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The Politics of the Gilded Age
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Themes of Gilded Age (1869-1889) n Politics: hard v. soft $, tariff, corruption, patronage & trusts n Industrialism: railroads, steel, oil, electricity, banking n Transformation: agrarian to urban n Urbanization: “new” immigrants n Unions & reform n Populism: farmers losing ground n “Last West”: farming, mining, cattle n By 1900, society gets more stratified
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"What is the chief end of man?-- to get rich. In what way?-- dishonestly if we can; honestly if we must." -- Mark Twain 1871
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The Election of 1868 n Republicans - nominate Ulysses S. Grant –promises continued Military Reconstruction –Campaigned by waving the "Bloody Shirt" - vote how you shot
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Waving the bloody shirt
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Ulysses S. Grant
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n Democrats - nominate Horatio Seymour –"Ohio Idea“ »Policy of Repudiation - redemption of Bonds at highest possible level –Seymour backs Eastern banker’s gold plan instead
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n 500,000 Freedmen vote for Grant n Grant wins by 300,000 votes
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Grant Administration n Called the "Era of Good Stealings" n Democrats locked out of political trough n Business & political "machines" gain spoils n Period of graft, corruption, & scandal
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The Scandals
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Black Friday – September 24, 1869 n "Jubilee Jim" Fisk (the Brass) & Jay Gould (the Brains) –Corner the gold market after promise from Grant to keep Treasury from selling gold reserves
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n Panic buying drives up prices n Treasury releases reserves n Prices plummet n Many are bankrupt n Grant exonerated of any wrong-doing
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Tweed Ring Scandals n "Boss" William Marcy Tweed of Tammany Hall in NYC
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n Used bribery, graft, & fraudulent elections to extort profits from political position
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n NY Times published reports of scandals n Cartoonist Thomas Nast attacked Tweed Boss Tweed
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n Samuel J. Tilden prosecuted Tweed on corruption charges n Boss Tweed dies in jail
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The Tammany Tiger Loose - What are you going to do about it?
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Credit Mobilier Scandal n Union Pacific RR insiders formed construction company n Made exorbitant profits by hiring & overcharging themselves (348% dividends in 1 year!)
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n Used bribery & kickbacks to Congress n 1872 Congressional investigation led to censuring of 2 members & the VP
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Whiskey Ring Scandal n Whiskey producers cheated gov't out of millions of dollars in excise taxes n Paid kickbacks to controllers & tax collectors
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n Grant: “Let no guilty man escape.” n Grant’s personal secretary is involved n Persuaded jury not to convict
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Military Ring Scandal n Secretary of War Belknap involved selling the privilege of disbursing shoddy goods to Indians –Made $24,000 profit
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n Grant accepts Belknap’s resignation "with regret“ the same day that the House impeached him n Scandals lead to calls for civil service reforms
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Election of 1872 n Liberal Republican "Revolt" n Republican party splits over "Anti-Grantism“ n Liberal Republican Party Formed –“Turn the Rascals Out!”
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–Led to nomination of Horace Greeley, liberal editor of NY Tribune –Democrats endorsed Greeley as well n Republican Party re- nominated Grant n Grant wins 286 - 66 electoral votes after much mudslinging
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n Election leads to minor civil service reforms & a general amnesty for most southerners n Grant’s 2 nd term marred by economic crisis
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Panic of 1873 n Causes: –Overproduction of railroads, mines, factories, & farm products –Risky loans unpaid –Depreciation of Greenbacks
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n Collapse leads to 15,000 businesses failing n Currency controversy heats up into major issue
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Currency Controversy n “Contraction” –Process of removing paper "Greenbacks" from circulation leads to controversy
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n Hard Money –Creditors –Less currency –Deflation –Gold currency –Bankers n Soft Money –Debtors –More currency –Inflation –Silver currency –Farmers
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n 1870: Supreme Court ruled the Civil War Tender Act unconstitutional –Set stage to continue withdrawing inflated Civil War paper money n Grant adds two seats to Supreme Court (to 9 Justices) who vote to repeal earlier decision & keep Greenbacks in circulation
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n 1874: Grant persuaded by Hard Money people to veto a bill to expand the money supply n 1875: Specie Resumption Act –Pledges government to withdraw more Greenbacks & to buy all Greenbacks back for gold by "Redemption Day" in 1879
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Silver Issue n Controversy over gold coins vs. silver coins n Early 1870's: Treasury sets rate of exchange for silver at 1/16 the price of gold n This is below "market" value n Miners slow down extraction & sale of silver
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"Crime of ‘73" n Treasury stops coinage of silver dollars n New silver deposits found & price of silver drops n Call for new silver minting & return to “Dollar of Our Daddies"
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Grant’s Monetary Policy: n Contraction & a “Hard- money” policy n Decreases the money supply n Brings inflation under control
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n Increases the government’s credit rating level n Worsens the depression begun with the Panic of 1873 n Brings Greenbacks back to face value
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Results: n Democratic House is elected in 1874 n Greenback Labor Party formed in 1878 –14 members of Congress
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n Bland-Allison Act (1878) –Instructed Treasury to buy & mint $2-4 million a month of silver as compromise n End of depression = end of controversy
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Politics in the Gilded Age
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Paradox of Politics n Era of “Forgettable Presidents” n Congress & business more influential n Major parties agreed on most major issues, yet highly competitive political era
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Two-Party Stalemate
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n 80% voter turnout & straight party ticket voting n Patronage & bribery dominated politics n 2 major parties:
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Republicans n Protestant / Puritanism n Personal Morality n Business support n Northeast / Midwest n Freedmen / GAR
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Democrats n Catholic / Lutheran n Tolerance of differences n Resisted gov't control of morals n Old South n Industrial cities / Labor
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Intense Voter Loyalty
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Republican Party Factions
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Stalwarts n "Lord Roscoe" Conkling n Senator from New York n Embraced spoils system –Jobs for votes
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Half-Breeds n James G. Blaine n Congressman from Maine n Lip-service to reform
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Mugwumps n Thomas Nast –Cartoonist who embodiedideals n Young liberal reformers n Anti-corruption n Help freedmen
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Conflicts within Republican Party led to deadlock
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Election of 1876 n Grant considers 3 rd Term –“Reminded" by Congressional Resolution of the tradition of 2 terms
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Puck Wants a Strong Man at the Head of Government-- But Not This Kind
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The Political ‘Army of Salvation’
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n Republican Stalwarts & Half-breeds reach compromise, nominate Rutherford B. Hayes –"The Great Unknown“ –Former Governor of Ohio
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n Democrats nominate Samuel J. Tilden –"Whispering Sammy“ –NY attorney who bagged Tweed –Campaigns against Republican Scandals & for Civil Service Reform
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Hayes vs. Tilden
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n Tilden wins 184 out of 185 needed electoral votes n 20 electoral votes in contest, four southern states send dual sets of elector votes
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1876 Presidential Election
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n Constitution states that the President of the Senate should open the votes in the presence of the House and Senate - no mention of who counts
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The Political Crisis of 1877 “Corrupt Bargain” Part II?
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n President of the Senate (Vice President) = Republican n Speaker of the House = Democrat
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A Political Crisis: The “Compromise” of 1877
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Compromise of 1877 n Passage of Electoral Act of 1877 –Set up electoral commission 15 men - 5 each from House, Senate, & Supreme Court –Republicans outnumber Democrats 8-7
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n The Compromise: –Republican Hayes is President –South to lose the last remaining Federal Troops »Reconstruction ends at expense of southern blacks –Southern RR route
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Hayes Prevails
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Alas, the Woes of Childhood… Sammy Tilden—Boo-Hoo! Ruthy Hayes’s got my Presidency, and he won’t give it to me!
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Hayes Presidency (1877 - 1881) n “His Fraudulency” & “Lemonade Lucy” n Economic & Labor problems –Railroad strikes put down
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6 n Immigrant problems –Anti-Chinese Kearneyites in California –Hayes vetoed Anti- Chinese immigration law –Bill passes in 1882 during Arthur Administration
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Election of 1880 n Republicans –Standoff between Stalwarts & Half-Breeds leads to "Dark Horse" candidate n James A. Garfield gets nomination –Chester A. Arthur (Stalwart) as VP
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n Democrats nominate Winfield S. Hancock –Civil War General wounded at Gettysburg n Campaign about character not issues n Garfield wins 214 to 155 in electoral vote –By 39,000 votes
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Election of 1880
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n Stalwarts & Half-Breeds fight over spoils n Half-Breed Blaine becomes Secretary of State & sought to shut out the Stalwarts
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n June 1881: Stalwart office seeker Charles Guiteau assassinates President Garfield who dies that September
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Garfield Assassinated “I am a Stalwart. Arthur is now President of the US”
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n Chester A. Arthur becomes President n Nation shocked by "an office - or your life!"
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President Chester A. Arthur
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Arthur Presidency (1881-1885) n President Arthur takes up cause of civil service reform n Conklingites seek offices & favors - get cold shoulder from Arthur
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n Pendleton Act of 1883 –Prohibited financial assessments on office holders –Established merit system based on aptitude –Set up Civil Service Commission & created classified positions
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n Problem: –Politicians turn to Big Business to make up for campaign funds
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Election of 1884 n Republicans nominate James G. Blaine –Half-Breed –Tainted by scandal »"Mulligan Letters" proving his corruption ("Burn this letter.“)
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n Scandal caused some Republicans to jump ship –Called Mugwumps = "holier than thou“ n Democrats nominate Grover Cleveland –"Grover the Good“ –Said to be clean –Republicans discovered he had fathered an illegitimate son
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n Election is all about character, not about issues –D= "Burn, burn, burn this letter" –R= "Ma, Ma, where’s my Pa?” –R= "Rum, Romanism, Rebellion"
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Ma, Ma…where’s my pa? He’s going to the White House, ha… ha… ha…! A Dirty Campaign
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Blaine vs. Cleveland
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n Cleveland wins 219-182 –First Democrat in White House since Buchanan
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Cleveland Presidency (1885 - 1889) n Cleveland is unbending supporter of laissez- faire –Gov't out of free market n Weak reformer
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n Fired Republicans & hired Democrats - 2/3 of Federal employees n Fought against pensions for dubious veterans n Fought to reduce tariffs & reduce gov't surplus n Sought to reduce monopolies
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Bravo, Señor Clevelando!
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Election of 1888 n Democrats renominate Cleveland despite his insistence of making Tariff an issue n Republicans nominate Benjamin Harrison –Grandson of "Tippacanoe" William Henry Harrison
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n British Minister Sir Lionel Sackville-West writes that a vote for Cleveland is a vote for England & free trade n Republicans put fear of low tariffs on Big Business - raise major war chest n Cleveland won popular vote but lost election 233-168
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President Benjamin Harrison
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n March 1889: Harrison, the “White House Ice Chest,” assumes the presidency n Republicans eagerly snapped up Federal offices & prepared to pass legislation to maintain the high protective tariffs
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n Makes “Half-breed” James G. Blaine (the Plumed Knight) Secretary of State again n Young New Yorker Theodore Roosevelt placed on the Civil Service Commission
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“Billion Dollar” Congress n Republicans have only 3 more votes than the 163 needed for a quorum n Democrats were able to block a quorum by failing to answer roll call
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Tsar Reed n New Republican Speaker of the House Thomas B. Reed changed the House rules & counted heads to establish a quorum n 1 st “Billion Dollar” Congress then began to pass legislation –1 st to pass over a billion dollars in peacetime
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“Billion Dollar” Legislation
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Pension Act of 1890 n Substantially increases the number eligible for Civil War pensions n Continued the need for tariffs by reducing the federal surplus
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Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890) n Forbade combinations in restraint of trade n Loopholes used by corporations since could not be enforced n More new trusts created in first year n Used by courts to curb labor organizations
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Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890) n Eastern "gold bugs" agreed to double the amount of silver purchased in exchange for western support of increased tariffs n Silver certificates could be redeemed for silver or gold
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McKinley Tariff Bill (1890) n Raised tariff rates to highest peacetime level ever –Averaged 48.4% on dutiable goods n Raised tariffs on agriculture goods that did not need protection n Farmers were hurt by higher prices for goods
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Congressional Election of 1890 n Discontent with “Bill” McKinley & his tariff leads to the election of a Democratic Congress in 1890 n 9 members of the militant Farmers Alliance were elected to Congress
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Election of 1892 n Democrats run ex- president Grover Cleveland against Republican incumbent Harrison & Populist James B. Weaver James B. Weaver
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n Republicans call for continued high tariffs which are again the major issue
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The People’s Party n Populists rooted in the Granges, Farmers Alliances, & Labor movement
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Price Indexes for Consumer & Farm Products: 1865-1913
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n Campaigned on a platform of "free silver," graduated income tax, gov’t ownership of telephone, telegraph, & railroads
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n Also called for direct election of Senators, a single 4-year term of office for the President, & use of the referendum & initiative n Also backed labor’s demands for shorter hours & immigration restrictions
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Homestead Strike n Summer of 1892: wave of labor strikes swept the country n At Carnegie’s Homestead Steel plant, 300 armed Pinkerton detectives used to try & crush a strike
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Homestead Strike
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n Steelworkers fought back & federal troops were eventually used to end the strike n Homestead Strike showed seriousness of labor unrest & disproved that tariff protection led to higher wages n Lost Republican votes
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Jim Crow South n Populists, led by Tom Watson of Georgia, appealed to southern Blacks to abandon the Republicans & vote for the Populists n Southern “Bourbon” leaders played on racial fears to woo poor whites back to the Democratic Party
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n Fear of Black political power led to the final passage of Jim Crow voting restrictions n Southern Populists soon became increasingly racist in their rhetoric n Populists one of the few third parties to win electoral votes –Weaver got over 1 million popular & 22 electoral votes in 1892
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Election of 1892
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Cleveland Wins Again
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n Grover Cleveland took office in 1893 as the only president to ever be reelected after being defeated n Cleveland comes back more conservative & a little heavier
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The Panic of 1893 n Depression begins in 1893 that will last for about 4 years n It is the first major depression of the modern industrial age
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n Caused by overbuilding, over speculation, labor disorders, & agricultural depression n Silver issue led to poor credit for US n Banks failed, businesses failed, thousands out of work
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n Charities set up soup kitchens for the thousands of hoboes living in the streets
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n Federal government followed laissez-faire policy & did nothing
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Gold Panic n Gold reserves fall below the $100 million n “Endless chain” had gov’t paying more for silver purchases than it received in gold
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n Cleveland calls a special session of Congress seeking to repeal the Silver Purchase Act n In the middle of the crisis, Cleveland has to secretly have a tumor removed from his mouth
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Congressional Opposition n William Jennings Bryan –Nebraska Democrat who led opposition –Great oratory made him famous throughout country n Cleveland able to use the power of his office to get the law repealed, but alienated the silverites in the Democratic Party
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n 1894: gold reserves dropped to $41 million dollars & the country is in danger of going off the gold standard n Cleveland is forced to sell bonds to raise gold reserves
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n The “endless chain” redemption continued to cause the treasury reserves to drop n Depression deepened
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Wilson Gorman Tariff Act (1894) n Democrats passed a new tariff that created a modest reduction in tariffs & a 2% income tax on incomes over $4,000
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n Bill ultimately watered down by amendment & passed without the signature of an outraged Cleveland n Supreme Court will declare the income tax unconstitutional in 1895 –16 th Amendment will allow for an income tax in 1913
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1894 Congressional Election n Republicans win the congressional election of 1894 in a landslide & begin to boast that they will win the White House in ‘96
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Morgan Steps In n 1895: deepening gold crisis led Cleveland to seek loans from Wall Street bankers n J.P. Morgan loans $65 million to federal gov’t & confidence is restored –Banks will earn $7 million in interest
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n Populists are enraged by the defeat of income tax & Cleveland’s sellout to “Jupiter” Morgan n Coin’s Financial School becomes the bible of free- silverites n Silver becomes the issue of the Populists in 1896
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