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The Progressive Era: Crash Course US History #27 episode transcript - U.S. History by Crash Course

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The Progressive Era: Crash Course US History #27

From: U.S. History by Crash Course

In which John Green teaches you about the Progressive Era in the United States. In the late 19th and early 20th century in America, there was a sense that things could be improved upon. A sense that reforms should be enacted. A sense that progress should be made. As a result, we got the Progressive Era, which has very little to do with automobile insurance, but little to do with automobiles. All this overlapped with the Gilded Age and is a little confusing, but here we have it. Basically, people were trying to solve some of the social problems that came with the benefits of industrial capitalism. To oversimplify, there was a competition between the corporations' desire to keep wages low and workers' desire to have a decent life. Improving food safety, reducing child labor, and unions were all on the agenda in the Progressive Era. While progress was being made, and people were becoming free, these gains were not equally distributed. Jim Crow laws were put in place in the south, and immigrant rights were restricted as well. So once again on Crash Course, things aren't so simple.

Full Transcript

The Progressive Era Crash Course US History 27

speaker01 00:01:00

Green crash us history and we're about. It who we about t? Where it's half discussions of misogyny and half high contrast images of pizza? Because if so, I can get behind there from the past. Your anachronism is showing your internet was green letters on a black screen.

speaker01 00:25:00

But no, the progressive E was not like Tumblr argue that it did indirectly make Tumblr and therefore Jawa gift sets possible. So that's something. So some of the solutions that progressives came up with to deal with issues of inequality and injustice don't seem terribly progressive today. And also it kind of over lap with the Gilded Age and progressive implies like progress, presumably progress toward freedom and justice, which is hard to argue about an era that involved one of the great restrictions of freedom in American history, prohibition. So maybe we shouldn't call it the progressive air at all. I, Stan, whatever, roll the intro.

speaker01 01:06:00

So if the Gilded Age was the period when American industrial capitalism came into its own and people like Mark Twain began to criticize its associated problems, then the Progressive Era was the age in which people actually tried to solve those problems through individual and group acts.

speaker01 01:20:00

As the economy changed, progressives also had to respond to a rapidly changing political system. The population of the US was growing and its economic power was becoming ever more concentrated. And sometimes progressives responded to this by opening up political participation and sometimes by trying to restrict the vote. The thing is, broad participatory democracy doesn't always result in effective government, he said, sounding like the Chinese National Communist Party, And that tension between wanting to have government for, of and by the people and wanting to have government that's like good at governing kind of define the progressive era and also our era.

speaker01 01:52:00

But progressives who were most concerned with the social problems that revolved around industrial capitalist society. And most of these problems weren't new by 19, but some of the responses were companies and later, corporations had a problem that had been around at least since the 1000 and 880 S. They needed to keep costs down and profits high in a competitive market. And one of the best ways to do this was to keep wages low, hours long, and conditions appalling. Your basic house self situation, just getting house elves didn't get wages. Also, by the end of the 19th century, people started to feel like these large monopolistic industrial combinations.

speaker01 02:24:00

The sole carelle trusts were exerting too much power over people's lives. The 1890s saw federal attempts to deal with these truststfc, the Sherman Antitrust Act, but overall the federal government wasn't where most progressive changes were made.

speaker01 02:36:00

For instance, there was muck raking, a form of journalism in which reporters would find some Mu and mass circulation magazines realized they could make money by publishing exposes of industrial and political abuse. So they did. It's time for the mystery document. I bet it involves muck. The rules here are simple, I guess. The author of the mystery document.

speaker01 02:56:00

I'm either correct or I get shocked that a man so as scrape his finger pushing a truck in the pickle rooms and all the joints in his fingers might be eaten by the acid 1 by one of the butchers and foremen, the beef boners and trimmers and all those who used knives. You could scarcely find a person who had the use of his thumb. Time and time again, the base of it had been slashed to it was a mere lump of flesh against which the man pressed the knife to hold it they would have no nails they had worn them off pulling hides. Wow, well now I am hyper aware of and grateful for my thumbs, they are just in excellent shape. I am so glad, Stan, that I am not a beef boner at one of the meat packing factories ridden about in the jungle by Upton Sinclair, no shock for me, only imagine how long and hard you've worked to get the phrase beef boner into this show and you finally did it. Congratulations, by the way, just a little bit of trivia.

speaker01 03:56:00

The Jungle was the first book I ever read that made me vomit, so that's a review. I don't know if it's positive, but there you go anyway at the time readers of the jungle were more outraged by descriptions of rotten meat than by the treatment of meat packing workers.

speaker01 04:09:00

The jungle led to the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act in 1906. That's pretty cool for Upton Sinclair, although my books have also led to some federal legislation such as the How, which officially declared Hazel Augustus, the nation's OTP.

speaker01 04:23:00

So to be fair, writers have been describing the harshness of industrial capitalism for decades. So muckraking wasn't really that new. But the use of photography for documentation was. Louis hene, for instance, for photograph child laborers in factories and mines, bringing Americans face to face with the more than 2 million children under the age of 15 working for wages. And Heinz photos helped bring about laws that limited child labor, but even more important than the writing and photographs in magazines when it came to improving conditions for workers was Twitter. What's that? There was no Twitter? Still, what is this? So apparently still without Twitter, workers had to organize into unions to get corporate to reduce hours and raise their pay.

speaker01 05:02:00

Also, some employers started to realize on their own that one way to mitigate some of the problems of industrialization was to pay workers better. Like in 1009 14, Henry Ford paid his workers an average of 5 dollars per day on one of at the whereas today I face Dann and Danica three times that, and still they whine. Ford's reasoning was that better paid workers would be better able to afford the model TS that they were making, and indeed Ford's annual output rose from 34000 cars to 730 30000 cars between 1000 and 910 and 1000 and 916, and the price of a Model T dropped from $700 to $316. Still, Henry Ford definitely forgot to be awesome. Sometimes he was anti-Semitic. He used spies in his factory and he named his child Edsel. Also, like most employers at the turn of the century, he was vehl's anti-sunni.

speaker01 05:46:00

So while the AFL was organizing the most privileged industrial workers, another union grew up to advocate for rights for a larger swath of the workforce, especially the immigrants who dominated unskilled labor, the industrial workers of the world. They were also known as the wobbies, and they were founded in 19 oh 5 to advocate for, quote, every wage worker, no matter what his religion, fatherland, or trade, and not, as the name wobbies suggest, just those fans of wibbly wobbly time.

speaker01 06:12:00

The wobby is were radical social. Ultimately they wanted to see capitalism in the state disappear in revolution.

speaker01 06:18:00

Now, most progressives didn't go that far, but some, following the ideas of Henry George, worried that economic progress could produce a dangerous, unequal distribution of wealth that could only be by taxes. But more progressives were influenced by Simon Wright Patton, who prophesied that industrialization would bring about a new civilization where everyone would benefit from the abundance and all the leisure time that all these new labor saving devices could bring. Optimism was partly spurred by the birth of a mass consumption society. I mean, Americans by 1915 could purchase all kinds of new fangled devices, like washing machines or vacuum cleaners, automobiles, record players. It's worth underscoring that all this happened in a couple in 1850, everyone listened to washed their clothes in nearly the same way that people did 10000 years ago, and then boom. And for many progressives, this consumer culture, to quote our old friend Eric foner, became the foundation for a new understanding of freedom, access to the cornucopia of goods made available by modern capitalism. And this idea was encouraged by new advertising that connected goods with freedom, using liberty as a brand name or affixing the Statue of Liberty to a product, by the way, which is made exclusively in the United States of America, the greatest nation on earth ever. That's a lie, of course, but you're allowed to lie in advertising.

speaker01 07:39:00

But in spite of this optimism, many progressives were concerned that industrial capitalism, with its exploitation of labor and concentration of wealth, was limiting rather than increasing freedom, depending on how you do defined freedom. Of course, industrialization created what they referred to as the labor problem. As mechanization, diminished opportunities for skilled workers and the supervised routine of the factory. Ford destroyed autonomy. The scientific workplace management advocated by efficiency expert Frederick W Taylor, required rigid rules and supervision in order to heighten worker productivity. So if you've ever had a job with a defined number of bad break, that's also Taylorism found its way into classrooms And anyone who's ever had to sit in rows for 45 minute periods punctuated by factory style bells, knows that this atmosphere is not particularly conducive to a sense of freedom. Now, this is a little bit confusing because while responding to worker exploitation was part of the progressive movement, so was Taylorism itself, because it was an application of research, observation, and expertise to the vexing problem of how to increase productivity. And this use of scientific experts is another hallmark of the Progressive Era, one that usually found its expression in politics.

speaker01 08:46:00

American progressives, like their counterparts in the green sections of not America, sought government solutions to social problems. Germany, which is somewhere over here, pioneered social legislation with its minimum wage, unemployment insurance and old age pension laws. But the idea that government action could address the problems and insecurities that characterize the modern industrial world also became prominent in the United States. And the notion that an activist government could enhance rather than threaten people's freedom was something new in America. Now, progressives pushing for social legislation tended to have more success at the state and local level, especially in cities, which established public control over gas and water and raise taxes to pay for transportation and public schools, whereas federally, the biggest success was pro, which, you know, not that successful. But anyway, if all that local collectivist investment sounds like socialism, it kind of is, I mean, by 19 9, 12, the socialist party had 150000 members and had elected scores of local officials like Milwaukee mayor emils some urban progressives even pushed to get rid of traditional Democratic forms. All a number of cities were run by commissions of experts or city managers who would be chosen on the basis of some demonstrated expertise or credential than their ability to hand out turkeys at Christmas or find jobs for your nephew's sister's cousin. Progressive editor Walter Whitman argued for applying modern scientific expertise to solve social problems in his 1914 book Drift and Mastery, writing that scientifically trained experts quote could be trusted more fully than ordinary citizens to solve America's deep social problems.

speaker01 10:16:00

This tension between government by experts and increased popular Democratic participation is one of the major contradictions of the Progressive Era. The 17th Amendment allowed for senators to be elected directly by the people rather than by state legislatures, and many states adopted primaries to nominate candidates, again taking power away from political parties and putting it in the hands of voters. And some states, particularly Western ones, like California, adopted aspects of even more direct demand. The initiative which allowed voters to put issues on the ballot, and the referendum, which allows them to vote on laws directly. Unless you think that more democracy is always good, I present you with California. But many progressives want actual policy made by experts who knew what was best for the people, not the people themselves.

speaker01 11:00:00

Despite primaries and direct elections of senators, it's hard to argue that the Progressive Era was a good moment for Democratic participation, since many progressives were only in favor of voting in so far as it was done by white middle class Protestant voters. Alright, let's go to the thought bubble. Progressives limited immigrants participation in the political process through literacy tests and laws requiring people to register to vote. Voter registration was supposedly intended to limit fraud and the power of political machines. Stop me if any of this sounds familiar, but it actually just suppressed voting generally. Voting gradually declined from 80% of male Americans voting in the 1890s to the point where today only about 50% of eligible Americans vote in presidential elections.

speaker01 11:39:00

But an even bigger blow to democracy during the Progressive Era came with the Jim Crow laws passed by legislatures in southern states, which legally segregated the South. First, there was the deliberate disenfranchisement of African Americans. The 15th Amendment made it illegal to deny the right to vote based on race, color, or previous condition of servitors said nothing about the ability to read so many Southern states instituted literacy requirements, Other states added poll taxes requiring people to pay to vote, which effectively disenfranchised large number of African American people who were disproportionately poor. The Supreme Court didn't help. In 1896, it made one of its most famous bad decisions, Plessy v Ferguson, ruling that segregation in public accommodations in Homer plessy's case a railroad car did not violate the 14th Amendment Ins Equal Protection clause as long as black railroad cars were equal to white ones, it was a OK to have duplicate sets of everything, now creating two sets of equal quality of everything would get really expensive. So Southern states didn't actually do it. Black schools, public restrooms, public transportation opportunities, the list goes on and on would definitely be separate and definitely not equal. But now, of course, as we've seen, progressive ideas inspired a variety of responses, both for Taylorism and against it, both for government by experts and for direct democracy.

speaker01 12:55:00

Similarly, in the Progressive Era, just as the Jim Crow laws were being, there were many attempts to improve, improve the lives of African Americans. The towering figure in this movement to uplift black Southerners was Booker T Washington, a former slave who became the head of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, a center for vocational education. And Washington urged southern black people to emphasize skills that could make them successful in the contemporary economy. The idea was that they would earn the respect of white people by demonstrating their usefulness, and everyone would come to respect each other through the recognition of mutual dependence while continuing to live in separate social spheres. Washington's accommodationist stance was not shared by all African Americans. WB Dubois advocated for full civil and political rights for black people and helped to found the NAACP, which urged African Americans to fight for their rights through, quote, persistent men ATS.

speaker01 13:42:00

So I wanted to talk about the Progressive Era today, not only because it shows up on a lot of tests, but because progressives tried to tackle many of the issues that we face today, particularly concerning immigration and economic justice. And they use some of the same methods that we use today, organization, journalistic exposure, and activism. Now, we may use Tumblr or Tea Party forms, but the same concerns motivate us to work together. And just as today, many of their efforts were not successful because of the inherent difficulty in trying to mobilize very different interest in a pluralistic nation, in some ways, their platforms would have been better suited to an America that was less diverse and complex, but it was that very diversity and complexity that gave rise and still gives rise to the urge toward progress in the first place.

speaker01 14:28:00

Thanks for I'll see you next week.

speaker01 14:29:00

Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller. Our script supervisor is Meredith Danko, the associate producer is Danica Johnson, the show is written by my high school history teacher, Raul Meyer, rosiana Rojas and myself, and our graphics team is Thought Cafe every week there's a captioned for the libert, you can suggest captions and comments where you can also ask questions about today's video that will be answered by our team of historians. Thanks for watching, Crash course if you like it, and if you're to credits, you probably do, make sure you're it and we in my hometown don't forget to be awesome. I was more dramatic than it sounded.