AP US History: The Progressive Era
Theodore Roosevelt
Bull Moose party; Big Stick Diplomacy ("speak softly but carry a big stick"; relied on a strong navy; established the US as a leader); full of contradictions; conservationist; supported radical change and reform; TRUST BUSTER
WCTU
Women's Christian Temperance Union
19th amendment
Women's suffrage
Upton Sinclair
"The Jungle"; exposed the meat-packing industry; led to the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act
Great White Fleet
16 white battleships sent around the world to demonstrate America's increased power; "good will cruise"
Panama Canal
A canal through Panama to speed up ship travel; cost $40 million; established the US as a world super power
Referendum
A general vote on a specific issue referred to the people for a decision
Maragret Sanger
Advocated birth control
Lucretia Mott / Elizabeth Cady Stanton / Susan B. Anthony
Advocates of women's rights who participated in the Seneca Falls Convention to promote women's suffrage
Organizers of a parade for women in March, 1913
Alice Paul and Lucy Barns
Lincoln Steffens
Author of "Shame of the Cities"
J.P. Morgan
Banking; born into riches
Jane Addams
Chicago Hull House; aimed to help the poor with assimilation
Charles Lindbergh
Controllable airplane
William Jennings Bryan
Democratic candidate in the 1896 presidential election who ran on the promise of equality for all; anti-trust
Woodrow Wilson
Democratic party; Moral Diplomacy (condemned imperialism, spread democracy, and promote international peace); supported Federal Reserve Act of 1913, which stabilized the economy; "New Freedom" program (emphasized business competition and small government); won the presidential election because the Republican vote was split between Roosevelt and Taft
17th amendment
Direct election of US Senators
Henry Ford
Eight hour work days and a living wage; assembly line method of production; cars
Civil Service Commission
Enforced the Pendleton Act
Ida Tarbell
Exposed corruption in the Standard Oil Company
Thomas Nast
Exposed political corruption with cartoons
Spanish-American War
Four month war; caused by Cuban War of Independence; US win; U.S.S. Maine blew up ("Remember the Maine!")
Dorothea B. Dix
Helped to reform conditions for the mentally ill; wanted grants for insane asylums
When did women first demand the right to vote?
In 1848 at the Seneca Falls Convention in NY
When did women gain the right to vote?
In 1920, thanks to the 19th amendment
16th amendment
Income tax
Yellow journalism
Journalism that exaggerates stories and uses sensational headlines to attract readers
Muckrakers
Journalists who wanted to ignite change
20th amendment
Lame duck amendment; changed the presidential inauguration from March to January
Sherman Anti-Trust Act
Meant to stop trusts, but was hardly enforced until the progressive presidents took office
Lewis Hine
Muckraking photographer of child labor
Jacob Riis
Muckraking photographer of tenement living; "How the Other Half Lives"
Pendleton Act
Passed by President Arthur, it created a system in which federal employees were hired based on merit rather than on any sort of political connections
Gold Standard Act
Passed by President McKinely, it stated that all paper money must be backed by gold; it got rid of America's practice of bimetallism
Hepburn Act
Passed by President Roosevelt, it increased the power of the Interstate Commerce Commission
Populism vs progressivism
Populism: farmers; wanted more government control of banking and industries; focused more on a economic system Progressivism: mostly middle class; saw the unfairness in the economy; fed up with corruption; focused more on a political system
18th amendment
Prohibition
Ida B. Wells
Promoted the well-being of black children by organizing preschools for them
Carrie Nation
Radical member of the temperance movement
Origins of progressivism
Rapid industrialization, immigration, and urbanization, which led to national growth and prosperity
William Howard Taft
Republican party; Dollar Diplomacy (further foreign policy through use of economic power by guaranteeing loans to foreign countries); supported conservatism, not progressivism; supported subtle reform; wanted to break up all trusts; lost progressive support because he raised tariffs (Payne Aldrich tariff)
Why was progressivism so popular during this time?
Rise of the middle class resulted in more free time and more disposable income; growing hostility towards monopolies; horror at conditions of cities due to muckrakers
The Square Deal
Roosevelt's plan for reform; meant to give all Americans an equal opportunity
Progressive goals
Social, moral, economic, and political goals
John D. Rockefeller
Standard Oil Company; self-made man
Monroe Doctrine
Stated that Europeans couldn't get involved in US affairs
Roosevelt's Corollary
Stated that US could act as police in Latin American affairs if Europeans caused problems
The success of the rally organized by Alice Paul and Lucy Barns led to the formation of an organization called what?
The Congressional Union
Initiative petition
The process of beginning a referendum on a recall or special issue (the number of valid signatures of registered voters must be verified by the state election's official)
Civil disobedience
The refusal to obey a law due to the belief that the law is immoral
Who coined the term "muckraker"?
Theodore Roosevelt
Effects of Spanish-American War
Treaty of Paris; US acquired Cuba, Guam, and Puerto Rico; purchased Philippines for $20 million
Andrew Carnegie
US Steel Company; self-made man
Recall
Voters can remove and replace an elected official before their term of office is up (different from impeachment)
William McKinely
Won the 1896 presidential election because of the donations to his campaign from the three big titans
First state to grant women the right to vote
Wyoming