Politics in a Gilded Age
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Transcript Politics in a Gilded Age
POLITICS IN A GILDED AGE
“Gilded” means covered with a layer of gold, it also suggests that the
glittering surface covers a core of little real value and is therefore
deceptive.
This era was characterized by:
Economic expansion
Corporate Corruption
Oppression of workers (and minorities)
Political Corruption:
New York’s Tweed Ring (stole millions from city)
Credit Mobilier (railroads paid off Congress)
Whiskey Ring (defrauded millions from feds)
WAS THE GILDED AGE POLITICAL SYSTEM
EFFECTIVE IN MEETING ITS GOALS?
Probably not
Between 1876 and 1892 a political stalemate paralyzed the house,
Senate
Presidents made little effort to mobilize public opinion or exert
executive leadership
Federal Government did not deal with problems created by the
economy’s rapid growth
Local and state governments regulated education, medical care, business,
civil/criminal prosecutions
FEDERAL LEGISLATION
High Tariff (tax on imported goods and services)
Reduced Federal Spending
Withdrew greenbacks (paper money in circulation)
1879-set the gold standard (which limited money in circulation to that
which could be backed by gold in the US treasury
Put banks in control of issuing money
These policies favored big business and hurt Southern and Western
farmers
FEDERAL REFORMS
1883 Civil Service Act
1887 Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)
1890 Sherman Antitrust Act-Tried to prohibit the creation of
monopolies
FREEDOM IN THE GILDED AGE
Theory of Social Darwinism
1859-Darwin’s Origins of Species
Theory of Natural Selection or survival of the fittest
Interpreted as: Evolution was a natural process in human society as in
nature, and governments must not interfere
Deserving vs. Undeserving poor
Modern rich elite vs. primitive poor
WILLIAM GRAHAM SUMNER
“Government existed only to protect the property of man and the
honor of women, not to upset social arrangements decreed by nature.”
p. 664
Government would not end “laissez faire” until FDR came to office
PRINCIPLE OF NEGATIVE FREEDOM
Favored limited government and unrestrained free market
The principle of free labor, which originated as a celebration of the
independent small producer in a society of broad equality and social
harmony was translated into a defense of the unrestrained operations
of the capitalist marketplace (p. 664)
14th Amendment was reinterpreted to defend the “right to labor”
instead of equality for former slaves
Lochner vs. New York voided state law that established a 10 hour day for bakers, said
the law infringed on freedom of contract
LABOR AND THE REPUBLIC
1877-Great Railroad strike, put down by feds
Revealed worker solidarity
Close ties between Republican party and industrialists
Knights of Labor-800,000 members in 1886
Strikes, boycotts, political actions, education, social actions
Membership rapidly grew in the next few decades
See textbook for authors that criticized big business and sympathized with
laborers: Henry George, L. Gronlund, E. Bellamy
These works revealed a “wide spread consciousness that something is radically wrong with
the present organization.”
How would it be possible to protect the freedom of both industrialists and workers?
LAISSAZ FAIRE ECONOMY
Under attack by:
Labor movements
Authors
Preachers
Anarchists
Strikes:
Haymarket Affair, 1886
Homestead Strike, 1892
Coxey’s Army, 1894
Pullman Strike, 1894