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The Progressive Era Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level.

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Page 1: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

The Progressive Era

Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of

government from the local to the state and then to the national level.

Page 2: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

I. The Problems of the 1890’s• Huge Gap between

rich and poor• Tremendous

economic and political power of the rich

• Wealthy were insensitively flaunting their wealth before a poorer public

Page 3: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

I. Problems of the 1890’s

• Industrial workers hideously poor, living in squalor and working in dangerous conditions

• Jacob Riis’ How the Other Half Lives (1890)

• Little concern for Black America

Page 4: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

II. Progressive Reformers

Page 5: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

A. Streams of Reform• The “Social Gospel”

movement--Walter Rauschenbusch: Christianity and the Social Crisis (1907)

• Settlement House Workers--Jane Addams, Hull House in Chicago (1889)

• Americans of “Old Wealth”

Page 6: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

A. Streams of Reform• Young, socially-

conscious lawyers• Investigative

Journalists-- “Muckrakers”--Lincoln Steffens, Ida Tarbell, and Upton Sinclair

• Small businessmen

Page 7: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

B. Features of Progressive Reform

• Desire to remedy problems through government initiative

• Reliance on “experts”-- Robert Lafollette’s “Wisconsin Idea”

• Wanted reform not revolution

• Stressed the importance of efficiency in reform--Frederick W. Taylor

Page 8: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

B. Features of Progressive Reform (cont.)

Want to bring order out of chaos--Creation of NCAA in 1906

Desire to make politics more democraticDesire to make businessmen more responsible for problems

Page 9: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

B. Features of Progressive Reform

• Desire to make society more moral and more just

• Desire to distribute income more equitably

• Desire to broaden opportunities for individual advancement

• Women were active in progressivism--Suffragettes like Susan B. Anthony

Page 10: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

B. Features of Progressive Reform

• Infiltrated both political parties-- Republican “insurgents”

• Middle-class reform movement

• Operated on all three levels of government

Page 11: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

III. Sample Progressive Reforms

Page 12: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

A. Political Reforms• Tried to put more power into the hands

of the people• Innovative changes in city government

--city managers and commission model• The Direct Primary• Initiative, Referendum and Recall• The Secret Ballot• Direct Election of Senators and the Vote

for Women

Page 13: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

B. Social Reforms• Child labor laws• Ten-hour work days

--The “Brandeis brief”--Muller v. Oregon (1908)--Bunting v. Oregon (1917)

• Prohibition initiatives• Moral Purity campaigns

--Mann Act (1910)

Page 14: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level
Page 15: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

B. Social Reforms • Minimum safety standards

on the job• Minimum standards for

housing codes• “City Beautification”

movement• Immigration Restriction• Eugenics

--Buck v. Bell (1927)• Little Help for Blacks

--NAACP (1909)-- “Birth of a Nation”

Page 16: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

IV. Progressive Amendments to the Constitution

• Progressive reliance on the law

• 16th Amendment (1913)—federal income tax

• 17th Amendment (1913)—direct election of senators

• 18th Amendment (1919)—prohibition

• 19th Amendment (1920)—vote for women

Page 17: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

V. Presidential Progressivism: Theodore Roosevelt

• Great drive, energy and exciting personality

• TR’s interests and early years

• NYC police commissioner

• Spanish-American War experience-- “Rough Riders”

• Political Rise from NY Governor to Vice-President

Page 18: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

A. First Term as President (1901-1904)

• McKinley’s assassination

• Offered energetic national leadership

• Cast every issue in moral and patriotic terms--The “Bully Pulpit”

• Master Politician• Modest goals for his

“accidental” presidency

Page 19: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

B. “Trust-Buster”?

• TR’s attitude toward Big Business

• Wants to regulate in order to get businesses to act right

• The “Square Deal” (1902)

• Making an example of the Northern Securities Co.

• The Elkins Act (1903) and the Bureau of Corporations

Page 20: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

C. Second Term as President (1905-1909)

• More vigorous progressivism

• Hepburn Act (1906)• Federal Meat

Inspection Act (1906)• Pure Food and Drug

Act (1906)• Conservation Policy

--Preservation vs. Conservation

Page 21: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

VI. “A Tough Act to Follow”: The Presidency of William Howard

Taft (1909-1913)• The Election of

1908• Taft’s political

experience• Taft’s weight• Not a dynamic

politician• Never completely

comfortable as President

Page 22: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

VI. Presidency of Taft • Controversy over

the Tariff• More conservative

than TR, but also more trust suits

• The “Ballinger-Pinchot” Affair

• Growing tension with Teddy Roosevelt

Page 23: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

VII. The Election of 1912• Growing split within

the Republican Party• Creation of the “Bull

Moose” Party• Progressive Party

Platform: “New Nationalism”

• Democrats drafted Woodrow Wilson

• Results of the Election

Page 24: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

VIII. Democratic Progressivism: The Presidency of Woodrow

Wilson (1913-1921)• Wilson’s early life

and political career• True progressive and

dynamic speaker• Sympathetic to small

businessmen• Could be a stubborn,

moral crusader and ideologue

Page 25: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

A. “New Freedom”• Wilson’s brand of

progressivism• Wants to recreate

the “golden age” of small American businesses

• Wilson wants to open channels for free and fair competition

• Historic Jeffersonian approach to federal power

Page 26: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

B. Key Wilsonian Legislation

• Underwood Tariff Act (1913)

• Federal Reserve Act (1913)

• Clayton Anti-Trust Act (1914)

• Federal Trade Commission (1914)

Page 27: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

C. Congressional Progressivism After 1914

• Wilson was not a strong progressive when it came to social reform

• Congress takes over the progressive agenda

• Appointment of Brandeis to Supreme Court

• Examples of congressional progressive legislation after 1914--Federal Highways Act (1916)

Page 28: Reform shifts from the farm to the city and climbs the ladder of government from the local to the state and then to the national level

IX. The Waning of the Progressive Movement

• Progressive movement peaks by 1917• Success of the movement led to its decline• Advent of World War I also hurt

progressive activism• Progressives themselves began to weary

of their reform zeal—as did the nation as a whole

• Ironically, voter participation has steadily declined since the election of 1912