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The Yen for Reform
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The Yen for Reform

Feb 23, 2016

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The Yen for Reform. From the “Gilded Age” to the “Progressive Era”. Progressive Era – 1896-1920? What is progress?. The Problem(s). How to manage change Immigration Urbanization Industrialization Growth of wealth Corruption Poverty. A Dark Beginning. Populist hopes thwarted in 1896 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The Yen for Reform

The Yen for Reform

Page 2: The Yen for Reform

From the “Gilded Age” to the “Progressive Era”

• Progressive Era – 1896-1920?

• What is progress?

Page 3: The Yen for Reform

The Problem(s)

• How to manage change– Immigration– Urbanization– Industrialization– Growth of wealth– Corruption– Poverty

Page 4: The Yen for Reform

A Dark Beginning

• Populist hopes thwarted in 1896• Jim Crow grows in South– Failure of biracial coalition– Reversal of Reconstruction

Page 5: The Yen for Reform

“Redemption”

• White elite in South comes to power in 1880s-early 1900s

• Cuts budgets, schools, hospitals• Makes unemployment illegal• Rents out convicts as slaves– “One dies, get another”

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Everyone Is Equal but Some Are More Equal than Others…

• South imposes poll taxes, literacy tests, etc. to vote (1896-1906)

• Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)

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An Era of Accommodation

• Booker T. Washington (1856-1915)• Black middle class builds own institutions

• Meanwhile, American Federation of Labor replaces Knights of Labor in 1890s

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The American Empire

• Conquered the West• Now look to Cuba, Philippines, Hawaii• Spanish American War (1898) – the “splendid

little war”• “Remember the Maine!”

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The Paradox of Progressivism

• Middle class and elite movement for reform• Adopts some of Populist ideas• Meant to better the lot of the poor, workers,

women

Page 12: The Yen for Reform

The Paradox of Progressivism

• Middle class and elite movement for reform• Adopts some of Populist ideas• Meant to better the lot of the poor, workers,

women

• A movement without an ideology?

Page 13: The Yen for Reform

Theories of Progressivism

• Status anxiety

• Anglo cultural resistance to immigrants, blacks, poor

• Modernizing ideal of efficiency, order

• Need to tame monopoly

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Progressive Women

• Settlement Houses• Fight for birth control• Fight for right to vote• “City Beautiful”

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The Rise of Socialism

• Originally limited to immigrants, ex: Germans• Became significant 3rd party under Eugene

Debs of Indiana

Page 16: The Yen for Reform

The Wobblies

• Industrial Workers of the World• Way more militant• “One big union”• Advocated general strike• Fought for free speech

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Election of 1912• Socialist Debs vs. Republican President William

H. Taft• Progressive Theodore Roosevelt• and Democrat Woodrow Wilson

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What TR Had Been Up To

• Took over when McKinley assassinated (1901) • Trust-busting• Conservation• Handed reins to Taft in 1908

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The Debate

• Roosevelt’s “New Nationalism”– Idea that big business is here to stay– Must be regulated– Heavy taxes on the rich– Early idea of social security/universal healthcare

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The Debate

• Wilson’s “New Freedom”– Less emphasis on government programs– Tougher anti-trust laws– Right to unionize– Support for small business

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Two Versions of Same Idea

• In office, Wilson pursued policies similar to Roosevelt and Populists– Banned child labor– New protection for right to unionize and strike– New regulation of business– Federal Reserve (1913)