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Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

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Page 1: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Political Paralysis of theGilded Age

AP Chapter 23

Page 2: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

What were the patterns of party strength?

• Elections were close

• Voter participation very high – 80 to 95%

• Family tradition, ethnic ties, religious affiliation often determined how one voted

Page 3: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Differences Between the Two PartiesDemocrats• Immigrant Lutherans &

Roman Catholics• Southerners• Northern Industrial Cities• Big “political machine”

politics• More indulgent to moral

weakness; smaller role for government in moral issues

Republicans• Puritan heritage• Midwestern• Rural & small towns of the

northeast• Freedmen• Union Army veterans• Favored a strong gov’t role

to enforce strict codes of personal morality AND economics

Page 4: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

What were the issues?

• Tariff

• Nature of the nation’s money supply

• Pensions awarded to Civil War veterans

• “waving the bloody shirt”

• Lackluster presidents

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Money Supply and the EconomyInflation: rising prices that

result from demand exceeding supply

Causes:

• Increased need or desire for specific products or services (ex: oil, health care)

• Increasing money supply. More currency available means that more money will be chasing those goods/services available.

Deflation: dropping prices that result from supply exceeding demand

Causes:

• Decreased need or desire for specific products or services (ex. building materials)

• Limited money supply. Less currency available chasing goods/services mean there are fewer people able to buy.

• People are holding their money because they’re scared to spend.

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Money Supply and the EconomyInflation

Winners

• People who owe money

• Commodity producers: sellers of raw materials and agricultural products (esp. farmers)

• People whose incomes can hopefully continue to rise

• Silver (?) and paper money not backed by precious metal

Losers

• Savings

• ? Industrial workers? (Always a struggle to get business owners to increase wages, esp. at times of uncertainty with increasing inflationary costs.)

DeflationWinners

• People lending money; People who have large amounts of currency (bankers especially)

• Already established businesses

• Savings

• People living on a fixed amount of money

• Gold (And perhaps silver?)

• ? Industrial workers? (Since business owners would possibly be less likely to cut wages.)

Losers

• Assets (land, machinery); raw materials

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Greenbacks and Silver• U.S. needed a money

supply adequate for a growing and diverse economy

• Gold and silver – trustworthy

• Bankers and creditors wanted gold

• Farmers and debtors wanted an expanded money supply backed by silver & even greenbacks along with gold

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Depression of 1873• Biggest up to that point in time – some call it

the first major economic depression in U.S. history

• Result of rapid economic expansion after the Civil War

• Boom – bust• Overextended economy + risky loans• The Crime of ’73 – de-monitized silver • Millions out of work

Page 9: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Resumption Act of 1875

• Debtors and farmers sought the reissue of greenbacks

• “soft money” vs. “hard money”• “hard money” won – redemption of all paper

money in gold beginning 1879• Contraction – decrease in nation’s money

supply – stabilized greenbacks• “soft money” began demanding free coinage of

silver

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Bland – Allison Act - 1878

• The U.S. Treasury purchase between $2 and $4 million in silver each month from the western mines

• The silver was to be purchased at market rates, not at a pre-determined ratio of 16 to 1

• The metal was to be minted into silver dollars as legal tender

• Government purchased a minimal amt. of silver – little effect

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Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890

• Gov’t required to 4.5 million ounces of silver each month

• Issue (a.k.a. paper money) was redeemable in gold and silver

• Surplus of silver – drove down value

• People preferred to redeem issue for gold and not silver drain on gold reserves

• Panic of 1893

Page 12: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Election of 1868

• Republican• “Bloody Shirt”

campaign• Inexperienced in

politics• Inept in choosing

assistants• Deferred to Congress

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Era of Good Stealings

• Corruption – Railroads, Stock-market, judges and legislators for hire

• Political machines and bosses – Tweed Ring of NYC cheated the city of $200 million

• Scandals in the presidency

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The Spoils System• Since the Jacksonian era• A system of rewarding contributors & political

supporters with government jobs.• Government jobs were used to support politicians &

the political parties to maintain party loyalty• Unqualified and incompetent often received jobs• Office holders had to contribute to future

campaigns• Battle for reform in the GOP – Stalwarts vs. Half-

breeds

Page 15: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Grant Scandals• Whiskey Ring – Grant’s private

secretary took bribes not to collect taxes from distillers

• Credit Mobilier - VP received stock not to investigate fraud by a RR construction company

• Sec. of War accepted bribes from agents on Indian reservations

Page 16: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

The Fisk – Gould Scheme• Jim Fisk and Jay Gould – wealthy businessmen• Attempted to corner the gold market• Bribed government officials to stop selling gold

in order to drive up the price• Sept. 24, 1869 – began to bid up the price of

gold• When Grant suspected a scam, he ordered the

treasury to release more gold • Gold prices crashed

Page 17: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

The Election of 1876 – The End of Reconstruction

• Rutherford B. Hayes vs. Samuel Tilden

• Tilden (D) won 184 votes out of the needed 185 to win the Electoral College

• Votes in Louisiana, South Carolina, and Florida in dispute ( 2 sets of results)

• Commission of 15 (8 republicans and 7 democrats) counted the disputed votes

Page 18: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Compromise of 1877

• Hayes (R) would get the votes and become president

• Federal troop withdrawn from Louisiana and S. Carolina – ending Reconstruction

• Bill to subsidize the Texas Pacific Rail - line

Page 19: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

The Great RR Strike of 1877

• Wild-cat strike – 1st national strike

• Baltimore and Ohio RR

• 10% wage cut

• Double headers

• Spread from the East to Mid-west

• 2/3 RR idle – property burned

• Hayes called in federal troops – 100 dead

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Tweed Ring - NYC

• Tammany Hall – NYC democratic headquarters

• Political machine politics

• Graft, bribery, fraudulent elections

• Bilked the city of almost $200 million

• Brought down by Thomas Nast

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Election of 1872

• Liberal Republicans – fed up with corruption and graft – nominated Horace Greeley

• Democrats – nominated Greeley

• Republicans – Grant

• Mud-spattered campaign

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Who voted Republican during the Gilded Age?

• Region?

• Religion?

• Blue laws?

• Tariffs?

• Money issues?

• Union pensions?

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Who voted Democratic during the Gilded Age?

• Region?

• Religion?

• Blue laws?

• Tariffs?

• Money issues?

• Union pensions?

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The Election of 1880 and the Patronage Issue

• Republican convention split between Half-Breeds and Stalwarts

• James A. Garfield – Half-Breed nominated for president

• Chester Arthur – Stalwart – VP nominee• Garfield beat Winfield Hancock by 40,000 out

of 9.2 million votes• 1881 Garfield assassinated by Charles Guiteau

– a stalwart• Arthur became president

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Page 31: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Pendleton Act• Created an independent civil service staff that is

outside of party politics. Government jobs based on ability and qualifications.

• Civil Service Commission to classify government jobs and administer an examination – established standards of merit

• Gov’t employees could not be forced to contribute to political campaigns and could not be fired for political reasons

• Difficult to fire or demote government employees without a lot of proof and a long procedure.

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Consequences of the Pendleton Act?

• Stopped the most blatant abuses

• Politicians forced to look elsewhere for money

• Turned to businesses and lobbyists

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Election of 1884

• Republican candidate – James G. Blaine of Maine – not know for his honesty

• Mugwumps – Republicans who refused to support Blaine

• Democrats – Grover Cleveland – had a reputation for integrity

• Mud – slinging again – Democrats labeled the party of “Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion”

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Grover Cleveland

• 1st democratic president since Civil War

• “public office is a public trust”

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President Cleveland

• Laissez – faire business happy• Expanded the merit system – but also

appointed many democrats to positions• Surplus - $145 million/year• Issue military pensions – vetoed special

pension bills for Civil War vets• Fought for lower tariffs• Compelled return of 80 million acres of public

land held illegally by lumber and railroad companies

Page 36: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Election of 1888

• Democrats Cleveland

• Republicans Benjamin Harrison

• Harrison supported high tariffs and so the industrialists supported him

• Cleveland won popular vote – Harrison won the electoral vote

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The First Billion Dollar Congress

• Harrison did not assert presidential authority – deferred to party leaders

• Congress –– Raised tariffs and reduced imports, thus

reducing federal revenues (McKinley Tariff)– Voted “pork barrel” public expenditures– Authorized generous pensions previously

vetoed by Cleveland– Wiped out surplus

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There’s Trouble Down on the Farm!

• Harsh conditions – drought and harsh winters – 1886-87

• Railroad abuses• Falling agriculture prices• Tight money• McKinley Tariff• Voted for Democrats in 1890• Formed Farmers’ Alliances and the Grange

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1892 – A year of discontent

• Homestead Strike– Strike against A. Carnegie’s Homestead steel

plant– 300 armed Pinkerton’s called in– Ten people killed– Federal troops called in to break strike

• Strike at Coeur d’Alene silver mine broken by state and federal troops

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Populist (Omaha) Platform• Inflation – free coinage of silver• Graduated income tax• Government ownership of the railroads,

telegraph, and telephone• Direct election of U.S. senators• One-term limit on the presidency• Initiative and referendum• 8 hour day• Immigration restriction

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Election of 1892

• Populists nominated General James B. Weaver – 22 electoral votes– Cut into republican strength in

Midwest

• Republicans – Harrison• Democrats – Cleveland (winner)

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Panic of 1893

• Economic collapse of the railroads– Overbuilding and over-speculation

• Depletion of gold reserves

• Government debt – veterans benefits and high tariff

• Stock prices dropped

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Depression 1893-1897

• 200 railroads failed• 20-25 percent unemployment• Recent immigrants faced disaster• Harsh winters 1893-4• Farm prices down 20% • More people joined the Populist Movement• Jacob Coxey went to see the President

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What about the gold standard?

• Defended by Cleveland

• Gold reserve fell below $100 million

• Repeal of Sherman Silver Purchase Act

• Gold reserve sank to $40 million

• Floated 2 Treasury bond issues of over $100 million

• Turned to J.P. Morgan for help

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What did Morgan do?

• Banker and head of a Wall Street syndicate

• Agreed to lend gov’t $65 million in gold

• Charged $7 million fee• Saved the gold standard and restore

confidence in nation’s finances

Page 50: Political Paralysis of the Gilded Age AP Chapter 23

Backlash?

• People resented cooperation with Morgan• Resented preservation of gold standard• Wilson – Gorman Tariff passed

– Lower but not enough– Income tax – but declared unconstitutional

• Coxey’s Army ignored• Used troops and an injunction against the

Pullman Strike

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Congressional Election of 1894

• Democrats suffered heavy losses

• Republicans gained control of the House of Representatives

• Populists increased their base