Chapter 18 The Progressive Era,

Similar documents
The Progressive Era

PROGRESSIVE ERA. 1890s A21w

The Progressive Era,

All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz D

PROGRESSIVE ERA. 1890s A21w

American History 11R

U.S. History PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT REVIEWED! THE PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT

APUSH REVIEWED! PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT

Chapter 11 Packet--Dr. Larson

A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy Theodore Roosevelt

Progressivism and the Age of Reform

Social Darwinism. Industrial Democracy. The 20 th Century Begins

The Progressive Era,

Identify the causes of Progressivism and compare it to Populism. Analyze the role that journalists played in the Progressive Movement.

9/28/2007. The Progressive Era, The Progressive Era, The Progressive Era, Topics of Discussion

The Progressive Era,

2. COMPARISON -- TWO PHILOSOPHIES:

The Progressive Reform Era:

Review. 1. During which years did the Gilded Age take place? 2. What were some of the problems of the Gilded Age?

Progressivism and the Republican Roosevelt. Chapter 28

I. The Problems of the 1890 s

The Progressive Era. America Seeks Reforms in the Early 20 th Century

The Progressive Era. America Seeks Reforms in the Early 20 th Century

AMERICA SEEKS REFORMS IN THE EARLY 20 TH CENTURY

A Growing Need for Reform

netw rks The Progressive Era Lesson 1 The Movement Begins, Continued Mark the Text Identifying Defining 1. Underline the definition of kickbacks.

CHAPTER OBJECTIVE INTERACT WITH HISTORY TIME LINE. The Origins of Progressivism. Women in Public Life. Teddy Roosevelt s Square Deal

The Progressive Era. Political, Social, and Economic Reform ( )

The Progressive Era. America Seeks Reforms in the Early 20 th Century

The Progressive Era AP US History

Populism-agrarian revolt that swept through the Midwest in the late 19 th C.

American Anthem. Modern American History. Chapter 6. The Progressives Columbus statute in Rhode Island

The Progressive Era

Chapter Twenty-One. Urban America and the Progressive Era

PROGRESSIVISM. Hull House. Jane Addams PROGRESSIVES TARGET PROBLEMS

Problems Brought About By

Objective To explain how the progressive movement managed to increase the power of government to regulate business and to protect society from the

Progressivism Takes Hold. American History Chapter 9

The Progressive Movement:

American Federation of Labor (AFL) Booker T. Washington. boycotts. child labor. civil rights

CHAPTER 9 THE PROGRESSIVE ERA AMERICA SEEKS REFORMS IN THE EARLY 20 TH CENTURY

UNITED STATES HISTORY. Unit 3 THE PROGRESSIVE ERA Aka Power to the People

8. I am a woman s rights activist who called for a constitutional amendment giving women the right to vote

Chapter 28: Progressivism and the Republican Roosevelt, (Pages ) Per. Date Row

Progressivism and the Age of Reform

I. Elements of reform

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

The Progressive Era 1. What were a few of the issues covered by the Progressives? 3. What was eventually impacted by The Progressive movement?

The Progressive Movement

The Progressive Era. Political Reform

MUCKRAKERS. social, economic, and political injustices. corruption, scandal and injustice to the public view

Creating America (Survey)

Unit 3: The Progressive Era

Cities: Social Progress. Cleaner Safer Less Disease More Education Assistance to Poor Child Services

Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era ( )

10. Settlement houses were most closely associated with what Progressive Era personality? A) Frank Norris B) Upton Sinclair C) Jane Addams D) Carrie N

The Progressive Era,

The Americans: Reconstruction to the 21 st Century

Who were the Progressives?

Quick Class Discussion: What problems existed within the city, state, and national gov ts?

Multiple choice: Choose the best response. (3pts Each 45 points)

OUTLINE 7-3: THE PROGRESSIVE ERA, II

The Progressive Era

3/28/12. Progressivism Under Taft and Wilson

Section 1 The Age of Reform

Cities: Social Progress. Cleaner Safer Less Disease More Education Assistance to Poor Child Services

Chapter 9 The Progressive Presidents ( ) Sept, 1901 William McKinley shot in Buffalo NY, by Leon Czolgosz (CHAWLgawsh)

Chapter 15. The fun Talk of Progressives!

Progressivism and Reform The growth of industry and cities created problems. A small number of people held a large proportion of the nation s wealth

Background. 0 PASSIONATE HUNTER 0 Remarried & had six kids. 0 abandoned politics

VUS. 8.c&d: Immigration, Discrimination, and The Progressive Era

The Progressive Era. The Drive For Reform

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

Progressives Those who supported political, social, and economic change in the United States. They called for more regulation of business improved

RN 2.7 Roots of Progressivism p

The Progressive Era The Drive For Reform

The Progressive Presidents

4. This allowed for the popular, or direct, election of U.S. senators.

The Americans (Survey)

Progressive Era ( ) Objective #1. Objective #2. Chapter 28. Discuss the origins and nature of the progressive movement.

Ida Tarbell -Investigates the Standard Oil Trust in 1900 through an interview of Henry H. Rogers (a leader of Standard) -Published in Nov.

The Progressive Era. America Seeks Reforms in the Early 20 th Century

Key Terms: Modern U.S. History

Gilded Age Reforms. Henry George Progress and Poverty and Edward Bellamy Looking Backward - Forward thinking authors

NAME DATE CLASS President McKinley is assassinated

URBAN AMERICAN AND THE PROGRESSIVE ERA,

Chapter 28: Progressivism and the Republican Roosevelt,

Chapter 6, Lesson 3. The Wilson Years

Guided Reading and Analysis: The Progressive Era, Amsco Chapter 21 pp Period 6 and 7 Main Ideas:

C. Progressive Era. 1. Prosper of Industry. a) Republican policies

Chapter 23 Lecture Outline

Four Goals of Reformers

Roots of Progressivism

CHAPTER 22 CONCEPT CARDS

Ida Tarbell -Investigates the Standard Oil Trust in 1900 through an interview of Henry H. Rogers (a leader of Standard) -Published in Nov.

VUS. 8.c&d: Immigration, Discrimination, and The Progressive Era

BIG BUSINESS AND LABOR A NEW INDUSTRIAL AGE

Unit II: Progressive Era

Sources. Populism-ideals Reform Darwinism Social Gospel Intellectual

The Gilded Age leads to the Progressive Era

Transcription:

OUTLINE Chapter 18 The Progressive Era, 1900-1916 This chapter examines the many changes brought to the American economy and political system by Progressive reformers. Particular attention is given to the presidential administrations of Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson. INTRODUCTION I. AN URBAN AGE AND A CONSUMER SOCIETY II. CHANGING IDEAS OF FREEDOM III. THE POLITICS OF PROGRESSIVISM IV. THE PROGRESSIVE PRESIDENTS

STORY: In March 1911, a terrible fire broke out in a New York City garment factory, killing nearly 150 young female immigrant workers. As authorities investigated the fire, they discovered that working conditions in the factory had been unhealthy and unsafe. But the Triangle Shirtwaist Company was no better or worse than most factories of the era and the tragic fire there came to symbolize for a generation of Americans the need for major reforms in the industrial economy. These reformers, who called themselves Progressives, dramatically altered the shape of government, the economy, and the very meaning of freedom. INTRODUCTION THEMES: 1. Reformers focused most of their attention on American cities because cities were, simultaneously, the centers of the worst poverty and of the greatest opportunity in the new industrial economy. 2. Progressivism included many strains of reform including concern for workers, for consumers, for women and children, and for the environment. 3. Women were key players in the Progressive movement and their participation produced new ideas about the role of women in society. 4. The three Progressive-era presidents were Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson. They expanded the role of government in regulating the economy and in protecting workers and consumers from the excesses of industrial capitalism.

I. AN URBAN AGE AND CONSUMER SOCIETY FOCUS QUESTION: Why was the city such a central element in Progressive America? A. Farms and Cities 1. For the last time in American history, farms and cities grew together 2. American agriculture entered what would later be remembered as its golden age 3. The city became the focus of Progressive politics and of a new mass consumer society a. New York was the largest You should know why cities were the focus of the Progressives. 4. The city captured the imagination of artists, writers, and reformers B. The Muckrakers 1. A new generation of journalists writing for mass-circulation national magazines exposed the ills of industrial and urban life muckrakers a. Lincoln Steffens b. Ida Tarbell 2. Major novelists of the era took a similar unsparing approach to social ills a. Theodore Dreiser b. Upton Sinclair Upton Sinclair, The Jungle

C. The Immigrant City 1. Between 1901 and 1914, 13 million immigrants came to the United States a. Ellis Island 2. Asian and Mexican immigrants entered in fewer numbers You should be able to describe why immigrants came to America and what their lives were like in American cities. D. The Immigrant Quest for Freedom 1. Progressive-Era immigration formed part of a larger process of worldwide migration set in motion by industrial expansion and the decline of traditional agriculture 2. Like their nineteenth-century predecessors, the new immigrants arrived imagining the United States as a land of freedom a. Some immigrants were birds of passage, who planned on returning to their homeland 3. The new immigrants clustered in closeknit ethnic neighborhoods E. Consumer Freedom 1. The advent of large department stores in central cities, chain stores in urban neighborhoods, and retail mail-order houses for farmers and small town residents made available to consumers throughout the country the vast array of goods now pouring from the nation s factories You should be able to give examples of consumer freedom. 2. Leisure activities also took on the characteristics of mass consumption

a. Vaudeville F. The Working Woman 1. Traditional gender roles were changing dramatically as more and more women were working for wages a. Married women were working more 2. The working woman became a symbol of female emancipation 3. Charlotte Perkins Gilman claimed that the road to women s freedom lay through the workplace 4. Battles emerged within immigrant families of all nationalities between parents and their self-consciously free children, especially daughters You should be able to describe how women were affected by industrialization. Charlotte Perkins Gilman G. The Rise of Fordism 1. Henry Ford concentrated on standardizing output and lowering prices of automobiles 2. Ford revolutionized manufacturing with the moving assembly line Fordism 3. Ford paid his employees five dollars a day so that they could buy his car H. The Promise of Abundance 1. Economic abundance would eventually come to define the American way of life, in which personal fulfillment was to be found through acquiring material goods

2. The desire for consumer goods led many workers to join unions and fight for higher wages I. A Living Wage 1. Earning a living wage came to be viewed as a natural and absolute right of citizenship a. Father John A. Ryan Living wage 2. Mass consumption came to occupy a central place in descriptions of American society and its future

II. CHANGING IDEAS OF FREEDOM FOCUS QUESTION: How did the labor and women s movements change the meaning of American freedom? A. The Varieties of Progressivism A. Progressives wished to humanize industrial capitalism B. Industrial Freedom 1. Frederick W. Taylor pioneered scientific management a. Eroded freedom of the skilled workers You should be able to identify the key Progressive ideas about freedom. 2. White-collar workers also felt a loss of freedom 3. Many believed that unions embodied an essential principle of freedom the right of people to govern themselves C. The Socialist Presence 1. The Socialist Party brought together surviving late-nineteenth-century radicals 2. Socialism flourished in diverse communities throughout the country a. New York b. Milwaukee 3. Eugene Debs was socialism s loudest voice Eugene V. Debs

D. AFL and IWW 1. The AFL sought to forge closer ties with forward-looking corporate leaders willing to deal with unions as a way to stabilize employee relations 2. A group of unionists who rejected the AFL s exclusionary policies formed the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) AFL IWW a. William Big Bill Haywood E. The New Immigrants on Strike 1. Immigrant strikes demonstrated that while ethnic divisions among workers impeded labor solidarity, ethnic cohesiveness could also be a basis of unity 2. Lawrence strike demonstrated that workers sought not only higher wages but the opportunity to enjoy the finer things of life 3. New Orleans dockworker strike showed interracial solidarity 4. Ludlow strike ended soon after many strikers were killed F. Labor and Civil Liberties 1. The courts rejected the claims of labor 2. Like the abolitionists before them, the labor movement, in the name of freedom, demanded the right to assemble, organize, and spread its views

G. The Free Speech Fights 1. Labor had to fight to get the right to assemble and speak freely H. The New Feminism 1. Feminists forthright attack on traditional rules of sexual behavior added a new dimension to the discussion of personal freedom 2. Heterodoxy was part of a new radical bohemia You should be able to describe the key aspects of the new ideas about personal freedom. 3. The lyrical left made freedom the key to its vision of society I. The Rise of Personal Freedom 1. Issues of intimate personal relations previously confined to private discussion blazed forth in popular magazines and public debates a. Sigmund Freud J. The Birth Control Movement 1. Emma Goldman lectured on sexual freedom and access to birth control 2. Margaret Sanger placed the issue of birth control at the heart of the new feminism 3. The birth control issue became a crossroads where the paths of labor radicals, cultural modernists, and feminists intersected Margaret Sanger

III. THE POLITICS OF PROGRESSIVISM FOCUS QUESTION: In what ways did Progressivism include both democratic and antidemocratic impulses? A. Effective Freedom 1. Progressives assumed that the Modern era required a fundamental rethinking of the functions of political authority 2. Drawing on the reform programs of the Gilded Age and the example of European legislation, Progressives sought to reinvigorate the idea of an activist, socially conscious government These 3 points about Progressive ideas about freedom are important to remember. 3. Progressives could reject the traditional assumption that powerful government posed a threat to freedom because their understanding of freedom was itself in flux a. John Dewey B. Progressive Politics 1. State and local governments enacted most of the era s reform measures 2. Gilded Age mayors Hazen Pingree and Samuel Golden Rule Jones pioneered urban progressivism 3. The most influential Progressive administration at the state level was that of Robert M. La Follette, who made Wisconsin a laboratory for democracy Robert M. La Follette

C. Progressive Democracy 1. Progressives hoped to reinvigorate democracy by restoring political power to the citizenry and civic harmony to a divided society 2. But the Progressive Era also witnessed numerous restrictions on democratic participation a. Voting was seen more as a privilege for a select few You should be able to identify some of the ways in which Progressivism expanded democracy and some of the ways in which it restricted democracy. D. Government by Expert 1. The impulse toward order, efficiency, and centralized management was an important theme of Progressive reform a. Mastery required applying scientific inquiry to modern social problems E. Spearheads for Reform 1. Organized women reformers spoke for the more democratic side of Progressivism 2. Jane Addams founded Hull House in Chicago 3. The new woman was college-educated, middle-class and devoted to providing social services 4. Settlement houses produced many female reformers Jane Addams Settlement houses

F. The Campaign for Suffrage 1. Campaign for women s suffrage became a mass movement 2. By 1900, over half the states allowed women to vote in local elections dealing with school issues Women s suffrage G. Materialist Reform 1. Ironically, the desire to exalt women s role within the home did much to inspire the reinvigoration of the suffrage movement 2. Muller v. Oregon upheld the constitutionality of an Oregon law setting maximum working hours for women Muller v. Oregon a. Louis Brandeis b. A breach in liberty of contract doctrine H. The Idea of Economic Citizenship 1. Brandeis argued that the right to government assistance derived from citizenship itself Economic citizenship

IV. THE PROGRESSIVE PRESIDENTS FOCUS QUESTION: How did the Progressive presidents foster the rise of the nation-state? A. Theodore Roosevelt 1. Roosevelt regarded the president as the steward of the public welfare 2. The Square Deal attempted to confront the problems caused by economic consolidation by distinguishing between good and bad corporations B. Roosevelt and the Trusts 1. Roosevelt used the Sherman Antitrust Act to dissolve Northern Securities Company 2. Roosevelt helped mine workers during a 1902 coal strike Theodore Roosevelt You should be able to identify the key policies of the Theodore Roosevelt Administration. 3. Roosevelt improved the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) and regulated the food and drug industry C. The Conservation Movement 1. Roosevelt also moved to preserve parts of the natural environment from economic exploitation a. John Muir and the Sierra Club 2. Conservation also reflected the Progressive thrust toward efficiency and control

D. Taft in Office 1. Taft pursued antitrust policy even more aggressively than Roosevelt 2. Taft supported the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution 3. Progressive Republicans broke from Taft after the Ballinger-Pinchot affair E. The Election of 1912 1. The election was a four-way contest among Taft, Roosevelt, Democrat Woodrow Wilson, and Socialist Eugene V. Debs a. It became a national debate on the relationship between political and economic freedom in the age of big business You should know the candidates and the basic issues in the Presidential election of 1912. F. New Freedom and New Nationalism 1. Wilson insisted that democracy must be reinvigorated by restoring market competition and freeing government from domination by big business 2. Roosevelt called for heavy taxes on personal and corporate fortunes and federal regulation of industries including railroads, mining, and oil 3. The Progressive Party platform offered numerous proposals to promote social justice G. Wilson s First Term 1. Wilson proved himself a strong executive leader

2. With Democrats in control of Congress, Wilson moved aggressively to implement his version of Progressivism a. Underwood Tariff b. Clayton Act S You should be able to identify the key policies of the Woodrow Wilson Administration. 3. Wilson abandoned the idea of aggressive trust-busting in favor of greater government supervision of the economy a. Federal Reserve system b. Federal Trade Commission