0% found this document useful (0 votes)
644 views10 pages

Chapter 28&29 America On The World Stage Progressivism & Republican Roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt became president in 1901 after McKinley's assassination. As a progressive reformer, Roosevelt pursued a "Square Deal" agenda including railroad regulation, food and drug safety laws, conservation of public lands, and antitrust enforcement. He believed the federal government should mediate between big business and the public good. Roosevelt also asserted U.S. influence abroad through diplomacy and shows of naval power, such as negotiating an end to the Russo-Japanese War and using gunboat diplomacy against European powers in disputes over Latin American debts.

Uploaded by

Anna Lee
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
644 views10 pages

Chapter 28&29 America On The World Stage Progressivism & Republican Roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt became president in 1901 after McKinley's assassination. As a progressive reformer, Roosevelt pursued a "Square Deal" agenda including railroad regulation, food and drug safety laws, conservation of public lands, and antitrust enforcement. He believed the federal government should mediate between big business and the public good. Roosevelt also asserted U.S. influence abroad through diplomacy and shows of naval power, such as negotiating an end to the Russo-Japanese War and using gunboat diplomacy against European powers in disputes over Latin American debts.

Uploaded by

Anna Lee
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 10

Chapter 28&29

America on the World Stage


Progressivism & Republican Roosevelt
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
 Roosevelt became president after William McKinley was assassinated in 1901.
o 42 and youngest ever to assume the presidency
 Roosevelt very admired public figure and was considered an idol
 Roosevelt very conservative
o Saw federal government as mediator (someone who stands in between) of
public good with president at its center
o Urged regulation of trade not destruction
o Government to investigate activities of corporations
 Department of Commerce and Labor
 1902 ordered Justice Department to enforce Sherman
Antitrust Act against a new Rail Road monopoly

Square Deal
 Series of reform movements that include:
 Railroad Reform
o Asked for legislation to increase government’s power to oversee railroad
rates
 Hepburn Railroad Regulation Act
 No more two different fares, no more being charged more
if you’re shipping farm goods, and no more discrimination
 Still have it, and businesses have to follow standard policy
—it’s just expanded
 Pressured Congress for Pure Food & Drug Act
 Restrict sale of dangerous or ineffective medicines
 Because of Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, Roosevelt asked for the Meat Inspection
Act
o He was so nauseated from reading it, that there was no way he couldn’t
make the act
 Miscellaneous:
o 8 hour work day
o Broader compensation for victims of industrial accidents
o Inheritance and income taxes
o Regulation of stock market
o National Reclamation Act
 Newlands Act
 Parks, reservations, etc
 Square refers to treating everyone equally—as equal as possible
The Panic of 1907
 Government still had little control over economy
o Industrial production outran capacity of domestic and foreign markets
o Banking system and stock market inadequate
 Not equipped to handle too many supplies
 Conservatives blamed Roosevelt
 J.P. Morgan constructed a pool of assets from several banks
o Said key was to purchase by U.S. Steel of shares of the Tennessee Coal
and Iron Company
 Morgan asked and got assurances purchase would not prompt antitrust action
 The panic subsided and Roosevelt congratulated

Progressivism
 Solving problems of industrialization
 Focused on: political reform and consumer protection
o Regulation of businesses to stop concentration of power
o Social justice for poor and workers
o Social control of morals – drinking, prostitution, movies, etc...
 Willing to use government to meet their ends
o Free government from control of corrupt big business
 Wanted to make government more accessible to ordinary people

Muckrakers
 Teddy Roosevelt accused them of raking up muck through their writings
 They go and investigate and talk about all of the bad
o Point out where all of the weaknesses are
 Among first to articulate new spirit of reform
 Directed public attention toward social, economic, and political injustices
o Caused public outrage at corruption and incompetence in city politics

The Settlement House


 Response to problems of crowded immigrant neighborhoods
 Hull House – Jane Adams of Chicago
o Sought to help immigrant families adapt to the language and customs of
their new country
 Profession of social work spawned from the Settlement House
o “Women’s Work”
Women Suffrage
 Suffrage not mean challenge but rather allow women to bring ‘virtue’ to society
o War would become a thing of the past
 1920 – 19th Amendment gave political rights to women
 Not all women satisfied with the 19th Amendment
o Alice Paul – head of the National Women’s Party
 Equal Rights Amendment: constitutional amendment to provide
clear legal protection
 Jane Adams and other denounced the Equal Right’s Amendment
 The suffrage movement only about right to vote

The Assault on the Parties


 Need to reform government
 City-manager plan – elected officials hired an outside expert to take charge of the
government
 Introduced:
o Initiative – allows new legislation to be submitted directly to the voters in
a general election
o Referendum – allowed the voters to approve or disprove of actions taken
by the legislation
o Direct Primary – allowed the selection of candidates to be given to
people rather than bosses
o Recall – gives voters the right to remove a public official from office with
a special election after a sufficient number of citizens sign a petition
o You now have a voice!
 Robert La Follett (Wisconsin) most celebrated

Sources of Progressive Reform


African American and Reform
 Booker T. Washington – focused on working on immediate self improvement
rather than long-rage social change
 Not everyone was content with that approach
 W.E.B. Du Boise
o Born in Massachusetts and educated at Fisk University and Harvard
 Wrote The Souls of Black Folk (1903)
o Attacked the philosophy of Washington
o Accused him of encouraging white to impose segregation
o Claimed that Washington was limiting the aspiration of his race
 Advocated: Full universal education, aspire to professions, and fight for
restoration of civil rights
 In 1905, DuBois and his supporters met at the Niagra movement in Canada
o National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
 Led drive for equal rights using lawsuits as weapons
 Guun Vs. United States – Ruled grandfather clause in
Oklahoma was unconstitutional
 Buchanan Vs. Worley – struck down law requiring
residential segregation
 NAACP never radical
o Never stressed using anything outside of the law
o Stressed opportunity for exceptional African Americans to gain positions
of full equality
o Theory was by creating a trained elite, African Americans would create a
leadership group capable of fighting for the rights of the race as a whole

Crusades and Reform


The Temperance Crusade
 Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) – became single largest
women’s organization of the time
o Publicized evils of alcohol and connection between drunkenness and
family violence, unemployment, poverty, and disease
 By 1916, 19 states had passed prohibition laws
 January of 1920, the 18th amendment was passed, officially outlawing alcohol
o Prohibition
 Cops are never the one’s to follow prohibition
 Speak Easy’s – find all of the alcohol there, underground

Industrial Workers of the World


 A.K.A. “Wobblies”
 Leader – William “Big Bill” Haywood
o Better hours, better pay, and better conditions
 Advocated single union for all workers and abolition of slave wage system
 Rejected political action in favor of strikes
 Eventually government shut them down
 More moderated come to power to make real changes
 Injunction – a petition to stop from doing something
 Were able to bring attention to the problem, but not save it

The Big Stick America and the World


Roosevelt and “Civilization”
 “Speak softly, but carry a big stick”
 Civilized nations: predominantly white and Anglo-Saxon (from the Eastern
European sides), well-developed industrial
 Uncivilized nations: Nonwhite, Latin, or Slavic, not industrialized
 Japan only exception
o Producers of industrial goods
 Believed in an economic relationship between two groups of nations
o Civilized society had right and duty to intervene in the affairs of
“backward” nations

Protecting the Open Door in Asia


 1904, Japanese attacked Russian fleet
 Roosevelt agreed to mediate
o Russia recognized Japan’s territorial gains
o Japan stopped fighting
o Roosevelt negotiated secret agreement to ensure US continued trade in
area, behind closed doors
 US stays in the biggest place—they have more things of it
 Roosevelt won Nobel Peace Prize
 Not a single peep is made, about this secret agreement to keep the
US on top
 Soon US and Japan relations deteriorated
 “Yellow Peril”
o Anti-Asian reports in newspapers
 Japanese
o Riots broke out
 California
o “Oriental School”
o “Great White Fleet”
 Roosevelt hinted at war
 Japan finally limited immigration to ease tension

The Iron-Fisted Neighbor


 1902 Venezuela began reneging on debts
o Britain, Italy, and Germany blockaded the Venezuelan coast
o German ships then bombarded the port
 Roosevelt used threat of American naval power to pressure Germany to withdraw
o Used Monroe Doctrine against Germany
 “Roosevelt Corollary” – added to Monroe Doctrine
o Gave US right to oppose European intervention in Western Hemisphere
 US has the right to go to war if it is ever breeched
 Don’t have to ask congress, or anything
o Allowed US to intervene in domestic affairs of its neighbors if they proved
unable to maintain order on their own
 US goes down as the “Iron-Fisted Neighbor” to protect

The Panama Canal


 Most celebrated accomplishment of Roosevelt’s presidency was the Canal
 Step One: Hay-Pauncefote Treaty
o Between America and Britain
o Canceled 1850 pact to build any canal together
o US now free to act alone
 Step Two: Choose a site
 Panama Canal opened in 1914
 Roosevelt concludes his terms on a positive note-doesn’t challenge the two terms
The Troubled Succession
William Howard Taft Becomes President in 1908
Roosevelt
 Most dynamic public figure
 Sportsman and athlete
 Expansive view of powers of the office

Taft
 Lacks dynamic personality
 Well respected, but little more
 Sedentary & obese
o 350 lbs
o Special tub
 Slow and cautious about rules

Pinchot-Ballinger Controversy
 Taft replaced Roosevelt’s Sec. of Interior
o Appointed Richard A. Ballinger
 Ballinger tried to remove nearly a million acres of forests and mineral reserves
from public lands
o This is not illegal—he’s doing it in order to pump money back into the
government
o Make them available for private development
 Louise Glavis, investigator for Interior Dept charged Ballinger with conniving to
turn over valuable public lands for personal profit
o Insider trading
 Taft ordered attorney general to investigate
o Ruled charges were groundless
 Pinchot not satisfied
o He leaked story to the press and asked Congress to investigate the scandal
 He hinted that Taft may be a lot like Grant
 Taft discharged Pinchot for insubordination and Congress exonerated Ballinger
o Exonerate – making free and clear
 Progressives = Ballinger
 Roosevelt supporters now feel alienated from Taft
 Started out as a simple scandal that escalates
 *Represents clash in economic development
o Pinchot: carefully supervised economic growth
o Ballinger: (westerns) saw regulations as impediment to their own
economic ambitions

“New Nationalism”
 Roosevelt’s return to politics
o Broke away from Taft and Republicans
 Roosevelt supported:
o Graduated income tax and inheritance tax
o Worker’s compensation for industrial accidents
o Child and Women labor reform
o Tariff revision
o Firmer regulation of corporations

Spreading Insurgency
 Congressional elections of 1910
 Republicans suffered defeat
 Almost all progressive incumbents reelected
 Democrats won control of House and gained strength in the Senate
 Roosevelt claimed he had no interest in presidency anymore, but he will change
his mind because of two things that happened
 (1) October 27, 1911, Taft announced a lawsuit against U.S. Steel charging the
1907 acquisition of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company had been illegal
 Roosevelt was enraged by the implication that he acted improperly while
president
 (2) Robert La Follett was to run for the Republican nomination, but suffered a
breakdown after his daughter’ illness. He decided not to run and lost his
supporters
 On February 22, 1912, Roosevelt announced his candidacy for president

The Republican Division


 Roosevelt, champion of the progressives
 Taft, candidate of the conservatives
 Up for grabs: 254 contested delegate votes
 Roosevelt needed fewer than half to win, but will receive only 19
 The next day, Roosevelt led his supporters out of the convention and out of the
party
 Roosevelt launched new progressive party
o Bull Moose Party
 His cause was pretty much lost
 (1) A lot of former supporters refused to leave the Republican Party
 (2) The man the Democrats will nominate offers a much better alternative to Taft
than Roosevelt will

Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom


The Election
 Taft delivered a few speeches then lapsed into virtual silence
 Roosevelt campaigned energetically, but failed to draw any significant numbers
 He had been wounded by would-be assassin
 Roosevelt and Taft split the Republican vote while Wilson held on to most of the
democrats
 Wilson wins and becomes next president

Wilson’s New Freedom


 Wilson was a bold and forceful president
o Goes after the big businesses
 Believed big business was unjust and inefficient
o Destroy rather than regulate
 Underwood-Simmons Tariff
o Established cuts in order to introduce real competition into American
markets to break up the power of trusts
 Used 16th amendment to offset lost money
 Wilson next tackled the issues of reforming the banking system

Federal Reserve Act


 December 23, 1913 – Most important piece of domestic legislation
 Act created 12 Regional Banks, each owned and controlled by individual banks in
district
 The regional Federal Reserve banks would hold certain percentage of assets of
member banks in reserves
 Federal Reserve Notes – new type of paper currency that would become nations’
medium of trade
 National Federal Reserve Board – supervise and regulate entire system…
presidential appointments

The Problem of Trusts


 In 1914, Wilson proposed 2 measures to deal with monopolies and trusts
 (1) Create a federal agency through which the government would help business
police itself
o Federal Trade Commission
 Investigate and prosecute for “unfair trade practices”
 Did not define what “unfair” meant
 (2) Strengthen the government’s power to prosecute and dismantle trusts
 Clayton Antitrust Act
 Government supervision rather than destruction
Foreign Policy
“Pancho” Villa
 Cross between bandit and Robin Hood
o “Restore Mexico back to its glory”
 Hated Huerta and wanted to revolt
 Took 16 Americans off train and killed them
o He makes America believe that it was the Mexican government
o Hoped to cause war between Mexico and US
 General John J. “Black Jack” Pershing ordered to stop raid
o Mexican government helps with it
o Threatened but not able to capture Villa
 Villa finally got tired
o Formally gives up, takes responsibility for the 16 dead, and it allows
Wilson to restore the relationship with Mexico

Thunder Across the Sea


 Austria-Hungary’s Arch Duke Ferdinand killed by Serb patriot
o Serbia and Russia together so Russia mounted forces
 Germany attacked France
 Great Britain sucked in as help for France
 Central Powers: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Turkey, and Bulgaria
 Allies: France, Britain, Russia, Japan, and Italy

Uneasy Neutrality
 Both sides to persuade US to give up neutrality
 British and French war needs produced boom for US
 Germany mad and made submarines war area around British waters
 May 7, 1915, Lusitanian blown up
o 128 American died
o Torpedoed
 August 1915, Arabic sunk
o 2 Americans died
 March 1916, Sussex sunk
 Wilson threatened war and Germany gave in

Election of 1916
 Progressives wanted Teddy to run again
o Refused on grounds of hating Wilson so much
 Republicans also wanted Teddy, but settles on Charles Hughes
o Former Supreme Court justice and governor
 Campaign close
 Hughes won the east easily
o Newspapers reported victory
 California ultimately decided election and Wilson won
 Most Americans thought Wilson = no war… but were they wrong!

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy