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Reformers and Progressives

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Title: Reformers and Progressives


1
Reformers and Progressives
  • American History
  • Unit II Becoming a World Power
  • Chapter 6 Section 1- Progressivism

2
Progressivism
  • The Main Idea
  • Progressives focused on three areas of reform
    easing the suffering of the urban poor, improving
    unfair and dangerous working conditions, and
    reforming government at the national, state, and
    local levels.
  • Reading Focus
  • What issues did Progressives focus on, and what
    helped energize their causes?
  • How did Progressives try to reform society?
  • How did Progressives fight to reform the
    workplace?
  • How did Progressives reform government at the
    national, state, and local levels?

3
Birth of the Progressive Era - 52 min.
4
Muckrakers
  • Name applied to American journalists,
    novelists, and critics who in the first decade of
    the 20th cent. attempted to expose the abuses of
    business and the corruption in politics.
  • The term derives from the word muckrake used by
    President Theodore Roosevelt in a speech in 1906,
    in which he agreed with many of the charges of
    the muckrakers but asserted that some of their
    methods were sensational and irresponsible.
  • The muckraking movement lost support in about
    1912. Historians agree that if it had not been
    for the revelations of the muckrakers the
    Progressive movement would not have received the
    popular support needed for effective reform.

5
Who were the reformers? What did they want?
  • Mostly middle class people (Roosevelt called them
    Muckrakers) concerned with social issues of the
    times. Issues such as
  • immigrants - oldcomers and newcomers
  • city life- poor and needy, and prohibition
  • crime and corruption
  • strikes, Workmans compensation, minimum wage
  • Political bosses
  • city/state governments- direct democracy, tax
    laws
  • Giant business corporations
  • Womens Suffrage
  • Child Labor

6
Progressive Programs - 535 min.
7
Progressivism and Its Champions
8
Muckrakers
  • Miss Ida Tarbell had been at work for years on
    her history of the Standard Oil Company, and it
    began to run in McClure's in November 1902.
  • Lincoln Steffen's first novel on municipal
    corruption, "Tweed Days in St. Louis" appeared in
    McClure's Oct 1902.
  • Henry Demerest Lloyd's Wealth Against
    Commonwealth, published in 1894, attacked the
    Standard Oil Company.
  • How the Other Half Lives, published in 1890 by
    Jacob Riis, exposed life in New York's slums.
  • John Spargo, an Englishman, published The Bitter
    Cry of the Children, an account of young kids at
    work in sweatshops.
  • Perhaps the most famous Muckraking novel, The
    Jungle by Upton Sinclair, exposed the horrors of
    the Chicago meat-packing plants and the
    immigrants who were worked to death in them.

Lincoln Steffen
Ida Tarbell
Upton Sinclair
Jacob Riis
9
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10
Jacob Riis and Upton Sinclair
  • In 1877 Riis became a police reporter for the New
    York Tribune. In the 1880s his work gravitated
    towards reform and he worked with other New York
    reformers then crusading for better living
    conditions for the thousands of immigrants
    flocking to New York in search of new
    opportunities. He constantly argued that the
    "poor were the victims rather than the makers of
    their fate".

As a writer Sinclair gained fame in 1906 with the
novel The Jungle, a report on the dirty
conditions in the Chicago meatpacking industry.
The book won Sinclair fame and fortune, and led
to the implementation of the Pure Food and Drug
Act in 1906.
11
Upton Sinclair- The Jungle 311 min.
12
Reforming Society
  • Growing cities couldnt provide people necessary
    services like garbage collection, safe housing,
    and police and fire protection.
  • Reformers, many of whom were women like activist
    Lillian Wald, saw this as an opportunity to
    expand public health services.
  • Progressives scored an early victory in New York
    State with the passage of the Tenement Act of
    1901, which forced landlords to install lighting
    in public hallways and to provide at least one
    toilet for every two families, which helped
    outhouses become obsolete in New York slums.
  • These simple steps helped impoverished New
    Yorkers, and within 15 years the death rate in
    New York dropped dramatically.
  • Reformers in other states used New York law as a
    model for their own proposals.

13
Fighting for Civil Rights
Progressives fought prejudice in society by
forming various reform groups.
  • NAACP
  • National Association for the Advancement of
    Colored People
  • Formed in 1909 by a multiracial group of
    activists to fight for the rights of African
    Americans
  • 1913 Protested the official introduction of
    segregation in federal government
  • 1915 Protested the D. W. Griffith film Birth of
    a Nation because of hostile African American
    stereotypes, which led to the films banning in
    eight states
  • ADL
  • Anti-Defamation League
  • Formed by Sigmund Livingston, a Jewish man in
    Chicago, in 1913
  • Fought anti-Semitism, or prejudice against Jews,
    which was common in America
  • Fought to stop negative stereotypes of Jews in
    media
  • The publisher of the New York Times was a member
    and helped stop negative references to Jews

14
National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People
  • 1909 On February 12th The National
    Association for the Advancement of Colored People
    was founded by a multiracial group of activists,
    who answered "The Call." They initially called
    themselves the National Negro Committee.
    Organized to end discrimination and to prevent
    violence against blacks, especially lynching.
  • FOUNDERS
  • Ida Wells-Barnett, W.E.B. DuBois, Henry
    Moscowitz, Mary White Ovington, Oswald Garrison
    Villiard, William English Walling and led the
    "Call" to renew the struggle for civil and
    political liberty.

15
N.A.A.C.P.
  • The NAACP started its own magazine, Crisis in
    November, 1910
  • NAACP campaigned, especially in the Supreme Court
    against lynching, segregation and racial
    discrimination in housing, education, employment,
    voting and transportation.
  • NAACP also fought for Womens Suffrage.

16
Reforming the Workplace
  • By the late 19th century, labor unions fought for
    adult male workers but didnt advocate enough for
    women and children.
  • In 1893, Florence Kelley helped push the Illinois
    legislature to prohibit child labor and to limit
    womens working hours.
  • In 1904, Kelley helped organize the National
    Child Labor Committee, which wanted state
    legislatures to ban child labor.
  • By 1912, nearly 40 states passed child-labor
    laws, but states didnt strictly enforce the laws
    and many children still worked.
  • Progressives, mounting state campaigns to limit
    workdays for women, were successful in states
    including Oregon and Utah.
  • But since most workers were still underpaid and
    living in poverty, an alliance of labor unions
    and progressives fought for a minimum wage, which
    Congress didnt adopt until 1938.
  • Businesses fought labor laws in the Supreme
    Court, which ruled on several cases in the early
    1900s concerning workday length.

17
Child Labor
  • The rise of child labor in the United States
    began in the late seventeen and early eighteen
    hundreds. Industrialization was a strong force in
    increasing the number of working children.
  • By nineteen hundred more than two million U.S.
    children worked. Children worked in factories,
    mines, fields and in the streets. They picked
    cotton, shined shoes, sold newspapers, canned
    fish, made clothes and wove fabric. Children were
    forced into this situation in order to help
    support their families.

Sadie Pfeifer, 48 inches high. Has worked half a
year.
18
Child Labor
  • Working conditions were often horrendous.
    Children would work twelve hours a day, six days
    a week throughout the year.
  • The hours were long, the pay was low and the
    children were exhausted and hungry.
  • Factory children were kept inside all day long,
    children who worked the fields spent long, hot
    days in the sun or went barefoot in mud and rain.
  • These young workers could not attend school and
    rarely knew how to read or write

Breaker Boys" were used in the anthracite coal
mines to separate slate rock from the coal after
it had been brought out of the shaft. They often
worked 14 to 16 hours a day.
19
Child Labor
  • Children in the United States continued to work
    under deplorable conditions until well into the
    mid-twentieth century.
  • In the early nineteen hundreds, reformers began
    working to raise awareness about the dangers of
    child labor and tried to establish laws
    regulating the practice.
  • In 1904, the National Child Labor Committee was
    formed. Throughout the nineteen hundreds,
    Congress and the Supreme Court were at odds over
    child labor regulation.
  • 1938- the Fair Labor Standards Act was passed and
    children were freed from the bondage of dangerous
    work

20
Lewis Hines
  • In 1908 the National Child Labor Committee
    employed Lewis Hine as their staff investigator
    and photographer. Hine traveled the country
    taking pictures of children working in factories.
    Hine also lectured on the subject and once told
    one audience "Perhaps you are weary of child
    labor pictures. Well, so are the rest of us, but
    we propose to make you and the whole country so
    sick and tired of the whole business that when
    the time for action comes, child labor pictures
    will be records of the past."

21
Congress Attempts to Control Child Labor
  • In 1916 Congress made its first effort to control
    child labor by passing the Keating-Owen Act. The
    legislation forbade the transportation among
    states of products of factories, shops or
    canneries employing children under 14 years of
    age, of mines employing children under 16 years
    of age, and the products of any of these
    employing children under 16 who worked at night
    or more than eight hours a day. In 1918 the
    Supreme Court ruled that the Keating-Owen Act was
    unconstitutional.
  • After the Supreme Court ruled that the
    Keating-Owen Act was unconstitutional, Congress
    passed a Second Child Labor Law. This levied a
    tax of ten per cent on the net profits of
    factories employing children under the age of 14,
    and of mines and quarries employing children
    under the age of 16. This legislation was
    declared unconstitutional as a result of the
    Drexel Furniture Company case in 1922.

22
Fair Labor Standards Act
  • June, 1938, that Congress passed the Fair Labor
    Standards Act. The main objective of the act
    was to eliminate "labor conditions detrimental to
    the maintenance of the minimum standards of
    living necessary for health, efficiency and
    well-being of workers". This included the
    prohibition of child labor in all industries
    engaged in producing goods in inter-state
    commerce. It set the minimum age at 14 for
    employment outside of school hours in
    non-manufacturing jobs, at 16 for employment
    during school hours, and 18 for hazardous
    occupations.

23
Labor Law in the Supreme Court
24
The Triangle Shirtwaist Company Fire
  • In 1911, a gruesome disaster in New York
    inspired progressives to fight for safety in the
    workplace.
  • About 500 women worked for the Triangle
    Shirtwaist Company, a high-rise building
    sweatshop that made womens blouses.
  • Just as they were ending their six-day workweek,
    a small fire broke out, which quickly spread to
    three floors.
  • Escape was nearly impossible, as doors were
    locked to prevent theft, the flimsy fire escape
    broke under pressure, and the fire was too high
    for fire truck ladders to reach.
  • More than 140 women and men died in the fire,
    marking a turning point for labor and reform
    movements.
  • With the efforts of Union organizer Rose
    Schneiderman and others, New York State passed
    the toughest fire-safety laws in the nation, as
    well as factory inspection and sanitation laws.
  • New York laws became a model for workplace safety
    nationwide.

25
Reforming the Workplace
  • Triangle Shirtwaist fire- death of over 140 men
    and women. Helped bring about tougher
    fire-safety laws.

26
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27
The Unions
ILGWU
IWW
28
Reforming Government
  • City Government
  • Reforming government meant winning control of it
  • Tom Johnson of Cleveland was a successful reform
    mayor who set new rules for police, released
    debtors from prison, and supported a fairer tax
    system.
  • Progressives promoted new government structures
  • Texas set up a five-member committee to govern
    Galveston after a hurricane, and by 1918, 500
    cities adopted this plan.
  • The city manager model had a professional
    administrator, not a politician, manage the
    government.
  • State Government
  • Progressive governor Robert La Follette created
    the Wisconsin Ideas, which wanted
  • Direct primary elections limited campaign
    spending
  • Commissions to regulate railroads and oversee
    transportation, civil service, and taxation
  • Other governors pushed for reform, but some were
    corrupt
  • New Yorks Charles Evan Hughes regulated
    insurance companies.
  • Mississippis James Vardaman exploited prejudice
    to gain power.

29
Election Reforms
  • Progressives wanted fairer elections and to make
    politicians more accountable to voters.
  • Proposed a direct primary, or an election in
    which voters choose candidates to run in a
    general election, which most states adopted.
  • Backed the Seventeenth Amendment, which gave
    voters, not state legislatures, the power to
    elect their U.S. senators.
  • Some measures Progressives fought for include

30
Reforming Government
  • City Government reforms
  • New rules for police, releasing debtors from
    prison and a fairer tax system.
  • 5 member commission system
  • Council-manager model
  • State government reforms
  • Election reforms
  • Seventeenth Amendment
  • Initiative, referendum and recall.

31
City Government
  • Commission Plan
  • Replaced the mayor and council with a small
    board of commissioners, each elected at large and
    each responsible for a single area of municipal
    administration.
  • Under the new plan voters could easily identify
    and punish those responsible for shortcomings in
    city services.

32
City Government
  • City Manager scheme
  • Under this plan an elected city council
    determined basic policy and appointed a
    professional, nonpartisan city manager who was in
    charge of the day-to-day operation of the
    municipality. Worked well in small cities.
  • Critics of corruption urged adoption of
    nonpartisan elections, new methods of municipal
    accounting, a civil service system for city
    employees, and state constitutional amendments to
    halt state legislative interference in municipal
    affairs.

33
Direct Democracy
  • Secret Ballot
  • Direct Primary- People select the candidates
  • INITIATIVE The people may initiate(propose) by
    5-8 petition of voters a bill to a legislature.
  • REFERENDUM The people may use referendum
    (popular ballot) to enact, approve or reject acts
    of the legislature.
  • RECALL All elected public officials in the
    State, except judicial officers, are subject to
    recall (by petition) by the voters of the State
    and forced to stand for re-election at any time.
  • 17th Amendment Direct Election of Senators. The
    Senate of the United States shall be composed of
    two Senators from each State, elected by the
    people thereof, for six years and each Senator
    shall have one vote

34
Progressive Movement
  • The Progressive Movement was an effort to cure
    many of the ills of American society that had
    developed during the great spurt of industrial
    growth in the last quarter of the 19th century.
    The frontier had been tamed, great cities and
    businesses developed and an overseas empire
    established, but not all citizens shared in the
    new wealth, prestige and optimism.
  • Progressivism was rooted in the belief that man
    was capable of improving the lot of all within
    society. Progressivism also was full of strong
    political overtones and rejected the church as
    the driving force for change. Supporters of the
    movement were found in both major political
    parties, Democrat and Republican.
  • Specific goals included
  • Remove corruption and undue influence from
    government
  • Conservation
  • Include more people more directly in the
    political process.
  • Government must play a role to solve social
    problems and establish fairness in economic
    matters.
  • Race- Blacks and Native Americans
  • Child Labor, Workers- young and old, workers
    compensation,
  • Political Reform- Direct Election, political
    reform,
  • Anti- monopoly reform.

35
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36
Progressive Movement
  • The efforts and successes
  • Interstate Commerce Act (1887) and the Sherman
    Antitrust Act (1890).
  • A minority supported socialism with government
    ownership of the means of production.
  • conservation movement
  • railroad legislation
  • food and drug laws.
  • elect senators
  • prohibition
  • suffrage to women.
  • Workers compensation, civil service, and minimum
    wage
  • efforts to place limitations on child labor were
    routinely thwarted by the courts.
  • The needs of blacks and Native Americans were
    poorly served by the Progressives.
  • Secret Ballot, Direct Election, direct primary
    and initiative, referendum and recall
  • Robert LaFollette- Leader in reform measures and
    the candidate of the reform element of his party
    for the nomination for governor in 1896 and 1898
    in 1900 unanimously nominated for Governor of
    Wisconsin and elected by the largest plurality
    ever given a candidate for that office.

37
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