Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Progressive Movement Ch 11, Sec 1-2. 1890-1920-new reform movement. Called Progressivism or Progressive Movement. – Felt that private charities could.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Progressive Movement Ch 11, Sec 1-2. 1890-1920-new reform movement. Called Progressivism or Progressive Movement. – Felt that private charities could."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Progressive Movement Ch 11, Sec 1-2

2 1890-1920-new reform movement. Called Progressivism or Progressive Movement. – Felt that private charities could not do enough to help poor. – Gov’t must get involved. Progressivism not a single party or group. Overall, had social, moral, economic, political goals.

3 Goals of Progressivism Government should be more accountable to its’ citizens. Government should limit the power of wealthy interests. Government should be given expanded powers so that it could become more active in improving citizens’ lives. Governments should become more efficient and less corrupt.

4 Beginnings of Reform Journalists wrote of conditions in factories and slums. – Called muckrakers. Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle. – Brought attention to bad conditions to the people and gov’t. Led to reform groups and legislation to correct conditions/abuses.

5

6 Reformers and Groups Labor Movement. – Unions grew to combat low pay and working conditions. Owners used courts to prevent strikes (injunctions). Socialist Movement. – Gov’t redistributes wealth; gov’t controls property & income; became popular. – Socialist Party won local gov’t victories, not successful on national level.

7 Women very important/influential in Progressive movement. National Consumer’s League inspected factories, demanded minimum wages, factories follow state laws. Florence Kelley worked with Jane Addams. – Helped end child labor, regulate sweatshops. Mother Jones was a union organizer, famous for organizing mine workers. – Helped found IWW, or Wobblies. Rose Schneiderman – Triangle Shirtwaist Fire. – Fire inspectors, fire drills, fire exits unlocked, automatic sprinklers.

8 Florence Kelley

9

10 Mother Jones

11

12 Rose Schneiderman

13

14

15 Progressive Legislation Reforms Progressives wanted social welfare programs. – Programs to ensure a minimum standard of living. – Unemployment, health insurance, safety regs. Municipal Reforms (local gov’t). – Pushed for home rule-cities have ability to govern themselves. – Pushed to bring down political machines. – Pushed to take over utilities (electricity, gas, water). – Welfare services (baths, parks, shelters, relief for unemployed).

16 State Reforms. – More power for voters. Direct primary-citizens nominate candidates for election. Initiative-citizens can put proposed laws on ballots via petition. Referendum-citizens approve or reject law passed by legislature. Recall-citizens vote to remove public official from office. – Workplace reforms. Health & safety laws (limited hours, worker’s comp). Establish state labor departments. Abolished child labor, est. minimum wage.

17 Federal Reforms. Theodore Roosevelt was big Progressive president. – Forced coal miners & owners to negotiate deal to end strike. – Filed 42 anti-trust lawsuits; became known as “trust-buster”, didn’t like monopolies. – Gave power to ICC to regulate railroads’ rates. – Inspired by The Jungle, passed the Pure Food and Drug Act, Meat Inspection Act. Required labels of ingredients, sanitary conditions, rating system for meat.

18

19

20

21

22

23 – Created federal Department of Labor, Women’s Bureau, Children’s Bureau. Laws to protect women, kids. – TR was big environmentalist; created US Forest Service, set aside 200 million acres for parks. New Constitutional Amendments. – 16 th – Allowed federal gov’t to tax income. – 17 th – Direct election of senators by voters. – 18 th – Established Prohibition.

24


Download ppt "The Progressive Movement Ch 11, Sec 1-2. 1890-1920-new reform movement. Called Progressivism or Progressive Movement. – Felt that private charities could."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google