Period 7 Flashcards
Twentieth President. Served from March 4, 1981 until his death on September 19, 1881, when he was shot
James Garfield
Twenty-first President. Served 1881–1885. Mainly remembered for the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act
Chester A. Arthur
A form of political corruption where a political parties rewards its supporters with favors, often posts to public office.
Spoils system
A period from the 1870s to 1900. While marked by massive economic growth due to industrialization, it also led to equally massive economic inequality. Backlash to this period manifested in the reforms of the Progressive
Gilded Age
An authoritarian or oligarchical political organization that commands political influence, voting blocs, and corporate influence in such a way that they can decide (or strongly influence) the outcome of elections. Often corrupt and prone to political patronage. Usually active at the city level, but sometimes extends statewide.
Political machines
A term for a faction of the Republican Party that supported the party patronage (spoils) system during the Gilded Age.
Stalwarts
A term for a faction of the Republican Party opposed to the party patronage (spoils) system during the Gilded Age.
Halfbreeds
A term for a faction of the Republican Party neutral in regards to party patronage (spoils) system during the Gilded Age, but who still advocated modest reform of it.
Mugwumps
Twenty-second and twenty-fourth President. Only president to serve non-consecutive terms, in 1885–1889 and 1893–1897. The first Democratic Party president since before the Civil War. Supported the gold standard. His second term was defined by the Panic of 1983, which caused a severe depression. Sent federal troops in to break up the Pullman Strike. His resolution of the Venezuelan crisis of 1895 began the reconciliation between the United States and British Empire.
Grover Cleveland
A reform which encouraged a merit-based system for the civil service over the then-predominant party patronage (spoils) system.
Pendleton Civil Service Act of 1881
Twenty-third President. Served 1889–1893, and was bookended by Cleveland’s two non-consecutive terms. Harrison supported the passage of the Sherman Antitrust Act but did little to enforce it. Modernized the U.S. Navy with new warships.
Benjamin Harrison
An alliance of farmers in several states. The Alliance gained membership, successfully seated senators and governors in several midwestern states, and eventually morphed into the Populist Party.
Farmers’ Alliance
Also known as the People’s Party. Their 1892 policy platform advocated for a silver standard, a graduated income tax, direct election of U.S. senators, and ownership of railroads, telegraph, and telephone lines. While the Populists won five Western states in the 1892 election, the Democrats absorbed their policies.
Populist Party
An economic depression caused by the failure of the Reading Railroad company and by over-speculation artificially inflating the price of stocks. The market did not recover for almost four years. Investors began trading in their silver for more valuable gold, depleting the already dangerously low supply of gold
Panic of 1893
Also known as General Coxey. He led “Coxey’s Army” into Washington, D.C. in 1894 and 1914 to demand that the Congress create jobs for the unemployed. His ideas would contribute to the development of the Social Security Act.
Jacob Coxey
A term for pro-gold standard Democrats, such as Grover Cleveland.
Gold Bugs
Nicknamed “The Great Commoner.” An outspoken Christian fundamentalist and anti-imperialist, Bryan served as the Democratic Party’s nominee for President on three separate occasions. He saved the party from being overtaken by the insurgent Populist Party by co-opting its progressive policies and rhetoric. Later served as the prosecutor in the Scopes Monkey Trial.
William Jennings Bryan
A famous speech delivered by William Jennings Bryan at the Democratic National Convention in 1896. In it, Bryan savaged the gold standard in favor of bimetallism. The speech concluded with the line “you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.” It won Bryan, a dark horse, the Democratic nomination for President. Considered one of the greatest works of American rhetoric.
“Cross of Gold” speech
Twenty-fifth President. Served 1897–1901. A proponent of the gold standard and a moderate between business and labor interests, McKinley was assassinated six months into his second term by an anarchist. McKinley oversaw U.S. involvement in the Spanish-American War, as well as the subsequent extension of American control over Cuba and the Philippines.
William McKinley
Twenty-sixth President. Served 1901–1909. A reformist New York governor, was kicked upstairs by party bosses to the vice presidency, which was seen as an unimportant office. After McKinley was assassinated, he became president at 42, the youngest ever. He pursued a progressive domestic agenda called the Square Deal. In terms of foreign policy, he forced through construction of the Panama Canal. He brokered an end to the Russo-Japanese War, which secured him the 1906 Nobel Peace Prize. He unsuccessfully attempted to run for a third, non-consecutive term in 1912.
Theodore Roosevelt
An era of social and political reform that began with the swearing in of Theodore Roosevelt in 1901 and lasted until the beginning of U.S. involvement in World War I in 1917. Antitrust legislation and labor reform were key aspects of this era, along with support for women’s suffrage, direct election of U.S. senators, and prohibition of alcohol.
Progressive Era
An influential Protestant social justice movement in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It stated that Christians had an obligation to improve the lives of those less fortunate, especially the poor. Its leaders encouraged many middle-class Protestants to join reform efforts, such as those calling for laws banning child labor and making school compulsory for children. Essentially, it was the religious wing of the Progressive movement.
Social Gospel
A pioneer of yellow journalism in the 1880s and rival to William Randolph Hearst. He was associated with the Democratic Party in New York. Today best remembered for establishing the Pulitzer Prize, an award for achievements in journalism.
Joseph Pulitzer
A pioneer of yellow journalism in the 1880s and rival to Joseph Pulitzer. Owned a media empire. He was associated with the progressive movement. Today, he is best remembered for helping kick off the Spanish-American War with his news coverage, as well as for the thinly veiled portrayal of his biography in the 1941 classic Citizen Kane.
William Randolph Hearst