11/9/15 Warm Up: How have minorities improved over the progressive era? Agenda Warm Up This week’s plan Go over 21.3.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
US History Goal 7.03.
Advertisements

Women of the Progressive Era
African American and Women’s Rights (1877 – 1920).
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Segregation and Discrimination.
Progressive Movement Social Problems. Goals of the Progressive Movement A government controlled by the people Guaranteed economic opportunities through.
Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4.
After the Civil War…  In the years right after the Civil War, freedmen (former slaves) were able to vote and participate in government, thanks to the.
Do Now Temperance (alcohol) Women’s Rights Civil Rights
Objectives Describe how women won the right to vote.
Issues of the Gilded Age
Women During the Progressive Era
The Progressive Era part 2 Describe the influence of women and minorities on the reforms of the Progressive Era/Describe the goals of leaders and groups.
 Political, social, and economic change in America at the turn of the 20 th century  Progressives – those who support these reforms. ◦ Wanted to make.
Section 1 Segregation and Social Tensions
The Gilded Age.
Chapter 17 Section 2 Women Make Progress.
Chapter 22- Progressives and Reformers
Life for Many African-Americans From Why were African-Americans left out of the Progressive Era reforms?
Progressive Reform for Women & African Americans.
Discrimination and Segregation Against African Americans.
Agenda (th 2/21, fri 2/22)  Bell Ringer – From Section 17.1 in your textbook and P , find 3 more facts, names or examples to add to each column.
The Rights of Women and Minorities Ch. 6 Section 3 p
UNIT 7: INDUSTRIALIZATION, REFORM AND IMPERIALISM NOTES 2.
Warm Up 0 In your Progressive Era Notes, turn to your Common Vocabulary Unit 3 page. 0 What do the following words mean? Write definitions down in your.
African Americans in the Progressive Era  Ignored by Progressive Era  Wilson segregates federal buildings Interracial marriages illegal in D.C.  Plessy.
Segregation and Discrimination Mr. White’s US History 1.
Progressive Test Review.  Who was the founder of the NAACP and encourage African Americans to be more vocal in pursuing equality?  A. W.E.B Dubois 
Women in Public Life Chapter 6 Section 2.
Women’s Rights In the years following the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848, women's rights activists had achieved some important goals Property rights for.
The Jim Crow Era. Following Reconstruction, the Southern states will seek to bypass the Civil War Amendments which guaranteed civil rights, and voting.
How were the civil and political rights of certain groups in America undermined during the years after Reconstruction?
REVIEW 1. List 3 advancements in Science and Technology during the Progressive Era (late 1800’s – early 1900’s). 2. Why was there a rise in newspaper sales.
US 2 CHAPTER 17 THE PROGRESSIVE ERA ( ) SECTION 3 THE STRUGGLE AGAINST DISCRIMINATION.
African-Americans and Women in the Progressive Era
Do Now Get a Text Temperance (alcohol) Women’s Rights Civil Rights
The Struggle against discrimination
Struggle for Rights in the Progressive Era
24.3 Women and the Progressive Movement
African-Americans During the Gilded Age.
Other Reforms of the Progressive Era
US History Goal 7.03.
The Progressive Era.
QOTD 19) The Seventeenth Amendment (17th): a) ended segregation.
Chapter 17 The Progressive Era ( ) Section 2
Segregation and Discrimination
Segregation and Discrimination
Video Questions How did Booker T. Washington and WEB Dubois differ in their approach to civil rights? What organizations did they form? Who was Jane Addams?
Objectives Analyze the impact of changes in women’s education on women’s roles in society. Explain what women did to win workers’ rights and to improve.
Knights Charge 2/22 In one word, describe American politics during the Gilded Age. What was a political machine? Who ran the biggest one in New York? Who.
Women of the Progressive Era
Warm-Up 9/29/16 (p.5-13 INB) Please WRITE the entire question and the full answer you choose: Which of the following occurred as a result of the Sherman.
Please put your review packet in your folder
African-American Discrimination and Segregation
Chapter 16: Issues With The Gilded Age
Segregation and Discrimination
Progressive Era Created by Educational Technology Network
Word of the day: Suffrage: The right to vote. Warm up:
In the South, grandfather clauses, literacy tests, and poll taxes were devices used to deny African Americans the right to vote.
Segregation and Discrimination
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
African-American Discrimination and Segregation
Other Reforms of the Progressive Era
Women of the Progressive Era
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
US History Goal 7.03.
Chapter 17 The Progressive Era ( ) Section 2
Women's Rights 1865–1920.
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
Presentation transcript:

11/9/15 Warm Up: How have minorities improved over the progressive era? Agenda Warm Up This week’s plan Go over 21.3

Chapter 21, Section 3 “The Rights of Women and Minorities”

Female Progressives Vassar College Students in 1887 in New York Women began attending women’s colleges in larger numbers in the late 1800s (nearly 40% of college students were women by 1910) Women were excluded from fields like law and medicine that were dominated by men Many women college graduates entered fields such as social work and education and often put their education to use by becoming active in reform movements Smith College in Massachusetts

Temperance Woman’s Christian Temperance Union – reformer group founded in 1874 that fought for the adoption of local and state laws restricting the sale of alcohol Carrie Nation – radical temperance fighter in 1890s Kansas who would storm into saloons with a hatchet and smash liquor bottles Experiencing Carrie Nation 18th Amendment – amendment to the US Constitution passed in 1919 it banned the production, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages throughout the US

Opposition to Female Suffrage suffrage – the right to vote, which women reformers began to push for again in the late 1800s and into the 1900s Reasons for opposition: Political bosses were worried about the anti-corruption efforts of women Some business leaders worried women would support minimum wage and child labor laws Others believed women should only be homemakers and mothers and not politically active citizens

The Suffrage Movement Women failed to gain the right to vote following the Civil War (when African Americans did get it) Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony founded the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) in 1890 to promote the cause of women’s suffrage Some women earned the right to vote on a state-by-state basis Wyoming was first in 1890, followed by Colorado, Idaho, and Utah

19th Amendment Carrie Chapman Catt – Pres. of NAWSA in 1900 who helped mobilize more than 1 million members, and pushed for more states to allow women the right to vote Alice Paul – founded the National Woman’s Party in 1913 and used parades, demonstrations, picketing (including on Pres. Wilson during WWI), and hunger strikes to draw attention to the movement Alice Paul’s Hunger Strike 19th Amendment – U.S. Constitutional amendment that granted women the right to vote in 1920 Alice Paul Celebrating Ratification of 19th Amendment

11/10/15 Agenda Continue Review of 21.3

African Americans Faced Discrimination African Americans were relegated to sharecropping in the South and working for the lowest wages in the worst jobs in the North Jim Crow laws – set up segregation which separated races in public places in the South Barriers to voting: Literacy Tests – difficult, nearly impossible test to determine ability to read/write. Poll Taxes – fee charged to Blacks only for the purposes of voting Grandfather Clause – voting rule that stated you could vote as long as your grandfather had the right to vote African Americans Faced Discrimination

African American Leaders vs. Discrimination Booker T. Washington – late 1800s educator who founded the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, who fought discrimination by encouraging African Americans to improve educational and economic conditions before asking for full rights W.E.B. Du Bois – a Harvard University graduate who called for direct action and protests of racial injustice, who also became a founder of the NAACP in 1909 Argument Summed Up

Lynchings Lynching: Racially motivated murders, usually inflicted upon African-Americans for violation of social codes (more than 3,000 African-Americans lynched between 1885-1915) Ida B. Wells – African American journalist who wrote for a Memphis newspaper, who wrote articles about the unequal economic and educational opportunities for African Americans and about lynchings She later moved to Chicago due to continual death threats

Organizations Aid African American N.A.A.C.P. – (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) an early civil rights group founded by reformers including W.E.B. DuBois in 1909 that attacked discrimination through court cases (including winning one that ended the grandfather’s clause that restricted African American voting) National Urban League – organization founded in 1911 that aided African Americans moving from the South by helping them find jobs and housing in Northern cities

Other minority groups struggled to assimilate and achieve equality Reformers who helped these groups tended to encourage them to adopt the ways of European society Conflicting Native American groups were set up – some promoted integration and some supported preserving their traditional culture Chinese immigrants organized neighborhood associations to provide public services that white reforms denied them Mexican immigration increased into the South and these people became an important part of the economy there, but they rarely benefitted from the progressive labor laws of the time period