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Progressive Era

1914 book exploring balance

between things like traditionalism

and progressivism.

Could Laissez-Faire

be amended?

Could the government

substitute mastery for drift?

What were

the ills that

Progressives wanted to cure?

Popular mags…..increased public awareness!

Broad spectrum – parties, regions, levels of gov’t.....

Steffens – The Shame of the Cities

Tarbell – Standard Oil

Phillips – Senate

Baker – Following the Color Line

Spargo – The Bitter Cry of the Children

Wiley – snake oil

More Awareness More democracy!

Where the country stood at 1900

1. Imperial power with new territories.

2. #1 producer of goods (and from 1900-1910, production increased by 85%!)

3. Civil War bitterness subsided for whites; replaced by patriotism, economic

opportunity, and white supremacy.

4. Increased civil rights, immigration, social work, and feminist activities.

5. Continued technological advancement and transportation development.

6. Increased gap between rich and poor (haves and have-nots).

7. Urban underclass increasingly without hope of advancement and titans of

industry with unprecedented wealth and power.

8. Muckraking increasing resentment.

9. Strikes continuing and often violent.

Muckrackers

Goo

Goos

Temperance

Suffragettes

Populists

Midclass

Women

Labor

Unions

Civil

Rights

Roots

Progressivism was a continuation of efforts

begun by the Greenbacks – the Grange

and especially the Populists.

2nd Great Awakening

Antebellum Reforms[1810s-1850s]

CIVIL

WAR

Populism[1870s-1890s]

Social Gospel

Progressivism[1890s-1920]

1920s Revivalism

New Deal[1930s-1940s]

1950sRevivalism

Great Society

&1960s SocialMovements

ChristianEvangelicalMovement

CONSERVATIVE

REVOLUTION

The “Culture Wars”:The Pendulum of Right v. Left

Progressive Presidents: Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson

Progressives in general: middle class, white collared,

educated, urbanites interested in

curing the ills of society and

encouraging active government

involvement… from both parties and all

regions of country.

A Progressive is a Populist

who shaved his whiskers,

washed his shirt, and put

on a derby hat.

-- William Allen White

…Wage War on Social Injustice by Increasing Democracy

and Avoiding Social Revolution… Preserve American Ideals

While also Changing Expectations of Government… ending

Laissez-Faire…. Targeting:

Women’s suffrage

Monopolies Political corruption

Inefficiency of government Discrimination

Alcohol Immigration

Pornography & Prostitution Working Conditions

Unregulated Business Wages

Commission System – experts running city

ex: Galveston, 1901

City Manager System – elected city council chooses

manager (expert)

Laws/Law Enforcement – decreasing slumlords, juvenile

delinquency, prostitution, corrupt

sale of city services, bribed

police officers

Public Utilities Commissions – government regulation

Primary elections – voters nominating state senators

Initiative – voters propose legislation

Referendum – laws on ballot for voter approval

Recall – voters remove “bad” leaders

Corrupt Practices Acts – limiting $ candidates spend

Australian ballot – secret ballot

Votes for Women – before the 1920,

all but the light red states had some

level of female suffrage

(green had full)

The Wisconsin Example, 1901

Increased government regulation of public utilities

Reducing political power of RR and lumber,

Expert advisors

Robert M. La Follett

“Fighting Bob”

led progressive

change in Wisconsin

as governor .

Under Roosevelt

Reclamation Act – oversaw land development for water power, 1902

Department of Commerce and Labor – new executive agencies to

investigate businesses engaged

in interstate commerce, 1903

Elkins Act – strengthened ICC regulation of RR, targeting rebates, 1903

Hepburn Railroad Act – more power to ICC to regulate RR, 1906

Meat Inspection Act – inspection of animals at slaughter, “corral to

can” if interstate commerce, 1906

Pure Food & Drug Act – inspection meat products and open labeling

of medicines/drugs in products, 1906

Aldrich-Vreeland Act – national banks issue emergency $, 1908

Under Taft

Payne-Aldrich Bill – moderately reduced tariffs while raising others, 1909

Underwood-Simmons Tariff, - Lowered Import Duties, 1913

16th Amendment – Graduated Income Tax, 1913

17th Amendment – Direct Election of Senators, 1913

Under Wilson

Underwood Tariff – significantly lowered tariffs, 1913

Federal Reserve Act – national bank #3, 1913

Federal Trade Commission Act – investigate and end unfair business

practices in trusts, 1914

Clayton Anti-Trust Act – strengthened Sherman Act and removed labor

unions as trusts, 1914

Lafollette Seaman Act – better treatment for sailors, 1915

Federal Farm Loan Act – low interest loans for farmers , 1916

Workingmen’s Compensation Act – shot down by Supreme Court but would

have provided help to civil service employees during hard times,1916

18th Amendment – Prohibition, 1918

19th Amendment – Women’s Suffrage, 1920

Warehouse Act – credit for farmers storing crops in federally licensed

warehouses, 1916

Adamson Act – 8 hour workday and overtime pay for RR workers, 1916

Settlement House Movement & Women’s Clubs

provided women with experience , education, and a voice.

“Separate Spheres” Embraced by Women’s

Movement

Women’s place was

in the home… caretaker

and moral compass for

family should have a vote!

Women Tackled:

Child Labor, Disease in tenements, Pensions for

single mothers, Food safety, Temperance, Unsafe working

conditions, etc.

Formed groups such as:

Women’s Trade Union League

National Consumers League

Served on Federal Agencies such as:

Children’s Bureau, 1912

Women’s Bureau, 1920

Florence Kelley Educated at Cornell, former resident/worker at

Hull House, became Illinois’s first chief factory inspector and

founded/led National Consumers League in 1899.

Influenced 1908 Muller vs. Oregon case

The case upheld Oregon state

restrictions on the working hours of

women as justified by the special state

interest in protecting women's health.

Secured 10 hour workday , illustrated

government power over business , but

upheld sexism.

Invalidating Progressives:

Lochner v. New York, 1905Supreme Court ruled law for 10 hour workday for

bakers was "unreasonable, unnecessary and arbitrary

interference with the right and liberty of the

individual to contract."

Partially Validating Progressives:

Muller V. Oregon, 1908Supreme Court upheld special law for women’s

workday citing special needs of women.

Laws protecting

workers were

meaningless if

not enforced…

This tragedy led

to workers

compensation

laws and

stronger laws

and regulations.

Women’s Christian Temperance Union

(WCTU) founded by Frances E. Willard,

became the largest female organization

in the world. They helped reduce alcohol

consumption and pass “dry” laws.

1902 Anthracite Coal Strike

T.R. forced arbitration…

threatened to send in troops… did

not take sides…

ending in 10% wage increase and

9 hour workday.

T.R. was the first president to get involved in a strike

WITHOUT taking the side of the employers!

T.R. urges Congress to create the

Department of

Commerce and Labor

1903

--Later split into two

departments

--Head of department is

member of presidential

cabinet

-- aided in trust-busting

TRUST BUSTER?

4,000 businesses swallowed by

trusts … T.R. tried to distinguish

between “good” and “bad “

trusts… brought a few suits… but

really didn’t BUST the trusts.

Didn’t want to punish success, but

did want to assert government

power over business.

(regulating more than

busting up)

Puck was a political magazine.

The image shows T.R. scrubbing

“Flim-Flam Finance” with “honesty

soap.”

T.R. went after the Northern

Securities Company in 1902

(J.P. Morgan and James J. Hill)…

went to Supreme Court, which

ordered it to be dissolved.

Business was angry but progressives

pleased.

1904 Election 56% of vote!

His SQUARE DEAL continues…

Stock Market prices fell 50% from 1906.

Many bank runs and bankruptcies.

Was it caused by Progressive policies? NO but public

likes to blame Presidents so T.R. was blamed.

Did conservatives blame progressive policies? YES

The government still couldn’t regulate

economy.

There is no national bank.

J.P. Morgan and wealthy bankers bailed

out failing businesses in exchange from

promise from T.R. not to bust his new

trust. (Taft later does)

1864 – Yosemite Grant creates the first park for

public use under Lincoln

1872 – Yellowstone established under Grant

1877 Desert Land Act – unsuccessful

1891 Forest Reserve Act – authorized president to

set aside land to be protected by national parks

1902 Newlands Act

– irrigation projects in west

1905-1911 – Roosevelt Dam

T.R. and Gifford

Pinchot, head of

the federal

Division of

Forestry

T.R. was one of the greatest

environmental advocates.

Muir Woods National Monument, 1905

… and 5 National Parks, 148 million

acres of National Forests,

Pelican Island animal refuge, and

23 monuments in his 8 years as

President!

T.R. and John Muir, author of

Our National Parks, 1901 and co-

founder of the Sierra Club

Boy Scouts of America founded in 1910

celebrates the outdoors.

Sierra Club est. by

Jon Muir fights to

conserve natural

resources.

Call of the Wild

written by Jack

London raised

awareness and

concern for nature.

Hetch Hetch Valley in

Yosemite National Park was

destroyed when a reservoir

was created in 1913.

This was a blow to

Conservationism, but

illustrates the conflict between

nature and civilization.

Roosevelt voluntarily steps down, as

was tradition after two terms.

He was a popular, energetic,

president who restored power

of executive and tamed

industry.

He hand selected his

successor, William Howard Taft,

to replace him… but Taft didn’t do

things the Roosevelt Way… DRAMA!

WJB lost to McKinley in 1896 & 1900

Third loss to Taft in 1908

He remained popular among liberal,

progressive/populist democrats,

carried the South, but lost with his

43% to Taft’s 52% of the vote.

Eugene Debs ran as a Socialist in the 1908

election and received 420,794 votes.

Debs ran for president in 1900, 1904

receiving a similar amount of votes.

He ran again in 1912 and earned more than

900,000 votes.

In 1920, he ran from his prison cell… and

earned a record 913,693 votes… Socialist

Party hasn’t received that many votes since.

After Taft took office, T.R. went

hunting in Africa.

Strengthen Executive

Tamed Industry

Balanced dramatically different interests

with skill (Employer-Employee,

Business-Government, Conservation-

Industry, Individualism-Paternalism)

Square Deal was the grandfather to his

5th cousin’s New Deal

Opened America’s eyes to the world and

their responsibility in it

Taft was expected to continue Roosevelt’s

policies, but he had none of the skill and

charm that enabled T.R. to lead.

His Dollar Diplomacy replaced the Big Stick,

and his trust busting exceeded what T.R.

thought was right.

T.R. re-enters politics in the next election to

stop Taft.

Encouraged investment in Panama,

Honduras, Haiti, and China to increase

American security and prevent Europeans

from doing so.

Tried to buy the Manchurian RR from

Japan/Russia… was laughed at.

1912 – forced to use force… Nicaragua

revolution threatens completion of Panama

Canal… Taft sends in troops.

Exchanging Dollars for Bullets… with limited success…

T.R. doesn’t like Taft’s aggressive Trust

Busting…

90 suits in 4 years compared to 40 in 8.

1911 – Standard Oil Company broken

Tried to break up U.S. Steel, which

infuriated T.R. since he approved some

of the mergers following the panic of

1907.

T.R. & Taft

Reasons T.R. tried to replace Taft:

1. Payne-Aldrich… raised some tariffs while

lowering others… anti-progressive

2. Trust busting too aggressively

3. Ballinger-Pinchot conflict of 1910… Pinchot

criticized Ballinger… Taft fires Pinchot…

Pinchot buddy of T.R.

The Republican Party split… Old Guard

supporting Taft… progressive wing

supporting T.R. and his

New Nationalism, which led to

Democratic take over of Legislature in 1910

elections and the 1911 creation of the

Progressive Party.

T.R. enthusiastically re-enters

politics in 1911.

Donkey and Elephant were symbols of Democratic and Republican parties,

thanks to Nast, and the new Progressive Party had the Moose… because T.R.

was called a Bull-Moose.

The Progressive Party &Former President

Theodore Roosevelt

People should riseabove their sectarianinterests to promote the general good.

Women’s suffrage.

Graduated income tax.

Inheritance tax for the rich.

Lower tariffs.

Limits on campaign spending.

Currency reform.

Minimum wage laws.

Social insurance.

Abolition of child labor.

Workmen’s compensation.

The Democratic Party &Governor Woodrow Wilson (NJ)

Could he rescue the Democratic Party from “Bryanism”??

Government control of the monopolies

trusts in general were bad

eliminate them!!

Tariff reduction.

One-term President.

Direct election of Senators.

Create a Department of Labor.

Strengthen the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.

Did NOT support women’s suffrage.

Opposed to a central bank.

Keepthe

WhistleBlowing

Taft was determined to defeat TR and preserve the conservative heart of the Republican Party.

High import tariffs.

Put limitations on female and child labor.

Workman’s Compensation Laws.

Against initiative, referendum, and recall.

Against “bad” trusts.

Creation of a Federal Trade Commission.

Stay on the gold standard.

Conservation of natural resources because they are

finite.

The Socialist Party & Eugene V. Debs

The issue is Socialism versus Capitalism. I am for Socialism because I am for humanity.

Government ownership of railroads and utilities.

Guaranteed income tax.

No tariffs.

8-hour work day.

Better housing.

Government inspection of factories.

Women’s suffrage.

The key issues in the

campaign were …

Progressive = Roosevelt 88 electoral votes

Democrat = Wilson 435 electoral votes

Republican = Taft 8 electoral votes

Socialist = Debs 0

With Taft’s 23% popular vote and Roosevelt’s 27% popular

vote… a united Republican Party would have won the election.

Wilson received 41% and was a minority president… fewer

people voted for Wilson than voted for William Jennings Bryan

in earlier elections!

Tariff

Underwood Tariff of 1913

Banks

Federal Reserve Act, 1913

Trusts

Federal Trade Commission Act, 1914

Clayton Anti-Trust Act, 1914

Panama Canal Tolls Act

repealed…

Great Britain was upset with

this Act, as it went against the

1901 Hay-Pauncefote Treaty

which promised to keep the

canal free and open to all.

Wilson repealed it as a matter

of “good faith.”

Jones Act, 1916

Full territorial status to Philippines and

promised independence as soon as

they were stable. Wilson believed in

self-determination of

nations.

California – Japan

California was prohibiting Japanese from owning land.

Wilson sent WJB to get CA to back off. Japan threatened

force in Pacific in retaliation.

Haiti, 1915 Dominican Republic, 1916

Marines sent in to

protect Americans

during riots and

violence.

They stay for 19 years.

Continued Roosevelt’s plan

to handle finances and

manage their police… a lot

of violence here… marines

sent in to stop riots. They

stay for 8 years.

Wilson was a very hesitant imperialist… he acted against his own

beliefs with these two interventions. He believed they were so unstable…

leaving them alone would cruel.

Wilson buys the

Virgin Islands from

Denmark.

Latin Americans call

the Caribbean

YANKEE LAKE.

A Mexican Revolution in 1913 ended

badly when General Huerta became

president after murdering the

revolutionary leader.

Mexicans flooded into America.

Mexicans asked for help but Wilson

didn’t intervene, because the motive

was financial not moral.

1914, Wilson supports arming

Huerta’s rival, Carranza and Villa.Huerta Carranza

Wilson threatens to use force

after the Tampico Incident

(American sailors arrested) and

ordered the navy to Vera Cruz.

Huerta and Carranza are now

upset with Wilson… and Pancho

Villa attacks Americans in Mexico

and in New Mexico.

John J. Pershing was sent to

capture Villa… didn’t get him.