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Chapter 21 Urban America and the Progressive Era 1900-1917 OUT OF MANY A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.

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Page 1: Chapter 21 Urban America and the Progressive Era 1900-1917 Chapter 21 Urban America and the Progressive Era 1900-1917 OUT OF MANY A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN

Chapter 21Urban America and the Progressive Era

1900-1917

Chapter 21Urban America and the Progressive Era

1900-1917

OUT OF MANY

A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE

© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.

Page 2: Chapter 21 Urban America and the Progressive Era 1900-1917 Chapter 21 Urban America and the Progressive Era 1900-1917 OUT OF MANY A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN

Part One:

Introduction

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Chapter Focus Questions

What were the social and intellectual roots of progressive reform?

How did tensions between social justice and social control divide progressives?

How did the impact of new immigration transform America?

What new forms of activism emerged among the working class, women, and African Americans?

How did progressivism become a central force in national politics?

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Part Two:

American Communities: The Henry Street Settlement House: Women

Settlement House Workers Create a Community of Reform

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American Communities: The Henry Street Settlement House: Women Settlement House

Workers Create a Community of Reform

Lillian Wald’s Henry Street Settlement began as a visiting nurse service.

At Henry Street, Wald created a community of college-educated women who lived among the urban poor and tried to improve their lives.

Most settlement workers did not make a career out of this work, but several of the women went on to become influential political reformers.

The workers served the community by promoting health care, cultural activities, and, later, by promoting reform legislation.

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Part Three:

The Origins of Progressivism

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The Origins of Progressivism

Progressivism drew from deep roots in American communities and spread, becoming a national movement.

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Unifying Themes of Progressivism

Progressives articulated American fears of the growing concentration of power and the excesses of industrial capitalism and urban growth.

Progressives favored the idea that government should intervene to address social problems.

Progressives drew upon evangelical Protestantism, especially the social gospel movement, and the scientific attitude to promote social change.

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Lewis Hine, one of the pioneers of social documentary photography, made this evocative 1908 portrait of “Mamie,” a typical young spinner working at a cotton mill in Lancaster, South Carolina. The National Child Labor Committee hired Hine to help document, publicize, and curb the widespread employment of children in industrial occupations. “These pictures,” Hine wrote, “speak for themselves and prove that the law is being violated.”

SOURCE: Lewis Hine (American,1874 –1940), “A Carolina Spinner ,” 1908. Gelatin silver print,4 3/4” x 7” Milwaukee Art Museum, Gift of the Sheldon M. Barnett Family. M1973.83.

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New Journalism: Muckraking

A new breed of investigative journalist began exposing the public to the plight of slum life.

Muckrakers published accounts of urban poverty, and unsafe labor conditions, as well as corruption in government and business.

Muckraking mobilized national opinion. Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle exposed the unsanitary conditions in Chicago’s meatpacking industry.Ida Tarbell documented the use of unfair business practices by John D. Rockefeller in her History of the Standard Oil Company.Lincoln Steffen exposed urban political corruption in a series titled The Shame of the Cities.

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Seeing History Photographing Poverty in the Slums of New York.

SOURCE: “Five Cents a Spot: Lodgers in a Bayard Street Tenement.” c. 1899. Museum of the City of New York, Jacob A. Riis Collection.

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Intellectual Trends Promoting Reform

The emerging social sciences provided empirical studies used by reformers to push for reforms.

Early twentieth-century thinkers like Lester Frank Ward challenged some of the intellectual supports for the prevailing social Darwinism. John Dewey’s ideas on education and John R. Commons and Richard Ely’s ideas on labor were influential in shaping public policy. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. attacked constitutional interpretations that had prevented states from passing legislation that protected public interests.

Sociological jurisprudence was used to support points instead of legal arguments.

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The Female Dominion

Jane Addams founded Hull House in Chicago in 1889.

Working there served as an alternative to marriage for educated women who provided crucial services for slum dwellers.

Florence Kelley worked there and wrote reports detailing the conditions in sweat shops for women and children.

Her reports pushed legislation for the eight hour work day for women and child labor laws in Illinois.

Women began to dominate new positions such as social workers, public health nursing, and home economics.

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A portrait of the young Jane Addams, probably taken around the time she founded Hull House in Chicago, in 1889.

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Part Four:

Progressive Politics in Cities

and States

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The Urban Machine

Urban political machines were a closed and corrupt system that:

offered jobs and other services to immigrants in exchange for votesdrew support from businesses

By the early twentieth century, machines began promoting welfare legislation, often allying themselves with progressive reformers.

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Progressives and Urban Reform

Reformers blamed machines on many urban ills.Political progressivism arose in cities to combat machines and address deteriorating conditions, such as impure water.

They sought professional, nonpartisan administration to improve government efficiency.

Following a tidal wave in Galveston, Texas, reformers pushed through a commissioner system.

Other cities adopted city manager plans and the commissioner system.

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Timothy D. “Big Tim” Sullivan, the popular and influential Democratic Party machine boss of the Bowery and Lower East Side districts of New York City, ca. 1901.

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Progressivism in the Statehouse: West and South

Governor and then Senator Robert LaFollette of Wisconsin forged a farmer-labor small business alliance to push through statewide reforms. Oregon passed referendum and initiative amendments that allowed voters to bypass legislatures and enact laws themselves. Western progressives like California’s Hiram Johnson targeted railroad influence.Southern progressives pushed through various reforms such as improved educational facilities, but supported discriminatory laws against African Americans.

Southern progressives pushed for a completely segregated public sphere.

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Part Five:

Social Control and its Limits

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The Prohibition Movement

Groups developed to end the production, sale, and consumption of alcohol.

The Women’s Christian Temperance Union became the largest women’s organization in America.

• They pushed for temperance laws as well as non-temperance laws such as women suffrage, homeless shelters, and prison reform.

The Anti-Saloon League was focused on the temperance issue.

• They played on anti-urban and anti-immigrant sentiments.

Native-born, small town and rural Protestants generally supported prohibition while recent immigrants opposed it.

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The Social Evil

Reformers also attacked prostitution.

A national movement used the media to try to ban the “white slave” traffic allegedly promoted by foreigners.

Progressives investigated prostitution and documented its dangers, though they were unable to understand why women took it up.

Progressive reform helped close down brothels, but they were replaced by more vulnerable street-walkers.

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The Redemption of Leisure

Reformers were aghast at the new urban commercial amusements, such as amusement parks, vaudeville, and the most popular venue, the movies.

These began to replace municipal parks, libraries, museums, YMCAs, and school recreation centers.

Early movies were most popular in tenement districts with immigrants.

Movies became more sophisticated and began to attract the middle class.

New York City reformers, along with movie producers and exhibitors, established the National Board of Censorship.

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Movies, by John Sloan, 1913, the most talented artist among the so-called Ashcan realist school of painting. Active in socialist and bohemian circles, Sloan served as art editor for The Masses magazine for several years. His work celebrated the vitality and diversity of urban working-class life and leisure, including the new commercial culture represented by the motion picture.

SOURCE: John Sloan, Movies , 1913.Oil painting. The Toledo Museum of Art.

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Standardizing Education

For many progressives, the school was the key agency to break down the parochial ethnic neighborhood and “Americanize” immigrants.

Expansion and bureaucratization characterized educational development as students started earlier and stayed later in school.

High school evolved as comprehensive institutions that offered college preparatory and vocational education.

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Part Six:

Challenges to Progressivism

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The New Global Immigration

The early twentieth century saw a tremendous growth in the size of the working class.

Sixty percent of the industrial labor force were foreign-born, mostly unskilled workers from southern and eastern Europe.

Driven out by the collapse of peasant agriculture and persecution, the new immigrants depended on family and friends to help them get situated. Many worked long hours for pay that failed to keep them out of poverty.Non-European immigrants included:

French-Canadians who worked in New England textile mills,Mexicans who came as seasonal farm workers—a large number stayed and established communities throughout the southwest, The Japanese, who worked in fishing and truck farming.

Map: Immigration to the United States, 1901–2028© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.

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MAP 21.1 Immigration to the United States, 1901–20

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Newly landed European immigrant families on the dock at Ellis Island in New York harbor, 1900. Originally a black and white photograph, this image was later color tinted for reproduction as a postcard or book illustration.

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Urban Ghettos In large cities, immigrants established communities in densely packed ghettos.New York City became the center of Jewish immigrants, many of whom worked at piece-rates in the ready-to-wear garment industry.

Garment work was highly seasonal.Working conditions were generally cramped, dirty, and dark.Workers worked long hours to produce the quota for each day.

A general strike by 20,000 workers contributed to the growth of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire in New York led to laws to protect workers.

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New York City police set up this makeshift morgue to help identify victims of the disastrous Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire, March 25, 1911. Unable to open the locked doors of the sweatshop and desperate to escape from smoke and flames, many of the 146 who died had leaped eight stories to their death.

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Company Towns

Some industrial workers lived in communities often dominated by a single corporation that owned the houses, the stores, and regulated life. Ethnic groups maintained many cultural traditions.

Immigrants resisted the discipline of the factory by taking time off for cultural activities, spreading out the work by slowing down, and becoming increasingly involved in unions.

Factories were dangerous places with high accident and death rates.In western mining communities, corporate power and violent labor conflict occurred.

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The AFL: “Unions, Pure and Simple”

The leading labor organization at the turn of the century was the American Federation of Labor (AFL).

With the exception of the mineworkers, most AFL unions were not interested in organizing unskilled immigrants, women, or African Americans.

The AFL was on the defensive from “open shop” campaigns promoted by trade associations and court injunctions that barred picketing and boycotting.

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The IWW: “One Big Union”

Radical workers, especially from the mining camps in the West, organized the Industrial Workers of the World. Led by “Big Bill” Haywood, the IWW tried to organize the lowest paid workers.

Haywood boasted that the IWW excluded no one from their ranks.

The IWW used direct action, including strikes. The IWW gained temporary power in the East but remained a force in the West.

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Publicity poster for the 1913 pageant, organized by John Reed and other Greenwich Village radicals, supporting the cause of striking silk workers in Paterson, New Jersey. This poster drew on aesthetic styles associated with the Industrial Workers of the World, typically including a heroic, larger-than-life image of a factory laborer.

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Rebels in Bohemia

A small community of middle-class artists and intellectuals in Greenwich Village, New York City, called “Village bohemians” supported the IWW and other radical causes.

The term “bohemian” referred to anyone who had artistic or intellectual aspirations and who lived with disregard for conventional rules of behavior.

The Village bohemia died out with the onset of World War I.

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Part Seven:

Women’s Movements and Black Activism

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The New Women

Middle-class women’s lives were changing rapidly.

More were receiving an education and joined various clubs involved in civic activities.

Women became involved in numerous reforms, from seeking child labor laws to consumer safety and sanitation.

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Birth Control

Margaret Sanger promoted wider access to contraceptives and opened a birth control clinic in a working-class neighborhood in Brooklyn.The new birth control advocates embraced contraception as a means for sexual freedom for middle class women.

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A supportive crowd surrounds birth control pioneer Margaret Sanger and her sister, Ethel Byrne, as they leave the Court of Special Services in New York City in 1917. Police had recently closed Sanger’s first birth control clinic in the immigrant neighborhood of Brownsville, New York and Sanger herself had spent a month in jail.

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Racism and Accommodation

The turn of the century was an intensely racist era. Segregation was institutionalized throughout the South. Violent attacks on blacks were supported by vicious characterizations in popular culture.

Racism was based on the assumed innate inferiority of blacks.

Racial Darwinism justified a policy of neglect and repression.Southern progressives pushed for paternalistic uplift.

Booker T. Washington emerged as the most prominent black leader.

Washington advocated black accommodation and urged that blacks focus on self-reliance and economic improvement.

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Racial Justice, the NAACP, Black Women’s Activism

W. E. B. Du Bois criticized Booker T. Washington for accepting “the alleged inferiority of the Negro.”

Du Bois supported programs that sought to attack segregation, the right to vote, and secure city equality.

He helped found the interracial organization known as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

Black women became a powerful force for social services.

They organized settlement houses, campaigned for suffrage, temperance, and advances in public health.

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In July 1905, a group of African American leaders met in Niagara Falls, Ontario, to protest legal segregation and the denial of civil rights to the nation’s black population. This portrait was taken against a studio backdrop of the falls. In 1909, the leader of the Niagara movement, W. E. B. Du Bois (second from right, middle row) founded and edited The Crisis, the influential monthly journal of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

SOURCE: Photographs and Print Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations.

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Part Eight:

National Progressivism

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Theodore Roosevelt and Presidential Activism

Roosevelt viewed the presidency as a “bully pulpit” to promote progressive reforms.

He pressured mine owners into a settlement that won better pay for miners.

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Trustbusting and Regulation

Roosevelt favored passing regulatory laws including:the Hepburn Act that strengthened the Interstate Commerce Commission,the Pure Food and Drug Act.

He directed the justice department to prosecute monopolies which earned him the nickname “trustbuster.”Roosevelt faced growing public concern with the rapid business consolidations taking place in the American economy.

He considered government regulation the best way to deal with big business.

Some big businesses agreed with Roosevelt.Stricter regulations would push smaller businesses out of the market.American meatpackers could compete more profitably in the European market with the federal stamp of approval required under the Meat Inspection Act.

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This 1909 cartoon by Clifton Berryman depicts President Theodore Roosevelt slaying those trusts he considered “bad” for the public interest while restraining those whose business practices he considered “good” for the economy. The image also plays on TR’s well-publicized fondness for big game hunting.

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The Birth of Environmentalism

Roosevelt believed that the conservation of forest and water resources was a national problem of vital import.

Roosevelt supported the conservation efforts of John Muir, the founder of the modern environmental movement.

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William Robinson Leigh painted this landscape, Grand Canyon 1911, one of many western scenes he created. Like many contemporaries, Leigh expressed his frustration with trying to capture the sublime in nature: “It challenges man’s utmost skill; it mocks and defies his puny efforts to grasp and perpetuate, through art, its inimitable grandeur.” SOURCE: Leigh, William Robinson (1866-1955), “Grand Canyon,” 1911. Oil on canvas, 66” x 99”. Collection of The Newark Museum, Newark, New Jersey, Gift of Henry Wallington Wack, 1930. Inv: 30.203. © The Newark Museum/ Art Resource, New York.

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Republican Split

In his second term Roosevelt pushed for more far-reaching economic and social programs ever proposed. His Republican successor, William Howard Taft, supported some of his reforms but Taft wound up alienating many progressives. Roosevelt then challenged Taft for Republican leadership.

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The Election of 1912: A Four-Way Race

Map: The Election of 1912In the 1912 election, Roosevelt ran for president for the new Progressive Party touting his New Nationalism program. The Democrats ran a progressive candidate, Woodrow Wilson, who promoted his New Freedom platform. The Socialist Party, which had rapidly grown in strength, nominated Eugene Debs.Wilson won 42 percent of the vote, enough to defeat the divided Republicans.

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MAP 21.2 The Election of 1912 The split within the Republican Party allowed Woodrow Wilson to become only the second Democrat since the Civil War to be elected president. Eugene Debs’ s vote was the highest ever polled by a Socialist candidate.

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This political cartoon, drawn by Charles Jay Budd, appeared on the cover of Harper’s Weekly, September 28, 1912. It employed the imagery of autumn county fairs to depict voters as unhappy with their three choices for president. Note that the artist did not include the fourth candidate, Socialist Eugene V. Debs, who was often ignored by more conservative publications such as Harper’s.

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Woodrow Wilson’s First Term

Wilson followed Roosevelt’s lead in promoting an activist government by:

lowering tariffs,pushing through a graduated income tax,restructuring the banking and currency system under the Federal Reserve Act. He expanded the nation’s anti-trust authority and established the Federal Trade Commission.

On social reforms Wilson proved more cautious.

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Part Nine:

Conclusion

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