THE AMERICAN NATION Eleventh EditionTHE AMERICAN NATIONEleventh Edition: THE AMERICAN NATION Eleventh Edition THE AMERICAN NATION Eleventh Edition
BEGINNINGS: BEGINNINGS Passage to Alaska
Hunters moved north in Asia in search of large mammals
Around 12,000 B.C., hunters walk across Bering Strait into North America
Hunters arrived at the Great Plains and find lush grasslands and millions of large mammals
Slide3: The Demise of the Big Mammals
Clovis hunters develop long spears and stone blades for more effective hunting
The animal slaughter begins
Some histoians debate the role of the Clovis hunters in killing these mammals
Slide4: The Archaic Period: A World Without Big Mammals, 9000 B.C.-- 1000 B.C.
Absence of big mammals forces people to find new sources of food, clothing and shelter
The Archaic Period lasts for several hundred human generations
Bands of Archaic people migrated in search of food according to season
Some plant cultivation beings around 2500 B.C. The First Sedentary Communities, 1000 B.C.
Sedentary communities developed in different places at different times
Slide5: Poverty Point, Mississippi: an important early sedentary community
Egalitarian social structure
Hopewell Mounds developed in Ohio and Illinois.
Corn Transforms the Southwest
The Aztec city of Teotihuacán: population near 100,000, paved roads, complex housing system
Gradual domestication of corn
importance of corn in culture
corn growing moves north to Mexican desert
Slide6: The Diffusion of Corn
Corn moved slowly through North America because of weather and labor demands of the crop
Hunting and gathering peoples slowly learned the necessity of agricultural labor
Population Growth After 800 A.D.
Corn stimulated population growth by improving physical health
Increased population caused people to clear more land, which in turn allowed for higher population
Trade system evolves
Slide7: Cahokia: The Hub of Mississippian Culture
By 1000 A.D., Cahokia had become a major center of trade, religion and politics
Vast and complex system of mounds and buildings
Sharp class divisions were present at Cohokja
The Collapse of Urban Centers
By 1200 A.D. most of the urban areas across North America were losing their populations
Why? Ecological disasters, land abuse, crop failure all contributed to lack of adequate food supply
Slide8: Many corn-growing tribes also began a long period of warfare with each other
American Beginnings in Eurasia and Africa
The domestication of a variety of crops (wheat, oats, peas, olives, etc.) and animals spread through African and Eurasia
Disease wrought havoc on Eurasian populations
Slide9: Europe in Ferment
Growing population put pressure on resources of land which in turn caused political unrest
Shortage of tillable land created a large, wandering peasant class
Invention of movable type created communication revolution
By the 15th century, Europeans were sharply divided along class and education lines and wholly cut-off for the worlds across the Atlantic Ocean
ALIEN ENCOUNTERS: EUROPE IN THE AMERICAS: ALIEN ENCOUNTERS: EUROPE IN THE AMERICAS Columbus and the Discovery of America
Christopher Columbus reached the West Indies on October 12, 1492
by the fifteenth century, western Europeans discover direct routes to the East
Prince Henry of Portugal sponsored improvements in navigation and voyages of exploration
Slide11: Spain’s American Empire
in 1493, Pope divided the non-Christian world between Spain and Portugal
Portugal concentrated on Africa and Brasil
Spain concentrated on the Caribbean and Americas
The Indian and the European
European technological superiority, particularly in instruments of war, provided the tools for domination
Slide12: Relativity of Cultural Values
Europeans regarded as heathens because the did not worship the Christian God
most Indians were deeply religious
some Europeans believed Indians were minions of Satan, unworthy of Christianity
some, such as Spanish friars attempted to convert them
Indians exploited the land as Europeans did
Slide13: fished, hunted, & modified vegetation and wildlife
different approaches to land and government led to conflict
even in warfare, the two cultures differed
Indians fought to display valor, avenge insult, or to acquire captives
Europeans fought with the intent to obliterate the enemy
Slide14: Disease and Population Losses
Europeans brought with them diseases for which Indians had no immunities, particularly smallpox and measles
these diseases devastated Indian populations
Spain’s European Rivals
Spain dominated exploration of the Americas during 16th century due to its internal stability
but corruption over gold and silver began to erode this stability and the disruption of the Catholic church undermined Spanish power
Slide15: The Protestant Reformation
the sale of indulgences and the luxurious life-styles of popes led to a challenge by reformers such as Martin Luther and John Calvin
in England, Henry VIII’s search for a male heir led him to split from Rome when the Pope refused him a divorce
Slide16: English Beginnings in America
Queen Elizabeth supported the explorations of English joint-stock companies and encouraged privateers, such as Sir Francis Drake, to plunder Spanish merchant shipping
she supported colonization of New World
in 1587Sir Walter Raleigh settled Roanoke Island
after the Spanish Armada was destroyed, Spain could not stop English colonization of New World
Slide17: The Settlement of Virginia
London Company established first permanent English settlement in America at Jamestown in 1607
half the settlers died during first winter because of mismanagement, ignorance of environment, and scarcity of people skilled in manual labor and agriculture
London Company encouraged useless pursuits such as searching for gold rather than building a settlement
Slide18: settlement survived in part because Captain John Smith recognized the importance of building houses and raising food
aid from Native Americans
settlers’ realization that they must produce their own food and the introduction of tobacco as a cash crop saved the colony
James I revoked the company’s charter in 1624, and Virginia became a royal colony
Slide19: “Purifying” the Church of England
Under Elizabeth I, the Church of England became the official church
Elizabeth I’s “middle way”
Catholics who could not reconcile themselves left the country
others practiced their faith in private
other sects of Protestantism formed
Slide20: Puritans who objected to the rich vestments, the use of candles, and the use of music in services; Puritans’ belief in predestination also set them apart from the Anglican church
Some Puritans, later called Congregationalists, also favored autonomy for individual churches
Others, called Presbyterians, favored an organization that emanated up from the churches rather than down from the top
Puritan fears that James I leaned towards Catholicism further alienated them from the Anglican church
Slide21: Bradford and Plymouth Colony
English Separatists set sail from Plymouth, England, on the Mayflower to settle near the northern boundary of Virginia
since they were outside jurisdiction of London Company, they drew up the Mayflower Compact
a mutually agreed upon covenant that established a set of political rules
they elected William Bradford their first governor
Slide22: Winthrop and Massachusetts Bay Colony
a group of Puritans formed the Massachusetts Bay Company
obtained a grant to the area between the Charles and Merrimack rivers
they founded Boston in 1630
elected John Winthrop governor
founders established an elected legislature
voters and members of the legislature had to be members of the church
Under Charles I, Puritans were persecuted in England, and the Great Migration of Puritans to Massachusetts Bay took place in the 1630s
Slide23: Troublemakers
Several groups dissented from the Massachusetts Bay colony
Roger Williams opposed alliance of church and civil government and championed the fair treatment of Indians
Banished from the colony, he founded the town of Providence and later established the colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantation
Slide24: Anne Hutchinson preached that those possessed of saving grace were exempt from rules of good behavior
General Court charged Hutchinson with defaming the clergy, brought her to trial, and banished her
Hutchinson and her followers left Massachusetts for Rhode Island in 1637
Slide25: Other New England Colonies
Congregations from Massachusetts settled in the Connecticut River valley
a group headed by Reverend Thomas Hooker founded Hartford in 1836
their instrument of government, the Fundamental Orders
did not limit voting to church members
Slide26: French and Dutch Settlements
England was not alone in challenging Spain's dominance in the New World.
French planted colonies in the West Indies and, through the explorations of Cartier and Champlain, laid claim to much of the Saint Lawrence River area
Dutch also established themselves in the Caribbean and founded the colony of New Netherland in the Hudson Valley
Slide27: Maryland and the Carolinas
in 17th century, English colonization shifted to proprietary efforts
proprietors hoped to obtain profit and political power
Maryland was one of the first proprietary colonies
established under a grant to the Calvert family
Lord Baltimore hoped not only to profit but to create a refuge for Catholics
Slide28: Catholics remained a minority in the colony, and Baltimore agreed to the Toleration Act
guaranteed freedom of religion to all Christians
in what is now known as the Carolinas, proprietors, with the help of John Locke, drafted a plan of government called Fundamental Constitutions
two separate societies emerged in Carolina
north was poorer and more primitive
Charleston colony to the south developed an economy based on trade in fur and on the export of foodstuffs
Slide29: The Middle Colonies
British eventually ousted the Dutch from New Amsterdam, which became New York
Quakers settled in New Jersey and Pennsylvania and there they drafted an extremely liberal constitution that guaranteed settlers freedom of conscience
William Penn, proprietor of Pennsylvania, treated the Indians fairly and permitted freedom of worship to all who believed in God; Penn’s ideas were more paternalistic than democratic
Slide30: Indians and Europeans as “Americanizers”
relationship between Native Americans and Europeans best characterized as interactive
Indians taught colonists how to grow food, what to wear, and new forms of transportation
Native Americans adopted European technology (especially weapons), clothing, and alcohol
out of the interaction between cultures came something new and distinctively American
AMERICAN SOCIETY IN THE MAKING: AMERICAN SOCIETY IN THE MAKING What Is an American?
Americans came from a variety of backgrounds
although they never completely abandoned their various heritages, they became different from their relatives who remained in Old World
Even the most rebellious seldom intended to create an entirely new civilization, but physical separation and a new environment led to different patterns of development
Slide32: Spanish Settlements in New Mexico and Florida
Franciscan friars shaped life in Spanish North America
Franciscans established strings of mission settlements along the upper reaches of the Rio Grande, in northern Florida, and along the coastal regions of present-day Georgia and South Carolina
friars instructed thousands of Indians in the rudiments of Catholic faith and taught them European agricultural techniques
Slide33: Franciscans exacted heavy price in labor from Indians
Indians built and maintained missions, tilled fields, and served friars; this treatment led to rebellions in many of the missions
although most rebellions were isolated and easily repressed
in 1680, the Pueblo Indians combined under a religious leader named Pope, razed the town of Santa Fe, and pushed Spaniards back to El Paso
by the 1690s, Spanish had regained control
Slide34: The Chesapeake Colonies
southern colonies of English North America consisted of three regions: the Chesapeake Bay, the “low country” of the Carolinas, and the “back country” extending into the Appalachians
Not until the eighteenth century would common features prompt people to think of this as a single region
Slide35: although Virginia grew in decade after it became royal colony, death rate remained high
newcomers underwent a period of “seasoning,” or illness; those who survived developed immunities to the diseases of the region
life expectancy remained short, resulting in a society where living grandparents were a rarity
more often than not, before children reached maturity they had lost at least one parent; loss of both parents was not uncommon
still there were opportunities for advancement, particularly through growing tobacco
Slide36: The Lure of Land
agriculture remained the mainstay of life in the Chesapeake and in the South
London Company saw little profit from agriculture, so it used land, its only asset, to pay off debts and to raise capital
availability of land attracted landless Europeans, many of whom could not afford passage
Slide37: thus a system of indentured servitude evolved to bring those with land and money together with those who wished to go to America
indentured servants worked for a period of years in exchange for their passage
those who survived the seasoning period and an often harsh period of servitude became free
many became landowners, but the best lands already belonged to large planters
ever-increasing need for labor and expense of meeting that demand with indentured servants led colonists to look for another solution
Slide38: “Solving” the Labor Shortage: Slavery
first African blacks to arrive in America landed in Jamestown in 1619
by about 1640, some, although certainly not all, blacks were slaves
racial prejudice and the institution of slavery interacted to bring about complete degradation of Africans in English colonies
although it spread throughout the colonies, slavery grew slowly at first
most colonists preferred white servants
Slide39: in the 1670s, improving economic conditions in England led to a slow flow of new servants
at the same time, slaves became more readily available
for a variety of reasons, indentured servitude gave way to slavery as a solution to the colonies’ need for labor
Slide40: Prosperity in a Pipe: Tobacco
unlike wheat, tobacco required no expensive plows to clear the land; it could be cultivated with a hoe
the crop required extensive human labor, but it produced a high yield and returned a high profit
the Tidewater region had many navigable rivers, and the planters spread along their banks
Slide41: the Chesapeake did not develop towns and roads because commerce traveled along the rivers
tobacco rapidly exhausted the soil, which worked to the advantage of larger agricultural units that could leave some fields to lie fallow
Slide42: Bacon’s Rebellion
distance from centers of authority made settlers in the Chesapeake difficult to subject to authority
a split developed between the ruling faction in Jamestown under Sir William Berkeley and settlers at the western edge of settlement
when Berkeley refused to authorize an expedition against Indians who had been attacking outlying settlements, western planters took matters into their own hands
Slide43: under Nathaniel Bacon, the westerners demonstrated a willingness to attack not only Indians but the governor as well
Bacon and his followers marched on Jamestown and forced Berkeley to grant them authority for further attacks on Indians
later they burned Jamestown
not long after, Bacon became ill with a “violent flux” and died
an English squadron then arrived and restored order
Slide44: The Carolinas
like their fellow colonists to the north, English and Scotch-Irish settlers in the Carolinas relied on agriculture
tobacco flourished in North Carolina
the introduction of Madagascar rice at the end of the 17th century provided South Carolina with a cash crop
in the 1740s, indigo was introduced into South Carolina
Slide45: the production of cash crops meant that the southern colonies could obtain manufactured goods and various luxuries from Europe
despite the obvious benefits of the situation, it prevented the development of a diversified economy in the southern colonies
slavery emerged early on as the dominant form of labor on South Carolina’s plantations
Blacks constituted a majority of the population in South Carolina
Slide46: each colony promulgated regulations governing behavior of blacks, which increased in severity with the density of the black population
slaves came from different places and performed different tasks; there was no single “slave experience”
more skilled a slave, more difficult it became to prevent that slave from running away
few runaways became rebels
a few isolated reformers, mostly Quakers, opposed slavery
Slide47: even some Quakers owned slaves, and racial prejudice was common even among Quakers
Home and Family in the Colonial South
except for the most affluent planters, life in the southern colonies was primitive and uncomfortable
houses were small; furniture and utensils were sparse and crudely made
clothing for most was rough and, because soap was expensive, usually unwashed
Slide48: women only rarely worked in the fields, but their duties included tending animals, making butter and cheese, pickling and preserving, spinning, and sewing
women also cared for their own and often orphan children as well
education in the South was less widespread than in New England
in the early 18th century only a handful of planters achieved real affluence
these large planters controlled politics
Slide49: the spread-out population made it difficult to support churches
in spite of its standing as the official religion with the support of public funds, the Anglican church never became a powerful force in the South
in this society, social events such as births, marriages, and funerals were great occasions
Slide50: Georgia and the Back Country
this region included the Great Valley of Virginia, the Piedmont, and Georgia
Georgia was founded by a group of philanthropists in London, who conceived the idea of taking honest persons imprisoned for debt and resettling them in the New World
Slide51: the idealistic regulations governing the colony swiftly fell into disuse
Georgia developed an economy similar to South Carolina’s
settlers began to settle farther inland
in North Carolina, a dispute over representation in the assembly led to a pitched battle between frontiersmen and troops dispatched by the assembly
the Regulators, as the frontiersmen called themselves, were crushed and their leaders executed
Slide52: Puritan New England
New England enjoyed several advantages over the southern colonies, for example:
Boston had a dependable supply of water
the terrain and climate made for a much healthier habitat.
Slide53: The Puritan Family
the Puritans brought more supplies with them than other colonists, which helped ease their adjustment
in addition to supplies, Puritans brought a plan for an ordered society
Central to that plan was a covenant, an agreement to bind individuals to the group
Puritan families were nuclear and patriarchal
Slide54: Puritan Women and Children
mortality among infants and children was lower in New England than in the Chesapeake
few families escaped the loss of a child
the outbreak of the English Civil War ended the Great Migration
thereafter, high birthrate and low mortality rate accounted primarily for growth of the colony
as a result, the population of New England was more evenly distributed by age and sex than in colonies to the south
Slide55: Women’s childbearing years extended over two decades
social standards required that husbands rule over wives and that parents rule over children
children were expected to take on duties of adults at an early age, and liberal use of corporal punishment ensured strict discipline
older children might be sent to live with another family or apprenticed to a craftsman
Slide56: Visible Saints and Others
Puritans believed that church membership should be a joint decision between the would-be member and the church
obvious sinners were rejected out of hand
with the Great Migration, large numbers of applicants enabled the churches to restrict membership to “visible saints”
Slide57: a decade later, new conditions led to a reconsideration
fewer than half of all adults in New England were church members by the 1650s, and many young people refused to submit to the zealous scrutiny necessary for membership
growing numbers of nonmembers led to problems:
could they be compelled to attend churches?
could they be taxed but not allowed to vote?
could they be baptized?
Slide58: if baptism were restricted to church members and a majority of the community did not qualify, the majority of people would be living in a state of original sin
the solution was the Half-Way Covenant, which provided for limited membership for any applicant not known to be a sinner who would accept the church covenant
Slide59: Democracies Without Democrats
the colonies were largely left to govern themselves
in spite of seemingly repressive laws passed by the governments of Massachusetts and Connecticut, primary responsibility for maintaining order rested with the towns of the region
Slide60: Dedham: A “Typical” Town
in 1635, the heads of thirty households from Watertown established a new town at Dedham
they set up a form of representative government and a church; structure of government permitted all male adults who subscribed to the covenant to vote
but was colonial New England democratic?
most male New Englanders could vote
Slide61: they tended to elect men from the wealthiest; most established levels of the community
many voters did not bother to vote, because many offices were uncontested
Slide62: The Dominion of New England
during Restoration, the English government sought to bring colonies under effective royal control
Massachusetts’s charter was annulled, and it became a royal colony
Edmund Andros, a professional soldier, became governor
after the Glorious Revolution, colonists overthrew Andros
Slide63: Salem Bewitched
Salem Village, a rural settlement near Salem, petitioned General Court for a church of their own
after a few years, the General Court granted their request
a series of preachers failed to unite feuding factions of village
Samuel Parris became minister in 1689 and proved equally unable to unite the village
church voted to dismiss him
Slide64: Parris’s daughters and Ann Putnam began to behave in ways their elders diagnosed as bewitched
they accused three socially marginal women of witchcraft
the three were brought before a court, but the accusations spread and worked up the social ladder
a group of ministers intervened
Governor Phips adjourned the court
19 persons had been hanged and one more pressed to death by heavy stones
Slide65: the episode also revealed some anxieties Puritan men felt toward women
many Puritans believed that Satan used the allure of female sexuality to work his will
in addition, many accused witches were widows of high status or older women who owned property; such women potentially subverted the patriarchal authorities of church and state
Slide66: Higher Education in New England
demand for educated ministers outstripped supply in the 1630s
Massachusetts General Court appropriated money for “a schoole or colledge”
John Harvard left double the appropriation and his library to what became Harvard
Massachusetts and Connecticut passed laws requiring towns of any size to establish grammar schools
Slide67: as a result, New England had a remarkably high rate of literacy
several ministers in Connecticut became disenchanted with the growing religious toleration at Harvard and founded a new college named after its first benefactor, Elihu Yale
Slide68: Prosperity Undermines Puritanism
colonists in New England turned early to farming
they also grazed cattle, sheep, and hogs
game and firewood abounded in the forests, as did fish in the Atlantic
yet a short growing season and rocky, hilly terrain meant that farmers produced little surplus
Slide69: the products New Englanders grew were available in Europe
thus, while fed and sheltered, New Englanders had little surplus and nowhere to sell it
more pious settlers welcomed the situation as protection against becoming too worldly
Massachusetts had laws against usury and profiteering
Slide70: A Merchant’s World
early efforts to produce manufactured goods in New England failed
fur seemed a likely item to trade for English manufactured goods, but fur-bearing animals retreated away from settlements
fish provided merchants with a marketable commodity
this was the start of the “triangular trade”
trade became the driving force of the New England economy
Slide71: Portsmouth, Salem, Boston, Newport, and New Haven grew rapidly
Boston became the third most populous city in the British Empire
The Middle Colonies
Middle Colonies, located between New England and Chesapeake, contained elements of the distinctive features of colonies to north and south
Slide72: Economic Basis for the Middle Colonies
New York and Pennsylvania contained ethnically and religiously diverse populations
Scandinavian and Dutch settlers outnumbered the English in New Jersey and Delaware
Pennsylvania drew German Quakers, Mennonites, and Moravians
Scotch-Irish settlers came to Pennsylvania in the early eighteenth century
Slide73: “The Best Poor Man’s Country”
land was easy to obtain in Pennsylvania
ordinary New Yorkers could become landowners fairly readily
Philadelphia grew more rapidly than Boston and New York
due largely to navigable rivers that penetrated deep into the back country
by the middle of the 18th century, Philadelphia became the largest city in English America
not only did merchants do well, but artisans often left substantial estates
Slide74: The Politics of Diversity
the Middle Colonies developed a more sophisticated political culture than either New England or the southern colonies
All of the Middle Colonies had popularly elected representative assemblies
New Yorkers and Pennsylvanians were less likely than southern colonists to defer to the landed gentry
Slide75: Leisler’s Rebellion shaped New York politics for two decades
political divisions led to the trial for seditious libel of John Peter Zenger, the editor of an opposition newspaper
the Zenger trial established truth as a defense against libel, which was contrary to English common law
Pennsylvania was split between the proprietary party and a Quaker party
Slide76: settlers in western Pennsylvania, resentful of eastern indifference to the threat of Indian raids
the Paxton boys slaughtered an Indian village and marched on the capital
Ben Franklin talked them out of attacking the town
Slide77: Rebellious Women
Anne Hutchinson incurred the wrath of Puritan leaders by criticizing their teachings and challenging them in public debate
the authority of husbands differed over time and place
the general trend was away from a rigidly hierarchical family
Slide78: nevertheless, women found themselves increasingly relegated to the margins of political life during the 18th century
by the middle of the century, the general expectation was that white women would confine themselves to matters relating to the home
AMERICA IN THE BRITISH EMPIRE: AMERICA IN THE BRITISH EMPIRE The British Colonial System
British colonies were founded independently by people with differing backgrounds and motivations
each British colony had its own form of government, and British government did not regard colonies as a unit
English political and legal institutions took hold throughout colonies
Slide80: Crown left colonists to make own laws pertaining to local matters
King’s Privy Council responsible for formulating colonial policy
Parliamentary legislation applied to the colonies
occasionally, British authorities attempted to create a more cohesive and efficient colonial system
late 17th century, British policy was to transform proprietary and corporate colonies into royal colonies
Slide81: Board of Trade took over management of colonial affairs in 1696
failure to establish a centralized colonial government contributed to the development of independent governments and eventually to the United States’ federal system
Mercantilism
mercantilism described to a set of policies designed to make a country self-sufficient while selling more goods abroad than it imported
if colonies lacked gold and silver, they could provide raw materials and markets for the mother country
Slide82: The Navigation Acts
commerce was essential to mercantilism
in the 1650s, Parliament responded to Dutch preeminence in shipping with Navigation Acts
reserved the entire trade of colonies to English ships and required that captain and 3/4 of crew be English
acts also limited export of certain enumerated items
acts were designed to stimulate British industry and trade and to restrict and shape, but not to destroy, infant colonial industries
Slide83: The Effects of Mercantilism
Mercantilist policy benefited both England and the colonies
England’s interests prevailed when conflicts arose
the inefficiency of English administration lessened the impact of mercantilist regulations
when regulations became burdensome, the colonists simply ignored them; and England was inclined to look the other way
Slide84: The Great Awakening
people in colonies began to recognize common interests and a common character
by about 1750, the word “American” had entered the language
one common experience was the Great Awakening, a wave of religious enthusiasm
two ministers, Theodore Frelinghuysen (a Calvinist) and William Tennent (a Presbyterian), arrived in the 1720s
they sought to instill evangelical zeal they witnessed among Pietists and Methodists in Europe
Slide85: colonial tours of George Whitefield, a powerful orator, sparked much religious enthusiasm
Whitefield did not deny the doctrine of predestination
preached of a God receptive to good intentions
many denominations split between the “Old Lights” or “Old Sides,” who supported more traditional approaches, and the “New Lights” or “New Sides,” who embraced revivalism
the better educated and more affluent members of a congregation tended to support traditional arrangements
Slide86: The Rise and Fall of Jonathan Edwards
Jonathan Edwards was the most famous native-born revivalist of the Great Awakening
took over his grandfather’s church in Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1727
Edwards’s grandfather, Solomon Stoddard, practiced a policy of “open enrollment”
Edwards set out to ignite a spiritual revival
sermons warned in graphic language of the Hell awaiting unconverted
Slide87: Edwards’s approach upset some of his parishioners, and in 1749 they voted unanimously to dismiss him
a reaction against religious enthusiasm set in by the early 1750s
although it caused divisions, the Great Awakening also fostered religious toleration
the Awakening was also the first truly national event in American history
Slide88: The Enlightenment in America
the Enlightenment had an enormous impact on America
the founders of colonies were contemporaries of scientists such as Galileo, Descartes, and Newton
they who provided a new understanding of the natural world
earth, heavens, humans, and animals all seemed part of a great machine, which God had set in motion
Slide89: through observation and reason, humans might come to understand the laws of nature
faith in these ideas produced the Age of Reason
ideas of European thinkers reached America with startling speed
the writings of John Locke and other political theorists found a receptive audience
ideas that in Europe were discussed only by an intellectual elite became almost commonplace in the colonies
Slide90: Colonial Scientific Achievements
colonials such as John Bartram, Cadwallader Colden, and Benjamin Franklin contributed to the accumulation of scientific knowledge
the theoretical contributions of American thinkers and scientists were modest, but involvement in the intellectual affairs of Europe provided yet another common experience for colonials
Slide91: Other People’s Wars
European nations competed fiercely for markets and raw materials
war became a constant in the 17th and 18th centuries
European powers vied for allies among the Native American tribes and raided settlements of opposing powers
colonies paid heavily for these European conflicts
Slide92: in addition to battle casualties, frontier settlers were killed in raids; and taxes went up to pay for the wars
these conflicts served to increase bad feelings between settlers in French and English colonies
more important Europe’s colonial wars inevitably generated some friction between England and its North American colonies
Slide93: The Great War for the Empire
England and France possessed competing colonial empires in North America
in 1750s, the two powers came into direct conflict
the result was another colonial war; but this one spread from the colonies to Europe
English effort was badly mismanaged
not until William Pitt took over the British war effort did England’s fortunes improve
Slide94: Pitt recognized the potential value of North America and poured British forces and money into the war
he also promoted talented young officers such as James Wolfe
British took Montreal in 1760, and France abandoned Canada to the British
British also captured French and Spanish possessions in the Pacific, in the West Indies, and in India
Slide95: Spain got back Philippines and Cuba, in exchange for which it ceded Florida to Great Britain
the victory in North America was won by British troops and British gold
the British colonies contributed relatively little money, and the performance of colonial troops was uneven
the defeat of the French seemed to tie the colonies still more closely to England
Slide96: The Peace of Paris
under terms of Treaty of Paris, signed in 1763, France gave up virtually all claims to North America
given extent of British victories in battle, terms of treaty were moderate
England returned captured French possessions in Caribbean, Africa, and India
Slide97: Putting the Empire Right
Britain now controlled a larger empire, which would be much more expensive to maintain
Pitt’s expenditures for the war had doubled Britain’s national debt
British people were taxed to the limit
American colonies now required a more extensive system of administration
issues such as western expansion and relations with the Indians needed to be resolved
many in England resented the growing wealth of the colonists
Slide98: Tightening Imperial Controls
British attempts to deal with problems resulting from victory in great war for empire led to American Revolution
after great war, British decided to exert greater control over American colonies
Britain allowed the colonies a great degree of freedom, thus colonists resented new restrictions on freedom
English colonies increased their pressure on the Indians
Slide99: British stationed 15 regiments along the frontier
as much to protect the Indians from the settlers as the settlers from the Indians
a new British policy prohibited settlement across the Appalachian divide
this created further resentment among colonists, who planed development of Ohio Valley
Slide100: The Sugar Act
Americans were outraged by British attempts to raise money in America to help defray cost of administering the colonies
Sugar Act placed tariffs on sugar, coffee, wines, and other imported goods
violators were tried before British naval officers in vice-admiralty courts
Colonists considered the duties to be taxation without representation
the law came at bad time because economic boom created by war ended with war
Slide101: American Colonists Demand Rights
British dismissed protests over Sugar Act
under concept of “virtual representation,” every member of Parliament stood for interests of entire empire
Slide102: The Stamp Act: The Pot Set to Boiling
Stamp Act placed stiff excise taxes on all kinds of printed matter
Sugar Act had related to Parliament’s uncontested power to control colonial trade
Stamp Act was a direct tax
Virginia's House of Burgesses took lead in opposing new tax
irregular organizations, known as the Sons of Liberty, staged direct-action protests against act
sometimes protests took form of mob violence
Slide103: Rioters or Rebels?
rioting took on a social and a political character
if colonial elite did not disapprove of rioting, looting associated with protests did alarm them
mass of people were property owners and had some say in political decisions; they had no desire to overthrow established order
Stamp Act hurt business of lawyers, merchants, and newspaper editors people who greatly influenced public opinion
Slide104: greatest concern was Britain’s rejection of the principle of no taxation without representation
as British subjects, colonists claimed “the rights of Englishmen”
passage of Quartering Act further convinced Americans that actions of Parliament threatened to deprive them of those rights
Slide105: Taxation or Tyranny?
English people were recognized as the freest people in the world which was attributed their freedom to balanced government
actually, balance between the Crown, the House of Lords, and the House of Commons never really existed
to Americans, actions of Parliament threatened to disrupt balance
British leaders believed that the time had come to assert royal authority
Slide106: colonies were no longer entirely dependent on England
British leaders were not ready to deal with Americans as equals
Americans refused to use the stamps and boycotted British goods. The Stamp Act was repealed in March 1766
Slide107: The Declaratory Act
Parliament passed the Declaratory Act
asserted that Parliament could enact any law it wished with respect to the colonies
Declaratory Act revealed the extent to which British and American views of the system had drifted apart
Slide108: The Townshend Duties
Townshend Acts (1767) placed levies on glass, lead, paints, paper, and tea imported colonists responded with new boycott of British goods
leaders of resistance ranged from moderates, John Dickinson, to revolutionaries, Samuel Adams
British responded by dissolving Massachusetts legislature, and by transferring two regiments from frontier to Boston
Slide109: The Boston Massacre
March 5, 1770, rioters began throwing snowballs at British soldiers
crowd grew hostile, the panicky troops responded by firing on it
five Bostonians lay dead or dying
John Adams volunteered his legal services to the soldiers
British also relented; Townshend duties except tax on tea were repealed in April 1770; a tenuous truce lasted for two years
Slide110: The Pot Spills Over
trouble erupted again when British patrol boat ran aground in Narragansett Bay in 1772
Slide111: The Tea Act Crisis
in 1773, Parliament agreed to remit British tax on tea; Townshend tax was retained
Americans regarded measure as a diabolical attempt to trick them into paying the tax on tea
public indignation was so great that authorities in New York and Philadelphia ordered ships carrying tea to return to England
December 16, 1773, colonists disguised as Indians dumped tea in harbor; England received news of the Boston Tea Party with great indignation
Slide112: From Resistance to Revolution
Parliament responded to Boston Tea Party by passing Coercive Acts in spring of 1774
acts weakened colonial legislatures and judiciary and closed Boston harbor until citizens paid for tea
also known as the Intolerable Acts
First Continental Congress met at Philadelphia September 1774
John Adams rejected any right of Parliament to legislate for colonies
Congress passed a declaration condemning Britain’s actions since 1763, a resolution that the people take arms to defend their rights
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World”
January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control colonies
April, British troops moved to seize arms the Patriots had stored at Concord
group of Minute Men met British at Lexington; exchange of gunfire left eight Americans dead
British moved on to Concord and destroyed provisions stored there
colonies rallied quickly to support Massachusetts
Slide114: The Second Continental Congress
met in Philadelphia on May 10
more radical than First Congress
organized forces gathering around Boston into a Continental Army and appointed George Washington commander in chief
Slide115: The Battle of Bunker Hill
Patriots set up defenses on Bunker Hill and Breed’s Hill
two assaults by Redcoats failed to dislodge colonists from Breed’s Hill; British carried hill on third try
battle cost British more than twice the number of colonial casualties
George III proclaimed the colonies to be “in open rebellion”
Slide116: Continental Congress appeased moderates by offering one last plea to king and then adopted “Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms”
Congress also proceeded to order an attack on Canada and set up committees to seek foreign aid and to buy munitions abroad
Slide117: The Great Declaration
two events in January 1776 pushed the colonies toward final break: British decision to use Hessian mercenaries and publication of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense
Paine called for complete independence and attacked idea of monarchy
Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced a resolution declaring independence from England on June 7, 1776
Slide118: Congress did not act at once; it appointed committee to draft justification for Lee’s resolution
Congress adopted justification, written largely by Thomas Jefferson, on July 4
first part of Jefferson’s Declaration described theory on which Americans based revolt and creation of a republican government
second part consisted of indictment of George III’s treatment of colonies
Slide119: 1776: The Balance of Forces
Americans had several advantages in fight for independence: familiar terrain; England had to bring forces across Atlantic; England’s highly professional army was ill-directed; and public opinion in England was divided
Britain, however, possessed superior resources: much larger population, large stocks of war materials, industrial capacity, mastery of the seas, a trained and experienced army, and a highly centralized government
Slide120: moreover, Congress had to create new political institutions during a war
Loyalists
America was far from united
Loyalists, or Tories, constituted a significant segment of colonial population
Slide121: Early British Victories
General Howe defeated an inexperienced American army at Battle of Long Island and again Manhattan Island
Washington surprised Hessian mercenaries by crossing Delaware River on Christmas night, 1776, and attacking at daybreak
second victory at Princeton on January 3, 1777, further bolstered American morale
Slide122: Saratoga and the French Alliance
British planned elaborate three-pronged attack to crush colonial resistance
Howe defeated Washington at the Battle of Brandywine and moved unopposed into Philadelphia
Howe’s adventures doomed the British campaign
American forces dealt General Burgoyne a devastating defeat at Saratoga
Slide123: France had been giving aid to the Americans,
United States and France negotiated a commercial treaty and a treaty of alliance
recognizing danger of that alliance, Lord North proposed giving in on all issues that had roused colonies to opposition
Parliament delayed until after Congress ratified treaties with France
war broke out between France and Britain
Washington settled army at Valley Forge for winter; army’s supply system collapsed, and men endured a winter of incredible hardship
Slide124: The War Moves South
May 1778, British replaced General Howe with General Clinton
Washington and Clinton fought at Monmouth Court House; Americans held the field and could claim victory
British focused their attention on South
hoped sea power and supposed presence of a large number of Tories would bring them victory
Slide125: British took Savannah and Charleston
American forces won victories at King’s Mountain, Cowpens, and Guilford Court House
Cornwallis withdrew to Wilmington, North Carolina, where he could rely on the British fleet for support
Slide126: Victory at Yorktown
Clinton ordered Cornwallis to establish a base at Yorktown
French fleet cut off Cornwallis’s supply and escape routes
Cornwallis asked for terms on October 17, 1781
Slide127: The Peace of Paris
despite promise to France not to make a separate treaty, American negotiators successfully played off competing European interests and obtained a highly favorable treaty with Britain
Britain recognized American independence, established generous boundaries, withdrew its troops from American soil, and granted fishing rights
Britain preferred a weak English-speaking nation control Mississippi Valley
Slide128: Forming a National Government
Congress was a legislative body, not a complete government
Various rivalries, particularly over claims to western lands, delayed the adoption of the Articles of Confederation
Articles created a loose union
each state retained sovereignty, and the central government lacked the authority to impose taxes or to enforce the powers it possessed
Slide129: Financing the War
Congress and states shared financial burden of war
Congress supported Continental Army, while states raised militias
states $5.8 million in cash and more in supplies
Congress also raised large sums by borrowing
Congress and states issued paper money, which caused currency to fall in value
Robert Morris became superintendent of finance and restored stability to currency
Slide130: State Republican Governments
most states framed new constitutions even before Declaration of Independence
new charters provided for elected legislature, an executive, and a system of courts
generally, power of executive and courts was limited; power resided in the legislature
various systems of government explicitly rejected British concept of virtual representation
Slide131: majority of state constitutions contained bills of rights protecting civil liberties against all branches of government
idea of drafting written structures of government derived from dissatisfaction with vagueness of unwritten British constitution and represented one of the most important innovations of Revolutionary era
Slide132: Social Reform
many states used the occasion of constitution making to introduce social and political reforms, such as legislative reapportionment and the abolition of primogeniture, entail, and quitrents
Jefferson’s Statute of Religious Liberty was enacted in 1786 to separated church and state in Virginia
Slide133: number of states moved tentatively against slavery and all northern states provided for gradual abolition of slavery
most southern states removed restrictions on manumission
Americans were hostile to granting of titles and other privileges based on birth
more people of middling wealth won election to legislatures than in colonial times
Slide134: Effects of the Revolution on Women
late 18th century saw trend toward increasing legal rights for women
for example, it became somewhat less difficult for women to obtain divorces
war did increase the influence of women
with many men in army, women managed farms, shops, and businesses
Slide135: revolutionary rhetoric stressed equality and liberty, and some women applied it to their own condition
revolution also provided greater educational opportunities for women
republican experiment required educated women, because women were responsible for raising well-educated citizens
Slide136: Growth of a National Spirit
nationalist sentiment came from variety of sources:
common sacrifices in war
common experiences during war
service in Continental Army
exposure to soldiers from other colonies
legislators traveling to different parts of country and listening to people
maintaining 13 separate postal systems or 13 sets of diplomatic representatives was simply not practical
Slide137: The Great Land Ordinances
Land Ordinance of 1785 provided for surveying western territories
Northwest Ordinance of 1787 established governments for west and provided mechanism for admission of territories as states
Slide138: National Heroes
Revolution provided Americans with their first national heroes
Benjamin Franklin was well known before Revolution, and his support of Patriot cause added to his fame
George Washington became “chief human symbol” of Revolution and of a common Americanism
Slide139: A National Culture
political break with Britain accentuated an already developing trend toward social and intellectual independence
Anglican church in America became the Protestant Episcopal church
Dutch and German Reformed churches severed ties with Europe
American Catholics gained their own bishop
textbooks of Noah Webster emphasized American forms and usage
THE FEDERALIST ERA: NATIONALISM TRIUMPHANT: THE FEDERALIST ERA: NATIONALISM TRIUMPHANT Border Problems
interstate conflicts immediately reasserted themselves at the end of war
government faced struggle to assert control over territory granted by Treaty of Paris
Great Britain removed forces from 13 states but refused to surrender its outposts on frontier in
southwest, Spanish closed Mississippi River to American commerce
Slide141: Foreign Trade
Americans could trade with European powers, and a Far Eastern trade developed
British import duties reduced American exports to England and its colonies in western hemisphere
British merchants poured inexpensive manufactured goods into United States
Congress could not pay the nation’s debts; states raised taxes to pay their debts; and the entire economy was cash poor
Slide142: states experienced hard times from 1784 to 1786
retaliatory tariffs on British goods would have dealt with some of problems, but Confederation lacked authority to levy them
a move to grant Congress power to tax imports failed when it did not gain unanimous consent of states
Slide143: The Specter of Inflation
Continental Congress and states paid for Revolutionary War by printing paper money, which resulted in inflation
some states attempted to restore credit by raising taxes and restricting new issues of money
powerful deflationary effect had its greatest impact on debtors, particularly farmers
debtors clamored for the printing of more paper money; some states yielded to pressure resulting in wild inflation
Slide144: Daniel Shays’s “Little Rebellion”
determined to pay off state debt and maintain sound currency, Massachusetts legislature levied heavy taxes resulting deflation leading to foreclosures
in 1786, mobs in western part of state began to stop foreclosures by forcibly preventing courts from holding sessions
Daniel Shays led a march on Springfield preventing state supreme court from meeting
state sent troops, and the “rebels” were routed
Slide145: To Philadelphia and the Constitution
in 1786, delegates from five states met in Annapolis to discuss common problems
Alexander Hamilton, who advocated a strong central government, proposed calling another convention for following year to consider constitutional reform
meeting approved Hamilton’s suggestion, and all states except Rhode Island sent delegates to convention in Philadelphia
Slide146: The Great Convention
remarkably talented group of delegates assembled in Philadelphia to revise Articles of Confederation
framers agreed on basic principles
should be a federal system with independent state governments and a national government
government should be republican in nature, drawing its authority from the people
no group within society should dominate
framers were suspicious of power and sought to protect interests of minorities
Slide147: The Compromises that Produced the Constitution
after voting to establish a national government, delegates faced two problems: what powers should government be granted and who would control it?
first question generated relatively little disagreement
delegates granted central government right to levy taxes, to regulate interstate and foreign commerce, and to raise and maintain an army and navy
second question proved more difficult
Slide148: larger states argued for representation based on population; smaller states wanted equal representation for each state
Great Compromise created a lower house based on population and an upper house in which each state had two representatives
issue of slavery occasioned another struggle and another compromise
three-fifths of slaves were counted for purposes of taxation and representation, and Congress was prohibited from outlawing slave trade until 1808
Slide149: creation of a powerful president was most radical departure from past practice
only faith in Washington and assumption that he would be first president enabled delegates to go so far
delegates also established a third branch of government; the judiciary
founders worried that powerful new government might be misused, so they created a system of “checks and balances” to limit authority of any one branch
Slide150: Ratifying the Constitution
framers provided their handiwork be ratified by special state conventions
this gave people a voice and bypassed state legislatures
new Constitution would take effect when nine states ratified it
Federalists (supporters of the Constitution) and Antifederalists (their opponents) vied for support in state conventions
Federalists were better organized than their opponents
Slide151: the Federalist Papers brilliantly explained and defended proposed new system
most states ratified Constitution readily once its backers agreed to add amendments guaranteeing civil liberties of people against encroachments by national government
Slide152: Washington as President
first electoral college made George Washington its unanimous choice
Washington was a strong, firm, dignified, conscientious, but cautious, president
he was acutely aware that his actions would establish precedent, so he meticulously honored the separation of powers
Washington picked his advisors based on competence and made a practice of calling his department heads together for general advice
Slide153: Congress Under Way
first Congress created various departments and federal judiciary
it also passed first ten amendments to Constitution known as the Bill of Rights
Slide154: Hamilton and Financial Reform
one of its first acts, Congress imposed a tariff on foreign imports
Congress delegated to Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of Treasury
he proved to be farsighted economic planner
He suggested that debt be funded at par and that United States assume remaining state debts
Congress went along because it had no choice
Southern states stood to lose, since they had already paid off most of their debts
Slide155: Madison and Jefferson agreed to support Hamilton’s plan in exchange for latter’s support for plan to locate permanent national capital on banks of Potomac River
Hamilton also proposed a national bank
Congress passed a bill creating the bank, but Washington hesitated to sign it
Jefferson argued that Constitution did not specifically authorize Congress to charter corporations or engage in banking
Hamilton countered that bank fell within “implied powers” of Congress
Slide156: Washington accepted Hamilton’s reasoning, and the bank became an immediate success
Hamilton hoped to change an agricultural nation into one with a complex, self-sufficient economy
toward that end, his Report on Manufactures issued a bold call for economic planning
a majority in Congress would not go so far, although many of the specific tariffs Hamilton recommended did become law
Slide157: The Ohio Country: A Dark and Bloody Ground
western issues continued to plague new country
British continued to occupy their forts, and western Indians resisted settlers encroaching on their hunting grounds
Westerners believed that federal government was ignoring their interests
Compounding their discontent was imposition of a federal excise tax on whiskey
Resistance to tax was especially intense in western Pennsylvania
Slide158: Revolution in France
French Revolution and subsequent European wars affected America
Alliance of 1778 obligated United States to defend French possessions in Americas
Washington issued a proclamation of neutrality
France sent Edmond Genet to United States to seek support
Genet licensed American vessels as privateers and commissioned Americans to mount military expeditions against British and Spanish possessions in North America
Slide159: Washington requested that France recall Genet
European war increased demand for American products, but it also led both France and Britain to attack American shipping
larger British fleet caused more damage
American resentment flared, but Washington attempted to negotiate a settlement with British
Slide160: Federalists and Republicans: The Rise of Political Parties
Washington enjoyed universal admiration, and his position as head of government limited partisanship
his principal advisors, Jefferson and Hamilton, disagreed on fundamental issues, and they became leaders around whom political parties coalesced
Jefferson’s opposition to Hamilton’s Bank of the United States became the first seriously divisive issue
Slide161: disagreement over French Revolution and American policy toward France widened split between parties
Jefferson and the Republicans supported France; Federalists backed the British
Slide162: 1794: Crisis and Resolution
several events in 1794 brought partisan conflict to a peak
attempts to collect whiskey tax in Pennsylvania resulted in violence
in July, 7,000 rebels converged on Pittsburgh and threatened to burn the town
the sight of federal artillery and liberal dispensation of whiskey turned them away
Washington’s large army marched westward, when he arrived, the rebels had dispersed
Slide163: Jay’s Treaty
Washington sent John Jay to negotiate treaty with England
American indebtedness to England and fear of Franco-American alliance inclined British to reach accommodation with United States
Jay obtained only one major concession; British agreed to evacuate posts in west
they rejected Jay’s attempts to gain recognition of neutral rights on high seas
Slide164: Jay agreed that America would not impose discriminatory duties on British goods
America would pay pre-Revolutionary debts
terms of treaty raised opposition at home
Slide165: 1795: All’s Well That Ends Well
Washington decided not to repudiate the Jay Treaty, and Senate ratified it in 1795
Jay’s Treaty became basis for regularization of relations with Britain
Spain, fearing an Anglo-American alliance, offered United States free navigation of Mississippi and right of deposit at New Orleans
this treaty, known as Pinckney’s Treaty, also settled disputed boundary between Spanish Florida and United States
Slide166: Treaty of Greenville, signed with Indians after Battle of Fallen Timbers, opened west to settlement
Before decade ended, Kentucky and Tennessee became states, and Mississippi and Indiana territories were organized
Slide167: Washington’s Farewell
settlement of western and European problems did not end partisan conflict at home
at end of his second term, Washington decided to retire and in his farewell address, he warned against partisanship at home and permanent alliances abroad
The Election of 1796
Washington’s retirement opened gates for partisan conflict
Jefferson represented Republicans
Slide168: the Federalists considered Hamilton too controversial, so they nominated John Adams for president and Thomas Pinckney for vice-president
Adams won, but partisan bickering split Federalist vote for vice-president, so Jefferson received second highest total and therefore became vice-president
Federalists quarrel among themselves, and Adams was also unable to unite bickering party
Slide169: The XYZ Affair
in retaliation for Jay Treaty, the French attacked American shipping
Adams sent commission to France to negotiate settlement
mission collapsed when 3 French agents (X, Y, and Z) demanded a bribe before making deal; the commissioners refused
Adams released the commissioners’ report, which embarrassed the Republicans
Slide170: Congress, controlled by the Federalists, abrogated the alliance with France and began preparations for war
although a declaration of war would have been immensely popular, Adams contented himself with a buildup of armed forces
Slide171: The Alien and Sedition Acts
Federalists feared that Republicans would side with France if war broke out
refugees from both sides of European war flocked to United States
Federalists pushed a series of repressive measures through Congress in 1798
Naturalization Act increased residence requirement for citizenship
Slide172: Alien Enemies Act empowered president to arrest or expel aliens in time of declared war
Sedition Act made it a crime “to impede operation of any law,” to instigate insurrection, or to publish “false, scandalous and malicious” criticism of government officials
Federalists attempted to silence leading Republican newspapers
Slide173: The Kentucky and Virginia Resolves
Jefferson did not object to state sedition laws, but believed that Alien and Sedition Acts violated First Amendment; he and Madison drew up resolutions arguing that laws were unconstitutional
Jefferson further argued states could declare a law of Congress unconstitutional
neither Virginia nor Kentucky tried to implement these resolves; Jefferson and Madison were in fact launching Jefferson’s campaign for president
Slide174: Taken aback by American reaction, France offered negotiations, and Adams accepted offer
Adams resisted strong pressure from his party for war
Negotiators signed the Convention of 1800, which abrogated Franco-American treaties of 1778
JEFFERSONIAN DEMOCRACY: JEFFERSONIAN DEMOCRACY The Federalist Contribution
Republicans won election of 1800 because electors did not distinguish between president and vice-president
Jefferson and Burr received same number of votes; this threw the election into House of Representatives
Hamilton, who exerted considerable influence on Federalist members of Congress, threw his support to Jefferson; Jefferson won presidency
Slide176: Federalists’ major contribution consisted of principles and governmental structure set forth in Constitution
Federalists established a sound financial system and encouraged development of a diversified economy
in foreign affairs, they sought accommodation with Britain and took a cautious approach toward French Revolution
Jefferson called his victory in 1800 a revolution, but real significance of election was that control of government changed hands in a democratic and orderly fashion
Slide177: Thomas Jefferson: Political Theorist
Jefferson derived political philosophy from ideas of Enlightenment and experience as southern planter
although he believed humans were inherently selfish, he also believed individuals in society could be improved by the application of reason
unlike Hamilton, he did not believe that wealthy had monopoly on talent
viewed all government as constant threat to individual freedom
Slide178: he relied on democracy and protection of personal liberties
Jefferson distrusted Hamilton’s admiration for British society, his plans to centralize American government, and his efforts to aid commerce and development
Slide179: Jefferson as President
he repealed Naturalization Act and allowed Alien and Sedition Acts to expire, but he made no attempt to destroy Hamilton’s financial structure
Slide180: Jefferson’s Attack on the Judiciary
as Adams’s administration expired, Congress passed the Judiciary Act of 1801, which created a number of new federal judgeships
Adams filled new judgeships with Federalists
upon gaining power, Republicans immediately repealed the act
moreover, not all of the commissions Adams signed had been delivered
Jefferson ordered undelivered commissions withheld
Slide181: one of Adams,s appointees, Marbury, petitioned Supreme Court to force new secretary of state, Madison, to give him his judicial commission
in Marbury v. Madison, Chief Justice John Marshall decided that a clause contained in Judiciary Act violated Constitution
even though Marbury had a right to the commission, the Supreme Court could not force Madison to give it to him
case established the power of federal judiciary to invalidate federal laws
Slide182: the Marbury case made Jefferson even more determined to strike at the Federalist-dominated courts
after obtaining impeachment and conviction of a clearly unfit district judge, John Pickering, Jefferson went after Samuel Chase, an associate justice of the Supreme Court
House of Representatives impeached Chase, Senate found that his actions did not constitute “high crimes and misdemeanors”
Slide183: The Barbary Pirates
Jefferson refused to continue policy of paying tribute to North African pirates to prevent seizure of American ships, making United States the only maritime nation to refuse to pay protection money to Barbary pirates
the pasha of Tripoli declared war on United States in 1801, and Jefferson dispatched a naval squadron to Mediterranean
although squadron failed to defeat pirates, the pasha agreed to a treaty more favorable to United States
Slide184: The Louisiana Purchase
Jefferson acquired Louisiana Territory, region between Mississippi River and Rocky Mountains, from France in 1803 for $15 million
Spain had given territory back to France in 1800
before relinquishing area, Spain revoked right of deposit at New Orleans
Jefferson made an attempt to buy New Orleans
Slide185: Napoleon’s need for money to finance his war in Europe and the failure of French to put down a slave revolt in Haiti led emperor to sell all of Louisiana
Jefferson had doubts about constitutionality of Louisiana Purchase but decided to go ahead anyway
with support of some prominent Federalists, treaty won ratification in Senate
Slide186: Federalism Discredited
west and south supported Jefferson, and his popularity was growing in north
with addition of new states in west, New England’s power declined still further
small group of die-hard Federalists in New England began to consider secession, even among Federalists, this group had little support
their attempt to gain control of New York’s state government failed
as a result of campaign, Burr challenged Hamilton to a duel and killed him
Slide187: Lewis and Clark
in 1803, Jefferson sent an expedition under Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to explore Louisiana Territory
expedition left St. Louis in Spring of 1804 and traveled up Missouri River
they eventually made it to Pacific coast and returned to St. Louis in 1806
Lewis and Clark located passes through Rocky Mountains, established friendly relations with several Indian tribes, and brought back a wealth of information about territory and inhabitants
Slide188: Jeffersonian Democracy
Jefferson’s policies and talents created Jeffersonian democracy
he proved that a democrat could maintain a stable administration
by accepting Federalist ideas on public finance, he contributed to prosperity among all classes, all of this eroded support for Federalists
Domestic Concerns Vex Jefferson
Despite his popular support, factionalism within his party disrupted Jefferson’s second term
Slide189: John Randolph, a fanatic supporter of states’ rights, resented Jefferson’s accommodations to Federalist policies
Randolph first clashed with Jefferson over a bill providing federal relief to victims of the Yazoo land fraud
Slide190: The Burr Conspiracy
Jefferson’s political assaults on Burr contributed to the latter’s decision to flirt with treason
his intent was to carve out a western empire for himself
Burr’s expedition failed when a confederate betrayed him, Burr was captured and charged with treason
Marshall’s narrow construction of treason led to Burr’s acquittal and increased animosity between Jefferson and Chief Justice
Slide191: Napoleon and the British
until 1806, the war between Britain and France stimulated the American economy; Americans provided goods and vessels to the combatants
Napoleon resorted to economic warfare against Britain, British retaliated with the Orders in Council, which blockaded most continental ports and barred foreign vessels from them unless vessels first stopped at a British port and paid customs duties
Slide192: Napoleon then declared that any vessel submitting to British rules became English property and therefore subject to seizure
when war first broke out, the danger of capture convinced merchant vessels from belligerent countries to abandon colonial trade, which fell into American hands
Americans tried to circumvent restrictions by transshipping and reexporting colonial goods as American goods carried on American ships, British declared such practices illegal, and thereby threatened American prosperity
Slide193: The Impressment Controversy
British practice of impressment threatened America’s rights as a neutral country
Jefferson and his administration conceded Britain right to impress British subjects from American ships
British also impressed naturalized Americans and even native-born American citizens
Jefferson believed in standing up for one’s rights but hated the thought of war
Slide194: moreover, as a southerner, he was probably less sensitive to New England’s interests than he might have been
in addition, the tiny navy Jefferson maintained could do little to enforce American rights on high seas
Slide195: The Embargo Act
when the British fired on an American warship and impressed three deserters from it, Jefferson ordered all British warships out of American waters and Congress passed the Embargo Act, which prohibited all exports
Jefferson hoped embargo would put economic pressure on Britain and France, but act severely damaged American economy
American merchants resented act and frequently violated it
Slide196: in Jefferson’s last months as president, Congress repealed the Embargo Act and replaced it with the Non-Intercourse Act, which forbade trade only with Britain and France and authorized president to end the boycott against either power if it stopped violating rights of Americans
NATIONAL GROWING PAINS: NATIONAL GROWING PAINS Madison in Power
in 1808, Republicans won both houses of Congress, and Madison won presidency
Non-Intercourse Act not only proved difficult to enforce, but failed to prevent British from continuing to seize American ships
Macon’s Bill No. 2 removed all restrictions on trade with Britain and France
Slide198: when Napoleon announced he would revoke his restrictions if Britain agreed to abandon its own restrictive policies, Madison reapplied the non-intercourse policy to Britain
France continued to seize American ships
Britain refused to modify the Orders in Council until French actually lifted theirs
Madison refused to admit that he had been deceived by Napoleon and concluded that, unless Britain ended its restrictions, the United States must declare war
Slide199: Tecumseh and the Prophet
growing numbers of American settlers steadily drove Indians out of the Ohio Valley
Tecumseh, a Shawnee chief, attempted to unite all tribes east of Mississippi into a great confederation
his brother, the Prophet, added force of a moral crusade; he argued that Indians must give up white ways and preserve their Indian culture
in 1811, a military force led by General William Henry Harrison engaged Indians at Battle of Tippecanoe and destroyed the hopes of Tecumseh’s federation
Slide200: Depression and Land Hunger
some westerners attributed low prices received for agricultural goods to loss of foreign markets and British depredations against American shipping
American commercial restrictions and an inadequate transportation system actually contributed more significantly to agricultural depression
Western expansionism fed war fever; westerners wanted Canada and Florida
United States took western part of Florida without opposition from Spain
Slide201: Opponents of War
maritime interests in east feared war against Britain
Napoleon posed genuine and serious threat to United States, and going to war with Britain would aid Napoleon
by 1812 conditions in England made change in British maritime policy likely
growing effectiveness of Napoleon’s Continental System caused depression in Britain
Slide202: British manufacturers, who blamed hard times on loss of American markets, urged the repeal of Orders in Council
gradually, British government moved to suspend Orders, but not until Congress had declared war on Great Britain in 1812
Slide203: The War of 1812
the War of 1812 was poorly planned and managed
U.S. Navy could not challenge Britain’s mastery of Atlantic
Canada appeared to be Britain’s weak spot, but an American invasion failed because of poor leadership and unwillingness of some American militiamen to leave their own soil
soon Americans were fighting to keep British from taking American territory
Slide204: Captain Oliver Hazard Perry defeated British fleet and gained control of Lake Erie
this made British control of Detroit untenable, and when they fell back, Harrison defeated British at Thames River
British captured Fort Niagara and burned Buffalo
Slide205: Britain Assumes the Offensive
war against Napoleon occupied British until 1814
after Napoleon’s defeat, British put more effort into war with America
British undertook a three-pronged attack
central British force did take Washington and burn most public buildings
they moved up the Chesapeake, American forces stopped them at Baltimore
Slide206: “The Star Spangled Banner”
an American civilian, Francis Scott Key, observed bombardment of Fort McHenry from deck of a British ship, where he was being held prisoner
when he saw American flag still flying over fort the next morning, he wrote the words to “Star-Spangled Banner,” which was later set to music and eventually became national anthem
the burning of Washington shocked many Americans, and thousands came forward to enlist
Slide207: The Treaty of Ghent
in 1814, the British and Americans met at Ghent to discuss terms for peace
British prolonged negotiations in the hope that their offensive would give them upper hand
news of British defeat at Plattsburg forced British to modify their demands
they eventually agreed to American demands for the status quo ante bellum
negotiators signed Treaty of Ghent on December 24, 1814
Slide208: The Hartford Convention
news of treaty had not yet reached America when a group of New England Federalists met to protest the war and plan for a convention to revise Constitution
their opposition to war made them unpopular in rest of country, which in turn encouraged extremists in New England to talk of secession
moderate Federalists controlled Hartford Convention
Slide209: their resolutions argued that states had right to interpose their authority to protect themselves from violations of Constitution
they also proposed a series of amendments to Constitution
news of the Treaty of Ghent discredited Federalists, who had predicted a British victory
Slide210: The Battle of New Orleans
news of the Treaty of Ghent failed to arrive in time to prevent Battle of New Orleans
Americans, commanded by General Andrew Jackson, successfully withstood British assault and inflicted heavy casualties on British while suffering only minor losses themselves
Slide211: Victory Weakens the Federalists
America’s ability to hold off British convinced European powers that the United States and its republican form of government were there to stay
the war cost United States relatively few casualties and little economic loss
among the big losers were Native Americans and the Federalist party
as Europe settled down to what would be a century of relative peace, major foreign threats to United States ended, and commerce revived and European immigration to America resumed
Slide212: Anglo-American Rapprochement
American trade had become more important to British economy, and in 1815 the two countries signed a commercial agreement ending discriminatory duties and making other adjustments favorable to trade
in 1817, in Rush-Bagot Agreement, the two countries agreed to demilitarize Great Lakes
Slide213: in 1818, a joint Anglo-American commission settled disputed boundary between U.S. and Canada by designating 49th parallel as northern boundary of Louisiana Territory from Lake of the Woods to Rocky Mountains
they also agreed to joint control of Oregon country for ten years
Slide214: The Transcontinental Treaty
Jackson’s pursuit of Indians into Spanish Florida and his capture of two Spanish forts raised Spanish fears that America would eventually seize all of Florida
Spain was even more concerned about security of its holdings in northern Mexico and was ready to give up Florida in exchange for an agreement protecting its Mexican empire
Slide215: Spain had to accept a boundary to Louisiana Territory that followed Sabine, Red, and Arkansas rivers to Continental Divide and 42nd parallel to Pacific
the U.S. obtained Florida for $5 million, to be paid to Americans with claims against Spain
Slide216: The Monroe Doctrine
fears of Russian expansion in the Western Hemisphere prompted Monroe and secretary of state, John Quincy Adams, to warn: “The American continents are no longer subjects for any new European colonial establishments”
Russia agreed to abandon territorial claims south of 54 degrees, 40 minutes and to remove restrictions on foreign shipping
Slide217: a greater threat came when several European powers decided to try to restore Spain’s empire
neither British nor Americans wanted to see a restoration of Spanish empire
Britain had no desire to recognize new revolutionary republics in South America
America had already recognized them
Monroe rejected a British proposal for a joint declaration and included a statement of American policy in his message to Congress in 1823
Slide218: U.S. would not interfere with existing European colonies in North or South America and would avoid involvement in European affairs
any attempt to extend European control to countries that had won their independence would be considered hostile to U.S.
Monroe Doctrine may be seen as final stage of American independence
Slide219: The Era of Good Feelings
political factionalism diminished during Monroe’s presidency, known as “Era of Good Feelings”
Jeffersonians had come to accept most of Hamilton’s economic policies
Jeffersonian balance between individual liberty and responsible government had survived both bad management and war
when political divisions reappeared, they were about new issues emerging out of the growth of the country
Slide220: New Sectional Issues: Protection, Western Lands, Banking, Slavery
War of 1812 and depression that struck country in 1819 shaped many of controversies of Era of Good Feelings
the panic of 1819 strengthened position of protectionists, who argued that American industry needed protection from foreign competition
with exception of shipping interests, north favored protectionism and the South initially favored protectionism to foster national economic self-sufficiency
Slide221: eventually South rejected protectionism on ground that tariffs increased price of imports and hampered export of cotton and tobacco
charter of First Bank of U.S. was not renewed when it expired in 1811
many new state banks were created after 1811, and most recklessly overextended credit
after the British raid on Washington created a panic, all banks outside New England suspended specie payments
Slide222: a second Bank of the U.S. was established in 1816, but it was poorly managed and irresponsibly created credit
easy credit policies of the banks led to a boom in land sales
agricultural expansion in America and resumption of agricultural production in Europe after Napoleonic Wars resulted in falling prices
as prices fell, many western debtors faced ruin
although slavery became the most divisive sectional issue, it caused remarkably little conflict in national politics before 1819
Slide223: Congress abolished African slave trade in 1808 with little controversy
new free and slave states were added to Union in equal numbers, thus maintaining balance in Senate
cotton boom led southerners to defend slavery more aggressively
West tended to support the South’s position
Southwestern slave states naturally supported slavery; northwest was also sympathetic, partly because it sold much of its produce to southern plantations
Slide224: Northern Leaders
John Quincy Adams emerged as the best-known northern leader of early 1820s
began career as Federalist but became a Republican
nationalist, supported Louisiana Purchase, internal improvements and he was opposed to slavery
Daniel Webster, nationalist, reflected the interests of his native New England
Slide225: opposed Embargo Act, War of 1812, high tariff of 1816, cheap land, internal improvements, and initially opposed Second Bank (largely on partisan grounds)
Martin Van Buren avoided taking positions
expressed no clear opinions on such major issues as slavery or the tariff
Slide226: Southern Leaders
most prominent southern leader, William H. Crawford of Georgia, was one of the first politicians to try to build a national machine
he supported states’ rights, he favored the imposition of a moderate tariff
John C. Calhoun of South Carolina took a strong nationalist position on all issues; devoted to South and its institutions
Slide227: Western Leaders
Henry Clay’s “American System” reflected his gift for seeing national needs from a broad perspective
advocated federal support for internal improvements and a protective tariff
although a slave owner, he opposed slavery on principle and favored colonization
Thomas Hart Benton championed the small western farmer
Slide228: William Henry Harrison made his reputation as soldier before entering politics; had little impact on developing political alignments of 1820s
Andrew Jackson resembled Harrison in many ways
his chief assets were his reputation as a military hero and his forceful personality
no one knew his views on important issues, but this did not stop enthusiastic supporters from backing him for president
Slide229: The Missouri Compromise
Missouri’s request for admission as a slave state touched off a serious political controversy
voting that split along sectional lines, House added Tallmadge Amendment to Missouri
Enabling Act Tallmadge Amendment prohibited further introduction of slavery into Missouri and provided that all slaves born in Missouri after statehood should be freed at age twenty-five
Slide230: Senate defeated the amendment
debate did not turn on morality of slavery
Northerners objected to adding new slave states because these states would be overrepresented in Congress under Three-fifths Compromise
Missouri entered as a slave state, and its admission was balanced by admission of Maine as a free state
to prevent further conflict, Congress adopted a proposal to prohibit slavery in the Louisiana Territory north of 36 degrees 30 minutes
Slide231: The Election of 1824
politics continued to divide along sectional lines, no issue divided country so deeply as slavery
by 1824, Federalists had disappeared as a national party, and factional disputes plagued the Jeffersonians
no candidate won a majority of the electoral college in a bitter contest
in the House of Representatives, Clay threw his support to John Quincy Adams, who became the next president
Slide232: John Quincy Adams as President
Adams took a Hamiltonian view and sought to promote projects beneficial to national interest
he proposed a vast program of internal improvements as well as aid to manufacturing and agriculture
a Jeffersonian nationalist would have had difficulty gaining acceptance of these proposals; with his Federalist background, Adams had no chance
Adams’s inability to garner popular support and his refusal to use power of appointments to win political support impeded his administration
Slide233: Calhoun’s Exposition and Protest
a new tariff in 1828 set high duties on manufactured goods and agricultural products
Calhoun believed that tariff would impoverish the South
in response, he wrote the “South Carolina Exposition and Protest,” an essay repudiating the nationalist philosophy he had previously espoused and defending the right of a state to nullify an act of Congress
Slide234: The Meaning of Sectionalism
the sectional issues that strained ties between people of different regions were products of powerful forces, such as growth and prosperity, that actually bound the sections together
other forces unifying the nation were patriotism and commitment to the American experiment in government
TOWARD A NATIONAL ECONOMY: TOWARD A NATIONAL ECONOMY Gentility and the Consumer Revolution
new attitudes toward material goods and new ways of producing them brought a major economic readjustment; the industrial revolution would change America
ironically, widespread emulation of aristocratic behavior followed America’s democratic revolution
Slide236: in Europe, gentility was the product of ancestry and cultivated style; in America, possession of material goods largely defined gentility
Americans were demanding more goods than traditional craftsmen could produce
producers expanded their workshops, trained more artisans, laid in large stocks of materials, and acquire labor-saving machines
these developments constituted the market revolution of the early 19th century
the industrial revolution came on its heels
Slide237: America’s Industrial Revolution
technology fueled the revolution in manufacturing; spinning machines, cotton gin, and the steamboat wrought profound changes
artisans still produced vast bulk of goods used by Americans
skilled craftsmen performed every stage of fabrication
virtually all of these producers supplied only local needs
Slide238: Birth of the Factory
Britain began mechanizing in 1770s, bringing workers together in buildings called factories and using power from water and later steam
America depended on Britain for manufactured goods until Revolution
first American factory began production in 1790
Slide239: not long after, Boston Associates, a group of merchants headed by Francis Cabot Lowell, established Boston Manufacturing Company at Waltham
Lowell revolutionized textile production
his operation combined machine production, large-scale operation, efficient management, and centralized marketing
Slide240: An Industrial Proletariat?
the changing structure of work widened gap between owners and workers and blurred distinctions between skilled and unskilled workers
as the importance of skilled labor declined, so did the ability of workers to influence working conditions
some historians argue that the frontier siphoned off displaced or dissatisfied workers
Slide241: America’s expanding economy provided opportunities for workers to rise out of working class and therefore prevented the formation of strong working class identities
conditions in early shops and factories represented an improvement for people who worked in them
Most factory workers were drawn from outside regular labor market
textile mills in particular relied on the employment of women and children
Slide242: Lowell’s Waltham System: Women as Factory Workers
the Boston Associates developed the “Waltham System” of employing young, unmarried women in their new textile mills
women came from farms all over New England to work for a year or two in mills and lived in strictly supervised company boardinghouses
discontent manifested in two strikes in 1830s
declining prices in 1840s led to the introduction of new rules to increase production
Slide243: by then young women had begun to find work as schoolteachers and clerks
Millowners turned to Irish immigrants to operate the machines
Slide244: Irish and German Immigrants
population of U.S. more than doubled in the period from 1790 to 1820; growth resulted almost entirely from natural increase
1815, immigration began to pick up; most immigrants came from Germany, Ireland, Britain, and Scandinavia
immigrants were drawn by the prospect of abundant land, good wages, and economic opportunity
Slide245: others sought religious or political freedom
immigration stimulated the American economy
however, the influx of the 1830s and 1840s depressed living standards
native-born workers resented immigrants for their willingness to accept low wages and, in the case of the Irish, for their Catholicism
Slide246: The Persistence of the Household System
technological advances alone did not mean the immediate advance of the industrial system
seemingly minor advances in water wheels, transmission belts and metal gears enabled larger technological advances
After the War of 1812, imporovements in paper, glass and pottery manufactureing slowly changed the American household
Slide247: Rise of Corporations
corporations provided a means to gather capital
in early days of nation, states chartered only a few corporations, and very few of these engaged in manufacturing
most people believed only quasi-public projects deserved privilege of incorporation
during the War of 1812, considerable capital was transferred from commerce to industry
manufacturing gave rise to more and larger cities, which provided markets for farmers
Slide248: Cotton Revolutionizes the South
South began to produce cotton to supply textile factories of New England
a high quality, long staple “sea island” cotton could be grown only in limited areas, and the lint of heartier “green seed,” or upland, cotton could not easily be separated from the seed
Eli Whitney’s invention of the cotton gin led to an enormous expansion of cotton production
Cotton stimulated economy of the entire nation
most of it was exported, which paid for European products and Northern merchants transported, insured, and traded in cotton
Slide249: Revival of Slavery
slavery declined in decade of Revolution, but racial prejudice blunted logic of Revolution’s libertarian beliefs
revolutionary generation had a great respect for property rights
forced abolition therefore had few proponents
the bloody uprising in Saint Domingue led many whites to reconsider ending slavery
the Revolution had led to manumission of many slaves; as number of free blacks rose, tighter restrictions were imposed on them
Slide250: some opponents of slavery hoped to solve the “problem” of free blacks by establishing colonies of freed slaves (usually in Africa)
colonization movement did establish a settlement in Liberia; few American blacks had any desire to migrate to an alien land
cotton boom of early 19th century virtually halted colonization movement
boom also gave rise to an interstate slave trade
in the northern states, blacks faced legal liabilities, denial of suffrage, and segregation or exclusion
Slide251: Roads to Market
advances in transportation played a crucial role in settlement of West
barges could bring goods downstream, but transportation upstream was prohibitive; importance of roads linking Mississippi Valley to eastern seaboard
Slide252: Transportation and the Government
most of improved highways and bridges were built by private developers, who charged tolls for the use of their roads
local, state, and national governments contributed heavily to internal improvements
the obvious need for roads linking the trans-Appalachian west with eastern seaboard called for action by national government, but sectional rivalries in Congress prevented such action
until the coming of railroads, overland shipping remained uneconomical, so inventors concentrated on improving water transport
Slide253: Development of Steamboats
rafts and flatboats could move downstream only; the steamboat answered the problem of moving upstream
with advent of the steamboat, freight charges plummeted, and Northwest became part of the national market
Slide254: The Canal Boom
Canals improved the network of transportation
although canals cost more to build than roads, they were more efficient for moving goods than overland transportation until advent of railroad
Slide255: New York City: Emporium of the Western World
New York had already become the nation’s largest city
Erie Canal solidified its position as the national metropolis
Pennsylvania, desperate to keep up with New York, began constructing canals at a feverish pace
States beyond the mountains displayed an even greater zeal for the construction of canals; this proved excessive and many states overextended themselves resulting in financial disaster
Slide256: The Marshall Court
Chief Justice John Marshall believed in a powerful central government
he also regarded business community as an agent of progress
in a series of cases between 1819 and 1824, Marshall upheld the “sanctity” of contracts and the supremacy of the federal government
Dartmouth College v. Woodward gave a wide interpretation to the “contract” clause of the Constitution
Slide257: in McCulloch v. Maryland, Marshall endorsed the constitutionality of Second Bank of the U.S. and struck down attempts by states to tax it
the decision adopted the Hamiltonian, or “loose,” interpretation of the Constitution and strengthened the implied powers of Congress
Gibbons v. Ogden established federal supremacy by broadly construing the “commerce” clause
JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY: JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY “Democratizing” Politics
Jefferson believed ordinary citizens could be educated to determine what was right
Jackson believed they knew what was right by instinct
new western states drew up constitutions that eliminated property qualifications for voting and holding office
Slide259: they opened many more offices to election rather than appointment
only in Delaware and South Carolina did legislatures continue to choose presidential electors
this period saw final disestablishment of churches and beginning of free-school movement
officeholders came to regard themselves as representatives and leaders, and appealed more openly and intensely for votes; this empowered the party system that exists today
Slide260: 1828: The New Party System in Embryo
Jackson believed that he had been cheated out of the presidency in 1824, and he began campaigning for 1828 almost immediately after Adams’s selection by the House of Representatives
in campaign of 1828, Jackson avoided taking a stand on issues
both sides resorted to character assassination
voters turned out in far greater numbers than four years earlier, and they chose Jackson
Slide261: The Jacksonian Appeal
some historians point out Jackson was neither a democrat nor a friend of the underprivileged
he owned a large plantation and many slaves
nor was Jackson quite the rough-hewn frontiersman he sometimes seemed; his manners and life-style were those of a southern planter
his supporters liked to cast him as the political heir of Jefferson, in many ways Jackson more closely resembled the more conservative Washington
Slide262: The Spoils System
Jackson’s policy appeared revolutionary since there had not been a major political shift in many years
Jackson offered the principle of rotation as an underpinning of his policy
he believed the duties of public officials were so simple that anyone could perform them
rotating offices would permit more citizens to participate in tasks of government and prevent the development of an entrenched bureaucracy
Slide263: President of All the People
Jackson conceived of himself as direct representative of people and embodiment of national power
he vetoed more bills than all of his predecessors combined, yet he had no desire to expand federal authority at the expense of the states
Slide264: Sectional Tensions Revived
Jackson steered a moderate course on issues dividing the sections, urging a slight reduction of the tariff and “constitutional” internal improvements
he proposed that surplus federal revenues be “distributed” to the states
Slide265: however, if the federal government distributed its surplus revenues, it could not reduce the price of public lands without going into debt
in the Senate, Webster successfully blocked a West-South alliance based on cheap land and low tariffs
Slide266: Jackson: “The Bank . . . I Will Kill It!”
Jackson won reelection in 1832, partly based on his promise to destroy second Bank of the U.S.
Marshall declared its constitutionality and Landon Cheves established it on a sound footing, the Bank of the U.S. flourished
Cheves’s successor, Nicholas Biddle, realized that the Bank of the U.S. could act as a rudimentary central bank
Slide267: he attempted to use the institution to control credit and compel local banks to maintain adequate reserves of specie
at the same time the nation had an insatiable need for capital and credit
some bankers chafed under Biddle’s restraints
regional jealousies also came into play, as did distrust of chartered corporations as agents of special privilege
Slide268: Jackson’s Bank Veto
opposition to the Bank remained unfocused until Jackson brought it together
Biddle drew closer to Clay and Webster, who hoped to use the bank issue against Jackson
Clay and Webster urged Biddle to ask Congress to renew Bank’s charter early
the bill passed Congress, and Jackson vetoed it
after his reelection, Jackson withdrew government funds from Bank
Slide269: faced with withdrawal of so much cash, Biddle contracted his operations
he further contracted credit by presenting all state bank notes for conversion into specie and limiting his own bank’s loans
money became scarce, and a serious panic threatened
Pressure mounted on Jackson, who refused to budge
eventually, pressure shifted to Biddle, who began to lend freely; the crisis ended
Slide270: Jackson Versus Calhoun
Calhoun coveted the presidency, moreover, personal animosities separated him from Jackson
the two men were not far apart ideologically except on the paramount issue of the right of a state to overrule federal authority
like most westerners, Jackson favored internal improvements, but he preferred that local projects be left to the states
he vetoed the Maysville Road Bill because the route was wholly within Kentucky
Slide271: Indian Removals
Jackson also took a states’ rights position in the controversy between the Cherokee Indians and Georgia
he pursued a policy of removing Indians from the path of white settlement
Some tribes resisted and were subdued by troops
the Cherokee attempted to hold their lands by adjusting to white ways
Slide272: in spite of several treaties that seemed to establish the legitimacy of their government, Georgia refused to recognize it
Georgia passed a law declaring all Cherokee laws void and the Cherokee lands part of Georgia
in Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, Marshall ruled that the Cherokee were “not a foreign state” and therefore could not sue in a federal court, but in Worcester v. Georgia, he ruled that the state could not control the Cherokee or their territory
Slide273: Marshall also overturned the conviction for murder of a Cherokee named Corn Tassel on the ground that the crime had taken place in Cherokee territory
Jackson backed Georgia and insisted that no independent nation could exist within U.S.
eventually, the U.S. forced about 15,000 Cherokee to leave Georgia for lands in Oklahoma; about 4,000 died on the way
Slide274: The Nullification Crisis
South Carolina’s planters objected to a new tariff law passed in 1832 that lowered duties less than they had hoped
they also resented northern agitation against slavery
radicals in the state saw the two issues as related (both represented the tyranny of the majority), and they turned to Calhoun’s doctrine of nullification as a logical defense
Slide275: Jackson believed that if a state could nullify federal law the Union could not exist
South Carolina passed an ordinance of nullification prohibiting collection of tariff duties in state and voted to authorize the raising of an army
Jackson began military preparations of his own
in a presidential proclamation, he warned that “disunion by armed force is treason”
Slide276: Congress compromised by reducing the tariff and by passing a Force Bill granting the president additional authority to enforce the revenue laws
Sobered by Jackson”s response and professing to be satisfied with the token reductions of the new tariff, South Carolina repealed the Nullification Ordinance
South Carolina attempted to save face by nullifying the Force Act
Slide277: Boom and Bust
an increased volume of currency caused land prices to soar
proceeds from land sales wiped out the government’s debt and produced a surplus
alarmed by the speculative mania, Jackson issued a Specie Circular, which required purchasers of government land to pay in gold or silver
demand immediately slackened, and prices sagged
Slide278: speculators defaulted on mortgages, and banks could not recover enough on foreclosed property to recover their loans
people rushed to withdraw their money in the form of specie, and banks exhausted their supplies
panic swept the country
numerous factors caused such swings in the economic cycle, but Jackson’s policies exaggerated them
Slide279: Jacksonianism Abroad
Jackson’s exaggerated patriotism led him to push relentlessly for the solution of minor problems, and he did achieve some diplomatic successes
Great Britain agreed to several reciprocal trade agreements, including one that finally opened British West Indian ports to American ships
France agreed to pay compensation for damages to American property during the Napoleonic wars
Slide280: when the French Chamber of Deputies refused to appropriate the necessary funds, Jackson sent a blistering message to Congress asking for reprisals against French property
Congress wisely took no action, which led Jackson to suspend diplomatic relations with France and order the navy readied
the French government finally appropriated the money
Slide281: The Jacksonians
Jacksonian Democrats included rich and poor, easterners and westerners, abolitionists and slaveholders
if it was not yet a close-knit national organization, the party agreed on certain basic principles: suspicion of special privilege and large business corporations, freedom of economic opportunity, political freedom (at least for white males), and conviction that ordinary citizens could perform tasks of government
Slide282: Democrats also tended to favor states’ rights
Jacksonians supported opportunities for the less affluent (such as public education) but showed no desire to penalize the wealthy or to intervene in economic affairs to aid the underprivileged
Slide283: Rise of the Whigs
Jackson’s opposition remained less cohesive and dissident groups began to call themselves Whigs
those who could not accept the peculiarities of Jacksonian finance or had no taste for the anti-intellectual bent of the administration were drawn to the Whigs
Slide284: the Whigs were slow to develop an effective party organization
in 1836, they relied on a series of favorite son candidates in an effort to throw the election into the House of Representatives
the strategy failed to defeat Jackson’s handpicked successor, Martin Van Buren
Slide285: Martin Van Buren: Jacksonianism Without Jackson
Van Buren approached most problems pragmatically
he fought the Bank of the U.S. but opposed irresponsible state banks as well
while favoring public construction of internal improvements, he preferred state rather than national programs
Van Buren had the misfortune to take office just as the Panic of 1837 hit
Slide286: just as the country recovered from the Panic of 1837, cotton prices declined sharply in 1839
state governments defaulted on their debts, which discouraged investors
a general economic depression lasted until 1843
Van Buren did not cause the depression, but his policies did nothing to help
his refusal to assume any responsibility for the general welfare has led at least one historian to argue that the Whigs, not the Democrats, were the “positive liberals” of the era
Slide287: the depression convinced Van Buren that he needed to find some place other than the state banks to keep federal funds
he settled on the idea of removing the government from all banking activities
the Independent Treasury Act called for the construction of government-owned vaults to store federal revenues; all payments to government were to be made in hard cash
the plan was economically irresponsible, but system worked reasonably well for many years, thanks to a lucky combination of circumstances
Slide288: The Log Cabin Campaign
the depression hurt the Democrats, but it did not cause Van Buren’s defeat in 1840
Whigs were better organized than four years earlier, and they stole the Democrats’ tactics by nominating a popular general and shouting praises of the common man
they contrasted simplicity of William Henry Harrison with the suave Van Buren
Slide289: huge turnout elected Harrison by large margin; less than a month after his inauguration, Harrison fell ill and died
with the succession of John Tyler, events took a new turn, one that would lead to civil war
THE MAKING OF MIDDLE-CLASS AMERICA: THE MAKING OF MIDDLE-CLASS AMERICA Tocqueville and Beaumont in America
two French aristocrats, Alexis de Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont, were among the many foreign visitors who came to observe and record American manners, institutions, and society in first half of nineteenth century
Slide291: Tocqueville and Beaumont believed that Europe was passing from its aristocratic past to a democratic future and that the best way to prepare for this change was to study American society and its republican government
Tocqueville’s observations provided the material for his Democracy in America, published in 1835
Slide292: Tocqueville in Judgment
nothing struck Tocqueville more than the equality he observed among Americans
although Americans did not live in total equality, inequalities that existed among white males were not enforced by institutions or supported by public opinion
many of Tocqueville’s observations represented oversimplifications
had little interest in industrialization and urbanization or how they affected the country
failed to recognize the substantial poverty that existed in Jacksonian America
Slide293: A Restless People
European observers often commented on the restlessness of Americans and their tendency to pack up and move in search of land, work, or other opportunity
Americans migrated both toward the unsettled frontier and toward established urban areas
Boston, New York, and Philadelphia expanded rapidly in first half of 19th century
emergence and growth of new towns were even more significant than growth of large cities
Slide294: urbanization transformed Northeast and Old Northwest but had little impact on South
despite the growth of America’s population, much of the country remained sparsely settled
Slide295: The Family Recast
factory system and growth of cities undermined importance of home and family as unit of economic production
husbands spent more time away from home; wives exercised more power
married women assumed more responsibility for household affairs
this trend widened gap between middle and lower classes
many considered it a dereliction of duty for a middle-class wife to take a job
Slide296: such an attitude could not develop in lower-class families where everyone had to work
the middle class “cult of true womanhood” placed women on a pedestal for their selfless devotion to home and family
women, particularly in urban areas, married later than the previous generation and had fewer children
smaller families led parents to value children more highly and to lavish more time and affection on them
Slide297: The Second Great Awakening
in New England, evangelists who rejected both orthodox Calvinism and deistic thought led the Second Great Awakening
they stressed the mercy and love of God and the importance of personal salvation
Charles Grandison Finney led revival meetings in New York that combined sermons, personal testimonials of salvation, and hymn singing
Finney’s theology dismissed Calvinism as a “theological fiction”
Slide298: salvation was available to anyone
revivalism of Second Great Awakening appealed to uprooted workers who sought employment in towns along Erie Canal and to middle-class women who felt responsible for the spiritual well-being of their families
Slide299: The Era of Associations
voluntary associations served as a pillar of emerging middle class
associations promoted various philanthropic and religious causes
leaders came from upper class, but middle class formed bulk of membership
Slide300: Backwoods Utopias
some reformers sought to achieve social reorganization and personal reform by establishing small-scale communities outside of American society
two millennial groups, the Rappites and the Shakers, practiced celibacy
Shakers held their property in common and made a virtue of living simply
Other religious colonies included the Amana and Oneida communities, which prospered by developing manufacturing skills
Slide301: members of Oneida community practiced “complex marriage,” which held that every man in community was married to every woman
Joseph Smith founded the Mormon faith in western New York in the 1820s
their unorthodox religious views and exclusivism caused resentment among non-Mormons
hostility and violence in Ohio and Illinois forced them to move westward; they eventually settled at Salt Lake City
Slide302: The Age of Reform
other efforts at reform included rehabilitation of criminals and better care for the physically and mentally disabled
reformers demanded that deviant and dependent members of community be taken from their present corrupting surroundings and placed in institutions where they could be trained, educated, or rehabilitated
however humane the motivations of reformers might have been, the institutions they created seem inhumane by modern standards
Slide303: “Demon Rum”
temperance movement, most widely supported and successful reform movement, addressed a real problem; Americans in 1820s consumed prodigious quantities of alcohol
the formation of American Temperance Union in 1826 marked beginning of a national crusade against drunkenness
temperance movement aroused opposition, particularly from German and Irish immigrants, when it moved beyond calls for restraint to demands for total prohibition of alcohol
Slide304: by the 1840s, reformers had secured legislation imposing licensing systems and taxes on alcohol
by 1855, a dozen states had followed Maine’s example and prohibited the manufacture and sale of liquor
the nation’s per capita consumption of alcohol plummeted
Slide305: The Abolitionist Crusade
abolitionism attracted few followers until 1820s
antislavery northerners considered slavery wrong, but believed that Constitution obliged them to tolerate it in states where it existed
advocates of forced abolition were regarded as irresponsible extremists
most critics of slavery confined themselves to urging colonization or persuading slaveholders to treat their slaves humanely
Slide306: Benjamin Lundy, a Quaker newspaper editor, was one of the few to go further, and even he advocated persuasion rather than the use of federal power to end slavery
his assistant, William Lloyd Garrison, demanded immediate emancipation of slaves and full racial equality
Garrison’s unyielding position, his refusal to engage in politics, and his support for female abolitionist lecturers divided the movement
Slide307: many blacks advocated abolition long before white abolitionists began to attract attention
the most prominent black abolitionist was Frederick Douglass, a former slave, who insisted on emancipation as well as full social and political equality
Slide308: Women’s Rights
women who opposed slavery confronted the opposition of men who objected to the participation of women in political affairs
many female abolitionists also became advocates for women’s rights
some equated women’s position in society with that of blacks
advocates of rights for women who began their careers as abolitionists included Sarah and Angelina Grimke, Lucretia Mott, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Slide309: Stanton, Mott, and others organized a meeting at Seneca Falls in 1848 and drafted a Declaration of Principles patterned on the Declaration of Independence
Susan B. Anthony became a leading campaigner for women’s rights in the 1850s
She recognized the need for effective organization to bring pressure on male-dominated society
A DEMOCRATIC CULTURE: A DEMOCRATIC CULTURE In Search of Native Grounds
by the middle of 19th century, American culture was clearly an offspring rather than an imitation of European culture
of American novelists before 1830, only James Fenimore Cooper made successful use of the national heritage
Slide311: most American novelists imitated British writers, though none approached the level of their British counterparts
New York emerged as America's literary capital and Washington Irving as its leading light
American painting reached a level comparable to that of Europe, where many of the best American painters still trained
American painters such as West, Copley, Peale, and Stuart excelled as portraitists
American painting was less obviously imitative of European styles than was American literature
Slide312: The Romantic View of Life
romantic movement was a reaction against Age of Reason
romantics valued emotion and intuition over pure reason, and they stressed individualism, optimism, patriotism, and ingeniousness
romanticism fit mood of 19th-century America
transcendentalism, a mystical, intuitive way of looking at life that aspired to go beyond the world of the senses, represented the fullest expression of romanticism
Slide313: transcendentalists regarded nature as the essence of divinity; thus, humans were divine because they were part of nature
above all, transcendentalists valued the individual and the aspiration to stretch beyond human capacities
Slide314: Emerson and Thoreau
Ralph Waldo Emerson, the leading transcendentalist thinker, urged Americans to put aside their devotion to things European and seek inspiration in immediate surroundings
although he favored change and believed in progress, the new industrial society of New England disturbed him profoundly
however, he was not temperamentally disposed to join crusades for reform
Slide315: he was too idealistic to accept compromises most reformers must make to achieve their ends
Emerson valued self-reliance and disliked powerful governments
like Emerson, Henry David Thoreau objected to society’s restrictions on the individual
Thoreau spent two years living alone in a cabin at Walden Pond to prove that an individual need not depend on society
Slide316: to protest Mexican War, which he believed immoral because it advanced the cause of slavery, Thoreau refused to pay state poll tax
for this action, he was arrested and spent a night in jail
his essay, “Civil Disobedience,” explained his view on the proper relation of the individual to the state
Slide317: Edgar Allan Poe
Poe epitomized the romantic image of the tortured genius
haunted by alcohol, melancholia, hallucinations, and debt, he was nevertheless a master short story writer and poet, a penetrating critic, and an excellent magazine editor
Slide318: Nathaniel Hawthorne
Hawthorne rejected the egoism and optimism of transcendentalism
he was fascinated by New England’s Puritan past and its continuing influence
his best known works, including The Scarlet Letter and The House of the Seven Gables, concerned individuals and their struggle with sin, guilt, and the pride and isolation that often afflict those who place too much reliance on their own judgment
Slide319: Herman Melville
like Hawthorne, Melville could not accept the transcendentalists’ optimism
he considered their vague talk about striving and their faith in the goodness of humanity complacent nonsense
in his most famous work, Moby Dick, Melville dealt powerfully with the problems of good and evil, courage and cowardice, faith, stubbornness, and pride
Slide320: Walt Whitman
the most romantic and distinctively American writer of his age, Whitman believed that a poet could best express himself by relying uncritically on his natural inclinations
his greatest work, Leaves of Grass, often shocked or confused his readers with its commonplace subject matter and its coarse language
Slide321: The Wider Literary Renaissance
pre-Civil War literary renaissance also included New Englanders Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, John Greenleaf Whittier, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and James Russell Lowell
Southern literature was even more markedly romantic than that of New England, as demonstrated by novelists John Pendleton Kennedy and William Gilmore Simms
several historians achieved prominence during this period, including George Bancroft and Francis Parkman
Slide322: Domestic Tastes
Charles Bulfinch’s “Federal” style of architecture flourished in the North
wood-turning machinery contributed to the popularity of the “Gothic” style
“Greek” and “Italian” styles also flourished, the former particularly in the South
new technology allowed the mass production of textiles with complicated designs, including wallpaper, rugs, and hangings
Slide323: combined with the use of machine methods in the production of furniture, new textiles had a profound impact on furniture in American homes
more affluent Americans decorated their homes with the works of American genre painters, “luminists,” and members of the Hudson River School
beginning in the 1850s, the lithographs of Currier and Ives brought a fairly crude but charming form of art to a still wider audience
Slide324: Education for Democracy
common school movement, led by Henry Barnard and Horace Mann, urged creation of state-administered schools taught by professional teachers
movement was based on an unquenchable faith in the improvability of the human race through education and a belief that democracy required an educated citizenry
by the 1850s, every state outside the South provided free elementary schools and supported institutions to train teachers
Slide325: historians have identified several reasons for the success of the common school movement
common schools helped to “Americanize” immigrant children, and they brought Americans of different economic circumstances and ethnic backgrounds into early and mutually beneficial contact with one another
they also instilled good employee values
Slide326: Reading and the Dissemination of Culture
as the population grew and became more concentrated, and as middle class values permeated American society, particularly in the North, popular concern for “culture” increased
industrialization made it possible to satisfy this new demand
improved printing techniques reduced the cost of books, magazines, and newspapers
moralistic and sentimental “domestic” novels reached their peak of popularity in the 1850s
Slide327: Americans devoured reams of religious literature
self-improvement books were popular as well
philanthropists established libraries and public lectures
mutual improvement societies known as lyceums founded libraries, sponsored lectures, and lobbied for better education
Slide328: The State of the Colleges
the cost of private colleges meant that relatively few students could afford them; since students were hard to come by, discipline and academic standards were lax
the college curriculum focused on the classics rather than on practical or scientific studies until the 1840s
Harvard and Yale established schools of science; Harvard allowed students to choose some of their courses, and instituted grades
Slide329: colleges in the South and West began to offer mechanical and agricultural subjects
Oberlin College admitted women in 1837, and the Georgia Female College opened in 1839
white males constituted the overwhelming majority of students, but only 2 percent of white males went to college
Slide330: Civic Cultures
cities and towns sought to become local and regional centers of learning, art, and culture
in the East, Boston, New York, and Philadelphia vied for primacy
in the West, Cincinnati, Lexington, and Pittsburgh sought to become regional centers of culture
members of the professions were generally accepted as the arbiters of taste in cultural matters
Slide331: Scientific Stirrings
few Americans pursued science on more than a part-time basis, and few American scientists achieved international recognition in the half century after the Revolution
Tocqueville attributed this to Americans’ distrust of theory and abstract knowledge
nevertheless, Americans accounted for some advances; national and state governments sponsored geological and coastal surveys; and the Smithsonian Institution was founded
Slide332: American Humor
the juxtaposition of high ideals and low reality formed the basis for much American humor
James Russell Lowell’s Bigelow Papers turned “Down East” humor to more telling satirical effect
Seba Smith’s character, Major Jack Downing, and Johnson J. Hooper’s creation, Simon Suggs, provided satirical lenses through which to examine Jacksonian America
EXPANSION AND SLAVERY: EXPANSION AND SLAVERY Tyler’s Troubles
Tyler clashed continuously with Clay, who considered himself the real leader of Whig party
Clay’s comprehensive program, which included a new Bank of the United States, conflicted with Tyler’s view of states’ rights
when Tyler vetoed a bill to create a new Bank, the entire cabinet, except for Webster, resigned
Slide334: Clay wanted to distribute the proceeds of land sales to the states to justify raising the tariff
southerners insisted on stopping distribution if the tariff exceeded 20 percent
when the Whigs attempted to push a high tariff through Congress without repealing the Distribution Act, Tyler vetoed the bill
finally, after repeal of the Distribution Act, Tyler signed a bill providing for a higher tariff
Slide335: The Webster-Ashburton Treaty
the boundary between Maine and New Brunswick had remained unsettled since 1783
in order to avoid a serious conflict over the disputed area, Secretary of State Webster and Lord Ashburton negotiated a settlement
although the United States gave up some of its rightful claims in that area, the British made concessions elsewhere along the U.S.-Canadian border
Slide336: The Texas Question
the Transcontinental Treaty of 1819 excluded Texas from the United States
Americans nevertheless soon began to settle in the area, which had become part of an independent Mexico; American settlers soon outnumbered Mexicans in Texas
both Adams and Jackson tried to buy Texas, but Mexico refused to sell
disagreements arose between the American settlers and the Mexican government over religion, language, and slavery
Slide337: this led the Mexican government to prohibit further immigration of Americans; in response, Texans began to seek independence
A series of skirmishes escalated into rebellion; Texas declared its independence in 1836, and Sam Houston was elected its first president
although opinion in Texas favored annexation by the United States, Jackson and Van Buren wanted neither war with Mexico nor to stir up sectional tensions by admitting Texas as a state
Slide338: Texas developed friendly relations with Britain, which alarmed southerners, who worried that Texas might abolish slavery
in an effort to insure the annexation of Texas, Tyler appointed Calhoun secretary of state
Calhoun’s association with the extreme southern viewpoint and with slavery alienated many northerners who otherwise would have favored the annexation of Texas, and the Senate rejected Calhoun’s treaty
Slide339: Manifest Destiny
by the 1840s, Americans had come to believe that it was their destiny to explore, settle, and exploit the entire continent and to unify it into one nation
Slide340: Life on the Trail
later generations romanticized westward expansion; in reality, the movement entailed hardship, danger, and death
in the 1840s, the trip west covered a longer distance than in earlier days
moreover, the comforts of “civilization” were more extensive than in earlier times, and therefore harder to surrender
the move west disrupted family life and gender roles; much of the hardship fell on women
Slide341: California and Oregon
many settlers traveled to California, then unmistakably part of Mexico, and to Oregon, which both the United States and Britain claimed
the expense of the trip meant that few who went west were genuinely poor
the allure of Pacific coast harbors, which some regarded as the keys to the Asian trade, also drew people westward
in the 1840s, Americans regarded Oregon as a particularly desirable destination
Slide342: The Election of 1844
Whigs nominated Clay
Van Buren wanted to keep Texas out of the campaign, but southern Democrats rallied behind Calhoun’s policy of annexing Texas as a slave state
Van Buren lost control of the Democratic convention, which nominated James K. Polk of Tennessee
a Jacksonian Democrat who opposed both high tariffs and a national bank, Polk favored expansionism
Slide343: the antislavery Liberty party split the Whig vote in New York and handed the election to Polk
in spite of Polk’s narrow victory, many regarded it as a mandate for expansion
Tyler called for a joint resolution of Congress to annex Texas, and it passed just before Tyler left the White House
Slide344: Polk as President
Polk was uncommonly successful in carrying out his policies
he persuaded Congress to lower the tariff of 1842 and to restore the Independent Treasury
he also succeeded in opposing federal internal improvements
Polk acquired Oregon in a treaty with Britain, which ended the joint occupation of the territory and established the 49th parallel as the boundary between Canada and the United States from the Rockies to Puget Sound
Slide345: War with Mexico
when the United States annexed Texas, Mexico broke off diplomatic relations
Polk ordered General Zachary Taylor to defend the disputed border region between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande
Polk also sent John Slidell on a secret mission to Mexico to try to obtain the disputed area by negotiation
Mexicans rejected Polk’s offer to buy the territory in question as well as part of New Mexico and California
Slide346: Mexico also reasserted its claim to all of Texas
a Mexican attack on American troops north of the Rio Grande provided Polk with the pretext to declare war
although smaller, the American force was better led and supplied
Slide347: To the Halls of Montezuma
Polk demonstrated real ability as a military planner, but domestic opposition to the war (particularly in the North) and the fact that his leading generals were Whigs hampered his conduct of the war
Taylor quickly occupied northern Mexico, and settlers led by John C. Frémont established an independent Republic of California
American troops under Winfield Scott landed near Veracruz and amid the hardest fighting of war, Scott’s forces advanced into Mexico City
Slide348: The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
Polk sent Nicholas P. Trist to serve as peace commissioner
Trist proceeded to negotiate the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, in which Mexico agreed to accept the Rio Grande as its border with Texas and to cede New Mexico and Upper California to the United States
in return, the United States agreed to pay Mexico $15 million and to take on the claims of American citizens against Mexico
Slide349: Polk hoped for a better deal, but he had no choice but to submit the treaty to the Senate, for to demand more territory would have meant the continuation of an increasingly unpopular war
for similar reasons, the Senate ratified it
The Fruits of Victory: Further Enlargement of the United States
the Mexican War resulted in enormous territorial gains for the United States
in 1848, gold was discovered near San Francisco; the ensuing gold rush accelerated settlement of the Pacific coast
Slide350: Slavery: The Fire Bell in the Night Rings Again
territorial expansion raised the unresolved issue of the status of slavery in the new territories
the Constitution did not give the federal government any control over slavery in the states, but Congress had complete authority in the territories
during the Mexican War, Congressman David Wilmot proposed an amendment prohibiting slavery in any territory acquired from Mexico
Slide351: the Wilmot Proviso passed the House but not the Senate, where southerners held the balance of power
Calhoun countered by introducing resolutions that argued that Congress had no right to bar slavery from any territory
two compromises were offered. Polk and most southerners supported a plan to extend the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific
Senator Lewis Cass proposed letting local settlers determine the issue of slavery in their territory
Slide352: The Election of 1848
Both parties hedged on the issue of slavery
the Whigs nominated a war hero, Zachary Taylor, and the Democrats nominated Lewis Cass
the Van Buren wing of the Democratic party, known as “Barnburners,” combined with the Liberty party to form the antislavery Free Soil party and nominated Van Buren
Taylor won the election by a narrow margin, but the Free Soil party garnered about 10 percent of the vote
Slide353: The Gold Rush
between 1849 and 1860, over 200,000 people went to California in search of gold
the massive immigration reduced California’s Spanish population to a minority
order was difficult to maintain among large numbers of men seeking fortunes and isolated from women; ethnic conflict contributed to the disorder
Taylor proposed admitting California directly as a state and letting Californians decide for themselves about slavery
Slide354: Californians drew up a constitution that outlawed slavery, which outraged southerners
the admission of California as a free state would tip the balance in the Senate in favor of the North
Slide355: The Compromise of 1850
Clay proposed a compromise that California would be brought directly into the Union as a free state, and the rest of the Southwest would be organized as a territory without mention of slavery
Southerners would retain the right to bring slaves into the Southwest Territory
Texas would give up its claims to disputed land along its border with New Mexico; in exchange, the United States would take over Texas’ preannexation debts
Slide356: the slave trade would be abolished in the District of Columbia (although not slavery itself), and Congress would pass a more effective fugitive slave law
Clay’s proposals led to one of the greatest debates in the history of the Senate
Calhoun demanded that the North yield on every point and argued for the right of states to secede peacefully from the Union
Webster defended Clay’s proposals
Slide357: Taylor’s death and Fillmore’s assumption of the presidency paved the way for compromise
Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois pushed each measure separately through the Senate
THE SECTIONS GO THEIR WAYS: THE SECTIONS GO THEIR WAYS
The South
the South was less affected than other regions by urbanization, European immigration, the transportation revolution, and industrialization
the South remained predominantly agricultural; however, the cultivation of cotton and tobacco expanded westward while the older sections of Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina diversified their agriculture
experiments with fertilizers, crop rotation, agricultural implements and practices, and new varieties of crops helped improve agricultural productivity
Slide359: The Economics of Slavery
the increased importance of cotton in the South’s economy strengthened slavery’s hold on the region
the price of slaves increased, particularly in the Deep South, and slave trading became a big business
the slave trade had disastrous effects on slaves; families were often separated
as slaves became more expensive, ownership of slaves became more concentrated
Slide360: by 1860, only 25 % of southern families owned any slaves
the South had few large plantations and many small farms which grew staple crops and owned few slaves
plantations could yield high profits, but southerners did not develop facilities for marketing or transportation
the profit from handling the crop went largely to northern merchants and middle men
Slide361: southern capital was tied up in land and slaves and therefore not available for investment in other things
under slavery, southern blacks remained a nonconsuming class, and much of the intelligence, talent, and abilities of the slave population was wasted
Slide362: Antebellum Plantation Life
the “typical” antebellum plantation was more like a small village than a northern farm
planters bought luxuries and manufactured goods, but plantations produced most household needs and nearly all the food consumed
the master exercised paternal authority over the plantation
his wife had immense domestic responsibilities
Slide363: at the same time, she played the role of a refined, gracious southern lady
most slaves worked in the fields, but others were employed as household servants and artisans on the plantation
though simple and crude, slave quarters compared favorably with houses of European peasants
Slide364: The Sociology of Slavery
it is difficult to generalize about slavery because so much depended on the individual master’s behavior
most owners provided adequate food, clothing, and shelter for their slaves
still, slaves had a higher rate of infant mortality and a lower life expectancy than whites
the United States was the only slave society in the western hemisphere whose slave population grew by natural increase
Slide365: slaves had no rights
slaves accommodated themselves to the system while attempting to resist oppression
the “peculiar institution” hardened as northern opposition to slavery grew and southerners worried about insurrection
slavery remained an essentially rural institution, and its existence contributed to the rural nature of the South
not all blacks in the South were slaves; however, white southerners took a dim view of free blacks and restricted their freedom
Slide366: The Psychological Effects of Slavery
with few exceptions, such as Denmark Vesey, most slaves appeared resigned to their fate
the system fostered submissiveness and discouraged independent judgment and self-reliance on the part of blacks
in spite of this, slaves maintained strong family and group attachments as well as a culture of their own
slavery had a detrimental impact on poor southerners, who associated working for others with servility
Slide367: slavery inevitably affected the master class as well
the patriarchal nature of the slave system reinforced male dominance in southern society
some slave owners behaved nobly, within the confines of the institution
for others, slaves provided objects on which to vent brutal tendencies
Slide368: Manufacturing in the South
despite the dominance of cotton in the southern economy, some manufacturing did exist.
rope production, iron and coal mining, iron production
Textile manufacturing in the Carolinas
despite manufacturing, the South never developed an industrial society in the 19th century
Slide369: The Northern Industrial Juggernaut
Northern society placed a premium on resourcefulness and encouraged experimentation; industry in that region grew rapidly in the decades before the Civil War
the factory system made great strides, and a shortage of skilled labor led businessmen to substitute machines for trained hands
Westward expansion made new resources available, and the expansion of agriculture produced an increasing supply of raw materials for the mills and factories
Slide370: a relaxation of earlier prejudices against the corporation made possible larger accumulations of capital
industrial growth increased the demand for labor
skilled artisans earned good wages; but machinery made skills less important, and the wages for an unskilled worker could barely support a family
Slide371: A Nation of Immigrants
jobs created by industrial expansion attracted thousands of European immigrants
native-born Americans tended to look down on immigrants, many of whom developed prejudices of their own
the arrival of unskilled immigrants created economic disruptions
Slide372: How Wage Earners Lived
growth of urban populations produced slums
wives and children of male factory workers had to work in the factories to survive
conditions for skilled workers improved in the 1840s and 1850s; the working day grew shorter, most states enacted mechanic’s lien laws, and a Massachusetts court established the legality of labor unions in Commonwealth v. Hunt (1842)
Slide373: unionism remained local and weak, however, at least in part because skilled workers looked down on unskilled workers, and few laborers considered themselves part of a permanent working class
Slide374: Progress and Poverty
although the United States was a democratic land of opportunity with an expanding economy, few class distinctions, and a comparatively high standard of living, there existed a large class of poor, unskilled, mostly immigrant laborers who were materially less well off than most southern slaves
the gap between rich and poor widened, and society became more stratified
Slide375: Foreign Commerce
the United States remained primarily an exporter of raw materials and an importer of manufactured goods
cotton was the most valuable export and textiles the leading import
Britain was the leading consumer of American exports and America’s leading supplier
the success of sailing packets concentrated trade in larger port cities; smaller ports languished
Slide376: several smaller port cities in New England maintained prosperity by concentrating on whaling, which boomed between 1830 and 1860
increased foreign trade spurred the construction of ships and the development of large, fast clipper ships
Slide377: Steam Conquers the Atlantic
by late 1840s, steamships captured most of the transatlantic passenger traffic, mail contracts, and first class freight; although fast sailing ships held their own on very long voyages for many years
Britain’s mastery of iron technology negated traditional advantages American shipbuilders had enjoyed and gave Britain the lead in the development of iron ships, which were larger, stronger, and less costly to maintain
Shipping rates declined, which encouraged immigration from Europe
Slide378: Canals and Railroads
canal building continued in the 1830s and 1840s; each year saw more western produce move to market through the canals
first American railroads were built in the 1830s
first railroads did not compete with canals for intersectional traffic; the through connections needed to move goods economically over great distances materialized slowly
Slide379: competition among railroad companies prevented connections, and engineering problems impeded growth
by the 1850s, however, these problems had been solved, and by the end of the decade, the Pennsylvania Railroad crossed the mountains
Slide380: Financing the Railroads
railroad construction required immense amounts of labor and capital
immigrants and slaves did most of the work
private investors provided most of the money invested in railroads before 1860
towns, counties, and states also lent money to railroads, invested in railroad stock, and granted special privileges to railroads (including tax exemptions and the right to condemn property)
eastern and southern interests often opposed federal aid to railroads until after the Civil War
Slide381: Railroads and the Economy
railroad construction had profound effects
the location of a railroad helped determine what agricultural land was used and how profitably it could be farmed
land grant railroads stimulated agricultural expansion by selling farm sites at low rates on liberal terms
access to world markets provided an incentive to agricultural production
Slide382: labor remained scarce, but new machines, including the steel plowshare and the McCormick reaper, helped ease the labor shortage
eastern seaports benefited from the railroads, as did intermediate centers, such as Buffalo, Cincinnati, and Chicago
railroads stimulated other economic activity
they spurred regional concentration of industry and investment banking
Slide383: the complexity of their operations required elaborate administrative structures, which made them the first modern business enterprises
proliferation of trunk lines and competition from the canal system led to a sharp decline in freight and passenger rates
Slide384: Railroads and the Sectional Conflict
the economic integration of East and West stimulated nationalism and became a force for preserving the Union
increased production and cheap transportation meant more income and an improved standard of living for western farmers
without railroads and canals and the link they provided to eastern markets, Midwest would not likely have sided against the South in 1861
failure to build a railroad system of its own cost the South its influence in the Old Northwest
Slide385: The Economy on the Eve of the Civil War
between the mid-1840s and mid-1850s, the United States experienced remarkable growth in manufacturing, agricultural production, population, railroad mileage, gold production, and sales of public land
such growth inevitably caused dislocations; and a serious economic collapse in 1857 checked agricultural expansion, which hurt the railroads and cut down on demand for manufactured goods
as a result, unemployment increased
Slide386: the vigor of the economy soon ended the economic downturn
the economic panic had its greatest impact on the upper Mississippi Valley; it had little effect on the South, because cotton prices remained high
THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR: THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR
The Slave Power Comes North
new fugitive slave law encouraged southerners to recover escaped slaves, which caused panic among black communities in northern cities
many blacks, not all of them former slaves, fled to Canada
many northerners refused to cooperate with the law, and abolitionists often interfered with its enforcement; in some northern states, the law became difficult to enforce
southerners accused the North of reneging on the Compromise of 1850
Slide388: “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”
Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel, Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852), became an immediate best-seller, added to sectional tensions, and brought home the evils of slavery to many northerners
southerners accused it of distorting plantation life
Slide389: Diversions Abroad: The “Young America” Movement
spurred by a belief in manifest destiny, a search for new markets, a desire to spread democracy to the rest of the world, and a need for a distraction from sectional tensions, America embarked on an aggressive foreign policy known as the Young America movement
this expansionist sentiment encouraged William Walker to attempt to gain control of Nicaragua and George Bickley to attempt the conquest of Mexico
Slide390: in 1850, Secretary of State John Clayton and the British minister to the United States, Henry Lytton Bulwer, negotiated a treaty providing for demilitarization and joint Anglo-American control of any canal across the Central American isthmus
America had long been interested in Cuba, and that interest increased because of its strategic importance
Slide391: American ministers in Europe produced the Ostend Manifesto in 1854, which proposed that America should buy Cuba or take it by force if Spain refused to sell
news of the manifesto outraged northerners, who saw it as a “slaveholders’ plot,” and the government was forced to disavow the manifesto along with any plans for acquiring Cuba
Commodore Perry’s expedition to open Japan (1852) was another manifestation of the expansionist mood
Slide392: Douglas: The Little Giant
the most prominent spokesman for the Young America movement was Stephen A. Douglas
Douglas based his politics on expansion and popular sovereignty
although he opposed the expansion of slavery to the territories, he refused to acknowledge that any moral issue was involved
he believed that natural conditions would prevent slavery from expanding westward
Slide393: Douglas wanted the Democratic nomination for president in 1852, but the party chose Franklin Pierce, who easily defeated General Winfield Scott, the Whig’s nominee
the Whig party was rapidly disintegrating
“Cotton Whigs” of the South, alienated by the antislavery opinions of northern Whigs, flocked to the Democrats
southern Democrats controlled Congress, which disturbed both Democrats and Whigs in the North
Slide394: The Kansas-Nebraska Act
Douglas wanted the Nebraska Territory organized to open the region for a transcontinental railroad; southerners opposed Douglas’s plans
they wanted a southern route; moreover, Nebraska lay north of the Missouri Compromise line and would presumably become a free state
Slide395: in an effort to gain southern support, Douglas agreed to divide the Nebraska Territory into Kansas and Nebraska and to repeal the Missouri Compromise’s prohibition of slavery north of 36 degrees, 30 minutes
popular sovereignty would decide the status of slavery in the territories
in spite of strong opposition in the North, Douglas mustered enough support to pass the bill
the Kansas-Nebraska Act was the single greatest step toward secession and civil war
Slide396: Know-Nothings and Republicans
two new parties emerged from the demise of the Whigs: the American, or “Know-Nothing,” party and the Republican party
the Know-Nothings espoused a nativist platform
Nativist issues cut across sectional lines, and the American party had support in all sections
although most Know-Nothings disliked blacks, the party tended to adopt the view of slavery predominant in whichever section they were located
Slide397: former Free Soilers, “Conscience” Whigs, and “Anti-Nebraska” Democrats banded together in the Republican party
support for the Republicans came almost exclusively from the North
Republicans were not abolitionists; rather, they wanted to keep slavery out of the territories, primarily to maintain exclusive access to the West for free white labor
Slide398: “Bleeding Kansas”
the status of slavery in Kansas became a national issue, as abolitionists and defenders of slavery attempted to control the territory
Proslavery “border ruffians” from Missouri crossed into Kansas and helped to elect a proslavery territorial legislature in 1855
antislavery settlers elected a legislature of their own
President Pierce’s denunciation of the free-state government at Topeka encouraged the proslavery forces to take the offensive
Slide399: they sacked the antislavery town of Lawrence; in retaliation, John Brown, an antislavery extremist, and his followers murdered five proslavery men at Pottawatomie Creek
Slide400: Senator Sumner Becomes a Martyr
Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts attacked the Kansas-Nebraska Act and demanded that Kansas be admitted as a free state
he savagely berated Douglas and Senator Andrew Butler of South Carolina
Butler’s nephew, Congressman Preston Brooks, took it on himself to defend his uncle’s honor by beating Sumner with a cane on the floor of the Senate
Slide401: Brooks became a southern hero; northerners regarded the incident as evidence of the brutalizing effect of slavery and considered Sumner a martyr
Slide402: Buchanan Tries His Hand
Republicans nominated John C. Frémont as their candidate in 1856
Democrats chose James Buchanan
American party nominated ex-president Fillmore
Democrats won by denouncing Republicans as sectional party that threatened to destroy Union
while Republicans believed that Buchanan lacked the character to stand up to southern extremists, many hoped that he could promote reconciliation
Slide403: The Dred Scott Decision
Dred Scott was a slave who accompanied his owner from Missouri to Illinois and Wisconsin Territory before returning to Missouri
in 1846, Scott brought suit in Missouri for his freedom, claiming that his residence in Illinois and Wisconsin, where slavery was prohibited, made him free
in 1857, the Supreme Court ruled that blacks were not citizens and therefore could not sue in federal court
Slide404: not satisfied with that ruling, the Court went further and declared the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional because it denied individuals the right to enjoy their property without due process of law
the Dred Scott decision threatened Douglas’s principle of popular sovereignty; if Congress could not exclude slaves from a territory, surely a mere territorial legislature could not
the decision convinced many in the North that the South was engaged in an aggressive attempt to extend slavery
Slide405: The Lecompton Constitution
Buchanan appointed Robert J. Walker as territorial governor of Kansas
although a southerner, Walker opposed the introduction of slavery into the territory against the will of its inhabitants
proslavery leaders in Kansas convened a constitutional convention in Lecompton, in which the Free Soilers refused to participate
the rump convention drafted a proslavery constitution and refused to submit it to a vote of all settlers
Slide406: Walker denounced the constitution, but Buchanan recommended that Congress admit Kansas to the Union with the Lecompton Constitution as its frame of government
this decision brought Buchanan into conflict with Douglas and split the Democratic party
in a referendum held in 1858, voters in Kansas overwhelmingly rejected the Lecompton Constitution
Slide407: The Emergence of Lincoln
many northerners regarded Douglas as the best hope of preserving the Union, so his bid for reelection to the Senate attracted considerable attention
his Republican opponent was Abraham Lincoln, a lawyer who had previously served in the Illinois legislature and in Congress
Lincoln”s personality was complex
possessed of a wonderful sense of humor, he was subject to fits of melancholy
Slide408: while not an abolitionist, Lincoln opposed the expansion of slavery into the territories
the revival of the slavery controversy in 1854 led Lincoln to a more explicit moral opposition to slavery
still, he attacked the institution rather than the slave owners
his position won support from many who attempted to reconcile their opposition to slavery with a desire to preserve the Union
Slide409: The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
Public attention focused on a series of seven debates between Lincoln and Douglas
in reality, the two men differed little on the subject of slavery
neither wanted slavery extended into the territories; neither believed that it would flourish in the West; and neither favored forced abolition. In the debates, however, they tended to exaggerate their differences
Slide410: Douglas characterized Lincoln as abolitionist, and Lincoln portrayed Douglas as proslavery and as a defender of the Dred Scott decision
in the Freeport debate, Lincoln pressed Douglas into admitting that the Dred Scott decision could not prohibit settlers from excluding slavery from a territory, because settlers could refuse to enact the local laws necessary to protect slavery
the so-called Freeport Doctrine helped Douglas win reelection, but it cost him dearly in the presidential campaign of 1860
Slide411: John Brown’s Raid
in October 1859, John Brown and a small group of followers attacked the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia
they hoped to incite slaves to rebel and to use the weapons to arm the slaves
no slaves joined them, and Brown was captured, convicted of treason, and hanged
northerners regarded him as a martyr, while white southerners viewed him as a typical radical abolitionist
Slide412: The Election of 1860
by 1860, Southern paranoia resulted in aggressive policies designed to defend slavery and in talk of secession
at the Democratic convention in Charleston, southern delegates refused to support Douglas, who represented the best hope for preventing a rupture between North and South, and the convention adjourned without selecting a candidate
a second convention failed to produce agreement, and the two wings met separately
Slide413: northern Democrats nominated Douglas, and southern Democrats chose John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky
Republicans drafted a platform attractive to all classes and all sections of the northern and western states
they advocated a high tariff, a homestead law, internal improvements, and the exclusion of slavery in the territories
Republicans chose Lincoln as their candidate because of his moderate views, his political personality, and his residence in a crucial state
Slide414: the Constitutional Unionist party, composed of the remnants of the Whig and American parties, nominated John Bell of Tennessee
Lincoln received a plurality, although nowhere near a majority, of the popular vote; however, he won a decisive victory in the electoral college
Slide415: The Secession Crisis
in late 1860 and early 1861, South Carolina and six states of the Lower South seceded from the Union and established a provisional government for the Confederate States of America
other southern states announced that they would secede if the North used force against the Confederacy
South seceded because it feared northern economic and political domination
Slide416: some believed that independence would produce a more balanced economy in the South
years of sectional conflict and growing northern criticism of slavery had undermined patriotic feelings of southerners
States’ rights and a strict constructionist interpretation of the Constitution provided the South with justification for its action
like many northerners, President-elect Lincoln believed that secession was only a bluff designed to win concessions from the North, and southerners believed that the North would not resist secession with force
Slide417: President Buchanan recognized the seriousness of the situation but claimed to be without legal power to prevent secession
moderates proposed the Crittenden Compromise, an amendment that would have recognized slavery south of 36 degrees, 30 minutes, but Lincoln opposed any extension of slavery into the territories
with the failure of the Crittenden Compromise, the Confederacy made preparations for independence, while Buchanan bumbled helplessly in Washington
THE WAR TO SAVE THE UNION: THE WAR TO SAVE THE UNION Lincoln’s Cabinet
Lincoln constructed a cabinet respresenting a wide range of political opinions
in a conciliatory but firm inaugural address, the new president explained that his administration posed no threat to southern institutions, but he warned that secession was illegal
Slide419: Fort Sumter: The First Shot
Lincoln did not reclaim federal property seized by the Confederates in the Deep South; however, he was determined to defend Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor and Fort Pickens at Pensacola, both of which remained in federal hands
Lincoln took the moderate step of resupplying the garrison at Fort Sumter
on April 12, the Confederates opened fire on the fort and forced its surrender
Slide420: Lincoln issued a call for seventy-five thousand volunteers, which prompted Virginia, North Carolina, Arkansas, and Tennessee to secede
Lincoln made it clear that he opposed secession to preserve the Union, not to abolish slavery
Slide421: The Blue and the Gray
the North possessed tremendous advantages over the Confederacy in population, industry, railroads, and naval strength
Confederates discounted these advantages
many believed that the North would not sustain a long war and that the importance of “king cotton” to the northern and international economies would give the South the upper hand
the South had the advantage of fighting a defensive war, and it benefited from quickly finding a great commander
Slide422: in contrast, many northern generals performed poorly in the early stages of the war and little distinguished soldiers of one side from the other
both sides faced massive difficulties in organizing, recruiting, and administering armies
the Whig prejudice against powerful presidents was part of Lincoln’s heritage, but he proved to be a capable and forceful leader
Lincoln exceeded the conventional limits of presidential authority
Slide423: the Confederacy faced greater problems, for it had to create an entire administration under the pressure of war, with the additional handicap of its commitment to states’ rights
the Confederacy based its government on precedents and machinery taken over from the United States
in contrast to Lincoln, President Jefferson Davis proved to be neither a good politician nor a popular leader
Slide424: The Test of Battle: Bull Run
the first battle of the Civil War took place on July 21, 1861, near the Bull Run River
Confederate forces, led by P. G. T. Beauregard, routed federal troops commanded by Irvin McDowell
Confederates were too disorganized to follow up their victory, but panic gripped Washington
the battle had little practical impact, except to boost southern morale
Slide425: after Bull Run, Lincoln devised a new strategy that included a naval blockade of southern ports, operations in the West to gain control of the Mississippi River, and an invasion of Virginia
Lincoln also appointed George B. McClellan, an experienced soldier and an able administrator, to command the Union forces
Slide426: Paying for the War
by the fall of 1861, the United States had organized a disciplined and well-supplied army in the East
Northern factories turned out the weapons and supplies necessary to fight a war
to supply Army and to offset drain of labor into the military, industrial units tended to increase in size and to rely more on mechanization
Congress financed the war by enacting excise and income taxes, assessing a direct tax on the states, borrowing, and printing paper money
Slide427: Politics as Usual
the secession of the South left the Republicans in control of Congress
although most Democrats supported measures necessary to conduct the war, they objected to the Lincoln administration’s conduct of it
slavery remained a divisive issue
radical Republicans, led by Charles Sumner and Thaddeus Stevens, advocated the abolition of slavery and granting full civil and political rights to blacks
Slide428: moderate Republicans objected to making abolition a war aim and opposed granting equal rights to blacks
Peace Democrats, or “Copperheads,” opposed all measures in support of the war and hoped for a negotiated peace with the South
Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus and applied martial law freely during the war
although courts attempted to protect civil liberties, they could not enforce their decrees when they came into conflict with the military
Slide429: after the war, in Ex parte Milligan (1866), the Supreme Court declared the military trials of civilians illegal in areas where regular courts still functioned
Slide430: Behind Confederate Lines
South also revised its strategy after Bull Run
Davis relied primarily on a defensive war to wear down the Union’s will to fight
the Confederacy did not develop a two-party system, but there was plenty of political strife
conflicts continually erupted between Davis and southern governors
Confederacy’s main problem was finance
it relied on income and excise taxes, a tax in kind, borrowing, cotton mortgages, and printing paper currency
Slide431: supplying its armies strained its resources, and the blockade made it increasingly difficult to obtain European goods
Southern expectations that “king cotton” would force England to aid the South went unrealized
England had a large supply of cotton when the war broke out and found other suppliers in India and Egypt
Slide432: War in the West: Shiloh
after Bull Run, no important battles took place until early 1862
McClellan continued his preparation to attack Richmond, while Union forces commanded by Ulysses S. Grant invaded Tennessee
Grant captured forts Henry and Donelson and marched toward Corinth, Mississippi
Confederate force led by Albert Sidney Johnston attacked Grant at Shiloh on April 6
Slide433: although Grant’s troops held their ground and forced the Confederates to retreat the following day, the surprise attack and the heavy Union losses so shook Grant that he allowed the enemy to escape
Shiloh cost Grant his command
casualties at Shiloh were staggering
new technology, which made weapons more deadly, accounted for the carnage
gradually, generals began to adjust their tactics and to experiment with field fortifications
Slide434: McClellan: the Reluctant Warrior
McClellan launched his campaign against Richmond in the spring of 1862
the Peninsula Campaign revealed McClellan’s deficiencies as a military commander
he saw war as a gentlemanly contest of maneuver, guile, and position; he was reluctant to commit his troops to battle
he constantly overestimated the strength of his enemy and failed to take advantage of his superior numbers
Slide435: at the indecisive Battle of Seven Pines, McClellan lost the initiative
during that battle, the Confederate commander, Joseph E. Johnston, was wounded
Robert E. Lee replaced him
Lee was courtly, tactful, and modest, yet on the battlefield he was a bold and daring gambler
Lee’s brilliant and audacious tactics forced McClellan to retreat
Slide436: Lee Counterattacks: Antietam
McClellan’s performance dismayed Lincoln, who reduced his authority by placing him under General Henry Halleck
Halleck called off the Peninsula Campaign
Lee defeated General John Pope’s forces at the Second Battle of Bull Run in August 1862, and Lincoln once again turned to McClellan
Lee hoped to strike a dramatic blow by invading northern territory
his march was halted at Antietam Creek in Maryland on September 17
Slide437: although the two sides fought to a draw, Lee’s army was perilously exposed
McClellan’s failure to pursue Lee led Lincoln once again to dismiss him
Slide438: The Emancipation Proclamation
Antietam provided Lincoln with the opportunity to make emancipation a war aim
The Emancipation Proclamation, issued on September 22, 1862, declared all slaves in areas still in rebellion on January 1, 1863, to be free
the proclamation did not apply to border states or to parts of the Confederacy already controlled by federal troops
Slide439: practically speaking, the proclamation did not free a single slave, yet it served Lincoln’s military needs and gained the support of liberal opinion in Europe
if anything, the proclamation aggravated racial tensions in the North
Democrats attempted to make political capital out of racist sentiment in North; Republicans often defended the Emancipation Proclamation with racist arguments of their own
Slide440: The Draft Riots
passage of the Conscription Act in March 1863 resulted in draft riots in several northern cities
most serious took place in New York in July
many of the rioters were workers who opposed conscription and the idea of fighting to free slaves, in part because they believed that freed slaves would compete for their jobs
the New York riot began as a protest against conscription and became an assault on blacks and the well-to-do
Slide441: the Emancipation Proclamation neither reflected nor initiated a change in white attitudes; most white northerners continued to believe in the inferiority of blacks
Lincoln was no exception, but his views were evolving
Slide442: The Emancipated People
both slaves and free blacks regarded the Emancipation Proclamation as a promise of future improvement, even if it failed immediately to liberate slaves or to ease racial tensions
Lincoln’s racial views might seem unenlightened by modern standards, but even his most militant black contemporaries respected him
after January 1, 1863, slaves flocked to Union lines in droves
Slide443: African American Soldiers
by 1862, the need for manpower argued for a change in the law of 1792 that barred blacks from the army
in August, the secretary of war authorized the military government of the captured South Carolina sea islands to enlist slaves
after the Emancipation Proclamation authorized the enlistment of blacks, states began to recruit black soldiers
by the end of the war, one of eight Union soldiers was black
Slide444: black soldiers fought in segregated units commanded by white officers
even though they initially received only about half of what white soldiers were paid, black troops soon proved themselves in battle
their casualty rate was higher than that of white units, partly because many captured black soldiers were killed on the spot
Slide445: Antietam to Gettysburg
McClellan’s replacement, General Ambrose E. Burnside, differed from McClellan in that he was an aggressive fighter
his disastrous attack at Fredricksburg led to his replacement by Joseph Hooker, whom Lee defeated at Chancellorsville
nevertheless, Chancellorsville cost the Confederates dearly; their losses were roughly equal to those of the Union forces, and theirs were harder to replace; in addition, Stonewall Jackson was killed in the battle
Slide446: to compound matters, the war in the West was not going well for the Confederacy
given his own situation and the decline in northern morale after Chancellorsville, Lee decided once again to invade the North
the Union army, now commanded by George Meade, halted Lee's advance at Gettysburg
Lee retreated after losing a major battle for the first time
Meade, however, failed to press his advantage
Slide447: Lincoln Finds His General: Grant at Vicksburg
Grant assumed command of Union troops in West when Halleck was called East, July 1862
while the great struggle at Gettysburg took place, Grant executed a daring series of maneuvers that led to surrender of Vicksburg
Grant’s victory gave the Union control of the Mississippi River and split the Confederacy
after Grant won another decisive victory at Chattanooga, Lincoln promoted him to lieutenant general and gave him supreme command of the armies of the United States
Slide448: Economic and Social Effects, North and South
by the end of 1863, Confederacy was on the road to defeat
Northern military pressure sapped its manpower; the blockade sapped its economic strength; shortages led to drastic inflation
efforts to increase manufacturing were only moderately successful because of shortages in labor, capital, and technical knowledge
Slide449: Southern prejudice against centralized authority prevented the Confederacy from making effective use of its scarce resources
on the other hand, the northern economy boomed after 1861
Government demand stimulated manufacturing
Congress passed a number of economic measures previously blocked by southerners, including various tariffs, the Homestead Act (1862), the Morill Land Grant Act (1862), and the National Banking Act (1863)
Slide450: although the economy grew, it did so at a slower pace than before or after the war
inflation eroded workers’ purchasing power, which, in turn, led to strikes
reduced immigration contributed to labor shortages
the war hastened industrialization and laid the basis for many other aspects of modern civilization
Slide451: Women in Wartime
many southern women took over the management of farms and plantations while the men were away in military service; others served as nurses in the Confederate medical corps or as government clerks
Northern women also ran farms and took jobs in factories or with government agencies
Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman doctor in the United States, helped to organize the Sanitary Commission
Slide452: the gradual acceptance of women nurses indicated that the “proper sphere” for women was expanding-another modernizing effect of the war
Slide453: Grant in the Wilderness
Grant’s strategy was to attack Lee and to try to capture Richmond while General William Tecumseh Sherman marched from Chattanooga to Atlanta
Grant attempted to outflank Lee in a series of battles in which he gained little advantage and suffered heavy losses
Grant knew, however, that his losses could be replaced; the South’s could not
Slide454: Grant moved around Lee’s flank and struck towards Petersburg
Lee rushed in forces to hold the city, which Grant placed under siege
Lee was pinned
Slide455: Sherman in Georgia
in June, the Republicans renominated Lincoln with Andrew Johnson as his running mate
Democratic nominee, McClellan, advocated peace at any price
in September, Sherman captured Atlanta and began his march to the sea
Lincoln won reelection handily
in December 1864, Sherman, who believed in total war and in the necessity of destroying the South’s economic base and its morale, entered Savannah and marched northward
Slide456: To Appomattox Court House
Lee desperately tried to pull his army back from Petersburg, but his force was enveloped by Grant’s
Richmond fell on April 3
Lee and Grant met at Appomattox Court House on April 9, where Lee surrendered
Grant’s terms required only that Confederate soldiers lay down their arms and return to their homes
he agreed to allow southern soldiers to keep their horses
Slide457: Winners, Losers, and the Future
Civil War cost nation more than 600,000 lives
the South suffered enormous property damage
the war left bitterness on both sides
despite the cost, the war ended slavery, and secession became almost inconceivable
a war designed to preserve a Union of states had created a nation
America emerged from the war with a more technologically advanced and productive economic system
RECONSTRUCTION AND THE SOUTH: RECONSTRUCTION AND THE SOUTH Presidential Reconstruction
after John Wilkes Booth assassinated Abraham Lincoln on April 14, 1865, the national mood hardened
however, in spite of the amount of blood shed, the Civil War caused less intersectional hatred than might have been expected; animosity quickly subsided, and most Confederate leaders were only mildly punished
Slide459: the status of the southern states raised complex legal questions about the process of readmitting them to the Union
the process of readmission began in 1862, when Lincoln appointed provisional governors for those areas of South occupied by federal troops
in December 1863, he issued a proclamation that provided that southerners, with the exception of high Confederate officials, could reinstate themselves as United States citizens by taking a loyalty oath
Slide460: a state could set up a government when a number equal to 10 percent of those who voted in 1860 took the oath
the Radicals disliked Lincoln's plan and passed the Wade-Davis Bill, which required a majority of voters in a state to take the loyalty oath before a constitutional convention could be convened
the bill further required that the states prohibit slavery and repudiate Confederate debts. Lincoln pocket-vetoed the bill
Slide461: after Johnson became president, he issued an amnesty proclamation only slightly more rigorous than Lincoln’s
by the time Congress reconvened in December 1865, all of the southern states had organized governments, ratified the Thirteenth Amendment, and elected senators and representatives. Johnson submitted the new governments to Congress
Slide462: Republican Radicals
both radical and moderate Republicans wanted to protect ex-slaves from exploitation and to guarantee their basic rights
radicals, however, demanded full political equality; moderates were unwilling to go so far
their agreement on a minimum set of demands doomed Johnsonian Reconstruction
Slide463: Republicans feared that the balance of power in Congress might swing to the Democrats because the 13th Amendment increased the South’s congressional representation by negating the Three-Fifths Compromise
southern voters provoked northern resentment by electing former Confederate leaders to office
Black Codes passed by southern governments to control ex-slaves further alarmed the North
congressional Republicans rejected Johnsonian Reconstruction and created a committee on Reconstruction to study the question of readmitting southern states
Slide464: Johnson further alienated Republicans in Congress by vetoing an extension of the Freedman’s Bureau and the Civil Rights Act
Congress overrode the veto of the Civil Rights Act, and thereafter Congress, not the president, controlled Reconstruction
Slide465: The Fourteenth Amendment
in June 1866, Congress submitted the Fourteenth Amendment to the states
this truly radical measure granted blacks political rights and, in doing so, expanded the power of the federal government at the expense of the states
in addition, it broadened the definition of citizenship and struck at discriminatory legislation, such as the Black Codes, by guaranteeing all citizens due process and equal protection of the law
Slide466: it attempted to force southern states to permit blacks to vote; those states that did not faced a reduction of their congressional representation
the amendment also barred former federal officials who had served the Confederacy from holding state or federal office unless they received a pardon from Congress
finally, it repudiated the Confederate debt
Slide467: Johnson made the choice between the Fourteenth Amendment and his own policy the main issue of the 1866 elections
this strategy failed dismally; the Republicans won veto-proof majorities in both houses of Congress and control of all the northern state governments
Slide468: The Reconstruction Acts
the refusal of southern states to accept the 14th Amendment led to the passage, over Johnson’s veto, of First Reconstruction Act in March 1867
this law divided the South into five military districts commanded by a military officer with extensive powers to protect the civil rights of “all persons” and to maintain order
to end military rule, states had to adopt new constitutions that both guaranteed blacks the right to vote and disenfranchised many ex-Confederates
Slide469: the new state governments also had to ratify the 14th Amendment
Congress passed two more Reconstruction Acts to tighten and clarify procedures
Arkansas became first state to gain readmission in June 1868, and by July enough states had ratified the 14th Amendment to make it part of the Constitution
last southern state to qualify for readmission, Georgia, did so in July 1870
Slide470: Congress Takes Charge
the South’s refusal to accept the spirit of even the mild Reconstruction designed by Johnson goaded the North to ever more strident measures to bring the ex-Confederates to heel
Johnson’s intractability also influenced the Republicans, and they became obsessed with the need to defeat him
a series of measures passed between 1866 and 1868 increased the authority of Congress over many areas of government
Slide471: still not satisfied, the Republicans finally attempted to remove Johnson from office
although a poor president, Johnson had really done nothing to merit ejection from office
the Republicans accused Johnson of violating the Tenure of Office Act by dismissing Secretary of War Stanton without obtaining the Senate’s approval
the House promptly impeached Johnson, but the Radicals failed to secure a conviction in the Senate by a single vote
Slide472: The Fifteenth Amendment
the Republican candidate, Ulysses Grant, defeated the Democratic nominee, Horatio Seymour, for the presidency in 1868
Southern blacks enfranchised under the Reconstruction Acts provided Grant’s narrow margin of victory in the popular vote
the Fourteenth Amendment and Reconstruction Acts enabled southern blacks to vote, but the Radicals wanted to guarantee blacks the right in all states, despite the unpopularity of the idea in the North
Slide473: Congress passed the Fifteenth Amendment, which forbade states to deny the right to vote on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude
the amendment became part of the Constitution in March 1870
Slide474: “Black Republican” Reconstruction: Scalawags and Carpetbaggers
during Reconstruction, former slaves had real political influence; they voted, held office, and exercised the rights guaranteed them by 14th Amendment
however, black officeholders were neither numerous nor inordinately influential
real rulers of “black Republican” governments were “scalawags,” southern whites who cooperated with the Republicans, and “carpetbaggers”
Slide475: “carpetbaggers” were northerners who went to the South for idealistic reasons or in search of opportunities
Blacks failed to dominate southern governments because they generally lacked political experience, were often poor and uneducated, and were nearly everywhere a minority
those blacks who held office tended to be better educated and more prosperous than most southern blacks; many had been free before the war
Slide476: most black officeholders proved to be able and conscientious public servants
others were incompetent and corrupt
in this regard, little distinguished them from their white counterparts
corruption in northern cities dwarfed that in the South
radical southern governments, in conjunction with the Freedman’s Bureau and philanthropic organizations, did much to rebuild the South and to expand social services and educational opportunities for whites and blacks
Slide477: The Ravaged Land
the South’s economic problems complicated the rebuilding of its political system
although in the long run the abolition of slavery released immeasurable quantities of human energy, the immediate effect was chaos
Thaddeus Stevens was the leading proponent of confiscating the property of southern planters and distributing it among blacks
establishing ex-slaves on small farms without adequate tools, seeds, and other necessities, however, would have done them little good
Slide478: yet, without a redistribution of land, former slaves were confined to the established framework of southern agriculture
southern whites considered blacks incapable of providing for themselves as independent farmers
southern productivity did decline, but not because blacks could not work independently
Blacks chose no longer to work like slaves; for example, they did not force their children into the fields at very early ages
Slide479: Sharecropping and the Crop-Lien System
immediately after the Civil War, southern planters attempted to farm their lands by gang labor consisting of ex-slaves working for wages
this system did not work because it reminded blacks of slavery and because capital was scarce
sharecropping emerged as an alternative. Sharecropping gave blacks more control over their lives and the hope of earning enough to buy a small farm
Slide480: however, few managed to buy their own farms, in part because of white resistance to blacks owning land
many white farmers in the South were also trapped by the sharecropping system
Scarcity of capital led to the development of the crop-lien system, which locked southern agriculture into the cultivation of cash crops
the South’s economy grew slowly after the Civil War, and its share of the national output of manufactured goods declined sharply during the Reconstruction era
Slide481: The White Backlash
to check black political power, dissident southerners formed secret terrorist societies, the most notorious of which was the Ku Klux Klan
formed in 1866 as a social club, the Klan soon became a vigilante group dedicated to driving blacks out of politics; the Klan spread rapidly throughout the South
Congress attacked Klan with three Force Acts (1870-1871), which placed elections under federal jurisdiction and punished those convicted of interfering with any citizen’s right to vote
Slide482: by 1872, federal authorities had broken the power of the Klan, but the experience of Klan, however, demonstrated the effectiveness of terrorism in keeping blacks away from polls, and paramilitary organizations adopted the tactics the Klan had been forced to abandon
“Conservative” parties (Democratic in national affairs) took over southern governments
terrorism and intimidation account only in part for this development
sectional reconciliation and waning interest in policing the South made the North unwilling to intervene
Slide483: Grant as President
Grant failed to live up to expectations as president
the general was a poor executive; his honest naivete made him the dupe of unscrupulous friends and schemers
he failed to deal effectively with economic and social problems, and corruption plagued his administration
Grant did not cause or participate in the scandals that disgraced his administration, but he did nothing to prevent them
Slide484: in 1872, Republican reformers, alarmed by rumors of corruption in Grant’s administration and by his failure to press for civil service reform, formed the Liberal Republican party and nominated Horace Greeley for president
Democrats also nominated Greeley, but Grant easily defeated him
Slide485: The Disputed Election of 1876
in 1876, Republicans nominated Rutherford B. Hayes, and Democrats chose Samuel J. Tilden
in Florida, South Carolina, and Louisiana, where Republican regimes still held power, Republicans used their control of the election machinery to invalidate Democratic votes and declare Hayes the winner in those states
in January 1877, Congress created an electoral commission to decide the disputed elections
the Republican majority on the commission awarded the disputed votes to Hayes
Slide486: The Compromise of 1877
many southern Democrats were willing to accept Hayes if he would promise to remove federal troops from South and to allow southern states to manage their own internal affairs
once in office, Hayes honored most elements of the compromise
he removed the last troops from South Carolina and Louisiana in April 1877 and appointed a former Confederate general, David M. Key, as Postmaster General
Slide487: the alliance of ex-Whigs and northern Republicans that produced the compromise did not last
the South remained solidly Democratic
the Compromise of 1877 did, however, mark the end of the Reconstruction era and the recognition of a new regime in the South
IN THE WAKE OF WAR: IN THE WAKE OF WAR New Problems, New Solutions
industrialization and urbanization changed the structure of the American economy and society
American political history in the last quarter of the 19th century was singularly divorced from the meaningful issues of the day
on the rare occasions that important issues did become the subject of debate, they occasioned far less argument than they merited
Slide489: The Triumph of Self-Interest
after Civil War Americans became materialistic
they professed a belief in laissez-faire, a policy of government noninterference in business
people tolerated the grossest kind of waste and corruption in high places
Mark Twain described this period as “the Gilded Age” dazzling on the surface but base metal below
Slide490: by the 1870s, Charles Darwin’s Origin of the Species (1859) influenced American public opinion
William Graham Sumner drew an analogy between survival of the fittest in nature and in human society
the application of Darwinist theory to social relations became known as social Darwinism
Slide491: Congress Ascendant
a succession of weak presidents occupied White House, and Congress dominated government
within Congress, the Senate generally overshadowed the House
critics called the Senate a rich man’s club, but its real source of influence derived from the long tenure of many of its members and the small number of senators
then, too, the House of Representatives was one of the most disorderly and inefficient legislative bodies in the world
Slide492: although the Democrats and Republicans competed fiercely, they seldom took clearly opposing positions on the issues of the day
fundamental division between Democrats and Republicans was sectional, result of Civil War
the South was heavily Democratic; New England remained solidly Republican; and the rest of the country was split, although Republicans tended to have the advantage
wealthy northerners and blacks tended to be Republicans; immigrants and Catholics tended to be Democrats
Slide493: even though Democrats won presidency only twice, most presidential elections in late nineteenth century were extremely close, and congressional majorities fluctuated continually
Slide494: The Political Aftermath of War
Republicans attacked Democrats by waving the “bloody shirt” (reminding voters that the Democrats had been party of secession and that Democrats denied rights to blacks in South)
other major issues included the tariff, currency, and civil service reform
Slide495: Blacks After Reconstruction
both Republicans and Democrats subscribed to hypocritical statements about black equality and constitutional rights, but neither did anything to implement them
for a time, southern blacks were not totally disfranchised
rival white political factions tried to manipulate black voters
in the 1890s, however, southern states began to use poll taxes and literacy tests to bar blacks from voting
Slide496: Supreme Court decisions curtailed black civil rights and power of government to defend them
in the Civil Rights Cases (1883), Court declared the Civil Rights Act of 1875 unconstitutional and ruled that the Fourteenth Amendment guaranteed civil rights against invasion by the state, but not by individuals
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) upheld legality of separate public accommodations for blacks and whites, so long as they were of equal quality
in practice, facilities provided for blacks were separate; they were rarely equal
Slide497: Booker T. Washington: A “Reasonable” Champion for Blacks
some blacks responded to racism and discrimination by adopting militant black nationalism; others advocated a revival of the African colonization movement; neither of these approaches won many adherents
the dominant black leader of the period, Booker T. Washington, believed that blacks needed to accommodate themselves to white prejudices, at least temporarily, and concentrate on self-improvement
Slide498: these ideas, expressed in his “Atlanta Compromise” speech, established his reputation as a moderate, “reasonable” black leader
in public, he minimized the importance of civil and political rights; behind the scenes, however, he lobbied against discriminatory measures and financed test cases in the courts
Slide499: White Violence and Vengeance
for decades after the Civil War, some southern whites had attempted to replace the legal subjugation of slavery with a new form of subjugation based on terror
between 1890 and 1910, an average of nearly a hundred blacks were lynched each year
even more striking was the utter savagery of many of the lynchings
violence succeeded in disfranchising southern black men and driving them out of public spaces
Slide500: ironically, this created an opportunity for black women to fill the void created by the disfranchisement of black men
black women in religious and reform associations became the points of contact with the white community
Slide501: The West after the Civil War
there was neither a typical West nor westerner
many parts of region had as large a percentage of foreign-born residents as the eastern cities
although often portrayed as an unpopulated region with large open spaces, the West contained several growing cities, including San Francisco and Denver
if the western economy was predominantly agricultural and extractive, it also had both a commercial and developing industrial component
Slide502: the West epitomized the social Darwinist psychology of post-Civil War America
beginning in the mid-1850s, a steady flow of Chinese immigrated to the United States
many worked building the railroads
with the completion of the railroads, Chinese began to look elsewhere for work
workers in San Francisco, who resented the competition, rioted
by 1882, these problems led Congress to prohibit Chinese immigration for ten years; later this ban was extended indefinitely
Slide503: The Plains Indians
in 1860, the Indians still occupied roughly half the United States; by 1877, they had been shattered as independent peoples; the Plains Indians lived by hunting
they eagerly adopted the products of white culture-clothing, weapons, horses
westward expansion by whites put pressure on Indian lands
in 1851, Thomas Fitzpatrick, an Indian agent, negotiated agreements with several tribes of Plains Indians at Horse Creek, Wyoming
Slide504: each tribe agreed to accept definite limits on its hunting grounds
in return, the Indians were promised gifts and annual payments
this policy, known as “concentration,” was designed to reduce intertribal warfare and, more important, to enable the government to negotiate separately with each tribe
the United States maintained that each tribe was a sovereign nation, to be dealt with as an equal in treaties, although both sides knew that such was not the case
Slide505: Indian Wars
white encroachments led to the outbreak of guerrilla warfare, in the course of which both sides committed atrocities
in 1867, the government tried a new strategy to replace the “concentration” policy
all Indians would be confined to reservations and forced to become farmers
some Indians refused to yield to the new policy and waged war against both the U.S. Army and settlers
Slide506: Indians made superb cavalry soldiers and often held off or defeated American troops
granting the inevitability of white expansion, some version of the “small reservation” policy was probably best for the Indians
however, maladministration hampered the government’s policy
treaties did not provide adequate land for the Indians, and Indian agents often cheated Indians
the discovery of gold on the Black Hills Indian Reservation led to further fighting, including Custer’s defeat at the Little Bighorn
Slide507: The Destruction of Tribal Life
the bison formed the mainstay of the Indian’s food and provided materials for clothing, tools, and shelter
its destruction led to disintegration of tribal life
many whites, including those sympathetic to the Indians’ plight, believed that the only way to solve the “Indian problem” was to persuade them to abandon their tribal culture and to live on family farms
Slide508: the Dawes Severalty Act (1887) allotted tribal lands to individual Indians, provided funds for education, and granted United States citizenship to those who accepted allotments and “adopted the habits of civilized life”
although the bill’s sponsors perceived it as a humanitarian reform, it had disastrous results
it shattered what remained of Indian culture without enabling Indians to adapt to white ways
Slide509: The Lure of Gold and Silver in the West
Americans had long regarded the West as a limitless resource to be exploited
miners chased “strikes,” which gave rise to boom towns, many of which soon died
major strikes were made at Fraser River, Pikes Peak, and Nevada (the Comstock Lode)
the boom towns of the West reflected the get-rich-quick attitude prevalent in the East
few gave any thought of conserving the resources
Slide510: gold towns attracted a variety of characters, and law enforcement was a constant problem
prospectors may have made key discoveries, but larger mining interests developed the resources and made most of the profits
gold rushes increased interest in the West and generated a valuable literature
moreover, each new strike and rush, no matter how ephemeral, brought permanent settlers: farmers, cattlemen, storekeepers, lawyers, and ministers
Slide511: gold bolstered the financial position of the United States and helped pay for the import of European goods
gold towns also consumed American agricultural and manufactured goods
Slide512: Big Business and the Land Bonanza
the Homestead Act (1862) intended to create 160-acre family farms, but things did not work out as planned
even if land was free, most landless Americans could not afford the cost of moving and purchasing the necessary farm equipment
factory workers had neither the skills nor the interest to become farmers
Slide513: moreover, 160 acres was not sufficient for farms in the far West; the Timber Culture Act (1873) increased the figure to 320 acres and required the planting of trees on the land
large speculators grabbed much of the land, and private interests destroyed much of the western forests
some corporate “bonanza” farmers made profits, but even commercialized agriculture could not withstand the droughts of the 1880s
Slide514: Western Railroad Building
the government subsidized the construction of western railroads through a combination of land grants and loans
government lands adjacent to the railroads were not open to homesteading because such free land would prevent the railroads from disposing of their granted lands at good prices
land grant railroads encouraged the growth of the West by advertising and selling their lands
they also provided inexpensive transportation and shipping for settlers
corruption and waste often marred the construction of railroads
Slide515: The Cattle Kingdom
the cattle industry developed as a result of increasing demands for food in eastern cities and the expansion of the railroad network
cattle were driven from Texas to Sedalia, Abilene, and points westward on the railroads, where the cattlemen sold them for substantial profits the long drive produced the American cowboy, about a third of whom were black or Mexican
cattle towns such as Abilene, Wichita, and Dodge City thrived
life in these towns was neither so violent nor disorderly as legend has it
Slide516: Open-Range Ranching
cattlemen began raising stock closer to the railheads, eliminating the long drive
open-range ranching on the northern plains required little more than the possession of cattle and access to water
the open range made actual ownership of much land unnecessary
ranchers often banded together to obtain legal title to watercourses and grazed their cattle in common on adjacent lands
Slide517: their herds became intermixed and could be distinguished only by brands
Easterners and Europeans invested in the ranches, and a few large ranches eventually came to dominate the industry
Slide518: Barbed Wire Warfare
by the mid-1880s, crowding on the range and lack of clear land titles gave rise to conflict and violence
compounding matters, Congress refused to change the land laws and thereby encouraged those who could not get title to enough land legally to resort to fraud
individuals and groups began to fence off large areas of land they considered their own, a step made possible by the invention of barbed wire
fencing often led to conflicts
Slide519: overproduction drove down beef prices, and many sections were overgrazed
the severe winter of 1886 to 1887 killed between 80-90 percent of cattle on the range and ended open-range cattle ranching
the industry revived on a smaller, more efficient scale
AN INDUSTRIAL GIANT: AN INDUSTRIAL GIANT Essentials of Industrial Growth
American manufacturing flourished in the last quarter of the nineteenth century
new natural resources were discovered and exploited, creating opportunities that attracted the brightest and most energetic Americans
the national market grew, protected from foreign competition by tariffs, and foreign capital entered the market freely
Slide521: European immigrants provided the additional labor needed for industrial expansion
advances in science and technology created new machines and power sources, which increased productivity
Slide522: Railroads: The First Big Business
in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, railroads were probably the most significant element in American economic development
important as an industry themselves, railroads also contributed to the growth and development of other industries
railroads developed into larger and more integrated systems, and their executives, including Cornelius Vanderbilt and Jay Gould, became some of the most powerful and wealthiest people in the country
Slide523: railroad equipment became standardized, as did time zones
land grant railroads helped to settle the West by selling their lands cheaply and on easy terms to settlers
new railroad technology, including the air brake and more powerful locomotives, made it possible for larger trains to travel at faster speeds
Slide524: Iron, Oil, and Electricity
the transformation of iron manufacturing affected the United States almost as much as the development of railroads
new techniques, including the Bessemer process, made possible mass production of steel
huge supply of iron ore and coal in U.S. allowed for rapid growth of steel production
the Mesabi range yielded enormous quantities of easily mined iron
Pittsburgh, surrounded by vast coal deposits, became the iron and steel center of the country
Slide525: the petroleum industry expanded even more spectacularly than iron and steel
new refining techniques enabled refiners to increase the production of kerosene, which, until the development of the gasoline engine, was the most important petroleum product
technological advances and the growth of an urban society led to the creation of new industries, such as the telephone and electric light businesses
Slide526: Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1876, and his invention quickly proved its practical value
of all Edison’s many inventions, the most significant was the incandescent light bulb
the Edison Illuminating Company opened a power station in New York, and power stations began to appear everywhere
the substitution of electric for steam power in factories had an impact comparable to the substitution of steam for water power before the Civil War
Slide527: Competition and Monopoly: The Railroads
growing importance of expensive machinery and economies of scale led to economic concentration
deflationary pressures after 1873 led to falling prices and increased competition, which cut deeply into railroad profits
railroads attempted to increase the volume of shipping by giving rebates, drawbacks, and other discounts to selected customers
Slide528: sometimes these discounts were far beyond what the economies of bulk shipment justified; in order to make up these losses, railroads charged higher rates in areas where no competition existed
combination of lost revenue from rate cutting and inflated debts forced several railroads into receivership in the 1870s
in the 1880s, major railroads responded to those pressures by creating interregional systems
these became the first giant corporations
Slide529: Competition and Monopoly: Steel
the iron and steel industry was also intensely competitive; production continued to increase, but demand varied erratically
Andrew Carnegie used his talents as a salesman and administrator, along with his belief in technological improvements, to create Carnegie Steel Company, which dominated the industry
alarmed by Carnegie’s control of the industry, makers of finished steel products began to combine and considered entering primary production
Slide530: in response, Carnegie threatened to turn out finished products
J. P. Morgan averted a steel war by buying out Carnegie, his main competitor, and the main fabricators of finished products
the new combination, United States Steel, was the first billion-dollar corporation
Carnegie retired to devote his life to philanthropy
Slide531: Competition and Monopoly: Oil
competition among refiners led to combination and monopoly in the petroleum industry
John D. Rockefeller founded the Standard Oil Company in 1870
he used technological advances and employed both fair and unfair means to destroy his competition or to persuade them to join forces
by 1879, Rockefeller controlled 90 % of nation’s oil refining capacity
to maintain monopoly, Rockefeller developed a new type of business organization, the trust
Slide532: Competition and Monopoly: Utilities and Retailing
utilities, such as the telephone and electric lighting industries, also formed monopolies in order to prevent costly duplication of equipment and to protect patents
Bell and Edison fought lengthy and expensive court battles to defend their inventions from imitators and competitors
competition between General Electric Company and Westinghouse dominated the electric lighting industry
Slide533: the life insurance business expanded after the Civil War, and it, too, became dominated by a few large companies
in retailing, this period saw the emergence of urban department stores, including Wanamaker’s and Marshall Field
the department stores advertised heavily and stressed low prices, efficient service, and guaranteed products
Slide534: Americans Ambivalence to Big Business
the expansion of industry and its concentration in fewer hands changed the way many people felt about the role of government in economic and social affairs
although Americans disliked powerful government and strict regulation of the economy, they did not object to all government involvement in the economic sphere
the growth of huge industrial and financial organizations frightened many people
Slide535: at the same time, people wanted the goods and services big business produced
the public worried that monopolists would raise prices; still more significant was the fear that monopolies would destroy economic opportunity and threaten democratic institutions
Slide536: Reformers: George, Bellamy, Lloyd
the popularity of several reformers reflected the growing concern over the maldistribution of wealth and the power of corporations
in Progress and Poverty (1879), Henry George argued that labor was only true source of capital
he proposed a “single tax” on wealth produced by appreciation of land values
Edward Bellamy’s utopian novel, Looking Backward (1888), described a future in which America was completely socialized and carefully planned
Slide537: Bellamy’s ideal socialist state arrived without revolution or violence
Henry Demarest Lloyd’s Wealth Against Commonwealth (1894) denounced the Standard Oil Company
his forceful but uncomplicated arguments made Lloyd’s book convincing to thousands
despite their criticisms, these writers did not question the underlying values of the middle class majority, and they insisted that reform could be accomplished without serious inconvenience to any individual or class
Slide538: Reformers: The Marxists
by the 1870s, the ideas of the Marxian socialists began to penetrate the United States; Marxist Socialist Labor party was founded in 1877
Laurence Gronlund’s The Cooperative Commonwealth (1884) attempted to explain Marxism to Americans
leading voice of Socialist Labor party, Daniel De Leon, was a doctrinaire revolutionary who insisted that workers could improve their lot only by adopting socialism and joining Socialist Labor party
he paid scant attention to the opinions or to the practical needs of common working people
Slide539: The Government Reacts to Big Business: Railroad Regulation
political reaction to the growth of big business came first at the state level and dealt chiefly with the regulation of railroads
strict railroad regulation resulted largely from agitation by the National Grange and focused on establishing reasonable maximum rates and outlawing unjust price discrimination
in Munn v. Illinois (1877), the Supreme Court ruled that such regulations by states were constitutional when applied to businesses that served a public interest
Slide540: however, the Supreme Court declared invalid an Illinois law prohibiting discriminatory rates between long and short hauls in the Wabash case (1886) on the ground that a state could not regulate interstate commerce
the following year, Congress passed the Interstate Commerce Act, which required that railroad charges be reasonable and just
it also outlawed rebates, drawbacks, and other competitive practices
in addition, the act created the Interstate Commerce Commission, the first federal regulatory board, to supervise railroad regulation
Slide541: The Government Reacts to Big Business: The Sherman Antitrust Act
first antitrust legislation originated in the states
federal action came with the passage of the Sherman Antitrust Act (1890), which declared illegal trusts or other combinations in restraint of trade or commerce
the Interstate Commerce Act sought to outlaw the excesses of competition; the Sherman Act intended to restore competition
Slide542: the Supreme Court undermined the Sherman Act when it ruled that the American Sugar Refining Company, which controlled 98 percent of sugar refining, was engaged in manufacturing and therefore its dominance did not restrict trade
in later cases, however, the Court ruled that agreements to fix prices did violate the Sherman Act
Slide543: The Labor Union Movement
at the time of the Civil War, only a small percentage of American workers were organized, and most union members were skilled artisans, not factory workers
the growth of national craft unions quickened after 1865
the National Labor Union was founded in 1866, but its leaders were out of touch with the practical needs and aspirations of workers
they opposed the wage system, strikes, and anything that increased laborers’ sense of membership in the working class
Slide544: their major objective was the formation of worker-owned cooperatives
founded in 1869, the Knights of Labor supported political objectives that had little to do with working conditions and rejected the idea that workers must resign themselves to remaining wage earners
the Knights also rejected the grouping of workers by crafts and accepted blacks, women, and immigrants
membership in the Knights grew in the 1880s, encouraged by successful strikes against railroads
Slide545: in 1886, agitation for an eight-hour day gained wide support
clashes between workers and police in Chicago led to a protest meeting at Haymarket Square
a bomb tossed into the crowd killed seven policemen and injured many others
Slide546: The American Federation of Labor
the violence in Chicago damaged organized labor, especially the Knights of Labor, which the public associated with anarchy and violence
membership in the Knights declined
a combination of national craft unions, the American Federation of Labor, replaced the Knights of Labor as the leading labor union
led by Adolph Strasser and Samuel Gompers, the AFL concentrated on organizing skilled workers
Slide547: it fought for higher wages and shorter hours
the AFL accepted the fact that most workers would remain wage earners and used its organization to develop a sense of common purpose and pride among its members
the AFL avoided direct involvement in politics and used the strike as its primary tool to improve working conditions
Slide548: Labor Militancy Rebuffed
threatened by the growing size and power of their corporate employers, the substitution of machines for human skills, and the influx of foreign workers willing to accept low wages, labor grew increasingly militant
in 1877, a railroad strike shut down two-thirds of the nation’s railroad mileage
violence broke out, federal troops restored order, and the strike collapsed
in 1892, violence marked the strike against Carnegie’s Homestead Steel plant
Slide549: the defeat of the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers eliminated unionism as an effective force in the steel industry
the most important strike of the period took place in 1894, when Eugene Debs’s American Railway Union struck the Pullman company
President Cleveland broke the strike when he sent federal troops to ensure the movement of the mail
when Debs defied a federal injunction to end the strike, he was jailed for contempt
Slide550: Whither America, Whither Democracy?
each year more of America’s wealth and power seemed to fall into fewer hands
bankers dominated major industries
centralization increased efficiency but raised questions about the ultimate effects of big business on democracy
the defeat of the Pullman strike demonstrated the power of courts to break strikes
Slide551: the federal government obtained an injunction in that case by asserting that the American Railway Union was engaged in a combination in restraint of trade prohibited by the Sherman Act
after the failure of the Pullman strike, Debs became a socialist
AMERICAN SOCIETY IN THE INDUSTRIAL AGE: AMERICAN SOCIETY IN THE INDUSTRIAL AGE Middle-Class Life
American middle-class culture took elements of romanticism (the optimism about human potential, the quest for personal improvement, the passion for competition) and tempered them with self-control
Victorian family relations, however, were not nearly so stiff and formal as often imagined
Slide553: diaries and letters indicate that many couples experienced sexually fulfilling relationships
middle-class families also began to have fewer children; abstinence accounted for much of the decline in fertility, but the use of contraceptive devices and abortion contributed as well
America’s middle-class comprised professionals, varied groups of shopkeepers, small manufacturers, skilled craftsmen, and established farmers
middle-class family life was defined in terms of tangible goods, thus giving rise to a culture of consumption
Slide554: Skilled and Unskilled Workers
wage earners, especially in the mining, manufacturing, and transportation sectors, experienced the full impact of industrialization
skilled industrial workers were generally quite well off, but unskilled laborers found it difficult to support a family on their wages alone
large-scale industry decreased contact between employee and employer; relations between them became increasingly impersonal
Slide555: machines set the pace of work
the costs of capitalization reduced the worker’s opportunity to rise from the ranks of labor to ownership
workers became subject to swings of the business cycle
Slide556: Working Women
with the shift from cottage industries to a factory system, a growing number of women worked outside of the home
while many women found work in textile mills and sewing trades, at least half of all working women were employed as domestic servants
the Cult of True Womanhood served to open new employment opportunities for women
Slide557: employers in the retail sector believed women to be more polite, honest, and submissive than male workers
for many of these same reasons, educated middle-class women came to dominate the nursing, elementary education, and secretarial fields
although employment opportunities for women increased during this period, management and entrepreneurial positions remained, for the most part, a male domain
Slide558: Farmers
long the mainstay of American society, independent farmers found their relative share of the nation’s wealth and their personal status declining
loss of wealth and influence, along with an increasing vulnerability to an economy dominated by industrial trends, fostered periodic waves of radicalism in the nation’s farm belts
Slide559: while the Grange movements took hold at different times in different places and varied in their impact, they were instrumental in breaking down rural laissez-faire prejudices
farmers in the older, more established regions benefited not only from new technology but from easy access to rapidly expanding urban markets
the frontier farm belts and the Old South proved less able to adapt to new technologies and advances in transportation
Slide560: Working-Class Family Life
enormous disparities existed in the standard of living among workers engaged in the same line of work during this period
co-workers with the same pay rates often supported their families in dramatically different styles
the factors influencing a working-class family could range from family size to personal spending habits
Slide561: social workers of the day listed such variables as family health, intelligence, the wife’s household management skills, the family’s commitment to middle-class values, and pure luck
Slide562: Working-Class Attitudes
surveys conducted among workers during the 1880s and 1890s revealed a broad spectrum of responses regarding their employment circumstances
while some workers expressed contentment with their conditions, others called for the nationalization of the means of production and transportation
despite a general improvement in living standards, the number of bitter strikes revealed the discontent of many workers
Slide563: this dissatisfaction fell into three broad areas
for some, poverty remained the chief problem; for others, rising aspirations triggered discontent
the discontent of yet another group stemmed from confusion over their situation; the tradition that no one of ability need remain a hired hand died hard, even in the face of contradictory reality
they were drawn to the ideas of a classless society and the community of interest shared by capital and labor, but the gap between the very rich and ordinary citizens was widening
Slide564: Working Your Way Up
Americans were a mobile people. Geographical mobility often translated into economic and social improvement
nearly one quarter of all manual laborers studied rose into the ranks of the middle class
Slide565: while such upward progress was primarily the result of economic growth, public education began to provide an additional boost
by the turn of the century, more than 15 million students attended public schools, curricula had expanded, and as many as 36 cities had established vocational high schools
Slide566: The “New” Immigration
between 1866 and 1915, about 25 million immigrants entered the United States
the demand for labor created by industrial expansion drew immigrants, and steamships made the Atlantic crossing safe and speedy
economic disruption in many European countries, political upheaval, and religious persecution pushed this wave of immigrants to America’s shores
Slide567: prior to the 1880s, the bulk of America’s newcomers were western and northern Europeans
beginning in the 1880s, the sources of immigration shifted from northern and western to southern and eastern Europe
Slide568: New Immigrants Face New Nativism
linguistic, religious, and cultural factors, along with the physical appearance of these new immigrants, convinced many Americans that these new arrivals would not assimilate into mainstream society
old stock American workers, in addition to their existing prejudices, worried that these new immigrants undermined their job security
the majority of these “new immigrants” settled into ethnic enclaves
Slide569: political nativists, social Darwinists, and pseudo-scientists found the flow of immigrants alarming
labor leaders feared competition for jobs. Employers were not disturbed by the influx of workers, but many became alarmed by the supposed radicalism of the immigrants
there were some efforts to limit immigration, but substantial immigration controls were not enacted until after World War I
Slide570: The Expanding City and Its Problems
proponents of immigration restriction made much of crowded ethnic enclaves in cities
immigrants were drawn to cities by the jobs created by expanding industry, as were native-born Americans
industrialization alone did not account for the growth of the cities; urban centers served as commercial and transportation hubs
by the end of the century, however, the expansion of industry had become the chief cause of urban growth
Slide571: immigrants made up a steadily increasing proportion of the urban population
few had the resources to acquire land and farm implements
as the concentration progressed, eastern cities developed ethnic neighborhoods
these neighborhoods helped preserve traditional cultures
many native-born citizens resented the newcomers and accused them of resisting Americanization
Slide572: Teeming Tenements
rapid rate of city growth severely taxed, and in many cases overwhelmed, local infrastructures
problems of sewage and garbage disposal, fire protection, law enforcement, and availability of potable water supplies often reached crisis stage
overcrowding and substandard housing led to epidemics, crime, juvenile delinquency, and, at times, to the disintegration of family life
efforts to enact new building codes and to design new modes of urban housing effected little real improvement
slums bred crime; more affluent fled to suburbs
Slide573: The Cities Modernize
eventually the problems confronting the nation’s cities began to yield to solutions
technology contributed some of the answers
development of electric trolley lines not only allowed a city to expand outward but also eliminated much of the organic pollution of horsepower
improvements in street paving and electric lighting enhanced urban life
Slide574: new materials and new architectural design allowed cities to grow upward
despite these technical aids and the actions of urban reformers, the lot of the cities’ poorest denizens remained much the same
Slide575: Leisure Activities: More Fun and Games
the concentration of people in the burgeoning cities fostered many kinds of social, intellectual, and artistic activity impossible to maintain in rural areas
in addition to the museums and concert halls of the upper classes, city life also spawned vaudeville, burlesque houses, and the workingman’s saloon
Slide576: family activities could center around parks and amusement parks reached by trolley
bicycling, golf, and tennis gained popularity
cities provided the concentrations of population necessary to maintain spectator sports such as boxing, baseball, football, and basketball
Slide577: Christianity’s Conscience and the Social Gospel
the traditional conservative attitudes of many churches and their leaders offered little practical help to urban slum dwellers
many residents of the poorer districts were Roman Catholic; and, while the Church distributed aid to the poor, it remained unconcerned with the social causes of poverty
urban evangelists such as Dwight L. Moody urged slum dwellers to cast aside their sinful ways
Slide578: however, they, too, paid little attention to the causes of urban poverty and vice
a few nontraditional, primarily Protestant, clergymen began to preach a “Social Gospel” that focused on improving the living conditions of the poor, rather than on purely spiritual matters
the most influential of these was Washington Gladden
Slide579: The Settlement Houses
the Social Gospel movement was, for the most part, inspirational
a number of concerned people founded community centers known as settlement houses
the settlement house, constructed in the poorer districts and run by upper- and middle-class volunteers (most of whom were women), provided guidance, educational services, and legal advice to their clientele
Slide580: the volunteers not only provided lessons in home economics and English but also lobbied local and state governments for tenement housing laws and the construction of schools
the overall goal was to improve the plight of the disadvantaged while aiding them in assimilating into mainstream society
Slide581: Civilization and Its Discontents
those Americans fortunate enough to be spared the more unpleasant disruptions of industrial development by wealth, social status, or geographic isolation remained uncritical of their civilization
however, blacks, many immigrants, the poor, and a growing segment of reformers found much to lament in American society
many were troubled by the increasing gap between rich and poor
others worried that crass materialism would overwhelm traditional and spiritual values
INTELLECTUAL AND CULTURAL TRENDS: INTELLECTUAL AND CULTURAL TRENDS
The Knowledge Revolution
industrialization altered the way Americans thought as well as the way they made a living
the new industrial society placed new demands on education and gave rise to new ways of thinking about education
Darwin’s theory of evolution influenced almost every field of knowledge
America emerged from the intellectual shadow of Europe, as Americans began to make significant contributions to the sciences as well as the relatively new social sciences, and American literature flourished
Slide583: Americans began to hunger for information
Chautauqua-type movements, the growth of public libraries, and the boom in the number, size, and sophistication of newspapers began to satisfy the public's newfound curiosity
a growing and better-educated population created a demand for printed matter
this, combined with the integration of the economy, increased importance of advertising
papers such as Pulitzer’s New York World and Hearst’s New York Journal competed fiercely for readers
Slide584: Magazine Journalism
by the turn of the century, more than five thousand magazines were in publication
prior to the 1880s, a few staid publications, such as Harper’s and The Atlantic Monthly, dominated the field of serious magazines
in the 1860s and 1870s, Frank Leslie’s magazines appealed to a broader audience
after the mid-1880s, several new, serious magazines adopted a hard-hitting, controversial, and investigative style and inquired into the social issues of their day
Slide585: in 1889, Edward Bok became editor of Ladies’ Home Journal
he offered articles on child care and household affairs as well as literary items
in addition to printing colored reproductions of art masterpieces, Bok undertook crusades for women’s suffrage, conservation, and other reforms
Bok not only catered to public tastes, he created new ones
Slide586: Colleges and Universities
the number of colleges increased as state universities and coeducational land-grant colleges sprang up across the nation
still, less than 2 percent of the college age population attended college
Harvard led the way in reforming curriculum and professionalizing college teaching
established in 1876 and modeled on German universities, Johns Hopkins University pioneered the modern research university and professional graduate education in America
Slide587: beginning with Vassar College, the second half of the nineteenth century witnessed the establishment of numerous women's colleges
alumni influence on campus grew, fraternities spread, and organized sports became a part of the college scene; colleges and universities mirrored the complexities of modern American society
Slide588: Scientific Advances
Americans made enormous contributions in the fields of pure science during the nineteenth century
Josiah Willard Gibbs single-handedly created the field of physical chemistry
Albert A. Michelson was the first man to measure the speed of light accurately
Slide589: Revolution in the Social Sciences
social scientists applied the theory of evolution to every aspect of human relations
they also attempted to use scientific methodology in their quest for objective truths in subjective fields
controversies over trusts, slum conditions, and other problems drew scholars into practical affairs
classical economics faced a challenge from the institutionalist school
similar forces were at work in the disciplines of sociology and political science
Slide590: Progressive Education
educators began to realize that traditional education did not prepare their students for life in industrial America
settlement house workers found that slum children needed training in handicrafts, citizenship, and personal hygiene as much as in reading and writing
new theorists argued that good teaching called for professional training, psychological insights, enthusiasm, and imagination, not rote memorization and corporal punishment
Slide591: John Dewey of the University of Chicago emerged as the leading proponent of progressive education
Dewey held that the school should serve as “an embryonic community,” a mirror of the larger society
he contended that education should center on the child and that new information should relate to the child’s existing knowledge
Dewey saw schools as instruments of reform
toward that end, he argued that education should teach values and citizenship
Slide592: Law and History
social evolutionists affected even the law
in 1881, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., in The Common Law, best summarized this new view, averring that “the felt necessities of time” and not mere precedent should determine the rules by which people are governed
also responding to new intellectual trends, historians traced documentary evidence to discover the evolutionary development of their contemporary political institutions
Slide593: one product of this new approach was the theory of the Teutonic origins of democracy, which has since been thoroughly discredited
however, the same general approach also produced Frederick Jackson Turner’s “Frontier Thesis”
if the claims of the new historians to objectivity were absurdly overstated, their emphasis upon objectivity, exactitude, and scholarly standards benefited the profession
Slide594: Realism in Literature
the majority of America’s pre-Gilded Age literature was romantic in mood
however, industrialism, theories of evolution, the new pragmatism in the sciences, and the very complexities of modern life produced a change in American literature
novelists began to examine social problems such as slums, political corruption, and the struggle between labor and capital
Slide595: Mark Twain
while no man pursued modern materialism with more vigor than Samuel L. Clemens, perhaps no man could illustrate the foibles and follies of America’s Gilded Age with greater exactitude than his alter ego, Mark Twain
his keen wit, his purely American sense of humor, and his eye for detail allowed Twain to portray the best and the worst of his age
his works provide a brilliant and biting insight into the society of his day
Slide596: William Dean Howells
initially for Howells, realism meant a realistic portrayal of individual personalities and the genteel, middle-class world that he knew best
he became, however, more and more interested in the darker side of industrialism
he combined his concerns for literary realism and social justice in novels such as The Rise of Silas Lapham and A Hazard of New Fortunes
following his passionate defense of the Haymarket radicals in 1886, he began calling himself a socialist
Slide597: the most influential critic of his time, Howells was instrumental in introducing such authors as Tolstoy, Dostoyevski, Ibsen, and Zola to American readers
he also sponsored young American novelists such as Hamlin Garlin, Stephen Crane, and Frank Norris
some of these young authors went beyond realism to naturalism, a philosophy that regarded humans as animals whose fate was determined by the environment
Slide598: Henry James
a cosmopolitan born to wealth, Henry James lived most of his adult life as an expatriate
James never gained the recognition of his countrymen during his lifetime
his major themes concerned the clash between American and European cultures and the corrupt relationships found in high society
Slide599: Realism in Art
Realism had a profound impact on American painting as well as writing
foremost among realist artists was Thomas Eakins, who was greatly influenced by the seventeenth-century European realists
as an early innovator in motion pictures, Eakins used film to study people and animals in motion
Winslow Homer, a watercolorist from Boston, used all of the realist’s techniques for accuracy and detail to enhance his sometimes romantic land- and seascapes
Slide600: in art, the romantic tradition retained its vitality
the leading romantic painter of the day, Pinkham Ryder, drew upon the sea for much of his inspiration
if the careers of Eakins, Homer, and Ryder demonstrated that America was not uncongenial to first-rate artists, two of the leading artists of the era, James McNeill Whistler and Mary Cassatt, were expatriates
during this period, vast collections of American and foreign artworks came to rest in the mansions and museums of the United States
Slide601: The Pragmatic Approach
it would indeed have been surprising if the intellectual ferment of this period had not affected traditional religious and philosophical values
evolution posed an immediate challenge to traditional religious doctrine but did not seriously undermine most Americans’ faith
if Darwin was correct, the biblical account of creation was false
however, many were able to reconcile evolutionary theory and religion
Slide602: Darwinism had a less dramatic but more significant impact upon philosophical values
the logic of evolution made it difficult to justify fixed systems and eternal verities
Charles S. Pierce, the father of pragmatism, argued that concepts could be fairly understood only in terms of their practical effects
William James, the brother of the novelist and perhaps the most influential thinker of his time, presented pragmatism in more understandable language
Slide603: he also contributed to the establishment of psychology as a scientific discipline
although pragmatism inspired reform, it had its darker side
while relativism gave cause for optimism, it also denied the comfort of certainty and eternal values
Pragmatism also seemed to suggest that the end justified the means
POLITICS: LOCAL, STATE, AND NATIONAL: POLITICS: LOCAL, STATE, AND NATIONAL Political Strategy and Tactics
major parties normally avoid taking stands on controversial issues, but that tendency reached abnormal proportions in the late nineteenth century
a delicate balance of power between the parties as well as new and difficult issues, to which no answers were readily available, contributed to the parties’ reluctance to adopt firm positions
Slide605: Voting Along Ethnic and Religious Lines
although major parties had national committees and held national conventions to nominate presidential candidates and draft “platforms,” these parties remained essentially separate state organizations
more often than not, a voter’s ethnic origins, religious ties, perception of the Civil War, and whether he lived in a rural or urban setting influenced his decision to vote Republican or Democrat
Slide606: local and state issues often interacted with religious and ethnic issues and shaped political attitudes
the nation’s political leadership, therefore, based their strategies and chose their candidates with an eye to local and personal factors as well as national concerns
Slide607: City Bosses
stresses of rapid urban growth, strain on infrastructures, and exodus of upper and middle classes all led to a crisis in city government
this turmoil gave rise to urban political bosses
these bosses provided social services in exchange for political support
money for these services (and to enrich themselves) came from kickbacks and bribes
Slide608: despite their welfare work and popularity, most bosses were essentially thieves
the system survived because most comfortable urban dwellers cared little if at all for the fate of the poor
many reformers resented the boss system mainly because it gave political power to people who were not “gentlemen”
Slide609: Party Politics: Sidestepping the Issue
on the national scene, the South was solidly Democratic; New England and the Trans-Mississippi West were staunchly Republican
New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois usually determined the outcome of elections
only three presidential candidates between 1868 and 1900 did not come from New York, Indiana, Illinois, or Ohio; and all three lost; partisan politics was intense in “swing states”
because so much depended on these states, the level of political ethics was abysmally low
Slide610: Lackluster Leaders
America’s presidents of the day demonstrated little interest in dealing with the urgent issues confronting the nation
Rutherford B. Hayes, president from 1877 to 1881, entered office with a distinguished personal and political record
Hayes favored tariff reduction, civil service reform, and better treatment for blacks in South
however, he made little progress in any of these areas
Slide611: Republican party split in 1880 between “Stalwarts” and “Half-Breeds,” and James A. Garfield emerged as a compromise candidate
Garfield was assassinated after only four months in office, but he had already demonstrated his ineffectiveness
his successor, Chester A. Arthur, although personally honest and competent, had been an unblushing defender of the spoils system
as president, however, Arthur conducted himself with dignity, handled patronage matters with restraint, and gave nominal support to civil service reform
Slide612: Arthur also favored regulation of the railroads and tariff reductions
nevertheless, he was a political failure; the Stalwarts would not forgive Arthur for his “desertion,” and the reformers would not forget his past
his party denied him its nomination in 1884
the election of 1884 revolved around personal issues and was characterized by mudslinging on both sides
Grover Cleveland, former Democratic governor of New York, defeated James G. Blaine by fewer than 25,000 votes
Slide613: Cleveland’s was an honest, if unimaginative, administration
his emphasis on the strict separation of powers prevented his placing effective pressure on the Congress, and thus he failed to confront the issues of the day
in 1888, Benjamin Harrison, a Republican from Indiana, defeated Cleveland. Harrison’s election elevated a “human iceberg” and fiscal conservative to the presidency
Slide614: during Harrison’s term, Congress raised the tariff to an all-time high, passed the Sherman Antitrust Act and the Silver Purchase Act, and enacted a “force” bill to protect the voting rights of southern blacks
Harrison, however, remained aloof from this process
Cleveland reclaimed the presidency from Harrison in 1892
by the standards of the late nineteenth century, Cleveland’s margin of victory was substantial
Slide615: Congressional Leaders
James G. Blaine, a Republican from Maine, stands out among Congressional leaders, both for his successes and for his shortcomings
Congressman William McKinley of Ohio devoted his efforts to maintaining a protective tariff
another Ohioan, John Sherman, held national office from 1855 to 1898
although a financial expert, he proved all too willing to compromise his personal beliefs for political gain
Slide616: Thomas B. Reed, a Republican congressman from Maine, was a man of acerbic wit and ultraconservative views
as Speaker of the House, his autocratic methods won him the nickname “Czar”
Slide617: Crops and Complaints
if middle class majority remained comfortable and complacent, the economic and social status of farmers declined throughout the late 19th century; and their discontent forced American politics to confront the problems of the era
American farmers suffered from low commodity prices, restrictive tariff and fiscal policies, competition from abroad, and drought. Farmers on the plains experienced boom conditions in the 1880s
Slide618:
the boom collapsed in the 1890s, and a downward swing in the business cycle exacerbated their plight
Slide619: The Populist Movement
the agricultural depression triggered an outburst of political radicalism, the Alliance movement
the Farmers Alliance spread throughout the South and into the Midwest
the farm groups entered politics in the elections of 1890
in 1892, these farm groups combined with representatives of the Knights of Labor and various professional reformers to organize the People’s, or Populist, party
Slide620: the convention adopted a sweeping platform calling for a graduated income tax; the nationalization of rail, telegraph, and telephone systems; the “subtreasury” plan, and the unlimited coinage of silver
the party also called for the adoption of the initiative and referendum, popular election of United States senators, an eight-hour workday, and immigration restrictions
in the presidential election, Cleveland defeated Harrison
Slide621: the Populist candidate, James B. Weaver, attracted over a million votes, but results in congressional and state races were disappointing
opponents of the Populists in the South played on racial fears, and the Populists failed to attract the support of urban workers
Slide622: Showdown on Silver
by early 1890s, discussion of federal monetary policy revolved around the coinage of silver
traditionally, the United States issued gold and silver coins
established ratio of roughly 15:1 undervalued silver, so no one took silver to the Mint
when silver mines of Nevada and Colorado flooded market with metal and depressed the price of silver, it became profitable to coin bullion; but miners found that the Coinage Act of 1873 had demonetized the metal
Slide623: Silver miners and inflationists demanded a return to bimetalism; conservatives resisted
the result was a series of compromises
the Bland-Allison Act (1878) authorized the purchase of $2 million to $4 million of silver a month at the market price
this had little inflationary impact because the government consistently bought the minimum
the Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890) required the government to buy 4.5 million ounces of silver monthly
however, increasing supplies drove the price of silver still lower
Slide624: Cleveland believed that the controversy over silver caused the depression by shaking the confidence of the business community
he summoned a special session of Congress and forced a repeal of Sherman Silver Purchase Act
the southern and western wings of the Democratic party deserted over this issue. Cleveland’s handling of Coxey’s Army and the Pullman strike further eroded public confidence in him, and the public was outraged when it took a syndicate of bankers headed by J. P. Morgan to avert a run on the Treasury
Slide625: with the silver issue looming ever larger and the Populists demanding unlimited coinage of silver at 16:1, the major parties could no longer avoid the money question in 1896
the Republicans nominated McKinley and endorsed the gold standard
the Democrats nominated William Jennings Bryan and ran on a platform of free silver
although concerned over the loss of their distinctive party identity, the Populists nominated Bryan as well
in an effort to preserve their party identity, they substituted Tom Watson for the Democratic vice-presidential nominee
Slide626: The Election of 1896
the election of 1896, fueled by emotional debates over the silver issue, split party ranks across the nation
pro-silver Republicans swung behind Bryan, while pro-gold Democrats, called “gold bugs” or National Democrats, nominated their own candidate
the Republican aspirant, William McKinley, relied upon his experience, his reputation for honesty and good judgment, his party’s wealth, and the skillful management of Mark Hanna
Slide627: moreover, the depression worked to the advantage of the party out of power
Bryan, a powerful orator, was handicapped by his youth, his relative inexperience, and the defection of the gold Democrats
he nevertheless conducted a vigorous campaign, traveling over eighteen thousand miles and delivering over six hundred speeches
on election day, McKinley decisively defeated Bryan
Slide628: The Meaning of the Election
far from representing a triumph for the status quo, the election marked the coming of age of modern America
McKinley’s approach was national; Bryan’s was basically parochial
workers and capitalists supported McKinley, and the farm vote split
the battle over gold and silver had little real significance; new gold discoveries led to an expansion of the money supply
Slide629: Bryan’s vision of America, and that of the political Populists who supported him, was one steeped in the past
McKinley, for all his innate conservatism, was capable of looking ahead toward the new century
THE AGE OF REFORM: THE AGE OF REFORM Roots of Progressivism
progressives were never a single unified group seeking a single objective
they sought civil service reform, political reform, government regulation of big business, improvement of conditions in the workplace, and the enactment of antitrust legislation
in response to an increasingly complex society, progressivism represented a “search for order”
Slide631: The Muckrakers
the popular press published articles on social, economic, and political issues of the day
McClure’s published Ida Tarbell’s critical series on Standard Oil and Lincoln Steffens’s expose on city machines
soon, other editors rushed to adopt McClure’s formula
a veritable army of journalists published stories exposing labor gangsterism, the adulteration of foods and drugs, corruption in college athletics, and prostitution
Slide632: the degree of sensationalism used by some authors prompted Theodore Roosevelt to label them “muckrakers”
Slide633: The Progressive Mind
despite its democratic rhetoric, progressivism was paternalistic, moderate, and often soft-headed
reformers oversimplified issues and regarded their personal values as absolute standards
progressives came from all walks of life and included great tycoons, small operators, advocates of social justice, prohibitionists, and others
Slide634: progressivism never truly challenged the fundamental principles of capitalism; nor did it seek to reorganize the basic structures of society
many progressives held anti-immigrant views, and few progressives concerned themselves with the plight of blacks
Slide635: “Radical” Progressives: The Wave of the Future
influenced by European revolutionary theories, some segments of American society sought radical relief for the ills of industrialism
some labor leaders rejected craft unionism and advocated socialism
in 1905, a coalition of mining and other unions, socialists, and other radicals formed a new union, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
Slide636: the openly anticapitalist IWW never attracted the support of mainstream labor
other nonpolitical European ideas influenced progressive intellectuals
few understood, and even fewer read, Freud, but his theories became a popular topic of conversation
some used Freud to argue against conventional standards of sexual morality
Slide637: Political Reform: Cities First
corrupt political machines ruled many cities
city bosses and machine politics became the primary targets of progressivism
reformers could not defeat the machines without changing urban political structures
new forms included “home rule,” nonpartisan bureaus, city commissioners, and city managers
beyond reforming the political process, progressives hoped to use it to improve society
Slide638: some experiments at the municipal level included urban renewal, municipalizing public utilities and public transportation systems, and reform of penal institutions
Slide639: Political Reform: The States
corruption and mismanagement at state level impeded the efforts of municipal reformers
Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin perhaps best illustrated progressivism in action at the state level
among La Follette’s reforms were the adoption of direct primaries, corrupt practices acts, and laws to limit campaign spending and funding of lobbyists
Slide640: La Follette also advocated state regulation of the railroads and management of natural resources
other states adopted many elements of the Wisconsin Idea
some states went beyond Wisconsin in making their governments responsive to the popular will with the adoption of the initiative and referendum
Slide641: State Social Legislation
by the 1890s, many states passed laws regulating conditions in the workplace
these laws restricted child labor, set maximum hours for women and children, and regulated conditions in sweatshops
conservative judges, unwilling to accept an expansion of the states’ coercive power, often struck down such laws on the ground that they violated the “due process” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
Slide642: progressives also achieved state legislation regulating the transportation, utilities, banking, and insurance industries
however, piecemeal regulation by the states failed to solve the problems of an increasingly complex society
Slide643: Political Reform: The Women’s Suffrage Movement
the Progressive Era saw the culmination of the struggle for women’s suffrage
the women’s movement was handicapped by rivalry between the NWSA and the AWSA, by Victorian attitudes about the role of women, and by applications of Darwinian theory
feminists attempted to turn ideas of women’s moral superiority to their advantage in the struggle for voting rights
in doing so, however, they surrendered the principle of equality
Slide644: in 1890, the two major women’s groups combined to form the National American Women’s Suffrage Association (NAWSA)
the growth of progressivism contributed to the cause of suffrage
after winning the right to vote in several states, NAWSA focused its attention on the national level
the Nineteenth Amendment (1920) granted women the right to vote
Slide645: Political Reform: Income Taxes and Popular Election of Senators
progressivism also found expression in the Sixteenth Amendment, which authorized a federal income tax, and the Seventeenth Amendment (1913), which provided for direct election of senators
a group of progressive members of Congress also managed to reform the House of Representatives by limiting the power of the Speaker
Slide646: Theodore Roosevelt: Cowboy in the White House
Roosevelt assumed the presidency following McKinley’s assassination
he brought to the presidency solid political qualifications, a distinguished war record, and credentials as a historian
although the prospect of Roosevelt in the White House alarmed conservatives, he moved slowly and with restraint
his domestic program included some measure of control of large corporations, more power for the Interstate Commerce Commission, and the conservation of natural resources
Slide647: Roosevelt and Big Business
although Roosevelt won a reputation as a “trustbuster,” he did not believe in breaking up big corporations indiscriminately; he preferred to regulate them
Roosevelt was not an enemy to all large-scale enterprises, merely those that flagrantly seemed to restrain trade
facing a Congress that would not pass strong regulatory laws, Roosevelt resorted to use of the Sherman Act
Slide648: although his Justice Department brought suit against the Northern Securities Company, the President preferred to reach “gentlemanly agreements” with large trusts
this approach proved successful with U.S. Steel and International Harvester
when Standard Oil reneged on an agreement, however, the Justice Department brought suit
Slide649: Roosevelt and the Coal Strike
Roosevelt effectively used the powers and prestige of his office to intervene in the anthracite coal strike of 1902
he attempted to arbitrate between management and the United Mine Workers, but management proved intransigent
the president’s threat to seize and operate the mines convinced the owners of the wisdom of accepting arbitration
Slide650: neither side was entirely pleased, but, to the American public, the incident seemed to illustrate the progressive spirit and Roosevelt’s “square deal”
Roosevelt’s use of executive power in this case dramatically extended presidential authority and hence that of the federal government
Slide651: TR’s Triumphs
Roosevelt easily defeated the Democratic candidate, Alton B. Parker, in 1904
encouraged by his victory and aware of the growing militancy of progressives, the president pressed Congress for passage of the Hepburn Act (1906), which allowed the ICC to inspect the books of railroad companies and to fix maximum rates
it also gave the ICC authority over other interstate carriers and prohibited railroads from issuing passes freely
Slide652: in response to Upton Sinclair’s novel, The Jungle, which described the filthy conditions in the meat-packing industry, Roosevelt pressed Congress to pass the Pure Food and Drug Act (1907)
Slide653: Roosevelt Tilts Left
as the progressive impulse advanced, Roosevelt advanced with it
Roosevelt’s approach became increasingly liberal
he placed more than 150 million acres of public lands in federal reserves, strictly enforced usage laws on federal lands, and encouraged state governments actively to regulate their public lands
as Roosevelt moved toward the left, many Old Guard Republicans turned against the president
Slide654: the Panic of 1907 exacerbated the split
when conservatives blamed him for the panic, Roosevelt responded by moving further toward progressive liberalism; he advocated federal income and inheritance taxes, stricter regulation of interstate corporations, and reforms designed to help industrial workers
when Roosevelt began to criticize the courts, he lost all chance of obtaining further reform legislation
Slide655: William Howard Taft: The Listless Progressive, or More is Less
Roosevelt’s hand-picked successor, William Howard Taft, garnered the support of Old Guard Republicans as well as progressives and easily defeated William Jennings Bryan
although he enforced the Sherman Act vigorously and signed the Mann-Elkins Act, which expanded the power of the ICC, Taft made a less aggressive president than T.R. had been
Slide656: Taft was not comfortable with Roosevelt’s sweeping use of executive power
his political ineptness contributed to Taft’s problems
he alienated progressives when he failed to lend full support to a Congressional movement to reform the tariff system
Taft ran afoul of the growing conservation movement in 1910 when he fired the chief forester of the United States, Gifford Pinchot
Slide657: Breakup of the Republican Party
the Ballinger-Pinchot affair signaled the beginning of a split between Roosevelt and Taft
perhaps inevitably, the Republican party split into factions
Roosevelt sided with the progressives, and Taft threw in his lot with the Old Guard
Taft’s management of antitrust action brought against U.S. Steel in 1911 finalized the split
a portion of the suit was directed against the merger of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company with U.S. Steel in 1907
Slide658: Roosevelt had personally approved of merger and viewed Taft’s action as a personal attack
Roosevelt decided to challenge Taft for the nomination in 1912
while Roosevelt carried the bulk of the primaries, Taft controlled the party apparatus and secured the nomination
Roosevelt formed the breakaway Progressive party, also known as the “Bull Moose” party, and ran in the general election
Slide659: The Election of 1912
the Democrats ran Woodrow Wilson, the reform governor of New Jersey
Wilson’s “New Freedom” promised eradication of special interests and a return to competition
Roosevelt called for a “New Nationalism,” based on regulation of large corporations
hard-core Republicans voted for Taft, but the progressive wing went for Roosevelt
Democrats, both conservative and progressive, voted for Wilson; as a result, Wilson won easily
Slide660: Wilson: The New Freedom
Wilson quickly established his legislative agenda and successfully steered his legislation through Congress
in 1913, the Underwood Tariff substantially reduced tariffs; a graduated income tax made up for lost revenue
the Federal Reserve Act finally provided the nation with a centralized banking system
Congress created the Federal Trade Commission to regulate unfair trade practices
Slide661: the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 outlawed price discrimination, “tying” agreements, and the creation of interlocking directorates
Wilson’s decisive management style and a Democratic majority in Congress accounted in large part for his successes
Wilson’s progressivism had its limits; he refused to support legislation to provide low-interest loans to farmers or to exempt unions from antitrust actions
Wilson also declined to push for a federal law prohibiting child labor and refused to back a constitutional amendment granting the vote to women
Slide662: The Progressives and Minority Rights
a darker side of progressivism manifested itself in the area of race relations
a reactionary on racial matters, Wilson was fairly typical of progressive attitudes; only a handful failed to exhibit prejudice against nonwhite people
most progressives assumed that Native Americans were incapable of assimilating into white society
Asians were subject to intense discrimination
Slide663: in the South, the Progressive Era witnessed the institutionalization of “Jim Crow”
many progressive women adopted racist arguments in support of the Nineteenth Amendment, while Southern progressives argued for the disenfranchisement of blacks to “purify” the political system
Booker T. Washington and his philosophy of accommodation failed to stem the rising tide of racism, and a number of young and well-educated blacks broke away from his leadership
Slide664: Black Militancy
W. E. B. Du Bois, the first American black to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard, called upon blacks to reject Washington’s accommodationism
he urged them to take pride in their racial and cultural heritage and demanded that blacks take their rightful place in society without waiting for whites to give it to them
he recognized that environment, not racial factors, caused problems of poverty and crime
Du Bois was not, however, an admirer of the ordinary black American
Slide665: frankly elitist in approach, Du Bois contended that a “talented tenth” of blacks would lead the way to their race’s success
in 1905, he and other like-minded blacks founded the Niagara Movement
while it failed to attract mass support, it did stir some white consciences
a group comprised largely of white liberals founded the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1909
Slide666: the NAACP was dedicated to the eradication of racial discrimination from American society
the leadership of the NAACP was largely white in its early years, but Du Bois became a national officer and editor of the organization’s journal
more important, after the founding of the NAACP, virtually every leader in the struggle for racial equality rejected Washington’s approach
FROM ISOLATION TO EMPIRE: FROM ISOLATION TO EMPIRE
Isolation or Imperialism?
while America turned its attention to European affairs only sporadically, it displayed an intense interest in Latin America and the Far East
Americans’ faith in the unique political and moral qualities of their republic accounted for their disdain of Europe’s supposedly decadent affairs
however, when convinced European actions threatened their vital interests, Americans responded vigorously and tenaciously
Slide668: America forcefully pressed its claims against England arising from the Civil War and aggressively sought an end to a ban on American pork products by France and Germany
Slide669: Origins of the Large Policy: Coveting Colonies
in the post-Civil War years, America began to take hesitant steps toward global policies
the purchase of Alaska and the Midway Islands provided toeholds in the Pacific basin
attempts to purchase or annex the Hawaiian Islands, Cuba, and the Dominican Republic signaled growing interest in the outside world
by the late 1880s, the United States had begun an active search for external markets for its agricultural and industrial goods
Slide670: with the so-called closing of the frontier, many Americans looked to overseas expansion
intellectual trends added impetus to the new global outlook
Anglo-Saxonism, missionary zeal, and European imperialism opened American eyes to the possibilities inherent in expansion
finally, military and strategic arguments justified a large policy
Slide671: Toward an Empire in the Pacific
American interest in the Pacific and the Far East was as old as the Republic itself
the opening of Japan to western trade increased America’s interest in the Far East
despite Chinese protests over the exclusion of their nationals from the United States, trade with China remained brisk
strategic and commercial concerns made the acquisition of the Hawaiian Islands an increasingly attractive possibility
Slide672: growing trade and commercial ties, a substantial American expatriate community, and, after 1887, the presence of an American naval station all pointed toward the annexation of Hawaii
in 1893, Americans in Hawaii deposed Queen Liliuokalani and sought annexation by the United States
despite opposition from anti-imperialists and some special interests, the U.S. annexed Hawaii in 1898
Slide673: Toward an Empire in Latin America
in addition to traditional commercial interests in Latin America, the United States became increasingly concerned over European influence in the region
in spite of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty (1850), the United States favored an American-owned canal; in 1880, the United States unilaterally abrogated the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty
Slide674: in 1895, a dispute between Venezuela and Great Britain over the boundary between Venezuela and British Guiana nearly brought the United States and Britain to blows
the United States and Great Britain rattled sabers, but war would have served neither side
finally, pressed by continental and imperial concerns, Britain agreed to arbitration
after this incident, relations between Britain and America warmed considerably
Slide675: The Cuban Revolution
Cuban nationalists revolted against Spanish rule in 1895
Spain’s brutal response aroused American public opinion in support of the Cubans
President Cleveland offered his services as a mediator, but Spain refused
American expansionists, citizens sympathetic to Cuban independence, and press (led by Hearst’s Journal and Pulitzer’s World) kept issue alive
publication of de Lôme’s letter and explosion of battleship Maine in February 1898 pushed the United States and Spain to the brink of war
Slide676: The “Splendid Little” Spanish-American War
on April 20, 1898, a joint resolution of Congress recognized Cuban independence and authorized the president to use force to expel Spain from the island
the Teller Amendment disclaimed any intent to annex Cuban territory
the purpose of the war was to free Cuba, but the first battles were fought in the Far East, where, on April 30, Commodore Dewey defeated the Spanish fleet at Manila Bay
Slide677: by August, Americans occupied the Philippines
American forces won a swift victory in Cuba as well
Spain agreed to evacuate Cuba and to cede Puerto Rico and Guam to the United States
the fate of the Philippines was determined at the peace conference held in Paris that October
Slide678: Developing a Colonial Policy
almost overnight, the United States had obtained a substantial overseas empire
some Americans expressed doubts over the acquisition of the Philippines, but expansionists wanted to annex the entire archipelago
advocates of annexation portrayed the Philippines as markets in their own right and as the gateway to the markets of the Far East
many Americans, including the president, were swayed by “the general principle of holding on to what we can get”
Slide679: The Anti-Imperialists
the Spanish-American war produced a wave of unifying patriotism that furthered sectional reconciliation
however, victory raised new and divisive questions
a diverse group of politicians, business and labor leaders, intellectuals, and reformers spoke out against annexing the Philippines
some based their opposition on legal and ethical concerns; for others, racial and ethnic prejudice formed the basis of their objections
Slide680: in the end, swayed by a sense of duty and by practical concerns, McKinley authorized the purchase of the Philippines for $20 million
after a hard-fought battle in the Senate, the expansionists won ratification of the treaty in February 1899
Slide681: The Philippine Insurrection
early in 1899, Philippine nationalists, led by Emilio Aguinaldo, took up arms against the American occupation
atrocities, committed by both sides, became commonplace
although American casualties and the reports of atrocities committed by American soldiers provided ammunition for the anti-imperialists, McKinley’s reelection settled the Philippine question for most Americans
Slide682: William Howard Taft became the first civilian governor and encouraged participation by the Filipinos in the territorial government
this policy won many converts but did not end the rebellion
Slide683: Cuba and the United States
at the onset, the president controlled the fate of America’s colonial possessions, but eventually the Congress and the Supreme Court began to participate in this process
the Foraker Act (1900) established a civil government for Puerto Rico
a series of Supreme Court decisions determined that Congress was not bound by the limits of the Constitution in administering a colony
freedom did not end poverty, illiteracy, or the problem of a collapsing economy in Cuba
Slide684: the United States paternalistically doubted that the Cuban people could govern themselves and therefore established a military government in 1898
eventually, the United States withdrew, after doing much to modernize sugar production, improve sanitary conditions, establish schools, and restore orderly administration
a Cuban constitutional convention met in 1900 and proceeded without substantial American interference
Slide685: under the terms of the Platt Amendment, the Cubans agreed to American intervention when necessary for the “preservation of Cuban independence,” promised to avoid foreign commitments endangering their sovereignty, and agreed to grant American naval bases on their soil
although American troops occupied Cuba only once more, in 1906, and then at the request of Cuban authorities, the threat of intervention and American economic power gave the United States great influence over Cuba
Slide686: The United States in the Caribbean
the same motives that compelled United States to intervene in Cuba applied throughout region
Caribbean nations were economically underdeveloped, socially backward, politically unstable, desperately poor, and threatened by European creditor nations
United States intervened repeatedly in region under broad interpretation of Monroe Doctrine
in 1902, the United States pressed Great Britain and Germany to arbitrate a dispute arising from debts owed them by Venezuela
Slide687: the Roosevelt administration took control of the Dominican Republic’s customs service and used the proceeds to repay that country’s European creditors
the Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine announced that United States would not permit foreign nations to intervene in Latin America
since no other nation could step in, the United States would “exercise . . . an international police power”
short run, this policy worked admirably; in long run, it provoked resentment in Latin America
Slide688: The Open Door Policy
when the European powers sought to check Japan’s growing economic and military might by carving out spheres of influence in China, the United States felt compelled to act
Secretary of State Hay issued a series of “Open Door” notes, which called upon all powers to honor existing trade agreements with China and to impose no restrictions on trade within their spheres of influence
Slide689: although an essentially “toothless” gesture, this action signaled a marked departure from America’s isolationist tradition of nonintervention outside of the Western Hemisphere
within a few months, the Boxer Rebellion tested the Open Door policy
fearing that European powers would use the rebellion as an excuse for further expropriations, Hay broadened the Open Door policy to include support for the territorial integrity of China
Slide690: the Open Door notes, America’s active diplomatic role in the Russo-Japanese War, and the Gentleman’s Agreement of 1907 all engendered ill feelings between the United States and Japan
Slide691: The Panama Canal
American policy in the Caribbean centered on the construction of an interoceanic canal, thought to be a necessity for trade and an imperative for national security
Hay-Pauncefote Agreement (1901) abrogated Clayton-Bulwer Treaty and ceded to the United States construction rights to such a waterway
the United States negotiated a treaty for the right to build a canal across Panama with the government of Colombia, which the Colombian senate rejected
Slide692: when the Panamanians rebelled against Colombia in 1903, the United States quickly moved to recognize and insure Panama’s independence
the United States then negotiated a treaty with the new Panamanian government, which yielded to the United States a ten-mile-wide canal zone, in perpetuity, for the same monetary terms as those earlier rejected by Colombia
Slide693: “Non-Colonial Imperial Expansion”
America’s experiment with territorial imperialism lasted less than a decade
however, through the use of the Open Door policy, the Roosevelt Corollary, and dollar diplomacy, the United States used its industrial, economic, and military might to expand its trade and influence
at times, America also engaged in cultural imperialism, attempting to export American values and American system to weaker nations
despite America’s emergence as a world power, the national psychology remained fundamentally isolationist
WOODROW WILSON AND THE GREAT WAR: WOODROW WILSON AND THE GREAT WAR Wilson’s “Moral” Diplomacy
Wilson set the moral tone for his foreign policy by denouncing dollar diplomacy
in some matters, idealism provided an adequate basis for foreign policy
he persuaded Japan to modify the harshness of its Twenty-one Demands (1915) against China
Slide695: where vital interests were concerned, however, the primacy of America’s interests outweighed Wilson’s idealism
importance of the Panama Canal made Wilson unwilling to tolerate unrest in the Caribbean
Wilson’s most fervent missionary diplomacy manifested itself in Mexico, where his personal abhorrence of the Mexican dictator, Victoriano Huerta, led to American military intervention in Mexico’s internal affairs
Slide696: Europe Explodes in War
when World War I broke out in Europe, most Americans believed that the conflict did not concern them
Wilson promptly issued a proclamation of neutrality
the war’s affront to progressive ideals, combined with the traditional American fear of entanglement in European affairs, provided ample justification for neutrality
Slide697: though most Americans wanted to stay out of the war, nearly all were partial to one side or the other
people of German, Austrian, and Irish descent sympathized with the Central Powers; the majority, however, influenced by the ties of Anglo-American culture and successful Allied propaganda, sided with the Allies
Slide698: Freedom of the Seas
anticipating the economic benefits of trading with all belligerents, the United States found Britain’s control of the Atlantic frustrating
Britain declared nearly all commodities to be contraband of war
although British tactics frequently exasperated Wilson, they did not result in the loss of innocent lives; therefore, Wilson never seriously considered an embargo
Slide699: given British naval superiority and the economic importance of America, any action by the United States inevitably had a negative impact on one side or the other
ultimately, increased trade with the Allies and profits from loans to France and England tied America more closely to the Allies
in addition, Germany’s use of submarine warfare brought new questions to issues of naval warfare and neutral rights
extremely vulnerable on the surface and too small to carry survivors, U-boats could not play by the old rules of war
Slide700: the result was often a heavy loss of life
the sinking of the Lusitania (May 1915), with the loss of 128 American lives, brought an outcry from the American public
after dragging out the controversy for nearly a year, Germany apologized and agreed to pay an indemnity
the sinking of the Sussex in 1916 produced another strong American protest, which led the Germans to promise, in the Sussex pledge, to stop sinking merchant ships without warning
Slide701: The Election of 1916
facing a unified Republican party in 1916, Wilson sought the support of progressives
he nominated Lewis D. Brandeis to Supreme Court, signed the Farm Loan Act, approved the Keating-Owens Child Labor Act and a workmen’s compensation package for federal employees, and modified his stance on the tariff
Wilson’s maintenance of American neutrality and his progressive domestic policies won for him a narrow victory over Republican challenger Charles Evans Hughes
Slide702: The Road to War
in an effort to mediate the European conflict, Wilson sent his advisor, Colonel Edward M. House, to negotiate with the belligerents
after the failure of the House mission, America moved ever closer to intervention
Europe refused to respond to Wilson’s plea in January 1917 for peace without victory
after that, a series of events led the United States closer to war
Slide703: Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare in February
the Zimmermann telegram was released in March, after which Wilson authorized the arming of American merchantmen
on April 2, 1917, Wilson requested that Congress declare war on Germany
on April 6, the Senate voted 82 to 6 and the House 373 to 50 in favor of war
Slide704: Mobilizing the Economy
America’s entry into the war assured an Allied victory
the conversion of America’s economy to a wartime footing proceeded slowly, and the war ended before much of the process was complete
conscription did not begin to mobilize nation’s military manpower until September 1917
after several false starts, Wilson created the War Industries Board (WIB) to direct industrial mobilization
Slide705: America was more successful in mobilizing food supplies under the leadership of Herbert Hoover, a mining engineer and former head of the Belgian Relief Commission, who was appointed to supervise agricultural production
wartime government planning and regulation began a new era in cooperation between government and business
Slide706: Workers in Wartime
demands of a wartime economy, coupled with a shortage of workers, lowered unemployment
immigration was reduced to a trickle; wages rose; and unemployment disappeared
manpower shortages created new employment opportunities for blacks, women, and other disadvantaged groups
blacks left South for jobs in northern factories
while government did act to forestall strikes, its actions also opened the way for unionization of many previously unorganized industries
Slide707: Paying for the War
the war cost the federal government about $33.5 billion, not counting pensions and other postwar expenses
Government borrowing financed over two-thirds of the war’s cost
in addition to direct loans, the sale of Liberty and Victory bonds raised millions
a steeply graduated income tax, increased inheritance taxes, and an excess-profits tax helped the federal government raise over $10.5 billion in tax monies
Slide708: Propaganda and Civil Liberties
to rally public support, Wilson named George Creel to head the newly created Committee on Public Information (CPI)
the CPI churned out propaganda portraying the war as a crusade for freedom and democracy
in the midst of wartime hysteria, little distinction was made between constitutionally guaranteed rights of dissent and illegal acts of sedition or treason
Wilson signed Espionage Act of 1917 and Sedition Act of 1918, which went far beyond what was necessary to protect national interest
Slide709: Wartime Reforms
America’s wartime experience was part and product of the Progressive Era
the exigencies of war opened the way for government involvement in many social and economic areas
a new generation of professionally educated, reform-minded individuals found employment in the federal bureaucracy, and it appeared that the war was creating a sense of common purpose that might stimulate the public to cooperate to achieve selfless goals
Slide710: women’s suffrage, economic opportunities for blacks, gains in workmen’s compensation, and prohibition were but a few of the reforms of the war era
Slide711: Women and Blacks in Wartime
women found employment in new fields during the war, but for the majority these gains were short-lived
traditional views of a “woman’s role,” the desire to rehire veterans, and the opposition of many unions prevented women from consolidating their employment gains
more than a half million southern blacks moved north to cities between 1914 and 1919
Slide712: migrating blacks met with hostility and, on occasion, violence; however, many realized an improvement in their social and political status
blacks who joined the armed forces served in segregated units
the majority of black servicemen were assigned to support and labor units, but many did fight and die for their country
about 200,000 blacks served in Europe
many blacks, including W. E. B. Du Bois, hoped that their patriotism would bring political equality when the war was over
Slide713: Americans To the Trenches and Over the Top
more than 2 million Americans served in Europe
although the American Expeditionary Force (AEF), under the command of General Pershing, reached France on July 4, 1917, American forces did not see action until the battles of Château-Thierry, Belleau Wood, and Soissons in 1918
Slide714: America’s largest engagement, the drive west through the Argonne Forest, involved over 1.2 million men and proved instrumental in ending the war
in November 1918, an armistice ended the Great War
American casualties totaled 112,432 dead and 230,074 wounded
Slide715: Preparing for Peace
although hostilities ended in November, the shape of postwar Europe had yet to be decided
the Central Powers, Germany in particular, anticipated a settlement based on Wilson’s Fourteen Points
victors, especially England and France, found many of its provisions unacceptable
Wilson journeyed to Paris and attempted personally to guide course of peace conference
Slide716: with Wilson out of the country and preoccupied with the peace conference, the domestic political situation deteriorated
there was growing discontent over his farm and tax policies; despite its gains during the war, labor was restive
moreover, Wilson had exacerbated his political difficulties by making a partisan appeal for the election of a Democratic Congress in 1918
Republicans won majorities in both houses, and Wilson faced a hostile Congress
Slide717: the President compounded his problems by failing to appoint any leading Republicans or any members of the Senate to the peace commission, thus making it less likely that the Senate would ratify the treaty
Slide718: The Paris Peace Conference and the Versailles Treaty
the “Big Four,” David Lloyd George of England, Wilson of the United States, Georges Clemenceau of France, and Vittorio Orlando of Italy, dominated the Paris Peace Conference
Far more concerned over security, war guilt, and reparations than Wilsonian goals of justice and international harmony, the European victors all but ignored Wilsonian goals of open diplomacy, freedom of the seas, and national self-determination
Wilson expected that League of Nations would make up for deficiencies in Versailles Treaty
Slide719: The Senate and the League of Nations
to pacify American opponents, Wilson persuaded the Great Powers to exclude “domestic questions,” such as tariff and immigration policies and the Monroe Doctrine from the purview of the League; but this did not ensure its acceptance with Americans
Senate Republicans split into three anti-League camps
the “irreconcilables” rejected League membership on any terms
Slide720: “mild reservationists” backed membership, subject to minor revisions of League’s charter
the majority Republican opposition, the “strong reservationists” led by Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts, would accept the League only if American sovereignty were fully protected
Wilson refused to yield any ground and undertook a nationwide speaking tour to rally support for the treaty
at Pueblo, Colorado, Wilson collapsed and had to return to Washington
Wilson rejected all compromise, and the Senate rejected the Treaty
Slide721: Demobilization
almost immediately after signing the Armistice, the government removed its economic controls, blithely assuming that the economy could readjust itself without direction
millions of men were demobilized rapidly
these swift and unregulated changes in the economy soon created problems
inflation spiraled; by 1920 the cost of living stood at twice the level of 1913
Slide722: during 1919, one out of five employees engaged in strike actions
then came a precipitous economic decline; between July 1920 and March 1922, prices fell and unemployment surged
Slide723: The Red Scare
labor unrest, fear of Bolshevism, failure to distinguish between unions and communism, economic flux, and the xenophobic tenor of wartime propaganda fostered near hysteria in postwar America and led to the phenomenon known as the Red Scare
in January 1920, Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer organized a series of raids against radicals
Slide724: of the more than 6,000 “radical” foreigners seized, only 556 proved liable to deportation
When the massive uprising that Palmer predicted for May Day 1920 failed to materialize, the Red Scare swiftly subsided
Slide725: The Election of 1920
the Democrats nominated James A. Cox of Ohio, who favored membership in the League
the Republican nominee, Warren G. Harding, also of Ohio, equivocated on the issue, despite his Senate record as a strong reservationist
Harding’s smashing victory over Cox signaled more than America’s rejection of the League
The voters’ response to Harding’s call for a return to “normalcy” suggested that Americans sought an end to the period of agitation and reform that had begun with Theodore Roosevelt
POSTWAR SOCIETY AND CULTURE: CHANGE AND ADJUSTMENT: POSTWAR SOCIETY AND CULTURE: CHANGE AND ADJUSTMENT Closing the Gates to New Immigrants
xenophobia did not cease with the passing of the Red Scare
as millions of Europeans attempted to flee their continent’s devastation, Congress acted to bar their entry into the United States
Slide727: bowing to nativist pressures, especially against southern and eastern Europeans, Congress established entry quotas based on national origin
Congress restricted overall immigration to a maximum of 150,000 in 1929
dislike of the new immigrants, many of whom were Jewish, was related to a general growth of anti-Semitism
Slide728: New Urban Social Patterns
the 1920 census revealed, for the first time, that urban Americans (defined as those living in a community of 2,500 or more) outnumbered rural Americans
city life affected family structure, employment, and educational and cultural opportunities
ethnic background, socioeconomic status, and family size played significant roles in determining whether women worked outside the home and, if they did work, women's work patterns
Slide729: compulsory education laws and child labor legislation limited the number of children working
new ideas about family life, such as companionate marriage, contraception, scientific child rearing, and more easily obtainable divorces, gained currency
the impersonality of large cities loosened constraints on sexuality
homosexuals developed a distinct culture
Slide730: The Younger Generation
the failure to achieve the idealistic goals of America’s entry into World War I created a feeling of alienation among young adults
however, popular notions of the Jazz Age only superficially reflected reality
young people behaved in unconventional ways because they were adjusting to more rapid changes than previous generations
trends barely perceptible during the Progressive Era reached avalanche proportions
Slide731: patterns of courtship changed; respectable women smoked cigarettes in public; women cast off corsets, wore lipstick, shortened their hair, and shortened their skirts
parents worried about the breakdown of all moral standards, but many facets of the youth rebellion reflected a conformity to peer pressure
young people’s new ways of relating to each other were not mere fads and were not confined to people under thirty
Slide732: The “New” Woman
Margaret Sanger, a political radical concerned about poor women who lacked knowledge of contraception, led the battle for birth control
Sanger encountered legal, religious, and societal barriers but helped win wide acceptance for birth control
other gender-based restrictions slowly broke down
many states modified divorce laws to protect women’s rights
Slide733: more women attended college and worked, but women earned less than men and were excluded from many management positions
radical feminists realized that voting did not guarantee equality; they founded the Women’s Party and campaigned for an equal rights amendment
less radical women founded the League of Women Voters and campaigned for broad social reforms
Slide734: Popular Culture: Movies and Radio
popular culture changed dramatically as moving pictures grew in sophistication and appeal
the introduction of sound in 1927 brought a new level of technological maturity
filmmakers like D. W. Griffith created an entirely new art. Radio exerted an even greater impact
radio soon brought a wide variety of public events into American homes
Slide735: by using radio to spread its messages, the advertising industry subsidized the nascent medium
because advertisers sought mass markets, however, they preferred uncontroversial, intellectually light programs
Slide736: The Golden Age of Sports
prosperity, increased leisure time, radio, and advertising dollars all promoted the extraordinary popularity of sports in the 1920s
sports heroes such as Harold “Red” Grange, Jack Dempsey, Bill Tilden, and Babe Ruth enthralled the American public
new stadiums filled with capacity crowds; radio brought the action into living rooms of millions
football became the dominant college sport, and tens of thousands of Americans took up participatory sports such as tennis, golf, and water sports
Slide737: Urban-Rural Conflicts: Fundamentalism
rural America viewed cities as hotbeds of decadence, sin, and overt materialism
religious fundamentalism emerged as a reaction of rural conservatives toward the perceived excesses of urban culture
the Scopes “Monkey Trial” typified the conflict between fundamentalism and modernism
John T. Scopes, a biology teacher, in cooperation with the American Civil Liberties Union, defied a Tennessee law banning the teaching of evolution in public schools
Slide738: Clarence Darrow represented Scopes, while William Jennings Bryan represented the state (and, in a larger sense, rural, fundamentalist America)
although Scopes was convicted, the trial exposed the ignorance and danger of the fundamentalist position
Slide739: Urban-Rural Conflicts: Prohibition
ratification of 18th Amendment (1919), which prohibited the manufacture, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages, signaled a great victory for the forces of rural conservatism
alcohol abuse declined during the “noble experiment”; however, the illegal trade in “booze” spawned corruption
by the end of the decade, it was readily apparent that prohibition had failed, but powerful moral and political forces prevented modification or repeal
Slide740: The Ku Klux Klan
the new Ku Klux Klan, founded in 1915 by William J. Simmons, achieved a peak membership of five million in 1923
its targets included immigrants, Jews, and Catholics, as well as blacks
using appeals to patriotism, nativism, morality, and traditional Americanism, the Klan found supporters primarily in middle-sized cities, small towns, and villages in the middle western and western states
Slide741: factionalism and misconduct by leaders weakened the Klan
by the late twenties, it was in decline; in 1930, it had only nine thousand members
Slide742: Sacco and Vanzetti
in 1921, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were convicted of murdering a paymaster and a guard during a holdup in Massachusetts
two men were Italian immigrants and anarchists
irrespective of their guilt or innocence, their trial was a travesty of justice
after years of appeals, two men were executed
the case contributed to the disillusion and alienation of many intellectuals
Slide743: Literary Trends
the horrors of World War I combined with the antics of fundamentalists and red baiters led intellectuals to abandon the hopeful experimentation of the prewar period
intellectuals became critics of society
out of this alienation came a major literary flowering
F. Scott Fitzgerald symbolized this “lost generation” and captured its spirit in his novels, This Side of Paradise and The Great Gatsby
Slide744: some writers and artists became expatriates
the most talented of this group, Ernest Hemingway, became the symbol of the expatriate American intellectual
The Sun Also Rises and A Farewell to Arms revealed a sense of outrage at life’s meaninglessness
even more than Hemingway’s ideas, his sparse literary style accounts for his towering reputation
Edith Wharton wrote about New York’s nineteenth century elite in a traditional style reminiscent of Henry James
Slide745: H. L. Mencken reflected the distaste of intellectuals for the climate of the times
most popular writer of 1920s, Sinclair Lewis, portrayed the smug ignorance and bigotry of the American small town in Main Street
in Babbitt, Arrowsmith, and Elmer Gantry, Lewis presented scathing indictments of business, the medical profession, and religion
along with new literary styles, the twenties witnessed innovations in the distribution of literature, most notably founding of the Book-of-the-Month Club
Slide746: The “New Negro”
southern blacks continued to migrate to North
while blacks in northern cities had always tended to live together, the tendency toward concentration continued and produced ghettos
disappointment of their wartime expectations led to a new militancy among blacks
W. E. B. Du Bois vacillated between integration and black nationalism
Slide747: Marcus Garvey had no such ambivalence; his Universal Negro Improvement Association stressed black pride and a return to Africa
black leaders like Du Bois considered Garvey a charlatan
Garvey was convicted of defrauding thousands of his supporters when his steamship line went bankrupt
the northern ghettos produced some compensating advantages
Slide748: concentrations of black populations enabled them to elect representatives to state legislatures and to Congress
Harlem became a cultural center for writers, musicians, and artists
within the ghetto existed a world with economic, political, and social opportunities for black men and women that did not exist in the South
Slide749: Economic Expansion
despite the turmoil of the period and the dissatisfaction of intellectuals, the 1920s was an exceptionally prosperous era in America
business boomed, real wages rose, and unemployment declined
perhaps as much as 40 percent of the world’s wealth lay in American hands
Slide750: government policy, pent-up demand from the war, and the continuing mechanization and rationalization of industry fueled economic growth
assembly lines and time and motion engineering helped increase productivity and profits
Slide751: The Age of the Consumer
increases in productivity and prosperity brought a new era of consumerism
producers tailored their goods to meet consumer demand, and the advertising industry ensured that the demand existed
consumer durables led the economic surge
the automotive industry in particular exerted a powerful multiplier force on the economy
by 1929, Americans drove some 29 million privately owned automobiles
Slide752: the car changed family life and recreational patterns
it made a mobile people more mobile and became a symbol of American freedom, prosperity, and individualism
Slide753: Henry Ford
Henry Ford, the man most responsible for the growth of the automotive industry, was not a great inventor
his genius lay in the areas of production, personnel, and business management techniques
cost-efficient assembly lines allowed mass production of inexpensive cars
Slide754: Ford realized that high wages not only ensured retention of his trained work force but also stimulated consumer spending
the Ford Motor Company’s “Model T,” a low-cost, well-constructed auto, dominated the market for many years
Ford’s unwillingness to cater to consumer demand, however, enabled other manufacturers to cut into Ford's share of the market
Slide755: The Airplane
internal combustion gasoline engines made motorized flight possible
World War I speeded the advance of airplane technology, and most planes built in the 1920s were intended for military use
in the postwar years, wing walkers, parachutists, and other “barnstormers” expanded the public’s fascination with the airplane
Slide756: commercial air service developed slowly; the first regularly scheduled passenger and mail service began in 1927
Charles A. “Lucky Lindy” Lindbergh captured the world's imagination with his nonstop New York to Paris flight in May 1927
THE NEW ERA: 1921 TO 1933: THE NEW ERA: 1921 TO 1933 Harding and “Normalcy”
Harding gained Republican nomination largely because of genial nature and lack of convictions
hard working and politically astute, Harding was also indecisive and unwilling to offend
Harding appointed able and reputable men to the major cabinet posts, including Charles Evans Hughes, Herbert Hoover, Andrew Mellon, and Henry C. Wallace
however, many lesser offices, and a few major ones, went to his Ohio cronies
Slide758: The Business of the United States is Business
Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon dominated domestic policy
Mellon sought to lower taxes on the rich, reverse the low-tariff policies of the Wilson period, and reduce the national debt by cutting expenses
his policies had considerable merit, but Mellon carried his policies to an extreme
even with large Republican majorities, Congress refused to grant unqualified approval
Slide759: moreover, the farm bloc, a coalition of mid-western Republicans and southern Democrats, offset the Republican majority
Mellon nevertheless balanced the budget and reduced the national debt by an average of over $500 million a year
the business community heartily approved of the policies of the Harding and Coolidge administrations
Slide760: both Harding and Coolidge used appointments to convert regulatory bodies, such as the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Federal Reserve Board, into pro-business agencies that ceased almost entirely to restrict the activities of the industries over which they had control
Slide761: The Harding Scandals
although personally honest, Harding appointed cronies known as the “Ohio Gang” who demonstrated a propensity for corruption
scandals rocked the Veterans Bureau and the office of the alien property custodian
the greatest scandal involved Harding's secretary of the interior, Albert B. Fall
Fall leased naval petroleum reserves to private oil companies
Slide762: a Senate investigation into the Teapot Dome Scandal revealed that Fall had received over $300,000 in loans from these oil companies
the American people, who had not yet learned the extent of the scandals, genuinely mourned Harding’s death
Slide763: Coolidge Prosperity
Vice-President Coolidge had no connection with the Harding scandals and cleaned house on taking office
his pro-business philosophy endeared him to conservatives
in 1924, Coolidge easily won the Republican nomination
the badly divided Democrats finally chose a compromise candidate after 103 ballots
Slide764: in the general election, Coolidge easily defeated the Democratic challenger, John W. Davies
Robert M. La Follette, running on the Progressive party ticket, finished a distant third
Slide765: Peace Without a Sword
Disillusion with the results of World War I led Americans to withdraw from foreign involvements, but American economic interests made complete withdrawal impossible
while the United States avoided formal alliances, diplomatic efforts included the Washington Conference (1921), at which leading nations agreed to maintain the Open Door in China and to limit the costly naval arms race
Slide766: three far-reaching treaties were drafted
the Five-Power Treaty limited the number of battleships of its signatories
countries signing the Four-Power Treaty agreed to respect each other’s interests in the Pacific
the Nine-Power Treaty pledged to maintain China’s sovereignty and the Open Door
by initiating the Conference, the United States regained some of the moral influence lost when it refused to join the League
however, the treaties were essentially toothless
Slide767: The Peace Movement
while sincerely desiring peace, Americans refused to surrender any sovereignty or to build an adequate defense
so great was the nation’s desire to avoid foreign entanglements that the United States refused to join the World Court
peace societies flourished
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Woodrow Wilson Foundation worked for world peace
Slide768: many Americans urged pacifism in the conduct of foreign policy
the desire for peace culminated in the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928
signed by over fifteen nations, the pact renounced “war as an instrument of national policy”
Slide769: The Good Neighbor Policy
during the 1920s the continued presence of marines and the economic power of the “Colossus of the North” fueled anti-Yankee sentiment in Latin America
under Herbert Hoover, American policy began to treat Latin American nations as equals
the Clark Memorandum (1930) disassociated the right of intervention in Latin America from the Roosevelt Corollary
Slide770: according to Clark, the United States’ right to intervene depended on “the doctrine of self-preservation”
Franklin Delano Roosevelt continued the Good Neighbor Policy
by 1934 the Marines had withdrawn from Nicaragua, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic; and the United States abrogated the right to intervene in Cuba
Slide771: The Totalitarian Challenge
the limitations of isolationism became evident in 1931 when Japan occupied Manchuria in violation of both the Nine-Power and the Kellogg-Briand pacts
China appealed to United States and League of Nations for aid, but neither would intervene
the United States announced the Stimson Doctrine, which stated that the United States would never recognize the legality of territory seized in violation of American treaty rights
Slide772: Stimson Doctrine served only to irritate the Japanese
in January 1932, Japan attacked Shanghai
the League condemned the aggression, and, in response, Japan withdrew from the League
Slide773: War Debts and Reparations
quarrels over war debts hindered efforts by the former Allies to deal with Japan’s aggression
the United States demanded repayment of loans made to its allies during World War I
the Allies could not repay the loans, and the American protective tariff made it nearly impossible for them to gain the dollars necessary to pay the debts
the Allies added the cost of their debts to German reparation payments
Slide774: Germany could not pay the huge sums assessed for reparations and was reluctant even to try
despite the restructuring of reparations under the Dawes (1924) and Young (1929) plans, Germany defaulted on its payments; in turn, France and Britain defaulted on their loans
Slide775: The Election of 1928
a successful businessman, a technocrat, and a skilled bureaucrat, Herbert Hoover easily won the Republican nomination
he believed that capital and labor could cooperate to achieve mutually beneficial goals
his opponent, Alfred E. Smith, a New York Democrat, was in many ways Hoover’s antithesis
a Catholic antiprohibitionist, Smith represented the urban, immigrant, machine-style politics of the nation’s cities
Hoover won a smashing victory
Slide776: Economic Problems
the prosperity of the 1920s masked serious flaws in the economy
not all sectors of the economy shared in the prosperity; the coal and cotton industries lagged behind the general economy
the trend toward consolidation of industries continued throughout the period
voluntary trade associations, with government backing, now practiced self-regulation
the weakest sector of economy was agriculture
Slide777: while most economic indicators reflected an unprecedented prosperity, the boom rested on unstable foundations
maldistribution of resources posed the greatest problem
productive capacity raced ahead of purchasing power
large sums of money were invested in speculative ventures rather than in productive enterprises
Slide778: The Stock Market Crash of 1929
stock market raced ahead beginning early 1928
prices climbed still higher during the first half of 1929
the market wavered in September, but few saw cause for serious concern
on October 29, 1929, the stock market collapsed, and the boom ended
Slide779: Hoover and the Depression
stock market collapse was more a symptom of economic woe than the cause of the depression
the Great Depression was a worldwide phenomenon caused primarily by economic imbalances resulting from World War I
in the United States, concentration of wealth, speculative investment, and underconsumption contributed to the severity of the depression
Hoover relied upon voluntarism and mutual self-interest to cure the economic ills
Slide780: he rejected classical economics and proposed a number of measures to combat the depression
however, he overestimated the willingness of citizens to act in the public interest without legal compulsion and relied too much on voluntary cooperation
private charities soon ran out of money
as the depression deepened, Hoover placed more emphasis on balancing the budget, which further decreased the supply of money
the Hawley-Smoot Tariff (1930) imposed high rates on manufactured goods, which contracted trade
Slide781: The Economy Hits Bottom
in the spring of 1932, thousands of Americans faced starvation
people unable to pay rent established shantytowns they called “Hoovervilles”
people begged for food while agricultural prices dropped so low that farmers organized Farm Holiday movements
in the summer of 1932, twenty thousand World War I veterans marched on Washington to seek immediate payment of their war bonuses
Slide782: when Congress rejected their appeal, some refused to leave and established a camp on the Anacostia Flats
federal troops dispersed the Bonus Army
the unprecedented severity of the depression led some to propose radical economic and political changes
Slide783: The Depression and Its Victims
the depression had a profound psychological impact on the American people
there were simply no jobs to be found
people who lost jobs at first searched for new ones; after a few months, however, they became apathetic
economic stress brought personal stress
power shifted within families; family size decreased
hopelessness and malnutrition contributed to the lack of political radicalism during the depression
Slide784: The Election of 1932
Democrats chose Franklin Delano Roosevelt of New York to challenge Hoover in 1932
Roosevelt campaigned on optimism and grand, but unspecified, solutions to the nation’s economic woes
desperate for a change in style and substance, Americans rallied to Roosevelt's promises of a New Deal
Slide785: he proposed that the government take whatever steps were necessary to protect individual and public interests
Roosevelt won with an electoral margin of 472 to 59
the last days of the Hoover administration and a “lame duck” Congress witnessed the nadir of the depression
THE NEW DEAL: 1933-1941: THE NEW DEAL: 1933-1941 The Hundred Days
by the date of Roosevelt’s inauguration, the disintegration of the banking system convinced conservatives and radicals alike of the necessity for government intervention
during the first “hundred days” of Roosevelt’s presidency, Congress passed an impressive body of legislation
Slide787: on March 5, 1933, the president declared a “bank holiday”
legislation of the Hundred Days created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), forced the separation of investment and commercial banking, extended the power of the Federal Reserve Board, established the Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC), and regulated the securities exchange
Slide788: Roosevelt had no comprehensive plan of action; rather he employed an ad hoc approach, which sometimes resulted in contradictory policies
although most measures of the Hundred Days were designed to stimulate the economy, the Economy Act reduced salaries of federal employees and cut veterans’ benefits
Slide789: The National Recovery Administration (NRA)
the problems of unemployment and industrial stagnation received high priority during the Hundred Days
Congress appropriated $500 million for aid to the needy
the newly created Civilian Conservation Corp (CCC) employed tens of thousands of young men
Slide790: the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), a controversial piece of legislation, created the Public Works Administration (PWA), allowed manufacturers to establish price and production limits, established a minimum wage and maximum hours, and guaranteed labor the right to bargain collectively
a variant on the idea of the corporate state, the NIRA envisaged a system of industrywide organizations of capitalists and workers (supervised by government) that would resolve conflicts internally
Slide791: the National Recovery Administration (NRA), created by the NIRA, oversaw the drafting and operation of business codes
the NIRA failed to end the depression
dominant producers in each industry supervised the drafting and operation of the codes
they used their power to raise prices and limit production rather than to hire more workers and increase output
Slide792: even though the NIRA provided protection for collective bargaining, the conservative and craft-oriented AFL displayed little enthusiasm for enrolling unskilled workers on an industry-wide basis
John Lewis and other labor leaders created an alternative to the AFL by establishing the Congress of Industrial Organizations, formed to organize workers on an industry-wide basis without regard to craft
Slide793: The Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)
the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933 combined compulsory production limitations with government subsidization of staple farm commodities
in effect, the AAA paid farmers to produce less
while some farmers benefited, others, particularly sharecroppers and tenant farmers, did not
Slide794: The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) Act of 1933 created a board authorized to construct dams, power plants, and transmission lines, as well as to market electrical power to individuals and communities
the TVA also provided a “yardstick” for evaluating the rates and efficiency of private power companies
in addition, the TVA engaged in flood control, soil conservation, and reforestation projects
Slide795: the TVA never became the comprehensive regional planning organization some of its sponsors intended; it did improve the standard of living for many in the valley
Slide796: The New Deal Spirit
Roosevelt infused his administration with a much needed wave of optimism
Roosevelt’s receptiveness to new ideas and the increased New Deal bureaucracies drew academics and professionals into government service
the New Deal was never a clearly stated ideological movement
it drew heavily on populism, Theodore Roosevelt’s New Nationalism, and the Wilsonian tradition
Slide797: Washington became a battleground for special interests
William Leuchtenberg described the New Deal as “interest-group democracy”
the New Deal gave interest groups other than big business a voice in Washington
on the other hand, it slighted the unorganized majority
Slide798: The Unemployed
in 1934, at least 9 million Americans were still unemployed, hundreds of thousands of whom were in desperate need
nevertheless, the Democrats increased their majorities in Congress
Roosevelt’s unemployment policies accounted, at least in part, for Democratic successes at the polls
Roosevelt appointed Harry L. Hopkins to head the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) in 1933
Slide799: Hopkins insisted that the unemployed needed jobs, not handouts
in November 1933, he persuaded Roosevelt to create the Civil Works Administration (CWA)
the CWA employed millions on public works projects
the cost of the CWA frightened Roosevelt, who soon abolished it
in 1935, Roosevelt put Hopkins in charge of the new Works Progress Administration (WPA)
Slide800: in spite of these efforts, at no time during the depression did unemployment fall below 10 percent of the total work force
Roosevelt’s fear of deficit spending meant that many New Deal measures did not provide sufficient stimulus to the economy
Slide801: Literature in the Depression
John Dos Passos published his harshly anticapitalist and deeply pessimistic trilogy, U.S.A., between 1930 and 1936
John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath (1939) perhaps best portrayed the desperate plight of America’s poor
Thomas Wolfe’s autobiographical novels such as Look Homeward Angel (1929) and You Can’t Go Home Again (1940) offered a stark and vivid view of the confusion of urban life and the impact of hard times
Slide802: William Faulkner wrote vividly of southern poverty, pride, and racial problems in his novels
between 1929 and 1932, he published The Sound and the Fury, Light in August, As I Lay Dying, and Sanctuary
Slide803: The Extremists: Long, Coughlin, Townsend
Roosevelt’s moderation provoked extremists on both the left and right
the most formidable was the “Kingfish,” Huey Long, a senator from Louisiana
although he never challenged white supremacy, the plight of all poor people concerned him
after initially supporting Roosevelt, Long split from the administration and introduced his “Share Our Wealth” plan, intended to redistribute the nation’s wealth
Slide804: less powerful than Long but more widely influential was Father Charles E. Coughlin, the “Radio Priest”
Coughlin urged currency inflation and attacked the alleged sympathy for communists and Jews within Roosevelt’s administration
Coughlin’s program resembled fascism more than anything else
Slide805: Dr. Francis E. Townsend proposed “old-age revolving pensions,” which would give $200 per month to the nation’s elderly on the conditions that they not hold jobs and that they spend the money within thirty days
the collective threat of these radical reformers forced FDR to adopt a bolder approach toward solving the problems of the depression
Slide806: The Second New Deal
despite Roosevelt’s efforts, the depression continued unabated
in the spring of 1935, he launched the Second New Deal
the Wagner Act (1935) ensured the right of labor to collective bargaining and prohibited employers from interfering with union organizational activities
Slide807: the Social Security Act (1935) established a federal system of old-age pensions and unemployment insurance
the Rural Electric Administration (REA) brought electric power to rural areas
the Wealth Tax (1935) raised taxes on large incomes, estates, and gifts
critics worried that the New Deal restricted liberty
the cost also alarmed them
Slide808: by 1936, some members of the administration had fallen under the influence of John Maynard Keynes, who advocated deficit spending to stimulate consumption
Roosevelt never accepted Keynes’s theories, but the imperatives of the depression forced him to increase spending beyond the government’s income
Slide809: The Election of 1936
the election of 1936 matched Governor Alfred M. Landon of Kansas and Roosevelt
although Landon represented moderate wing of Republican party, his campaign was hampered by reactionary views of some of his supporters
Congressman William Lemke of North Dakota ran on the Union party ticket, a coalition of extremist groups. Roosevelt won easily, carrying every state except Maine and Vermont
Democrats also made large gains in city and state elections
Slide810: Roosevelt Tries to Undermine the Supreme Court
the conservative majority in the Supreme Court declared several major New Deal programs unconstitutional
by 1937, all of the major measures of the Second New Deal appeared doomed
Roosevelt responded by announcing a proposal to increase the number of sitting justices, a thinly disguised attempt to stack the Court with his own appointees
Roosevelt severely misjudged the opposition to the plan
Slide811: Congress and public strenuously objected to his tampering with system of checks and balances
the president eventually yielded to pressure and withdrew his plan
alarmed by the attack on the Court, two justices changed their positions and voted to uphold New Deal legislation
moreover, death and retirement created enough vacancies on the Court to allow Roosevelt to appoint a large pro-New Deal majority
nevertheless, Roosevelt’s personal and political prestige suffered from the affair
Slide812: The New Deal Winds Down
the Court battle marked the beginning of the end of the New Deal
a series of bitter strikes, starting in 1937, alarmed the public
in June 1937, FDR responded to a moderate increase in economic conditions by curtailing government expenditures
the resulting “Roosevelt Recession” included a downturn in the stock market, rising unemployment, and declining industrial output
Slide813: in response, Roosevelt finally committed himself to heavy deficit spending, beginning in April 1938
at his urging, Congress passed a $3.75 billion public works bill, new AAA programs, and the Fair Labor Standards Act
these measures did little to ease the recession and alienated conservatives
particularly after the elections in 1938, a coalition of Republicans and conservative Democrats gained enough power to halt expansion of New Deal reforms
Slide814: Significance of the New Deal
the outbreak of World War II ended the depression
the New Deal ameliorated suffering but failed to revive the economy
Roosevelt’s willingness to try different approaches made sense because no one knew what to do
however, his vacillating policies and his desire to maintain a balanced budget often proved counterproductive
Slide815: as a result of the New Deal, the nation began to look to the government as the guarantor of its public welfare
Roosevelt expanded the federal bureaucracy and increased the power of the presidency
federal bureaucracies now regulated formerly private sectors
if the New Deal failed to end the depression, the changes it effected altered American life and society
Slide816: Women as New Dealers: The Network
largely because of the influence of Eleanor Roosevelt and Molly Dewson, head of the Women’s Division of the Democratic National Committee, the Roosevelt administration employed more women in positions of importance than earlier administrations
Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins became the first woman to hold a cabinet post
Slide817: Molly Dewson and Eleanor Roosevelt headed an informal, yet effective, “network” of influential women whose goal was the placement of reform-minded women in government
Eleanor Roosevelt exerted significant influence, particularly in behalf of civil rights
Slide818: Blacks During the New Deal
while minimal in 1932, the shift of black voters from the Republican to the Democratic party became overwhelming by 1936
however, Roosevelt remained unwilling to alienate southern members of Congress and deferred to them on racial matters
new Deal programs often treated blacks as second-class citizens
in 1939, black unemployment was twice that of whites, and wages paid to whites were double those received by blacks
Slide819: despite this situation, an informal “Black Cabinet,” including Mary McLeod Bethune and Charles Forman, lobbied the federal government in behalf of better opportunities for blacks
in the labor movement, the new CIO recruited black members
thus, while black Americans suffered during the depression, the New Deal brought some relief and a measure of hope
Slide820: A New Deal for Indians
the New Deal built on earlier policies toward Native Americans
while retaining many paternalistic and ethnocentric attitudes, government policies improved after the appointment of John Collier as Commissioner of Indian Affairs in 1933
under Collier, the government expressed a willingness to preserve traditional Indian cultures
at the same time, it attempted to improve economic and living conditions
Slide821: the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 allowed a degree of autonomy by attempting to reestablish tribal governments and tribal ownership of Indian lands
some critics, including many Indians, charged Collier with trying to turn back the clock
others attacked him as a segregationist
not all Indians, moreover, particularly those who owned profitable allotments, were willing to yield their privately held land to a tribal corporation
Slide822: The Role of Roosevelt
how much credit for New Deal policies belongs to Roosevelt is debatable
Roosevelt left most details and some broad principles to his subordinates
his knowledge of economics was skimpy, and his understanding of many social problems remained superficial
nevertheless, Roosevelt’s personality marked every aspect of the New Deal
Slide823: his ability to build and manipulate coalitions made the program possible
he personified the government and made citizens believe that the president cared about the condition of ordinary Americans
Slide824: The Triumph of Isolationism
although an internationalist at heart, Roosevelt, like other world leaders, placed the economic recovery of his own nation ahead of global recovery
isolationist sentiment in America intensified during the 1930s
Senator Gerald P. Nye headed an investigation (1934-1936), the findings of which convinced millions of Americans that financiers and munitions makers had been responsible for America’s entry into World War I
Slide825: Congress passed a series of neutrality acts, which severely restricted the options available to the White House and State Department
in part because of domestic problems and in part because of his own vacillation, Roosevelt seemed to lose control over foreign policy
Slide826: War Again in Europe
the aggression of Japan, Italy, and Germany convinced Roosevelt of the need to resist aggression
fear of isolationist sentiment, however, led Roosevelt to move cautiously and to be less than candid in his public statements
the invasion of Poland and subsequent declarations of war by Great Britain and France budged Congress to adopt cash and carry legislation
Slide827: in the fall of 1939, Roosevelt sold arms to Britain and France, although he lacked legal authority to do so
Roosevelt also approved a secret program to build an atomic bomb
when Britain ran out of money in 1940, Roosevelt swapped destroyers for British naval bases
in September 1940, Congress established the nation's first peacetime draft
Slide828: A Third Term for FDR
Roosevelt ran for an unprecedented third term in the presidential election of 1940
partisan politics and his belief that only he could control the isolationists undoubtedly played a role in Roosevelt’s decision to seek reelection
Wendell L. Willkie, a moderate from Indiana, headed the Republican ticket
Slide829: since he supported the basic structure of the New Deal, Willkie focused on opposing the trend of Roosevelt’s foreign policies
while rejecting isolationism, Willkie accused Roosevelt of intending to take the United States to war
Roosevelt won the election handily
Slide830: The Undeclared War
Roosevelt’s victory encouraged him to expand aid to Great Britain
in March 1941, Congress approved the Lend-Lease Act
the American navy began to patrol the North Atlantic and to pass intelligence data to the British navy
Slide831: in April 1941, the United States occupied Greenland; in July it occupied Iceland
after the Greer incident and the sinking of the Reuben James, the United States had, for all practical purposes, although not officially, gone to war
WAR AND PEACE: WAR AND PEACE The Road to Pearl Harbor
relations between Japan and the United States deteriorated after Japan resumed its war against China in 1937
neither the United States nor Japan desired war
Roosevelt considered Nazi Germany to be a more dangerous enemy and dreaded the prospect of a two-front war
Slide833: in the spring of 1941, Secretary of State Cordell Hull demanded that Japan withdraw from China and pledge not to occupy French and Dutch possessions in Asia
even moderates in Japan did not accept Hull’s demand for total withdrawal
in July 1941, the United States retaliated against Japan’s occupation of Indochina by freezing Japanese assets in America and placing an embargo on petroleum
Slide834: militarists assumed control of Japan’s government, and while the pretense of negotiation continued, Japan prepared to implement war plans against the United States
on December 7, 1941, Japan attacked Pearl Harbor
Congress declared war on Japan the following day, and on December 11, the Axis powers declared war on the United States
Slide835: Mobilizing the Home Front
Congress granted wide emergency powers to the president
however, Democratic majorities were slim in both houses, and a coalition of conservatives from both parties limited Roosevelt’s freedom to act through fiscal oversight
Roosevelt was an inspiring wartime leader but a poor administrator
nevertheless, Roosevelt’s basic decisions made sense
Slide836: they included financing the war through taxes, basing taxation on ability to pay, rationing scarce resources and consumer goods, and regulating wages and prices
a lack of centralized authority impeded mobilization, but production expanded dramatically
manufacturing nearly doubled; agricultural output rose 22 percent
unemployment virtually disappeared
productive capacity and per capita output increased especially dramatically in the South
Slide837: The War Economy
Roosevelt selected James F. Byrnes as his wartime “economic czar”
Byrnes headed the Office of War Mobilization, which controlled production, consumption, priorities, and prices
the National War Labor Board arbitrated disputes and stabilized wages
despite rationing and wage regulations, American civilians experienced no real hardships during the war
Slide838: prosperity and stiffer government controls strengthened organized labor; the war did more to institutionalize collective bargaining than the New Deal had done
the war also effected a redistribution of wealth in America
the wealthiest 1 percent of the population received 13.4 percent of the national income in 1935; by 1944 this group received 6.7 percent
the income tax was extended until nearly all Americans paid
Congress adopted the payroll-deduction system to ensure its collection
Slide839: War and Social Change
Americans became more mobile
not only were those in the military moved to training camps all over the United States and to Europe and the Pacific, but wartime industries drew millions of civilians to new areas
wartime prosperity allowed new marriages and a higher birthrate
Slide840: Minorities in Time of War: Blacks, Hispanics, and Indians
several factors improved the condition of black Americans
Hitler’s racial doctrines made racism less respectable
black leaders pointed out the inconsistency between fighting for democracy abroad and ignoring it at home
blacks serving in the military were treated more fairly than in World War I; however, the armed forces remained segregated
Slide841: economic realities worked to the advantage of black civilians
unemployment had affected blacks disproportionately; the labor shortage brought full employment
moreover, defense jobs often involved opportunities to develop valuable skills, opportunities that racist policies of unions and employers had denied to blacks before the war
blacks moved to the cities of the North, Midwest, and West Coast
Slide842: although most migrants had to live in urban ghettos, their very concentration (and the fact that blacks outside the South could vote) gave them greater political clout
the NAACP grew in membership and influence; it also assumed a more activist role
to head off a threatened march on Washington, the president established a Fair Employment Practices Commission
racial tensions resulted in race riots, the worst of which took place in Detroit
Slide843: increased demands for labor led to a reversal of the government’s policy of forcing Mexicans out of the Southwest
in Los Angeles, prejudice against Hispanics erupted into rioting against young men wearing zoot suits
military service and mobility in search of employment increased the American Indian’s assimilation into white society
Slide844: The Treatment of German- and Italian-Americans
World War II produced less intolerance and repression than World War I
in marked contrast to the First World War, Americans in World War II were generally able to distinguish between the enemy in Italy and Germany and Italian-Americans and German-Americans
Slide845: few Italian-Americans supported Mussolini, and most German-Americans were vehemently anti-fascist
moreover, both groups were well organized and prepared to use their political influence
Slide846: Internment of the Japanese
in marked contrast to treatment of Americans of Italian or German descent, 112,000 Japanese-Americans, many of them native-born citizens, were relocated into internment camps
the government feared their potential disloyalty, and the public was aroused by racial prejudice and the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor
Supreme Court upheld restrictions on Japanese-Americans in Hirabayashi v. U.S. (1943)
finally, in Ex Parte Endo (1944), the Supreme Court forbade the internment of loyal Japanese-American citizens
Slide847: Women’s Contribution to the War Effort
millions of women entered the work force during the war, and more married women than ever worked outside of the home
despite initial reluctance by employers and unions, women made inroads into traditionally male domains
black women bore a double burden of race and gender, but the demand for labor created opportunities for them
in addition to prejudice in the workplace, working women faced housework as well
Slide848: war also affected women who did not take jobs
wartime mobility caused problems for the women who faced new, sometimes difficult, surroundings without traditional support networks
war brides often followed their husbands to training camps, where they faced problems comparable to those of women who moved to work in defense industries; in addition, they faced the fear and emotional uncertainties of newlyweds, compounded by separation from husbands who were risking their lives overseas
Slide849: Allied Strategy: Europe First
Allied strategists decided to concentrate on the European war first
the Japanese threat was remote, but Hitler threatened to knock Soviet Union out of war
the United States and Soviet Union wanted to establish a second front in France as soon as possible
Churchill pressed instead for strategic bombing raids on German cities and an invasion of German-held North Africa
Churchill got his way
Slide850: in 1942, Allied planes began to bomb German cities, and an Allied force under Dwight Eisenhower invaded North Africa
the decision to offer conditional surrender terms to the French collaborationist, Admiral Jean Darlan, disturbed Charles de Gaulle and many Americans, but it did yield strategic dividends
Rommel’s Afrika Korps surrendered in May 1943
by the fall of 1943, the Soviets had checked the Nazi advance at Stalingrad, and the Allies were pushing their way up the Italian peninsula
Slide851: Germany Overwhelmed
on D-Day, June 6, 1944, the Allied forces launched a massive attack on the Normandy coast
in the East, millions of Soviet troops slowly pushed back the Axis lines
while Eisenhower prepared for a general advance, the Germans launched a counterattack
Allies turned back Germans at the Battle of the Bulge, which cost Germans their last reserves
Slide852: on May 8, 1945, Nazi Germany unconditionally surrendered
as the Allies advanced, the horror of the Nazi death camps unfolded
news of the camps had reached the United States much earlier
yet Roosevelt declined to take any action to save refugees or even to bomb the camps or the rail lines leading to the camps
Slide853: The Naval War in the Pacific
while the first priority was to defeat Germany, American forces in the Pacific fought to prevent further Japanese expansion
in spite of heavy losses, the American navy turned back a Japanese convoy at the Battle of the Coral Sea (1942)
at Midway, the United States fleet decisively defeated a Japanese armada
thereafter, the initiative in the Pacific shifted to the Americans
Slide854: Island Hopping
American forces ejected the Japanese from the Solomon Islands in a series of battles around Guadalcanal in which American air power proved decisive
American forces advanced steadily, and by mid-1944, American land-based bombers were within range of Tokyo
in February 1945, MacArthur liberated the Philippines
Slide855: two battles in Philippine waters (1944) completed the destruction of Japan’s sea power and reduced its air power to kamikazes
American forces took Iwo Jima and Okinawa, only a few hundred miles from the Japanese mainland, in March 1945
the tenacity of Japanese soldiers made it seem that the actual invasion and conquest of Japan would take at least another year and cost an additional million American casualties
Slide856: Building the Atom Bomb
following Roosevelt’s death in April 1945, Harry S Truman became America’s president
America’s scientific community delivered a powerful new weapon, the atom bomb, to Truman
the United States had devoted over six years and $2 billion to develop this weapon
after the first successful test on July 16, 1945, Truman faced a difficult decision
Slide857: he could authorize bombing the Japanese cities with this weapon, or he could finish the war using conventional means
the motives behind Truman’s decision are still debated
on August 6 and 9, 1945, atomic weapons devastated the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Truman’s decision was influenced by the potential casualties involved in an invasion of Japan as well as a desire to end the war before the Soviet Union could intervene effectively and claim a role in making peace
Slide858: hatred of Japan undoubtedly also influenced the decision
on August 15, Japan surrendered unconditionally, and Second World War ended
millions of people perished in the war, and many areas lay in ruins. Despite the war's horrible cost, improvements in technology and medicine held out the promise of a better world
scientists argued that the power of the atom could also serve peaceful needs
with the drafting of the United Nations charter in 1945, the world hoped for international cooperation
Slide859: Wartime Diplomacy
hopes of world peace and harmony failed to materialize, largely because of a split between the Soviet Union and the western allies
during the war, American propaganda spared no effort to persuade Americans that the Soviet Union was a devoted, peace-loving ally
Joseph Stalin was portrayed as a kindly father figure
Americans representing viewpoints as diverse as Douglas A. MacArthur and Henry A. Wallace adopted pro-Soviet positions
Slide860: such views were naive at best, but the war created an identity of interest in defeating a common enemy
moreover, the Soviets expressed a willingness to cooperate in resolving postwar problems, and the Soviet Union was one of the original signers of the Declaration of the United Nations
in May 1943, the Soviets dissolved the Comintern
in October, the “big three powers” established the European Advisory Commission to set policy for the occupation of Germany
Slide861: the Big Three met and cooperated constructively at Teheran and Yalta
at San Francisco, the Allies created a United Nations Organization consisting of a General Assembly (made up of all member nations) and a Security Council (consisting of five permanent members and six other, temporary members)
Slide862: Allied Suspicion of Stalin
long before the war ended, the Allies clashed over important issues
Stalin deeply resented the delay in opening a second front
at the same time, the Soviet leader never concealed his determination to protect his western frontier by exerting control over Eastern Europe
Slide863: most Allied leaders conceded Stalin’s dominance in Eastern Europe, but they never publicly acknowledged this
Conflicts between western commitments to self-determination and Soviet desires for security presented difficult problems, particularly in Poland
Slide864: Yalta and Potsdam
at Yalta, Roosevelt and Churchill agreed to Soviet annexation of large sections of eastern Poland
Stalin agreed to allow the Poles to hold free elections, a commitment he probably never intended to keep
a pro-Soviet regime was installed in Poland. The new president, Truman, met with Stalin and the British leadership at Potsdam in July 1945
Slide865: Potsdam formalized the occupation of Germany
fortified by news of the successful testing of an atomic bomb, Truman made no concessions to the Soviets
Stalin refused to relinquish his hold on Eastern Europe
suspicions mounted and positions hardened on both sides
the end of World War II marked the beginning of a new international order dominated by the Soviet-American rivalry
THE AMERICAN CENTURY: THE AMERICAN CENTURY The Postwar Economy
after Roosevelt’s death, Truman attempted to follow Roosevelt’s policies at home and abroad
the first issue he confronted after the war was reconversion of the economy
at the war’s end, most Americans wanted to demobilize the military, end wartime controls, and reduce taxes
policymakers hoped to avoid both sudden economic dislocation and a return to depression
Slide867: torn between these objectives, Truman vacillated
yet the nation weathered demobilization with relative ease; pent-up consumer demand spurred production
however, inflation and labor unrest helped the Republicans to win control of Congress in 1946
in 1947, Congress passed the Taft-Hartley Act, outlawing “closed shops” and authorizing the president to order an eighty-day cooling off period in strikes that threatened the national interest
Slide868: At Home and Work
the wartime trend toward earlier marriages and larger families accelerated with the war’s end
government policies, such as income tax deductions for dependents, further encouraged the inclination of people to have children
household management and child rearing became the career of choice for millions of American women, including college graduates
scholars supported the notion that women belonged in the home
Slide869: although men assumed prominent roles in some domestic rituals, they were expected to cede management of the domestic sphere to women
a man’s primary contribution to the family was to earn enough to sustain it
unemployment remained low, but the character or work changed in unsettling ways
large corporations depended on increasing numbers of managers and clerical workers
entrepreneurial individuals gave way to “organization men” and the need to conform
Slide870: attitudes toward marriage and child rearing spanned the spectrum of American society
the growth of suburbs gave a physical dimension to emerging ideas of family life
much as it reinforced the desire to have larger families, government policies encouraged the growth of suburbs
not all women in the suburbs lived the life portrayed in television situation comedies
substantial numbers worked outside the home, particularly in the clerical and service sectors of the economy
Slide871: The Containment Policy
Stalin seemed intent on expanding Soviet power into central Europe, Asia, and the Middle East
by January 1946, Truman moved toward a tougher stand with respect to the Soviet Union
George F. Kennan, a foreign service officer, contended that origins of Soviet expansionism lay in the instability and illegitimacy of the Soviet regime
Slide872: he proposed that the United States firmly but patiently resist Soviet expansion wherever it appeared
Kennan never elaborated on how, precisely, the Soviet Union should be contained or in what parts of the world the policy should be applied
Slide873: The Atom Bomb: A “Winning” Weapon?
although Truman authorized the use of the atom bomb to force the surrender of Japan, he also hoped that it would serve as a counterweight to the numerically superior Red Army
Stalin, however, refused to be intimidated
in addition, horrifying accounts of the devastation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki left Americans uneasy
Truman came to doubt that American people would permit the use of atomic weapons for aggressive purposes
Slide874: in November 1945, the United States proposed that the United Nations supervise all production of nuclear energy
U.N. created an Atomic Energy Commission, which put forward a plan for the eventual outlawing of atomic weapons backed by unrestricted U.N. inspections
the Soviets rejected the American and U.N. plans
Slide875: A Turning Point in Greece
in 1947, the policy of containment began to take shape
responding to a communist threat in Greece, Truman asked Congress for economic and military aid for Greece and Turkey
the Truman Doctrine promised “to support free peoples resisting subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures”
in selling his proposal, Truman overstated the threat and couched the request in ideological terms
Slide876: The Marshall Plan and the Lesson of History
the economies of European countries remained unstable after the war
in 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall proposed a plan by which the U.S. would finance reconstruction of European economy
western European powers eagerly seized upon Marshall’s suggestion
although initially tempted, Stalin declined to take part and insisted that eastern European nations do so as well
Slide877: after the fall of Czechoslovakia in a communist coup in February 1948, Congress appropriated over $13 billion for European recovery effort
the results were spectacular; by 1951, the economies of western Europe were booming
western European nations moved toward social, cultural, and economic collaboration
Britain, France, and the United States created a single West German Republic from their zones of occupation
when the Soviets closed ground access to Berlin, the United States responded with an airlift that forced the Soviets to lift the blockade
Slide878: Dealing with Japan and China
containment proved far less effective in the Far East than it did in Europe
American policy succeeded in Japan and failed in China
after the surrender of Japan, a four-power Allied Control Commission was established, but American forces, led by General MacArthur, controlled Japan and encouraged Japan’s nascent democracy
Slide879: Japan emerged economically strong, politically stable, and firmly allied with the United States
the problems in China were probably insurmountable
Truman dispatched George C. Marshall to negotiate a settlement between Chiang Kai-shek’s nationalists and Mao Tse-tung’s communists
this attempt at compromise failed, and civil war soon erupted
Slide880: The Election of 1948
by spring of 1948, public opinion polls revealed that most Americans considered Truman incompetent
he had alienated both southern conservatives and northern liberals
Truman still managed to win the nomination; but southern Democrats, known as “Dixiecrats,” walked out when the convention adopted a strong civil rights plank and chose Strom Thurmond to run on a third-party ticket
Slide881: compounding matters, the left wing also defected; Henry A. Wallace ran on the Progressive ticket
the Republican nominee, Governor Thomas Dewey of New York, anticipating an easy victory, ran a listless campaign
Truman, in contrast, launched a vigorous campaign
his strong denunciation of the “do nothing” Republican Congress and the success of the Berlin Airlift aided his reelection bid
Slide882: many Democratic liberals thought Wallace too pro-Soviet and voted for Truman
Truman surprised everyone and won a narrow victory in the popular vote and a more substantial one in the electoral college
after the election, Truman put forward a number of proposals, which he called the Fair Deal
however, little of his program was enacted into law
Slide883: Containing Communism Abroad
during Truman’s second term, the confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union increasingly dominated attention
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, designed to protect the West from Soviet aggression, was formed in 1949
the Soviet detonation of an atomic bomb in September 1949 led Truman to authorize development of a hydrogen bomb
containment failed in Asia. In China, Mao’s communists defeated the nationalists
Slide884: Chiang’s forces fled in disarray to Formosa in 1949
right-wing Republicans charged that Truman had not supported the Chinese nationalists strongly enough and had therefore “lost” China
Truman ordered a review of containment
the resulting report, NSC-68, called for a massive expansion of the nation's armed forces
although Truman initially had reservations about the document, events in Korea changed his mind
Slide885: Hot War in Korea
American policymakers had decided that a land war on the Asian continent would be impracticable
yet when communist North Korea invaded South Korea in June 1950, Truman decided on a military response
despite early gains by the North, U.N. forces (90 percent American) under the command of MacArthur turned the tide and began pressing north
Slide886: MacArthur proposed conquest of North Korea
despite opposition from his civilian advisors, Truman authorized an advance as far as the Chinese border
in November 1950, 33 divisions of the People’s Republic of China army crossed the Yalu River and shattered U.N. lines
MacArthur urged the bombing of Chinese installations north of the Yalu and a blockade of China
Slide887: when Truman rejected his proposals, MacArthur openly criticized the administration
Truman removed MacArthur from command
in June 1951, the communists agreed to negotiations, which dragged on interminably
initially, this “police action” was popular with the American public, but the bloody stalemate eroded public enthusiasm
Slide888: The Communist Issue at Home
the frustrating Korean War illustrated the paradox that, at the height of its power, American influence was waning
the United States faced internal as well as external threats
exposure of communist espionage in Canada and Great Britain fueled American fears of communist subversion
Slide889: hoping to allay allegations that he was “soft” on communism, Truman established the Loyalty Review Board in 1947 to ensure that no subversives found employment in the federal government
the Hiss and Rosenberg trials heightened the climate of fear
Slide890: McCarthyism
in February 1950, Joseph R. McCarthy, an obscure senator from Wisconsin, charged that the State Department was “infested” with communists
although he offered no evidence to support his claims, many Americans believed him
McCarthy went on to make more fantastic accusations
Slide891: the enormity of his charges and the status of his targets convinced many that there had to be some truth in his accusations
events of the early cold war and the public’s resulting fears made people more susceptible to McCarthy’s allegations
Slide892: Dwight D. Eisenhower
the Republican party selected Eisenhower as their candidate in 1952
aside from his popularity as a war hero, Eisenhower’s genial tolerance made a welcome change from Truman
his ability as a leader was amply demonstrated by his military career, and his campaign promise to go to Korea was a political masterstroke
Eisenhower easily defeated his Democratic opponent, Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois
Slide893: Eisenhower dismantled no New Deal programs and undertook some modest new initiatives
moreover, he adopted an essentially Keynesian approach to economic issues
Eisenhower proved to be a first-rate politician who knew how to be flexible without compromising basic values
in spite of his political skills, however, he was unable to recast the Republican Party in his own, moderate, image
Slide894: The Eisenhower-Dulles Foreign Policy
president and his secretary of state, John Foster Dulles, formulated a “New Look” in foreign policy, which reduced reliance on conventional forces and relied instead on America’s nuclear arsenal to achieve international stability
this approach promised to save money and to prevent the United States from being caught up in another local conflict like the Korean War
moreover, Dulles hoped the new approach would make it possible to “liberate” eastern Europe and “unleash” Chaing against the Chinese mainland
Slide895: after administration hinted at its willingness to use nuclear weapons, Chinese signed armistice that ended hostilities but left Korea divided
threatened use of nuclear weapons also seemed to convince the Chinese to abandon their aggressive intent toward Quemoy and Matsu
the New Look did succeed in reducing the defense budget, but it did not lead to the liberation of eastern Europe
further, unleashing Chaing would have been like pitting a Pekingese against a tiger
above all, “massive retaliation” made little sense when the Soviet Union also possessed nuclear weapons
Slide896: McCarthy Self-Destructs
even after it came under the control of his own party, McCarthy did not moderate his attacks on the State Department
partly in an effort to blunt McCarthy’s charges, Dulles sanctioned the dismissal of nearly five hundred State Department employees
early in 1954, McCarthy finally overreached himself by leveling allegations at the army
Slide897: televised broadcasts of the Army-McCarthy Senate hearings revealed to the American public McCarthy’s disregard for decency and truth
with Eisenhower quietly applying pressure behind the scenes, the Senate voted to censure McCarthy in 1954
Slide898: Asian Policy After Korea
both Truman and Eisenhower provided aid to France’s efforts to defeat the Viet Minh in Indochina
however, during the siege of Dien Bien Phu in 1954, Eisenhower refused to commit American personnel to the struggle
France soon surrendered; and France, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and China signed an agreement that divided Vietnam at the 17th parallel and called for a national election in 1956
Slide899: North Vietnam, led by Ho Chi Minh, established a communist government
in South Vietnam, Ngo Dinh Diem overthrew the emperor, and the United States provided support and advice to his new government
the planned election was never held, and Vietnam remained divided
Dulles organized the Southeast Asian Treaty Organization (SEATO)
Slide900: The Middle East Cauldron
American policy in the Middle East was influenced by that region’s massive petroleum reserves and by the conflict between Israel and its Arab neighbors
Truman consistently made support for Israel a priority
Eisenhower and Dulles deemphasized support for Israel
U.S. provided economic aid to Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser but refused to sell him arms
the Soviets gladly provided the arms, and Nasser drifted toward the Eastern Bloc
Slide901: in response, the United States withdrew its funding of the Aswan Dam
Nasser then nationalized the Suez Canal
an allied force of British, French, and Israeli forces attacked Egypt in October 1956
the United States and the Soviet Union eventually compelled the invaders to withdraw, and the crisis subsided
in January 1956, Eisenhower announced the “Eisenhower Doctrine,” stating that the United States would use armed force anywhere in the Middle East “to halt aggression from any nation controlled by international communism”
Slide902: Eisenhower and Khrushchev
Eisenhower defeated Stevenson by an even greater margin in 1956 than he had in 1952
the cold war escalated when United States detonated the first hydrogen bomb in 1952 and the Soviets followed suit within six months
after Stalin’s death in 1953, his successor, Nikita Khrushchev, attempted to move the Soviet Union away from Stalinism
abroad, Khrushchev courted many emerging nations by appealing to the anti-western prejudices of countries recently held as colonies and by offering economic and technological aid
Slide903: Eisenhower understood that the United States maintained superiority in the nuclear arms race
further, he was aware of the Soviet Union’s many weaknesses, but the Soviet success in placing the Sputnik satellite in orbit alarmed many Americans
Eisenhower knew that, militarily, the Soviet Union was no match for the United States and that Sputnik had not changed the equation appreciably
yet to call the Soviet bluff might prod Khrushchev to rash action
Slide904: Eisenhower reassured American people they had little to fear and otherwise remained silent
Eisenhower exercised great restraint in the conduct of foreign policy, particularly when faced with a crisis
although he had always guided foreign policy, Eisenhower took over much of the actual conduct of diplomacy after failing health forced Dulles to resign in 1959
confronted with the threat of nuclear war moved the United States and the Soviet Union toward accommodation
Slide905: in the summer of 1959, Vice-President Richard M. Nixon visited Moscow, and Khrushchev toured the United States in September
in this new air of cordiality, a date was set for a new summit meeting
this meeting never took place
on May 1, 1960, the Soviets shot down an American reconnaissance plane over Soviet territory, and Soviet-American relations quickly soured
Slide906: Latin America Aroused
the United States neglected Latin America in the postwar years
like Truman, Eisenhower supported military governments in preference to communist revolutions
violent anti-American rioting illustrated the depth of anti-Yankee sentiment and forced curtailment of Vice-President Nixon’s “good-will” tour in 1958
in 1959, Fidel Castro overthrew Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista
Slide907: although Eisenhower quickly recognized the new Cuban government, Castro soon began to spout anti-American rhetoric; he also confiscated American property
when Castro established close relations with the Soviet Union, Eisenhower banned the importation of Cuban sugar
Khrushchev announced that American intervention in Cuba would be met with nuclear retaliation by the Soviet Union
near the end of his second term, Eisenhower broke off relations with Cuba
Slide908: The Politics of Civil Rights
during the Cold War, America’s treatment of its racial minorities took on added importance because of the ideological competition with communism
America’s blacks became increasingly unwilling to accept their status as second-class citizens
Truman had proposed civil rights reforms but failed to sway Congress
Eisenhower succeeded in integrating the military, but the direct assault on racial inequality came from the Supreme Court
Slide909: in Brown v. the Board of Education of Topeka (1954), the Court overturned the doctrine of “separate but equal”
although Eisenhower believed that equality could not be legislated, he refused to countenance defiance of federal authority or the Constitution
when the governor of Arkansas used the National Guard to prevent the execution of a federal court order upholding the right of a handful of black children to attend Little Rock’s Central High School, Eisenhower nationalized the Arkansas Guard and sent federal troops to enforce the order
Slide910: the Eisenhower administration gained passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1957, which created a Civil Rights Commission and authorized the Department of Justice to ensure the right of southern blacks to register and to vote
the act proved difficult to enforce
Slide911: The Election of 1960
Eisenhower reluctantly endorsed the candidacy of Vice-President Nixon
Nixon ran on the Eisenhower legacy and on his own reputation as a staunch anticommunist
the Democrats nominated John F. Kennedy, a senator from Massachusetts, and chose the Senate majority leader, Lyndon Johnson, as his running mate
Slide912: although he had not been a particularly liberal congressman, Kennedy sought to appear more forward-looking as a presidential candidate
Kennedy benefited from his television presence during several debates with Nixon
in the end, Kennedy won a paper-thin victory in the popular vote
FROM CAMELOT TO WATERGATE: FROM CAMELOT TO WATERGATE John Fitzgerald Kennedy’s image of youth and vigor
his administration prided themselves on being the best and the brightest
in reality, however, neither the president nor his administration lived up to the image
Slide914: The Cuban Crises
Kennedy believed that his chief task was to stop the spread of communism
in a departure from Eisenhower’s reliance on America’s nuclear deterrent, Kennedy proposed to challenge communist aggression wherever it occurred
not long after taking power, he authorized an invasion of Cuba by Cuban exiles
the landing at the Bay of Pigs in April 1961 was a complete fiasco
Slide915: the affair exposed the United States to all the criticism a straightforward assault would have, and it failed to overthrow Castro
Castro moved toward the Soviet orbit
in June 1961, Kennedy and Khrushchev met in Vienna, where Khrushchev blustered about taking West Berlin
in August, Khrushchev ordered construction of the Berlin Wall
both sides resumed nuclear testing and built up massive nuclear arsenals
Slide916: Kennedy also instructed the CIA to initiate “massive activity” against Castro’s regime, which included attempts to assassinate the Cuban dictator
in October 1962, Khrushchev placed Soviet troops, bombers, and nuclear missiles in Cuba
Kennedy forced a showdown by ordering the United States Navy to halt the shipment of offensive weapons to Cuba
the world held its breath for several days until finally Khrushchev backed down
Slide917: although Kennedy’s supporters regarded this as Kennedy’s finest hour, in retrospect it appears that he overreacted
both Kennedy and Khrushchev seem to have been sobered by the missile crisis
however, the humiliation Khrushchev suffered contributed to his overthrow by hardliners two years later
Slide918: The Vietnam War
after the French defeat in 1954, the parties agreed to general elections in 1956
fearing that Ho Chi Minh would defeat him, Ngo Dinh Diem, the American-backed leader of South Vietnam, cancelle