2. I. Who was a Progressive Reformer? -Came from all classes, Regions, races. -Spearheaded by Middle-Class Women, 1890s.
3. WHAT WAS Progressivism -A collection of various reform communities; - United citizens in many political, professional, and religious organizations; and -Might be local, statewide, or national in scope.
4. 1- Reform state, local & federal government to improve public welfare Social Justice
5. Settlement Houses -College-educated, M-C women -Activisms in “Women’s Sphere” -kindergartens, nurseries, English classes, American cooking, etc. -First Social Scientists & Social Workers -Bldg codes, safety codes, stats & analysis reports Hull House, 1889, Jane Addams Example of Progressive Reform & Gov’t.
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8. Addams’ funeral Hull House She was accused of being a socialist, anarchist and communist 1931: Nobel Peace Prize
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11. Through Hull-House, Hamilton became a member of the Illinois Commission on Occupational Diseases. 1910: she conducted pioneering survey of lead poisoning that demonstrated shockingly high injury and mortality rates and prompted passage of the state's first industrial disease law. Working for U.S. Department of Labor, Hamilton documented the prevalence of poisoning (typically denied by manufacturers) in the lead and munitions industries. In the absence of federal regulations, she assumed personal responsibility for persuading owners to improve plant conditions and also alerted medical colleagues and the public to the dangers of industrial diseases.
12. Hamilton joined Harvard's new industrial hygiene program in 1919; she was Harvard's first woman professor. There she found new ways to protect workers' health. She prodded the U.S. surgeon general and other authorities to take up the broader problem of controlling industrial diseases. In her nineties, she protested the Vietnam War. To the end she retained the faith in progress that she had shared with a generation of reformers.
13. 2-Middle-class needed more control over explosive growth of cities and immigrants: Social Control Over scenes like this . . .
17. FEARS -Problems due to massive immigration: -crowded cities, tenements, disease. -(fears of the immigrants themselves) -Business/profits valued over common good -working conditions, worker welfare -consumer welfare
18. Middle Class feared - Power of big businesses -business monopolies made goods more expensive and less the way consumers needed them. -that products were tainted (milk, meat) -dirt, fillers, “TB infected clothes” from sweatshops, etc.
19. (1) Anger about excesses of Industrial growth And Urban growth and crowding “ tenaments” Like this . . .