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The Progressive Era
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What were the issues of the Gilded Age?
Disparity of wealth Workers rights Working conditions Wages, hours, child labor, danger, etc. Poverty in cities – Tenements, poor sanitation Racial discrimination – Immigrants & African Americans Corruption in Social Justice Immigrants, Women, African Americans, Children
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Progressive Era Occurred in reaction to the extreme corruption, workplace conditions, and injustice of the Gilded Age Popular Presidents of the Progressive Era include Teddy Roosevelt & Woodrow Wilson
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Progressivism Movement based on the idea that new ideas and honest, efficient government could bring about social justice
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Progressive Beliefs Move away from laissez faire with government regulating industry Make US government responsive to the people (voting) Limit power of the political bosses. Improve worker’s rights, conditions for poor and immigrants Clean up the cities End segregation and Jim Crow
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Areas to Reform Social Justice Political Democracy Economic Equality
Conservation
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Social Justice Improve working conditions in industry, regulate unfair business practices, eliminate child labor, help immigrants and the poor
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Political Democracy Give the government back to the people, get more people voting and end corruption with political machines.
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Economic Justice Fairness and opportunity in the work world, regulate unfair trusts and bring about changes in labor. Demonstrate to the common people that U.S. Government is in charge and not the industrialists.
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Preserve natural resources and the environment
CONSERVATION Preserve natural resources and the environment
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Populists vs Progressives
Populists---rural Progressives---cities Populists were poor and uneducated Progressives were middle-class and educated. Populists were considered too radical Progressives stayed politically mainstream. Populists initially failed Progressives had more success
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What is a muckraker? Writer/journalist who exposes the problems of society in order to bring about reform
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Muckrakers in tenements Lincoln Steffens (magazine editor)
The Shame of the Cities Political corruption in Philadelphia Link between big business and crooked politicians Jacob Riis (photographer, NY Evening Sun) How the Other Half Lives Poor living conditions in tenements
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Muckrakers Ida Tarbell The History of Standard Oil
Robber baron business practices of Rockefeller Described the firms cutthroat methods of eliminating competition. John Spargo The Bitter Cry of the Children Child Labor Also, Lewis Hine
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Lewis Hine and Child Labor
Lewis Hine was a school teacher turned muckraker during the Progressive era. In 1908, Hine became a photographer who was interested in exposing the ills of society. From , he targeted the abuses of child labor in American Industry. He produced a photo essay on child labor in 1909
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Muckrakers Frank Norris The Octopus
Unfair business practices of the Southern Pacific Railroad
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Muckrakers Upton Sinclair Frances E.W. Harper The Jungle
Working conditions for immigrants; unsanitary conditions in meat-packing plants Frances E.W. Harper Iola Leroy Struggles of African Americans
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Who are the Progressives?
In addition to Muckrakers, they were also Religious Groups 1. Preaching of the "social gospel." 2. Create acts of god, churches should work to improve conditions for workers and the poor. 3. Religious organizations like the YMCA, YWCA, concentrated efforts on helping newcomers adjust to life in the big cities. Investigates slum conditions, provided food and clothing and set up settlement houses.
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Who are the Progressives?
Radical Groups 1. Socialist Party a. Organized in 1901 by labor leaders including Eugene V. Debs. b. Wanted govt. takeover of some big businesses, laws regulating business as well as a minimum wage and laws setting the length of the work week to 40 hours.
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African Americans in Progressive Era
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Segregation Jim Crow Laws (1876-1965) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
What increased segregation? Jim Crow Laws ( ) Legalized segregation Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) “Separate but equal”
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How did African Americans face discrimination in voting?
15th Amendment Poll Tax Literacy Tests Grandfather Clauses How? Southern states evade 15th Amend. Required money to vote Must pass a test to vote If your ancestors could vote prior to 1866, then so could you How did these discriminate African Americans?
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Opposing Discrimination
Booker T. Washington Hard work “Pull yourself up by your bootstraps” Tuskegee Institute, vocational education W.E.B. DuBois Disagreed with Washington Wanted blacks to demand full equality
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NAACP National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
Founded in 1909 Springfield, Illinois Founded by W.E.B. DuBois, Ida B. Wells, Florence Kelly, and other progressive reformers
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NAACP The NAACP was formed partly in response to the continuing horrific practice of lynching and the 1908 race riot in Springfield, the capital of Illinois and resting place of President Abraham Lincoln. Appalled at the violence that was committed against blacks, a group of white liberals that included Mary White Ovington and Oswald Garrison Villard, both the descendants of abolitionists, William English Walling and Dr. Henry Moscowitz issued a call for a meeting to discuss racial justice. Some 60 people, seven of whom were African American (including W. E. B. Du Bois, Ida B. Wells-Barnett and Mary Church Terrell), signed the call, which was released on the centennial of Lincoln's birth. source naacp.org
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NAACP The NAACP's principal objective is to ensure the political, educational, social and economic equality of minority group citizens of United States and eliminate race prejudice. The NAACP seeks to remove all barriers of racial discrimination through the democratic processes. This group helps pave the way for continued work towards civil rights for African Americans.
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Tuskegee Institute
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Who opposed discrimination, and how?
Ida B. Wells Worked to stop lynching National Association of Colored Women Add lynching website “Brave men do not gather by thousands to torture and murder a single individual, so gagged and bound he cannot make even feeble resistance or defense.”
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