1 / 48

Bell Ringer 12/1

Bell Ringer 12/1. One way in which the Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) and the Gentlemen’s Agreement (1907) are similar is that they (1) reflected nativist attitudes in the United States (2) encouraged a policy of popular sovereignty (3) led to an increase in Asian immigration

machin
Télécharger la présentation

Bell Ringer 12/1

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. Bell Ringer 12/1 One way in which the Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) and the Gentlemen’s Agreement (1907) are similar is that they (1) reflected nativist attitudes in the United States (2) encouraged a policy of popular sovereignty (3) led to an increase in Asian immigration (4) eased requirements for citizenship

  2. Land Conservation -Yellowstone national park established on 1872, 1st national park. -Presidents Harrison and Cleveland set aside 35 million acres of land. -President Teddy Roosevelt will set aside more than 200 million acres of land for national forests, mineral reserves, and water projects. -Most parks located in the West.

  3. Pendleton Civil Service Act 1883 -President Garfield is assassinated by an individual who was expecting a job in his administration through the spoils system. Chester A. Arthur now becomes President and obtains Congress’s support for civil service reform. Becomes law in 1883, creates a Civil Service Commission which classifies government jobs and tests applicants’ to ensure they are qualified and fit for jobs.

  4. Political Machines & the Rise of Political Bosses

  5. Political Machines - Unofficial city organizations designed to keep a particular party or group in power…usually headed by a single powerful “boss”. Sometimes the boss held power – more often he hand-picked those that would serve and would get them elected- - exchange of favors - Ward leaders controlled districts and handed out jobs or contracts to those who did them favors. - in exchange they voted for the party candidates.

  6. -bribes to the political machine could get a business favors from the city government • Immigration was blamed for the success of political machines • Often the machines would help new immigrants when other organizations or formal city government could not. • In turn immigrants voted for and paid unfair bribes to political bosses in order to keep jobs, apartments, and the peace.

  7. Bell Ringer 12/6 In the United States Constitution, the power to impeach a federal government official is given to the (1) House of Representatives (2) president (3) state legislatures (4) Supreme Court

  8. Boss Tweed & Tammany Hall -Tweed controlled the NYC Democratic Party Machine known as Tammany Hall Tweed was famous for padding bills and submitting false receipts, and collecting bills on imaginary services, making the machine millions of dollars. Thomas Nast to the Rescue

  9. Political Cartoons of Thomas Nast

  10. “the Brains”

  11. Thomas Nast Cartoonist for the National paper Harper’s Weekly. Through years of publishing cartoons exposing the truths of Tweeds corruption, Tweed was eventually arrested and convicted of his crimes in 1873. Even though Tweed is brought down, Tammany Hall dominates NYC polities for another half century.

  12. Populist Party In 1891, the farmers alliance creates this third party. Populists platform included: Increased circulation of money Progressive income tax, more money you make the more you pay in taxes. Supported 8 hour work day.

  13. Election of 1896 http://www.history.com/shows/men-who-built-america/videos/the-rise-of-thomas-edison#presidential-election-of-1896

  14. Turner’s Frontier Thesis Frederick Turner claimed that the frontier played a central role in forming American character. Frontier forced immigrants to shed their old ways and adapt, invent, and innovate. Frontier produced highly individualistic, bent on self-improvement, and committed to democracy individuals.

  15. Bell Ringer 12/7 In the United States, industrial unions of the 1880’s and of the 1980’s had similar goals in that both campaigned for 1) national health insurance 2) better unemployment insurance 3) greater job security and higher wages 4)wage and price freezes

  16. AFRO-AMERICAN LEADERS BOOKER T. WASHINGTON W.E.B. DuBOIS

  17. TWO DIFFERENT PHILOSOPHIES AS TO WHAT BLACK PEOPLE SHOULD DO TO SECURE THEIR RIGHTS WASHINGTON DuBOIS

  18. HE HELPED FORM THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE IN 1909. THIS GROUP OF BLACKS AND WHITE LIBERALS WORKED FOR FULL CITIZENSHIP AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY FOR BLACK AMERICANS. W.E.B. DuBOIS

  19. FREDERICK DOUGLAS WAS WIDELY REGARDED AS THE LEADER AND SPOKESMAN FOR THE BLACK COMMUNITY UNTIL HIS DEATH IN 1895. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON ASSUMED DOUGLAS’S ROLE BUT WAS CHALLENGED BY W.E.B. DuBOIS. THE TWO HAD DIFFERING IDEAS ON HOW BLACK AMERICANS SHOULD DEAL WITH THE RACISM AND LACK OF OPPORTUNITY.

  20. http://www.history.com/topics/black-history/black-history-month/videos/web-dubois-and-the-niagara-movementhttp://www.history.com/topics/black-history/black-history-month/videos/web-dubois-and-the-niagara-movement

  21. Bell Ringer 12/9 The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions (1798) held that states could nullify the Alien and Sedition Acts because these laws 1)repealed the Northwest Ordinance 2)placed an unfair tax on whiskey made by western farmers 3)violated the Constitution 4)established limits on universal suffrage

  22. Bell Ringer 12/12 What was a common purpose of the three amendments added to the US Constitution between 1865 and 1870? 1. extending suffrage to Southern women 2. reforming the sharecropping system 3. granting rights to African Americans 4. protecting rights of Southerners accused of treason

  23. Bell Ringer 12/13 What was a result of the disputed presidential election of 1876? 1. Reconstruction ended as federal troops were removed from the South. 2. Slavery was reestablished in the South by state legislatures. 3. New state laws were passed in the South to guarantee equal rights for African Americans. 4. A constitutional amendment was adopted to correct problems with the electoral college system.

  24. Bell Ringer 12/8 W.E.B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington most strongly disagreed over which issue? the constitutionality of the Sherman Antitrust Act. the construction of the Panama Canal methods to achieve racial equality support for the allies in WWI

  25. Reform in the Cities • Initiative – people may petition the legislature for a proposed law • Referendum – voters decide if a law or amendment should be passed • Recall – method used to force elected officials from office • Secret Ballots – prevents party bosses from knowing peoples votes • Direct Primary – allows voters rather than party to select candidates that will run

  26. Urban Living Conditions Cities during this time period grew upward and outward. Tenement houses were low cost apartment buildings designed to house as many families as the owner could fit in. Before long because of poverty, overcrowding, and neglect neighborhoods gradually declined. Areas with many tenement houses often times became slums and ghettos. Ghettos- area in which one ethnic or racial group dominates, many immigrants chose to live near others of their ethnic backgrounds.

  27. How the Other Half LivesBy Jacob Riis Muckrakers- Journalists who alerted the public of wrongdoings in politics and business. -became known for his descriptions of tenement life as experienced by immigrants living in the City's poorest tenement house districts. -forced the public (the advantaged half) to acknowledge the poverty that existed in tenements. - Helped pave the way towards the Tenement Act of 1901.

  28. Bell Ringer 12/14 One way that “Bleeding Kansas,” the Dred Scott decision and John Brown’s Raid had a similar effect on the United States was that these events 1. ended conflict over slavery in the territories. 2. eased tensions between the North and the South. 3. contributed to the formation of the Whig Party. 4. made sectional compromise more difficult.

  29. The Jungle by Upton Sinclair -1906 book that described the horrors of the meat packing industry. - Book led to the creation of federal Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906.

  30. Jane Addams -1889 she open Hull House a settlement house in Chicago. -Made significant social and economic contributions to the lives of poor people living in Chicago. -Worked to get laws regulating labor and tenement housing.

  31. 1912 Election -Theodore Roosevelt(1901-1908) and William Howard Taft(1908-1912) both vying for Republican nomination. Taft, being incumbent Republican President, receives nomination, Roosevelt starts 3rd party called Bull Moose Party. Woodrow Wilson, Gov of NJ, wins Democrat nomination. Wilson wins 42% of popular vote but still wins election because Republican party split.

  32. Bell Ringer 12/15 The Meat Inspection Act (1906) and the Pure Food and Drug Act (1906) were efforts by the federal government to (1) protect public health and safety (2) support business monopolies (3) restrict foreign competition (4) regulate child labor

  33. Woodrow Wilson • Financial Reform • Clayton Antitrust Act – prohibited buying stock of one company if it would create a monopoly & legalized unions and farm organizations • Federal Trade Commission (FTC) – given power to investigate corporate activities • Income Tax – 16th Amendment started a graduated income tax system • Federal Reserve System – Federal Reserve Act of 1913 started the system still used today, 12 districts in the US with a regional central bank.

  34. IDA TARBELL Revealed after years of diligent research the illegal means used by John D. Rockefeller to monopolize the early oil industry.

  35. FRANK NORRIS Novel exposed the stranglehold the railroads had over wheat and other farmers. It called for regulation of railroad corporations.

  36. 19th Amendment When men went to fight in WWI in 1917, millions of women to their places in factories, mills, and mines. Because of this, an amendment was introduced establishing that no state could deny a citizen the right to vote based on gender.

  37. STATES THAT GAVE WOMEN THE SUFFRAGE BEFORE THE 19TH AMENDMENT 1919

  38. Native Americans Gain Citizenship -American Indian Citizenship Act of 1924 made all Native Americans citizens of the US with full voting rights.

More Related