Period 6 APUSH
Emma Goldman
A Lithuanian-born immigrant radical thinker known for her writings and speeches on topics ranging from anarchism, to patriotism, feminism, to birth control, to homosexuality.
Coxey's Army, 1894
A band of several hundred unemployed men, led an by Ohio businessman (whose name is given to this group), that marched on Washington D.C. in 1894 to protest unemployment and to demand that the government create jobs on public works projects for the purpose of economic relief. The group was dispersed by soldiers deployed by the federal government, which was a typical response in the 1890s.
Jacob Riis' How the Other Half Lives (1890)
A book that offered a shocking account of living conditions among the urban poor, complete with photographs of apartments in dark, airless, overcrowded tenement houses.
Spanish-American War, 1898
A conflict fought between Spain and the United States in 1898. Hostilities began in the aftermath of the internal explosion of the U.S.S. Maine in Cuba leading to United States intervention in the Cuban War of Independence. Teddy Roosevelt made a name for himself with his "Rough Riders" in the battle of San Juan Hill. As a result of America's victory over Spain, America gained influence over Cuba, acquired Puerto Rico and Spain's Pacific possessions (Guam and the Philippines), and got involved in the bloody Philippine-American War. The war illustrates how the U.S. became an empire during the Age of Imperialism.
The Anti-Imperialist League
A diverse union of writers (including the famous author, Mark Twain), businessmen, and social reformers opposed to American imperialism, and particularly the annexation of the Philippines, because they either believed that imperialism ran counter to our key values as a nation (freedom, equality, democracy), or that American energies should be directed at home, or that it would be too expensive to maintain overseas outposts, or they were racists who did not wish to bring non-white populations into the United States.
The Chinese Exclusion Act, 1882
A federal law barring immigrants from China from entering the U.S.. The law was first a temporary ban, but it was extended and made permanent in 1902. Although non-whites had long been barred from becoming naturalized U.S. citizens, this was the first time race was used to exclude an entire group of people from entering the U.S.. This law was created at a time of widespread discrimination against and violence towards Chinese Americans, particularly on the West Coast, where about 105,000 Chinese Americans lived, and it also reflected the slow contraction of the boundaries of nationhood occurring during the Gilded Age.
Immigration Restriction League
A group that called for the reduction of immigration by barring the illiterate from entering the United States.
Keating-Owen Act, 1916
A law enacted by President Wilson, this outlawed child labor in the manufacture of goods sold in interstate commerce (the Supreme Court would later declare it unconstitutional).
The Foraker Act, 1900
A law that declared Puerto Rico was an "insular territory," different from previous territories in the West which would enter the union on an equal basis as states. Puerto Rico's one million inhabitants were defined as citizens of Puerto Rico, not the U.S., and denied a future path to statehood. Congress would later extend U.S. citizenship, but not statehood, to Puerto Ricans in 1917. Puerto Rico remains "the world's oldest colony," poised on the brink of statehood or independence. It elects its own government but lacks a voice in the U.S. Congress.
Alfred T. Mahan's The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1890
A naval officer and his book that argued that no nation could prosper without a large fleet of ships engaged in international trade, protected by a powerful navy operating from overseas bases. The argument offered strategic considerations that were used to justify U.S. imperialistic expansion during the era.
Lynching
A notorious practice, particularly widespread in the South between 1890 and 1940, in which persons (usually black) accused of a crime were murdered by mobs before standing trial. Lynchings often took place before large crowds, with law enforcement authorities not intervening.
Edward Bellamy's Looking Backwards, 1888
A novel that popularized socialist ideas in which the main character falls asleep in the late nineteenth century only to awaken in the year 2000, in a world where cooperation has replaced class strife, "excessive individualism," and cutthroat competition. Inequality had been banished and with it the idea of liberty as a condition to be achieved through individual striving free of governmental restraint. Freedom, Bellamy' novel suggested, was a social condition, resting on interdependence, not autonomy.
"The Age of Imperialism"
A periodization concept, used by historians, describing the last quarter of the nineteenth century in world history, when European empires carved up large portions of the world among themselves. Their justification was to bring "civilization," by which they meant Western values, labor practices, and Christianity. The process generally resulted in the economic exploitation of the colonized people and areas. During this period, U.S. foreign policy was influenced by, and in some ways came to resemble, that of other European empires.
Social Darwinism
A popular Gilded Age concept that celebrated the "survival of the fittest" to justify class distinctions and to explain poverty. In their misapplication of Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection to society, proponents believed that some people were more "fit" than others, and this inequality in individual fitness explained the maldistribution in wealth in modern capitalist societies. For government or private individuals to assist the poor would be to interfere in a natural process by which the unfit are weeded out so that society could progress.
Frederick W. Taylor's "scientific management," or "Taylorism"
A program that sought to streamline production and boost profits by systematically controlling costs and work practices. Through this process, the "one best way" of producing goods could be determined, and workers must obey these detailed instructions from supervisors. Not surprisingly, many skilled workers saw this as a loss of freedom.
Margaret Sanger and the birth control movement
A reform movement espousing the idea that the right to control of one's body included the ability to enjoy an active sexual life without necessarily bearing children. The most prominent activist associated with this movement was one of eleven children, and she challenged laws that had banned contraceptive
The Ghost Dance
A religious revitalization campaign reminiscent of the pan-Indian movements lead by earlier prophets; leaders foretold a day when whites would disappear, the buffalo would return, and Indians could once again practice their ancestral customs; this movement was attacked and destroyed militarily by the government.
"Bread and Roses"
A slogan of the labor movement that first emerged in the Lawrence, Massachusetts strike of 1912. The slogan was a metaphor declaring that workers sought not only higher wages but also the opportunity to enjoy the finer things in life.
Consumer freedom and mass-consumption
A social and economic ideal that encouraged the purchase of consumer goods as a way to realize freedom. It was during the Progressive Era that the promise of mass consumption became the foundation for this new understanding of freedom as access to the cornucopia of goods made available by modern capitalism. Large, downtown department stores, chain stores in urban neighborhood, and retail mail-order houses for farmers and small-town residents made available to consumers throughout the country the vast array of goods now pouring from the nation's factories. Leisure activities too took on the the characteristics of mass consumptions: amusement parks, dance halls, and theaters attracted large crowds.
Convict-lease system
A system of state laws in the South, developed under the Redeemers, that 1) allowed for the arrest of virtually anyone without employment and increased penalties for petty crimes, and 2)rented out the state's convicted criminals (most of them black) to perform involuntary labor to private businesses for the profit of the state. The convict-lease system effectively exploited the loophole in the Thirteenth Amendment and allowed a form of black slavery to continue in the South long after Reconstruction.
The "Gilded Age"
A title of a Mark Twain novel from the 1870s, this derogatory term has been adopted by historians as a name for the last few decades of the 19th century. As opposed to a "golden age", "Gilded" means covered with a layer of gold. The name suggests that beneath the impressive economic growth and innovation of the Second Industrial Revolution, there is also corruption and oppressive treatment of those left behind in the scramble for wealth.
Ida B. Wells
African American journalist and the nation's leading anti-lynching activist. She reported on lynchings and documented the fact that the charges against victims of lynching were often untrue.
Annexation of Hawaii, 1898
Although independent, Hawaii already had close economic ties with the U.S. in the late 19th century, and its economy was dominated by American-owned sugar plantations that employed native islanders and Chinese, Japanese, and Filipino laborers. In 1893, a group of American planters organized a rebellion that overthrew the Hawaii government of Queen Liliuokalani, and in 1898, the U.S. annexed the Hawaiian island, reflecting its growing empire during the Age of Imperialism.
"Open door" policy with China
American territorial possessions in the Pacific (Guam, Philippines, Hawaii) during the Age of Imperialism had more to do with trade than with large-scale American settlement. In 1899, shortly after the Spanish American War, the U.S. demanded, in this policy, that European powers that had recently divided China into commercial spheres of influence grant equal access to American exports.
Booker T. Washington's Atlanta Speech, 1895 (the "Atlanta Compromise")
An 1895 speech in which Booker T. Washington repudiated the abolitionist tradition that stressed ceaseless agitation for full equality, urging blacks not to try to combat segregation. He advocated industrial education and economic self-help to gain practical skills and vocational training in order to acquire some power in the economy. He said, "In all things purely social we can be as separate as the fingers, yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress."
Mountain Meadows Massacre, 1857
An attack by a group of Mormons on a wagon train of non-Morman settlers, killing over 100 adults and older children. The event came out of a period of tension between the federal government and the Mormans, who had been led by Brigham Young to the Great Salt Lake Valley of Utah in the 1840s, and whose practice of polygamy and close connection between church and state, put them at odds with the political and cultural practices of the United States.
"Lost Cause" ideology
An ideology that romanticized slavery, the Old South, and the Confederate experience.
Carnegie's "Gospel of Wealth"
Andrew Carnegie's philosophy that the wealthy had a moral obligation to promote the advancement of society by creating "ladders of opportunity" upon which the aspiring poor could climb. He denounced the "worship of money" and distributed much of his wealthy to various philanthropies, especially to the creation of public libraries.
Maternalist Reform
Arising from the conviction that the state had an obligation to protect women and children, female reformers during the Progressive Era called for government action to improve the living standards of poor mothers and children by enacting policies such as mothers' pensions (state aid to mothers of young children who lacked male support.) and laws limiting the hours of labor of female workers.
The Conservation Movement
As opposed to preservationism, the philosophy of keeping natural areas "wild" and off limits to development, this movement proposes "wise use" of natural resources at a sustainable rate, and it is applied by the National Forest System. Both these movements took off during the Presidency of Teddy Roosevelt, who relying on advice from Gifford Pinchot, the first Head of the U.S. Forests Service, ordered millions of acres of land to be set aside as wildlife preserves and encouraged Congress to create new national parks and forests.
State level Progressives
Because of the decentralized nature of American government, state and local governments enacted most of the Progressive Era's reforms measures. In cities, Progressives worked to reform the structure of government to reduce the power of political bosses, establish public control over "natural monopolies" like gas and water works, and improve public transportation. They raised property taxes in order to spend more money on schools, parks, and other facilities. Important progressive reformers working at the state and local levels included Hazen Pingree, Samuel "Golden Rule" Jones, Hiram Johnson, and Robert LaFollette.
The "new immigration"
Between 1870 and 1920, almost 25 million immigrants arrived from overseas. Increasingly, immigrants arrived not from Ireland, England, Germany, or Scandinavia (the traditional sources of immigration), but instead from southern and eastern Europe, especially from Italy and the Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires, and many were Catholic or Jewish. They were widely described by native-born Americans as members of distinct "races" whose "lower level of civilization" posed a threat to the dominance of WASPS (white, anglo-saxon, protestants) in the U.S.
Black Disenfranchisement
Between 1890 and 1906, every southern state enacted laws or constitutional provisions designed to eliminate the black vote: poll taxes, literacy tests, "understanding clauses," and "grandfather clauses."
Collective bargaining
By using strength in numbers, this is the process whereby group of employees organizes together as a union in order to negotiate with their employer. Unions generally aimed to secure higher wages, shorter hours, and better working conditions through these negotiations with their employer.
Teller Amendment (1898)
Congress adopted and then added this amendment to the Declaration of War on Spain in 1898. It promised that the U.S. had no intention of annexing or dominating Cuba after winning the Spanish-American War. It was intended to underscore America's humanitarian motives for intervening on the side of Cuba (but it was later contradicted by the Platt Amendment).
Civil Service Act, 1883
Created a merit-based system for federal employees, with appointment via competitive examinations rather than political influence. It replaced the "spoils system" that Andrew Jackson began in the 1830s. This is one of the positive developments in politics during the Gilded Age.
"new immigrants"
During the Gilded age and the Progressive Era, this term referred to immigrants from southern and eastern Europe who were described by native-born Americans as belonging to distinct and inferior races.
The "working woman"
During the Progressive Era, more and more women were working for wages. For native-born white women, the kinds of jobs available expanded enormously. Despite continued wage discrimination and exclusion from many jobs, the working woman--immigrant and native, working class and professional--became a symbol of female emancipation
Reforms to the democratic process: primary election, initiative, referendum, recall
During the Progressive Era, several states, including California under Hiram Johnson, adopted the initiative and referendum (the former allowed voters to propose legislation, the latter to vote directly on it) and the recall, by which officials could be removed from office by popular vote. The primary election allowed Parties to select candidates for office in a more democratic fashion.
16th Amendment (Graduated Income Tax), 1913
Established the federal income tax. A "graduated" tax, or a "progressive" tax, is one in which taxpayers with higher incomes are taxed at higher rates than those with lower incomes.
19th Amendment (woman suffrage), 1920
Extended the right to vote to women in federal or state elections.
The Clayton Anti-Trust Act, 1914
Following through on his vision of New Freedom, Wilson enacted this law that exempted labor unions from antitrust laws and barred courts from issuing injunctions curtailing their right to strike.
Destruction of the Buffalo
For the past several hundred years, Indians on the Great Plains had developed a whole cultural, spiritual, and economic way of life that was centered on the enormous buffalo herds that used to graze on the Great Plans. As railroad and wagon trains brought settlers onto the Plains, hunters seeking buffalo hides brought the vast herds to the brink of extinction. The wars of the late 19th century on the Great Plains were often fought by starving Indians.
The American Federation of Labor (AFL)
Founded in 1881 and growing to become the most prominent federation of labor union in the 1890s, it adopted more limited goals (higher wages and better working conditions) than the Knights of Labor had, and composed itself mostly of skilled, white, native-born workers (less inclusive than the Knights of Labor). Its long-term president was Samuel Gompers.
Government by expert
In general, Progressive had faith in expertise; they believed that government could best exercise intelligent control over society through a democracy run by impartial experts who were in many respects unaccountable to the citizenry.
Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896
In one of the most significant rulings in American history, the U.S. Supreme Court supported the legality of Jim Crow laws that permitted or required "separate but equal" facilities for blacks and whites. In reaction to this decision, states across the South passed laws mandating racial segregation in every aspect of Southern life, from schools to hospitals, waiting rooms, toilets, and cemeteries. Despite the phrase "separate but equal," facilities for blacks were either nonexistent or markedly inferior. The doctrine of "separate but equal" would not be struck down by the Supreme Court until the Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954.
"segregation" vs. "white domination"
In reference to the Jim Crow era, the term "segregation" is really a euphemism for a system that might be better described as one of "white domination." Each component of the system--disenfranchisement, unequal economic status, inferior education, the convict-lease system, the "separate but equal" doctrine--reinforced the others, and the point was not so much to keep the races apart as it was to ensure that when they came into contact with one another, whites held the upper hand.
Mary "Mother" Jones and the IWW free speech fights
In the Progressive Era, state courts regularly issued injunctions prohibiting strikers from speaking, picketing, or distributing literature during labor disputes. Like the abolitionists before them, the labor movement, in the name of freedom, demanded the right to assemble, organized, and spread their views. So the IWW, and the fiery eighty-three year old organizer Mary "Mother" Jones, relied on song, street theater, impromptu meetings, and street corner gatherings, which often met mass arrest. Yet the struggles of workers for the right to strike and of labor radicals against restraints on open-air speaking made free speech a significant public issue in the early twentieth century and laid the foundation for the rise of civil liberties as a central component of freedom in the twentieth century.
Child Labor
In the early twentieth century, more than two million children under the age of fifteen worked for wages.
The Great Railroad Strike of 1877
In the first national labor walkout, railway workers protesting a pay cut paralyzed rail traffic in much of the country. Militia united trying to force workers back to work fired on strikers in Pittsburg, killing twenty, igniting an outbreak of violence and general strikes in several major cities. In the aftermath of the strike, the federal government constructed armories in major cities to ensure that troops would be on hand in the event of further labor difficulties. Henceforth, national power would be used to protect the rights of property against the labor movement.
Indian Reservation system
In the late 1800s, the federal government set aside areas of land in the West and forced Indian nations to relocate to them or face the U.S. military. These reservations tended to be on lands that were the least desirable to white settlers (usually unsuitable for farming or resource extraction). The reservations represent only a tiny fraction of Western land that Indian nations controlled a century prior.
Andrew Carnegie
In the quintessential "rags to riches" story, this Scottish Immigrant came to the U.S. as a boy and worked his way up to become one of the richest men in the world. He built a Steel Company in his name through "vertical integration"--that is, controlling every phase of the business from raw materials to transportation, manufacturing, and distribution. His steel factories at Homestead (the site of a major labor battle during the Gilded Age) were the most technologically advanced in the world. He opposed unionization for his employees but promoted philanthropy with his "Gospel of Wealth."
The Election of 1896
In this Presidential election, Populists joined with the Democrats to support William Jennings Bryan, who embraced the Social Gospel and called for free coinage of silver (or the unrestricted minting of silver money), which farmers believed would increase the amount of money in circulation, raise crop prices, and make it easier for farmers to pay off debts. The Republicans nominated William McKinley and defended the Gold Standard. This election is often called the "first modern political campaign" because of the huge amount of money spent by the Republicans and the efficiency of their national organization. The results revealed a nation divided on regional lines: Bryan and the Democrats carried the South and the West. McKinley and the Republicans swept the more populous industrial states of the North. Industrial America, from financiers and managers to workers, now voted Republican; McKinley's victory shattered the political stalemate that had persisted since 1876 and created one of the most enduring political majorities in American History.
Muller v. Oregon, 1908
In this case, the Supreme Court unanimously upheld the constitutionality of an Oregon law that had set maximum working hours for women. Upholding this law ran counter to the Court's prevailing doctrine of liberty of contract (as expressed in Lochner v. New York, 1905) because the beneficiaries of the state regulation in this case were women. The future Supreme Court justice, Louis Brandeis, filed a famous brief citing scientific and sociological studies to demonstrate that because they had less strength and endurance than men, long hours of labor were dangerous for women, while their unique ability to bear children gave the government a legitimate interest in their working conditions. Brandeis's brief and the Court's opinion solidified the view of women workers as weak, dependent, and incapable of enjoying the same economic rights as men. Afterwards, many states enacted maximum hours laws for female workers, and many women derived great benefit from these laws; however, other women saw them as an infringement on their freedom.
The Dawes Act, 1887
Law passed in 1887 meant to encourage adoption of white norms among Indians; broke up tribal holdings (reservations) into small farms for Indian families, with the remainder sold to white purchasers. The policy proved to be a disaster, leading to the loss of much tribal land and the erosion of Indian cultural traditions.
"Yellow Press"
Mass-circulation newspapers (so called by their critics after the color in which a popular comic strip was printed) that mixed sensational accounts of crime and political corruption with aggressive appeals to nationalistic, patriotic sentiments. They contributed the public's support of imperialistic expansion in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Federal Trade Commission, 1914
One of President Wilson's major acts against trusts, this agency was set up to investigate and prohibit unfair business activities such as price-fixing and monopolistic practices. Like the Federal Reserve System, it was welcomed by business leaders as a means of restoring order, but it reflected an expanding federal role in the economy during the Progressive Era.
Jane Addams and Hull House
One of the Progressive era's most prominent female reformers, she founded this "settlement house" in Chicago in 1899, which was devoted to improving the lives of the immigrant poor. They built kindergartens and playgrounds for children, established employment bureaus and health clinics, and showed female victims of domestic abuse how to gain legal protection. By 1910, inspired by this model, more than 400 settlement houses had been established in cities throughout the country.
Carlisle Indian School
One of the boarding schools established by the Bureau of Indian Affairs where Indian children were taken to be stripped of the "negative" influence of their parents and tribes, dressed in non-Indian clothes, given new names, and educated in white ways.
Explosion of The U.S.S. Maine, 1898
One of the causes of U.S. entrance into the Spanish-American War. This was a U.S. battleship that exploded in Havana Harbor in 1898, resulting in 266 deaths; the American public, assuming that the Spanish had mined the ship, clamored for war (popular slogan: "Remember the Maine, and to hell with Spain!"), and the Spanish-American War was declared two months later.
"captains of industry" or "robber barons"
Opposing viewpoints that industrial leaders were either beneficial for the economy or wielded power without any accountability in an unregulated market.
Muckrakers
Originally a term of disparagement coined by Teddy Roosevelt, this term came to refer to writers who exposed corruption and abuses in politics, business, meatpacking, child labor, and more, primarily in the first decade of the twentieth century; their popular books and magazine articles spurred public interest in reform. They include the following people and books: Jacob Riis's How the Other Half Lives (1890), Lincoln Steffens' The Shame of the Cities (1904), Ida Tarbell's The History of the Standard Oil Company (1904), and Upton Sinclair's The Jungle (1906).
18th Amendment (Prohibition), 1919
Outlawed the manufacture, sale, and transportation (but not consumption) of alcoholic beverages. It became the only Amendment ever to be repealed when the 21st Amendment was ratified in 1933.
Carrie Chapman Catt and the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA)
President of the NAWSA, which had been created in 1890 to reunite the rival suffrage organizations formed after the Civil War), she reflected the era's narrowed definition of nationhood by suggesting that the native-born, middle-class women who dominated the suffrage movement deserved the vote as members of a superior race and that educational and other voting qualifications did not conflict with the movement's aims, so long as they applied equally to men and women.
Meat Inspection Act, 1906
Progressive Era law, signed by TR, created largely in reaction to Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, the law set strict standards of cleanliness in the meatpacking industry.
Hepburn Act, 1906
Progressive Era law, signed by TR, that Imposed stricter control over railroads and expanded the powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission, including giving the ICC the power to set maximum rates, which was a significant step in the development of federal intervention in the corporate economy.
Pure Food and Drug Act, 1906
Progressive Era law, signed by TR, the first law to regulate manufacturing of food and medicines; prohibited dangerous additives and inaccurate labeling.
17th Amendment (Direct Election of Senators), 1913
Progressive reform that required U.S. senators to be elected directly by voters; previously, senators were chosen by state legislatures.
Interstate Commerce Commission, 1887
Reacting to the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Wabash Railroad v. Illinois (1886), Congress established this commission in order to curb abuses in the railroad industry by regulating rates.
John Muir, the Sierra Club, and Hetch Hetchy
Scottish-American preservationist (keep wilderness wild) who founded the first organization devoted to environmental preservation in 1892 to help preserve forests in their "natural" state by making them off limits to logging by timber companies. His love of nature stemmed from deep religious feelings; he believed people could experience God's presence directly through nature. A proposal to dam Hetch Hetchy Valley (a beautiful valley just north of Yosemite Valley in California) to provide water for the city of San Francisco lead to the first great environmental political battle in U.S. history between Sierra Club preservationists (opposed to building the dam) and "wise-use" conservationists resource managers who supported the dam. Muir and the Sierra Club lost the debate, and the dam was built.
Minimum wage, maximum hours, and worker's compensation laws
Several of the main legislative goals of the labor movement during the Progressive Era. While nearly half the states enacted worker's compensation laws during the era, the dominant ideology of "liberty of contract" meant that very few state-level minimum wage and maximum hour laws were enacted, and those that were only applied to female workers (a result of the maternalist reform movement).
American socialism
Socialism in the U.S. reached its greatest influence during the Progressive Era. The American Socialist Party, founded in 1901, called for free college education, legislation to improve conditions of laborers, and, as an ultimate goal, democratic control over the economy through public ownership of railroads and factories. By 1912, the Socialist Party claimed over 150,00 dues-paying members, published hundreds of newspapers--including Appeal to Reason, the largest weekly newspaper in the country--, enjoyed substantial support in the AFL, and had elected scores of officials to local governments.
Munn v. Illinois, 1877
Supreme Court case in which the court upheld the constitutionality of an Illinois law that established a state board empowered to eliminate railroad rate discrimination and set maximum charges. In this case, the Supreme Court seemed willing to accept laws regulating enterprises that represented a significant "public interest." This ruling was later overturned by Wabash v. Illinois, 1886
The breakup of J.P. Morgan's Northern Securities, 1904
Teddy Roosevelt shocked the corporate world by announcing his intention to prosecute under the Sherman Antitrust Act the Northern Securities Company. Created by financier JP Morgan, this "holding company" owned the stock and directed the affairs of three major western railroads. It monopolized transportation between the Great Lakes and the Pacific. In 1904, the Supreme Court ordered Northern Securities dissolved, a major victory for the antitrust movement. This event symbolized the shift away from the pro-big business laissez faire policies of the Gilded Age.
The Civil Rights Cases of 1883
The Supreme Court invalidated the Civil Rights Act of 1875, which had outlawed racial discrimination by hotels, theaters, railroads, and other public facilities. The Fourteenth Amendment, the Court insisted, prohibited unequal treatment by state authorities, not by private businesses.
Lochner v. New York, 1905
The Supreme Court, in this case, voided a state law establishing ten hours per day, or sixty per week, as the maximum hour of work for bakers. The New York Law, wrote one justice, "interfered with the right of contract between employer and employee." This notorious ruling gave the name "Lochnerism" to the entire body of liberty of contract decisions.
Eugene Debs
The best known socialist in the U.S., no one was more important in spreading the socialist message or linking it to ideals of equality, self-government, and freedom. A champion of the downtrodden, he was one of the founding members of the Industrial Workers of the World, and five times the candidate of the Socialist Party of America for President of the United States; director of the Pullman strike; he was imprisoned along with his associates for ignoring a federal court injunction to stop striking.
"Industrial Freedom" and "Industrial democracy"
The central demands of workers in the Progressive Era, these terms referred to empowering workers to participate in the economic decisions of their company via strong unions. They were considered to be the solution to the "labor problem" by many in the Progressive Era. Throughout the Gilded Age, workers had experienced a loss of freedom in the workplace and an undermining of their personal autonomy because of developments like Taylorism, the growth of white-collar work, and the declining odds of one day managing one's own business.
Redeemers
The coalition of merchants, planters, and business entrepreneurs who dominated the South's politics after 1877 who moved to undo as much as possible of Reconstruction (claiming to have redeemed the South from the alleged horrors and misgovernment of "black rule").
Ellis Island and Angel Island
The first was the reception center in New York Harbor through which most European immigrants to America were processed from 1892 to 1954. The second was in San Francisco Bay and served as the main entry point for immigrants from Asia.
The Election of 1912
The four-way contest between Taft, Roosevelt, Wilson, and Debs became a national debate on the relationship between political and economic freedom in the age of big business. Taft stressed that economic individualism could remain the foundation of the social order so long as government and private entrepreneurs cooperated in addressing social ills. Debs emphasized abolishing the capitalist system and also demanded including public ownership of the railroads and banking system, government aid to the unemployed, and laws establishing shorter working hours and a minimum wage. However, it was the battle between Wilson's New Freedom and Roosevelt's New Nationalism over the role of federal government in securing economic freedom that most galvanized public attention. In the end, Wilson was elected.
Liberty of Contract
The freedom for workers to negotiate the substance of their contract with their employers. In reality, given how much more powerful large employers were than their relatively interchangeable workers, this liberty was far more advantageous to employers than to workers. Nevertheless, for several decades, the Supreme Court used this theory to reconcile freedom and authority in the workplace.
"The White Man's Burden"
The idea, popularized by an 1899 poem by Rudyard Kipling, suggested that white imperialism contributed to the progress of civilization. In this poem, Kipling urged the U.S. to take up the "burden" of empire, as had Britain and other European nations. The poem coincided with the beginning of the Philippine-American War and U.S. Senate ratification of the treaty that placed Puerto Rico, Guam, Cuba, and the Philippines under American control. This racialized notion became a euphemism for imperialism.
Henry Ford and "Fordism"
The ideology of the founder of Ford Motor Company, which pioneered a business plan based on mass production and mass consumption. More specifically, Ford's system produced standardized, simple "Model T" automobiles (with nothing handmade or expensive to produce) targeted not to the elite consumer, but rather to the common man. He mass-produced them on the moving assembly line so as to greatly expand output by reducing the time it took to produce each car. He aggressively opposed unions among his employees. And yet he paid much higher wages than other employers, enabling him to attract a steady stream of skilled workers, and enabling his workers to purchase what they made.
The Farmer's Alliance
The largest citizens' movement of the nineteenth century, founded in Texas in the late 1870s, farmers in forty-three states united to try to remedy their sense of increasing economic insecurity, which they blamed on high freight rates charged by railroads, excessive interest rates for loans from merchants and bankers, and the fiscal policies of the federal government.
John D. Rockefeller
The leading figure in the U.S. oil industry and one of the richest people in the world, he used "horizontal integration" (buying up all his competitors) and later "vertical integration" (controlling the drilling, refining, storage, and distribution of oil) to build his company, Standard Oil, which controlled ninety percent of the nation's oil industry. Like Carnegie, he fought unionization but gave much of his fortune away, establishing foundations to promote education and medical research.
"American standard of living"
The maturation of the consumer economy gave rise to this popular, new concept that reflected, in part, the emergence of a mass-consumption society during the Progressive Era and was used to criticize the growing economic inequality in the nation.
Crédit Mobilier Scandal, 1867
The most notorious example of corruption in federal politics during the Gilded Age in which lawmakers supported bills aiding companies in which they had invested money or from which they received stock or salaries. This scandal is named after a construction company that charged the (government-assisted) Union-Pacific Railroad exorbitant rates to build the eastern half of the first transcontinental railroad line, then they paid the lawmakers to look the other way.
The Homestead Strike, 1892
The nineteenth century's most widely publicized confrontation between capital and labor. A major strike of workers started at Andrew Carnegie's Steel plant in Pennsylvania after Carnegie decided to operate the plant on a non-union basis. After the workers initially beat back hired policemen from the Pinkerton Detective Agency in a battle that left a number dead, the PA governor sent in the national guard to reopen the plant on Carnegie's terms. The strikers nevertheless won national sympathy, but the strike was ultimately a failure for the workers, and it demonstrated the enormous power of large corporations during the Gilded Age.
Monopolies
These developed often during the Second Industrial Revolution, often through cutthroat competition, when one company came to dominate an entire industry, which resulted in limited competition and higher prices for consumers.
Frederick Jackson Turner's "Frontier Thesis"
This (University of Wisconsin) historian's 1893 essay argued that the western frontier process had forged the distinctive qualities of American character (individualism) and government (political democracy). Turner portrayed the West as an empty space ("free land") before the coming of white settlers, for this reason and others, his argument has been widely rejected by modern historians.
New York's "Boss" Tweed Ring
This corrupt urban political machine reached into every New York City neighborhood and won support from the city's immigrant poor by fashioning a kind of private welfare system that provided food, fuel, and jobs in hard times while also plundering the city of tens of millions of dollars.
Pro-big business laissez faire
This is the term historians use to describe the role of the national government in the economy during Gilded Age. The government was actively involved in the economy in ways that promoted big business (subsidizing railroads, canals, roads; subsidizing mail; maintaining protective tariffs; subsidizing research and development; forcing Native Americans onto reservations, putting down labor strikes, surveying Western lands and giving it to settlers; pursuing an imperialistic foreign policy for natural resources and markets, establishing protective tariffs, attracting immigrant labor, etc.). But the government was very limited, or "hands-off," in its efforts to protect the interests of workers, consumers, or the environment.
Sherman Anti-Trust Act, 1890
This was the first law to restrict monopolistic trusts and business combinations; extended by the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914.
"The Women's Era" (1890-1920)
Three decades starting from the 1890s, during which women, although still denied the vote, enjoyed larger opportunities than in the past for economic independence (with nearly every state abolishing its coverture laws) and greater roles in public life through a network of women's clubs, temperance associations, and social reform organizations.
Federal Reserve System, 1913
Woodrow Wilson created this powerful public agency (more consistent with TR's New Nationalism than Wilson's New Freedom) consisted of twelve regional banks. They were overseen by a central board appointed by the president and empowered to handle the issuance of currency, aid banks in danger of failing, and influence interest rates so as to promote economic growth. It was welcomed by business leaders as a means of restoring order, but it reflected an expanding federal role in the economy during the Progressive Era.
The Haymarket Square Riot/Affair, 1886
Workers were rallying in a public square in Chicago (this event is named after that public square) to protest the police killings of three workers the day before who were shot while trying to prevent strikebreakers from entering the McCormick factory plant. During the rally, an unknowing person threw a bomb into a crowd killing a policeman. Panicked police opened fire, killing several, and afterwards raided offices of labor and radical groups and arrested their leaders. This event gave employers an opportunity to paint the labor movement as a dangerous and un-American force.