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Progressivism Dbq Essay

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In the early 20th century, a fervent desire to allow the United States to escape from the corrupt and unfair politics of the Gilded Age and to improve life for "the employees in utter ignorance of cleanliness or danger to [their] health" (Document B) emerged. This great desire to reform society became known as Progressivism. Under the leadership of three progressive presidents, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson, the Progressive Era reformers and the federal government brought low and moderate national reform, though these measures often fell short of Progressive ideals.
Roosevelt took the first steps towards reforming American society with his "square deal," although his willingness to work with corporations and trusts …show more content…

To the dismay of both Roosevelt and J.P. Morgan, Taft dissolved the U.S. Steel trust. In addition, Taft set up an income tax under the Sixteenth Amendment, which the Progressives had desired ever since the Populist movement of the 1890s. As time passed, however, Taft began to ally himself with the conservative wing of the Republican Party. His newly-adopted conservatism was evident when he passed the Payne-Aldrich Tariff, which raised tariffs on most U.S. imports. Although Taft led some important reforms, his later conservatism made reform efforts during his presidency fall short of the ideals held by many of the Progressives. Wilson advocated many more reforms than Taft. During his presidency, Wilson reduced tariffs with the Underwood-Simmons Tariff of 1913, strengthened the Sherman Antitrust Act through the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914, which even stated "the labor of a human being is not a commodity or article of commerce" (Document E). This was a great victory for labor, as they were now seen as people rather than working machines. Most importantly, Wilson set up the Federal Reserve System, providing the nation with the first stable, relatively uncorrupt banking system since the fall of the Second Bank of the United States in …show more content…

In addition, Progressive reform societies such as the National Women Suffrage Association convinced Wilson to pass the 19th amendment allowing women to vote. (Although he did this grudgingly, as Document H suggests.) Wilson believed that the "fundamental wrongs of a modern society [could] be easily and quickly righted as a consequence of a few laws," as Herbert Croly puts it in Document F. However, Wilson's vision would be proven wrong. In 1918, the Supreme Court ruled that the child labor laws Wilson had passed were unconstitutional in the case of Hammer v. Dagenhart, as laws regulating child labor were "purely a state authority," thus the laws were "repugnant to the Constitution". (Document G). Despite the antitrust acts, strikes and labor violence continued to be a problem. The Ludlow Massacre, a confrontation between western miners and state militia and the Boston Police Strike of 1919 exemplify that tensions still existed between workers and employers. Finally, the reforms during the Progressive movement did very little to advance the status of African Americans. The Chicago Race Riots of 1919 showed that racial tensions and discrimination were still present in the United States. Despite the fact that African Americans had "fought gladly and to the last drop of blood; for America and her highest ideals" during World War I, they had to return to the "shameful land" of the United States

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