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Ch. 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age (Mark Twain) 1869-1896 Era when society was perceived as doing well but the reality was corruption, poverty, crime, and a huge gap between the rich and poor.
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Era of Good Stealings Black Friday 1869 Credit Mobilier 1872 Whiskey Ring 1874-75 Sec. of War resignation 1876
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Political Bosses Boss Tweed Hinky Dink Kenna
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Depression of 1873 1. Commercial overexpansion: RR, gains, mining, loans 2. Bankruptcies high 3. AA suffer 4. Hard-money vs. greenbacks 5. Resumption Act 1875: redeem greenbacks for gold 6. Silver backing as well?
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Political Party Membership Republicans: Puritan values Gov’t control on soc/eco/moral Midwest, rural, small town Freedmen Ethnic and cultural difference at the heart of political differences! Not the “issues.” Democrats: Catholic/Lutherans Immigrants/Tolerant Morality not a gov’t issue South/N. cities Political machines
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Stalwart’s vs. the Half-Breeds both belong to the Republican party! Stalwarts: conservative Keep patronage/no civil service reform backed the protective tariff Roscoe Conkling of New York was the most prominent Stalwart leader. The Half-Breeds “half Republican” moderately liberal supported civil service reform James Blaine of Maine was the leader of this group
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Post-reconstruction South Sharecropping & crop-lien systems
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Jim Crow
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Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) “The New Order”
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Class Conflicts & Ethnic Clashes The Great Railroad Strike of 1877
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Great Uprising of 1877 1. Began in West Va; spread from coast to coast! 2. Supported by community 3. >100 dead 4. Pinkertons hired 5. Pres. Hayes sends in federal troops 6. Formation of the National Guard 7. Trickle effect of trains going on strike?
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Strikes by States, 1880
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Ethnic Clashes
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Pres. Garfield Assassination C.J. Guiteau
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Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act (1883) 1. position based on merit via exams 2. Get rid of the spoils system 3. Taxation of employees for campaigns no longer allowed
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President Grover Cleveland (D) 1884 22 nd and 24 th president Favored Laissez-faire economics Probusiness Non-military $145M surplus! Pork barreling Lower tariffs, to the chagrin of the Democrats
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Benjamin Harrison (R) 23 rd President 1888
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Harrison’s Billion Dollar Congress Passes McKinley Tariff Act 1890 Highest tariff to date! Farmers goods not protected by tariffs= support Democratic party Sherman Silver Purchase Act 1890: puts more silver out into circulation; results in inflation although helps farmers able to pay off debt
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Farmers and Workers Organize Populist Movement (1890s) Farmers come together to challenge RR and the two-party system
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aka The People's Party
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Populist Movement Grangers Colored Farmers Alliance Farmers Alliance
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Populists’ Goals 1. Gov’t control of major industries!! RR, banks, communications, etc. 2. Graduated income tax 3. Eradicate monopolies 4. Restrict immigrant/no land 5. Lower tariffs 6. Coinage of silver 1/16 7. One term president 8. Direct senatorial elections 9. Better working conditions/wages/hrs James Weaver (1892E.)
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Farmers’ Alliance & Populist Wanted “Free coinage of silver” to help pay off their debt Negative consequence of all this silver in circulation?
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Homestead Strike (steel workers/1892) 1. Wage cuts/break union 2. Pinkerton’s hired 3. Fighting ensues 4. Pa. National Guard sent out/scabs hired 5. Conditions worsen: hrs increased, wages cut, union defeated
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Colored Farmers’ National Alliance
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Populist Tom Watson Goes from a civil rights supporter to White supremacist
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Voting Disenfranchisement 1. Literacy test 2. Poll taxes 3. Property qualification 4. Grandfather clause 5. SCJ = ensured “qualified” voters
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Guess who’s back in 1892?
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Cleveland & the Depression, 1893 Repeals Silver Purchase Act Gov’t gets loan from JP Morgan Many saw deal as shady Republicans prepare for a comeback!
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