The Progressive Movement Takes Shape. What is Progressivism? Political response to the problems of...

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The Progressive Movement Takes Shape

Transcript of The Progressive Movement Takes Shape. What is Progressivism? Political response to the problems of...

The Progressive Movement Takes Shape

What is Progressivism?

Political response to the problems of Industrialization and its social by-products:• immigration• urban growth• concentration of corporate power• widening of class divisions

Progressivism’s strength was in the cities

Who were the progressives?

• Middle class• Protestant • Successful Urban

dwellers

Umbrella label - Social Gospel, Suffrage, Temperance, Settlement, Good Government, Civil Rights

Types of Progressive Reform

Wanted to reform the system to preserve it• Humanitarian - legislation to protect

worker• Morality - Purity Crusaders - Nativists• Economic - Break-up trusts and

monopolies• Political – provide good and efficient

government

Pressure for Reform

• Pressure to reform came from private interest groups

• Women’s Christian Temperance Union

• NAACP

• National American Women‘s Suffrage Association

Emphasis on the scientific approach to social problems

• Social Research

• Expert Opinion

• Statistical Data

• Human emotion propelled the movement

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Progressive Goals

• End “White slavery”

• Prohibition

• Immigration restriction

• “Americanization” of immigrants

• Regulation of utilities

• Women’s suffrage

Goals

• End child labor

• Destruction of urban political machines

• Efficiency

• Political Reform

End to “White Slavery”

Prohibition

Prohibition

• Saloons vice

• Drinking family tragedy

• Voting in saloons graft and corruption boss and political machines

Immigration Restriction

Anti-Trust

• Break up monopolies• Sherman Anti-Trust• Clayton Anti-Trust• Standard Oil Trust• Railroad Trust• T. Roosevelt –

“Trust-Buster”

Municipal Reform

• Provide better services to the city populations• Break up machines• Government regulation of utilities• Bath-houses, kindergartens, playgrounds,

improved sanitation, lodging houses for tramps, lower transit fares, equitable taxes

• Hazen Pingree, Samuel “Golden Rule” Jones

Settlement movement

• Reform movement

• Live in poor neighborhoods to witness effects of poverty first hand

• Jane Addams and Helen Gates Starr founded Hull House in Chicago

Jane Addams – Hull House

- First American Woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize

Settlement Movement

• Taught classes

• Medical clinics

• Day care and camps

• Legal advice

• Investigated community conditions

• Helped immigrants

• Jane Addams

• Lillian Wald

Hull House services

• Cultural events• Classes• Child care center• Clubs• Summer camps • Playgrounds• Employment and

legal aid• Healthcare clinics

Hull House

• Investigated city conditions – economic, political and health

• Foundation for future reform• Workers – college educated women• Contribution – widen people’s

perspectives on social conditions and close the gap between divisions in society

• First social workers

Florence Kelley

• Quaker

• Socialist

• Trained at Hull House

• Illinois’ first state factory inspector

• National Consumers’ League

• Fought child labor and sweat shop conditions

End to Child Labor

Women’s Suffrage

• Alice Paul and Carrie Chapman Catt

• Sought constitutional amendment

• 19th Amendment achieved

Destruction of Political Machines

Muckrakers

Novelists and journalists who exposed wrong - doing

• Ida Tarbell - Standard Oil Trust

• Lincoln Steffens - The Shame of the Cities -St. Louis

• Upton Sinclair - The Jungle - Chicago’s meat-packing industry

State reforms - intended to democratize the process

• Secret ballot

• Direct primary - Wisconsin (1903)

• Initiative and Referendum

• Recall

• Seventeenth Amendment - direct election of Senators by the people - not the state legislatures

Reforming Society and Cities

• By 1907 - 30 states had abolished child labor

• 1903 - Muller v. Oregon - women laundry workers limited to a 10 hour day

• 1911 - New York State Factory Investigating Committee - 56 worker protection laws

• 1914 - 25 states passed laws making employers liable for job related injuries

The Wisconsin Idea

• Laboratory for progressive reform • Governor Robert “Fighting Bob” LaFollette• direct primary• commission to regulate railroads• increased corporate taxes• passed a law limiting campaign spending• legislative reference library to inform

lawmakers

Theodore Roosevelt – 1st Progressive President

• Trust Buster• Square Deal• Settled 1902 Coal

Strike• Conservationist• Consumer protection

– Pure Food and Drug Act

– Meat Inspection Act

TR as President

• Saw the presidency as a “bully pulpit” – platform from which to bring change

• “square deal” – government should afford honesty and fairness in gov’t and business

• Opposed socialists • Condemned wealthy who opposed change

and abused their power

Anthracite Coal Strike - 1902

• United Mine Workers

• Mine owners refused arbitration

• TR threatened to seize the mines

• Workers received wage increase and shorter hours – no union recognition

• TR – became a friend to labor and expanded presidential power

Anthracite Miners – Scranton, PA 1902

Curbing the “Bad” Trusts

• 1902 – applied the Sherman Anti – Trust Act against Northern Securities Company (JP Morgan)

• Power of the federal government to regulate business combinations

• “good trusts” and “bad trusts”• 40 antitrust suits Trustbuster

Corralling the Corporations

• Elkins Act – 1903 – fines for railroad rebates

• Hepburn Act – 1906 – expanded Interstate Commerce Commission– Free passes on RR restricted– If shippers complained – ICC could nullify

rates

Conservationist

• TR increased national reserves of forests, coal lands and waterpower sites

• Secured passage of of Newlands Act (1902) to finance irrigation project – SW

• Encouraged conservation efforts of the Forest Service – appt. Gifford Pinchot

• Propelled conservation into national significance

Conservation and Preservation

• Gifford Pinchot –– Conservation – scientific timber management– Chief Forester - U.S. Forest Service

• John Muir – Preservation – preserve wildness of western

landscape– Founder of Sierra Club

Hetch – Hetchy Before

Hetch – Hetchy Today

Chicago 1905 “Hog Butcher of the World”

Goals of Conservationism?

• Use natural resources wisely

• Multiple – use resource management

– Recreation

– Sustained yield logging

– Watershed protection

– Summer stock grazing

Consumer Protection

• Pure Food and Drug Act 1906

• Meat Inspection Act 1906

• Inspired by Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle

TR hands his policies to Taft as he leaves the presidency.

Wm. Howard Taft2nd Progressive President

• Failed at tariff reform

• Split the Republican Party over conservation

• Busted trusts• Reserved acreage• Angered TR

Woodrow WilsonLast Progressive President

• Clayton Anti-Trust Act

• Federal Trade Commission

• Lowered tariffs

• 16th Amendment – income tax

• Federal Reserve System

• Highly moralistic

Progressive Amendments

• 16th Amendment – Income Tax

• 17th Amendment – Direct election of Senators

• 18th Amendment – Prohibition

• 19th Amendment – Women’s suffrage

What is the heritage of the progressive movement?

• Belief that government has responsibility to act in public’s welfare

• Marked transition from laissez-faire to government regulation of the economy

• Demonstrated ability of our democratic institutions to meet problems arising from urbanization and industrialization

• President should provide strong and effective national leadership