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PROGRESSIVE ERA 1890-1920 A21w 9.2.13.

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Presentation on theme: "PROGRESSIVE ERA 1890-1920 A21w 9.2.13."— Presentation transcript:

1 PROGRESSIVE ERA A21w 9.2.13

2 ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS Who were the Progressives? What reforms did they seek? How successful were Progressive Era reforms in the period ? Consider: political change, social change (industrial conditions, urban life, women, prohibition)

3 Progressivism WHEN? “Progressive Reform Era” WHO? “Progressives”
1901 1917 1920s WHO? “Progressives” urban middle-class: managers & professionals; Protestant women WHY? Address the problems arising from: industrialization (big business, labor complaints) urbanization (slums, political machines, corruption) immigration (ethnic diversity) inequality & social injustice (suffrage, racism)

4 HOW? WHAT were their goals? Government (laws, regulations, programs)
Democracy – government accountable to the people Regulation of corporations & monopolies Social justice – workers, poor, minorities Environmental protection HOW? Government (laws, regulations, programs) Efficiency value experts, use of scientific study to determine the best solution wikipedia

5 Origins of Progressivism
“Muckrakers” Jacob Riis – How the Other Half Lives (1890) Ida Tarbell – “The History of the Standard Oil Co.” (1902) Lincoln Steffens – The Shame of the Cities (1904) Upton Sinclair – The Jungle (1906) Wadsworth.com; Ida Tarbell Lincoln Steffens Jacob Riis Upton Sinclair

6 Municipal Reform municipal reform
utilities - water, gas, electricity, trolleys Shoe line--Bowery men with gift from Tim Sullivan, February, 1910 "Big Tim" Sullivan, a New York City ward boss, rewarded "repeat voters" with a new pair of shoes. Sullivan once explained, "When you've voted ‘em with their whiskers on, you take ‘em to a barber and scrape off the chin fringe. Then you vote ‘em again…Then to a barber again, off comes the sides and you vote ‘em a third time with the mustache…[Then] clean off the mustache and vote ‘em plain face. That makes every one of ‘em for four votes." (Library of Congress) Pageant 13e Reader’s Companion Shoe line - Bowery men with gifts from ward boss Tim Sullivan, February, 1910

7 State Political Reform
secret ballots direct primary Robert M. LaFollette Seventeenth Amendment (1913) initiative referendum recall Wadsworth.com Robert M. LaFollette Governor of Wisconsin

8 State Political Reform
Voter Participation in Presidential Elections,

9 State Social Reforms professional social workers
settlement houses - education, culture, day care, unemployment assistance child labor laws Enable education and advancement for working class children

10 State Social Reforms workplace & labor reforms eight-hour work day
improved safety and health conditions in factories workers compensation laws minimum wage laws unionization child labor laws Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, 1913

11 State Social Reform: Child Labor
“Breaker Boys” Pennsylvania, 1911 Child Laborers in Indiana Glass Works, Midnight, Indiana. 1908 Shrimp pickers in St. Louis, Miss., 1911 (1) Description: Child Laborers in Indiana Glass Works, Midnight, Indiana Photographer, Lewis W. Hine; Credit: Nartional Archives and Records Administration; (2) Description: Child Laborer, Newberry, S.C The overseer said apologetically, "She just happened in." She was working steadily . photographer, Lewis W. Hine;Credit: Nartional Archives and Records Administration; (3) The coal mines of Pennsylvania employed more than ten thousand boys under the age of 16. Known as "breaker boys," they sorted coal. Such work was dangerous and sometimes fatal, as attested by this 1911 headline. (Library of Congress); Pageant 13e History Companion (4) Lewis W. Hine. Shrimp pickers in Peerless Oyster Co. Bay St. Louis, Miss., March 3, 1911.;"On other side of shed still younger children were working. Out of sixty working,... I counted 15 apparently under 12 years of age. Some 3, 4, and 5 years old were picking too.... Boss said they went to work at 3 A.M. and would quit about 3 or 4 P.M." ; PBS American Photography Child Laborer, Newberry, S.C. 1908

12 Settlement Houses Settlement Houses Hull House – Jane Addams
Hull House today: (1906 picture) Jane Addams (1905) Hull House Complex in 1906

13 Frances Willard (1838-98), leader of the WCTU
Temperance Temperance Crusade Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) Anti-Saloon League Frances Willard ( ), leader of the WCTU Anti-Saloon League Campaign, Dayton

14 Temperance and Prohibition
Eighteenth Amendment Henretta, America’s History 4e from Prohibition on the Eve of the 18th Amendment, 1919

15 Socialism Socialist Party Eugene V. Debs
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW or “Wobblies”) Socialists parade, May Day, 1910 Though their objectives sometimes differed from those of middle-class Progressive reformers, socialists also became a more active force in the early twentieth century. Socialist parades on May Day, such as this one in 1910, were meant to express the solidarity of all working people. (Library of Congress) Industrial Workers of the World Eugene V. Debs

16 Assassination of President McKinley (Sept 6, 1901)
Description: Assassination of William McKinley. Czolgosz shoots President McKinley with a concealed revolver, at Pan-American Exposition reception, Sept. 6th, Keywords: Credit: Library of Congress

17 Theodore Roosevelt The “accidental President” Republican (1901-1909)
Wadsworth.com (portrait and on horseback); Underwood and Underwood. Theodore Roosevelt Addressing a Crowd, Collection of The New-York Historical Society. PBS- American Photography

18 Roosevelt’s “Square Deal”
1902 Anthracite Coal Miners Strike “Square Deal” Wadsworth.com (both) Anthracite miners at Scranton, Pennsylvania, 1900

19 Roosevelt the “trust-buster”
Northern Securities Company (1904) “good trusts” and “bad trusts” Hepburn Railroad Regulation Act (1906) Scanned from The Verdict 22 May 1899 by C. Gordon Moffat “ONE SEES HIS FINISH UNLESS GOOD GOVERNMENT RETAKES THE SHIP”

20 Consumer Protection Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle
Pure Food and Drug Act (1906) Meat Inspection Act (1906) Wadsworth.com (stockyards, Meatpacking workers); Brinkley 11e Instructor Resource CD (The Jungle); Theodore Roosevelt cartoon "A nauseating job, but it must be done“; Upton Sinclair's novel, The Jungle, published in 1906, prompted President Theodore Roosevelt to order an investigation of Sinclair's allegations about unsanitary practices. Roosevelt then used the results of that investigation to pressure Congress into approving new federal legislation to inspect meatpacking. (Utica Saturday Globe) Pageant 13e Chicago Meatpacking Workers, 1905 "A nauseating job, but it must be done"

21 Roosevelt & Conservation
Used the Forest Reserve Act of 1891 U.S. Forest Service (1906) Gifford Pinchot White House conference on conservation -1908 John Muir Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot, 1907 Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot, 1907; The two friends and allies in the conservation cause aboard the steamboat Mississippi on a 1907 tour with the Inland Waterways Commission. (Library of Congress)’; [Pageant 13e History Companion] Description: Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir on Glacier Point, Yosemite Valley, California, c1906;Credit: Library of Congress; Theodore Roosevelt & John Muir at Yosemite 1906

22 CONSERVATION: National Parks and Forests
Faragher, Out of Many, 3rd Ed.;

23 William Howard Taft President 1909-13 Republican
This postcard depicts how President Theodore Roosevelt, in command of the Republican Party, persuaded his friend William Howard Taft to run for president in Taft was not eager for that office, but Roosevelt succeeded in convincing him to seek it. With Roosevelt's strong support, Taft was elected, but he proved a disappointment to Roosevelt. (Collection of Janice L. and David J. Frent) Postcard with Taft cartoon

24 Taft’s Progressive Accomplishments
trust-busting forest and oil reserves Sixteenth Amendment Caused split in Republican Party Payne-Aldrich Tariff (1909) Pinchot-Ballinger Controversy (Taft has) “…completely twisted around the policies I advocated and acted upon.” -Theodore Roosevelt

25 Election of 1912 Woodrow Wilson Progressive Party (“Bull Moose party”)
“New Nationalism” significance Wilson: Wadsworth.com; Description: Theodore Roosevelt as an opera singer who wins the favor of "Miss Insurgency", while Robert La Follette watches in disgust. 03/18/1912. Artist, Berryman, Clifford K.;Credit: National Archives and Records Administration; Woodrow Wilson Theodore Roosevelt cartoon, March 1912

26 1912 Presidential Election
wadsworth

27 Wilson Woodrow Wilson “New Freedom” Underwood Simmons Tariff (1913)
Sixteenth Amendment (1913) Federal Reserve Act (1913) Federal Trade Commission Act (1914) Clayton Anti-Trust Act (1914) Keating-Owen Act (1916) Wadsworth.com Wilson at the peak of his power

28 Federal Reserve System
Federal Reserve Act Thomson Wadsworth.com

29 ESSENTIAL QUESTION To what extent did economic and political developments as well as the assumptions about the nature of women affect the position of American women during the period ? (1997 DBQ)

30 WOMEN “women’s professions” “new woman” Club women
A local club for nurses was formed in New York City in Here the club members are pictured in their clubhouse reception area. (Photo courtesy of the Women's History and Resource Center, General Federation of Women's Clubs.) The Women's Club of Madison, Wisconsin conducted classes in food, nutrition, and sewing for recent immigrants. (Photo courtesy of the Women's History and Resource Center, General Federation of Women's Clubs.)

31 Woman Suffrage Movement
National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) Carrie Chapman Catt Ohio Woman Suffrage Headquarters, Cleveland, 1912 Wadsworth.com

32 Woman suffrage before 1920 Thomson Wadsworth Wadsworth.com

33 Women’s Suffrage Alice Paul National Woman’s Party
Nineteenth Amendment Equal Rights Amendment Suffragette Banner 1918 Description: Women suffragists picketing in front of the White house. The first picket line - College day in the picket line line, 1917;Credit: Library of Congress. Description: The 19th amendment; Credit: Library of Congress 19th Amendment National Woman’s Party members picketing in front of the White House, 1917 (All: Library of Congress)

34 ESSENTIAL QUESTION Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois offered different strategies for dealing with the problems of poverty and discrimination faced by black Americans at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries. How appropriate were each of these strategies (considering the historical context in which each was developed)? (1989 DBQ edited)

35 Black Population (1920) Faragher, Out of Many, 3rd Ed.;

36 African-Americans Booker T. Washington W.E.B. Du Bois Niagara Movement
“talented tenth” NAACP W.E.B. Du Bois Booker T. Washington BTW: Du Bois: Wadsworth.com


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