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Industrialization and the Progressive Response Anything bolded and underlined is something you definitely need to know Workers Millions of workers were needed: Production in factories Acquisition of raw materials Transportation of goods Women and African Americans met with especially fierce inequality 1891 – 7400 Southern blacks have industrial jobs Remember – there were 4million freed slaves in 1865… Unskilled labor had dirty, disgusting jobs Women and children worked too – out of necessity Owner opinion of labor Employees were inputs into the product 6 days a week, many hours, bad conditions, little pay – no humane considerations Owners felt no responsibility Company towns – paid in scrips Similar to sharecropping How to combat such injustice? Knights of Labor Open to workers traditionally excluded from other unions Women, men, skilled, and unskilled, and later, African Americans too… BUT NEVER CHINESE WORKERS Fits in with Chinese Exclusion Act – prejudice – need based entry Mother Jones – labor leader KOL were looking for 8 hour days Equal pay for equal work End child labor Great Upheaval Workers needed rights – huge wage cuts In response, 1886 – 1500 strikes involving 400,000 workers Chicago workers – Haymarket Square – organized by anarchists -met with violence when a bomb exploded How did companies fight back? Blacklists Yellow dog contracts Lockouts Strikebreakers In response to the Knights’ cause American Federation of Labor (AFL) was created Restricted to skilled labor Disassociate themselves with the trouble makers Samuel Gompers (the guy from the Triangle Shirtwaist factory packet) Famous Strikes Homestead – lockout / strikebreakers (“Detectives”) - violence Strike Pullman Company town prices went up, wages went down, workers boycotted, trains were hooked up to mail cars, fed gov forced boycotts end! Rural Progressivism Problems farmers faced: Overproduction shrank profits and demand, prices continue to drop Families bought more land to produce more (to make more money) but dropped prices even more Families Bank could not pay loans repossessed their land Why were the farmers mad? Everyone got something good out of the deal except the farmers: Cheap food Eastern Which banks made out quite well led to the creation of the … Grange movement Farmers attempted to organize to help themselves – formed “cooperatives” – tried to increase profit Interstate Commerce Act stopped RR from giving rebates Created the Interstate Commerce Commission Random note – because of trains we have time zones… Question of Money Farmers wanted more paper money (wanted inflation) - easier for debts Bankers wanted money backed by the gold standard – made repayment better for them – no inflation Eventually ended up passing a law that was semi-helpful to farmers Outcome of these Rural happenings was the Populist Party (populism) Farmers, labor leaders, reformers Graduated income tax Bank regulation Government ownership of RR and communication mediums Immigration restrictions William Jennings Bryan – key representative Progressive Movement Increasing gap between rich and poor Progressives were the urban populists Publicized the ills of industrial society!!! Wanted to: Focus on urban problems Unsafe working conditions Bad sanitation Corrupt political machines Progressive Ideals Social justice – federal graduated income tax Different view of social darwinism Reforms Inspired by mass-circulation journals: Cosmopolitan magazine Muckrakers – realism!!! Tarbell – The History of Standard Oil Jacob Riis – How the Other Half Lives Upton Sinclair, The Jungle Ida Seeking to solve some of the major social problems of the era Reforming the workplace Considerations paid to: Hours Wages (national minimum wage – 1938) Who was working? Laws were passed but they were hard to enforce Argument against laws: “used 14th Amendment – “prohibits states from depriving any person of life, liberty, pr property without process of law” – it was unfair to take away their livelihoods Fighting for reform: AFL (still) Growing in power Fighting for closed shops (not open) International Workers of the World (Woblies) – very radical – many did not like! Bill Haywood Socialist Societal Reforms Book publishing, movie production, baseball City planning Prohibition - 18th amendment – repealed in 1933 Women’s suffrage (19th Amendment) 1920 (we’ll come back to this) Race Related Reforms W.E.B. DuBois National Association for the Advancement of Colored People American Indian progressives Jane Addams too By the way Tomorrow’s registration day – take a look at the classes available to you – we went over them the other day in class HW Tonight: Read excerpt from Jane Addams - you must read this and come in with it marked Might also want to take a look at the notes you have taken on some of our most recent studies. Tomorrow would be a good day for a short quiz Don’t forget janosco’s reading of daisy miller either