Politics & Protest 1865-1900 Chapter 21 By Nicole Mastin.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 9 Section 1 Origins of Progressivism
Advertisements

Issues of the Gilded Age
Objectives Identify what attracted farmers to the Great Plains.
Industrial Revolution Study Guide. Due to the Agricultural Revolution, all of the following occurred… Food prices decreased Populations increased Average.
Populism: An Overview. Populism A general definition: A political philosophy supporting the rights and power of the people in their struggle against the.
Objectives Analyze the problems farmers faced and the groups they formed to address them. Assess the goals of the Populists, and explain why the Populist.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Populism.
Farmers & The Populist Movement
Ch.5 Sec.3 FARMERS AND THE POPULIST MOVEMENT. Farmers Unite  Late 1800s- farmers were trapped economically  Crop prices were falling  Farmers mortgaged.
Populism “My Life Has Value!”. What is Populism? A People’s Movement A movement seeking to aid interests of farmers and the working class against the.
Chapter 21 Politics and Protest Lincoln ( ) johnson (65-69) grant (69-77) hayes(77-81) Garfield(1881) arthur (81-85) cleveland (85-89,93-97)
Unit 10- Age of Oil-BLACK GOLD!!!
AS YOU WALK IN – 1/5/15 1.Welcome Back!!! – I hope you had some great time with your family! 2.Gather your book and binder, I will be checking to see if.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsFarmers and Populism Section 3 Chapter 16 Section 3 Farmers and Populism.
Chapter 19: From Stalemate to Crisis The Farmer’s Revolt.
WORLD HISTORY II Chapter 11: Growth of Western Democracies
Mr. President, I’m afraid several of our students missed some key questions on their CBA tests. What do you mean they missed “some” key questions? Didn’t.
What is a Populist?. Farmers: Where it all began.  In the late 1800’s farmers were trapped in a vicious economic cycle. Prices for crops falling. Mortgaged.
Thomas Malthus saw the effects of the population explosion- crowded slums, unemployment, etc. “Essay on the Principle of Population” – poverty and misery.
Farmers and the Populist Movement
THE PROGRESSIVE ERA AMERICA SEEKS REFORMS IN THE EARLY 20 TH CENTURY.
Emergence and Exit of Populism. What is Populism? Where did it come from?  Populism is the movement in the late 1800’s to try and solve some problems.
Ch Farmers and the Populist Movement. Section Objectives 1.Identify the problems farmers faced and their cooperative efforts to solve them. 2. Explain.
E. Napp Reformers and Revolutionaries In this lesson, students will be able to identify the following terms: Unions Karl Marx Proletariat Communism.
Chapter Twenty Commonwealth and Empire, 1870–1900 The Populist Movement.
Warm Up: 08/26/ What are the 3 questions every economic system must answer? 2.What are the 3 major economic theories discussed in Section 4, of Chapter.
Chapter 9 Section 1 The Origins of Progressivism.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Populism.
The Progressives Who were the Progressives? Who were the Progressives? Intellectuals and reformers committed to social change Intellectuals and reformers.
Introduction to the Progressive Era Chapter 17 Section 1.
Reforms Continue -continuation of prior reforms -Grange -Populists -Suffragists -Temperance.
TEST 2 JEOPARDY CHAPTER 5.3 AND CHAPTER 9. $200 $300 $400 $100 PROGRESSIVE PRESIDENTS PROGRESSIVE ERA POPULISM RANDOM $400 $300 $200 $100 $500 PROGRESSIVE.
The Rise of Progressivism CHAPTER 17 SECTIONS 1 AND 2.
Protecting Social Welfare Attempts to soften the harsh living conditions brought on by urbanization and industrialization Young Men’s Christian Association.
Populism 5.3. Big ideas Main idea: farmers United to address their economic problems giving rise to the populist movement Why it matters now: many of.
Goal 4.03: Financial Difficulties facing the American farmer/Rise & Decline of Populism Goal 4.04: Innovations in Agricultural Technology/Business Practices.
Challenges in the Late 1800s ( )
The Origins of Progressivism
Farming Problems In the late 19th Century.
Emergence of a Modern Nation
What does SUFFRAGE mean? Who got SUFFRAGE rights with 15th Amendment?
Populism.
Chapter 21, Politics and Protest
Challenges for Farmers
Chapter 17.3 The Populist Movement.
Politics and Populism of the Gilded Age
Westward Expansion and Industrialization
Broad Based, Grass Roots Reform Movement (1900 – 1920)
Industrial Revolution: Political Responses
CPQ-10/18/ words! What were the basic beliefs of the populist party? And what type of people supported this party?
Gilded Age 6 - Race, Politics, and Populism
Politics of the Gilded Age
Unit 4: Industrialization of the United States (1865 – 1914)
AND THE CONFLICT THEORY
Populism and Politics in the Gilded Age
Industrial Revolution: Radical Responses
Page 14.
Reformers and Revolutionaries
Populism.
USHC-4.4a Explain the impact of industrial growth and business cycles on farmers, workers, immigrants, labor unions, and the Populist movement and the.
Objectives Analyze the problems farmers faced and the groups they formed to address them. Assess the goals of the Populists, and explain why the Populist.
Farmers and Populism Ch. 9 Sec. 3.
Farmers and Populism Ch. 9 Sec. 3.
Section 3: Farmers and Populism
Industrial Revolution: Political Responses
Chapter 7 Section 3 Farmers and Populism.
The Progressive Era EQ: What are the goals of Progressivism?
Objectives Analyze the problems farmers faced and the groups they formed to address them. Assess the goals of the Populists, and explain why the Populist.
Populism.
Progressive Era Reform Movements
Presentation transcript:

Politics & Protest Chapter 21 By Nicole Mastin

Agrarian Unrest Throughout the late 19 th century, as industrialization was booming, farms began to struggle. Farmers started to protest as their agricultural lifestyle was being ignored.

Populism Eventually, new organizations formed, resulting in the rise of a new political party called Populism. Soon after the election of 1896, this party diminished.

Reform Reform in areas such as Women’s Rights began to increase. Socialism grew in the late 1800’s because of Karl Marx.

Illustration #1 This photograph portrays a farmer whose crops have been drought stricken. This is one of the many problems farmers faced in the late 19 th century.

Illustration #2 New technologies such as the reaper (left) greatly increased farm production. Thusly, as more crops were harvested, prices declined causing farmers to be economically unstable.

Illustration #3 This is an election poster from the election of Grover Cleveland (left photo) won the election because of the votes of Southern Democrats with Populist principles.

Illustration #4 This logo comes from the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. This union was established as one of the early ways women campaigned against prohibition.

Illustration #5 This is the socialist manuscript displaying the socialist ideas of Karl Marx and Frederick Engel's. These men believed that because the capitalist class owned means of production, and the proletariat owned nothing, a class conflict would emerge. Eventually, a classless society would emerge.

Key People Oliver Hudson Kelley President Grover Cleveland Susan B. Anthony

Five Major Points Precedent established by interstate commerce act-federal Gov. Could control large scale private enterprise if public required it. Omaha platform was a document established by populists to display dissatisfaction with political corruption, business interests, mortgage burden, and condition of labor. The American socialist party was founded by Eugene V. Debs. He declared that workers in a democracy could gain control of government and use it to change the free enterprise system. Henry George promoted a “single tax” on land values. If the land was used efficiently, which rarely happened, value would be put on potential value. Conspicuous Consumption was a term established by Thorstein Veblen to describe how the upper class uses a large amount of resources to show off.