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C.13 the Rise of Progressivism. The Birth of Progressivism We will Explain the origins and accomplishments of the Progressive Movement and Analyze the.

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Presentation on theme: "C.13 the Rise of Progressivism. The Birth of Progressivism We will Explain the origins and accomplishments of the Progressive Movement and Analyze the."— Presentation transcript:

1 C.13 the Rise of Progressivism

2 The Birth of Progressivism We will Explain the origins and accomplishments of the Progressive Movement and Analyze the efforts to achieve women’s suffrage and other reforms in the early 20 th century Video Notes:1:00

3 Birth of the Progressive Era 1min.

4 1. Why did the progressives believe that strong government action was the only way to tackle the social and economic problems of industrialization? (traditionally Americans had depended on voluntary solutions)

5 2. Why were women so critical to the successes of the progressive movement? 3. Why was TR such a popular progressive leader? (How did he sound more like a reformer than he actually was?)

6 4. To what extent was progressivism really a conservative, middle class reform that did not really reflect the interests or concerns of the working class and the poor? (Conservation and the environment reflected the perspectives of the affluent)

7 Progressives Programs 5:00

8 Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

9 TIME LINE OF THE PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT 1893 Anti-Saloon League founded 1895 Booker T. Washington gives Atlanta Compromise speech – "cast down their bucket" 1903 Women's Trade Union League founded 1905 Niagara Movement promotes African American rights 1906 San Francisco earthquake Meat Inspection Act Pure Food and Drug Act 1909 NAACP founded 1911 Society of American Indians founded Triangle Shirtwaist fire 1914 Federal Trade Commission created Clayton Anti-Trust Act 1917 -1918 WWI Great Migration 1919 Eighteenth Amendment (Prohibition) ratified 1920 Nineteenth Amendment (federal woman suffrage) ratified 1929 League of United Latin American Citizens founded

10 U.S. History 2.7.12 Return– Assignment #1 1. T.R.– the Progressive President Info– Video– From Cattleman to Cleaning up the Meat industry 2. Clock Buddies– Review– T.R. 3. We will finish and turn in Assignment #2 Friday– and then…….

11 T.R. 6:09

12 Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle 2:37

13 History of Food Safety: 2:37

14 MuckrackersMuckrackers GooGoosGooGoos TemperanceTemperance SuffragettesSuffragettes PopulistsPopulists MidclassWomenMidclassWomen LaborUnionsLaborUnions CivilRightsCivilRights

15 Early Voices of Reform 3:54

16 2 nd Great Awakening Antebellum Reforms [1810s- 1850s] CIVICIVILWARCIVICIVILWAR Populism [1870s- 1890s] Social Gospel Progressivism [1890s-1920] 1920s Revivalism New Deal [1930s- 1940s] 1950s Revivalism Great Society & 1960s Social Movements Christian Evangelical Movement CONSERVATIVECONSERVATIVEREVOLUTIONREVOLUTIONCONSERVATIVECONSERVATIVEREVOLUTIONREVOLUTION The “Culture Wars”: The Pendulum of Right v. Left

17 Liberalism—what is it and where does it come from? Locke → Jeffersonian Democracy (1800s) → Jacksonian Democracy (1830s) → Reform Movement → (1840s and 1850s) Grange (Farmer’s Alliance) after Civil War → Populists (1892) → Progressives (1900-1920) → New Deal (FDR, 1933-1945) → Fair Deal (Truman, 1945-1953) → New Frontier (1961- 1963) → Great Society (1963-1969)

18 Lesson 2- Liberalism True expression of democracy Alliance between public and government to correct abuses of capitalism Alleviate short-term problems, bring about fundamental change— pol., econ., social

19 Critics on the left Liberalism is an alliance between gov’t and corporations to: maintain power in few hands, maintain elites hegemony over other classes, (just like conservatives, different methods) preserve the status quo

20 I. The Roots of Progressivism In 1900, 76 million, 1 in 7 foreign-born 1900-1914, 13 million more immigrants arrive Progressives were a broad reform movement—attack monopoly, corruption, inefficiency, social injustice, poverty, urban squalor, racism, sexism, etc.

21 Common thread— “strengthen state”—use of government as an agency of human welfare Roots—1870s Greenback Movement, 1890s Populism Political/philosophical position— new solutions to problems of industrial age, laissez-faire and rugged individualism out of place

22 “intentionally feeble” Jeffersonian government needs to be reinvigorated to respond to both power of corporations and problems of increasingly urban society

23 II. Rise of the Progressives Politicians—William Jennings Bryan, Gov. Atgeld, Populists leaders Writers and novelists—Henry Demarest Lloyd—Wealth against Commonwealth– attack Standard Oil Thorstein Veblan—The Theory of the Leisure Class—attack predatory wealth and conspicuous consumption

24 Jacob Riis-How the Other Half Lives Theodore Dreiser—The Titan, The Financier Muckrakers—exposè journalists and reform writers 10¢ and 15¢ journals emerge, compete in dirt digging— McClure’s, Cosmopolitan, Collier’s, Everybody’s TR called them muckrakers as an insult

25 Other Muckraking works Lincoln Steffens “The Shame of the Cities”—corrupt alliance between big business and city government Ida Tarbell— “History of Standard Oil” Thomas Lawson “Frenzied Finance”—stock speculation

26 David Phillips– Treason of the Senate—under control of corporations Ray Stannard Baker Following the Color Line—following the conditions of blacks John Spargo—The Bitter Cry of the Children—child labor Dr. Harvey W. Wiley— attacked patent medicines in Colliers

27

28 Politics and Progressivism 3:21

29 III. Progressives in Politics White, Anglo-Saxon middle- class movement, squeezed from above (Trusts) and below (unions, immigrants) 2 goals—use state power to curb trusts, stop Socialism by improving common person’s life

30 The Socialists 1:05

31 Progressives appear in all parties, all regions and all levels of government Political reforms: Direct Primary Elections— get rid of bosses Initiative—voters propose legislation, bypass legislators

32 Direct Primary, Senators etc.

33 Direct Primary Elections— get rid of bosses Initiative—voters propose legislation, bypass legislators

34 Referendum—laws placed on ballot for approval by people Recall—special elections to remove public officials Australian (secret) Ballot— less likely to bribe and can’t be sure Corrupt-practices Act—limits on corporate gifts and donations

35

36 Direct Election of Senators— (Millionaires Club), elected by state legislatures, distant from people 17 th Amendment 1913 Women’s suffrage—women’s vote will “elevate” elections

37 Suffrage 2:49

38 Municipal Reforms: City Manager System (Galveston, TX)—experts, no spoils Cleaning up streets— slumlords, juvenile delinquents, prostitution

39 Galveston, TX 1900

40 State Level Reforms: “Fightin’ Bob” La Follette and the Wisconsin Idea— campaigns against bosses and corporations (particularly RR) Use of Civil Servants from Univ of Wisconsin to run gov’t

41 19 Amendment Equal Rights Amendment Temperance Immigration (Nativism, Eugenics) Triangle Shirtwaist W.E.B Du Bois v. Booker T. Washington Lynching (Ida Wells) Progressive Income Tax

42 Progressive Income Tax 2:42

43 Rise of the City: Urban Growth

44 Limits of Progressivism 2:40


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