Politics, Reform, and Expansion, 1890-1900
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“In this balanced and sensible book, Professor Faulkner treats the decade in its full variety.”—G.T. BLODGETT, The New England Quarterly
“The straightforward organization and clear writing, as well as the careful footnotes and twenty-three page bibliographical essay, will be boons to the scholars and students who will long be using this volume.”—The South Atlantic Quarterly
“This is in the main a scholarly, carefully documented, judicious review of the last decade of the nineteenth century...this volume has one merit so conspicuous that it reduces criticism of the work almost to caviling. This is its analysis of the spirit of expansionism that resulted in our acquisition of Puerto Rico, Hawaii and the Philippines....
“Mr. Faulkner is no propagandist. His language is always careful and restrained, but neither is he a historian of the neuter gender. He has opinions and he states them, without extravagance, but equally without ambiguity.”—GERALD W. JOHNSON
Harold U. Faulkner
Harold U. Faulkner (1890-1968) was an American Economic Historian. Born on February 25, 1890 to John Alfred Faulkner and Helen Mae Underwood, he received his B.A. from Wesleyan University in 1913, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University. He then went on to serve as Associate Professor of History at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts. His other published works on economics and history include American Economic History (1924); From Versailles to the New Deal: A Chronicle of the Harding-Coolidge-Hoover Era (1950); and The Decline of Laissez-Faire, 1897-1917 (1951). Professor Faulkner passed away on June 19, 1968 in Northampton, Massachusetts, aged 78.
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Politics, Reform, and Expansion, 1890-1900 - Harold U. Faulkner
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Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
POLITICS, REFORM AND EXPANSION 1890-1900
BY
HAROLD U. FAULKNER
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 2
Illustrations 3
Maps and Charts 5
Editors’ Introduction 6
Preface 9
CHAPTER 1—The Restless Decade 10
CHAPTER 2—The Revolt of the Cities 10
CHAPTER 3—The Decline of Agriculture 10
CHAPTER 4—Progress and Poverty 10
CHAPTER 5—Billion-Dollar Politics 10
CHAPTER 6—The Election of 1892 10
CHAPTER 7—Depression, Bonds, and Tariffs 10
CHAPTER 8—1894 10
CHAPTER 9—The Bryan Campaign 10
CHAPTER 10—The Drums of War 10
CHAPTER 11—The War with Spain 10
CHAPTER 12—End of a Decade 10
Bibliography 10
PERIODICALS AND NEWSPAPERS 10
GENERAL HISTORIES 10
MANUSCRIPT MATERIAL 10
BIOGRAPHIES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIES—POLITICAL 10
POLITICS 10
THIRD PARTIES 10
AGRICULTURE 10
THE FRONTIER 10
DECLINE AND REVIVAL OF AGRICULTURE 10
THE AGRARIAN REVOLT 10
FOREIGN TRADE 10
BUSINESS CYCLES, CURRENCY, AND FINANCE CAPITALISM 10
TRANSPORTATION 10
MANUFACTURING 10
CONSOLIDATION OF BUSINESS 10
LABOR 10
EXPANSION AND THE SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR 10
Illustrations
These illustrations, grouped in a separate section.
1. Benjamin Harrison
2. James G. Blaine
3· Tariff Reform and Civil Service Reform seem in danger of going overboard
4· Grover Cleveland
5· President Cleveland with his second cabinet
6. William L. Wilson
7. Richard Olney
8. John G. Carlisle
9· John Sherman
10. Thomas B. Reed
11. An Eastern view of free silver
12. Interior of Electrical Building, Chicago World’s Fair
13· Entrance, Transportation Building, Chicago World’s Fair
14. General
Coxey on his way to Washington
15. Coxey’s Army entering Allegheny, Pennsylvania
16.·John P. Altgeld
17 James B. Weaver
18. Eugene V. Debs
19. A typical cartoon of the agrarian crusade
20. Jane Addams
21. Samuel Gompers
22. American Peace Commission in Paris, October, 1898
23. Reflections—Night,
1896, by Alfred Stieglitz
24. William Jennings Bryan
25. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt of the Rough Riders
26. William McKinley
27. Marcus A. Hanna
28. The Terminal,
1889, by Alfred Stieglitz
29. Tammany Street Cleaning
by Jacob A. Riis
Maps and Charts
Map of the United States in 1890 according to population
Bullion value of 371¼ grains of silver in terms of gold at the annual average price of silver, 1866-1930
The presidential election of 1892
The presidential election of 1896
Dewey’s attack on Manila—1898
The Santiago campaign—1898
The presidential election of 1900
Editors’ Introduction
THE decade of the nineties was the watershed of American history. On the one side stretches the older America—the America that was overwhelmingly rural and agricultural, that devoted its energies to the conquest of the continent, that enjoyed relative isolation from the Old World, that was orthodox in religion, optimistic in philosophy, and romantic in temperament. Over the horizon, on the other side, came the new America—an America predominantly urban and overwhelmingly industrial, inextricably involved in world politics and world wars, experiencing convulsive changes in population, economy, technology, and social relations, and deeply troubled by the crowding problems that threw their shadow over the promise of the future.
Already by the nineties the generation that had fought the Civil War was passing from the scene, and a generation that knew Pickett’s charge and Missionary Ridge only as history and tradition was coming to the fore. Majors and colonels in faded blue or gray still strutted the political stage, but the most memorable politician of the decade—William Jennings Bryan—was born the year of secession, and his great rival, Theodore Roosevelt, was but a baby when the flag came fluttering down from Ft. Sumter. The issues that had agitated the post-war generation—reconstruction, the tariff, public lands, railroads—took on a faded and old-fashioned character. Politicians, notoriously the victims of the cultural lag, still waved the bloody shirt of the rebellion or invoked the memory of the stars and bars, but to little avail, and soon a new war united North and South where an old war had divided them. Even the statesmen of the previous decades, the bearded Blaines and Conklings, Mortons and Lamars came to seem alien and archaic when contrasted with new men like Bryan and La Follette and Theodore Roosevelt or—perhaps more to the point—with new masters of industry and captains of finance like Rockefeller, Carnegie, and Morgan.
The problems that pushed so urgently to the fore in the nineties were economic and social, and did not seem to be illuminated by traditional political debates or yield to familiar party resolutions. The key issues of the new age, as Professor Faulkner makes clear, were reform and expansion, and about these issues the old political orthodoxies had little to say. The late eighties had brought hard times to the farmer, the workingman, and to many businessmen as well, and with hard times doubts and disillusionment; in the nineties came open revolt, a challenge to old beliefs, a repudiation of old shibboleths, a fragmentation of old parties. There was almost everywhere a feeling that somehow the promise of American life was not being fulfilled. The Union had been saved, but sectional animosities had scarcely abated, and the Negro was not much better off than he had been in slavery. The continent had been conquered, and the frontier was no more, but the cost of exploitation and waste was a sobering one. Industry flourished, and the new nation was rapidly forging ahead of her Old World competitors, but at the price of recreating those class conflicts from which the United States had heretofore been thought immune. Cities had grown and flourished, but with them slums and poverty, crime and vice, and Jefferson’s warnings seemed to be justified within less than a century of his death. In 1890 Americans were reading How the Other Half Lives; they had not supposed that there was, in America, an Other Half, except among the Negroes. The ruthless exploitation of natural resources made the nation rich beyond the imaginings of its founders, but the riches were gravitating into the hands of the few, and the power of wealth in politics caused the gravest misgivings. Slavery had been ended, but not the inhumanity of man to man—and to women and children, as well: children of ten or twelve labored in factory and in mine; women stood twelve hours at the loom; absentee corporations foreclosed mortgages on distant farms; Negroes were denied both civil and political rights; the immigrant was cruelly exploited; the treatment of the dangerous and perishing classes outraged not only justice but decency. Millions flocked into the schools, but the census counted six million illiterates. Democracy flourished, and with it corruption.
These conditions might have led to revolt; instead they led to reform. The process of federal centralization which was to be so important in the twentieth century was already under way, and some of the issues that agitated public life were fought out on the national stage—both in Congress and in the Supreme Court. More, perhaps, were debated and disposed of on the local and state level: at no time in our history have local and state politics been more significant or contributed more to the working out of ultimate solutions to major problems. It is one of the most valuable features of Professor Faulkner’s book that he gives adequate attention to state and local affairs, and makes clear their connection with national.
The decade that had been ushered in so grimly ended on a note of confidence. Prosperity returned, to business, to factory, and to farm. Businessmen took heart, and hastened to create ever bigger combinations. The Klondike and Australian gold fields went far to settle the money question; farm prices increased and the farm problem all but disappeared. A jolly little war
ended with America as a world power and with the ebullient Roosevelt as the first world statesman since Jefferson. With the new century, the spring of hope succeeded the winter of discontent. If few of the problems that had agitated the nineties were solved, the nature of the problems themselves had been made clear and some solutions formulated: that was a notable achievement.
This volume is one of the New American Nation Series, a comprehensive, co-operative survey of the history of the area now embraced in the United States from the days of discovery to the second half of the twentieth century. Since the publication by the House of Harper of the American Nation Series, over half a century ago, scholars have broadened the scope of history, explored new approaches, and developed new techniques. The time has come for a judicious reappraisal of the new history, a cautious application of the new techniques of investigation, and a large-scale effort to achieve a synthesis of new findings with familiar facts, and to present the whole in attractive literary form.
To this task the New American Nation Series is dedicated. Each volume is part of a carefully planned whole, and fitted as well as is possible to the other volumes of the series; at the same time each volume is designed to be complete in itself. From time to time the same series of events will be presented from different points of view; thus the volumes dealing with foreign affairs, constitutional history, and cultural history will in some ways retrace ground covered in this volume. Repetition is less regrettable than omission, and something is to be gained by looking at the same period and the same material from different and independent points of view.
HENRY STEELE COMMAGER
RICHARD BRANDON MORRIS
Preface
THIS volume, one of a long series of studies in American history, deals almost exclusively with the years 1890 to 1900. It is essentially concerned with the politics of the decade, with the economic history of the period, with efforts to reform and improve many areas of the existing society, and finally with the new burst of territorial expansion resulting in part from the Spanish-American War. Other volumes in this series will emphasize the constitutional and the cultural development of the decade in greater detail than the present author has attempted.
To those brought up in the tradition of the gay nineties,
it may be surprising to discover that the phrase is misleading. Except for the few exciting months of the Chicago World’s Fair, there was little gaiety in the decade. On the contrary, five years of deep depression pushed agriculture to its lowest depths, demoralised industry and transportation, and brought with them various economic problems which became irretrievably interwoven with politics. The long and dreary battles over trusts, the control of interstate commerce, free silver,
and tariffs dominated the political life, but hardly raised the morale of the citizens. Nor did the efforts to solve these problems bring any immediate solutions to a harassed people.
To explode the myth of the nineties is not difficult. But I found it complicated, as is often the case, to point up the dominant characteristics of a single decade when the activities of the period started before the decade and continued in subsequent years. The nineties were restless, full of questioning and pioneering, when people were intent on reforming many aspects of social, economic, and political life. Thinking people of the nineties knew the weaknesses of existing society as well as did the muckrakers of the next decade. But, unlike the muckrakers, they were not content with facts alone; they pioneered in many efforts to better conditions. In a sense it was an introduction to a new century where this work would be carried on and widened. Curiously, all of this happened in a period during which the national government was controlled by extremely conservative administrations.
This author is grateful for the help of the two editors of this series, Henry S. Commager and Richard B. Morris, but particularly he is indebted to Professor Commager, who assumed the responsibility of supervising and criticizing this volume. Much credit is also due to Christopher Lash of Williams College, who contributed a great deal in suggesting chapter reorganizations in the original text, in emphasizing certain interpretations, and in giving some lift and spirit to the book.
HAROLD U. FAULKNER
Northampton, Massachusetts
December 12, 1958
CHAPTER 1—The Restless Decade
THE 1890’s separated not only two centuries but two eras in American history. These years saw the gradual disappearance of the old America and the rather less gradual emergence of the new. They witnessed the passing of the frontier and the rise of the United States to a position of world power and responsibility which was to make any return to her old isolation increasingly difficult, if not impossible. Old issues were dead or dying; sectional tension was no longer a force of much importance in politics, and efforts to revive it proved unavailing. Most important of all, the triumph of industry over agriculture was now assured. The Industrial Revolution, if not completed, had gone so far as to make turning back to the ways of a simpler agrarian society out of the question. Yet by no means all Americans—perhaps not even a majority—were able to recognize or willing to acknowledge the significance of these momentous changes. The face of life was being perceptibly altered; thought, in many cases, had yet to accommodate itself to the fact, The American people, Henry Adams said, were wandering in a wilderness much more sandy than the Hebrews had ever trodden about Sinai; they had neither serpents nor golden calves to worship. They had lost the sense of worship....
{1} In their uncertainty they looked to the past for guidance and reassurance, but the past was of little assistance in confronting the problems of a new era.
The Industrial Revolution pushed the great questions of slavery and sectionalism into the past; by 1900 the Civil War belonged to a bygone age seen now through the filter of romance. Veterans on both sides cherished memories of the war, but they could now celebrate their reunions together. A few professional politicians might still wave the bloody shirt and revive old issues, but their efforts increasingly failed to interest the voters. During the Harrison administration Henry Cabot Lodge and other Republicans advocated a Force Bill
to protect the right of Negroes to vote by federal supervision of congressional elections; it never even reached a Senate vote. Cleveland in his second administration appointed two Southerners to his cabinet, one a former Confederate officer. McKinley was the last Civil War veteran to be elected President. Reunion was essentially complete.{2}
The passing of the frontier signified more dramatically the waning of the old order. The historic census of 1890 officially declared the frontier to be closed—somewhat prematurely, for in actual fact the westward movement continued for years thereafter. Four times as many acres were homesteaded under the Act of 1862 after 1890 than before that date. After the usable land in this country had been occupied, almost 1,250,000 American pioneers moved into western Canada to take up fresh land there. The statement that the unsettled area has been so broken into by isolated bodies of settlement that there can hardly be said to be a frontier line
was rather a notice of an impending future than an actual fact, but the mere imminence of a frontierless future was enough to cause widespread apprehension. This apprehension ran through Turner’s celebrated essay of 1893; it was even more explicit in Theodore Roosevelt’s The Winning of the West, in which Roosevelt again and again expressed the fear that the old American virtues, nurtured by the frontier, were in peril now that the frontier was no more than a memory. Indeed, so persistently did Americans of the nineties call attention to the disappearance of the frontier that it seemed at times to be exercising a greater influence on history as a memory than it ever had as a fact.{3}
Serious Indian troubles ended in the Ghost Dance
War of 1890, and by the middle of the decade most of the good land on the Indian reservations had been opened to white settlers. Oklahoma was thrown open to settlement in 1889 after a decade of agitation and border incidents. Time and again boomers
invaded the area and had to be ejected by federal troops. At length the government gave in to popular pressure; in March, 1889, President Harrison announced that the Oklahoma District would be opened to settlement on April 22. From late March until the day of invasion adventurers, speculators and bona fide settlers gathered by the thousands on the southern border of Kansas and the northern border of Texas.
A few days before the announced date the prospective settlers were allowed to enter the Cherokee Outlet and the Chickasaw reservation. One hundred thousand settlers in every type of vehicle, including fifteen trains, crowded along the border line of the Oklahoma District waiting for the army to give the signal to advance. At eleven o’clock on the appointed day, wrote Edna Ferber in Cimarron,
they were crowding and cursing and fighting for places near the Line. They shouted and sang and yelled and argued, and the sound they made wasn’t human at all, but like thousands of wild animals penned up. The sun blazed down. It was cruel. The dust hung over everything in a thick cloud, blinding you and choking you....It was a picture straight out of hell....Eleven-forty-five. Along the Border were the soldiers, their gum in one hand, their watches in the other. Those last five minutes seemed years long; and funny, they’d quieted till there wasn’t a sound. Listening. The last minute was an eternity. Twelve o’clock. There went up a roar that drowned the crack of the soldiers’ musketry as they fired in the air as the signal of noon and the start of the Run. You could see the puffs of smoke from their guns, but you couldn’t hear a sound. The thousands surged over the Line. It was like water going over a broken dam. The rush had started, and it was devil take the hindmost. We swept across the prairie in a cloud of black and red dust that covered our faces and hands in a minute, so that we looked like black demons from hell.{4}
Within a few hours Guthrie was a tented city of almost 15,000 people and within a hundred days it had banks, a hotel, stores, newspapers, and an electric light plant. Oklahoma City, it was asserted, also had a tent population the first night of 10,000. Quite as rapidly the homesteaders were laying out their quarter sections in the surrounding country.{5} The thousands who swarmed into the District on that day were but the vanguard of many others who followed. Operating under the Dawes Severalty Act (1887), Congress extinguished Indian claims and opened one reservation after another to white settlers. The boomer invasion of 1889 was re-enacted in September, 1893, when 6 million acres of the Cherokee strip were opened.{6} By 1900 the population of Oklahoma numbered almost 400,000. The last great opening occurred in 1901.
By 1890 the last and greatest of the ranching frontiers had ended. Overproduction and depression hurt the industry; they were followed by severe winter storms in the late eighties which decimated the herds. At the same time farmers, aided by the railroads, barbed wire, and metal windmills, pressed on the heels of the retreating ranchers. By the late nineties farmers had taken over most of the land west of the 100th meridian which was suitable for crops. Barbed wire, which was utilized earlier by the farmers to protect their fields from roving cattle, was now used by ranchers to pen in their herds.{7} As with ranching, the early miners’ frontier had also disappeared. The mining industry had come into the hands of large corporations, and prospecting was chiefly done under their direction. The individual prospector thrived only in literature—in the pages of Bret Harte and Mark Twain, or the songs and stories of the Gold Rush.
The changing character of immigration was another striking manifestation of the disappearance of the older America. In the first place, the number of immigrants was increasing. More than three and one half million immigrants (not counting Canadians and Mexicans) came to the United States between 1891 and 1900—more than during any previous decade except the one just past. In the second place, and more important, an increasing proportion of immigrants came from southeastern Europe and a steadily diminishing proportion from northwestern Europe. This shift began in the late seventies and gained momentum during the eighties; in 1896 migration from southeastern Europe surpassed that from northwestern Europe for the first time.{8} After that migration from the new source, from Russia, Poland, Austria-Hungary, and Italy, was consistently greater than that from the British Isles and Western Europe. By 1900 there were something over ten million people of foreign birth living in the United States, of whom more than seven million came from southeastern Europe.
There was a much larger number of second-generation immigrants; 26 million Americans in 1900—34 per cent of the whole population—were born of foreign-born parents. Germans, Irish, Canadians, English, and Swedish, in that order, still made up the bulk of this population; but it was clear that if recent trends continued, they would soon be outnumbered by Slavs, Czechs, and Italians.{9} The Germans were concentrated in New York, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania; the English Canadians in Massachusetts, Michigan, and New York; the French Canadians in New England; the British in Pennsylvania, New York, and Massachusetts; and the Scandinavians in Minnesota, Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin. The newly arriving Slavs migrated to New York, Pennsylvania, and Illinois, and the Italians to New York and Pennsylvania.{10} The proportion of foreign-born to the total population was highest, in 1890, on the Pacific Coast, in New England, and in the Middle Atlantic states. More striking, however, was the fact that the foreign-born population tended to be concentrated increasingly in cities (partly, of course, because most of them first arrived there, and their dispersal took time)—a fact that added to the apprehension with which Americans of older stock viewed the rapid urbanization of the country.{11}
The new immigration gave rise to a demand for ending it. Farmers and laborers were loudest in this demand, but the fact that all three leading parties in the campaign of 1892—Republican, Democratic, and Populist—adopted planks favoring curtailment of immigration indicates that to some extent the demand was general. In 1894 an Immigration Restriction League was organized in Boston, Objections to immigration were largely on economic rather than on ethnic grounds, although the latter were by no means absent from the argument. The decline of immigration during the depression years 1894 and 1895 and again in 1897 and 1898 somewhat softened the competition of immigrant with native labor, and the demand for restrictive legislation consequently abated. On the whole sentiment still seemed to favor large-scale immigration with minor, if not nominal, restrictions, but there were many portents of a less liberal policy.
A House Committee on Immigration appointed in 1888 and later a Senate committee made reports which led to the Act of March 3, 1891.{12} To those already excluded under an Act of 1882—convicts (except those convicted for political offenses), the insane, and those likely to become public charges—four new categories were added: paupers; persons suffering from dangerous, contagious, or loathsome diseases; polygamists; and those whose passage had been paid for by others than friends or relatives. The same act strengthened the anticontract labor law and set up the office of Superintendent of Immigration (made Commissioner General in 1895) in the Treasury Department. In 1897 a bill sponsored by Henry Cabot Lodge providing for a literacy test, aimed at the new immigration,
passed both Houses of Congress. There, according to The Nation, it was most ostentatiously urged and defended...by Jingoes, protectionists, and labor demagogues,
{13} but the evidence points to its general support. President Cleveland, however, vetoed the bill two days before he left office.{14}
Negroes were numerically a smaller group than immigrants; there were seven and one-half million in 1890. Like the immigrants, they were drifting to the cities in larger and larger numbers.{15} Nevertheless, six out of every ten Negroes gainfully employed in 1890 were in agriculture and three out of ten in domestic service.{16} The movement of Negroes to northern cities was stimulated by the growing determination of the South to undo the work of Reconstruction through Jim Crow laws, terrorism, and systematic evasion of the Fifteenth Amendment. More than one thousand Negroes were lynched between 1890 and 1899, most of them in the South.{17}
Even before 1890 the South had practically extinguished the rights of the Negro. After that date new constitutions or new legislation completed the process. The Mississippi constitution of 1890 was framed to discriminate against the ignorant and illiterate colored man, while the illiterate white man was hardly affected. Every elector, said the document, shall be able to read any section of the constitution of this State, or he shall be able to understand the same when read to him, or give a reasonable interpretation thereof.
A somewhat similar provision was adopted in a new South Carolina constitution of 1895. Two years later a new constitution in Louisiana provided that voters must be able to read and write or be the owners of property valued at not less than $300. This, however, was qualified by a provision that every person entitled to vote January 1, 1867, and his sons and grandsons twenty-one years of age or over in 1897 might vote.{18} By 1900 few southern Negroes could cast a ballot. It was not until 1915 that the franchise portion of an Oklahoma constitutional amendment was examined by the Supreme Court and the grandfather clause
declared unconstitutional.{19}
All of this was done in plain sight and without compunction. Ben Tillman openly declared in the Senate in 1900:
We took the government away. We stuffed ballot boxes. We shot them. We are not ashamed of it. The Senator from Wisconsin would have done the same thing. I see it in his eye right now. He would have done it. With that system—force, tissue ballots, etc.—we got tired ourselves. So we called a constitutional convention, and we eliminated, as I said, all of the colored people whom we could under the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments.{20}
Northern liberals, with a few exceptions, did not come to the Negro’s rescue as they had before, perhaps because it was no longer politically profitable to do so. Tillman charged the North with having forgotten your slogans of the past—brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God.
The brotherhood of man [he continued] exists no longer, because you shoot negroes in Illinois, when they come in competition with your labor, as we shoot them in South Carolina when they come in competition with us in the matter of elections. You do not love them any better than we do. You used to pretend that you did, but you no longer pretend it, except to get their votes.{21}
Nobody rose to deny the charge.
The Indians, now a mere remnant of one quarter million, fared no better than other minorities, although the federal government had at least made an effort to improve their condition. Living on reservations, chiefly west of the Mississippi, they had been reduced by this time to wards of the government and were supported largely by its bounty. Indian affairs had been inefficiently managed and the system was full of abuses. By the late eighties the demand for reform had become so great and the pressure of white men to occupy Indian lands so strong that Congress in 1887 passed the General Allotment Act sponsored by Henry L. Dawes of Massachusetts. It empowered the President, when he believed a tribe had reached a sufficient stage of development, to divide the reservation and allot to each head of a family 160 acres, with lesser amounts to bachelors, women, and children. Each Indian was given the privilege of citizenship except the right, for twenty-five years, of selling or encumbering his land. What was left reverted to the public domain after fair payments for the land. It was the first systematic effort to provide for Indian welfare and marked a revolution in the handling of Indian affairs.
The purpose of the Dawes Act was obviously to break up the tribal status and make the Indian a self-supporting citizen, as well as to open land for the white man. Between 1887 and 1906, when new legislation was passed, the federal government disposed of 75 million acres, over 50 million of which were acquired by the government to sell to white settlers. Much of the latter was in Indian Territory, later to become the state of Oklahoma in 1907. For the Indians, however, the Dawes Act was a failure. Legislators and reformers had provided a plan for the Indians’ future, but their expectations were never fulfilled. Most of the Indians were unable or unwilling to change their way of life, pressure on their land was too great, and the land reserved for them was hardly adequate for decent living. Modifications of the act during the nineties were of little value, and it was soon clear that it had not solved the problem. It was not until the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, however, that the plan was discarded and efforts made to save the Indians’ cultural traditions.{22}
In the eyes of most Americans the enormous growth of cities presented problems far more important than the condition of Indians, Negroes, or immigrants. In 1890 the population of the United States was about 62 million; by 1900 it had reached nearly 75 million. Of this increase of 13 million considerably more than half was confined to the North Atlantic and North Central states, and that six and one-half million was divided about equally between those two areas, whereas in the three preceding decades the North Central states had consistently outstripped the North Atlantic states. During the 1890’s the increase was heaviest in New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Massachusetts, and Wisconsin, all states with a large urban population. Texas also gained heavily.{23} Only one state, Nevada, declined in population between 1890 and 1900, and her decline was caused by the exhaustion of the Comstock lode; but within certain areas of other states, all of them agricultural, population also declined. The retreat of settlement in western and central Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota and in eastern Colorado reflected a specific event—the great drought of 1887, which persisted for five years. The decline of eleven counties in California was caused by a decline in mining as well as by difficulties in farming. But the ebbing of population in rural New England and in parts of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Michigan reflected a decline of agriculture in general and a movement to the cities. Other parts of those states, as we have seen, were growing rapidly.{24} At the same time some nonurban areas opened up for settlement in Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North Dakota, where lumbering or the opening of Indian reservations provided opportunity for expansion.{25}
The movement to cities, although growing steadily, was only one of several movements undertaken by a migratory people, and the mobility of the people as a whole still conformed to an older pattern. Each census as far back as 1850 showed that more than one-fifth of the nation’s whites had moved from the state of their birth.{26} The surplus of people who migrated to a state over those who left it generally reached a maximum about three decades after the first settlement. Then after three more decades of declining surplus a deficit appeared; that is, more people left the state than entered it. By 1890 Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Louisiana had become deficit states. Agricultural migration was pretty consistently westward, but migration caused by industry might pull population in any direction. Michigan, for example, never showed a deficit and New Jersey has had a surplus since 1890. The same is also true of Florida since 1850, but for quite different reasons.{27} The center of population in 1890 was twenty miles east of Columbus, Indiana; in 1900 it was six miles southeast of that city, a westward movement of about fourteen miles.
But the growth of cities remains the most arresting demographical development of the period. In 1880 about one-fifth of the population lived in towns or cities of 8,000 inhabitants or more; in 1900, one-third. Forty per cent lived in towns of 2,500 or more.{28} Some areas became overwhelmingly urban during these years. By 1900 six out of ten people in the North Atlantic area lived in cities of 8,000 or more. In Rhode Island the proportion of urban to rural population was 61.2 per cent, in Massachusetts 76, in New York 68.5, in New Jersey 61.2, and in Connecticut 53.2. These were the only states in the country in which over half the population lived in cities of at least 8,000 people, but in Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Illinois, and California over 40 per cent lived in such places. The total number of cities of that size increased during the decade by about one hundred.{29} In the North Central states, which contained one-third of the population in 1900, cities also grew rapidly. Three out of ten people in that area lived in cities by 1900. Eighteen of the fifty largest cities in the country were located there as against ten in 1890, and two of the five largest cities, Chicago and St. Louis. (The others were New York, Philadelphia, and Boston.) It should be noted in passing that rapid urbanization in the late nineteenth century was not limited to the United States; it was a phenomenon common to most parts of the western world. Some areas of the United States, however, were even then in advance of Europe. Massachusetts had a larger proportion of its people in towns of ten thousand or over in 1890 than any nation in Europe, while Rhode Island, New York, and New Jersey had a larger proportion than any European country except England and Wales.{30}
While all of the states in the North Atlantic and North Central divisions showed an increase in population for the decade and in all but three (Vermont, Kansas, and Nebraska) a substantial increase, there were many areas in both divisions where rural depletion, as noted, was significant. In many areas this was attributable to a continued westward movement, but generally it was the lure of the city that drew off the more ambitious. The number of those who moved from the country to the village, from the village to the small city, and from the small city to the large one is unrecorded, but it was large. Even by 1890 the number of wage earners in industry almost equalled that of farm owners, tenants, and farm laborers combined.{31} The growth of cities, of course, was dependent not alone on rural migration; the tendency of immigrants, at least in the beginning, to live in cities was an important cause of growth. The foreign-born both of New York and Chicago in 1900, for example, amounted to one-third of the population; and the number of foreign-born and native-born of foreign parentage, to over three-fourths in both cities.{32}
Every cause for city growth, in fact, operated in America during this decade. In spite of the Panic of 1893 and the depression which followed, manufacturing continued its spectacular growth, although not as rapidly as in the eighties. In this growth the shift from water power to steam played an important part. Improvement in farm machinery increased specialized farming, released a surplus of farm labor, and produced a greater surplus of food for city consumption. At the same time machine-made products were displacing those formerly processed on the farm and releasing more farm labor. Wherever the population may have come from and whatever the causes may have been, the United States by 1900 had become a nation of cities, largely led and dominated by them.
In this rapidly changing economic order numerous problems clamored for attention. Most of them were by no means new. The fantastically high tariff rates imposed during the Civil War had continued with slight alleviation; efforts to reduce them revived in the