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5.1: The Progressive Movement

The Progressive Movement

the age of reform

age of reform: a widespread movement to improve american life by expanding democracy and achieving economic and social justice

  • use government as an agency of human welfare

  1. objectives

  • [middle class] accepted and hailed benefits of machine age but sought to correct its evils and problems

  • began to look for ways to provide welfare and justice for everyone - all americans

  • restore the public's beliefs of free enterprise and equality of opportunity: american dream was a myth, not a reality

  1. aims

  • political reform - wanted to restore control of government to people

  • economic + social reform - correct the abuses in american life

  • eg. child labor

  • restore equality of opportunity - sought business + labor reforms

  1. progressives - who were they?

  • unifying characteristic: cause (not just one cause)

  • general characteristics:

  • spirit or attitude - call to action

  • cut across party lines, economic groups, classes, gender, writers, labors, women, black people, etc.

  • new middle class: young, educated professionals (20-30)

  • strong faith in progress but use expertise to create a better world

  • repelled by inefficiency + immorality in government, business, society, etc.

  • belief: america can + should be a better place for all

  • battle cry: strengthen the state

  1. causes / roots of the progressive movement

  • scientific investigation

  • observation + experimentation = facts + truth

  • idealism - "high" principles

  • abraham lincoln → hero of the progressive movement

  • radical traditions → politicians, radicals, socialists - writers: lloyd, veblen, riss

  • religion - jesus → "hero" of the progressive movement; social gospel

  • feminists, middle class

  1. writers

  • jacob riis: how the other half lives - inequities between rich and poor

  • walter rauschenbusch: the social gospel

  • key muckrakers: ida tarbell - lincoln steffens - thomas lawson - david phillips - ray stannard baker - john spargo - upton sinclair

  1. feminists

  • jane addams - hull house (chicago); created idea of social work

  • lilian wald - henry street settlement (nyc)

political progressivism

  • goals: get rid of trusts, improve labor conditions

  • key reforms + legislation: initiative - referendum - recall (state governments)

  • people can take the initiative to propose a new law

  • direct primaries (people can choose candidates)

  • corrupt practices act - aims to remove corruption from politics

  • 17th amendment

  • australian ballot - secret ballots

  • cities + states

  • new city governments → commissions or city managers

  • remove politics from city governments

  • progressive governors - wisconsin, california, new york

  • robert "fighting bob" lafollette (wisco)

  • feminists + other progressive women

  • eg. florence kelly (national consumers league), alice paul (women's suffrage), frances willard (temperence), charlotte perkins gilman (new morality + new feminism), margaret sanger (birth control)

  • racism + the civil rights movement

  • booker t washington: policy of compromise - separation; black people had to earn rights, training + education, industrial school

  • naacp: web dubois - demands for black equality + rights, guaranteed these as us citizens

  • william monroe trotter: policy of resistance (failed); military stand may be necessary

  • niagara movement (canada) - black pride, uncompromising demand for political and civic equality

  • national urban league - needs of black people in northern urban areas

  • ida b wells - formed the national association of colored women

  • pattern of resistance to racial subordination

  • wrote a red record, crusade against lynchings

  • mary white ovington - settlement houses for urban black people

progressive presidents

  • common views

  • need for a strong national government

  • guide the affairs of an industrial society

  • president should lead, act boldly

  • strong - dynamic - charismatic; "man of the people"

  • end of laissez-faire

  • some government regulation of economy

  • regulate monopolies, restore free enterprise + equality of opportunity

  • extended beyond party lines - any politician can be progressive

teddy roosevelt: 1901-1908

  • ny legislator - cowboy - conservationist

  1. high voltage energy

  2. boyish + bellicose - "bully"

  3. outspoken moralizer + reformer

  4. gains popularity from "teddy bear" - refuses to shoot bear cub on trip out west

  • 3 Cs: trust-buster

  1. consumer protection

  2. trust-busting: some trusts can benefit the people (good v bad trusts) - initially goes after jp morgan, most wealthy / powerful man in nation; wanted to prove power of the president

  3. control of corporations

  4. trust-busting

  5. conservation

  6. national forests, public reserves

  7. the primary reason he ended up on mt. rushmore

the progressive movement and the industrial age

positives of the industrial ages

  • growing middle class → more could get better wages and raise families regardless of education level (better quality of life)

  • more variety in job opportunities, not just agricultural / industrial

  • development of consumer goods

  • new inventions (eg. lightbulb, electricity) now available to people → public benefit

  • women's rights - could now work (invention of typewriter provided new jobs)

problems/evils of the industrial ages

  • worker / employer relationships - workers were easily fired

  • poor working conditions, low wages

  • issues with striking, difficult to ban together + fight for fair working conditions

  • employers against workers' rights - blacklists, etc.

  • trusts + monopolies; cutthroat economic competition, excluded black labor

  • immigrants ended up in poorer areas ("ghettos") within cities

  • reorganization of work on the clock - prices decrease but assembly makes a cog in the machine rather than actually giving skills (quantity > quality), cheap, mass-produced products > good quality products

  • child labor (main issue from a progressive perspective)

major proponents of the progressive movement

  • muckrakers - suffragettes - populists - temperance - women - middle class - labor unions - civil rights

R

5.1: The Progressive Movement

The Progressive Movement

the age of reform

age of reform: a widespread movement to improve american life by expanding democracy and achieving economic and social justice

  • use government as an agency of human welfare

  1. objectives

  • [middle class] accepted and hailed benefits of machine age but sought to correct its evils and problems

  • began to look for ways to provide welfare and justice for everyone - all americans

  • restore the public's beliefs of free enterprise and equality of opportunity: american dream was a myth, not a reality

  1. aims

  • political reform - wanted to restore control of government to people

  • economic + social reform - correct the abuses in american life

  • eg. child labor

  • restore equality of opportunity - sought business + labor reforms

  1. progressives - who were they?

  • unifying characteristic: cause (not just one cause)

  • general characteristics:

  • spirit or attitude - call to action

  • cut across party lines, economic groups, classes, gender, writers, labors, women, black people, etc.

  • new middle class: young, educated professionals (20-30)

  • strong faith in progress but use expertise to create a better world

  • repelled by inefficiency + immorality in government, business, society, etc.

  • belief: america can + should be a better place for all

  • battle cry: strengthen the state

  1. causes / roots of the progressive movement

  • scientific investigation

  • observation + experimentation = facts + truth

  • idealism - "high" principles

  • abraham lincoln → hero of the progressive movement

  • radical traditions → politicians, radicals, socialists - writers: lloyd, veblen, riss

  • religion - jesus → "hero" of the progressive movement; social gospel

  • feminists, middle class

  1. writers

  • jacob riis: how the other half lives - inequities between rich and poor

  • walter rauschenbusch: the social gospel

  • key muckrakers: ida tarbell - lincoln steffens - thomas lawson - david phillips - ray stannard baker - john spargo - upton sinclair

  1. feminists

  • jane addams - hull house (chicago); created idea of social work

  • lilian wald - henry street settlement (nyc)

political progressivism

  • goals: get rid of trusts, improve labor conditions

  • key reforms + legislation: initiative - referendum - recall (state governments)

  • people can take the initiative to propose a new law

  • direct primaries (people can choose candidates)

  • corrupt practices act - aims to remove corruption from politics

  • 17th amendment

  • australian ballot - secret ballots

  • cities + states

  • new city governments → commissions or city managers

  • remove politics from city governments

  • progressive governors - wisconsin, california, new york

  • robert "fighting bob" lafollette (wisco)

  • feminists + other progressive women

  • eg. florence kelly (national consumers league), alice paul (women's suffrage), frances willard (temperence), charlotte perkins gilman (new morality + new feminism), margaret sanger (birth control)

  • racism + the civil rights movement

  • booker t washington: policy of compromise - separation; black people had to earn rights, training + education, industrial school

  • naacp: web dubois - demands for black equality + rights, guaranteed these as us citizens

  • william monroe trotter: policy of resistance (failed); military stand may be necessary

  • niagara movement (canada) - black pride, uncompromising demand for political and civic equality

  • national urban league - needs of black people in northern urban areas

  • ida b wells - formed the national association of colored women

  • pattern of resistance to racial subordination

  • wrote a red record, crusade against lynchings

  • mary white ovington - settlement houses for urban black people

progressive presidents

  • common views

  • need for a strong national government

  • guide the affairs of an industrial society

  • president should lead, act boldly

  • strong - dynamic - charismatic; "man of the people"

  • end of laissez-faire

  • some government regulation of economy

  • regulate monopolies, restore free enterprise + equality of opportunity

  • extended beyond party lines - any politician can be progressive

teddy roosevelt: 1901-1908

  • ny legislator - cowboy - conservationist

  1. high voltage energy

  2. boyish + bellicose - "bully"

  3. outspoken moralizer + reformer

  4. gains popularity from "teddy bear" - refuses to shoot bear cub on trip out west

  • 3 Cs: trust-buster

  1. consumer protection

  2. trust-busting: some trusts can benefit the people (good v bad trusts) - initially goes after jp morgan, most wealthy / powerful man in nation; wanted to prove power of the president

  3. control of corporations

  4. trust-busting

  5. conservation

  6. national forests, public reserves

  7. the primary reason he ended up on mt. rushmore

the progressive movement and the industrial age

positives of the industrial ages

  • growing middle class → more could get better wages and raise families regardless of education level (better quality of life)

  • more variety in job opportunities, not just agricultural / industrial

  • development of consumer goods

  • new inventions (eg. lightbulb, electricity) now available to people → public benefit

  • women's rights - could now work (invention of typewriter provided new jobs)

problems/evils of the industrial ages

  • worker / employer relationships - workers were easily fired

  • poor working conditions, low wages

  • issues with striking, difficult to ban together + fight for fair working conditions

  • employers against workers' rights - blacklists, etc.

  • trusts + monopolies; cutthroat economic competition, excluded black labor

  • immigrants ended up in poorer areas ("ghettos") within cities

  • reorganization of work on the clock - prices decrease but assembly makes a cog in the machine rather than actually giving skills (quantity > quality), cheap, mass-produced products > good quality products

  • child labor (main issue from a progressive perspective)

major proponents of the progressive movement

  • muckrakers - suffragettes - populists - temperance - women - middle class - labor unions - civil rights