Chapter 28: Progressivism & the Republican Roosevelt
Charles Evan Hughes
- reformist Republican governor of NY who had gained national fame as an investigator or malpractices by gas and insurance companies and by the coal trust - ran against Wilson in the Election of 1906 for the Republicans & condemned him for not standing up to Germany
Gifford Pinchot
Chief of Forest Service alongside Roosevelt - fired by Taft
17th Amendment
Direct Election of Senators
16th Amendment
Federal Income Tax
Of the following legislation aimed at resource conservation, the only one associated with Roosevelt's presidency was the
Newlands Act.
Teddy Roosevelt weakened himself politically after his election in 1904 when he
announced that he would not be a candidate for a third term as president.
The panic of 1907 stimulated reform in __________ policy.
banking
The idea of "multiple-use resource management" included all of the following practices except
damming of rivers.
The case of Lochner v. New York represented a setback for progressives and labor advocates because the Supreme Court in its ruling
declared a law limiting work to ten hours a day unconstitutional.
President Taft's foreign policy was dubbed
dollar diplomacy.
Political progressivism
emerged in both major parties, in all regions, at all levels of government.
While president, Theodore Roosevelt
greatly increased the power and prestige of the presidency.
According to the text, Teddy Roosevelt's most enduring achievement may have been
his efforts supporting the environment.
The settlement house and women's club movements were crucial centers of female progressive activity because they
introduced many middle-class women to a broader array of urban social problems and civic concerns.
Most muckrakers believed that their primary function in the progressive attack on social ills was to
make the public aware of social problems.
Progressive reformers were mainly men and women from the
middle class.
According to progressives, the cure for all of American democracy's ills was
more democracy.
When Upton Sinclair wrote The Jungle, he intended his book to focus attention on the
plight of workers in the stockyards and meat-packing industry.
referendum
proposed laws (bills) must be approved by voters
The real purpose of Teddy Roosevelt's assault on trusts was to
prove that the government, not private business, ruled the country.
The Elkins and Hepburn acts dealt with the subject of
railroad regulation.
Australian Ballot
secret ballots for voter policy
During his presidency, Teddy Roosevelt did all of the following except
tame capitalism.
The political roots of the progressive movement lay in the
the Greenback Labor party and the Populists.
Teddy Roosevelt helped to end the 1902 strike in the anthracite coal mines by
threatening to seize the mines and to operate them with federal troops.
Lincoln Steffens, in his series of articles entitled "The Shame of the Cities,"
unmasked the corrupt alliance between big business and municipal government.
The "real heart" of the progressive movement was the effort by reformers to
use the government as an agency of human welfare.
As president, William Howard Taft
was wedded more to the status quo than to progressive change.
Taft signed the _________________, proclaiming it "the best bill that the Republican party ever passed."
Payne-Aldrich Tariff
18th Amendment
Prohibition
Hiram W. Johnson
Republican Governor of California in 1910 and dynamic prosecutor of grafters who helped break the dominant grip of the Southern Pacific Railroad on California politics and set up a political machine of his own
While president, Theodore Roosevelt chose to label his reform proposals as the
Square Deal.
The Supreme Court's "rule of reason" in antitrust law was handed down in a case involving
Standard Oil.
In Muller v. Oregon, the Supreme Court upheld the principle promoted by progressives like Florence Kelley and Louis Brandeis that
female workers required special rules and protection on the job.
Progressive reform at the level of city government seemed to indicate that the progressives' highest priority was
governmental efficiency.
President Roosevelt believed that the federal government should adopt a policy of ___________ trusts.
regulating
The public outcry after the horrible Triangle Shirtwaist tire led many states to pass
restrictions on female employment in the clothing industry
To regain the power that the people had lost to the "interests," progressives advocated all of the following except
socialism.
The muckrakers signified much about the nature of the progressive reform movement because they
sought not to overthrow capitalism but to cleanse it with democratic controls.
The leading progressive organization advocating prohibition of liquor was
the Women's Christian Temperance Union.
One unusual and significant characteristic of the anthracite coal strike in 1902 was that
the national government did not automatically side with the owners in the dispute.
Female progressives often justified their reformist political activities on the basis of
their being essentially an extension of women's traditional roles as wives and mothers.
The progressive-inspired city-manager system of government
was designed to remove politics from municipal administration.
Teddy Roosevelt believed that trusts
were here to stay with their efficient means of production.
initiative
allows voters to propose legislation
Passage of the Federal Meat Inspection Act was especially facilitated by the publication of
Upton Sinclair's The Jungle.
Teddy Roosevelt decided to run for the presidency in 1912 because
William Howard Taft had seemed to discard Roosevelt's policies.
Robert La Follette
- Wisconsin governor - most militant of the progressive Republican leaders - returned lumbering and railroad "interests" to the people - perfected a scheme for regulating public utilities
Match each early-twentieth-century muckraker below with the target of his or her exposé. A. David G. Phillips 1. The United States Senate B. Ida Tarbell 2. The Standard Oil Company C. Lincoln Steffens 3. City governments D. Ray Stannard Baker 4. The condition of blacks a. A-1. B-2, C-3, D-4 b. A-4, B-2, C-3, D-1 c. A-3, B-1, C-2, D-4 d. A-3, B-2, C-4, D-1 e. A-1, B-4, C-2, D-3
A) A-1. B-2, C-3, D-4
Match each late-nineteenth-century social critic below with the target of his criticism. A. Thorstein Veblen 1. "bloated trusts" B. Jack London 2. slum conditions C. Jacob Riis 3. "conspicuous consumption" D. Henry Demarest Lloyd 4. destruction of nature a. A-4, B-2, C-3, D-1 b. A-1, B-3, C-4, D-2 c. A-3, B-4, C-2, D-1 d. A-3, B-2, C-1, D-4 e. A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
C) A-3, B-4, C-2, D-1
Taft did not strip this Speaker of the House of his power (one of the reasons he angered Progressives)
Joe Cannon
Theodore Roosevelt is probably most accurately described as
a middle-of-the-road reformer.
recall
a way for voters to remove elected officials from office
All of the following were prime goals of earnest progressives except
abolishing special workplace protections for women.
Progressivism was
closely tied to the feminist movement and women's causes.
As a part of his reform program, Teddy Roosevelt advocated all of the following except
control of labor.
The progressive movement was instrumental in getting the Seventeenth amendment added to the Constitution, which provided for
direct election of senators.
Which of the following was not among the issues addressed by women in the progressive movement?
ending special regulations governing women in the workplace