The Progressive Era - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

The Progressive Era

Description:

Some muckrakers exposed unfair practices of large American corporations. Standard Oil, the beef industry. Others targeted the government. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:211
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: DellaES
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Progressive Era


1
The Progressive Era
2
Progressivism
  • A movement to improve American life by expanding
    democracy and achieving economic and social
    justice.
  • This was not an organized set of reforms, but
    rather a collection of ideas and activities.
  • After seeing the poverty of the working class and
    the filth and crime of urban society, these
    reformers began to doubt the free markets
    ability to address these problems.
  • Science and technology had benefited people thus
    the progressives believed using scientific
    principles could also produce solutions for
    society.

3
  • Muckrakers- a group of crusading journalists who
    investigated social conditions and political
    corruption. They became known as muckrakers from
    a speech made by President Theodore Roosevelt.
  • Now, it is very necessary that we should not
    flinch from seeing what is vile and debasing.
    There is filth on the floor and it must be
    scraped up with the muck-rake and there are
    times and places where this service is the most
    needed of all the services that can be
    performed.
  • By the early 1900s, American publishers were
    competing to see who could expose the most
    corruption and scandal.
  • Some muckrakers exposed unfair practices of large
    American corporations. Standard Oil, the beef
    industry. Others targeted the government. And
    some concentrated on the social problems

4
Muckrakers
  • Lincoln Steffens articles about corrupt
    practices of political machines that were
    combined and published as a book titled The Shame
    of the Cities
  • Ida Tarbell wrote articles about the unfair
    practices of huge monopolies and wrote The
    History of the Standard Oil Company
  • John Spargo wrote about the grim life of
    thousands of children and wrote the book The
    Bitter Cry of the Children
  • Upton Sinclair - wrote The Jungle, an exposure
    of the terrible conditions of the Chicago
    meatpacking plants.
  • Jacob Riis wrote about the immigrant slum
    areas.
  • Muckrakers offered readers few solutions, but
    they did sound an alarm. In response, many
    Americans joined the crusade for reform.

5
Government Reform
  • Efficiency progressives argued that managing a
    modern city required experts, not politicians.
  • They wanted either a commission plan or a
    council-manager system. Under the commission
    plan a citys government would be divided into
    several departments, which would each be placed
    under the control of an expert commissioner.
  • Others believed that society needed more
    democracy, not less. They wanted to make elected
    officials more responsive to voters.
  • When reformer Robert La Follette was elected
    governor of Wisconsin, he pressured the state
    legislature to require each party to hold a
    direct primary, in which all party members could
    vote for a candidate to run in the general
    election.
  • LaFollettes reform was known as the Wisconsin
    Idea. He recruited experts known as the brain
    trust, to solve state problems and write laws
    and serve on govt. commissions. This successful
    Idea was called a laboratory for democracy.

6
Government Reform
  • Because of this reform, they called Wisconsin the
    laboratory of democracy.
  • Progressives in other states introduced three new
    reforms initiative allowed a group of
    citizens to introduce legislation and required
    the legislature to vote on it. Referendum
    allowed proposed legislation to be submitted to
    the voters for approval. Recall allowed
    voters to demand a special election to remove an
    elected official from office before his or her
    term expired.

7
  • To counter Senate corruption, Charles Russell
    complained that the Senate had become a chamber
    of butlers for industrialists and financiers,
    progressives called for the direct election of
    senators by all state voters. Prior to this
    amendment, senators were elected by state
    legislature. In 1912 Congress passed a
    direct-election amendment (17th Amendment)

8
The Suffrage Movement
  • July 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia
    Mott organized the first womens rights
    convention in Seneca Falls, NY. Stanton proposed
    to the delegates that their first priority should
    be getting women the right to vote. The movement
    for womens voting rights became known as the
    suffrage movement. Suffrage is the right to
    vote.
  • Before the Civil War some women preferred to work
    towards the abolition of slavery.

9
(No Transcript)
10
The Suffrage Movement
  • After the Civil War the 14th and 15th Amendments
    were passed to protect the voting rights of
    African Americans. The women hoped that these
    amendments would be worded so they would include
    women as well.
  • The debate over these two amendments split the
    womens movement in two National Woman Suffrage
    Assoc. led by Elizabeth Stanton and Susan B.
    Anthony the National American Woman Suffrage
    Assoc. led by Lucy Stone, Carrie Chapman Catt and
    Julia Ward Hower.
  • Stantons group wanted to focus on passing a
    constitutional amendment allowing women suffrage.
    The Catts group believed that the best strategy
    was to convince state governments to give women
    the right to vote before trying to amend the
    Constitution.

11
The Suffrage Movement
  • In 1890 Alice Paul brought the two groups
    together to form the National American Woman
    Suffrage Association (NAWSA). Still the hardest
    part was to get women to become politically
    active. When the Progressive movement began,
    however, many middle-class women concluded that
    they needed the vote to promote social reforms
    they favored.
  • By end of 1912, Washington, Oregon, California,
    Arizona, and Kansas had granted women full voting
    rights.
  • Alice Paul organized a march on Washington DC the
    day before Pres. Wilsons inauguration.
  • 1918 House of Representatives passed a woman
    suffrage amendment. Pres. Wilson addressed the
    Senate to encourage them to pass this but it
    failed by two votes.
  • Finally by 1919 Senate passed the 19th Amendment
    by just more than the 2/3 vote needed.
  • 19th Amendment went into effect Aug. 26, 1920.

12
Social Welfare Progressivism
  • Campaign against child labor in 1900 over 1.7
    million children under the age of 16 worked
    outside the home.
  • 1904 Natl. Child Labor Comm. To work to abolish
    child labor.
  • At same time many states began passing compulsory
    education laws, requiring young children to be in
    school instead of at work.
  • By the early 1900s the number of child laborers
    had begun to decline.
  • Many adult workers still labored in difficult
    conditions. Factories, coal mines, and railroads
    were particularly dangerous.
  • Progressives joined union leaders to pressure
    states for workers compensation laws which was
    insurance for employees who got hurt on the job.
  • These laws established insurance funds financed
    by employers. Workers injured in industrial
    accidents received payments from the funds.
  • Minimum wage laws for women were passed in 12
    states. As well as laws barring children from
    working at night.

13
Social Welfare Progressivism
  • Building codes set minimum standards for light,
    air, room size, and sanitation, and required
    buildings to have fire escapes.
  • Health codes required restaurants and other
    facilities to maintain clean environments for
    their patrons.
  • Zoning laws divided towns or cities into areas
    for commercial, residential, or other
    development.
  • Many progressives believed that alcohol was
    responsible for many problems in American life.
    The temperance movement, which advocated the
    moderation or elimination of alcohol, emerged
    from these concerns.
  • 1873 Womens Christian Temperance Union had
    250,000 members by 1893

14
Social Welfare Progressivism
  • Anti-Saloon league pressed for Prohibition -
    laws banning the manufacture, sale, and
    consumption of alcohol.
  • A fourth group of progressives focused on
    regulating big business. Some believed that
    government should break up big companies to
    restore competition. Sherman Anti-trust Act.
  • Others argued for the creation of government
    agencies to regulate big companies and prevent
    them from abusing their power. ICC
  • Some even advocated socialism where government
    actually owns and operates industry for the
    community as a whole. Socialism had some
    national supporters Eugene Debs, the former
    American Railway Union leader, won nearly a
    million votes as the American Socialist Party
    candidate for president in 1912.

15
Roosevelt Revives the Presidency
  • Eugene Debs - a candidate for President of the US
    as a member of the Socialist Party of America in
    1904, 1908, 1912, and 1920.Through his
    presidential candidacies as well as his work with
    labor movements, Debs would eventually become one
    of the best-known Socialists in the United
    States.
  • President Theodore Roosevelt took over the
    presidency when William McKinley was
    assassinated. He was 42, the youngest president
    yet. He was a member of the Rough Riders during
    the Spanish American War. He was a very dynamic
    person who loved the spotlight.
  • Roosevelt was a Social Darwinist. He believed
    the US was in competition with the other nations
    of the world and that only the fittest would
    survive.
  • Domestically Roosevelt was a committed
    progressive who firmly believed that the
    government should actively balance the needs of
    competing groups in American society.
  • He said, I shall see to it, that every man has a
    square deal, no less and no more. During his
    second term, his reform program became known as
    the Square Deal.

16
  • Roosevelt believed that trusts and other large
    business organizations were very efficient and
    part of the reason for Americas prosperity. Yet
    remained concerned that in the pursuit of their
    private interests, some trusts were hurting the
    public interest.
  • During his first term three railroad companies
    joined to form one Northern Securities.
  • Alarmed at this union, Roosevelt decided that
    this company was in violation of the Sherman
    Antitrust Act and ordered his attorney to file a
    lawsuit against Northern Securities.
  • The Supreme Court ruled that they were in
    violation and Roosevelt became known as a
    trustbuster and his popularity soared!

17
  • Coal Strike of 1902 Nearly 150,000 workers
    walked out of eastern Pennsylvanias anthracite
    mines, demanding a pay increase, a reduction in
    work hours, and recognition for their union,
    (United Mine Workers UMW)
  • If the strike drug on too long, the country would
    face a coal shortage that could shut down
    factories and leave many peoples homes cold with
    winter fast approaching. Roosevelt said this was
    an example of groups pursuing their private
    interests at the expense of the nation.
  • President Roosevelt urged that the company and
    the union accept arbitration a settlement
    imposed by an outside party. The union agreed,
    the mine owners did not.
  • Roosevelt threatened to have the Army run the
    mines so the mine owners finally accepted
    arbitration.
  • By intervening in the dispute, Roosevelt had
    taken the first step toward establishing the
    federal government as an honest broker between
    powerful groups in society.

18
  • Bureau of Corporations Roosevelt still believed
    that most trusts benefited the economy and that
    breaking them up would do more harm than good.
  • So Roosevelt proposed the creation of a new
    federal agency to investigate corporations and
    publicize the results.
  • 1903 Roosevelt convinced Congress to create the
    Department of Commerce and Labor. Within this
    department would be a division called the Bureau
    of Corporations with the authority to investigate
    corporations and issue reports on their
    activities.
  • Congress also passed the Expedition Act which
    gave federal antitrust suits precedence on the
    dockets of circuits.
  • 1906 Roosevelt pushed the Hepburn Act through
    Congress which was intended to strengthen the ICC
    by giving it power to set railroad rates. After
    years of fighting it, the ICC became a supporter
    of the railroads interests and by 1920 began
    setting rates at levels intended to ensure the
    industrys profits.

19
Roosevelts Square Deal
  • Meat inspection Act required federal inspection
    of meat sold through interstate commerce and
    required the Agriculture Department to set
    standards of cleanliness in meatpacking plants.
  • Pure Food and Drug Act prohibited the
    manufacture, sale, or shipment of impure or
    falsely labeled food and drugs.

20
Conservation
  • Roosevelt cautioned against unregulated
    exploitation of public lands and believed in
    conservation to manage the nations resources.
  • Land development in the West Newlands
    Reclamation Act, a large-scale transformation of
    the Wests landscape and economy authorizing the
    use of federal funds from public land sales to
    pay for irrigation and land development projects.
  • Gifford Pinchot headed the US Forest
    Service. Roosevelt argued that the government
    must distinguish between the man who skins the
    land and the man who develops the country. I am
    going to work with the man who develops the
    country. Pinchots department drew up
    regulations controlling lumbering on federal
    lands.

21
President Roosevelt
  • Changed the role of the federal government and
    the nature of the presidency. Increasingly
    Americans began to look to the federal government
    to solve the nations economic and social
    problems.
  • Under Roosevelt the executive branch of
    government had dramatically increased its power.
  • The ICC could set rates, the Agriculture
    Department could inspect food, the Bureau of
    Corporations could monitor business, and the
    attorney general could rapidly bring antitrust
    lawsuits under the Expedition Act.

22
Passing the Reins
  • Financial Panic of 1907 hindered Roosevelts
    effectiveness at end of term. Business was
    further alarmed when Roosevelt proposed new
    reform measures such as inheritance and income
    taxes, more regulation of interstate commerce,
    federal investigations of labor disputes, 8 hour
    workdays, workers comp, and federal regulation
    of the stock markets.
  • Roosevelt handpicked his successor, William
    Howard Taft, another progressive.

23
William Taft President 1908
  • Although committed to many progressive ideas,
    Tafts personality and approach to politics
    quickly brought him into conflict with
    progressives.
  • Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act Progressives felt
    betrayed by Tafts decision to accept this new
    tariff.
  • Taft disliked political maneuvering and preferred
    to avoid conflict with others.

24
William Taft President 1908
  • Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy Taft replaced his
    Secretary of Treasury with Richard a. Ballinger,
    a more conservative corporate lawyer. Ballinger
    tried to make nearly a million acres of public
    forests and mineral reserves available for
    private development.
  • Pinchot charged the new secretary with having
    once plotted to turn over valuable public lands
    in Alaska to a private syndicate or business
    group for personal profit. Pinchot leaked the
    story to the press but Taft fired Pinchot for
    insubordination.
  • By signing the Payne-Aldrich Tariff and
    supporting Ballinger Taft gave the impression
    that he had sold the Square Deal down the
    river.

25
Tafts Progressive Reforms
  • Despite all of his political problems, Taft also
    had several successes.
  • Taft established the Childrens Bureau, a federal
    agency similar to Roosevelts Bureau of
    Corporations. It investigated and publicized
    problems with child labor
  • Taft also supported the Mann-Elkins Act of 1910
    which increased the regulatory powers of the ICC.
  • Taft set up the Bureau of Mines to monitor the
    activities of mining companies, expanded the
    national forests, and protected waterpower sites
    from private development.

26
New President Woodrow Wilson 1912
  • Theodore Roosevelt broke his friendship with Taft
    by publicly criticizing Taft for his dealings
    with trusts. Roosevelt announced that he would
    enter the presidential campaign of 1912 and
    attempt to replace Taft as the Republican nominee
    for President, he ran under the Bull Moose Party
  • Conservatives rallied behind Taft and
    Progressives lined up for Roosevelt. This did
    nothing but divide the Republican party.
  • Woodrow Wilson entered politics as a firm
    progressive. As governor of New Jersey, he
    pushed one Progressive reform after another
    through the statehouse.

27
  • Roosevelt called his program New Nationalism
    which supported outlined a complete program of
    reforms.
  • Wilson countered with what he called the New
    Freedom. He criticized Roosevelts program as
    one that supported regulated monopoly. Wilson
    argued that Roosevelts approach gave the federal
    government too much power in the economy and did
    nothing to restore competition. Wilson wanted to
    lower tariffs because he felt it would prevent
    monopolies
  • Wilson wins the election with less than 42 of
    the popular vote as the Republican vote was split
    between Roosevelt and Taft.

28
Regulating the Economy
  • During his eight years as president, Wilson
    demonstrated his power as he crafted reforms
    affecting tariffs, the banking system, trusts,
    and workers rights.
  • Reforming tariffs Wilson declared that high
    tariffs had built up a set of privileges and
    exemptions from competition behind which it was
    easy. to organize monopoly untilnothing is
    obliged to stand the tests of efficiency and
    economy.

29
  • 1913 Democrat-controlled Congress passed the
    Underwood Tariff and Wilson signed it into law.
    This Tariff reduced the average tariff on
    imported goods to about 30 of the value of the
    goods, or about half the tariff rate of the
    1890s.
  • An important section of the Underwood Tax was the
    provision for levying an income tax, or a direct
    tax on the earnings of individuals and
    corporations. The Constitution originally
    prohibited direct taxes unless they were
    apportioned among the states on the basis of
    population.
  • The 16th Amendment in 1913 made it legal for the
    federal government to tax the income of
    individuals directly.

30
  • The US had not had a central bank since the
    1830s.
  • Hundreds of small banks collapsed during
    economical depressions that hit the country
    periodically.
  • 1907 was one of those depressed times.
  • To restore public confidence in the banking
    system Wilson supported the establishment of a
    Federal Reserve system. Banks would have to keep
    a portion of their deposits in a regional reserve
    bank, which would provide a financial cushion
    against unanticipated losses.
  • The Board of Governors would set the interest
    rates the reserve banks charged other banks,
    thereby indirectly controlling the interest rates
    of the entire nation and the amount of money in
    circulation.
  • Congress approved the Federal Reserve Act in 1913
    and it became one of the most significant pieces
    of legislation in American History.

31
  • During his campaign, Wilson had promised to
    restore competition to the economy by breaking up
    big business monopolies. Roosevelt argued that
    Wilsons ideas were unrealistic because big
    business was more efficient and unlikely to be
    replaced by smaller, more competitive firms.
    Once in office, Wilsons opinion shifted, and he
    came to agree with Roosevelt but progressives
    in Congress continued to demand action against
    big business.

32
  • 1914 Congress created the Federal Trade
    Commission (FTC) to monitor American business.
    FTC had the power to investigate companies and
    issue cease and desist orders against companies
    engaging in unfair trade practices, or those
    which hurt competition. The FTC could be taken
    to court if a business disagreed with its
    rulings.
  • Wilson deliberately appointed conservative
    business leaders to serve as the FTCs first
    commissioners so that they would work with
    business to limit activities that unfairly
    limited competition instead of just breaking up
    big business.

33
  • Wilson passed the Adamson Act which supported an
    8 hour work day for railroad workers.
  • Wilsons approach did not satisfy progressives in
    Congress who responded by passing the Clayton
    Antitrust Act. This act declared that unions
    were not unlawful combinations in restraint of
    trade. This came to be called the Magna Carta
    for the workers because it gave unions the right
    to exist.

34
  • Federal Aid and Social Welfare
  • 1916 Wilson signed the first federal law
    regulating child labor. The Keating-Owen Child
    Labor Act prohibited the employment of children
    under the age of 14 in factories producing goods
    for interstate commerce. The Supreme Court
    declared the law unconstitutional on the grounds
    that child labor was not interstate commerce and
    therefore only states could regulate it.
  • Adamson Act 8 hour workday for RR workers
  • Federal Farm Loan Act created 12 Federal Land
    Banks to provide farmers with long-term loans at
    low interest rates.

35
Legacy of Progressivism
  • Progressivism made important changes in the
    political life of the US. Before this era, most
    Americans did not expect the government to pass
    laws protecting workers or regulating big
    business. In fact many courts had previously
    ruled that it was unconstitutional for the
    government to do so. By the end of this era,
    people now expected the government to play a more
    active role in regulating the economy and solving
    social problems.

36
Limits of Progressivism
  • The most conspicuous limit to progressivism was
    its failure to address African American reform
    issues.
  • 1909 National Association for the Advancement of
    Colored People (NAACP). W.E.B. DuBois and other
    founders believed that the vote was essential to
    bring about an end to lynching and racial
    discrimination.
  • Although Progressives excluded many groups from
    their efforts, they did expand democracy and
    improve the quality of life for millions of men,
    women, and children.

37
Constitutional Amendments
  • The 16th Amendment in 1913 made it legal for the
    federal government to tax the income of
    individuals directly.
  • In 1912 Congress passed a direct-election
    amendment (17th Amendment)

1918 House of Representatives passed a woman
suffrage amendment. Pres. Wilson addressed the
Senate to encourage them to pass this but it
failed by two votes. Finally by 1919 Senate
passed the 19th Amendment by just more than the
2/3 vote needed.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com