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Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age Section 1: Segregation and Social Tension Section 2: Political and Economic Challenges Section 3:Farmer’s and Populism Standards: 2.1, 2.3, 2.9. 2.12,

Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

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Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age. Section 1: Segregation and Social Tension Section 2: Political and Economic Challenges Section 3:Farmer’s and Populism Standards: 2.1, 2.3, 2.9. 2.12, 9.4. African Americans Lose Freedoms States’ Governments Limit Voting Rights - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Section 1: Segregation and Social TensionSection 2: Political and Economic Challenges

Section 3:Farmer’s and Populism

Standards: 2.1, 2.3, 2.9. 2.12, 9.4

Page 2: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

• African Americans Lose Freedoms• States’ Governments Limit Voting Rights

• Poll tax: people had to pay to register to vote (Georgia $1-2)• Literacy tests: “Understanding” Tests• Had to own property• Grandfather clause: In Louisiana this clause allowed any man to vote if

he had an ancestor on the voting rolls in 1867, which made former slaves, and their decendants ineligible to vote

• 1894: 130,000 Black Registered Voters in Louisiana• 1904: 1,300 Black Registered Voters

• Legalizing Segregation• Segregation: separation of the races• Jim Crow laws: statutes that enforced segregation• Supreme Court overturns the Civil Rights Act of 1875

– No longer a violation to keep people out based solely on color– Plessy v. Ferguson: Court case that upheld “Separate but Equal”

– Racial Violence• Lynching: executions without proper court hearings

– 80% in the South– 70% of the victims were African Americans

Page 3: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Jim Crow and Limited Opportunity

Page 4: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Section 1: The Rise of Segregation• Resistance and Repression

• Sharecroppers: landless farmers who paid in the form of crops to a landlord for supplies, rent, seed, tools and other supplies; were always in debt

– Exodus to Kansas• Exodusters: migrants of African Americans from the rural South to

Kansas

– Forming a Separate Alliance• Colored Farmers’ National Alliance: helped African Americans

economically by setting up cooperatives – Cooperatives: a store where farmers bought products from each other; an

organization that is owned and run by the people who use the services

– Crushing the Populist Revolt• An appeal to racism

• “Black Republicanism” a step back to Reconstruction

Page 5: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Exodusters

Page 6: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

African Americans Oppose InjusticesIda B. Wells:

– Memphis Free Speech– Anti-lynching

» Said it was greed not just racial prejudice that led to the brutal acts and violence

– Mob destroyed printing press of Memphis Free Speech and drove Ida from town

– A Call for Compromise• Booker T. Washington: proposed that African Americans

concentrate on education and economic gains rather than deal with politics

• Atlanta Compromise: Booker T. Washington wanted the African American population to postpone the fight for Civil Rights until they were prepared to full equality.

– A Voice of the Future• W.E.B. Du Bois

– The Souls of Black Folk– Promoting and protecting the voting rights of African Americans was

the only way to reach equality.

Page 7: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. Dubois, Ida B. Wells

Page 8: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Chinese Immigrants Face Discrimination

• 1882: Chinese Exclusion Act: Chinese Immigrants Banned for 10 Years

• Wong Kim Ark v. United States: Supreme Court Upheld 14th Amendment

Page 9: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Mexicans Americans Struggle in the West

• Abuse and Discrimination Undermine Rights

• Courts backed white Americans land claims most of the time

• Las Gorras Blancas: Extremist group who targeted large ranch owners with terror tactics

• Alianza Hispano-Americana: Organization formed to protect Mexican-American Culture

Page 10: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Women Make Gains and Suffer Setbacks

• Susan B. Anthony: Felt betrayed when 14th/15th Amendments did not include women- 1872: Broke law by voting illegally in New York

• Elizabeth Cady Stanton: National Women’s Suffrage Association

• Women’s Christian Temperance Movement: Fought for women’s rights but also wanted to prohibit sale of alcohol (18th Amendment)

Page 11: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

U.S. History I

Chapter 7 Section 2

“Political and Economic Challenges”

2.5, 9.1, 9.3, 9.4

Page 12: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Section 2: Balance of Power Creates Stalemate

• 1877-1897: Presidents win by narrow margins and presidents are weak or corrupt. – Benjamin Harrison: Second President to lose Popular vote but win

Electoral College– Chester Arthur: Took over after James Garfield was assassinated:

Disliked by OWN Republican Party– *Grover Cleveland: Known for his Integrity: 1884 Won: 1888

Lost to Harrison (Electoral College) 1892: Won again (Only one counted TWICE)

• Corruption Plagues National Politics• Joseph Keppler: Political Cartoonist: “The Bosses of the

Senate” Next Slide• Patronage: government jobs go to the supporters of the winning party

in an election. “Spoils System”– The Pendleton Act: Allowed the president to decide which federal

jobs would be filled according to the rules of the Civil Service Commission: All had to take exam to qualify for job.

• Under Pres. Arthur, 14,000 jobs were placed under this program

Page 13: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

• Economic Issues Challenge Nation– Tariff: Tax on Imports– Republicans: Wanted

High Tariffs– Democrats: Wanted

Low Tariffs

• Silver or Gold• Greenbacks retired

after Civil War• Goldbugs: Wanted all

coins made of gold• Silverites: Wanted all

coins made of silver

Page 14: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

Section 3: Farmers and Populism• Unrest in Rural America

• Populism: a political movement founded in the 1890s that mainly represented farmers, favored free coinage of silver, and favored government control of railroads and other big industries

– Falling Prices and Rising Debt

• Greenbacks: U.S. paper money

• Inflation: money loses value, higher prices

• Deflation: lower prices, higher buying power

– Deflation Hurts Farmers• The Crime of ’73: The

decision of the government to stop the minting of silver

Page 15: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

– The Grange Takes Action: Oliver H. Kelley: 1867• Cooperatives: marketing organizations that worked to benefit their members

– The Grange Fails• Didn’t change economic problems of farmers• Railroads fought back by cutting services and refusing to lay more track• Wabash v. Illinois: limited a state’s ability to regulate the railroads, states could

not regulate interstate commerce

• The Farmers’ Alliance• Lampasas County, Texas 1877• Charles Macune

– The Alliance Grows• Kansas• Nebraska• North Dakota• South Dakota• South and Great Plains

– The People’s Party: Populists– The Subtreasury Plan: called for the government to set up warehouses where

farmers could store crops for low-interest loans until prices increased.

Page 16: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

• The Populist Party Demands Reforms• Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890: authorized the U.S.

Treasury to buy 4.5 million ounces of silver a month, put more money into circulation in an attempt to help farmers

– The South Turns to Populism• Many Southern Democrats move to Populist Party

– A Populist for President• James B. Weaver

– Graduated income tax: taxation of higher earnings more heavily

– Government ownership of railroads

– The Panic of 1893: Economic Crisis• Stock Market on Wall Street Crash

• Banks closed

• Economic Depression

Page 17: Chapter 7-Issues of The Gilded Age

• The Election of 1896• William Jennings Bryan

– Supported the minting of silver

– *Also known as prosecutor in the “Scopes Monkey Trial”

– Bryan’s Campaign• 600 speeches in 14 weeks

• Republicans nominate William McKinley as the man who could beat Bryan

– The Front Porch Campaign• William McKinley spoke only at his Canton, Ohio home. Delegates

came to see him at his home.

• Full Dinner Pan

• Unemployment would rise, wages would be cut

– Populism Declines • Depression ends

• Gold in Canada, Alaska, and South Africa increase money supply