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Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What...

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Review • What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? • What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded Age and who was its boss?
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Page 1: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Review

• What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish?

• What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded Age and who was its boss?

Page 2: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

The Populists

Page 3: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Manifest Destiny

• The idea that it is America’s God-given destiny to stretch from cost-to-coast.

Page 4: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Farming in the South and West after the Civil War

• With Manifest Destiny, more farming was happening in the U.S. than ever before.

• More machines were being used in farming then ever before.

• Eventually, more crops were being grown than could be consumed.

• This led to crop prices falling and many farmers needing to borrow money.

• Thus many farmers went into debt and some lost their farms.

Page 5: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.
Page 6: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Declining Status of Farmers

• Status of farmers falling as giant corporations rise.

• Farmers blamed their problems on East Coast Bankers and the Railroads.

• (RR’s charged smaller farmers more than big corporations.)

Page 7: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.
Page 8: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Crises of 1890s (#9)

• Severe Depression in 1893.

• Worst in US up to then.

• Also time of great labor unrest—Pullman Strike (1894) Homestead (1892).

Page 9: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Coxey’s Army

• Jacob Coxey

• March of unemployed men from. Ohio to D.C.

• Demand govt. to enact public works projects to provide jobs.

• Only 500 marchers.

• Coxey is arrested and little accomplished.

Page 10: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

The farmers begin to organize

• The farmers realized that if they banded together, they would have more power in addressing their concerns.

• 1st attempt is “The Grange.”• Then comes the “Farmers Alliance.

• These groups wanted the government to regulate railroad shipping costs.

• They also started cooperatives—pooling their products and sharing supplies and profits.

Page 11: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

The Populist Party

• A political party, mainly of Western and Southern farmers.

• They believed that farmers and workers should be freed from the exploitive practices of the banks, railroads, and merchants of the East coast.

.

Page 12: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Who are the Populists?

• Economically and culturally marginal people—geographically isolated.

• Rural white Protestants farmers.

• Blame RR’s, Eastern bankers, and middlemen for their plight.

• Anti-Semitism.

Page 13: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

review

• Overproduction led to a “glut” which resulted in falling prices which resulted in debt and foreclosures.

• Farmers blaimed others.

• Hung up on an idealized version of a mythical american past in which the self-sufficient farmers was the heart of America.

Page 14: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

What they Want:

• 1. Restricted Immigration.

• 2. Free coinage of silver —this would cause inflation and drive up the price of their crops.

• 3. Graduated Income Tax.

• 4. Direct Election of Senators.

• 5. Government ownership (or at least regulation) of utilities—railroads, telephones, telegraphs, etc.

Page 15: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Pops. Also want “Subtresuries”

• Subtresuries =govt. owned wharehouses where farmers would store their crops and get low interest loans against the crops and then sell them when the price rose.

• All Populists demands were in the Omaha platform of 1892

Page 16: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

The problem of the Railroads

• Often charge small farmers more to ship goods than big business men such as Rockefeller.

• “Short Haul vs. Long Haul”

• Grain Elevators

Page 17: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Issue of Silver

• Govt. had stopped using silver in 1873 (“Crime of 73).

• Farmers (and western miners) want coinage of silver at 16:1 ratio to create currency inflation.

Page 18: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

“Coin’s Financial School”

• Fictional book written in 1894 by William Harvey.

• One of the best-sellers of the age.

• Was about how the coinage of silver would solve all of the U.S. financial plans.

Page 19: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

The Wizard of Oz

• Populist Parable

Page 20: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.
Page 21: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Some Big Name Populists:• Tom Watson of

Georgia

• “Sockless” Jerry Simpson.

• Mary E. Lease “Raise less corn and more hell”

Page 22: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Populist Presidential Candidates

• 1892—James B. Weaver (won 6 states and received more than 1 million votes).

• William Jennings Bryan in 1896.

Page 23: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

The issue of “Fusion.” (#11)

• Some Populists want to unite with the Democrats to be more powerful.

• (race in South)

• They are for “Fusion.”

• Others against.

Page 24: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

Election of 1896

• Republicans nominate William McKinley of Ohio. Conservative—for tariff, against coinage of silver.

• Democrats are divided on silver issue, but nominate William Jennings Bryan (who is Pro-Silver).

• Gives “Cross of Gold Speech.”

Page 25: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

William Jennings Bryan’s “Cross of Gold” Speech

• Gold Standard is crucifying Mankind

Page 26: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

McKinley wins

• Bryan wins only parts of South and West.

• Loss signaled the practical end of Populist Party.

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The Failures of Populism

• In the South, the issue of race divided poor farmers.

• Many Populist leaders wanted to include blacks but many whites resisted and thus continued to vote for Democrats.

• Americans in general like the 2-party system (Democrats and Republicans).

• Democrats begin to use Populists’ ideas.

Page 29: Review What were political machines? How did they operate and what did they seek to accomplish? What was the most infamous Political Machine of the Gilded.

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