chapter 18: the progressive reform era (1890-1920)

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Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

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Page 1: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era

(1890-1920)

Page 2: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

The Progressive Era

• As the 1800s ended, only a handful of people were wealthy, while immigrants and poor laborers continued to live and work under harsh conditions.

• Many citizens and government officials began to demand reforms in government, business, and society.

• The turn of the 20th century marked the beginning of the Progressive Era and was a time of political, social, and economic change in the U.S.

• The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire and the muckrakers both helped to inspire the movement.

Page 3: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Child LaborChild Labor

Page 4: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)
Page 5: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

“The Shirtwaist Kings”Max Blanck and Isaac Harris

“The Shirtwaist Kings”Max Blanck and Isaac Harris

Page 6: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Triangle Shirtwaist FactoryAsch Building, 8th and 10th Floors

Triangle Shirtwaist FactoryAsch Building, 8th and 10th Floors

Page 7: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)
Page 8: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Page 9: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Page 10: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Page 11: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Page 12: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Page 13: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910

Page 14: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Inside the Building After the FireInside the Building After the Fire

Page 15: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Most Doors Were LockedMost Doors Were Locked

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Page 17: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Crumpled Fire Escape, 26 DiedCrumpled Fire Escape, 26 Died

Page 18: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

One of the HeroesOne of the Heroes

Page 19: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

10th Floor After the Fire10th Floor After the Fire

Page 20: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Dead Bodies on the SidewalkDead Bodies on the Sidewalk

Page 21: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

One of the “Lucky” Ones?One of the “Lucky” Ones?

Page 22: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Rose Schneiderman

The LastSurvivor

Rose Schneiderman

The LastSurvivor

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Scene at the MorgueScene at the Morgue

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Relatives Review Bodies145 Dead

Relatives Review Bodies145 Dead

Page 25: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Page of the

New York Journal

Page of the

New York Journal

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One of the Many FuneralsOne of the Many Funerals

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Protestors March to City HallProtestors March to City Hall

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Labor Unions March as MournersLabor Unions March as Mourners

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Women Workers Marchto City Hall

Women Workers Marchto City Hall

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The InvestigationThe Investigation

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Page 32: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Francis PerkinsFuture Secetary Of Labor

Francis PerkinsFuture Secetary Of Labor

Page 33: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

The Progressives

• Progressives (those who supported Progressive reforms), believed that things could be made better though government regulation of society.

• They called for more regulation of business, improved wages for workers, regulations over work conditions, laws governing morality, and defined standards for education.

• Progressives raged against the upper class as being exploiters of the poor.

Page 34: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

• The goals of the Populists could be summed up into four beliefs:

• Government should be more accountable to its citizens

• Government should curb the power and influence of wealthy interests

• Government should be given expanded powers so that it could become more active in improving the lives of its citizens

• Government should become more efficient and less corrupt so that they could competently handle an expanded role

Page 35: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

The Muckrakers

• The Muckrakers had a strong influence on the Progressive Movement.

• A muckrake is a rake or pitchfork used to clean poo and hay out of stables.

• Teddy Roosevelt used the term muckraker to refer to journalists who raked filth into the public eye.

• Many of these writers wrote stories exposing abuse in government and big business.

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The Muckrakers

• Lincoln Steffens exposed corruption in St. Louis and other cities.

• Ida Tarbell revealed the abuses of the Standard Oil Trust. She called for reforms in US business and campaigns against monopolies.

• The most famous muckraker was Upton Sinclair who published a novel called The Jungle in 1906. It uncovered the truth about the US meat packing industry. It led to the creation of a federal meat inspection program.

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• Told about how how meat was processed and the accidents, illnesses, and painful deaths that occurred within the meat packing industry.

• Now you read it…

Page 38: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

The Settlement Movement

• In addition to the muckrakers, there were other notable reformers in the Progressive Movement- many Progressive reformers were women.

• Jane Addams (nicknamed the “mother of social work”) opened Hull House as a settlement house in Chicago.

• Settlement houses were houses established in poor neighborhoods where social activists would offer assistance to immigrants and the urban poor (things the govt wasn’t providing).

• By 1910, there were more than 400 settlement houses in the U.S. Hull House served as a launching pad for investigations into economic, political, and social conditions in the city.

• It also provided help and education to the poor and immigrants, and eventually helped fight for and win new child labor laws.

Page 39: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

Other Movements Contd.• The Temperance Movement had a revival in the Progressive Era.

The 2nd wave of the movement accomplished the original goal of banning alcohol.

• Ratified in 1919, the 18th Amendment prohibited the manufacture, sale, transportation, or consumption of alcohol in the U.S.

• This Amendment was the result of reformers like Carrie Nation, who would go into saloons and smash bottle of liquor.

• Although Prohibition was eventually repealed, another Progressive Reform had a more lasting impact: the 19th Amendment.

• Ever since the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848, women had demanded suffrage.

• Susan B. Anthony carried the women’s suffrage movement into the 20th century. She established the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA).

• In 1920, Congress passed the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote.

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Labor Laws & Living Conditions

• One area where progressives called for reform was in living conditions for poor urban workers and immigrants.

• One of the key figures in this reform movement was Jacob Riis, who wrote the book How the Other Half Lives that exposed the horrible conditions under which immigrants worked and lived.

• His writings revealed the cramped space, filthy conditions, and often dangerous hazards that existed in inner-city tenements.

• Riis’ efforts contributed to New York passing its 1st laws to improve urban tenements.

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Labor Laws

• Since worker’s wages were low, men, women, & children had to work long hours for little pay.

• Workdays tended to run from sunrise to sundown and usually involved dangerous conditions.

• Many progressives called for shorter work days, higher wages, and safer work environments for employees.

• Progressive reformers succeeded in convincing a number of states to pass minimum age laws.

• Legislatures also passed laws restricting work hours and requiring safer working conditions after the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire.

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Political Reforms• The govt became notorious for political scandal in the late 1800s-

corruption at city, state, & federal level. • Progressives wanted to make govt officials more accountable to the

general public. • This resulted in political reforms such as:

– The 17th Amendment: established that US senators would be elected directly by the people, rather than by state legislatures. Meant that senate seats would have to be won in open elections rather than awarded as part of a closed political deal.

– Initiative: allowed citizens of a state to force a vote on a certain issue without having to wait for public officials to bring it up. If enough citizens signed a petition and/or made their voices heard, then the legislature could be compelled to address a particular concern.

– Recall: gave citizens the power to hold special elections to remove corrupt officials from office before their terms were up.

– Referendum: meant that public officials would be elected by popular vote, rather than by party bosses or state legislatures.

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Progressive Era Amendments• 16th Amendment (1913): Gave Congress the power to collect income taxes

on businesses & individuals. Increased the fed govt’s revenue & elminated the need to tax according to the proportions of state populations. Prevented corrupt business practices that kept tons of profits in the hands of big business owners while paying very little to laborers. More money to the govt means more resources to regulate society.

• 17th Amendment (1913): Direct primary.This law established the US senators would be elected directly by the people of a state, rather than by state legislatures.

• 18th Amendment (1919): Prohibition.The govt prohibited the making, selling, or transporting of alcoholic beverages. Later repealed by 21st.

• 19th Amendment (1920): Women’s suffrage. Gave women the right to vote.

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Other Reforms:• Pure Food and Drug Act – Forbid the

manufacture, sale, or transportation of food or drugs containing harmful ingredients

• Meat Inspection Act – Government inspection of meat shipped from one state to another

• Department of Labor – A federal agency that supports laws that benefit workers

Page 45: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

• Meat Inspection Act and the Food and Drug Act

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Page 47: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)

1906

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Progressivism Under Taft and Wilson• Theodore Roosevelt did not run again for

President in 1908; his Republican successor William Howard Taft won over Democrat William Jennings Bryant

• Progressives were furious. Roosevelt decided to come out of retirement to run again as a Progressive, this time under banner of the Bull Moose Party (Roosevelt did not get the Republican nomination for president – Taft did)

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Progressivism Under Taft and Wilson• The Democrats nominated the eventual winner

of the election, Woodrow Wilson.• Taft’s record as a Progressive was quite

notable:• He reserved more public lands and brought

more anti-trust lawsuits than Roosevelt had.

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Reforms During Wilson’s Administration:

• Woodrow Wilson believed that his duty as President was to offer major legislation to Congress, to promote it publicly, and to guide it to passage.

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Reforms During Wilson’s Administration:• Clayton Anti-Trust Act – Limited the power

of monopolies and clarified the Sherman Anti-Trust Act

• Federal Trade Commission – Created the Agency (FTC) that investigates fraudulent practices and used the courts to enforce its policies

• Federal Reserve Act (System)- Created a three level banking system that controlled the nation’s money supply and regulated member banks

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Reforms During Wilson’s Administration:

• Adamson Act – Reduced railroad workers workday from 10 hours to 8 hours with no cut in pay

• Federal Workmen’s Compensation Act – Benefits paid to federal employees injured on the job

• Keating-Owen Child Labor Act – Outlawed products sold interstate produced by child labor

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Reforms During Wilson’s Administration:• 18th Amendment – Prohibition – no sale or

manufacture of alcoholic beverages

• 19th Amendment – Women receive the right to vote (suffrage)

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Page 55: Chapter 18: The Progressive Reform Era (1890-1920)