply of $ = Value of $ (inflation)

The Money Supply. To fund the Civil War, US government had flooded the market with paper money ( greenbacks ) Supply of $ = Value of $ (inflation) Populism Declining Profits Thanks to new technologies, farmers had opened up the Great Plains and were producing a much greater supply of grains Grain supply = Grain prices Farmers were earning LESS Rising

More information

In Counting There is Strength

In Counting There is Strength Gilded Age Politics POLITICAL MACHINES In Counting There is Strength What is a Political Machine? Well organized political parties run by a political boss Controlled cities governments Oversaw improvements

More information

The Gilded Age. an era of corruption and presidential squeakers

The Gilded Age. an era of corruption and presidential squeakers The Gilded Age an era of corruption and presidential squeakers Party System Political party and courts will dictate policy Looking for patronage and victory Less about issues, more about personality and

More information

Political Paralysis in Gilded Age. Chapter 23

Political Paralysis in Gilded Age. Chapter 23 Political Paralysis in Gilded Age Chapter 23 Election of 1868 Ulysses S Grant (R) Horatio Seymour (D) Americans disillusioned with professional politicians so wanted military leader Waving Bloody Shirt

More information

Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age Period of Corruption & Political Stagnation of Forgotten Presidents

Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age Period of Corruption & Political Stagnation of Forgotten Presidents Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age 1869-1896 Period of Corruption & Political Stagnation of Forgotten Presidents Gilded Age appears to be something it is not Mark Twain named era Seemed glorious but

More information

Politics in the Gilded Age Political Machines Political Machines Political Machines Restoring Honest Government

Politics in the Gilded Age Political Machines Political Machines Political Machines Restoring Honest Government 1 2 3 4 Politics in the Gilded Age well organized political party that dominates and gets members elected to local political offices Political Bosses Dictated party positions and made deals with business

More information

Farmers and the Populist Movement

Farmers and the Populist Movement Farmers and the Populist Movement Farmers Unite In the late 1800 s a vicious economic cycle was especially harmful to farmers. Prices for their products was falling while the cost of seeds and tools was

More information

The Politics of The Gilded Age. The 1868 Presidential Election

The Politics of The Gilded Age. The 1868 Presidential Election The Politics of The Gilded Age The 1868 Presidential Election 1 Learning Objectives 2 Examine politics during the Gilded Age and the similarities between the Republican and Democratic Parties. Explain

More information

Corruption in the Gilded Age

Corruption in the Gilded Age Corruption in the Gilded Age Social Darwinism Term coined by Herbert Spencer Based on Charles Darwin s survival of the fittest Human society evolves and improves due to competition Emphasized individualism

More information

LOREM IPSUM. Book Title DOLOR SET AMET

LOREM IPSUM. Book Title DOLOR SET AMET LOREM IPSUM Book Title DOLOR SET AMET CHAPTER 4 POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE The late 19th century in American politics was the most corrupt age in our history. Political bosses ruled with reckless abandon

More information

Welcome Back! Bell Ringer

Welcome Back! Bell Ringer Welcome Back! Bell Ringer Quiz today! Friday: Quiz on online reading. Review PPT slides 3-8. Agenda and Objective: Through introductory readings, students will identify the term Gilded Age as well as political

More information

Politics in the Gilded Age. Chapter 15 Section 3 Life at the Turn of the 20th Century Riddlebarger

Politics in the Gilded Age. Chapter 15 Section 3 Life at the Turn of the 20th Century Riddlebarger Politics in the Gilded Age Chapter 15 Section 3 Life at the Turn of the 20th Century Riddlebarger Political Machines Part-time city politicians before Civil War Growing cities bring bigger challenges Need

More information

By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY 1. A Two-Party Stalemate Two-Party Balance 2. Intense Voter Loyalty to the Two Major Political Parties 3. Well-Defined Voting Blocs Democratic Bloc

More information

gave stock to influential politicians. And the Whiskey Ring in the Grant administration united Republicans officials, tax collectors, and whiskey

gave stock to influential politicians. And the Whiskey Ring in the Grant administration united Republicans officials, tax collectors, and whiskey The period between 1870 and 1890 is the only time in American history described in a derogatory way as the Gilded Age, after the title of an 1873 novel co-authored by Mark Twain. Gilded means covered with

More information

1 Politics of Populism & Reform 2 POLITICAL MACHINES 3 In Counting There is Strength 4 What is a Political Machine? Well organized political parties

1 Politics of Populism & Reform 2 POLITICAL MACHINES 3 In Counting There is Strength 4 What is a Political Machine? Well organized political parties 1 Politics of Populism & Reform 2 POLITICAL MACHINES 3 In Counting There is Strength 4 What is a Political Machine? Well organized political parties run by a political boss Controlled cities governments

More information

THE AMERICAN JOURNEY A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES

THE AMERICAN JOURNEY A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES THE AMERICAN JOURNEY A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES Brief Sixth Edition Chapter 20 Politics and Government 1877-1900 Politics and Government 1877-1900 The Structure and Style of Politics The Limits of

More information

Industrialization. All about business and money!!!

Industrialization. All about business and money!!! Industrialization All about business and money!!! After 1865- Second Industrial Revolution Technological Innovations Bessemer Process- Produce steel more economical Steam Engines Railroads Boats Sewing

More information

APUSH Reading Quizzes

APUSH Reading Quizzes APUSH Reading Quizzes 6.5-6.6 (Bailey, Chapters 23 & 26) The Great West, the Agricultural Revolution & Politics in the Gilded Age, Part 3 (1865-1896) *with Replace Lowest Unit 6 RQ Score option! 1. Which

More information

Politics in Washington

Politics in Washington n the late 1800s, the two major political parties were closely competitive, and issues such as tariffs and business regulations were hotly debated. Meanwhile, farmers facing falling crop prices and deflation

More information

Good, bad and ugly POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE

Good, bad and ugly POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE Good, bad and ugly POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE THE GILDED AGE The Gilded Age in United States history is the late 19th century, from the 1870s to about 1900. The term was coined by writer Mark Twain in

More information

S apt ect er ion 25 1 Section 1 Terms and People Jim Crow laws poll tax literacy test grandfather clause gre tion and Social Tensions

S apt ect er ion 25 1 Section 1 Terms and People Jim Crow laws poll tax literacy test grandfather clause gre tion and Social Tensions Terms and People Jim Crow laws laws that kept blacks and whites segregated poll tax a tax which voters were required to pay to vote literacy test a test, given at the polls to see if a voter could read,

More information

Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire

Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire Objectives: o We will study the nature of American party politics in the last third of the nineteenth century. Eze_7:19 They shall cast their silver in the streets, and

More information

Government inaction and political corruption characterized the politics during the Gilded Age Problem of the Gilded Age: Parties Divide Americans

Government inaction and political corruption characterized the politics during the Gilded Age Problem of the Gilded Age: Parties Divide Americans Issues of the Gilded Age (Chapter 7 in the Textbook) Time Period: Late 1800s Presidents To Be Discussed In This Lesson: 20.James Garfield 1881-1881 21.Chester Arthur 1881-1884 22.Grover Cleveland 1884-1889

More information

Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age Chapter 23

Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age Chapter 23 Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age 1869-1896 Chapter 23 The Bloody Shirt Elects Grant Democrats nominate Horatio Seymour former NY Governor They denounced military reconstruction And won 80 Electoral

More information

1.4 RISE & FALL OF POPULISM

1.4 RISE & FALL OF POPULISM 1.4 RISE & FALL OF POPULISM UNIT 1 EARLY REFORM, WESTERN POLITICS, AND THE GILDED AGE SECTION 4 LEARNING TARGETS & KEY WORDS TSWBAT: Identify the key factors leading to success and failure for farmers

More information

Lecture: Progressives. Learning Target: I can describe the political and social changes the United States went through during the Progressive Era

Lecture: Progressives. Learning Target: I can describe the political and social changes the United States went through during the Progressive Era Lecture: Progressives Learning Target: I can describe the political and social changes the United States went through during the Progressive Era I-Prior to 1900, presidents were not very strong (1877-1900)

More information

Farmers and the Populist Party

Farmers and the Populist Party Farmers and the Populist Party By the midterm election of 1890 some people had concluded that the two-party system was incapable of solving the nation s problems. That conviction was strongest among farmers,

More information

Politics in the Late 19th Century. How Native Born Americans and Ethnic Immigrants shaped democratic politics into a national pastime,

Politics in the Late 19th Century. How Native Born Americans and Ethnic Immigrants shaped democratic politics into a national pastime, Politics in the Late 19th Century How Native Born Americans and Ethnic Immigrants shaped democratic politics into a national pastime, 1876-1896 Is your cell phone on? Cheryl Decines Says Please Turn it

More information

Re: Politics in the Gilded Age

Re: Politics in the Gilded Age Re: Politics in the Gilded Age Panic of 1873 Financial crisis that triggered a depression, resulting in deflation under Pres. Grant Farmers + miners: wanted inflation introduce silver to achieve that -

More information

THE ELECTION OF 1896

THE ELECTION OF 1896 THE ELECTION OF 1896 Gilded Age Politics Politics focused on personalities and patronage. Fierce party loyalty Stalemate and inactivity Close elections Timid presidents Laissez-faire Rapid industrialization

More information

Politics in the Gilded Age

Politics in the Gilded Age Politics in the Gilded Age Setting the Scene Jay Gould never formally learned how to run a railroad, but he understood the stock market. By 1871, he had become the most powerful railroad man in New York.

More information

After the Civil War, falling crop prices and deflation

After the Civil War, falling crop prices and deflation Section Populism Guide to Reading Big Ideas Economics and Society The Populist movement and its presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan strongly supported silver as the basis for currency. Content

More information

Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, (Pages ) Per. Date Row

Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, (Pages ) Per. Date Row Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, Name 1869-1896 (Pages 502 527) Per. Date Row I. The Bloody Shirt Elects Grant A. Why Republicans nominated Grant/qualification for presidency B. What

More information

Farmers had problems right after the Civil War

Farmers had problems right after the Civil War Farmers had problems right after the Civil War Falling crop prices Increased debt due to buying new equipment Competition from foreign farmers Power of big business Government refused to help Solution:

More information

Chapter 14 Section 4. The Farmers' Complaint

Chapter 14 Section 4. The Farmers' Complaint Chapter 14 Section 4 The Farmers' Complaint The American economy rested on shaky ground in the post-civil War era. Twice, in 1873 and 1893, the collapse of a financially ailing railroad led to a cascading

More information

Immigrants and Urbanization: Politics in the Gilded Age. Chapter 15, Section 3

Immigrants and Urbanization: Politics in the Gilded Age. Chapter 15, Section 3 Immigrants and Urbanization: Politics in the Gilded Age Chapter 15, Section 3 Gilded Age Gilded Age: refers to the post-civil War and post-reconstruction Era from 1865 to 1901 in the US The politics of

More information

Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, Chapter 23

Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, Chapter 23 Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, 1869-1896 Chapter 23 AP Focus The post-civil War era is rife with corruption, graft, and influence-peddling. Corruption is rampant at the local and state levels as

More information

The Great West and The Rise of the Debtor Unit ( )

The Great West and The Rise of the Debtor Unit ( ) The Great West and The Rise of the Debtor Unit (1860-1896) The learner will evaluate the great westward movement and assess the impact of the agricultural revolution on the nation. Innovations Describe

More information

The 2 nd Industrial Revolution

The 2 nd Industrial Revolution NAME The 2 nd Industrial Revolution / 16 points- 6.1 / 16 points- 6.2 / 16 points- 6.3 / 10 points- 6.4 TOTAL- / 58 points 6.1 The Second Industrial Revolution /16 points Railroads and Steel 1. What was

More information

BLOODY SHIRT ELECTS GRANT

BLOODY SHIRT ELECTS GRANT CH 23: GILDED AGE BLOODY SHIRT ELECTS GRANT Election of 1868, Republicans nominate Ulysses S Grant Great soldier, no political experience (which the people were tired of politics) Democrats at this time

More information

Settling the Great Plains and Farmers and the Populist Movement

Settling the Great Plains and Farmers and the Populist Movement Settling the Great Plains and Farmers and the Populist Movement Settlers of the Great Plains transform the land and farmers united to address their economic problems, giving rise to the Populist movement.

More information

Warm Up. 1 Read the article on the Populist Movement and answer the questions that accompany it

Warm Up. 1 Read the article on the Populist Movement and answer the questions that accompany it Warm Up 1 Read the article on the Populist Movement and answer the questions that accompany it The Farmers Alliance I. Farmers began organizing together to fight the unfair economic system they were trapped

More information

Chapter 15: Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life ( )

Chapter 15: Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life ( ) Name: Period Page# Chapter 15: Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life (1870 1915) Section 1: Politics in the Gilded Age How did business influence politics during the Gilded Age? In what ways did government

More information

POSTWAR POLITICS AND THE POPULISTS: 1870S 1896

POSTWAR POLITICS AND THE POPULISTS: 1870S 1896 12 POSTWAR POLITICS AND THE POPULISTS: 1870S 1896 Republican administrations, which dominated the federal government in the late nineteenth century, did much to support the rise of big business. The populists

More information

710. Ohio Idea Senator George H. Pendleton proposed an idea that Civil War bonds be redeemed with greenbacks. It was not adopted.

710. Ohio Idea Senator George H. Pendleton proposed an idea that Civil War bonds be redeemed with greenbacks. It was not adopted. Note Cards 701. Texas v. White 1869 - Argued that Texas had never seceded because there is no provision in the Constitution for a state to secede, thus Texas should still be a state and not have to undergo

More information

Gilded Age Politics. A.P. U.S. History - Period 6

Gilded Age Politics. A.P. U.S. History - Period 6 Gilded Age Politics A.P. U.S. History - Period 6 Period 6 1865-1898 The transformation of the United States from an agricultural to an increasingly industrialized and urbanized society brought about significant

More information

Chapter 20 Political Realignments in the 1890s

Chapter 20 Political Realignments in the 1890s AP US History Mr. Blackmon Chapter 20 Political Realignments in the 1890s VIII Politics 1. U.S. presidents between 1876 and 1900 were considered among the weakest in American history. A major reason for

More information

Chapter 8: Issues of the Gilded Age ( ) Lecture Notes. 1. Ways in which blacks right to vote was restricted in the South:

Chapter 8: Issues of the Gilded Age ( ) Lecture Notes. 1. Ways in which blacks right to vote was restricted in the South: Name Class Period Chapter 8: Issues of the Gilded Age (1877-1900) Lecture Notes Section 1: Segregation and Social Tensions (pages 184-191) I. African Americans Lose Freedom A. Federal troops were removed

More information

Public Policies and National Elections How effective was government in addressing the problems of America s industrializing economy?

Public Policies and National Elections How effective was government in addressing the problems of America s industrializing economy? 1 2 Politics and Government 1877 1900 The Structure and Style of Politics How did parties shape late-nineteenth-century politics? The Limits of Government What explains the weakness and inefficiency of

More information

Populism. UNREST IN RURAL AMERICA Deflation, low crop prices, and tariffs hurt farmers. populism: movement to work for laws that would help farmers

Populism. UNREST IN RURAL AMERICA Deflation, low crop prices, and tariffs hurt farmers. populism: movement to work for laws that would help farmers UNREST IN RURAL AMERICA Deflation, low crop prices, and tariffs hurt farmers. populism: movement to work for laws that would help farmers high food supply + high export tariffs = hard for farmers to make

More information

23: I. ( ) A.

23: I. ( ) A. APUSH CH 23+24 Lecture Name: Hour: Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, 1869-1896 I. Key Themes of the Gilded Age (1870-1890) A. Political, Economic, and Social Issues 1. Political issues:

More information

Example: In the late 1800s, most of the nation's rapidly growing cities were located in Northeast and Midwest. true

Example: In the late 1800s, most of the nation's rapidly growing cities were located in Northeast and Midwest. true Page 1 Write the letter of the term that best answers the question. A term may be used more than once or not at all. a. Ellis Island c. Angel Island e. Chinese Exclusion Act b. melting pot d. culture shock

More information

Political, Economic, and Social Change

Political, Economic, and Social Change Political, Economic, and Social Change 1 2 Mark Twain Why a Gilded Age? From a satirical novel written with Charles D. Warner, The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today 1873. Meaning the prosperity and culture that

More information

Unit 2 Chapter Test. The Americans Grade 11 McDougal Littell NAME. Main Ideas Choose the letter of the best answer.

Unit 2 Chapter Test. The Americans Grade 11 McDougal Littell NAME. Main Ideas Choose the letter of the best answer. The Americans Grade 11 McDougal Littell NAME Unit 2 Chapter Test Main Ideas Choose the letter of the best answer. 1) Which of the following marked the collapse of Populism? (a) the Panic of 1891 (b) the

More information

APUSH Name: CH Lecture Hour: Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, I. Grant Becomes President

APUSH Name: CH Lecture Hour: Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, I. Grant Becomes President APUSH CH 23+24 Lecture Name: Hour: Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age, 1869-1896 I. Grant Becomes President A. The Election of 1868 1. Republicans: Ulysses S. Grant (Republican Party replaced

More information

CHAPTER NINETEEN FROM STALEMATE TO CRISIS Objectives A thorough study of Chapter 19 should enable the student to understand: 1.

CHAPTER NINETEEN FROM STALEMATE TO CRISIS Objectives A thorough study of Chapter 19 should enable the student to understand: 1. CHAPTER NINETEEN FROM STALEMATE TO CRISIS Objectives A thorough study of Chapter 19 should enable the student to understand: 1. The nature of American party politics in the last third of the nineteenth

More information

KEY TERMS, PEOPLE, AND PLACES

KEY TERMS, PEOPLE, AND PLACES Name: Class: _ Date: _ Chapter 08 Packet Matching IDENTIFYING KEY TERMS, PEOPLE, AND PLACES Match each item with the correct statement below. You will not use all the items. a. steerage b. ghetto c. political

More information

Grant presided over an era of unprecedented growth and corruption. Scandal. Whiskey Ring. The Indian Ring. HOMEWORK

Grant presided over an era of unprecedented growth and corruption. Scandal. Whiskey Ring. The Indian Ring. HOMEWORK GRANT, RECONSTRUCTION, AND BEYOND Originally from Ms. Susan M. Pojer and modified 2.06.09 Grant Administration Scandals Grant presided over an era of unprecedented growth and corruption. Credit Mobilier

More information

Segregation and Discrimination

Segregation and Discrimination LEQ: How were the civil and political rights of certain groups in America undermined during the years after Reconstruction? Segregation and Discrimination LEARNING GOALS Assess how whites created a segregated

More information

Progressive Era. AMSCO Book: Chapter Name: Guided Reading. Mr. Chojnacki. AP United States History II

Progressive Era. AMSCO Book: Chapter Name: Guided Reading. Mr. Chojnacki. AP United States History II Progressive Era Guided Reading AMSCO Book: Chapter 21 1890-1909 Mr. Chojnacki AP United States History II Name: Reviewing the Populists 1870-1896 APUSH Review Guide for / AMSCO ch. 19 (Populists only)

More information

America: Pathways to the Present. Chapter 8. Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life ( )

America: Pathways to the Present. Chapter 8. Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life ( ) America: Pathways to the Present Chapter 8 Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life (1870 1915) Copyright 2003 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. All

More information

Themes of the Gilded Age:

Themes of the Gilded Age: AP U.S. History: Unit 9.1 HistorySage.com Gilded Age Politics: 1868-1888 Themes of the Gilded Age: Politics: hard vs. soft money ('70s & '90s); tariff ('80s); corruption due to greed, patronage & trusts

More information

IRISH PRIDE Page 1 HCHS

IRISH PRIDE Page 1 HCHS Chapter 6 Section 3 The Gilded Age SPI 6.10 Interpret a political cartoon which portrays the controversial aspects of the Gilded Age (e.g. Populist reaction to politician and/or tycoons, railroad development,

More information

1. Politics of the Gilded Age, pp Name: Class Period: Due Date: / / Politics of the Gilded Age. Belief in Limited Government

1. Politics of the Gilded Age, pp Name: Class Period: Due Date: / / Politics of the Gilded Age. Belief in Limited Government Name: Class Period: Due Date: / / Reading Assignment: Ch. 19 AMSCO Directions: 1. Pre-Read: Read the prompts/questions within this guide before you read the chapter. 2. Skim: Flip through the chapter and

More information

Theodore Roosevelt -rose steadily through gov t ranks. -Spanish American War. -Gov. of NY reform governor. -Vice President of William McKinley

Theodore Roosevelt -rose steadily through gov t ranks. -Spanish American War. -Gov. of NY reform governor. -Vice President of William McKinley Theodore Roosevelt -rose steadily through gov t ranks -Spanish American War -Gov. of NY reform governor -Vice President of William McKinley -Became President with McKinley s assassination Square Deal -

More information

Populism: Problems & Politics

Populism: Problems & Politics Populism: Problems & Politics APK Populist were farmers based grass-roots movement Moved West with the land grants Railroads moved West with land grants too Fight over land & prices with railroads 2 Importance

More information

The Great West & the Agricultural Revolution

The Great West & the Agricultural Revolution The Great West & the Agricultural Revolution "Up to our own day American history has been in a large degree the history of the colonization of the Great West. The existence of an area of free land, its

More information

POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE:

POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE: Themes of the Gilded Age: POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE: 1869-1889 Politics: hard vs. soft money ('70s & '90s); tariff ('80s); corruption due to greed, patronage & trusts (throughout late 19 th c.) Industrialism:

More information

Settling the West and the Rise of Populism Notes

Settling the West and the Rise of Populism Notes Settling the West and the Rise of Populism Notes LG: How did people settle the West? I. Railroads Open the West A. Massive govt. land grants for laying RR lines. 1. 10 to 20 sq. miles of land per 1 mile

More information

Re: Reconstruction

Re: Reconstruction Re: Reconstruction 1865-1877 Lincoln v Congressional Reconstruction Lincoln: Favorable to the South Lincoln s 10% Plan: - If 10% of voters in 1860 election pledged loyalty to US, state could be readmitted

More information

Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e. Chapter Nineteen: From Crisis to Empire

Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e. Chapter Nineteen: From Crisis to Empire Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e The Politics of Equilibrium Electoral Stability High Turnout for Elections Cultural Basis of Party Identification Catholics Tended to Vote Democrat 2 The Politics of

More information

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century) The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century) Chapter 7: TELESCOPING THE TIMES Immigrants and Urbanization CHAPTER OVERVIEW The population rises as immigrants supply a willing workforce for urban

More information

Guided Reading & Analysis: The Politics of the Gilded Age, Chapter 19- The Gilded Age pp

Guided Reading & Analysis: The Politics of the Gilded Age, Chapter 19- The Gilded Age pp THIS IS AN OPTIONAL ENRICHMENT ASSIGNMENT. PRINT AND COMPLETE IN INK. Name: Class Period: Due Date: / / Guided Reading & Analysis: The Politics of the Gilded Age, 1877-1900 Chapter 19- The Gilded Age pp

More information

Guided Reading & Analysis: The Politics of the Gilded Age, Chapter 19- The Gilded Age pp

Guided Reading & Analysis: The Politics of the Gilded Age, Chapter 19- The Gilded Age pp Name: Class Period: Due Date: / / Guided Reading & Analysis: The Politics of the Gilded Age, 1877-1900 Chapter 19- The Gilded Age pp 380-391 Reading Assignment: Ch. 19 AMSCO This guide is not only a place

More information

Section 1: Segregation and Social Tension

Section 1: Segregation and Social Tension Section 1: Segregation and Social Tension Post Civil War the government was passing laws that increased the rights of freed slaves. During the Gilded Age, however, most began to have their rights narrowed.

More information

1. Analyze the political significance of the election of 1876

1. Analyze the political significance of the election of 1876 Name: Class Period: Gilded Age Politics, 1877-1900 APUSH Guide for American Pageant chapter 23 (You should have already read pages 502-509) and AMSCO chapter 19 (pages 380-386 only) Directions Print document

More information

The Progressive Era. Unit 1: The Gilded Age ( )

The Progressive Era. Unit 1: The Gilded Age ( ) The Progressive Era Unit 1: The Gilded Age (1870-1920) Grassroots Movement Protecting social welfare to combat the harsh realities of industrial and urban life Promoting morality as a key to improving

More information

Wayne E. Sirmon HI 201 United States History

Wayne E. Sirmon HI 201 United States History Wayne E. Sirmon HI 201 United States History HI 202 Work to be done. On-Line Quiz on Chapter 16 28 JAN (6 ZEROS) Article 1 approved 28 JAN over half the class LATE Review 1 due 6 FEB Exam 1 13 FEB Learning

More information

A look at Presidents 22 & 23: Cleveland / Harrison

A look at Presidents 22 & 23: Cleveland / Harrison A look at Presidents 22 & 23: Cleveland / Harrison GROVER CLEVELAND 1885-1889 Democrat Public office is a public trust. I. Political Issues A. Election of 1884 Grover Cleveland (Democrat) James Blaine

More information

(1870) 15 th Amendment: Male Suffrage

(1870) 15 th Amendment: Male Suffrage (1870) 15 th Amendment: Male Suffrage Period 6: 1865-1898 Chapter 23: The Gilded Age (1869-1896) EQ: What economic, political and social challenges did the new nation face after Reconstruction (1877)?

More information

Politics in the Gilded Age

Politics in the Gilded Age GUIDED READING Politics in the Gilded Age A. As you read this section, fill out the chart below by writing answers to questions about the Gilded Age. 186 Rutherford B. Hayes 1. What was Hayes s position

More information

Name. William McKinley ( ) Andrew Jackson ( ) George Washington ( ) Abraham Lincoln ( )

Name. William McKinley ( ) Andrew Jackson ( ) George Washington ( ) Abraham Lincoln ( ) Name Checks and Balances: U.S. Presidents and the Economy Directions: Working in teams, match the president with the appropriate Economic Situation, Government Response, and Primary Source Document cards

More information

Great West and Rise of the Debtors Goal 4

Great West and Rise of the Debtors Goal 4 Great West and Rise of the Debtors Goal 4 Cultures Clash on the Prairie Settlers push west White culture differed from Native-Americans Whites felt Indians did not improve land so for they gave that right

More information

The United States Election (Reversal) of 1888

The United States Election (Reversal) of 1888 POLI 423 Final Paper The United States Election (Reversal) of 1888 The U.S. election of 1888 was not only a very close one, but one of only 3 instances in American history where the winner of the national

More information

Sample Test: Immigration, Political Machines and Progressivism Test

Sample Test: Immigration, Political Machines and Progressivism Test Sample Test: Immigration, Political Machines and Progressivism Test Multiple Choice: 1. Which people were known as the new immigrants? A. Immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe. B. People who had

More information

Ch. 6 & Ch. 7 Test Review COPY OR ADD TO YOUR ANSWERS SO YOU HAVE THE CORRECT INFORMATION TO STUDY FOR YOUR TEST.

Ch. 6 & Ch. 7 Test Review COPY OR ADD TO YOUR ANSWERS SO YOU HAVE THE CORRECT INFORMATION TO STUDY FOR YOUR TEST. Ch. 6 & Ch. 7 Test Review COPY OR ADD TO YOUR ANSWERS SO YOU HAVE THE CORRECT INFORMATION TO STUDY FOR YOUR TEST. 1. What caused the first boom in the west? 2. Which group of people developed the open-

More information

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: BECOMING A MODERN SOCIETY: AMERICA IN THE GILDED AGE, READING AND STUDY GUIDE

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: BECOMING A MODERN SOCIETY: AMERICA IN THE GILDED AGE, READING AND STUDY GUIDE CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: BECOMING A MODERN SOCIETY: AMERICA IN THE GILDED AGE, 1877 1900 READING AND STUDY GUIDE I. The Rise of the City A. To the Cities B. The Emergence of Ethnic Enclaves C. The Troubled City

More information

Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age

Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age 1869-1896 Postwar United States Population increased to 39 million by 1870, making US 3rd largest nation in western world Political corruption rampant after the war

More information

Objectives. Students will understand the concerns and Ideas of the Populist Party.

Objectives. Students will understand the concerns and Ideas of the Populist Party. Quiz and Get Books! 1. Founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) who was against segregation. 2. What does it mean to Assimilate? 3. What are the Jim Crow Laws?

More information

Politics in the Gilded Age. An Era of Corrupt Politicians and Capitalistic Cronyism

Politics in the Gilded Age. An Era of Corrupt Politicians and Capitalistic Cronyism Politics in the Gilded Age An Era of Corrupt Politicians and Capitalistic Cronyism Bloody Shirt Politics Directly prior to the Gilded Age proper, the Republicans nominated political neophyte [but Civil

More information

Stalemate in Washington

Stalemate in Washington Stalemate in Washington Main Idea From 1877 to 1896, the Republicans and Democrats were so evenly matched that only a few reforms were possible at the national level. Key Terms and Names patronage, Stalwart,

More information

Immigration and Urbanization. Chapter 7

Immigration and Urbanization. Chapter 7 Immigration and Urbanization Chapter 7 Q: Which ethnic group settled in the largest area of NYC? Did immigrants have a pattern in the way they settled? Europeans Between 1870-1920, 20 million Europeans

More information

Gilded Age Level 2

Gilded Age Level 2 Gilded Age 1870-1900 Level 2 Presidents of the Gilded Age U.S. Grant 1869-1877 Rutherford B. Hayes 1877-1881 James Garfield 1881 Chester A. Arthur 1881-1885 Grover Cleveland 1885-1889 and 1893-1897 Benjamin

More information

Unit 3 Review. Populism and Progressivism

Unit 3 Review. Populism and Progressivism Unit 3 Review Populism and Progressivism The practice of handing out government jobs to supporters of a winning campaign for federal offices, especially the presidency patronage The practice of handing

More information