2. Progressive Movement
What were the guiding principles of Populism
After Populism, citizens saw the possibilities of
reform through government
Populist success in local and national
elections encouraged others to seek change
through political action
Building on Populism’s achievements and
adopting some of its goals, Progressives
dominated the first two decades of 1900’s.
3. First, the Progressive Era in
pictures & charts…
4. Rise of the City
Year Urban Population (%) Number of Cities w/
100K+Population
1880 20% 12
1890 28 15
1900 38 18
1910 50 21
1920 68 26
5. Percentage of Women in the Labor
Force
Year All Women Married Women Women as % of
Labor Force
1900 20.4% 5.6% 18%
1910 25.2 10.7 24
1920 23.3 9.0 24
1930 24.3 11.7 25
6. Sales of Automobiles
Year Number of Cars (in Thousands)
1900 4.1
1905 24.2
1910 181.0
1915 895.9
1920 1,905.5
1925 3,735.1
14. Roots of Progressivism
National Woman’s Suffrage Association
American Bar Association
National Municipal League
These are examples of some of the groups that
rallied citizens around a cause or profession
Gave legitimacy to professions
Most of these groups’ members were educated
and middle class
15. Muckrakers
Journalists who wrote exposes of corporate
greed and misconduct
TR came up with this term
Lincoln Steffens: The Shame of the Cities
Ida Tarbell: History of Standard Oil
Upton Sinclair: The Jungle
Ida B. Wells: Anti-lynching
17. Compare to 1830’s?
This reform was considered very similar to the
reform movement of the 1830’s, in that those
people campaigned for public enlightenment
on the plight of orphans, prostitutes, and those
held in mental institutions
18. Reformers
W.E.B. DuBois
Headed the NAACP
Quest for racial justice
It was an uphill battle that was so strenuous that, after
a lifelong struggle, DuBois abandoned the US and
moved to Africa
19. Reformers
Margaret Sanger
Feminist Movement
Faced great opposition for promoting the use of
contraceptives
They had been considered illegal in most places
Eventually, suffrage was granted to women in 1920
with the passing of the 19th Amendment
20. Reformers
Robert LaFollette
Wisconsin Governor, “Fightin’ Bob”
The “Wisconsin Idea”:
Direct primary
Progressive taxation
Initiative: voters can propose new laws
Referendum: public can vote on new laws
Recall: elections that gave voters power to remove officials
from office before their terms expired
21. Robert La Follette
Governor of
Wisconsin, 1901-
1906
U.S. Senate, 1906-
1925
22. Other Progressive Gains
State level reform:
Limit work day hours
Minimum wage requirements
Child labor laws
Urban housing codes
Progressive income taxes helped redistribute the
nation’s wealth
23. Teddy Roosevelt
Expected to be conservative due to being
McKinley’s VP, but was not!
Most prominent Progressive leader
First to use the Sherman Antitrust Act
successfully against monopolies
Aka the “Trustbuster”
Also tightened food and drug regulations, created
national parks, among other things
25. Taft
Not known as much as TR, but did a lot for
Progressivism
During his time as President, he pushed two
amendments through:
One instituting a national income tax
Another allowing for direct election of senators
Taft pursued monopolies even more aggressively
than TR!
26. Wilson
The last of the Progressive Presidents
Created the Federal Trade Commission
Lobbied for and enforced the Clayton Antitrust
Act of 1914
Created the Federal Reserve
This gave the gov’t greater control over the
nation’s finances
The 19th Amendment was passed during his term
28. End of Progressivism
Lasted through WWI
War made reformers and rest of nation tired of
fighting
The Red Scare split the Progressives by
dividing those on the “left” from those in the
center
29. Summary
Progressive movement achieved many of its
goals
Over time, it lost support of the interest groups
whose ends it had met
Many historians argue that the Progressive
movement was brought to an end by its own
success!
There were no more crusades left to fight for!