Muckrakers - Miami Beach Senior High School
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Transcript Muckrakers - Miami Beach Senior High School
Mr. Ermer
U.S. History
Miami Beach Senior High
Saw problems in industrial society, wanted to fix them
Problem #1: Laissez-Faire Economics
Progressives came from both political parties
Middle class, educated, urban
Western farmers
African-Americas (NAACP)
Muckrakers: journalists who investigate social problems
Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle exposes Meat Packing Industry
Gov’t needs to fix problems, but gov’t also needs fixing
Mistrust of political machines
Direct election of Senators, Income Tax, Inclusion
Progressives did not always agree on how to fix probs.
Amendment XVI: Income Tax (1913)
Amendment XVII: Direct election of Senators (1913)
Amendment XVIII: Prohibition (1919)
Repealed by Amendment XXI in 1933
Amendment XIX: Women’s Suffrage (1920)
Make gov’t more efficient, like businesses
Reforms to city government
City Commission or City Council with Managers
Democratic Reforms:
Direct Primaries
Initiative
Referendum
Recall
Woman Suffrage: giving women the right to vote
When Congress passed the 14th and 15th Amendments,
women try to be included…Congress refuses.
Two strategies emerge:
National Woman Suffrage Assoc.: Constitutional Am.
American Woman Suffrage Assoc.: State laws for voting
1890: Both groups merge into NAWSA
Women march, picket, and protest for suffrage
1918-19: Congress passes suffrage amendment
August 26, 1920: Nineteenth Amendment ratified
Social Problems: crime, illiteracy, alcoholism, child
labor, health and safety
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) pushes strikes
States pass laws restricting child labor and compulsory
public education
Adult working conditions were also bad:
Worker’s Compensation Funds
Supreme Court gives gov’t right to limit working hours
for women, not for men
Triangle Shirtwaist Co. Fire, new labor laws passed
Zoning laws and health codes
Progressives notice many problems stem from alcohol
Temperance movement: advocates ending alcohol
abuse/consumption/production
1911: Women’s Christian Temperance Union has
250,000 members (Frances Willard)
Prohibition: laws banning the manufacture,
transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages
Sherman Anti Trust Act of 1890: Break up big businesses to
allow for more competition
Some just want businesses better regulated, not busted
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)-Railroads
Eugene V. Debs: advocates socialism for businesses that
affect everyone
Ran for president in 1912, won over a million votes
Consumer Protections (FDA)
Meat Inspection Act
Pure Food & Drug Act
Reduced protective tariff rates
Federal Reserve Act
The Square Deal
Targets Railroads with Interstate Commerce Act (ICC)
Regulation decreased by court decisions, weakens ICC
Weak Hepburn Act not enough for Progressives, strengthens ICC
Pure Food & Drug Act
Conservation of Nature
Adds large tracts of land to National Park System
National Reclamation Act (Newlands Act)
Construction of dams, reservoirs, and canals
Hetch Hetchy Dam Controversy
Pinchot vs. Muir—dam ultimately built, but conservation grows
The troubled succession
1908: wins election against Democrat William Jennings Bryan
Economic policy
Moves to lower protective tariffs
Old Guard Republicans fight back with Payne-Aldrich Tariff
1912: Children’s Bureau created to protect children
Conservation
Replaces Sec. of Interior Garfield with Richard Ballinger
Ballinger-Pinchot dispute over coal lands in Alaska
Taft loses support of Progressives and Roosevelt
Roosevelt vs. Taft
Roosevelt’s “New Nationalism”—aggressive gov’t regulation
1912: Wilson (D), Taft (R), & Roosevelt (P) run for pres.
Taft & TR split vote, Wilson elected by huge margins
Wilson’s “New Freedoms”
Aimed at destroying monopolies on power
Federal Trade Commission Act
Lower protective tariffs (Underwood-Simmons Tariff )
Federal Reserve Act
12 Regional Banks, owned by their member banks in regions
Federal Reserve Board, headed by chairman to monitor/regulate
national economy
Child Labor Laws
Keating Owens Act places tax on child labor produced goods