i. gilded age

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I. Gilded Age Grant elected 1868 thanks to Black Republican vote. Mark Twain’s term “gilded age” for corruption such as Jim Fisk, Jay Gould tried to corner the Gold Market with help

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I. Gilded Age. Grant elected 1868 thanks to Black Republican vote. Mark Twain’s term “gilded age” for corruption such as Jim Fisk, Jay Gould tried to corner the Gold Market with help from Treasury Dept. Gilded Age. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: I. Gilded Age

I. Gilded Age

Grant elected 1868 thanks to Black Republican vote.

Mark Twain’s term “gilded age” for corruption such as Jim Fisk, Jay Gould tried to corner the Gold Market with help from Treasury Dept.

Page 2: I. Gilded Age

Gilded Age Boss Tweed/Tweed

Ring – NY bribery, graft, and fraudulent elections, making $200 million; jailed by Tilden and Nast.

Credit Mobilier – construction company run by Union Pacific RR, paid itself to build rr.

Page 3: I. Gilded Age

More scandal

Whiskey Ring – govt workers stealing excise tax revenue, including Sec. War Belknap.

Grant defeated NY Tribune editor Horace Greeley (D) through mud-slinging: free-loving vegetarian, too soft on South.

Page 4: I. Gilded Age

review

Bloody Shirt Gilded Age Fisk/Gould Boss Tweed Thomas

Nast/Samuel Tilden

Credit Mobilier Whiskey Ring Horace Greeley

Newspaper editor lost to Grant

Reason to vote Republican

Corner gold market RR paid itself to build NY political boss Cartoonist, attorney

who put away Boss Tweed

Stole tax money

Page 5: I. Gilded Age

II. Gilded Age economics, politics Panic of 1873 – too

many loans for railroads, mines, factories, farms.

Debtors wanted greenbacks printed for inflation, formed Greenback Party; hard-money advocates won over Grant.

Page 6: I. Gilded Age

Passionate, purposeless politics Parties agreed on

issues; high turnout (80%) based on patronage.

GOP – midwest, rural NE - strict morality, govt involved in ec. and values; Democrats – South and Big Cities – Catholic, Lutheran immigrants, easier going morality

Page 7: I. Gilded Age

Stalwarts v. Half-Breed Republicans Stalwarts – led by

Roscoe Conkling (NY), pro-patronage and spoils system.

Half-Breeds – James Blaine (MN), flirted with civil service reform; real fight over who controlled patronage

Page 8: I. Gilded Age

review Panic of 1873 Greenbacks Hard money Why high turnout? Republican support Democratic support Stalwarts Half-Breeds Stalwart leader Half-Breed leader

James Blaine Roscoe Conkling Too many loans Patronage all the way Some civil service

reform Midwest, rural NE South, big cities Patronage Helps creditors Helps debtors

Page 9: I. Gilded Age
Page 10: I. Gilded Age

I. Election of 1876 and Jim Crow Rutherford Hayes

(R-OH) v. Tilden (D-NY), who won popular vote 184 electoral votes (185 needed).

3 disputed Southern states – FL, SC,LA – two sets of returns.

Page 11: I. Gilded Age

Compromise of 1877 Electoral Count Act –

Commission of 15 would count, 8-7 GOP; Compromise 3 days before inauguration: Hayes President, troops out of La/SC.

Civil Rights Cases (1883) – Civil Rights Act 1875 applied to govt, not individuals

Page 12: I. Gilded Age

Jim Crow South Jim Crow (segregation)

laws passed by Redeemer Southern governments, upheld in Plessy v. Fergeson 1896, enforced through record lynching.

Debt: sharecroppers and tenant farmers; no voting: literacy tests, poll taxes, grandfather clause, white primaries

Page 13: I. Gilded Age

Election of 1876/compromise of 1877/Rutherfraud B. Hayes - explain

Page 14: I. Gilded Age

review Who ran in 1876? How close did Tilden come to winning? What were the disputed states? What were the terms of the Compromise of

1877? What did the Supreme Court rule in the Civil

Rights Cases of 1883? What court case enshrined segregation laws? How was segregation enforced in the 1890s? How did African-Americans suffer

economically? Politically?

Page 15: I. Gilded Age

III. More politics

Nativism – Chinese came to California (“Chinatown in S.F.) to work mines and railroads, mostly male

Irish demagogue Stephen Kearney and others pushed Chinese Exclusion Act 1882, in place until 1943.

Page 16: I. Gilded Age

2nd assassination

1880 GOP ticket Garfield (Ohio)/Arthur instead of Hayes.

Stalwart Charles Guiteau shot Garfield (2nd shortest presidency): “I am a Stalwart. Arthur is now President.”

Page 17: I. Gilded Age

Pendleton Act, 1882

Stalwart Arthur signed Pendleton Act – civil service reform/merit system

By promoting good government, Arthur ruined his political career, and died in 1886.

Page 18: I. Gilded Age

Make your own document Everybody make a

document/cartoon that explains the importance of Garfield’s assassination.

Page 19: I. Gilded Age

review

Who came to China to work mines and railroads?

What law, pushed by whom, was passed in response?

Who was the second President assassinated? Who killed him and why?

What law did President Arthur sign? How did this affect his political fortunes?

Page 20: I. Gilded Age

I. Grover “the good” Cleveland Blaine – “Burn this

letter” – the 1884 GOP nominee – pushed mugwumps (sanctimonious) to vote Democrat

Democrat Cleveland, so honest he admitted an illegitimate son

Page 21: I. Gilded Age
Page 22: I. Gilded Age

Personal politics

“Burn, burn, burn this letter!” “Ma, ma, where’s my pa?” “Gone to the White House, ha, ha, ha!”

Republican insult of Democrats of “Rum, Romanism, and rebellion” pushed NY Irish to vote Democrat

Page 23: I. Gilded Age

Laissez-faire (hands off) Cleveland Vetoed Texas farm

bill: “people support the govt; govt doesn’t support the people.”

Fought pension-grabbers and the tariff, which caused a surplus (Oh, no!!!), and he lost to Harrison in 1888

Page 24: I. Gilded Age

Explain the cartoon and the context

Page 25: I. Gilded Age

review

Blaine Mugwump “Burn, burn, burn this letter!” “Ma, ma, where’s my pa!” What response to this? Laissez-faire Support the government Pensions tariff

Page 26: I. Gilded Age

II. populism Republicans under

Harrison and House Speaker Thomas Reed passed McKinley Tariff, hurting farmers and losing elections – Cleveland again, only time ever.

Populists – People’s Party – met Omaha, Nebraska and nominated Greenback James Weaver, getting 22 electoral votes

Page 27: I. Gilded Age

Populist proposals

Free, unlimited silver

Graduated income tax

Govt owned railroads

Direct election of Senators

1 term Presidency Initiative,

referendum Shorter workday Immigration

restriction

Page 28: I. Gilded Age

Challenges to Populism

Georgia’s Tom Watson first wanted interracial populism, but became race-baiting , vociferous segregationist.

Panic of 1893; huge debt; Cleveland got loan from JP Morgan and Wall Street

Page 29: I. Gilded Age

review

How did Republicans hurt farmers? Populists: where and what

candidate? Name 8 Populist proposals. Who was Tom Watson and how did

he change?

Page 30: I. Gilded Age

I. Railroads 1865 – 32,000 miles

of rr; 1900 – 192,500; government subsidized building – 200 million acres given to railroads

Transcontinental RR begun by Union Pacific 1869

Irish workers: low pay, dangerous , “hells on wheels” towns

Page 31: I. Gilded Age

Wedding of the Rails Central Pacific –

10,000 Chinese laborers; ex-California Governor Leland Stanford; blasting through mountain (many explosion deaths)

1869 wedding of the rails; Stanford drove a golden spike with silver hammar

Page 32: I. Gilded Age

Railroad revolution Innovations: steel rail,

standard gauge track, Westinghouse air brake, Pullman Palace car, standard time

Economics: Vanderbilt $100 million Markets for raw materials, manufactured goods; source of steel industry

Page 33: I. Gilded Age

review

How fast did rrs grow? When was transcontinental rr begun? What two companies? What two groups of laborers? What hazards? Where was the wedding of the rails? Name 6 railroad innovations. What economic significance did the

rrs have?

Page 34: I. Gilded Age

II. Captains of industry/robber barons Vanderbilt – shipping,

then railroads: “The law/the public”

Rockefeller (Reckafellow)– Standard Oil (for lighting first), used trusts; Social Darwinism

Carnegie , then banker JP Morgan– U.S. Steel – vertical integration, stock watering

Page 35: I. Gilded Age

2 famous cartoons

Page 36: I. Gilded Age

legislation

Interstate Commerce Act, over Cleveland’s veto, created Interstate Commerce Commission to regulate railroads.

Often railroad men on the commission, but stabilized system

Page 37: I. Gilded Age

Inventors/inventions

Kelly/Bessemer – Steel process – cold air blown on hot iron

Bell – telephone; had been a teacher of the deaf

Edison – phonograph, mimeograph, dictaphone, moving picture, lightbulb

Page 38: I. Gilded Age

review

Rockefeller Carnegie Vanderbilt JP Morgan Edison Bell Bessemer/Kelley ICC

Regulate railroads US Steel Shipping/railroads/

public be damned Telephone Steelmaking Lightbulb,

phonograph Standard Oil

Page 39: I. Gilded Age

III. Gospel of Wealth

Rockefeller, – God made me rich; Carnegie – Gospel of Wealth – altruism/responsibility.

Social Darwinism – survival of the fittest; Spencer, Darwin

Page 40: I. Gilded Age

change Interstate commerce,

14th amendment protected corporations; 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act was originally ineffective.

New South – Henry Grady Atlanta Constitution; Duke – cigarette production; cotton mills with cheap labor and company store

Page 41: I. Gilded Age

conditions

Women, children doing factory work; inequality and wage labor up.

Regimented, repetitive factory an adjustment for farm workers.

Page 42: I. Gilded Age

review

Gospel of wealth Social Darwinism Why were corporations hard to

regulate? Sherman Antitrust Act Grady/New South Name 2 successful Southern

industries 4 Problems of industrialization

Page 43: I. Gilded Age

I. unions 1881-1900 23,000

strikes; ½ successful. Challenges: 1. scabs 2. Bought lawyers,

press, judges, politicians, and hired thugs (Pinkertons)

3. Lockout, yellow dog contracts, and blacklist

Page 44: I. Gilded Age

First two National Labor Union

– 1st; skilled and unskilled; struggled to unite racially; hurt by Depression

Knights of Labor – skilled and unskilled; led by Irish Terence Powderly; fought for 8 hour day; utopian, ruined by Haymarket Square Strike

Page 45: I. Gilded Age

American Federation of Labor (AFL) Led by Jewish

Samuel Gompers; skilled only

Shunned politics; wanted better hours, pay, conditions

Used long strike, closed shop

Page 46: I. Gilded Age

review

Union challenges National Labor

Union Knights of Labor American

Federation of Labor (AFL)

Terence Powderly Samuel Gompers

Leader of AFL Leader of Knights

of Labor 1st union; hurt by

bad economy Skilled worker only

union; practical goals

Skilled and unskilled; utopian goals

Page 47: I. Gilded Age

II. urbanization

1870-1900 – population doubled, but city population tripled.

NY (3.5m) , Philly, Chicago, all over 1 million people.

Page 48: I. Gilded Age

Pull factors

Came for jobs, electricity, plumbing, telephones (1880 – 50,ooo; 1900 – 1 million), department stores (Sister Carrie)

Congestion addressed by skyscrapers (Sullivan), subways

Page 49: I. Gilded Age

Urban problems

Crime (police invented)

Trash invented; nothing thrown away on farm; Baltimore smelled like “a million polecats.”

Dumbbell tenements and flophouses for urban poor/slums

Page 50: I. Gilded Age

leisure

Circus – PT Barnum – “sucker born every minute – Barnum and Bailey

Wild West shows – Buffalo Bill, Annie Oakley

Sports – baseball, basketball/Naismith, football/Walter Camp

Page 51: I. Gilded Age

review

Population 3 cities with a million 4 pull factors 2 solutions to congestion 3 city problems

Page 52: I. Gilded Age

I. New Immigrants

S and E Europe – Italians, Jews, Russians, Greeks, Polish, Croats, Slovaks

Darker skin, Orthodox Christian, parochial schools, for. Language newspapers

Esp. in NY, Chicago

Page 53: I. Gilded Age

Push pull

Failed European farms, failure in European cities

Letters home, advertisements about unlimited opportunity in U.S.

Page 54: I. Gilded Age

Italians

From South; 4m came; ½ went back

Worked in construction and as longshoremen

1% graduated high school; raised chickens and vegetables in cities

Page 55: I. Gilded Age

review

Where? Assimilation issues Push and pull The Italian experience

Page 56: I. Gilded Age

II. Reactions to New Immigrants Party Bosses

controlled local governments, which built schools, parks, and hospital in immigrant communities.

Acres of Diamonds v. Social Gospel – Rauschenbusch, Gladden, Salvation Army

Page 57: I. Gilded Age

Women helpers and workers Jane Adams –

settlement houses – Hull House – aid and train new immigrants.

White women: phone operators, social workers, secretaries, Dept store clerks; immigrants – factories; African-Americans - maids

Page 58: I. Gilded Age

nativism

Nativists feared high birthrates, labor scabs, “mongrelization,’ and radicalism formed American Protective Association.

Statue of Liberty 1886, gift from France, Emma Lazarus poem

Page 59: I. Gilded Age

review

Party bosses Christians Settlement houses/Jane Addams Women workers and race Name 4 nativist fears Emma Lazarus

Page 60: I. Gilded Age

question

If you’re in a bad situation, do you try to make the best of it, or change it?

Interpret a line from the song.

Page 61: I. Gilded Age

I. Thought Christian Science –

Mary Baker Eddy (not scientology) faith makes you healthy

Evolution – Darwin and accomodationists

Public high schools increased; illiteracy halved

Fact/value, public health improved – Lister and Pasteur

Page 62: I. Gilded Age

Washington v. Du Bois Booker T. Washington

– Tuskegee Institute – self-help, segregation, agriculture (Carver) and trades, “Uncle Tom?”

W.E.B. Du Bois – talented 10th, NAACP, Niagara Movement, Harvard PhD

Ida B. Wells - antilynching

Page 63: I. Gilded Age

Higher ed

Black colleges – Howard, Morehouse

Hatch Act (1887) extended Morrill Act for agricultural colleges – Cal, Ohio State, Texas A&M

Philanthropists – Stanford, U of Chicago

Page 64: I. Gilded Age

Review – match ‘em

Christian science Evolution Public health Trades and

segregation NAACP Black colleges Pragmatism Hatch Act/Morrill

Act

Mary Baker Eddy – pray for healing

Agricultural colleges

Pasteur/Lister WEB Du Bois Booker T.

Washington Howard, Atlanta U Truth as

consequence

Page 65: I. Gilded Age

II. Writing

Pragmatism – John Dewey, Oliver Wendell Holmes, William James – evaluate truth of idea by consequences

Yellow journalism – Hearst, Pulitzer – sensationalism, v. AP, New York Times

Page 66: I. Gilded Age

writers

Mark Twain – Huck Finn, The Gilded Age

Emily Dickenson – no fame poetry

Stephen Crane – Red Badge of Courage

Jack London – Call of the Wild

Theodore Dreiser – Sister Carrie

Page 67: I. Gilded Age

Women

Divorce rate up, birthrate down

Carrie Chapman Chatt – suffrage (Wyoming first ) is good for urban motherhood

WCTU – Francis Willard, Carrie Nation

Page 68: I. Gilded Age

matching

Pragmatism Yellow Journalism Mark Twain – Emily Dickenson Stephen Crane Jack London Theodore Dreiser Sister Carrie Women’s issues

no fame poetry Call of the Wild James, Dewey,

Holmes – truth of idea in consequence

sensationalism Divorce, suffrage,

antilynching Sister Carrie Huck Finn, The Gilded

Age Red Badge of Courage

Page 69: I. Gilded Age

III. Frontier and Native Americans Plains Tribes:

Comanche in Texas, Sioux in Dakotas, Apache in AZ and NM, Cheyenne in Wyoming

Horses, buffalo (1865 – 15 million; 1885 < 1000) key to hunting and warfare

Page 70: I. Gilded Age

Treaties

Treaty of Fort Laramie, 1851; Fort Atkinson, 1853 tribal territory in Oklahoma, Dakotas

Problems: 1. illegit. Signers 2. broken promises 3. defective

provisions 4. corrupt agents

Page 71: I. Gilded Age

2 massacres 1864 Sand Creek,

Colorado – Chivington massacred 400, including women and children

1866 William Fetterman and 81 others killed by Sioux in Wyoming Mountains, defending Bozeman Trail

Page 72: I. Gilded Age

review

Name 4 tribes of Plains Indians, with their location

2 key animals 2 treaties 2 reservations 4 problems with treaties 2 massacres

Page 73: I. Gilded Age

IV. Indian Wars

US army – many immigrants , 1/5 African-American “Buffalo soldiers”

Bozeman Trail abandoned in 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie, but 1874 Gen. Custer discovers gold in SD Black Hills

Page 74: I. Gilded Age

Little Bighorn

Battle of Little Bighorn, 1876 Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse and 2500 Sioux killed Custer and 264

Chief Joseph and Nez Perce were chased 1700 miles, just short of Canada: “I will fight no more forever.”

Page 75: I. Gilded Age

Last resistance

Geronimo and Apaches fled to Mexico; finally surrendered in 1886

Wounded Knee Massacre 1890, result of Ghost Dance, last violence

Page 76: I. Gilded Age

review

Describe the U.S. army in Indian Wars

Where was gold discovered, by whom?

Where was Custer killed, when, by whom?

Where was Chief Joseph captured/what quote?

What Apache holdout? What happened at Wounded Knee?

Page 77: I. Gilded Age

I. End of wars

Why Indians lost: 1. rr – endless

supplies and settlers

2. disease 3.

alcohol/firewater 4. demise of

buffalo – 15m to < 1000 in 20 years; Buffalo Bill killed 4000

Page 78: I. Gilded Age

reservations 1880 Helen Hunt

Jackson – Century of Dishonor – bad treatment

Dawes Act – 160 acres, forced assimilation

1879 Carlisle Indian School (PA) – “kill the Indian and save the man”

1934 Indian Reorganization Act – tribes recognized

Page 79: I. Gilded Age

More gold

1858 – “paydirt” in Pike’s Peak, Colorado

59ers – Comstock Lode in Nevada; gold and silver, statehood 1864

Boomtowns/ghost towns, mines, suffrage

Page 80: I. Gilded Age

review

Why did the Indians lose (4 reasons)? What book was written about the

bad treatment of Indians? What did the Dawes Act do? What was the philosophy of the

Carlisle Indian School Where else was gold found? Where was the Comstock Lode?

Page 81: I. Gilded Age

II. Cowboys and Long Drive Cowboys - confed

vets, freedmen, Mexicans - in Texas took Longhorns on long drive, mainly to cattle towns in Kansas

Longhorns sent to NY, Chicago, other cities;

Page 82: I. Gilded Age

Cowboys to ranches

Long Drives ended because:

1. barbed wire 2. overgrazing 3. winters 1885-

1886 Cattle production

shifted to large ranches

Page 83: I. Gilded Age

Moving west Homestead Act of

1862 brought farmers (“Homesteaders, sodbusters”) west, given 160 acres for promise to farm five years; dry farming worked.

8 new western states 1893 – Turner Thesis –

closing of the frontier

Page 84: I. Gilded Age

Utah, Oklahoma special

Page 85: I. Gilded Age

review

Name 3 groups of cowboys. Where did the Long Drives go? Why did the Long Drives end? What law brought people west? What were the conditions? Name 8 new states. Which 2 were special?

Page 86: I. Gilded Age

III. Return of the Populists

New farmers problems:

1. one crop – wheat or corn

2. world market 3. deflation 4. interest rates 5. boll weevil 6. droughts and floods 7. property taxes 8. freight rates

Page 87: I. Gilded Age

Farmers’ organizations

1. Grange (Oliver Kelly), 2. Alliance – social activities – cooperative stores, warehouses, some political success

Mary Lease – Populist leader – “raise less corn and more hell!”

Page 88: I. Gilded Age

Populist proposals

Free, unlimited silver

Graduated income tax

Govt owned railroads

Direct election of Senators

1 term Presidency Initiative,

referendum Shorter workday Immigration

restriction

Page 89: I. Gilded Age

1890s fireworks

Panic of 1893 – Coxey’s army marched on DC, demanded public works jobs

Pullman strike – Eugene Debs, palace car workers protested lower wages; army called by Cleveland

Page 90: I. Gilded Age

review

Name 10 farmers problems Name 2 farmers organizations ID: Mary Lease Coxey’s army Pullman Strike

Page 91: I. Gilded Age

IV. Election of 1896

GOP - McKinley – pro-tariff, Gold Standard; Westerners walked out of convention

Democrats – William Jennings Bryan – Cross of Gold speech; free silver

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Populist dilemma Push all reforms, stay

pure and lose; join Democrats for a chance to win; supported Bryan and free silver.

Bryan – 18,000 miles, 600 speeches, 5m listeners; McKinley front porch campaign more money

Page 94: I. Gilded Age

Realigning election

McKinley won 271-176; Bryan wound South and west, not urban workers.

Soon crop prices rose and more gold was found, inflating currency; farmers prospered, no need for Populists

Page 95: I. Gilded Age

Tell the story of the 1896 election What candidates? What third party? What issue? What speech? Why did Populists join Democrats? Why did McKinley win? Why was the election important?

Page 96: I. Gilded Age

IV. Election of 1896

Populists/Democrat William Jennings Bryan – cross of gold speech; unlimited silver purchase

McKinley and gold standard, business and workers won; 4th party system/realignment