1 / 17

Chapter 9 THE AGE OF REFORM

Chapter 9 THE AGE OF REFORM. Section 1: The Progressive Movement Section 2: Reforming the New Industrial Order Section 3: Reforming Society. Section 1: The Progressive Movement. Objectives:. What were the backgrounds of social reform leaders? What issues concerned progressives?

karik
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 9 THE AGE OF REFORM

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. Chapter 9THE AGE OF REFORM Section 1: The Progressive Movement Section 2: Reforming the New Industrial Order Section 3: Reforming Society

  2. Section 1: The Progressive Movement Objectives: • What were the backgrounds of social reform leaders? • What issues concerned progressives? • What issues did muckrakers address? • How did progressive writers and thinkers view American society?

  3. Section 1: The Progressive Movement Backgrounds of social reform leaders • native born • middle or upper class • usually urban • college educated

  4. Section 1: The Progressive Movement Progressive issues • reform of industrial practices • end to child labor • reform of electoral system • social justice

  5. Section 1: The Progressive Movement Muckraker’s issues • business corruption • corruption in urban politics • social problems such as slums and child labor • racism

  6. Section 1: The Progressive Movement Progressive views • Industrial society exploited the weak. • Government should use its powers to promote social welfare. • Private citizens bear a social responsibility.

  7. Section 2: Reforming the New Industrial Order Objectives: • What workplace problems did progressives target? • What were the results of the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire? • What rulings did the Supreme Court make on labor laws? • What were the successes and failures of unions in the early 1900s?

  8. Section 2: Reforming the New Industrial Order Workplace problems • child labor • low wages for women • long working hours • dangerous working conditions • no minimum wage

  9. Section 2: Reforming the New Industrial Order Results of the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire • public outrage • passage of strict fire-safety code by New York legislature

  10. Section 2: Reforming the New Industrial Order Supreme Court rulings on labor laws • In Lochner v. New York, the Court overturned a law limiting work to ten hours a day, stating that workers should be free to accept any working conditions. • In Muller v. Oregon, the Court upheld a law limiting women to a ten-hour workday, claiming that women’s physical structure justified special legislation. • In general, the Court sided with business owners and overturned much early social legislation.

  11. Section 2: Reforming the New Industrial Order Successes and failures of unions • increased membership • got wage increases and shorter hours in some companies • got aid from progressive organizations • accepted women and minorities (IWW) • excluded unskilled workers and sometimes promoted racism (AFL) • did not get closed-shop status (ILGWU) • failed to end capitalism and faded from power (IWW)

  12. Section 3: Reforming Society Objectives: • How did reformers try to improved life in U.S. cities? • How did reformers hope to improve moral standards? • How did African Americans and American Indians organize to improve their lives? • Why were immigrants left out of some progressive reforms, and how did they contribute to other reforms?

  13. Section 3: Reforming Society Reformers attempts to improve urban life • tried rid cities of garbage • wanted to provide better housing • desired better public education • wanted improved public health • worked to build playgrounds • wanted to provide city planning and redesign

  14. Section 3: Reforming Society Moral improvements desired by reformers • crusaded against alcohol • demanded censorship

  15. Section 3: Reforming Society American Indians • formed the Society of American Indians to address problems and publicize accomplishments.

  16. Section 3: Reforming Society African Americans • formed the NAACP to work through the courts for civil rights • formed the Urban League to fight for racial equality

  17. Section 3: Reforming Society Immigrants and reform • often left out because of racism and lack of respect for immigrants’ cultures • worked through political machines to establish worker-protection and public-health programs • used political machines to obtain playgrounds, public baths, and parks

More Related