Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900) Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold “Gilded...

25

Transcript of Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900) Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold “Gilded...

Page 1: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.
Page 2: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.
Page 3: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900) Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer

Mark Twain to describe what he believed was a time ofgreat prosperity for the wealthy captains of

industry misery and poverty for immigrants, farmers,

and workerscorruption in government 1

Page 4: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• French for “allow to be”

• Economic principle that the government should play a very limited role in business

• Prosperous businesses create a wealthy nation

2

Page 5: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

A payment made by the government to help the growth of some industries

Example - Land grants to the railroads

3

Page 6: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

Company hired by the Union Pacific Railroad to actually lay the tracks for the transcontinental railroad

They greatly overcharged the UP

They bribed members of Congress to keep funding the project by giving them valuable shares of stock in CM

4

Page 7: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

“To the victor goes the spoils.” Also called the patronage system First openly practiced in U.S. by

President Andrew Jackson The practice of giving government jobs

to friends and supporters Causes government corruption and

incompetence5

Page 8: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

Non-elected government workers, such as cabinet members and customs office or post office officials

Often positions of power or money (through bribery and graft)

Usually appointed by some elected official (such as the Pres)

6

Page 9: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• 19th President (1877-1881)

• Republican from Ohio

• “Won” the 1876 election by one electoral vote and a committee decision

7

continued

Page 10: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• Refused to use the spoils system

• Appointed qualified people to govt jobs instead of supporters

• Angered fellow Republicans

7

Page 11: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• 20th President (1881)

• Republican Congressman from Ohio

• Part of the “Half-Breed” faction of the party

8

continued

Page 12: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• Planned to reform the spoils system

• July 2, 1881 -Shot by a mentally unstable lawyer who had expected a political job appointment

8

Page 13: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• 21st President • (1881-1885)• Republican from NY• Garfield’s Vice Pres• Had been a supporter

of the spoils system (a Stalwart), but changed his viewpoint and worked for reform

9

Page 14: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• Passed in 1883 • Created Civil Service Commission

which tested applicants’ fitness for government jobs • Government workers could not be

fired for political reasons or forced to make campaign contributions

10

Page 15: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• 22nd President• 1885-1889• Democrat • Governor of NY• Took back 80 million acres

of lands given to RR’s• 1887 – signed Interstate

Commerce Act

11

continued

Page 16: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• Vetoed pension for Civil War veterans

• Only President to get married in the White House

• Married 20-year-old Francis Folsom

11

Page 17: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

Wedding of Grover and Francis

Page 18: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• 23rd President

• 1889-1893

• Republican – Indiana

• Huge tariff increase

• 1890 – signed the Sherman Antitrust Act

• Gave huge pensions to Civil War veterans

12

Page 19: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• 24th President• 1893-1897• Vetoed 413 pieces of legislation • Vetoed a bill to help farmers recover from a severe

drought• Economic depression in 1893 caused massive

unemployment• “While the people should support the government,

the government should not support the people.”

13

Page 20: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• 25th President• 1897-1901• Republican from Ohio• Supported gold standard• Defeated the Populist

Wm. Jennings Bryan in 1896 and 1900

• Campaign slogan – “A Full Dinner Pail”

14

continued

Page 21: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• September 6, 1901 shot by an anarchist at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo

14

Page 22: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

McKinley Assassin - Czolgosz

Page 23: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

McKinley Assassin – Czolgosz(Police Mug Shot)

Page 24: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

McKinley Assassination Newspaper Account• On August 31, 1901, Czolgosz moved to Buffalo, New

York and rented a room near the site of the Pan-American Exposition. On September 6 he went to the exposition with a revolver pistol in his pocket, concealed in a handkerchief. McKinley had been standing in a receiving line outside of the Temple of Music greeting the public for several minutes when, at 4:07 p.m., Czolgosz reached the front of the line. The President thrust out his hand; Czolgosz slapped it aside and shot McKinley twice at extremely close range, close enough to leave powder burns on the President's vest. Members of McKinley's security team as well as citizens in the crowd immediately subdued Czolgosz, beating him so severely it was initially thought he might not live to stand trial. McKinley died from his wounds on September 14.

Page 25: Post Reconstruction Period (1877 to 1900)  Gilded - covered with a thin layer of gold  “Gilded Age” – term used by the writer Mark Twain to describe.

• A special grand jury forthwith indicted the assassin, who, talking freely enough with his guards, refused all interaction with the attorneys assigned to defend him, and with the expert sent to test his sanity. He was convicted and sentenced to death on September 23, in a brief trial that lasted eight and a half hours from jury selection to verdict, and executed by electrocution, by three jolts at 1700 volts each, on October 29, 1901, in Auburn Prison in Auburn, New York. His last words were "I killed the President because he was the enemy of the good people — the good working people. I am not sorry for my crime." As the prison guards strapped him into the chair, however, he did say through clenched teeth, "I am sorry I could not see my father." Sulfuric acid and lye were thrown into his coffin so that his body would be completely disfigured, and to aid in its decomposition. His letters and clothes were burned.

McKinley Assassination Newspaper Account