What were the successes and failures of the Progressive Movement, and how might one account
for these?
Why did this movement come to an end by 1920?
Solution
I think that the Progressive thinkers did a great deal to ensure that all voices in the political
discourse are heard and to promote the general welfare of American citizens. The reforms of the
political establishment, ensuring that leaders are responsive the needs of its citizens and
curtailing the abuses of those in the position of power cannot be ignored. At the same time, the
emergence of a battle for workers\' rights and the need to ensure that the relationship between
industrialists and those who work to make the money for them is a bit more representative in
terms of demands of work compensation, hours, and conditions. Finally, the idea of focusing on
\"how the other half lives\" was not only something seen in the work of Jacob Riis, but actually a
theme of the Progressives\' movement with the work of the Muckrakers as well as the overall
motivation of the movement.
Although the Progressive Era was a period of broad reform movements and social progress, it
was also characterized by loose, multiple, and contradictory goals that impeded the efforts of
reformers and often pitted political leaders against one another, most drastically in the
Republican Party.
For instance, national Progressive leaders such as Roosevelt argued for increased federal
regulation to coordinate big business practices while others, like Wilson, promised to legislate
for open competition. At the local, municipal, and state level, various Progressive reformers
advocated for disparate goals that ranged as wide as prison reform, education, government
reorganization, urban improvement, prohibition, female suffrage, birth control, improved
working conditions, labor reform, and child labor reform. Although significant advancements
were made in social justice and reform on a case by case basis, there was little local effort to
coordinate reformers on a wide platform of issues. Furthermore, despite the Bull Moose Party\'s
declaration of a Progressive Party Platform, the American public viewed it more as coalition of
fervent Roosevelt supporters, rather than any comprehensive party platform that accounted for
the range of Progressive concerns.
Furthermore, the Progressive Movement was also an exclusive phenomenon that was restricted
to the white, Protestant, educated middle class. Racism often pervaded most progressive reform
efforts, as evidenced by the suffrage movement. Specifically, as women campaigned for the vote,
most progressives argued on behalf of female suffrage as a necessary reform to combat the
influence of \"corrupted\" or \"ignorant\" black voters in the election booth. Civil Rights and
Progressive Reforms were thus mostly exclusionary projects that had little real influence on each
other in the early twentieth century.
Finally, many Progressive achievements were frustrated by the federal court system,.
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What were the successes and failures of the Progressive Movement, an.pdf
1. What were the successes and failures of the Progressive Movement, and how might one account
for these?
Why did this movement come to an end by 1920?
Solution
I think that the Progressive thinkers did a great deal to ensure that all voices in the political
discourse are heard and to promote the general welfare of American citizens. The reforms of the
political establishment, ensuring that leaders are responsive the needs of its citizens and
curtailing the abuses of those in the position of power cannot be ignored. At the same time, the
emergence of a battle for workers' rights and the need to ensure that the relationship between
industrialists and those who work to make the money for them is a bit more representative in
terms of demands of work compensation, hours, and conditions. Finally, the idea of focusing on
"how the other half lives" was not only something seen in the work of Jacob Riis, but actually a
theme of the Progressives' movement with the work of the Muckrakers as well as the overall
motivation of the movement.
Although the Progressive Era was a period of broad reform movements and social progress, it
was also characterized by loose, multiple, and contradictory goals that impeded the efforts of
reformers and often pitted political leaders against one another, most drastically in the
Republican Party.
For instance, national Progressive leaders such as Roosevelt argued for increased federal
regulation to coordinate big business practices while others, like Wilson, promised to legislate
for open competition. At the local, municipal, and state level, various Progressive reformers
advocated for disparate goals that ranged as wide as prison reform, education, government
reorganization, urban improvement, prohibition, female suffrage, birth control, improved
working conditions, labor reform, and child labor reform. Although significant advancements
were made in social justice and reform on a case by case basis, there was little local effort to
coordinate reformers on a wide platform of issues. Furthermore, despite the Bull Moose Party's
declaration of a Progressive Party Platform, the American public viewed it more as coalition of
fervent Roosevelt supporters, rather than any comprehensive party platform that accounted for
the range of Progressive concerns.
Furthermore, the Progressive Movement was also an exclusive phenomenon that was restricted
to the white, Protestant, educated middle class. Racism often pervaded most progressive reform
efforts, as evidenced by the suffrage movement. Specifically, as women campaigned for the vote,
most progressives argued on behalf of female suffrage as a necessary reform to combat the
2. influence of "corrupted" or "ignorant" black voters in the election booth. Civil Rights and
Progressive Reforms were thus mostly exclusionary projects that had little real influence on each
other in the early twentieth century.
Finally, many Progressive achievements were frustrated by the federal court system, which
struck down laws regulating child labor, and by lack of resources and funds to fully implement
social and political plans of reform. As a result, Progressives failed to fully redistribute political
power from the hands of political lobbyists, machines, and organized interests.
Why it ended?
Years of the progressive movement are debateable. Most look at the period between 1899-1917
as the progressive period. That places it at ending with WWI. The issues that were important
during the progressive period were placed on the back burner because of the war and the nations
emphasis on fighting the war in Europe. Some people place the ending date at 1920 as when the
19th amendment was passed. (gave women the right to vote)