Title: Please answer:
1Please answer
- How did the publishing of Upton Sinclairs The
Jungle effect the operations of food industries
in the United States?
2The Progressive Era1880-1920
3Essential Questions
- Why was a reform movement necessary during the
late 19th century? - How did industrialization, immigration,
urbanization contribute to this movement? - Who were the progressive reformers? (social class)
4Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire 1911 Spirit
p. 213
5Progressive Era Amendments
- 17th Amendment
- Direct election of Senators
- 18th Amendment
- Prohibition of Alcohol
- 19th Amendment
- Womens suffrage
Significance of initiative, referendum, recall?
6Progressive Roots
- Well before 1900, politicians and writers had
begun to pinpoint targets for the progressive
attack - Henry Demarest Lloyd assailed the Standard Oil
Company in 1894 - Wealth Against Commonwealth
- Jacob A. Riis shocked middle-class Americans in
1890 with - How the Other Half Lives which described the dark
and dirty slums of New York
7Muckrakers
- Journalists who wrote about the corrupt side of
business during early 20th century - Expose unethical/unfair business practices
- Expose abuse of power by big business
- Fought to end child labor
- Expose unsanitary unsafe conditions
8Raking the Muck
- Popular magazines, (McClures, Colliers) , began
to appear in American newsstands in 1902 - They exposed the corruption and scandal that the
public loved to hate - These were very popular with the average citizen,
but much less so with the wealthy
9Jacob Riis
Riiss book showed the plight of the urban poor,
mostly immigrants who were forced to live in
small cramped spaces that lacked adequate
sanitation or ventilation
10Upton Sinclair
- Famous Muckraker
- Wrote The Jungle
- Exposes unsanitary conditions of the meat packing
industry - Greatly influenced others to investigate
businesses
11- At the turn of the Twentieth century, the United
States was entering the era of progressivism.
Following the tumultuous Gilded Age where each
level of government favored big business, many
lower-class Americans demanded change at the
workplace. This included higher wages, the rights
for workers to unionize without penalty, safer
working conditions, amongst others. - On September 20, 1878, Upton Sinclair was born in
Baltimore, Maryland into a poor, lower class
family. His family resided in Baltimore, until
their move to New York City when he was ten.
After finishing Columbia University, Sinclair
traveled along the Northeast. He married Meta
Fuller and settled down in Princeton, N.J. After
publishing many unsuccessful novels, he got
caught in the growing socialist movement in
America under Eugene V. Debs. Sinclair began to
write books advocating change through
investigative journalism this practice was
called muckraking. Upon hearing about a job in
Chicago to investigate the meat-packing industry,
he moved there to examine the workers
conditions. He published his findings in The
Jungle, a novel depicting an immigrant who worked
in one of plants.
12- Although many people thought the aim of The
Jungle was to target the unsanitary conditions of
the meat-packing industry, Sinclair was more
focused on revolutionizing America into a
socialistic society. He advocated for the end of
wage slavery and a redistribution of wealth. - How would Socialism change that?" asked the
girl-student, quickly. It was the first time she
had spoken. - "So long as we have wage slavery," answered
Schliemann, "it matters not in the least how
debasing and repulsive a task may be, it is easy
to find people to perform it. But just as soon as
labor is set free, then the price of such work
will begin to rise. So one by one the old, dingy,
and unsanitary factories will come downit will
be cheaper to build new and so the steamships
will be provided with stoking machinery, and so
the dangerous trades will be made safe, or
substitutes will be found for their products. In
exactly the same way, as the citizens of our
Industrial Republic become refined, year by year
the cost of slaughterhouse products will
increase until eventually those who want to eat
meat will have to do their own killingand how
long do you think the custom would survive then? - Excerpt from The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
13Ida Tarbell
- Who was her main target?
- Why?
John Rockefeller
14Lincoln Steffens
- Famous book?
- The Shame of the Cities
- I have been over into the future, and it works."
15Progressive Governors
- Robert M. LaFollette ? ?
- Governor of Wisconsin
- Took power back from big business (1901)
- Emerged as a leading figure in the Progressive
movement - Hiram W. Johnson
- Governor of California
- Broke the power of the Southern Pacific Railroad
in state politics (1910)
16Carrie Chapman Catt
- Reform movement?
- Why did she challenge the 14th 15th Amendments?
- Was she successful?
- Womens suffrage amendment?
- Spirit p. 224
17Florence Kelley
- Associated with which reforms?
- Child labor
- Minimum Wage
- 8 hour workdays
18Progressive Women
- Female activists worked through various
organizations - Women's Trade Union League
- National Consumers League
- Led by Florence Kelly (1899)
- Mobilized female consumers to pressure government
for laws safeguarding women and children in the
workplace
19Theodore Roosevelt
Increased the power and prestige of the presidency
- 26th president of U.S.
- (1901 1909)
- Gained fame in Spanish American War
- First modern president transformed presidency
into the strong executive office it is today - Roosevelt saw the presidency as a bully pulpit
from which he could influence news and shape
legislation
20Square Deal
- Various progressive reforms sponsored by
Roosevelt to help common citizens - Fight big business (trust-busting)
- Regulate the railroads
- Est. health guidelines for food industry
- Conserve natural resources Est. National Parks
21TR the Trustbuster
- The Progressive movement needed a President to
take on the Trusts - In 1902, President Roosevelt challenged the
Northern Securities Company (Trust)
- They sought to achieve a monopoly of the
railroads in the Northwest - The Supreme Court sided with the President and
the trust was dissolved
22Consumer Protection
- Backed by the public, President Roosevelt passed
the Meat Inspection Act of 1906 - The public had been sickened by the Sinclair
novel, The Jungle - The act stated that the preparation of meat
shipped over state lines would be subject to
federal inspection - Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906
- Designed to prevent the adulteration and
mislabeling of foods and pharmaceuticals
23John Muir
Newlands Act of 1902
24The Roosevelt Panic of 1907
- A panic descended upon Wall Street in 1907
- The financial world blamed the panic on President
Roosevelt for unsettling the industries with his
anti-trust tactics - Congress passed the Aldrich-Vreeland Act in 1908
- Authorized national banks to issue emergency
currency backed by various kinds of collateral
25The Rough Rider Thunders Out
- TR decides not to run for a 3rd term in 1908
- Seeks someone to continue his progressive
policies - William H. Taft?
- Who does Taft run against in 1908?
26William Howard Taft
- How did Taft fare as President?
- Compare Taft to another former President.
- Suffered from foot in mouth disease
- In what two areas did Taft make progress as
President?
27Tafts Dollar Diplomacy
- Improve financialopportunities for American
businesses. - Use private capital tofurther U. S.
interestsoverseas. - The U.S. should create stability abroad that
would best promote Americas commercial
interests. - U.S. policy of using economic power to exert
influence on other countries
28Taft the Trustbuster
- Taft brought 90 suits against trusts double
that of TR - Taft pursues an anti-trust suit against U.S.
Steel Corp - TR had personally protected this trust
- Payne-Aldrich Bill infuriates progressives
- Stage is set for major problems in the Rep party
29TR vs. Taft
- Republican party splinters behind TR Taft
- Election of 1912
- Taft Republicans
- Wilson Democrats
- Roosevelt Progressives
- Debs Socialists
Taft
Roosevelt
Wilson
Debs