Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCharles Gregory Modified over 8 years ago
1
Mrs. Stoffl THE STRUGGLE AGAINST DISCRIMINATION IN THE PROGRESSIVE ERA
2
Analyze Progressives’ attitudes towards minority rights Explain why African Americans organized Examine the strategies used by members of other minority groups to defend their rights OBJECTIVES:
3
Most Progressives were W.A.S.P.s Indifferent or hostile to minorities Wanted everyone to follow the white middle class life PROGRESSIVISM PRESENTS CONTRADICTIONS
4
Americanization: The process of changing non- Americans into “Americans.” Especially immigrants… Teach them to act, dress, eat, and celebrate like Americans AKA assimilation More loyal and better citizens Temperance: Partial consequence of prejudice against immigrants (notorious for drinking) Women’s Christian Temperance Union SOCIAL REFORM OR SOCIAL CONTROL?
5
Most white Progressives held same racist beliefs as non-Progressives Some people more fit than others to lead society By 1910 segregation was across the country, not just in the South RACISM LIMITS THE GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM
6
1. Work hard to rise to the occasion of full citizenship, blacks must pull themselves up by bootstraps through education of trade skills, hard work, owning businesses Gradually and patiently win whites’ respect Who am I? 2. Very outspoken against this ^ (______) view He and William Monroe Trotter argued that blacks should have immediate full rights of all citizens Both Harvard grads! Who am I? AFRICAN AMERICANS DEMAND REFORM
7
Especially concerned about the black right to vote in the South: DuBois, Trotter and other black reformers met in Niagara Falls to discuss what to do Niagara Movement (name of the group) denounced Washington’s gradual process to full rights and the teaching of only trade skills That education “can create workers, but it cannot make men.” Should teach blacks history, philosophy, literature so they can think for themselves Niagara Movement didn’t get much following but… AFRICAN AMERICANS FORM THE NIAGARA MOVEMENT
9
Springfield, IL: White mob attempts to lynch 2 black prisoners in the city jail (Summer, 1908) They are moved to safety(mob fails to lynch them) White mob turns to black residents: Kills 2 and burns 40 homes – Niagara Mvm’t outraged!! Springfield Riot got the attention of white reformers acknowledging the need to protect black lives 1909: In response, white reformers + Niagara Mvm’t join to form the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) RIOTS LEAD TO FORMATION OF NAACP
10
SPRINGFIELD RIOTS LEAD TO THE NAACP
11
Help African Americans be: Physically free from forced low pay labor Mentally free from ignorance Politically free from disenfranchisement Socially free from insult Equal access to housing and careers NAACP leaders were both black and white Progressives Jane Addams, Florence Kelley, Ida B. Wells, etc.. GOALS OF THE NAACP
12
As African Americans moved to the cities, many groups formed to help them find jobs In 1911 many groups across many cities joined to form the Urban League to help the poorer black workers find employment relief Helped families buy clothes and afford school NAACP focused on middle class blacks and social and political justice Both still around today AFRICAN AMERICANS FORM THE URBAN LEAGUE
13
Discrimination not only happening to blacks… Catholic immigrants Jewish immigrants Mexican Americans Native Americans Asian Americans REDUCING PREJUDICE AND PROTECTING RIGHTS
14
Jewish immigrants in New York form the Anti- Defamation League in response to the growing anti-Semitism in 1913 ADL sought to project Jewish followers from Physical and verbal attacks False statements And “to secure justice and fair treatment of all citizens alike.” THE ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE
15
Mex-Am living in Arizona formed the Partido Liberal Mexicano (PLM). Similar to the Urban League, it offered job services for Mex-Am’s Mutualistas: Made loans available to and provided legal assistance for Mex-Am Insurance programs if too sick to work MEXICAN AMERICANS ORGANIZE
16
Dawes Act of 1887 divided Native American reservations into farms to Americanize them The law made all land not given to the Native American open for sale to the public ∴ by 1932 2/3 of the land was owned by whites Society of American Indians sought to protect the rights of Indians and to combat federal Indian policy Carlos Montezuma: part of the Society, urged Indians to preserve their culture and avoid relying on gov’t NATIVE AMERICANS TAKE ACTION
18
1913 CA law said only citizens could own land Japanese Americans not allowed to become citizens b/c Gentlemen’s Agreement: U.S. would not impose restriction on Japanese immigration, + Japan would not allow further emigration to the U.S. So Japanese Americans were forced to sell their land… Some got around this by putting the land in their children’s names Born in the U.S. = citizen ASIAN AMERICANS FIGHT UNFAIR LAWS
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.