1 / 37

The PROGRESSIVE ERA

The PROGRESSIVE ERA. Nation of Nations Chapter 22. The Spirit of Progressivism. Progressivism not a __________ movement Shared values sense of evangelical Protestant duty faith in the benefits of _______ commitment to improve all aspects of American life. The Rise of the Professions.

jaxon
Télécharger la présentation

The PROGRESSIVE ERA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The PROGRESSIVE ERA Nation of Nations Chapter 22

  2. The Spirit of Progressivism • Progressivism not a __________ movement • Shared values • sense of evangelical Protestant duty • faith in the benefits of _______ • commitment to improve all aspects of American life

  3. The Rise of the Professions • Professions bulwarks of Progressivism • Law • Medicine • Business • Education • Social work • Professionalism strengthened through entrance exams, national associations

  4. The Social-Justice Movement • Reformers forsake _______reform to address larger structural problems • Apply scientific methods to social reform • Social work became a profession

  5. The Purity Crusade • Crusade against _______ • 1911--membership in Women's Christian Temperance Union hits 250,000 • 1916--19 states prohibit alcohol • 1920--___Amendment prohibits alcohol

  6. Woman Suffrage, Woman's Rights • Women fill Progressive ranks • National Conference of Social Work • General Federation of Women's Clubs • 1890--National American Woman Suffrage Association formed • 1920--_______ Amendment passed • Suffrage seen as empowering women to benefit the disadvantaged

  7. Women’s Suffrage Before 1900

  8. A Ferment of Ideas:Challenging the Status Quo • Progressives, pragmatists, measure value of ideas by actions they inspire • Reject _______ _______ • John Dewey--education should stress personal growth, free inquiry, creativity

  9. A Ferment of Ideas:Challenging the Status Quo (2) • 1901--_______ party formed • Unites intellectuals, factory workers, tenant farmers, miners, lumberjacks • Promises Progressive reform rather than overthrow of capitalism • 1912--Socialist presidential candidate _______ _______polls over 900,000 votes

  10. Reform in the Cities and States • Progressives wanted government to follow the public will • Reform government • reorganize for efficiency, effectiveness • new agencies address particular social ills • posts staffed with experts • _______ power extended at all levels

  11. Interest Groups and the Decline of Popular Politics • Decline in voter participation • 77% from 1876-1900 • 65% from 1900-1916 • 52% in the 1920s • remains near 52% through 20th century • _______ _______get favorable legislation through _______

  12. Voter Participation in Presidential Elections, 1876-1920

  13. Reform in the Cities • Urban reform leagues form professional, nonpolitical civil service • _______commissioners replace elected officials in many cities • City ______ idea spreads

  14. Action in the States • State regulatory commissions created to investigate economic life • Initiative, referendum, and recall created • 1917--17th Amendment provides for direct election of U.S. senators

  15. Action in the States:Reform Governors • Robert ______ of Wisconsin • ______ taps experts in higher education for help in sweeping reforms • Other Progressive governors • Joseph Folk of Missouri • Hiram Johnson of California • Charles Evans Hughes of New York • Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey

  16. The Republican Roosevelt • Often defies convention • Brings an exuberance to the presidency • Surrounds himself with able associates

  17. Busting the Trusts • 1902--wave of trust-busting led by suit against Northern Securities Company • 1904--Northern Securities dissolved • Roosevelt reputed a "trust-buster" • Comparatively _____antitrust cases under Roosevelt

  18. ________ in the Coalfields • 1902--United Mine Workers strike in Pennsylvania threatens U.S. economy • U.M.W., companies to White House • Roosevelt wins company concessions by threatening military seizure of mines • Roosevelt acts as broker of interests

  19. Roosevelt Progressivism at Its Height • 1904—A four-way election • Republican—Theodore Roosevelt • Democrat—Alton B. Parker • Socialist—Eugene V. Debs • Prohibition—Silas C. Swallow • Roosevelt wins 57% of popular vote, 336 electoral votes

  20. Regulating the Railroads • 1903--Elkins Act prohibits railroad rebates, strengthens Interstate Commerce Commission • Widespread popular demand for further railroad regulation after Roosevelt’s reelection • 1906--Hepburn Act further strengthens Interstate Commerce Commission • membership from five to seven • may fix reasonable maximum rates • jurisdiction broadened to include oil pipeline, express, sleeping car companies

  21. Cleaning Up Food and Drugs • Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle (1906)prompts federal investigation of meatpacking industry • 1906--Meat Inspection Act • sets rules for sanitary meatpacking • requires government inspection of meat products • Samuel Hopkins Adams exposes dangers of patent medicines • 1906--Pure Food and Drug Act • requires manufacturers to list certain ingredients • bans manufacture and sale of adulterated drugs

  22. Conserving the Land • First comprehensive national conservation policy • policy defines “conservation” as wise use of natural resources • ______ acreage under federal protection

  23. National Parks and Forests

  24. Conserving the Land (2) • Roosevelt’s challenge • attacks “malefactors of great wealth” • criticizes ______ of federal courts • agitates for ______ legislation • Popular response • business leaders blame for financial panic • overwhelming majority support

  25. The Ordeal of William Howard Taft • Taft able administrator, poor president • Conservative Republicans resurge • Taft loses support of Progressives

  26. Taft Alienates the Progressives • 1910--Taft successfully pushes Mann-Elkins Act to strengthen ICC • empowers ICC to fix railroad rates • Progressive Republicans attack Taft’s plan of a Commerce Court to hear ICC appeals • progressives obstruct Taft’s negotiations • 1910--Taft attacks Progressive Republicans, Democrats gain Congress

  27. Taft Alienates the Progressives (2) • Legislation protecting laborers • Sixteenth Amendment creates income tax • Taft a greater trustbuster than Roosevelt • Taft, Roosevelt attack one another publicly • 1912--Taft renominated by Republicans, little chance for victory

  28. Differing Philosophies in the Election of 1912 • Roosevelt--Progressive ("Bull Moose") • “___________” • federal regulation of economy • wasteful competition replaced by efficiency • Woodrow Wilson--Democrat • "___________" for individual • restrain big business, government • Democrats win White House, Congress

  29. Woodrow Wilson's New Freedom • Woodrow Wilson former president of Princeton, governor of New Jersey • Progressive, intellectual, inspiring orator, racist • One of America's most effective and dangerous presidents

  30. The New Freedom in Action • 1913--Underwood Tariff cuts duties • 1913--_________ reforms banks, establishes stable currency • 1914--Clayton Antitrust Act outlaws unfair trade practices, protects _______ • 1914--Federal Trade Commission

  31. New Freedom in Action: Retreating from Reform • November, 1914--Wilson announces the "New Freedom" has been achieved • It was “a time of healing because a time of just dealing” • Statement stuns many progressives

  32. Wilson Moves Toward the New Nationalism • Reasons for the move • distracted by the outbreak of war in Europe • needs conservative _______ support • Republicans seem to gain by attacking his programs • 1916--Presidential election

  33. Wilson Moves Toward the New Nationalism (2) • Wilson renews reform in reelection bid • Federal Farm Loan Act • intervenes in strikes on behalf of workers • attempts to ban child labor • increases income taxes on the rich • supports women’s suffrage • Program wins Wilson a close election

  34. The Fruits of the Progressivism • Reform of government at all levels • Intelligent planning of reform • World War I ends Progressive optimism

More Related