1 / 14

Populism in the United States

Populism in the United States. Western Expansion. Results: Mining (gold) boom (and bust) brings people west Logging becomes huge western industry Farms expand (successful!) Native Americans sent to reservations Treaty w/ U.S. (land forever theirs) By late 1800s, almost no “frontier” left.

glain
Download Presentation

Populism in the United States

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Populism in the United States

  2. Western Expansion • Results: • Mining (gold) boom (and bust) brings people west • Logging becomes huge western industry • Farms expand (successful!) • Native Americans sent to reservations • Treaty w/ U.S. (land forever theirs) • By late 1800s, almost no “frontier” left

  3. The Populist Party • Several political parties combine (1880s) • Populism – movement of the people • Economic Goals: • Increase money supply • Graduated income tax • Federal loans • Political Goals: • Senate elected by pop. vote • Secret ballot • 8-hour day • Democratic party eventuallyadopts this platform

  4. U.S. Monetary Policy • Debtors vs. Collectors • Debtors wanted more money in circulation, wanted Gov. to coin more silver (bimetallism) • Paper money considered worthless if cannot be exchanged for money • Bimetallism: using both silver AND gold to back currency • Silverites – would create more money, stimulate economy • Gold Standard – backing currency w/ gold only • Gold Bugs – Gold ONLY would create more stable (if expensive) currency

  5. Election of 1892 • Populist Nominee: James B. Weaver • Gov to control/operate RR, telegraph & telephone • Secret ballot in elections • Graduated income tax • U.S. Senators elected directily • Shorter working hours

  6. Election of 1892

  7. The Panic of 1893 • RRs expanded faster than markets • Some went bankrupt • Government’s gold supply became depleted • Led to rush on banks • Businesses, banks, collapse • Panic becomes depression

  8. Election of 1896 • Money central issue • Republicans – William McKinley • Supported big business (gold standard) • Democrats – William Jennings Bryan • Supported silver • Populists supported Bryan

  9. Election of 1896 • McKinley thought campaigning was undignified (accepted visitors @ home) • Bryan had “modern” campaign • Traveled by train, made speeches • Bryan carried S & W (except CA) • McKinley carried NE & California • More electoral votes • Urban America defeats Rural America

  10. End of Populism • McKinley elected president, populism ends • Legacy: • Powerless could organize, have political impact • Agenda of reforms enacted in 20th Cent.

More Related