Top Banner
Chapter 22 The Progressive Era
17

Chapter 22

Jan 17, 2016

Download

Documents

eldon

Chapter 22. The Progressive Era. Who were the Progressives?. New Middle Class of young professionals Apply principles of professions to problems of society Volunteer organizations Never fully united/often contradictory Mainly urban Hofstadter’s theory: “status revolution”. Muckrakers. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 22

Chapter 22

The Progressive Era

Page 2: Chapter 22

Who were the Progressives?

• New Middle Class of young professionals

• Apply principles of professions to problems of society

• Volunteer organizations• Never fully united/often

contradictory• Mainly urban• Hofstadter’s theory:

“status revolution”

Page 3: Chapter 22

Muckrakers

• Henry Demarest Lloyd and Ida Tarbell, exposed Standard Oil

• Lincoln Steffens, “The Shame of the Cities,” attacked political machines

Page 4: Chapter 22

The Progressive Mind

• Arouse “conscious of the people”

• “laissez faire is obsolete”

• Paternalistic, oversimplified issues

• Often at war with themselves

Page 5: Chapter 22

Progressive Artists

• Sloan, Henri, Luks: “ashcan artists”

• Felt they were “rebels”

• Angry when European artists like Matisse and Picasso got all the glory!

• Henri’s Gypsy Girl

Page 6: Chapter 22

“Radical” Progressives

• Eugene Debs and Socialists

• IWW and Bill Haywood

• Freud• “Bohemian thinkers”

like Duncan, Stiglietz, Dell, O’Neill

Page 7: Chapter 22

Margaret Sanger

• Militant campaigner for birth control

• Mother’s 18 pregnancies and 11 live births

• Arrested for violating “postal indecency” laws

• American Birth Control League (in 1942 becomes Planned Parenthood)

Page 8: Chapter 22

Writers

• Ezra Pound• Carl Sandburg

Page 9: Chapter 22

Cities First: Reform!

• Abe Ruef in San Francisco, p. 577

• Toledo Mayor Samuel “Golden Rule” Jones

• Mayor Tom Johnson (Cleveland), Seth Low and John P. Mitchell (New York), Hazen Pingree (Detroit)

• City manager system starts in Dayton

• “gas and water socialism”

Page 10: Chapter 22

State Reform: Wisconsin Leads the Way

• Bob Lafollette and WISCONSIN IDEA

• Direct primary, limit campaign contributions

• Commissions and agencies

• Oregon experiments with initiative and referendum

Page 11: Chapter 22

State Social Legislation

• Role of 14th Amendment in striking down progressive laws?

• Lochner v. NY, Hammer v. Dagenhart, Adkins v. Children’s Hospital

• 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Fire disaster

Page 12: Chapter 22

Consumer’s League

• “investigate, agitate, legislate”

• Louis Brandeis and “Brandeis Brief,” based on evidence!

Page 13: Chapter 22

Women’s Suffrage

• Failures of 14th and 15th Amendment

• American Women’s Suffrage Association

• National Women’s Suffrage Association– E. C. Stanton, S. B.

Anthony

• “Victorian ideals”

Page 14: Chapter 22

National American Women’s Suffrage Association

• Stanton and Anthony, later Carrie Chapman Catt

• More radical Congressional Union– Alice Paul, Alva

Belmont

– Pickets White house

Page 15: Chapter 22

Political Reform

• 16th Amendment• 17th Amendment• Reforms in House of

Reps– “Czar” Tom Reed

              

 

Page 16: Chapter 22

TR: “Cowboy in the White House”

• His background

• Alarmed conservatives!

• ICC, Newlands Act, Dept. of Commerce and Bureau of Corps, Elkins RR Act

• Needed EFFECTIVE regulation—not afraid to DO IT!

Page 17: Chapter 22

Roosevelt takes on Big Business

• Northern Securities: JP Morgan tries to stop him!

• 1902 Coal Strike: he organizes mediation

• Evolution of Modern Presidency!