Four urban problems were: a) Impure drinking water b) Morality rates skyrocketed c) Disease d) Poverty and Crime Describe the Social Gospel. The social gospel is the belief that the meaning of Christianity is to be found in changing society, not only in “saving souls”. Some of the groups involved in the Social Gospel were: a) Women’s Christian Temperance Union b) Young Men’s Christina Association c) Salvation Army d) Protestant religious group Education was mandatory for kids ages 7 to 12. Early education reforms included: a) Legislation providing free schooling and compulsory attendance b) Kindergarten was introduced Education was used to “Canadianize” immigrants through: a) Teaching customs b) Assimilated into our new culture c) Teaching values The term “suffrage” is associated with the right to vote. Adelaide Hoodles found Women’s Institute in order to educate rural women. Name four women who led the fight for women’s suffrage. a) Nellie McClung b) Emily Murphy c) Hennietta Edwards d) Emily…
At the start of the 20th century, the United States were experiencing many changes in the ways that their economics and politics operated. After the Civil War, Restoration, and the Gilded Age, the Progressive Era was a time the United States could establish the principles of the country and begin to build what America is today,. With large monopolies running the nation's economy, such as those run by J.P. Morgan, Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Vanderbilt, many people sought Reformation and wanted to fix the problems of the country. The reformers, or Progressives, wanted to fix the corruption in the government, trusts, poor living and working conditions, and morals in the country. They also fought for conservation of forests, and the rights of blacks, women, and immigrants. The Progressives brought reformation to a national level. The efforts they made lasted nearly twenty years, and came with many successes and limitations.…
The progressive era was a social movement that culminated the start of a political movement. The progressive movement was run by “progressives,” such as Jane…
Women worked to improve the social conditions of America by fighting for morality in several areas of society. Jane Adams fought for immigration rights by starting settlement houses, where immigrants could live, they would be assisted in finding jobs, given food etc. In fact, these settlement homes also took in poverty and stricter Americans helped them get back into the mainstream of America. During the time when immigrants were discriminated against, Jane Adams gave them a place to call home in order to show them what America was reall about. Another social reform was Temperance movement. Women from all forms of life, from religious to domestic, fought for prohibition because they believed that alcohol was plaguing the nation, as well as family life. Many groups formed such as Christian Temperance League that put people from bars and begin to pray to stop drinking. Prohibition, the 18th Amendment not on,y helped family life but workers coming home to their families instead of going out to the bars, but it also helped industry, more jobs were kept because men were not getting drunk and missing work, and society as whole was more efficient…
The Gilded age was a time where trusts restraining infrastructures, misuse of laborers, and coverture took place. These parts of the economy proceeded with sufficiently long that the endeavors to alter them lead to the dynamic time. Progressivism but because of gilded age Progressivism was brought on by the plated age since it was made to alter the economy of the overlaid age. The defilement in the overlaid age, for example, the tweed ring leads to progressivism which prompts the dynamic period. Dynamic convictions clarified Defilement Not a productive work environment nobody could be trusted consequently created wastefulness Imposing business models Caused by defilement.…
Another transformation that happened in the Progressive Era was the status of women. In the late 19th century, middle-class women created settlement houses in poor and urban neighborhoods, so they could carry out reform work in the surrounding neighborhoods. As these houses grew and evolved, settlement house workers started lobbying local, state, and national governments to pass reform legislation like minimum wage, workplace safety standards, and sanitation regulations. These settlement houses gave women a setting where they could do sociological research and have meetings, but also provided them with healthcare and childcare services, and even educational classes. Ultimately, settlement house workers were able to convince the governments…
At the turn of the 20th century, the toll that years of injustices took on American minority groups rose to a breaking point. The plethora of new technology which arrived post-civil war led to many unaddressed socioeconomic issues (“Progressive Movement.”), which caused many discontent individuals to unite to form malcontent groups. Known as the Progressive Era, the first 20 or so years of the century consisted of movements led primarily by working class citizens, african-americans, and women. The various organizations they formed had a “wide range of positions and goals” (“Progressive Movement.”), but were generally united in their desire for obtaining their inalienable rights. Among the leaders of these groups was Margaret Sanger, an…
Between the 1890s and World War One, reform efforts started taking place by the progressives. The progressives were not a single unified group and even had some contradicting goals. They were middle class urban dwellers and some were women. The progressives wanted to end prostitution, Americanize immigrants, antitrust legislation created, women’s suffrage, and the start of prohibition. An example of a group of progressive women who wanted to start prohibition is The Women’s Christian Temperance Union. This group was lead by Francis Willard. The goals of the Women’s Christian Temperance union were to lobby for federal aid for education, free school lunches, unions for workers, an eight-hour workday, work relief for the poor, municipal sanitation and boards of health, national transportation, strong anti-rape laws, protections against child abuse and of course prohibition. The root of Willard's argument for female suffrage was based on the platform of "Home Protection", which Willard described as "the movement...the object of which is to secure for all women above the age of twenty-one years the ballot as one means for the protection of their homes from the devastation caused by the legalized traffic in strong drink."[1] These "devastations" were the violent acts against women committed by…
By 1900, one out of five woman worked, and woman working became more popular in the cities. Many of the leading progressive reformers were actually woman. Most had graduated from the new Woman’s…
One of the largest and most well known Progressive reforms was women's suffrage. In the late 1800s women became involved in political issues such as the temperance movement by…
Women became leaders in a range of social and political movements for 1890 to 1920. Progressive reformers wanted to make politics better by improving corruption, improve the life of individuals, and increase government intervention to help protect people. In the Progressive Era the society faced poverty, poor health, and violence. Also, workers were abused…
Following the Reconstruction, several groups of people, most prominently farmers, had expressed growing discontent at the state of affairs. Beginning with the Panic of 1873, which had taken a major toll on the economy of the nation by severely restricting the accessibility of credit in the form of gold, and with the discrimination of railroad companies against farmers, these populations had sought after social and political reformations. However, not all of them had possessed the necessary wealth, power, or esteem to do so - this had come about as a direct result of the principles comprising social Darwinism, a phenomenon which, at its core, separates the population into sectors of prosperity, power, and perception by conglomerates and the…
This was unacceptable in the eyes of many including: Young Women's Christian Association, the National Consumers' League, professional associations, trade unions, and female reformers. Women stood up for themselves and were able to accomplish many things during the Progressive Era. Women and support groups fought for several rights and…
The Progressive Era lasted from the 1890s to the 1920s focusing on many different issues. During the Progressive Era women played a key part in trying to make changes in their political rights and making advancements in progressivism. “Equal Rights” was not what it seemed to be, women of course had their freedom but they necessarily didn't have the freedom to vote like that of men.…
The Reformers attempted to reform local politics by creating Settlement Houses; Settlement houses…