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COMPLETE REVIEW: HISTORICAL PERIOD 6

Period Six: 1865-1898

the nation's economic + demographic shifts and their links to cultural + political changes

the settlement of the west

  • railroads bound all regions together → national market for goods

  • industry encouraged to mass produce, consumers encouraged to mass consume

  • government gave staggering land grants to railroads to unify the nation

  • 4 transcontinental railroads – link east + west coast: increase of economic interdependence, greater production + consumption

  • farmers: greater market, dependence on railroads which had monopolies → charged high rates at the expense of farmers

  • response: national grange movement, leveraged membership of farmers against trusts + monopolization — oliver h kelley

  • victory in interstate commerce act: demanded reasonable railroad rates

  • small farmers suffered due to mechanization (eg. steam-powered combines), larger agricultural businesses benefit

  • easier access to moving west

  • homestead act: policy that provided free land in the west for anyone willing to settle/develop it, targeted settlers seeking self-sufficiency

  • conflicts with indigenous peoples → “indian problem” solved by reservation system

  • in no way correlated to their cultural practices + ancestral grounds

  • great resistance – ghost dance, sioux wars

  • ghost dance: a ritual performed by dakota tribes in an attempt to return buffalo + indigenous tribes to their ancestral land

  • sioux wars: indian appropriation act ends federal recognition of indigenous sovereignty, nullifies all prior treaties with indigenous nations; first war won by sioux, second lost

  • assimilation: abandon culture (dawes act: dissolves tribal organizations) + join american culture


the "new south"

  • some leaders wanted to increase industrial capacity (succeeded in isolated occasions) — steel, lumber, tobacco, textiles

  • maintained racial hierarchy – plessy v ferguson, jim crow laws

  • black southerners are no longer genuinely protected despite legal grounds — black codes

  • terrorized by lynching, kkk, but continued to resist

  • ida b wells: wrote fierce editorials against lynching + jim crow, forced to move north to stay safe

  • integrated into national rail network

  • still agricultural, economic ties to cotton

  • cotton, soybeans, sweet potatoes, peanuts

  • economically dominated by north


the rise of industrial capitalism

  • steel + oil industries

  • sherman antitrust act

  • only applied to commerce, not manufacturing

  • outlawed trusts (groups of businesses that joined to form monopolies)

  • goal: promote fairness among business competitors

  • social darwinism: applying survival of the fittest to social structures [+ business practices]

  • balanced by carnegie’s gospel of wealth – argued that rich have a moral obligation to better society with their money

  • westward expansion gave industrialists greater access to natural resources

  • bessemer process: process by which steel was made stronger + higher quality


immigration + migration

  • new immigration + nativism

  • farmers in europe face poverty, europeans face overcrowding + unemployment, religious persecution

  • america has political + religious freedom, economic opportunities, + improved transportation

  • old immigrants: northern/western europe, easily blended with american society

  • new immigrants: southern/eastern europe, "birds of passage" returned home after making enough money in america

  • immigration: international, migration: domestic

  • europeans (irish/german/scandinavian) + asians (mainly chinese) came in massive numbers

  • escape poverty, religious persecution, gain social mobility

  • america widely viewed as a land of opportunity

  • settle in urban areas → europeans generally form ethnic enclaves (east coast), asian immigrants on west coast

  • labor unions: immigrants work for cheap, opposes union efforts + demands

  • nativism – american protective association (anti-catholic)

  • chinese exclusion acts: prevent chinese immigrants from immigrating to the us

  • first + only time congress prevents a specific ethnic group from immigrating to the states

  • social darwinism against [irish] immigrants

  • some organizations offer them help – eg. jane addams’ hull house (settlement houses – teach english, find jobs)

  • migration – exoduster movement

  • black people out of the south into midwest

  • establish homesteads, many unsuccessful


reform movements

  • middle class gained strength – white collar work

  • middle managers to work company (not just owners + workers → management), improvement of quality of life

  • rise of labor unions

  • factory work exhausting + dangerous, all-day work, low wages, etc.

  • gather together for collective voice

  • knights of labor: disappear after rioting gives them a bad name

  • american federation of labor: more popular throughout late 19th/early 20th century

  • both crusaded for better wages + conditions, 10-hour workday

  • homestead strike

  • strike at andrew carnegie's steel plant, met by violence from pinkerton police

  • national grange movement

  • farmers become a minority → populist party

  • farming becomes more commercialized

  • small farmers couldn't compete with falling prices

  • tradition of independence + individualism had prevented farmers from taking collective action

  • farmers become active in economics and politics to protect members against middlemen, trusts, and railroads.

  • contract labor law

  • prohibited employers from forcing immigrants to work to pay off the costs of their passage to america

  • hull house

  • chicago, jane addams

  • relieve effects of poverty by providing social services

  • taught english to immigrants, provided children's education

  • social gospel

  • applying christian principles to social problems

  • minister walter rauschenbusch

  • christianity x progressive reforms

  • encouraged middle class protestants to attack urban problems

  • temperance movement

  • excessive drinking as the root of problems eg. crime, poverty, domestic violence

  • women's christian temperance union (wctu)

  • anti saloon league

  • social gospel: apply gospel to society in addition to individuals

  • continuity with second great awakening

  • urge middle-class christians to tackle poverty as their christian duty

  • interest in socialist movement

  • equality for all – eg. eugene v debs, cure for sicknesses of gilded age

  • rise of populist party

  • represent interests of farmers

  • correct concentration of economic power away from trusts + banks

  • omaha platform – progressive movement

  • direct election of senators

  • initiative + referendum opportunities

  • unlimited coinage of silver

  • all demands taken up by progressives later

  • women’s rights

  • women’s suffrage movement gains momentive

  • national american women’s suffrage association (nawsa)


debates about the role of government

  • the gilded age

  • national government faces inactivity

  • ignored problems, avoided taking stances on controversial issues → complacency + conservatism

  • high voter turnout → strong party identification + loyalty

  • democrats + republicans

  • continued pre-civil war beliefs

  • lots of corrupt, lethargic politicians

  • battles included patronage for civil service jobs (jackson’s spoil system)

  • corrected by pendleton act of 1881 – replaced with competitive civil service examination (james garfield assassinated by someone who he didn’t give a job to upon his election)

  • gold standard: government won’t print more paper money than can be backed up by gold

  • paper money holds its value against inflation

  • farmers + entrepreneurs argue for silver coinage + more paper currency so that debts could be paid

  • tariffs

  • protective tariffs (loved by industrialists, hated by consumers eg. farmers)

  • corruption in politics

  • urban political machines: boss tweed, tammany hall

  • did help community members – especially for immigrants

  • not just from goodness of hearts, winning votes

R

COMPLETE REVIEW: HISTORICAL PERIOD 6

Period Six: 1865-1898

the nation's economic + demographic shifts and their links to cultural + political changes

the settlement of the west

  • railroads bound all regions together → national market for goods

  • industry encouraged to mass produce, consumers encouraged to mass consume

  • government gave staggering land grants to railroads to unify the nation

  • 4 transcontinental railroads – link east + west coast: increase of economic interdependence, greater production + consumption

  • farmers: greater market, dependence on railroads which had monopolies → charged high rates at the expense of farmers

  • response: national grange movement, leveraged membership of farmers against trusts + monopolization — oliver h kelley

  • victory in interstate commerce act: demanded reasonable railroad rates

  • small farmers suffered due to mechanization (eg. steam-powered combines), larger agricultural businesses benefit

  • easier access to moving west

  • homestead act: policy that provided free land in the west for anyone willing to settle/develop it, targeted settlers seeking self-sufficiency

  • conflicts with indigenous peoples → “indian problem” solved by reservation system

  • in no way correlated to their cultural practices + ancestral grounds

  • great resistance – ghost dance, sioux wars

  • ghost dance: a ritual performed by dakota tribes in an attempt to return buffalo + indigenous tribes to their ancestral land

  • sioux wars: indian appropriation act ends federal recognition of indigenous sovereignty, nullifies all prior treaties with indigenous nations; first war won by sioux, second lost

  • assimilation: abandon culture (dawes act: dissolves tribal organizations) + join american culture


the "new south"

  • some leaders wanted to increase industrial capacity (succeeded in isolated occasions) — steel, lumber, tobacco, textiles

  • maintained racial hierarchy – plessy v ferguson, jim crow laws

  • black southerners are no longer genuinely protected despite legal grounds — black codes

  • terrorized by lynching, kkk, but continued to resist

  • ida b wells: wrote fierce editorials against lynching + jim crow, forced to move north to stay safe

  • integrated into national rail network

  • still agricultural, economic ties to cotton

  • cotton, soybeans, sweet potatoes, peanuts

  • economically dominated by north


the rise of industrial capitalism

  • steel + oil industries

  • sherman antitrust act

  • only applied to commerce, not manufacturing

  • outlawed trusts (groups of businesses that joined to form monopolies)

  • goal: promote fairness among business competitors

  • social darwinism: applying survival of the fittest to social structures [+ business practices]

  • balanced by carnegie’s gospel of wealth – argued that rich have a moral obligation to better society with their money

  • westward expansion gave industrialists greater access to natural resources

  • bessemer process: process by which steel was made stronger + higher quality


immigration + migration

  • new immigration + nativism

  • farmers in europe face poverty, europeans face overcrowding + unemployment, religious persecution

  • america has political + religious freedom, economic opportunities, + improved transportation

  • old immigrants: northern/western europe, easily blended with american society

  • new immigrants: southern/eastern europe, "birds of passage" returned home after making enough money in america

  • immigration: international, migration: domestic

  • europeans (irish/german/scandinavian) + asians (mainly chinese) came in massive numbers

  • escape poverty, religious persecution, gain social mobility

  • america widely viewed as a land of opportunity

  • settle in urban areas → europeans generally form ethnic enclaves (east coast), asian immigrants on west coast

  • labor unions: immigrants work for cheap, opposes union efforts + demands

  • nativism – american protective association (anti-catholic)

  • chinese exclusion acts: prevent chinese immigrants from immigrating to the us

  • first + only time congress prevents a specific ethnic group from immigrating to the states

  • social darwinism against [irish] immigrants

  • some organizations offer them help – eg. jane addams’ hull house (settlement houses – teach english, find jobs)

  • migration – exoduster movement

  • black people out of the south into midwest

  • establish homesteads, many unsuccessful


reform movements

  • middle class gained strength – white collar work

  • middle managers to work company (not just owners + workers → management), improvement of quality of life

  • rise of labor unions

  • factory work exhausting + dangerous, all-day work, low wages, etc.

  • gather together for collective voice

  • knights of labor: disappear after rioting gives them a bad name

  • american federation of labor: more popular throughout late 19th/early 20th century

  • both crusaded for better wages + conditions, 10-hour workday

  • homestead strike

  • strike at andrew carnegie's steel plant, met by violence from pinkerton police

  • national grange movement

  • farmers become a minority → populist party

  • farming becomes more commercialized

  • small farmers couldn't compete with falling prices

  • tradition of independence + individualism had prevented farmers from taking collective action

  • farmers become active in economics and politics to protect members against middlemen, trusts, and railroads.

  • contract labor law

  • prohibited employers from forcing immigrants to work to pay off the costs of their passage to america

  • hull house

  • chicago, jane addams

  • relieve effects of poverty by providing social services

  • taught english to immigrants, provided children's education

  • social gospel

  • applying christian principles to social problems

  • minister walter rauschenbusch

  • christianity x progressive reforms

  • encouraged middle class protestants to attack urban problems

  • temperance movement

  • excessive drinking as the root of problems eg. crime, poverty, domestic violence

  • women's christian temperance union (wctu)

  • anti saloon league

  • social gospel: apply gospel to society in addition to individuals

  • continuity with second great awakening

  • urge middle-class christians to tackle poverty as their christian duty

  • interest in socialist movement

  • equality for all – eg. eugene v debs, cure for sicknesses of gilded age

  • rise of populist party

  • represent interests of farmers

  • correct concentration of economic power away from trusts + banks

  • omaha platform – progressive movement

  • direct election of senators

  • initiative + referendum opportunities

  • unlimited coinage of silver

  • all demands taken up by progressives later

  • women’s rights

  • women’s suffrage movement gains momentive

  • national american women’s suffrage association (nawsa)


debates about the role of government

  • the gilded age

  • national government faces inactivity

  • ignored problems, avoided taking stances on controversial issues → complacency + conservatism

  • high voter turnout → strong party identification + loyalty

  • democrats + republicans

  • continued pre-civil war beliefs

  • lots of corrupt, lethargic politicians

  • battles included patronage for civil service jobs (jackson’s spoil system)

  • corrected by pendleton act of 1881 – replaced with competitive civil service examination (james garfield assassinated by someone who he didn’t give a job to upon his election)

  • gold standard: government won’t print more paper money than can be backed up by gold

  • paper money holds its value against inflation

  • farmers + entrepreneurs argue for silver coinage + more paper currency so that debts could be paid

  • tariffs

  • protective tariffs (loved by industrialists, hated by consumers eg. farmers)

  • corruption in politics

  • urban political machines: boss tweed, tammany hall

  • did help community members – especially for immigrants

  • not just from goodness of hearts, winning votes