The Progressive Movement

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Big Business Emerges Businesses consolidate into big industries or ________________ These are run by businessmen who become very wealthy and become known.
Advertisements

Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
The Progressive Movement. What was the name of the 20 th century social and political reform movement, which occurred on every level of government in.
The Rise of Labor Unions The need for reform grows.
Progressivism Manhattan's "Bandit's Roost" Alley, 1888 Men loiter in the alley known as "Bandit's Roost" off Mulberry Street in lower Manhattan.
WARM UP: What does PROGRESSIVE mean?
VUS 8 C&D JIM CROW ERA PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT. Compare the Robber barons using your notes and the board or paper or ipad.
4.3 The Organized Labor Movement
Would You Strike. 1. What was the problem in 1890? 9% of Americans held 75% of the wealth.
SECTION 5-4. Working in the United States Deflation- rise in the value of money. Added tensions between workers and employers.
WORKERS & UNIONS.  While industrial growth produced wealth for the owners of factories, mines, railroads, and large farms, people who performed work.
Labor Strives to Organize Bell Ringer: What do you think that conditions were like for people working in factories in the late 1800’s?
VUS 8 C&D JIM CROW ERA PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT. Compare the Robber barons using your notes and the board or paper or ipad.
Progressive Movement Industrialization Problems. Goals of the Progressive Movement A government controlled by the people Guaranteed economic opportunities.
19-4 Industrial Workers Mrs. Manley. Industrial Workers Why are workers organizing into unions? - to demand better pay and working conditions Mass production-
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Organized Labor After 1865.
The Progressive Movement
Industrialization. Assembly Line Tasks: 1. Take 3 sheets plain and 3 sheets grid paper. 2. Stack paper in alternating order (plain, grid, plain, grid,
Workers Organize. Gov’t & Business Gov’t maintained a hands-off approach to business But as corporations became all powerful, the gov’t became uneasy.
The Labor Movement Mrs. Jones-Wagy’s US History Class.
The Labor Movement Workers Organized Poor working conditions existed in most places hour work daylow pay No sick daysdull, boring Unsafe and.
The Progressive Movement By: Rachel and Charlie Block: 7.
Progressive Movement Standard VUS.8d-e. WHAT IS A PROGRESSIVE The progressive movement used government to institute reforms for problems created by industrialization.
Unit 5: An Industrial America Part III: Workers and Unions.
#24 Grover Cleveland Pullman Strike Panic of 1893.
VA and US History Labor Unions and Strikes Lecture Notes: Week 9 Lesson 4 Standard VUS.8d.
Big Business and Organized Labor
The Rise of Labor Unions
Organized Labor After 1865.
Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
The Rise of Big Business
Organized Labor After 1865.
Solving the social problems of immigration, urbanization and industrialization. Progressive Movement What were the goals of Progressives, and what were.
Changes In The Way We Work: Power to People
Warm-UP Rank the problems from your photo analysis last class. Which problem do you think was the most serious? Why?
Cities and the Industrial Revolution
America Seeks Reforms in the Early 20th Century
Chinese immigrants helped to
Progressivism Manhattan's "Bandit's Roost" Alley, 1888
Working Conditions, Unions, & Strikes
The Rise of Labor Unions
GILDED AGE: INDUSTRIALIZATION
Today working conditions Mini assessment Tomorrow Labor Unions
Knights of Labor American Federation of Labor Labor Disputes
The Labor Movement The late 1800s.
Part 2 Chapter 24.
The Progressive Era Chapter 18 Section 1.
The Organized Labor Movement
Progressivism Manhattan's "Bandit's Roost" Alley, 1888
Early Labor Unions.
Progressive Movement Part II
THE GILDED AGE: Immigration and Urbanization VISUAL VOCABULARY
Organized Labor American History.
Labor Unions Objective 5.03: Assess the impact of labor unions on industry and the lives of workers.
U2C6:The Progressives United States History.
Chapter 5 Industrial Revolution
Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
EQ: How can groups drive
What is Liberalism? What is Progressivism? Are they the same? Explain.
Labor Union Activities
Organized Labor After 1865.
Labor Movement Labor unions formed.
Chapter 13 Section 3: The Organized Labor Movement
Bell Ringer What do you think of Plainview? Do you like him? Why or why not? Do you think workers have a right to strike? Should striking workers be protected.
WARM UP Name two inventions that helped industrialize the United States and describe how they helped. What is the difference between horizontal and vertical.
Labor Movement.
Rise of Labor Unions in the 19th Century Gilded Age
The Progressive Movement
The Progressive Movement Power Point 1 – Part 1
Workers Unite.
Presentation transcript:

The Progressive Movement

Problems of Industrialization Unskilled labor Low morale Low wages Child labor

Robber Barons or Philanthropist? Those who gained their riches at the expense of the poor and the working class Lavish lifestyles of the wealthy at this time fed criticism Many spent freely to show off their wealth Public criticism and sense of social responsibility led the wealthy to use part of their wealth to aid society

Excesses of the Gilded Age – Income disparity, lavish lifestyles – Practices of robber barons

Vanderbilt Mansion

Rockefeller Mansion

Dangerous Working Conditions

Long hours, low wages, no job security, no benefits

Company towns

Employment of women

Progressive Movement

Progressive Movement Created to solve the problems caused by Industrialization

Goals of the Progressives Government controlled by people Guaranteed economic opportunities through government regulation Elimination of social injustices

Progressive accomplishments in local governments… New forms to meet needs of increasing urbanization

In state governments… Referendum Initiative Recall

Referendum Process that allows citizens to approve or reject a law passed by their legislature

Initiative Petition-based law

Recall Procedure that permits voters to remove public officials from office before the next election

In elections Primary elections Direct election of U.S. Senators (17th Amendment) Secret ballot

In child labor… Muckraking literature describing abuses of child labor Child labor laws

Muckrakers Journalists who uncover wrongdoing in politics or business

Strikes and Labor Unions

Knights of Labor Secret brotherhood of skilled workers Goals: Unity of all workers 8 hour day Equal pay for men and women

Haymarket Square Riot Chicago 1886 Workers strike for an 8 hour day 26 people die as a result

American Federation of Labor Samuel Gompers started Goals: Better working conditions Higher wages 8-hour day No child labor tenement reform

American Railroad Union Eugene v. Debs leader Union that united all workers on the RR

Industrial Ladies’ Garment Workers Union 1909 Tried to improve working conditions for women in sweatshops

Organizations formed in response to labor laws Knights of Labor American Federation of Labor (Samuel Gompers) American Railway Union (Eugene V. Debs) International Ladies’ Garment Workers Union

Strikes in response to labor laws Haymarket Square Homestead Strike Pullman Strike History channel Homestead In response to financial reverses related to the economic depression that began in 1893, the Pullman Palace Car Company, a manufacturer of railroad cars, cut the already low wages of its workers by about 25 percent but did not introduce corresponding reductions in rents and other charges at Pullman, its company town near Chicago, where most Pullman workers lived. As a result, many workers and their families faced starvation. When a delegation of workers tried to present their grievances about low wages, poor living conditions, and 16-hour workdays directly to the company’s president, George M. Pullman, he refused to meet with them and ordered them fired.  llman Strike, (May 11, 1894–c. July 20, 1894), in U.S. history, widespread railroadstrike and boycott that severely disrupted rail traffic in the Midwest of the United States in June–July 1894. The federal government’s response to the unrest marked the first time that an injunction was used to break a strike. Amid the crisis, on June 28, President Grover Cleveland and Congress created a national holiday, Labor Day, as a conciliatory gesture toward the American labour movement. The ARU’s president, Eugene V. Debs, predicted that, once the switchmen refused to add or remove Pullman cars from trains, the railroads would fire them and try to replace them with nonunion workers, and that in turn would lead other union members to walk out in solidarity, thus bringing more and more trains to a halt. The scenario played out as Debs had predicted. On June 27, 5,000 workers left their jobs and 15 railroads were tied up. By the next day, 40,000 had walked off, and rail traffic was snarled on all lines west of Chicago. On the third day, the number of strikers had climbed to 100,000, and at least 20 lines were either tied up or completely stopped. By June 30, 125,000 workers on 29 railroads had quit work rather than handle Pullman cars. The ARU had few locals in the East or the Deep South, but the boycott seemed remarkably effective everywhere else.

Gains from labor laws Limited work hours Regulated work conditions

Anti-trust laws Laws to regulate business during the Progressive Movement

Sherman Anti-trust Act Prevents any business structure that “restrains trade” (monopolies)

Clayton Anti-trust Act Expands Sherman Anti-Trust Act; outlaws price-fixing; exempts unions from Sherman Act

Suffrage The right to vote

Leader in the fight for women’s suffrage Susan B. Anthony Leader in the fight for women’s suffrage

Gave women the right to vote 19th Amendment Gave women the right to vote