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I.
Sources of Progressive Reform A.
Industrialization, with all its increase in productivity and the number of consumer
goods, created 1) Unemployment and labor unrest 2) Wasteful use of natural
resources 3) Abuses of corporate power
B.
Growing cities magnified problems of poverty, disease, crime, and corruption
C.
Influx of immigrants and rise of new managerial class upset traditional class
alignments
D.
Massive depression (1893-1897) convinced many people that equal opportunity was
out of reach for many Americans.
II.
Who Were the Progressives?
A.
New middle class composed of young professionals 1. Sought to apply principles
of professions (medicine, law, business, and teaching) to problems of society 2.
They had a strong faith in progress & the ability of educated people to overcome
problems 3. Rise in volunteer organizations organized to address issues (American
Bar Association, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People, National Municipal League) 4. Mainly urban in residence
and orientation
B.
Muckraking journalists attacked corruption and scandal with a sense of moral outrage
1. Lincoln Steffens exposed city machines in The Shame of the Cities (1904) 2.
Ida Tarbell exposed Standard Oil Trust abuses 3. Upton Sinclair's The Jungle
(1906) attacked the meat-packing industry
C.
Political reformers (many opposed to traditional party politics)
D.
Socialists--frustrated workers who promised to destroy capitalism. Led by Eugene
Debs (who polled 900,000 votes for president in 1912), socialists were rejected
by most Progressives as too extreme in their goals and methods
II.
Teddy Roosevelt & the Square Deal
A.
Using the power of the presidency (a "bully pulpit") as no president
since Lincoln, T.R. loved to lead and to fight those he felt were not acting in
America's best interests. 1. Coal Strike--When coal mine owners refused to
deal with the union in a 1902 strike, T.R. summonsed them and the head of the
mine workers to the White House and threatened to use army troops to keep the
mines open. Owners backed down and T.R. was credited with ending the strike 2.
Northern Securities Case--T.R. used the Sherman Antitrust Act to attack a railroad
monopoly. Supreme Court ordered the company to dissolve. 3. Added Departments
of Labor and Commerce to the Cabinet 4. Pushed through the Hepburn Act (1906),
strengthening the Interstate Commerce Commission 5. Urged Congressional approval
of the Pure Food & Drug Act (1906), which forbade impure foods and required
labeling of ingredients of foods and drugs.
B.
Conservation reform added massive areas to the national forests (total of 190
million acres) 1. Transferred forests to the U.S. Forest Service headed by
Gifford Pinchot, who insisted that trees be planted as well as harvested 2.
Withdrew millions of acres of public land from sale to protect natural resources
3. Used public land sale revenues to build dams and canal systems
III.
City and State Government Reform
A.
City government system changed to prevent boss or "machine" rule 1.
City commissions replaced mayors and city councils in some areas 2. City managers
(nonpolitical professional managers) were hired to run small cities
B.
State level reform efforts championed by Robert La Follette of Wisconsin 1.
Direct primary to give voters control over candidates 2. Competitive Civil
Service & restrictions on lobbying 3. Many states passed workmen's compensation
laws 4. Election reforms to bring direct democracy to voters a) Initiative--allowed
5% of voters to "initiate" laws in state legislatures b) Referendum--in
some states voters could then pass initiatives into laws c) Recall--by petition
voters could force an official to stand for re-election at any time
IV.
Major Progressivism Programs
A
.Education 1. Progressive education--John Dewey led movement that focused
on personal growth, not mastery of body of knowledge and learning through experience. 2.
Charles Eliot of Harvard pioneered elective courses and new teaching techniques
(such as seminars) to make university learning more meaningful 3. Women began
attending colleges in large numbers (by 1920, 47% of total enrollment was female). 4.
Believing that more education would help bring an enlightened population, Progressives
pushed enrollments to record levels (86% of children in schools by 1920) without
seriously assessing how schools were doing.
B.
Law--judges opinions needed to be based on factual information, not just oral
arguments and precedents 1. Muller V. Oregon (1908)--limited women's working
hours 2. Not all Progressive legal principles prevailed. In Lochner v. New
York (1905), the Supreme Court overturned a New York law limiting bakers' working
hours.
C. Settlement
houses--Jane Addams and others established group homes in city slums to aid poor
urban residents. 1. Promoted public health reform in cities, chlorinating
water and tightening sanitary regulations 2. Developed education & craft
programs for residents 3. Created neighborhood health clinics and dispensaries
D. Racial anti-discrimination
efforts 1. Booker T. Washington (Atlanta Compromise) argued for self-help
and accommodation on the part of blacks to white society 2. W.E.B. DuBois (Niagara
Movement--1905) urged blacks to assert themselves and agitate for political and
economic rights. Formed NAACP to use legal means to end racial discrimination
E. Women's rights
1. While the number of employed women stayed constant from 1900-1920 (20%),
the type of work switched from domestic labor (servants, cooks) to clerical work
(clerks, typists, bookkeepers), factory work, and professionals. 2. Most women
still held the lowest paying and least opportune jobs 3. Significant Progressive
feminists called for greater reform a) Charlotte Perkins Gilman attacked the
male monopoly on opportunity and declared that domesticity was an obsolete value
for American women b) Margaret Sanger led the movement to provide birth control
to prevent unwanted pregnancies among poor women c) Suffragists urged that
women be given the franchise, which came on the national level with the 19th Amendment
(1919).
F. Child
labor laws--most states passed minimum working age laws and prohibited children
from working more than 10 hours per day, but enforcement was difficult to achieve.
G. Temperance--Anti-Saloon
League and Women's Christian Temperance Union fought alcoholism on the state level
through blue laws and on the national level with the 18th Amendment which prohibited
the manufacture, sale, and transportation of liquor.
V.
Presidential Election of 1912
A.
Republican successor Taft proved to be less progressive than T.R. in the areas
of tariff reform and conservation. 1. Payne-Aldrich Tariff (heralded by Taft
as "the best tariff passed by the Republican Party") protected industries
and kept consumer prices high 2. A public land sale scandal in Alaska pitted
Pinchot against Secretary of Interior Ballinger. Taft fired Pinchot
B.
T.R. organized the National Progressive or "Bull Moose" Party after
Progressive Republicans bolted the Taft-controlled Republican convention. Party
platform included long list of Progressive demands
C.
Democrats nominated Woodrow Wilson, the scholarly governor of New Jersey who called
for moral revival and reform, including low tariffs, the breaking up of all monopolies,
and for the government to be an umpire in disputes between labor and business.
D.
Socialists nominated Debs, who called for public ownership of all natural resources
and major industries.
E.
Wilson won 40/48 states as Republicans split between Taft and TR. Height of Progressivism
as Wilson, TR, and Debs totaled 11 million votes to 3.5 million for Taft.
VI.
Wilson's New Freedom and Progressivism
A.
Tariff reform--Underwood Tariff (1913) gave first significant tariff reduction
since 1860s as Wilson personally delivered his goals to Congress.
B.
Currency and banking reform-- Creation of Federal Reserve System 1. Acted
as bankers' banks and prevent "runs" on bank assets 2. Federal Reserve
notes issued a flexible new currency to the banking system
C.
Clayton Antitrust Act (1914) to restrict monopolies and set up a Federal Trade
Commission to stop unfair practices which may arise
VII.
Evaluation of Progressivism
A.
Weaknesses of Progressive reform 1. Material progress of Americans weakened
zeal of reformers 2. Myriad of Progressive goals were often confusing and contradictory
3. Opposition to Progressivism apparent as initiatives failed and courts struck
down Progressive legislation 4. Government remained mainly under the influence
of business and industry 5. Outbreak of World War I dampened enthusiasm of
attempts to use governments to create just societies on earth
B.
Progressive accomplishments 1. Trust Busting forced industrialists to notice
public opinion 2. Legislation gave federal and state governments the tools
to protect consumers. 3. Income tax helped build government revenues and redistribute
wealth 4. Progressives successfully challenged traditional institutions and
approaches to domestic problems. . |