The Politics of The Gilded Age: Guided Reading & Analysis:, Chapter 19
The Politics of The Gilded Age: Guided Reading & Analysis:, Chapter 19
The Politics of The Gilded Age: Guided Reading & Analysis:, Chapter 19
Guided Reading & Analysis: The Politics of the Gilded Age, 1877-1900
Chapter 19- The Gilded Age pp 380-391
Reading Assignment: Ch. 19 AMSCO; If you do not have the AMSCO text, use chapter
23 of American Pageant and/or online resources such as the website, podcast, crash
course video, chapter outlines, Hippocampus, etc.
Purpose: This guide is not only a place to record notes as you read, but also to provide a
place and structure for reflections and analysis using your noggin (thinking skills) with new
knowledge gained from the reading. This guide, if THOUGHFULLY completed in its
entirety BOP (Beginning of Period) by the due date, can be used on the corresponding
quiz as well as earn up to 10 bonus points. In addition, completed guides provide the
student with the ability to correct a quiz for ½ points back! The benefits of such activities,
however, go far beyond quiz help and bonus points. ☺
Mastery of the course and AP exam await all who choose to process the information
as they read/receive. This is an optional assignment.
Deja vu So… young Jedi… what is your choice? Do? Or do not? There is no try.
Pictured: Gilded Age Presidents, Grant-Hayes-Garfield-Arthur-Cleveland-Harrison-Cleveland-McKinley,Public Domain.
Directions:
1. Pre-Read: Read the prompts/questions within this guide before you read the chapter.
2. Skim: Flip through the chapter and note titles and subtitles. Look at images and read captions. Get a feel for the content you are about to read.
3. Read/Analyze: Read the chapter. If you have your own copy of AMSCO, Highlight key events and people as you read. Remember, the goal is not
to “fish” for a specific answer(s) to reading guide questions, but to consider questions in order to critically understand what you read!
4. Write Write (do not type) your notes and analysis in the spaces provided. Complete it in INK!
The Gilded Age, which spanned the final three decades of the nineteenth century, was one of the most dynamic, contentious, and volatile periods in
American history. America's industrial economy exploded, generating unprecedented opportunities for individuals to build great fortunes but also leaving many
farmers and workers struggling merely for survival. Overall national wealth increased more than fivefold, a staggering increase, but one that was accompanied by
what many saw as an equally staggering disparity between the rich and the poor. Industrial giants like Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller revolutionized
business and ushered in the modern corporate economy, but also, ironically, sometimes destroyed free-market economic competition in the process. Record
numbers of citizens voted in national elections, but the politicians they voted for were often lackluster figures who turned a blind eye to the public interest. It was, as
Dickens might have said, the best of times and the worst of times. But even that Dickensian understanding of the Gilded Age isn't quite right. It's not enough to say
that the Gilded Age was a time of high highs and low lows; the highs and lows were actually often deeply intertwined parts of the exact same developments. In other
words, the highs often were the lows, and vice versa. In the Gilded Age, every dark cloud had its silver lining… and every silver lining had its dark cloud. For more
than a hundred years, critics have been ripping the business strategies that allowed big industrialists to build powerful monopolies—but those much-maligned
monopolies brought desperately needed order to America's immature economic system. Many have also long resented the immense fortunes of personal wealth that
a handful of big businessmen were able to acquire—but that wealth paid for a huge surge in philanthropy, building hundreds of libraries, schools, museums, and
other public facilities still enjoyed by the American people even today. Reformers decried the way urban politicians turned corruption into a way of life—but those
same crooked politicians also provided vital services to working-class and immigrant neighborhoods. The Gilded Age was a dynamic age of incredible economic
opportunity, just as it was a harsh era of incredible economic exploitation. Any version of this tale that includes only the exploitation but not the dynamism—or vice
versa—is missing half the story. (Smoop.com)
How did the Gilded Age differ from the era of Reconstruction?
The “Gilded Age” Politics of the Gilded Age… Explain the key issue dividing Mugwumps,
witnessed new a. the term “Gilded Age” came from Mark Twain to describe the new wealth Halfbreeds, and Stalwarts.
cultural and gained in the last years of the 19th century
intellectual b. age of “forgettable” presidents and politicians who ignored problems
movements in caused by industrialization and urbanization
tandem with
political debates
over economic and
social policies. Causes of Stalemate… List three similarities between Antebellum Era
Democrats and Gilded Age Democrats:
Gilded Age politics 1 )industrialists controlled politics
were intimately tied 1)
to big business 2)belief in limited government
2)
and focused
nationally on Belief in Limited Government…
3)
economic issues — 1. jived with laissez-faire economics and social Darwinism
tariffs, currency, 2. courts narrowly interpreted government’s powers to regulate business
3. federal government’s only responsibilities:
corporate a. delivering the mails
List three similarities between Antebellum Era
expansion, and Republicans (you may include the Whigs in this
b. maintaining a national military
laissez-faire comparison) and Gilded Age Republicans:
c. conducting foreign policy
economic policy d. collecting tariffs and taxes
— that engendered 1)
4. exceptions:
numerous calls for a. subsidies and grants for railroads
2)
reform. b. use of military and police to stop strikes (Pullman Strike)
c. pension system for Civil War veterans
3)
i. reformers wanted to make the system permanent and expand it for all
Americans
ii. But other reformers believed the pension system was a symbol of graft,
* One scandal not How was the Antebellum Two Party System
outlined in your book corruption and party rule
different from the Gilded Age Two Party system?
(during the Grant years) 5. The most powerful political institutions were the two political parties and the
is the Indian Ring. federal courts
Belknap, Secretary of 6. government most powerful on the local level
War, was forced to 7. concerned with winning elections and controlling patronage
resign after taking bribes
from suppliers to Indian
reservations… was *Turn back to page 300 and re-read the section
Campaign Strategy…
impeached and removed on Greed and Corruption during the Grant years.
by Congress after he Then, define the following:
resigned (resigned to 1. elections were close, so both Republicans and Democrats avoided taking
avoid it but they did it strong positions, which might have alienated the voters
Fisk & Gould scandal:
anyway). 2. despite lack of discussion about the issues, turnout was 80 percent due to:
a. strong party identification and loyalty b. regional, religious, and ethnic ties
Republicans…
Whiskey Ring:
- waved the “bloody shirt”
- retained the votes of reformers and blacks,
- made up of men in business and middle-class, white, Protestants
- remained supportive of high protective tariffs for business
Tweed Ring:
- bulwark against slavery and treason for North
- favored restricting immigration
- supported temperance legislation
Democrats…
- won all elections in the former states of the Confederacy
- northern votes came from political machines and immigrants
- made up of Catholics, Lutherans, and Jews who objected to temperance and
prohibition crusades
- believed in states’ rights and limited federal government
- symbol of white supremacy for South
- appealed to Catholic voters, immigrants, workers
Party Patronage…
1. politics was a game of gaining office, holding office and providing
government jobs to the party faithful
2. Stalwarts and Halfbreeds were political factions of the Republican party with
no real differences between them other than patronage
3. Mugwumps sat on the fence, wanted to elect an honest Democrat
Presidential Politics…
Rutherford B. Hayes…
1. ended Reconstruction by withdrawing last federal troops from the South
2. temperance reformers
3. vetoed efforts to restrict Chinese immigration
4. wanted to create a civil service system, but no one supported it
REMEMBER…As you read the chapter, jot down your notes in the middle column. Consider your notes to be elaborations on the Objectives and Main
Ideas presented in the left column and in the subtitles of the text. INCLUDE IN YOUR NOTES ALL SIGNIFICANT VOCABULARY AND PEOPLE. After read
and take notes, thoughtfully, analyze what you read by answering the questions in the right column. Remember this step is essential to your processing
of information. Completing this guide thoughtfully will increase your retention as well as your comprehension!
Chester A. Arthur…
1. supported bill reforming the civil service (Pendleton Act)
The “Gilded Age” 2. approved development of modern American navy
witnessed new cultural 3. questioned high protective tariff
and intellectual Explain how the issue of spoils or
movements in tandem patronage in the Gilded Age is similar to
with political debates politics in the Jackson Era.
over economic and social Pendleton Act (p.384)…
policies.
Dawes Act…
Dawes Act gave land to individual natives; purpose was to assimilate
Money Question…
The “Gilded Age” i. expand money supply or not?
witnessed new cultural ii. tension between the “haves” and the “have-nots
and intellectual
movements in tandem
with political debates Debtors, farmers, and start-ups wanted…
over economic and - borrow money at lower interest rates
social policies. - pay off loans more easily with inflated dollars
- blamed the gold standard for restricting money supply and causing Panic of 1873
Gilded Age politics were
intimately tied to big
business and focused
nationally on economic
issues — tariffs, Bankers, creditors, investors, and established businesses wanted…
currency, - wanted sound (hard) money
corporate expansion, - as economy and population grew, gold-backed dollars would gain in value
and laissez-faire
economic policy — that
engendered numerous
calls for reform.
Greenback Party…
i. paper money unbacked by specie called greenbacks
ii. had been issued as emergency measures for financing Civil War
iii. Northern farmers liked it b/c associated it with prosperity; creditors/investors saw it as a violation of natural law
Tariff issue…
i. during Civil War, Republican government enacted high tariffs to protect US industry and also fund the Union government
ii. Democrats objected because the taxes raised the price of consumer goods
iii. other nations retaliated by placing taxes of their own on US farm products, so America lost a share of the overseas market
iv. it seemed that industry was growing rich at the expense of rural America
Impact on economy:
Impact on economy: The Gold Standard Act of 1900 was passed
The law, passed 28 February 1878 over President to prevent the country from printing too
Rutherford B. Hayes's veto, required government much money and running out of gold.
purchases, at market prices, of $2 million to $4 million
The “Gilded Billion Dollar Congress.. Which action by the Billion Dollar
Age” witnessed Republicans had control over both houses of Congress and the presidency, very Congress was the most impactful?
new cultural productive Explain and defend your answer with
and intellectual specific evidence.
movements in 1. The McKinley Tariff of 1890…
tandem with raised the tax on foreign products to a peacetime high of over 48 percent
a. public didn’t like it, so got rid of Republicans in next election
political b. monthly pension increase to Civil War veterans, widows and children
debates over
economic and
social policies.
Note on McKinley Tariff:
The Democrats had pledged to lower tariffs, and protested the McKinley Tariff… but by the time the Wilson-
Gorman Tariff of 1894 made it through Congress, it was so loaded with special-interest protection that it
hardly made a difference in the McKinley Tariff rates. Cleveland allowed the bill, but the Supreme Court,
much to the dismay of the Populists, struck down the income tax provision of the tariff.
2.
5.
1. Midwest votes replaced Republicans with Democrats because they didn’t like the tariff
2. immigrants (Catholics) reacted to the prohibition of alcohol and Sunday closing laws--
didn’t like the legislation of public morality
Omaha Platform…
1. farmers’ alliance supported Ocala Demands was a precursor to the Omaha platform,
winning some government positions 2. wanted to do something about the concentration
of economic power in the hands of trusts and bankers 3. supported by Alliance members
and some Knights of Labor people 4. politically wanted: a. direct popular election of US
senators (instead of indirect) b. state laws by voters themselves through initiatives and
referendums 5. economically wanted: a. unlimited coinage of silver to trigger inflation
(free silver) b. graduated income tax c. government ownership of railroads, telegraph and
telephone d. loans and federal warehouses for farmers to enable them to stabilize prices
for their crops e. elimination of nationally owned banks (“money trust”) f. 8 hour work day
g. restriction of immigration 6. revolutionary: a. attacked laissez-faire capitalism b. wanted
progress and growth to continue, but more defined by needs of individuals and
communities; not challenging industrialization or capitalism as a whole c. attempted to
form political alliance between poor white and poor blacks, though anti-Semitic,
intellectual and urban d. Munn v Illinois- Supreme Court upheld the right of a state to
regulate the businesses of a public nature, like railroads ix. Populist Constituency 1.
appealed to geographically isolated farmers whose operations were only minimally
mechanized, dependent on one crop, and not consolidated 2. failed to attract labor
because their interests conflicted. a. exception: attracted miners on Rockies b/c they
endorsed the “free silver” agenda 3. only accepted blacks if white supremacy was
maintained 4. leaders were members of the middle class: professional people, editors, and
lawyers, longtime politicians and agitators 5. women were full fledged members “Raise
less corn and more hell.”- Mary E. Lease 6. temperance- women were against drinking, felt
it was necessary for rural stability 7. Southern leaders aroused resentment against the
Bourbons
The “Gilded
Age” witnessed
new cultural
and intellectual Were William H. Harvey’s views more consistent with Jacksonian
movements in Depression Politics… Democrats or Lincoln Republicans. Explain your answer.
tandem with
political Panic of 1893…
debates over 1. stock market crashed because of over speculation 2. overbuilt-
economic and dozens of railroads went into bankruptcy b/c they expanded
social policies. beyond market demand, became unable to pay back loans 3.
farmers had low purchasing power b/c low prices in agriculture 4.
20% unemployed 5. Cleveland championed the gold standard and
kept a hands-off policy
Gilded Age Presidents did not assess the government in the same
way populists and progressives did. How does this event,
“Coxey’s Army,” illustrate a turning point in American politics?
Significance of the Election of 1896… Populist Demise… Urban Dominance… Beginning of Modern Politics…
EXPLAIN THOROUGHLY…
a. marked the end of the stalemate and stagnation of the Gilded Age politics b. began era of Republican dominance of
the presidency c. Republican party transitioned from party of “free soil, free labor, and free men” to party of business,
industry and strong national government d. though the Populist party disappeared b/c racism was stronger than reform
agenda, their agenda was adopted (graduated income tax and popular election of senators) e. urban issues dominated
over rural issues f. McKinley was the first modern president, making the US a major player in international affairs g. Mark
Hana, McKinley’s adviser, created a model for organizing and financing a successful campaign focused on winning
favorable publicity h. Bryan was the first president to appear in all parts of the country, while McKinley had a “front-
porch” campaign
To what extent was the Populist movement a practical, liberal To what extent was the Populist movement a romantic, idealistic
response to the political and economic problems of the Gilded Age? response to the changes in American culture and economy during the
Gilded Age?
Evidence for Populists as Realistic:
Evidence for Populists as Idealistic:
Progressives only agreed with Socialists about workers’ compensation
Populist party disappeared b/c racism was stronger than reform and minimum wage 2. otherwise, they only wanted mild reforms, not
agenda, their agenda was adopted (graduated income tax and radical causes 3. but, some socialist ideas were eventually accepted like
popular election of senators) public ownership of utilities, 8-hour workday and pensions for
employees
“There is indeed much that is good and usable in our Populist past… Populism was the first modern political movement of practical importance in the
United States to insist that the federal government has some responsibility for the common weal. … Populists… bypassed and humiliated by the advance
of industrialism… were rebelling against the domination of the country by industrial and financial capitalists… They sought to restore the conditions
prevailing before the development of industrialism and the commercialization of agriculture.”
Richard Hofstadter, The Age of Reform from Bryan to F.D.R., 1955
“…Populism was indeed a response to the times, but it was also something more. It was an attempt to transcend those times and, in the act of
transcending the existing social context, to pose an alternative conception for the development of America… Thus, Populists contended, government
must be a responsive tool, one which can actively intervene in the economy to regulate matters affecting the public interest, and when necessary own
outright monopolies of this character, and can just as actively aid the underprivileged and work for a more equitable distribution of wealth.”
Norman Pollack, The Populist Mind, 1967