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Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫ Life at work ▫ Life at home ▫ American versus immigrant ▫ What did they do for entertainment If you do not know 1) look it up, 2) why are you not studying more? Keep your paper, you are going to answer questions throughout lecture that will count as a participation grade
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Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

Bell Ringer• Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the

late 1800s. Make sure to include:▫Life at work▫Life at home▫American versus immigrant▫What did they do for entertainment

• If you do not know 1) look it up, 2) why are you not studying more?

• Keep your paper, you are going to answer questions throughout lecture that will count as a participation grade

Page 2: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

From Crisis to EmpireChapter 19

Page 3: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

On the horizon…

•Unit 5 and Unit 6 study guides will be due February 25th!

Page 4: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium• From Civil War to 1900 the nation was divided

almost 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans▫16 (northern) states were Republican▫14 (southern) states were Democrat

• Republicans controlled the Presidency and the Senate while Democrats controlled the House▫People were fiercely loyal to their parties

(something we certainly are not today)▫This caused incredibly high voter turnout

(~70% compared to today’s 48%)

Page 5: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium•Why were people so loyal to their parties?

▫Regional differences: The South viewed Democrats as the party that

ended Reconstruction and maintained White Supremacy

The North viewed Republicans as the party that ended slavery and sought equality

•Republicans favored limited immigration and temperance which Catholics/immigrants took as an attack against them▫Therefore Catholics/immigrants supported

Democrats

Page 6: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium

•The Federal Government was not involved in many substantial issues▫They were in charge of the mail, military,

foreign policy, taxes, and tariffs▫They were also keeping railroads functional

by giving land grants to help them build▫They also intervened in the case of strikes

such as the Pullman Strike1. Who benefited from this intervention (the

workers or the owners)?

Page 7: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium

•The Federal Government also controlled a pension for Union Civil War veterans▫When the soldiers died off, so did the

pension program•By 1900 the two most powerful

institutions in the U.S. were the parties and the Supreme Court

Page 8: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium

•While the presidency was symbolically important, it was not very powerful▫There was a small staff for the president

who had to appoint 100,000 people when he was elected Mostly post office positions

▫When they appointed people, they had to try to keep harmony within their party which typically had many factions

▫Sometimes, this was impossible

Page 9: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium•The Republican Party divided into factions

during Hayes’ presidency▫The Stalwarts: led by Roscoe Conkling (NY),

favored traditional, professional machine politics▫The Half-Breeds: led by James G. Blaine (ME),

favored reform•Hayes could not make both happy, and

announced early he would not seek re-election▫He was a weak and unpopular president▫His popularity was made worse by “Lemonade

Lucy,” his wife who wanted temperance

Page 10: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium

•The only reason the divided Republican Party held the presidency in the 1880 election was because they chose James Garfield (Half-Breed) for President and Chester A. Arthur (Stalwart) for V.P.▫Democrats didn’t help themselves by

choosing a former Civil War commander-Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock

•Republicans also took both houses on Congress

Page 11: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium• Garfield began his presidency by advocating

for civil service reform▫A.K.A. ending the “spoils system”

• Garfield was assassinated by a gunman who shouted “I am a Stalwart and Arthur is president now!”

• Despite being a Stalwart, Arthur pushed for civil service reform▫He pushed the Pendleton Act which requires

federal jobs to be filled by people who have passed exams to earn those jobs

Page 12: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium

•In 1884 the Republicans put up James Blaine who was associated with corrupt politics▫Republican “mugwumps” declared they

would bolt from the party and support an honest Democrat (which they did)

•The Democrats put up Grover Cleveland—similar to Blaine on the issues, but had a good reputation of fighting corruption▫Cleveland won despite the Democrats

being called the party of “Rum, Romanism, and rebellion”

Page 13: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium• Cleveland was well respected (although not

liked) for his willingness to say no▫He thought that tariffs were too high allowing for a

surplus that led Congress to pass “reckless legislation”

▫He believed that the Federal Government should have a limited role

▫He asked for lower tariffs which the House passed, but the Senate (led by Republicans) refused (they actually called for a hike)

• This made tariffs the center argument in the election of 1888

Page 14: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium

•In 1888 the Democrats re-nominated Cleveland while the Republicans selected Benjamin Harrison (grandson of William Henry Harrison)▫Harrison endorsed high tariffs

•Cleveland won the popular vote by 100K, but Harrison won the electoral college and therefore the election

Page 15: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium•Harrison as president was nearly as weak as his

grandfather (who died in 30 days)▫Congress did pass the Sherman Anti-Trust Act2. What was the Sherman Anti-Trust Act? Was it

initially successful?▫ The McKinley Tariff passed and became the

highest tariffs known• By this time, the public was not a fan of tariffs • They let the Republicans know this by electing

Cleveland to the presidency in 1892

Page 16: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Politics of Equilibrium• Cleveland supported the same ideas as before

▫ This time he/Congress were also pressured to legislate regulation of railroads In Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway Co. v. Illinois ruled

that only the Congress could regulate interstate commerce—opening the door for Congress to pass the Interstate Commerce Act

• The Interstate Commerce Act banned discrimination between long and short hauls, required the railroads to publish their fares, and that rates must be “fair and just”▫ The Interstate Commerce Commission was supposed to

act on these issues (although, like the Sherman Act, it was not well carried out in its first decade)

Page 17: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

Question 3—The Agrarian Revolt5 minutesCan’t remember—look on p. 535-39

•Diagram the evolution from Grangers to the Populist Party▫Under each group explain what they fought

for▫If they went away, explain why.

Page 18: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Crisis of the 1890s

•The agrarian revolt was one of many indicators that the 1890s was going to be a decade plagued with issues

•The Panic of 1893 brought on the worse recession American had seen▫It began with the Philadelphia and Reading

Railroad declaring bankruptcy as well as the National Cordage Company This sparked a stock market crash which led to

bank failures (because banks had invested their money in the market)

Page 19: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Crisis of the 1890s• Within 6 months 8000 businesses, 156 railroads,

and 400 banks had failed• Ag prices also fell further• 1 million workers (~20% of the workforce) lost

their jobs• The economy did not recovery until 1901• Instability led to labor radicalism including strikes

▫“Coxey’s Army” was a revolt led by Jacob Coxey who brought 500 unemployed to Washington to protest the lack of a public works program

▫They were arrested and put in camps

Page 20: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Crisis of the 1890s• Our currency grew week in light of the depression

▫This brought up the question of what should back our money

• People grew concerned when silver became “demonetarized” (no longer used for coinage)

• This became known as the Crime of `73 ▫Two groups arose from this: miners who were happy

to sell silver at a higher price (for jewelry)▫And farmers who were upset because they wanted

“free silver” meaning “unlimited” coinage which would cause inflation and therefore a hike in their prices

Page 21: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

The Crisis of the 1890s

•Trying to appease the silverites Congress passed the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890 forcing the government to buy up $2-4 million in silver from miners and pay for it in gold

•The election of 1896 was clearly divided▫Silverites (western and southern

Democrats) who supported silver viewed as a symbol of liberation while gold was tyranny and oppressive

▫Gold Bugs (northerner Republicans) considered gold essential to the nation’s stability and honor

Page 22: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

“A Cross of Gold”• Populists, needing money for campaigns, allied with

silver-miners• Republicans put of William McKinley

▫ They opposed free coinage of silver• Democrats absorbed the Populist/People’s Party’s causes

—mainly “free silver”▫ Their nominee was William Jennings Bryan▫ He declared that the gold standard was oppressive▫ “You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this

crown of thorns; you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.”—from the “Cross of Gold Speech”

4. What simile is Bryan making with his Cross of Gold Speech? Is this overdramatic, or necessary, given the issue?

Page 23: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

“A Cross of Gold”

•McKinley conducted a “Front-porch” campaign in which people came to him ▫This cost $7M while the Democrats only

spent $300K•Bryan on the other hand traveled 18K miles

and addressed 5M people▫With Bryan’s loss came the end of the

Populist Party They had tied themselves to the Democrats and

their defeat signified a lack of support for the Populist movement

Page 24: Bell Ringer Describe the average city-dweller’s life in the late 1800s. Make sure to include: ▫Life at work ▫Life at home ▫American versus immigrant ▫What.

“A Cross of Gold”• McKinley brought about recovery

▫ He brought in higher tariffs with the Dingley Tariff (highest to date…again)

▫ He enacted the Currency Act (a.k.a. Gold Standard Act) of 1900 making gold the nation’s standard This was after an attempt to work with Britain and France

to see if a silver standard could be used—they said no)▫ Recovery began to show by 1898 and fully buy 1901

It also helped that a huge gold supply was found in Africa, Alaska, and Australia causing the inflation that farmers were seeking

• The next issue would soon preoccupy everyone—imperialism