Download - Chapter 17
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Chapter 17: Freedom's Boundaries, at Home and Abroad, 1890–1900 JSRCC
HIS 122
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Andrew Carnegie
Carnegie’s steelworks at Homestead Pennsylvania
Andrew Carnegie, who emigrated with his family from his native Scotland at the age of thirteen and was a teenager worked in a Pennsylvania Textile factor
1873, Carnegie set out to establish a “vertically integrated’ steel Company
1900s; he dominate the stee industry and had accumulated a fortune worth hundreds of millions of dollars
The railroad pioneered modern techniques of business organization
By the 1890s, Carnegie dominated the steel industry Vertical integration
Carnegie's life reflected his desire to succeed and his desire to give back to society
Industrial giant
Born in Scotland and immigrated to US in 1848
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Homestead Steel
their steel mills were most profitable and technologically advanced in the world . Workers went on strike because of low pay checks and wages
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Populists
Populist Party
Populists in western states endorsed woman suffrage
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Farmer’s Alliance
Farmer’s Alliance had 1.5 Million members Colored Alliance 1 million members by 1890
Origins and spread
Strategies
Initial cooperative approach; "exchanges"
Turn to "sub treasury plan," political engagement
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Farmer’s Aliance
When
1890
What
Farmer’s Alliance had 1.5 Million members Colored Alliance 1 million members by 1890
Origins and spread
Strategies
Initial cooperative approach; "exchanges"
Turn to "sub treasury plan," political engagement
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Omaha Platform
Adoption of the sub-treasury plan
Free and unlimited coinage of silver
A graduated income tax
Establishment of postal saving banks for safe deposit of earnings
Government ownership and operation of railroads, telephone telegraph and postal system
Tariff reduction
Electoral; reforms including: direct popular election senators, direct primaries the initiative, the referendum, the secret ballot, and limiting the office of the president and vice president each to one term
Omaha Platform of 1892 Increase money supply: gold and silver money
Income tax
Secret ballots
`8 hours’ workday
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Omaha Platform
When 1892
What Electoral; reforms including: direct popular election senators, direct primaries the
initiative, the referendum, the secret ballot, and limiting the office of the president and vice president each to one term
Impact Adoption of the sub-treasury plan
Free and unlimited coinage of silver
A graduated income tax
Establishment of postal saving banks for safe deposit of earnings
Government ownership and operation of railroads, telephone telegraph and postal system
8 hour work day
immigration
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Colored Farmer’s Alliance
1891
Tired to organize a strike if cotton pickers on plantations in South Carolina, Arkansas, and Texas ’actions was violently suppressed by local authorities and landowners, some of them sympathetic to the white Alliance but unwilling to pay higher wages to their own laborers
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Colored Farmer’s Alliance
When
1891
Where
South Carolina, Arkansas, and Texas
What
Tired to organize a strike if cotton pickers on plantations in South Carolina, Arkansas, and Texas ’actions was violently suppressed by local authorities and landowners, some of them sympathetic to the white Alliance but unwilling to pay higher wages to their own laborers
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Pullman
Pullman Strike-1894
Involved the Pullman Palace Car Company and the American Railway Wnion
Injunction issued using the Sherman Antitrust Act
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American Railway Union
150,000 members included both skilled and unskilled railroad laborers, announced that its member would refuse to handle trains with Pullman cars
Boycott crippled national rail services
President Grover Cleveland’s attorney general, Richard Oliney , obtained a federal court injunction ordering the strikers back to work
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Eugene V. Debs
Were jailed for contempt of court for violating the judicial order
The case of In Re Debs, the Supreme Court unanimously confirmed the sentences and approved the use of injunction against striking labor unions
Debs charged that concentrated economic power, now aligned with state and national governments, was attempting to “wrest from the weak” their birthright of freedom
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Coxey’s Army
1894
Band of several hundred unemployed men led by Ohio businessman Jacob Coxey demanding economic relief
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Democrats nominate William Jennings Bryan
Platform called for “Free Silver”
Populists nominated him too
William Jennings Bryan
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William McKinley
Republican
Gold Standard
Using only gold to back all money (worth more)
McKinley wins election
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1879-1880
Migration by some 40,000-60,00o blacks to Kansas to escape the oppressive environment of the New South
Name participants gave to this migration- the Exodus, derived from the biblical account of the Jews escaping slavery in Egypt
including former slave Benjamin “Pap” Singleton, the organizer of a real estate company, distributed flyers and lithographs picturing Kansas as an idyllic land if rural plenty
Most black migrants ended up as unskilled laborers in towns and cities
Kansas Exodus
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Kansas Exodus
When
1879-1880
Where
Kansas
What
African-Americans Migrated to Kansas, seeking political equality, freedom from violence, access to education, and economic opportunity
Migration by some 40,000-60,00o blacks to Kansas to escape the oppressive environment of the New South
Impact
Name participants gave to this migration- the Exodus, derived from the biblical account of the Jews escaping slavery in Egypt
including former slave Benjamin “Pap” Singleton, the organizer of a real estate company, distributed flyers and lithographs picturing Kansas as an idyllic land if rural plenty
Most African- Americans had little alternative but to stay in the region
Most northern employers refused to offer jobs to black
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National Association of Colored Women
1896
Brought together local and regional women’s club to press for both women’s rights and racial uplift
Most female activists emerged from the small urban black middle class
Preached necessity of “respectable” behavior as part and parcel of the struggle for equal rights
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National Association of Colored Women
When
1896
Impact
U.S. Supreme court decision supporting the legality of Jim Crow laws that permitted or required separate but equal facilities for blacks and whites
“Separate but equal" doctrine
Justice Harlan dissent
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Plessy v. Ferguson
1896
U.S. Supreme court decision supporting the legality of Jim Crow laws that permitted or required separate but equal facilities for blacks and whites
“Separate but equal" doctrine
Justice Harlan dissent
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Immigration Restriction League
A group that called for the reduction of immigration by barring the illiterate from entering the United States
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Chinese Exclusion Act
1882
By the mid 1800’s a seething anti-Chinese sentiment among the working class is was developing
Chinese immigrants became scapegoat for economic hardships because of their lower wages and unwillingness to unionize with non-Chinese
Anti-Chinese agitation eventually convinced Congress to pass a national Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882
Preamble whereas in the opinion of the Government of the United states the coming of Chinese laborers to this country endangers the good order of certain localities within the territory thereof:
Be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the united states of American in congress assembled
That from and after the expiration of ninety days next after the passage of this act and until the expiration of ten years next after the passage of this act.
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Booker T. Washington
Booker T. Washington’s widely praised speech at the Atlanta Cotton Exposition that urged blacks to adjust to segregation and abandon agitation for civil and political right
Background on Washington
1895 Atlanta address
Washington approach
Repudiation of claim to full equality
Acceptance of segregation
Emphasis on material self-help, individual advancement, alliance with white employers
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American Federation of Labor
Rise of the AFL, Samuel Gompers
AFL-Gompers approach
Repudiation of broad reform vision, political engagement, direct confrontation with capital
Emphasis on bargaining with employers over wages and conditions; "business unionism"
Narrower ideal of labor solidarity
Concentration on skilled labor sectors
Exclusion of blacks, women, new immigrants
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Women’s Christian Temperance Union
Largest female reform society of the late nineteenth century it moved from opposing sale of liquor to demanding the right to vote for women
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Spanish-American War
1898
Known as the “splendid little war”
Who
Spain vs. America
Where
Philippines, Cuba
Why
Help give freedom to Spain’s colonies
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USS Maine
Battleship that exploded in Havana Harbor on February 15, 1898, resulting in 266 deaths; the American public, assuming that the Spanish had mined the ship, clamored for war, and the Spanish-American War was declared two months later
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Platt Amendment
Amendment to Cuban constitution that reserved the United States� right to intervene in Cuban affairs and forced newly independent Cuba to host American naval bases on the island
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Insular Cases
1901-1904
The supreme court held that the Constitution did not fully apply to the territories recently acquired by the united states—a significant limitation of scope of American freedom
Court declared, must recognize the “fundamental” personal rights of residents of the Philippines and Puerto Rico
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Ida B. Wells
Born slave in Mississippi of 1862. Became a school teacher and an editor of the newspaper Memphis Free Press.She moved to the North because of the white people against her opinions
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Hawaii
Was closely tied to the United States. It was wanted as a naval base. It had American sugar-plantations. It was annexed to the U.S. In 1898
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Carrie Chapman Catt
President of the National American Women Suffrage Association (1890). She suggested voting as well.
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L. Frank Baum
published The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in 1900. It represented the aftermath of the reconstruction