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William McKinley

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William McKinley

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  1. The Cross of Gold speech was a speech delivered by William Jennings Bryan at the 1896 Democratic National Convention in Chicago on July 9, 1896. The speech advocated bimetallism. At the time, the Democratic Party wanted to standardize the value of the dollar to silver and opposed pegging the value of the United States dollar to a gold standard alone. The inflation that would result from the silver standard would make it easier for farmers and other debtors to pay off their debts by increasing their revenue dollars. It would also reverse the deflation which the U.S. experienced from 1873-1896. McKinley was for protective tariffs. He was against silver because it would devalue US currency and harm foreign trade. He promised that he would promote industry and banking and guarantee prosperity for every group in the nation. William Jennings Bryan William McKinley A Political Allegory

  2. Dorothy = represents America—honest, kindhearted and plucky – "the all-American girl from the heartland, with a big heart, independence, and daring

  3. Kansas = life on the Great Plains, a Populist stronghold "Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore."

  4. Tornado = a metaphor for political revolution

  5. The Scarecrow = Midwestern farmers

  6. The Tin Man = industrial workers. The fate of the Tin Man suggests the dehumanization of industrial labor. When Dorothy and the Scarecrow find the Tin Man he has rusted to the point where he is immobile. This is probably a reference to the depression of the 1890s that had closed many factories and left large numbers of workers unemployed.

  7. The Cowardly Lion = William Jennings Bryan, who made the first of three unsuccessful bids for the presidency in the election of 1896. Bryan was the Democratic Party's nominee for president and he embraced some Populist issues, most notably "free silver," the bi-metallic monetary standard that Populists thought would allow farmers greater access to credit. The Populists were faced with the choice of either running their own candidate or choosing "fusion" with the Democratic Party. The Populists opted to select Bryan as their candidate as well, risking being absorbed by the Democratic Party and dwindling as a movement. By casting their lot with the Democrats, the Populists felt they could expand their influence outside of the rural parts of the country. Ultimately, however, it appears the Populists made the wrong bet. Bryan lost the election and the Populists never regained the influence they enjoyed in the 1890s. Perhaps the undoing of the Populist movement was their failure to attract the support of industrial workers. In the Wizard of Oz, upon first meeting the Cowardly Lion strikes at the Tin Man, but his claws do not make a dent in his metal body—just as the Populists efforts to create a coalition between farmers and industrial workers were unsuccessful. Bryan may have been a great orator, but despite his roar, he had no real power.

  8. Toto = was likely a reference to prohibitionists (that is, "teetotalers") who were important allies of the Populists in the silver coalition.

  9. The Ruby Slippers = in the original story, the shoes were silver = the Silver Standard

  10. The Yellow Brick Road = the gold standard. The monetary system in the United States in the 19th and well into the 20th century was that paper money was redeemable for gold at a fixed exchange rate. Populists regarded the gold standard as unfair and argued instead for "bimetallism," the use of both silver and gold as the monetary standard.

  11. The Emerald City = Washington, D.C. The Emerald City is not a lustrous green, but a dull gray. It appears to people to be emerald because upon entry all people have to put on emerald colored glasses—the illusion of luster suggests a cynicism about politics.

  12. The Wizard = president of the United States (William McKinley), controlling the mechanisms of the Emerald City.

  13. The wicked witches are from the east and west, while the good witches are from the north and south. The good witches are from those parts of the country where the Populists had the greatest influence—the Midwest and the South.

  14. That's why this particular witch was killed when a house fell on her. The Wicked Witch of the East = Mortgage Bankers who were widely hated in an era of economic turmoil and frequent foreclosures.

  15. The Wicked Witch of the West represents the difficult physical environment in which farmers on the Great Plains were trying to make their living. The land on the Great Plains was not as fertile as lands to the east of the Mississippi River and to make matters worse, a drought was driving many farmers out of business in the 1890s. Dorothy kills the Wicked Witch of the West by dousing her with a bucket of water. Only through more plentiful water, either through greater rainfall or through irrigation, would farmers in this region be able to make a living in this harsh environment.

  16. Munchkins = Ordinary Citizens

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