Gilded Age and Progressive Era
Gilded Age, 1870 – 1900
- Growing Economy
- Rapid industrialization
- Big business
- Government corruption
- Immigration
- Urbanization
Progressive Era, 1890s – 1920s
- Goals for Progressive Reformers
- Protect social welfare
- Promote moral improvement
- Create economic reform
- Popularized by literature
- Expose inequities, corruption and other problems plaguing society
- Muckrakers – authors who exposed corruption
Ida Tarbell
- Investigative Reporter
- Exposed Standard Oil for unfair practices
- The Business of Being a Woman 1912
- The Ways of Women 1915
Urbanization
- Work drew people into towns and cities
- National pop. doubled between 1860 and 1910
- Urban pop. doubled each decade
Family Unit
- Immigrants identified with their own ethnic group
- Creation of ethnic ghettos
- The condition of these neighborhoods added to anti-immigrant sentiment from WASPs White Anglo Saxon Protestants
Immigrant Girls
- Young unmarried immigrants or the daughters of immigrants
- Factory work, mill work, domestic work
- 3 out of 4 were under 25
Immigrant Women
- Married women rarely took full-time work outside of the home
- They took in piecework or boarders
- By 1900 1 out of 5 urban homes took in boarders
Women’s Christian Temperance Union
- Worked to end the sale and use of alcohol
- The vote would help women pass local laws against alcohol
- National Consumers League
- Consumer power
- Florence Kelly
- Child labor
- Food safety
Child Labor
- Children worked
- Tenement manufacture
- Textile factories
- Mining / quarrying
- Agriculture
Child Labor Movement
- Rise of the middle class
- Changing attitude towards children
- New focus on childhood as a special age
- Education important but not accessible to all children
- Reformers public demonstrations against child labor
National Child Labor Committee
- Founded by Addams, 1907
- Lillian Wald
- Florence Kelly
- Federal child labor law was passed, 1916
Opposition
- Male union members did not want interference between the labor-capital relationship
- Parents
- Wanted children to work
- Families needed the income
- Not all families expected their children attend school
- Business
- Source of abundant source of cheap labor
- Size meant they could fit into small spaces
- Were easy to control / take advantage of
Invisible Labor
- Domestic labor continued for women even when they joined the paid labor force.
- “Invisible work” work that women did that was unrecorded and not included in the census
- This includes work they did for pay at home
Factory Work
- Textile industry
- Assemble shirtwaists
- Insufficient wages
- Long hours
- Unsafe conditions
- Locked doors
- Girls and women provided their own basic materials
Women and Labor Unions
- Men’s unions excluded women from joining
- A threat to male workers
- Thought women’s work to be temporary
- Thought to reduce men’s wages
- Fear of pushing men out of work
- Ideal of domesticity
- Women shouldn’t work
- Although it was necessary for the poor
Labor Strikes
- Women were involved in labor strikes although initially not part of an organized unions
- In time, women formed their own unions
Mary Harris Jones – “Mother Jones”
- Labor Activist
- Worked with Knights of Labor
- Gave inspirational speeches to workers during strikes
- A founder of the Social Democratic Party 1898
- Helped establish the Industrial Workers of the World 1905
- Some quotes
- “I’m not a humanitarian. I’m a hell-raiser”
- “Sit down and read. Educate yourself for the coming conflicts”
- “Reformation, like education, is a journey, not a destination.”
Clara Lemlich, 1886 – 1982
- Factory worker
- Labor activist
- Jewish immigrant from Ukraine
- International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union
Uprising of 20,000
- Great New York Shirtwaist Strike
- Nov 1909 – Feb 1910
- Settled with improved:
- Hours
- Working conditions
- Wages
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
- March 25, 1911
- 145 workers killed
- Brought attention to sweatshop conditions
Protective Laws
- By 1914, 27 states regulated women’s hours
- By 1920, 15 states set minimum wage laws
- Laws did protect women but also limited them in many ways
Accounting Homework
Stuck with a homework question? Find quick answer to Accounting homeworks
Ask Accounting Tutors
Need help understanding a concept? Ask our Accounting tutors
Accounting Exams
Get access to our databanks of Discussion questions and Exam questions
How We Safeguard Your Tutor Quality
All tutors are required to have relevant training and expertise in their specific fields before they are hired. Only qualified and experienced tutors can join our team
All tutors must pass our lengthy tests and complete intensive interview and selection process before they are accepted in our team
Prior to assisting our clients, tutors must complete comprehensive trainings and seminars to ensure they can adequately perform their functions
Interested in becoming a tutor with Online Class Ready?
Share your knowledge and make money doing it
1. Be your own boss
2. Work from home
3. Set your own schedule
History 111
1.