The History of USA
The History of USA
The History of USA
About 120,000 years ago, the Earth fell into an ice age. The northern polar ice cap grew southward,
water solidified into ice, and ocean levels fell. With the lowering of the oceans, hidden land was
exposed, including a land bridge connecting Siberia (located in modern-day eastern Russia) and
Alaska. Between 15,000 and 50,000 years ago, various small, nomadic hunting groups from Asia
crossed the land bridge, becoming the first human inhabitants of the Americas.
Over the next millenia, these earliest Americans dispersed across much of the Western Hemisphere. As
the Ice Age came to an end around 10,000 years ago and Earths atmosphere warmed, the land that
these groups inhabited changed dramatically. Sea levels rose and melting glaciers filled the Great Lakes
and Mississippi River Basin with water. Glaciers receded northward, and frozen plains gave way to
deciduous eastern forests, grassy central plains, and desert throughout the West. In time, the land
bridge disappeared back under the body of water now known as the Bering Strait.
The descendants of the earliest Americans changed with the landscape. As Ice Age animals such as
woolly mammoths disappeared, hunters began to prey on smaller game. The groups also fished and
gathered local provisions, like seeds and nuts, from the land. About 5,000 years ago, some groups
began to domesticate plants. As these groups learned how to farm and more efficiently use natural
resources, they required less land, and many in the East and Midwest gave up their nomadic lifestyle
and established small, stable communities by around 300 B.C.
Northwest Coast
Chinook, Haida, and other tribes spanned the Pacific coast from Alaska to California, living primarily
off the abundant fish. The Northwest tribes built totem poles depicting supernatural creatures. They
were proficient in other arts as well.
California
Within California, tribes such as the Chumash and Pomo lived in small villages of about one hundred
people. They specialized in processing acorns, which were one of the regions many abundant resources
that allowed local tribes to proser.
Southwest
In the early history of the Southwest, the dominant Anasazi tribeknown for their elaborate cliff
dwellingsmastered irrigation and farming. By the civilizations peak in the twelfth century, some
village populations topped 1,000. A system of roads connected many of these villages, and it seems
likely that Anasazi trade networks extended as far as northern Mesoamerica, since archeologists have
found artifacts in Anasazi territory that could only have been produced by civilizations in Mexico.
Yet around 1300 a.d., tens of thousands of Anasazi people deserted their dwellings en masse, possibly
due to drought, warfare, or depletion of natural resources. They spread throughout the Southwest, and
their descendants, such as the Hopi and Zuni, are known as Pueblo tribes. (Pueblo means village in
Spanish, and refers to both the people and the villages in which they lived.) These Pueblo tribes, along
with the Navajos and Apaches who migrated from the north around the fourteenth century, farmed
along rivers using advanced irrigation techniques, foraged for food, and mined turquoise for trade with
Mexico.
Plains
The Cheyenne, Sioux, and other tribes hunted in the Great Plains, which extended from the Rocky
Mountains to the Mississippi River. The Plains were largely uninhabited before the arrival of
Columbus. When Europeans brought horses and guns into the Plains, the tribes developed into
powerful hunting groups.
Eastern Woodlands
The Iroquois tribes, known as the Five Nations, controlled the Northeast. The Cherokee and other
tribes inhabited the Southeast; the Fox, Chee, and others lived around the Great Lakes; and the
Mississippian culture dominated the Mississippi flood plains. While all these Eastern Woodlands tribes
hunted, many were skilled in agriculture, employing the slash and burn technique and crop rotation
to manage their land for food production. These tribes are also known for their skill with crafts and
their well-developed trading networks.
Of these Eastern Woodlands tribes, the Mississippian tribes in particular were skilled in small-scale
architecture. Known as mound builders, they built large platform mounds at the center of their
towns, which served as religious temples for ceremony or burial, or as the homes of tribal leaders.
Before the age of European exploration, the Mississippian centers collapsed and the inhabitants fled to
establish small villages.
Mesoamerica
Some Native Americans formed rich and powerful civilizations in Mesoamerica, south of the presentday United States. The ancient Aztecs (centered near Mexico City) are known for their architecture,
which includes stone pyramids. The Maya of Central America are also known for their architecture, as
well as their advanced astronomy, mathematics, calendar systems, and for developing their own form
of writing. The Incas, based in Peru, built an extensive network of towns throughout the Andes.
Country
Achievement(s)
Christopher
Columbus
Spain
John Cabot
England
Amerigo Vespucci
Spain,
Portugal
Ponce de Leon
Spain
Name
Country
Achievement(s)
Hernando Cortez
Spain
Francisco Pizarro
Spain
Hernando de Soto
Spain
Jacques Cartier
France
Samuel de
Champlain
France
16081615: Explored Great Lakes, founded Quebec, established fur trade with Native
Americans
Henry Hudson
Netherlands
Spain
The Spanish monarchy began the Age of Exploration when it sponsored Christopher Columbuss
journey westward, across the Atlantic Ocean, in search of Asia. Columbus failed to reach Asia, landing
instead on the Bahama Islands in 1492. He returned to the New World in 1493 and established the
settlement of Santo Domingo as a base for further exploration. In 1493, the Pope declared that all lands
west of the Azores and the Cape Verde Islands belonged to Spain, but Portugal, another great sea
power, disputed the papal decree. The two countries reached a compromise with the Treaty of
Tordesillas in 1494, which divided all future discoveries between Castile (a region of Spain) and
Portugal.
The Treaty of Tordesillas reveals that both Portugal and Spain led the charge in exploring the New
World. But while the Portuguese focused on navigation and geographical observation, the Spanish put
their efforts into expedition and colonization.
After the Treaty of Tordesillas, Spain quickly established itself as the premier European power in the
New World, sending wave after wave of explorers into South America. These Spanish expeditions, led
by conquistadors, set out in search of gold, slaves, lucrative trade routes, and fame. Indeed, they
succeeded in creating an enormous empire. By 1522, the Spaniard Hernando Cortez had conquered the
Aztecs in Mexico and by 1536, under the leadership of Francisco Pizaro, Spain had conquered the Incas
in Peru. Conquistadors plundered the indigenous tribes for treasure and slave labor. They established
numerous encomiendassprawling estates populated with native slaves. Under Conquistador rule,
many of the natives died from disease, malnutrition, and fatigue, and they were soon replaced on the
encomiendas by African slaves brought in by Portuguese slave traders.
In North America, Spain initially proved just as dominant. Ponce de Leon claimed Florida for Spain in
1513, and Hernando de Soto led a Spanish exploration of the southeastern United States in 1539,
discovering the Mississippi River. In 1565, Spain established the first successful European settlement in
North Americaa fortress in St. Augustine, Florida. Around the turn of the seventeenth century,
Spanish settlers moved into the Southwest, establishing the colony of Santa Fe in 1610. In an effort to
maintain control of North America, the Spanish attacked many British and French settlements and
destroyed forts. Spain saw its claim on Florida as particularly important in the effort to diminish
English and French expansion southward.
France
France also played a strong role in the New World, though its efforts were mainly confined to North
America. The French led the charge to find a Northwest Passage, a much-hoped-for water route
through which ships might be able to cross the Americas to access Asia. In three voyages between 1534
and 1542, French explorer Jacques Cartier traveled the St. Lawrence River as far as Montreal. The
Northwest Passage eluded him (it doesnt exist), but his explorations established Frances early
dominance of North Americas major waterways. In 1562, French settlers briefly and unsuccessfully
attempted to settle in what is now South Carolina, and in 1564, the Spanish attacked and destroyed a
French settlement near Jacksonville, Florida.
Despite its failures, France continued to be a major player in North America. Most notably, the French
engaged in the highly profitable fur trade, setting up trading outposts throughout Newfoundland,
Maine, and regions farther west. Samuel de Champlain founded the first permanent French
settlement in 1608 at Quebec, and established a fur trade with the regions Native American tribes. By
the end of the seventeenth century the French controlled the St. Lawrence River, the Mississippi River,
the Great Lakes and, therefore, much of the land in the heart of the continent. Of all the European
colonial powers, the French enjoyed the best relationship with Native Americans.
The Netherlands
The Dutch East India Company became interested in North American settlement in 1609, when Henry
Hudson sailed up the river that now carries his name. In 1625, the Dutch bought Manhattan island
from the natives who lived there and established the settlement of New Amsterdam at the mouth of the
Hudson River. While the colony flourished on account of the fur trade, the Dutch did little to expand
their landholdings beyond their domain around the Hudson. A European conflict between England and
the Netherlands spread to the New World in 1664, during which the English took over New
Amsterdam, renaming it New York. After 1664, Dutch influence waned.
England
Compared to other European powers, England got a relatively late start in the exploration and
colonization of the New World. True, King Henry VII of England did send explorer John Cabot across
the Atlantic in 1497, and Cabot claimed Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and the Grand Banks for England.
But after Cabots efforts, the English became more concerned with domestic issues and generally
ceased exploring. For much of the sixteenth century, England had no real presence in the New World.
English interest in the New World increased in the second half of the sixteenth century. Religious
groups (such as the Puritans, who disagreed with the practices of the Church of England) saw the New
World as a place where they could practice their religion without persecution. The English monarchy
was enticed by the wealth pouring into Spain from Mexico, South America, and the West Indies; and
the riches Captain Francis Drake and others plundered from Spanish ships off of Central America in the
late 1570s particularly piqued Englands interest. Catholic Spain felt threatened by British sea power
and the influx of English Protestants, and the two European powers quickly became bitter rivals, each
scheming to position strategic bases throughout the New World.
Englands first effort to establish a settlement in the New World ended badly. In 1584, Sir Walter
Raleigh gained a royal charter to found the settlement of Roanoke, located on an island off the coast of
North Carolina. Raids by Native American tribes and disease devastated the settlement, and it was
eventually abandoned. Still, the Spanish monarchy, determined to eliminate their New World rivals,
dispatched the great Spanish Armada in 1588 to attack the British off the coast of England. Through
luck and ingenuity, a fleet of outgunned English ships decimated the Armada. With this victory,
England began its ascent as a premier naval power, which bolstered its colonial efforts, and Spain fell
into a slow decline.
The struggle between Britain and Spain dragged on throughout the end of the sixteenth century, so that
by 1600 the English crown and Parliament were hesitant to spend money on colonization. In place of
government funding, joint-stock companies formed to gather funding for colonization through the
sale of public stock. Along with religious groupswho saw the rise of the English navy as a real
opportunity to move to the New World and escape religious persecutionthese companies were
responsible for most English colonization throughout the seventeenth century.
history.
The Spanish, however, provided the Native Americans of the Great Plains with an unintended gift:
horses. During the conquistadors expeditions into the Southwest, some horses escaped and formed
large herds on the Great Plains. Within a few generations, Native Americans in the plains region
became experts on horseback, expanding their hunting and trading capabilities and dramatically
transforming Native American culture.
grants from the British government. Individuals were awarded huge tracts of land that they
would then supervise and govern, usually in return for political or financial favors. These
colonial governors reported directly to the king.
Self-governing colonies, including Rhode Island and Connecticut, formed when the king
granted a charter to a joint-stock company, and the company then set up its own government
independent of the crown. The king could revoke the colonial charter at any time and convert a
self-governing colony into a royal colony.
The SAT II test will focus on the particularly important English colonies of Jamestown, Plymouth, and
the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
Jamestown
Nearly twenty years after the failure of the English settlement at Roanoke, two separate joint-stock
companies set out to found settlements along the Atlantic seaboard. In 1606, Englands King James I
authorized a charter granting land in what was then called Virginia (but stretched from modern-day
Maine to North Carolina) to the Virginia Company of Plymouth and the Virginia Company of London.
Colonists, considered employees of their respective companies, journeyed to America in 1607. The
Virginia Company of Plymouth failed miserably, and its settlement in Sagadahoc, Maine was
abandoned within two years. The Virginia Company of London was more successful, though in the New
World, success was something of a relative term.
Pocahontas, introduced to the colony West Indian tobacco, a salable strain with many advantages over
local varieties. From 1616 to 1619, Jamestowns tobacco exports grew nearly twenty-fold. Sensing the
possibility for great profit, the Virginia Company dispatched money and supplies and awarded land
grants to anyone able to pay for his own passage to Jamestown, or for the passage of another laborer.
The profits produced by tobacco saved Jamestown and ensured the settlements success.
As the colony grew in size, its members began to desire a better system of government. In 1619, the
colonists formed a general assembly, the House of Burgesses. The House of Burgesses was the first
representative government in the New World, though its power was limited because the Virginia
Company could still overrule its actions. That same year, the first Africans were brought to Jamestown.
Originally working as indentured servants, by the 1640s most Africans were bought and sold as slaves.
Jamestowns House of Burgesses, formed in 1619, was Americas first representative government.
The year 1622 was a tragic one for Jamestown. A second war with the Powhatan tribe, a slump in
tobacco prices, fraudulent practices by local officials, and high death rates from disease, all conspired to
transform the normal rigors of colonial life into extremely hard times. Under this strain, the joint-stock
company collapsed and James I revoked its charter, making Virginia a royal colony in 1624.
Plymouth Plantation
In 1620, 102 settlers sailed across the Atlantic on the Mayflower, having procured a patent for
settlement from the Virginia Company of London. These colonists agreed to send lumber, fish, and fur
back to England for seven years before they could assume ownership of the land. Most of these settlers
were Separatists from England, who wanted to separate from the Anglican Church (the Church of
England). These Separatists had originally left England for the Netherlands to escape religious
persecution. The voyage to the New World offered an even greater escape.
Separatists renounced the Church of England and established their own self-governing
congregations. Among the Separatist groups are Pilgrims, Quakers, and Baptists. Separatists are
distinct from Puritans, who originally wanted to purify the Anglican Church without separating
from it.
In November of 1620, the Mayflower landed at Plymouth Bay, outside the bounds of the British
possession of Virginia. Since they had no legal right to settle there, the leaders of the Pilgrims, as the
Separatists who came to the New World were called, insisted that all males sign the Mayflower
Compact, which established the colony of Plymouth Plantation as a civil body politic under the
sovereignty of James I of England.
The Mayflower Compact is often described as Americas first example of true self-government.
The Pilgrims were unprepared for the harsh New England winter, and about half of the settlers died by
March 1621. Those who survived owed their lives to the aid of some English-speaking Native
Americans, who taught the Pilgrims how to grow corn. After that terrible first winter, Plymouth quickly
grew and prospered. Within a few years, the colony expanded into Cape Cod and the southeastern part
of modern Massachusetts.
settlers established a representative government, electing two representatives from each district to the
General Court.
while raising protectionist tariffs on the same goods produced in other nations.
Americans could not compete with English manufacturers in large-scale manufacturing.
The Navigation Acts severely restricted colonial trade, to the benefit of England.
The colonists initially complained about these strictures on trade. In New England in particular, many
colonists evaded the restrictions of the Navigation Acts by smuggling. But although relations between
England and the colonies were often full of friction (as in 1684, when Charles II revoked the
Massachusetts Bay Colonys charter as punishement for smuggling), the two sides never came to any
real conflict. Instead, England developed a policy of salutary neglect toward the colonies, which
meant that the trade laws that most hurt the colonial economy were not enforced. Threatened by the
presence of the French in North America, British officials knew that at some point they would have to
clash with the French over the domination of the continent, and they needed the colonists to support
them when that time came. The British did not want to alienate their much-needed allies through
aggressive trade restrictions.
With the prospect of war against the French looming, the British employed salutary neglect to
maintain the colonists loyalty.
American Colonies, West Indies, Africa, and England. Each port provided shippers with a payoff and a
new cargo. New England rum was shipped to Africa and traded for slaves, which were brought to the
West Indies and traded for sugar and molasses, which went back to New England. Other raw goods
were shipped from the colonies to England, where they were swapped for a cargo of manufactured
goods.
Mercantilism and the triangular trade proved quite profitable for New England tradesmen and ship
builders. But in the Southern Colonies, where the Navigation Acts vastly lowered tobacco prices,
economies suffered. The triangular trade also spurred a rise in the slave population and increased the
merchant population, forming a class of wealthy elites that dominated trade and politics throughout the
colonies.
The Middle Colonies included New York and New Jersey, and later Pennsylvania. England took control
of New York and New Jersey (then called New Amsterdam and New Sweden, respectively) from the
Dutch in 1664. New York was made a royal province in 1685, and New Jersey in 1702. Both colonies
were governed by a royal governor and a general assembly. Economically, the colonies relied on grain
production, shipping, and fur trading with the local Native Americans.
In 1681, Charles II granted the last unclaimed tract of American land to William Penn. Penn, a
Quaker, launched a holy experiment by founding a colony based on religious tolerance. The Quakers
had long been discriminated against in the Americas and England for their religious beliefs and their
refusal to bear arms. Seeking religious freedom, Quakers, Mennonites, Amish, Moravians, Baptists, and
others flocked to the new colony. Pennsylvania soon became economically prosperous, in part because
of the industrious Quaker work ethic. By the 1750s, Pennsylvanias capital, Philadelphia, had become
the largest city of the colonies with a population of 20,000.
Colonial Culture
In eighteenth-century Europe, the intellectual movement known as the Enlightenment championed
the principles of rationalism and logic, while the Scientific Revolution worked to demystify the natural
world. Upper-class Americans, including many of the colonists who would eventually lead the
American Revolution, were heavily influenced by Enlightenment ideas and embraced reason and
science, viewing with skepticism any beliefs that could not be proven by clear logic or experiment.
Religion was a prime target for Enlightenment thinkers. The American most representative of
Enlightenment ideals was Benjamin Franklin, who devoted his life to intellectual pursuits. Franklin
published Poor Richards Almanac, a collection of proverbs, in 1732. He created the American
Philosophical Society in 1743.
Perhaps in response to the religious skepticism espoused by the Enlightenment, the 1730s and 1740s
saw a broad movement of religious fervor called the First Great Awakening. During this time,
revival ministers stressed the emptiness of material comfort, the corruption of human nature, and the
need for immediate repentance lest individuals incur divine fury. These revivalists, such as Jonathan
Edwards and the Englishman George Whitefield, stressed that believers must rely on their own
conscience to achieve an inner emotional understanding of religious truth. Jonathan Edwards gave an
impassioned sermon called Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, in which he proclaimed that man
must save himself by immediately repenting his sins.
The Great Awakening was a revival movement meant to purify religion from material distractions
and renew ones personal faith in God. The movement was a reaction against the waning of religion
and the spread of skepticism during the Enlightenment of the 1700s.
The Great Awakening is often credited with democratizing religion, since revivalist ministers stressed
that anyone who repents can be saved by God, not just those who are prominent members of
established churches. For this reason, the movement appealed to all classes and groups. Revival
ministers reached out to the poor, to slaves, and to Native Americans. The Great Awakening divided
American Protestants, pitting the revivalists, or New Lights, against the Old Lightsestablished
ministers happy with the status quo. This division resulted in the formation of many new religious
congregations and sects, and the founding of universities such as Princeton, Columbia, Brown, and
Dartmouth to accomodate revivalist teachings.
Colonial Wars
By the late 1600s, the French and English had emerged as the two dominant forces in North America.
The two nations jockeyed for position in Europe and the New World, resulting in occasional wars that
took place on both continents (though the wars on the two continents often had different names, and
sometimes occurred over slightly different time periods). This series of wars, which ranged through the
first half of the 18th century, culminated in the French and Indian War of 17541763.
Tensions between the colonies and England initially arose during the French and Indian War. Colonial
traders smuggled French goods from the French West Indies in order to avoid English taxesset by the
1733 Molasses Acton molasses, rum, and sugar imported from non-British territories. As its war debt
accumulated, England strictly enforced the Molasses Act in order to raise more revenue from the
colonies. In 1760, England authorized British revenue officers to use writs of assistance. Writs of
assistance served as general search warrants, allowing customs officials to enter and investigate any
ship or building suspected of holding smuggled goods.
The writs of assistance proved a useful tool in combating smuggling, allowing the British to seize and
ransack buildings and ships at will. The colonists were furious. In 1761, Boston merchants challenged
the constitutionality of the writs before the Massachusetts Supreme Court, arguing that the writs stood
against the fundamental principles of law. Although they lost the case, the merchants and colonists
continued to protest the writs, believing Britain had overstepped its bounds.
Colonists and many British observers were outraged at the breach of what had been considered
traditional English liberties. Writs of assistance allowed officials to enter and ransack private homes
and ships without proving probable cause for suspicion, a customary prerequisite for any search in
England.
Parliamentary taxes because they did not elect any members of Parliament. They argued that they
should be able to determine their own taxes independent of Parliament.
Prime Minister Grenville and his followers retorted that Americans were obliged to pay Parliamentary
taxes because they shared the same status as many British males who did not have enough property to
be granted the vote or who lived in certain large cities that had no seats in Parliament. He claimed that
all of these people were virtually represented in Parliament. This theory of virtual representation
held that the members of Parliament not only represented their specific geographical constituencies,
but they also considered the well-being of all British subjects when deliberating on legislation.
charge. Often, they pocketed the profits. Known as customs racketeering, this behavior amounted to
little more than legalized piracy.
In 1768, 1,700 British troops landed in Boston to stem further violence, and the following year passed
relatively peacefully. But tension again flared with the Boston Massacre in March 1770, when an
unruly mob bombarded British troops with rocks and dared them to shoot. In the ensuing chaos, five
colonists were killed. The Boston Massacre marked the peak of colonial opposition to the Townshend
Duties.
Parliament finally relented and repealed most of the Townshend Duties in March 1770, partially
because England was now led by a new prime minister, Lord North. North eliminated most of the taxes
but insisted on maintaining the profitable tax on tea. In response, Americans ended the policy of
general non-importation, but maintained voluntary agreements to boycott British tea. Nonconsumption kept the tea tax revenues far too low to pay the royal governors, effectively nullifying what
remained of the Townshend Duties.
The Quebec Act, unrelated to the Coercive Acts but just as offensive to the colonists, established Roman
Catholicism as Quebecs official religion, gave Quebecs royal governors wide powers, and extended
Quebecs borders south to the Ohio River and west to the Mississippi, thereby inhibiting westward
expansion of the colonies.
The colonists saw the Intolerable Acts as a British plan to starve the New England colonists while
reducing their ability to organize and protest. The acts not only imposed a heavy military presence in
the colonies, but also, in the colonists minds, effectively authorized the military to murder colonists
with impunity. Colonists feared that once the colonies had been subdued, Britain would impose the
autocratic model of government outlined in the Quebec Act.
Colonial Response(s)
Challenged laws in Massachusetts Supreme Court, lost case (discussed in previous chapter)
Attempted Reconciliation
In May 1775, as violence broke out all over New England, the Second Continental Congress
convened in Philadelphia. Congress was split. New England delegates urged independence from
Britain. Other delegates, mostly those from the Middle Colonies, favored a more moderate course of
action. This faction, led by John Dickinson, fervently opposed complete separation from England. In an
effort to reconcile with the King, Dickinson penned the Olive Branch Petition, offering peace under the
following conditions:
A cease-fire in Boston
The Coercive Acts be repealed
Negotiations between the colonists and Britain commence immediately
The Olive Branch Petition reached Britain the same day as news of the Battle of Bunker Hill. King
George III rejected reconciliation and declared New England to be in a state of rebellion in August 1775.
In June, the Second Continental Congress adopted a resolution of independence, officially creating the
United States of America. Thomas Jeffersons draft of the Declaration of Independence was
officially approved on July 4. The Declaration of Independence proclaimed a complete and irrevocable
break from England, arguing that the British government had broken its contract with the colonies. It
extolled the virtues of democratic self-government, and tapped into the Enlightenment ideas of John
Locke and others who promoted equality, liberty, justice, and self-fulfillment.
In general, the constitutions established weak executive branches and responsive legislatures.
Most called for bicameral legislatures and for appointed, rather than elected, officials.
Most reduced property requirements for voting and otherwise increased social equality.
Most called for no official state religion.
States faced enormous debt. In 1781 and again in 1783, Congress proposed an import tax to finance the
national budget and guarantee the payment of war debts, but each time, a state rejected the proposal
(Rhode Island in 1781 and New York in 1783). With no power to force taxation on the states without
state approval, Congress could do nothing to regulate the economy. The government was financially
helpless.
The government faced the challenge of westward expansion with more success. Settlers, speculators,
and state governments all pressed for expansion into the lands granted to the U.S. under the Treaty of
Paris. The government attempted to control this expansion with the Land Ordinance of 1785, which
outlined the protocol for settlement. A second ordinance, the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, forbade
slavery in the territory above the Ohio River, contained a settlers bill of rights, and defined the process
through which territories could become states. In such expansion efforts, the government faced fierce
opposition from the Native Americans and Spanish along the frontier. The Spanish, denying the
validity of the Treaty of Paris, closed the port of New Orleans to American ships in 1784.
The third challenge to the Articles of Confederation concerned the governments ability to maintain law
and order. Depression, inflation, and high taxes made life miserable for many Americans. The plight of
farmers in western Massachusetts led to Shayss Rebellion. In August 1786, Daniel Shays, angered
by high taxes and debt he could not repay, led about 2,000 men in closing the courts in three western
Massachusetts counties to prevent foreclosure on farms. The rebellion exposed the inability of the
central government to control revolt and impose order, and heightened an already growing sense of
panic nationwide.
For many Americans, Shayss Rebellion, along with the economic depression, revealed the
shortcomings of national government under the Articles of Confederation. Congress could neither
suppress revolt nor regulate inflation; it had neither policing nor financial power.
The Constitution
In September 1786, delegates from five states met at the Annapolis Convention. Originally
concerned with interstate commerce, the delegates turned their focus to the shortcomings of the
national government. They proposed a convention to consider amending the Articles of Confederation.
Congress agreed, and asked the states to appoint delegates to convene in Philadelphia.
In May 1787, fifty-five delegates, representing every state except Rhode Island, met in Philadelphia.
Notable delegates included George Washington, John Dickinson, John Jay, Benjamin Franklin,
Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison. The delegates were convinced of the need for a
stronger national government. The first question facing the delegates was whether to amend the
Articles of Confederation or to create a new framework of government. The decision was made to create
a new framework embodied in a new constitution, and the convention became known as the
Constitutional Convention.
population would give the South an unfair advantage in the lower house, where representation was
proportional to population. The solution came in the three-fifths clause, which allowed three-fifths
of all slaves to be counted as people.
The government was granted the powers to set and collect taxes, to regulate interstate commerce, and
to conduct diplomacy in international affairs. The national government was also given the power to
invoke military action against the states. The Constitution declared all acts and treaties made by
Congress to be binding on the states.
The Constitution proposed a government composed of three branches: the legislative, executive, and
judicial. A system of checks and balances, in which each branch of the government held certain
powers over the others protected against tyranny, and was the cornerstone of the new government.
According to the checks and balances:
The president, the head of the executive branch, could veto acts of Congress and was
Supreme Court justices from office, if necessary. The upper house of Congress, the Senate,
could ratify or reject treaties proposed by the president, and had to approve the presidents
cabinet appointments.
The judicial branch, headed by the Supreme Court, had the power to interpret the laws passed
by Congress.
The writers of the Constitution wanted to increase the power of the national government without
debilitating the states. They reserved for state legislatures the powers to elect members of the Senate
and to select delegates for the Electoral College that elected the President. They further stipulated that
the Constitution could be amended by a vote of three-fourths of the state legislatures.
Federal government can:
Levy taxes
Run elections
Provide education
Coin money
The centerpiece of the Constitution was the establishment of the checks and balances system, which
would prevent any of the three branches of government from becoming too powerful.
and North Carolina both rejected the Constitution outright. Virginia and New York, states crucial to the
Union in terms of population and economics, remained undecided. In June 1788, New Hampshire
became the ninth state to ratify the Constitution, making the document the legitimate framework of
national government. Debate gripped Virginia and New York. In late June 1788, Virginia finally ratified
the Constitution by a narrow 53 percent majority. In New York, disputes continued for a month until
Alexander Hamiltons Federalists finally emerged victorious by a margin only slightly greater than that
in Virginia.
The writings of the political leaders of this period are an important part of American history. The most
notable works are collected in The Federalist Papers, a series of articles written by John Jay, James
Madison, and Alexander Hamilton. Exactly how much influence these papers had on the ratification of
the Constitution is up for debate, but the articles do clearly explain the arguments in favor of the
Constitution.
Building a Cabinet
The Constitution only provided the general framework of the executive branch without specifying the
number and the duties of executive posts. In 1789, Congress established what came to be known as the
cabinet: three executive posts (secretary of state, of war, and of treasury), as well as the office of
Attorney General. Washington appointed Thomas Jefferson as secretary of state, Alexander
Hamilton as secretary of treasury, Henry Knox as secretary of war, and Edmund Randolph as attorney
general.
Tariffs
One final issue dividing Congress concerned protective tariffs. In December 1791, Hamilton proposed
the passage of high protective tariffs to generate revenue for the national government and to foster
industrial development. Jefferson and Madison both opposed this protectionist economic policy,
fearing that industries would become too dependent upon government aid. Many congressmen also
opposed the tariff for favoring industrial and merchant interests of the North over the more rural and
agrarian South. In the face of such opposition, the tariff bill did not pass.
Hamiltons major proposals for national finance: national assumption of state debt; a national bank;
protectionist tariffs. All of these issues pitted Federalists against Anti-federalists, or loose
constructionists against strict constructionists.
Westward Expansion
During the 1790s, the U.S. attempted to expand its territory westward. The government devised
policies for settlement and admitted three new states to the union: Vermont (1791), Kentucky (1792),
and Tennessee (1796). Such expansion efforts incited opposition from Spain and Britain, both of which
still owned some western territory and wanted to own more. Native Americans who inhabited much of
this coveted land also resisted U.S. expansion. Military efforts in 1790 and 1791, aimed at forcing peace
with the Native Americans on U.S. terms, yielded little success. The tense relations continued in
stalemate until 1794, when U.S. troops routed a group of Native American warriors at the Battle of
Fallen Timbers. After this defeat, 12 Native American tribes signed the Treaty of Greenville, which
cleared the Ohio territory of tribes and opened it up to U.S. settlement.
grew increasingly difficult to ignore. The French Revolution (1789-1799) inspired opposing loyalties
within the federal government. Jefferson and other Republicans sympathized with the revolutionary
cause, which championed individual rights against the aristocratic government. Hamilton and other
Federalists opposed it.
In 1793, when revolutionary France went to war with Britain and Spain, U.S. loyalties were again
divided. Northern merchants pressed for a pro-British policy, mostly because of trade interests, while
Southern planters pushed for an alliance with France. Refusing to be drawn into the war, Washington
issued the Proclamation of American Neutrality. Although neutrality was the national policy,
Southwestern settlers offered some military support to the French against the Spanish in Florida and in
the Mississippi Valley, and 1,000 Americans enlisted with the French as privateers, terrorizing the
British navy. The British navy retaliated by seizing more than 250 American vessels during the winter
of 1794, forcing their crews into service in the Royal Navy through a policy known as impressment.
Tension flared further when Canadas royal governor denied U.S. claims to the land north of the Ohio
River and encouraged the Native Americans in the region to resist expansion. War seemed almost
inevitable as the British and Spanish troops began building forts on U.S. territory.
Desperate to avoid war, Washington dispatched negotiators to the warring European nations. John Jay
negotiated Jays Treaty (1795) with Britain, which secured the removal of British troops from
American land and reopened very limited trade with the British West Indies, but he did not address the
British seizure of American ships or the impressment of American sailors. Although criticized by
many Americans, especially Anti-federalists, for being too beneficial to Britain, Jays Treaty did keep
the U.S. out of a potentially ruinous war against a stronger and more established nation. Thomas
Pinckney negotiated the Treaty of San Lorenzo (1795) with Spain, which granted the U.S.
unrestricted access to the Mississippi River and removed Spanish troops from American land.
Washington strove to maintain U.S. neutrality in foreign affairs.
This attempt at extortion aroused public outrage among the American people, some of whom rallied for
war. Citing the need for readiness should a war break out, Congress tripled the American army in 1798.
In what became known as the Quasi-war, Congress then sent armed ships to protect Americans at sea.
Although France and America never officially declared war, from 1798 to 1800, the U.S. navy seized 93
French privateers while only losing one ship.
during wartime, U.S. authorities could deport a citizen of an enemy nation whom they deemed
a threat to national security.
The Alien Friends Act allowed the president to deport any citizen of any foreign nation whom he
deemed a threat to the U.S., even in the absence of proof.
The Naturalization Act changed the residency requirement for becoming a citizen of the United
States from five to fourteen years.
The Sedition Act, the final and most controversial act, forbade any individual or group to speak,
write, or publish anything of a false, scandalous and malicious nature that brought the
Congress and/or the president into contempt or disrepute.
The Alien and Sedition Acts granted the federal government unprecedented power to infringe upon
the liberty of individuals.
Of the four Sedition Acts, twothe Alien Friends Act and the Sedition Actwere set to expire near the
time of the 1800 elections, so that the acts would not be used against the Federalists should they lose
power. Just before the presidential election of 1800, four of the five major Republican newspapers were
charged with sedition, arousing the anger of many who felt the Federalists were exploiting their
political power to breach civil liberties and stifle their political opponents.
In opposition to the Alien and Sedition Acts, both Kentucky and Virginia endorsed manifestos on states
rights written by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, respectively. The Virginia and
Kentucky Resolutions (1798) declared that state legislatures could deem acts of Congress
unconstitutional, on the theory that states rights superseded federal rights. They argued that the
federal government was merely a representative of the compact of states, not an overriding power, and
therefore states had the final say on federal laws. In 1799, Kentucky passed a further resolution that
declared states could nullify objectionable federal laws. This doctrine of states rights and nullification
would emerge again in later political crises between the North and South concerning issues of tariffs
and slavery.
industrialized one.
Once in office, Jefferson cut back on federal expenditures and federal bureaucracy. He persuaded
Congress to cut almost all internal taxes, and balanced the cut with reductions in military expenditures
and other government endeavors. For income, the government relied mostly on land sales and customs
duties.
Westward Exploration
Even before the Louisiana Purchase, Jefferson was fascinated with the undiscovered frontier. He
envisioned the U.S. as an agrarian republic, not an industrial powerhouse, and therefore sought to open
up new farming along the vast and fertile frontier. Once the Louisiana Purchase was negotiated,
Jefferson commissioned teams of explorers, including Meriwether Lewis, who was a captain in the
army, and Lieutenant William Clark, to map out the new territory. In 1804, Lewis and Clark set off
from St. Louis with 45 soldiers. In the Dakotas, they met Sacajawea, an Indian woman who proved
indispensable as a guide. The group reached the Pacific Ocean in 1805 and landed back at St. Louis in
1806, having traveled nearly 3,000 miles in two and a half years. The success of the Lewis and Clark
expedition inspired increased exploration and settlement of the new territory.
French and British took aggressive measures that violated U.S. neutrality rights. The French policy,
known as the Continental System, subjected to seizure any ship that first stopped in a British port.
Through a series of countermeasures known as Orders in Council, Britain blockaded French-controlled
ports in Europe. The British also began searching American ships for goods from the French West
Indies and threatening American crews with impressment into the Royal Navy.
Anglo-American tensions peaked in the Chesapeake-Leopard affair in 1807, when the British frigate
HMS Leopard opened fire on the American frigate USS Chesapeake off the Chesapeake Bay, after its
request to board the Chesapeake was denied. When the British finally did board, they hanged four crew
members and sailed away. Outraged, Jefferson banned all British warships from American waters.
Congress then passed the Embargo Act of 1807, which prohibited any ship from leaving a U.S. port
for a foreign port, effectively ending both exportation and importation. Jefferson and Congress hoped
that such a measure would so damage the British and French economies that the countries would be
forced to honor U.S. neutrality. Yet such peaceable coercion failed: the Embargo Act hurt the U.S.
economy more than Englands or Frances.
American waters and the impressment of American sailors. In a conciliatory measure, Britain repealed
the Orders in Council, its aggressive naval policy, but it was too late. Congress had already passed a
declaration of war, and the War Hawks pushed for full engagement.
The American forces, however, were outmatched by British forces, in part because the Republicans had
drastically cut military expenditures and programs, leaving the U.S. forces seriously underfunded and
under-trained. Nonetheless, the war ended in stalemate, mainly because the British were also occupied
with events in Europe. The signing of the Treaty of Ghent in December 1814 ended the war and
restored the status quo. The treaty did not mention free trade or sailors rights.
Two weeks after the signing of Treaty of Ghent, but before news of the treaty had reached America,
American troops won a decisive victory in the Battle of New Orleans. General Andrew Jacksons
troops defended the city, killing more than 2,000 British troops while losing only thirteen men. The
timing of the Battle of New Orleans inspired the popular misconception that the U.S. had won the war
and had forced the British to surrender and sign the treaty. Even without officially winning the war,
the U.S. did succeed in protecting itself against one of the worlds premier powers, for which reason the
War of 1812 has been called the second war of independence.
state, but in the remainder of the Louisiana Territory, slavery would be prohibited north of 3630'
latitude (the southern border of Missouri). However, the compromise rapidly disintegrated when
Missouri submitted a draft constitution that prohibited free blacks from entering the state. Northern
opposition blocked Missouri from statehood until 1821, when Henry Clay designed a new agreement
that prohibited Missouri from discriminating against citizens of other states, including blacks with
citizenship. The Compromise cooled tensions between the North and South, but only temporarily.
Sectional conflict would only increase in the years to come.
Elements of the Missouri Compromise, in its final form: Maine admitted as a free state; Missouri
admitted as a slave state; slavery prohibited in the Louisiana Territory north of 3630'; Missouri
prohibited from discriminating against black citizens of other states.
The United States would construe any attempt at European colonization in the New World as an
unfriendly act.
Although the U.S. had little military power to back up its claims, the declaration nonetheless had
immense symbolic importance, announcing the United States as a world power equal to the great
European nations.
The Monroe Doctrine asserted U.S. preeminence in the affairs of the Americas, a position that has
informed American foreign relations ever since.
The case of Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) concerned the issue of interstate commerce. The case involved
a New York state steamboat franchise that had been granted a monopoly by the state legislature to run
passenger ships between New York and New Jersey. This state license conflicted with a federal license,
granted to another boat operator, to run the same steamboat route. Marshall ruled in favor of the
federal license, arguing that a state cannot interfere with Congresss right to regulate interstate
commerce. Marshall thus interpreted commerce broadly to include all forms of business, not just the
exchange of goodsan interpretation that would prove crucial to the drafting and constitutional
defense of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, with which Congress prohibited discrimination in public
accommodations. As they had with Marshalls earlier rulings, Republicans condemned this ruling as
too antagonistic toward states rights.
Chief Justice Marshall issued significant rulings on judicial review, federal versus state power, the
sanctity of contracts, and congressional control of interstate commerce. He transformed the Court
into a formidable government force, equal to Congress and the president.
Adams in Office
Adams presidency was shadowed by an uncooperative Congress. Unlike Adams, who advocated a loose
reading of the Constitution, most in Congress were strict constructionists, favoring states rights over
central power. Congress thus rejected all of Adamss proposals for federally funded internal
improvements, a national system of roads and canals, higher tariffs, and federal schools. That Adams
was considered unpleasant and refused to engage in political maneuveringtrading favors and
distributing patronagedid not win him any support, either.
Jackson as President
Andrew Jackson came to Washington in 1829, intending to rule according to the will of the people and
not the Washington select. A strong presence in the White House, he exerted stringent control over his
administration and was the first president to use the veto power extensively. He took a heavy hand with
Congress and other government departments. He also broke with many traditions, and in doing so, set
new ones that continue to affect American politics.
Nullification Crisis
The first and most important crisis Jackson faced while in office was the Nullification Crisis.
Congress had raised protective tariffs steadily over the previous decade: in 1816, in 1824, and again in
1828, a year before Jacksons presidency. These tariffs protected Western farming interests, New
England manufacturers, and Pennsylvania miners, but they hurt farmers in the South. Southern
politicians grew so angry at the imbalance that they named the 1828 tariff the Tariff of
Abominations. South Carolina reacted by flying its flags at half-mast when the tariff was passed, and
threatened to boycott New Englands manufactured goods.
Led by John C. Calhoun, a South Carolina native, the state denounced the tariff as unconstitutional on
the argument that Congress could only levy tariffs that raised revenue for common purposes, not tariffs
that protected regional interests. Calhoun argued that federal laws must benefit all equally in order to
be constitutional, and urged southern states to nullify, or void, the tariffs within their own borders.
Calhouns justification for nullification, published in his South Carolina Exposition and Protest (1828),
were largely derived from Jefferson and Madisons arguments in the Virginia and Kentucky
Resolutions (1798). Calhoun, like Jefferson and Madison, argued that the states were sovereign over
the central government, and therefore the states should have the final authority to judge the
constitutionality of laws affecting their regions. Calhoun saw the Constitution as a compact of states,
not an overriding federal power, which meant that all powers that the Constitution did not explicitly
delegate to the federal government fell, without question, to the states.
Jackson came into office in 1829, after the publication of Calhouns protest. Southern interests hoped
that Jackson would modify the Tariff of Abominations, especially since Calhoun served as Jacksons
vice president. Although Jackson did push through a modified, milder tariff in 1832, the changes did
little to satisfy many southerners. By 1832, Calhoun had grown so enraged over the tariff bills that he
resigned from office and returned home to South Carolina; he and Jackson had permanently split over
the issue. In November 1832, the South Carolina legislature approved Calhouns Ordinance of
Nullification, which nullified the tariffs of 1828 and 1832 and ordered state officials to stop collecting
duties at South Carolinas ports. The state threatened to secede if the national government intervened
to force tax collection.
Jackson responded swiftly and decisively, denouncing the nullifiers and sending arms to loyal
Unionists in South Carolina. The following March, Jackson signed the two-part Compromise of
1833. The tariff of 1833 provided for a gradual lowering of duties over the next decade. The second
measure, the Force Bill, authorized the president to use the U.S. Army and Navy, if necessary, to force
the collection of customs duties in South Carolina. South Carolina at first nullified the Force Bill, but
under threat of force, reconsidered and rescinded its previous nullifications.
The Nullification Crisis was precipitated by a series of tariffs that hurt the Southern economy.
Drawing on Madison and Jeffersons Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, Calhoun urged Southern
states to nullify the tariffs within their own borders, arguing that states rights were supreme and
advancing a compact theory of the Union: that is, the Union as a compact of states only, not an
overriding central power. The Crisis was averted by the Compromise of 1833.
Crisis. Northern Democrats defected to the Whigs because of Jacksons anti-business stanceJackson
had cultivated an image as friend to the common man and grew increasingly hostile toward business
and merchant interests, and, more generally, toward industry representing elite, privileged Americans.
By the election of 1836, the Whigs had become a national party with widespread popularity. On the
strength of Jacksons common appeal, however, the Democrats maintained their hold on the
presidency. In the election, Jacksons chosen successor, Martin Van Buren, defeated William Henry
Harrison and three other Whig candidates.
The Whig Party continued to grow in popularity, though, and in 1840 won the presidential election
backing William Henry Harrison. But the party lost its national prominence soon thereafter. United in
their dislike of Jackson, the Whigs were irreconcilably divided on other major issues, most notably
slavery and protective tariffs. Southern Republican Whigs could never wholly ally with Northern
Democratic Whigs on such matters. The Whig alliance began to disintegrate and, by the 1850s,
disappeared from the political scene completely.
Jacksonian Legacies
Andrew Jackson forever changed the face of American government by promoting a more egalitarian
political climate. To extend politics to the so-called common man, he fought for a system in which all
groups had a voice in government (excluding slaves, women, and Native Americans). He questioned
the ascendancy of the business community and championed the rights of small farmers, empowering
them to meet economic elites on an even playing field. Known as the age of the common man, the
Jacksonian Age thus witnessed a rise in popular politics and in overall political involvement.
In summary, legacies of Jacksons years in office include:
A return to the two-party system, which remains with us today. This system aroused public
political participation to a point never before seen in American history, in part because the
public had a clear-cut choice between two distinct political agendas. Party competition forced
both parties to clearly define their positions on major issues and to remain responsive to the
popular will.
Heightened voter turnout. The number of American voters jumped from 1.5 million in 1836 to
2.4 million in 1840the greatest proportional jump between elections in American history.
(Even in losing the election of 1840, Van Buren received 400,000 more popular votes than any
presidential candidate before him.) The jump in voting resulted from the rise in the number of
eligible voters and the number of voters who chose to vote. Eighty percent of eligible white
males voted in 1840, as opposed to less than 60 percent in the three previous elections.
The development of a strong executive. Jackson was the first president to use the veto power
extensively to express his political will, and he controlled his cabinet closely to ensure that the
executive department was united in pursuing its goals. Jackson revolutionized the presidency
by setting an example of strength that nearly every president has followed.
Religion
Since the Revolution, America had become increasingly secular. Educated Americans, in particular,
came to embrace the doctrines of the Enlightenment, which favored logic and reason over piety.
Partly as a reaction against this growing rationalism, the Second Great Awakening emerged in the
1800s and caused a resurgence of religious faith.
While the Second Great Awakening made great strides toward converting a secularized American
public, it was not without critics. Some claimed the revivals encouraged more lust than salvation.
Unitarians criticized the emotional displays of the revivals and argued that goodness sprang from
gradual character building, not sudden emotional conversion.
Mormonism
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, also known as Mormonism, was the most
controversial challenge to traditional religion. Its founder, Joseph Smith, claimed that God and Jesus
Christ appeared to him and directed him to a buried book of revelation. The Book of Mormon, similar
in form and style to the Bible, tells of the descendents of a sixth century B.C.E. prophet whose family
founded a civilization in South America. Violent religious persecution forced Mormons to move steadily
westward in search of land upon which to establish a perfect spiritual community. After Smiths murder
in Illinois, a new leader, Brigham Young, led the Mormons to present-day Utah, where they have since
prospered.
Social Reform
The 1820s and 1830s saw a great rise in popular politics, as free white males achieved universal
suffrage. Women, blacks, and Native Americans, however, remained excluded from the political
process and were often neglected by politicians. In protest, these marginalized groups and their
sympathizers organized reform movements to heighten public awareness and to influence social and
political policy. Many reformers believed that they were doing Gods work, and the Second Great
Awakening did much to encourage them in their missions.
These reform movements, like many issues of the day, quickly became sectional in nature. New
England and Midwestern areas settled by New Englanders were most likely to be reformist.
Southerners, by contrast, actively opposed the abolition of slavery, pursued temperance and school
reform only halfheartedly, and largely ignored womens rights.
Abolitionism
Perhaps the most prominent and controversial reform movement of the period was abolitionism, the
anti-slave movement. Although abolitionism had attracted many followers in the revolutionary period,
the movement lagged during the early 1800s. By the 1830s, the spirit of abolitionism surged, especially
in the Northeast. In 1831, William Lloyd Garrison launched an abolitionist newspaper, The
Liberator, earning himself a reputation as the most radical white abolitionist. Whereas past
abolitionists had suggested blacks be shipped back to Africa, Garrison worked in conjunction with
prominent black abolitionists, including Fredrick Douglass, to demand equal civil rights for blacks.
Garrisons battle cry was immediate emancipation, but he recognized that it would take years to
convince enough Americans to oppose slavery. To spread the abolition fervor, he founded the New
England Anti-Slavery Society in 1832 and the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1833. By 1840, these
organizations had spawned more than 1,500 local chapters. Even so, abolitionists were a small minority
in the United States in the 1830s and 1840s, often subjected to jeering and physical violence.
William Lloyd Garrisons newspaper, The Liberator, spoke for the most extreme abolitionists. Along
with Frederick Douglass, Garrison called for emancipation of slaves and full civil rights for blacks.
Opposed to abolitionism, Southern congressmen succeeded in pushing the gag rule through Congress
in 1836. This rule tabled all abolitionist petitions in Congress and thereby served as a preemptive strike
against all anti-slavery discussions. The gag rule was not repealed until 1844, under increased pressure
from Northern abolitionists and others concerned with the restriction of the right to petition granted by
the Constitution.
Womens Rights
The position of American women in the early 1800s was legally and socially inferior to men. Women
could not vote and, if married, could not own property or retain their own earnings. The reform
movements of the 1830s, specifically abolition and temperance, gave women a chance to get involved in
the public arena. Women reformers soon began to agitate not just for temperance and abolition, but
also for womens rights. Activists such as Angelina and Sarah Grimk, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and
Lucretia Mott argued that men and women are created equal and should be treated as such under the
law. These advocates allied with abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison, also an ardent feminist, merging
the powers of the abolition and the womens rights movements. Other advocates of both causes include
Sojourner Truth and Frederick Douglass.
In 1848, Mott and Stanton organized a womens rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York. The
Seneca Falls Convention issued a Declaration of Sentiments, modeled on the Declaration of
Independence, that stated that all men and women are created equal. The Declaration and other
reformist strategies, however, effected little change. While some states passed Married Womens
Property Acts to allow married women to retain their property, women would have to wait until 1920 to
gain the vote.
Public Schools
The movement to reform public schools began in rural areas, where one-room schoolhouses provided
only minimal education. School reformers hoped to improve education so that children would become
responsible citizens sharing common cultural values. Extending the right to vote to all free males no
doubt helped galvanize the movement, since politicians began fearing the affects of an illiterate, illeducated electorate.
In 1837, Horace Mann of Massachusetts became secretary of that states board of education. He
reformed the school system by increasing state spending on schools, lengthening the school year,
dividing the students into grades, and introducing standardized textbooks. Much of the North reformed
its schools along the lines dictated by Horace Mann, and free public schools spread throughout the
region. The South, however, made little progress in public education, partly owing to its low population
density and a general indifference toward progressive reforms.
Temperance
The production and consumption of alcohol in the United States rose markedly in the early 1800s. The
temperance movement emerged as a backlash against the rising popularity of drinking. Founded in
1826, the American Temperance Society advocated total abstinence from alcohol. Many advocates saw
drinking as an immoral and irreligious practice that caused poverty or mental instability. Others saw it
as a male indulgence that harmed women and children who often suffered abuse at drunkards hands.
During the 1830s, an increasing number of workingmen joined the movement in concern over the ill
effects of alcohol on job performance. By 1835, about 5,000 temperance societies were affiliated with
the American Temperance Society. Owing largely to this associations impact, consumption of liquor
began to decrease in the late 1830s and early 1840s, and many states passed restrictions or bans on the
sale of alcohol.
regimented environment would turn them into productive citizens. Until the early 1840s, the insane
were confined in these poorhouses or in prisons, living in miserable conditions that often exacerbated
their illnesses. In 1843, Dorothea Dix, a Massachusetts schoolteacher, described to the state
legislature the conditions of the insane in prison and encouraged the construction of insane asylums to
better rehabilitate the mentally ill. In the following years, asylums opened throughout the United
States.
Utopian Communities
The most extreme reform movement in the United States was the utopian movement, founded in the
first half of the 1800s on the belief that humans could live perfectly in small experimental societies.
Though utopian communities varied in their philosophies, most were designed and founded by
intellectuals as alternatives to the competitive economy. Utopian communities aimed to perfect social
relationships; reform the institutions of marriage and private property; and balance political,
occupational, and religious influences. Most utopian communities did not last beyond the early 1850s,
but one, the Oneida community in New York, survived from 1848 to 1881.
satirical accounts of life in colonial New York. Two of his most famous stories are Rip Van Winkle and
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. James Fenimore Cooper, the author of The Pioneers (1823) and The
Last of the Mohicans (1826), is credited with creating the first western hero. In The American Scholar
(1837), Ralph Waldo Emerson lauded such American literary advances and urged American authors to
continue setting their own course.
Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, and Edgar Allan Poe emerged in the late 1840s and
early 1850s as prominent writers of fiction. They portrayed individuals as conflicted and obsessive,
proud and guilt-ridden. In The Scarlet Letter, published in 1850, Hawthorne explores the moral
dilemmas of an adulterous Puritan minister. Melvilles Moby-Dick (1851) portrays a sea captains
tortured obsession. Poes macabre short stories and poems, including The Tell-Tale Heart (1843) and
The Raven (1844), examine depravity and moral corruption.
Prominent essayists and poets also emerged during the 1840s and 1850s. Two of the most renowned
essayists were the Transcendentalists Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau (discussed in
the Transcendentalism section), who favored emotion and intuition over pure logic. The poet Walt
Whitman, a follower of Emerson, celebrated America for producing a new type of democratic man
uncorrupted by European vice in his compilation of poems, Leaves of Grass, published in 1855.
Manifest Destiny
Fueling the expansion westward was the popular belief that it was Americas manifest destiny to
expand across Texas, toward the Pacific coast. In 1845, a New York journalist wrote of our manifest
destiny to overspread and to possess the whole of our continent which Providence has given us for the
development of the great experiment of liberty. Manifest destiny tapped into Americas nationalist
spirit, which had been growing since the War of 1812, and echoed Protestant beliefs that America was a
called nationthat is, chosen by God as a haven where Protestants could spread their faith.
territory encompassed present-day Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah, and parts of New Mexico,
Colorado, and Wyoming.) The treaty secured the West for American settlement, and American land
now stretched continuously from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean.
Oregon
Polks presidential campaign slogan, Fifty-four Forty or Fight, referred to the latitude coordinates of
northwest territory claimed by both the U.S. and Great Britain. The area included present-day Oregon,
Washington, and Idaho; parts of Montana and Wyoming; and much of western Canada. Northerners
also pushed for acquisition, since the admission of Oregon, a free state, would balance the annexation
of slave-holding Texas. However, Polk, once in office, could not commit to fight for the territory
already caught up in border disputes with Mexico, he did not wish to engage in further conflict and
instead proposed a compromise with Britain. The 1846 compromise divided the Oregon territory along
the forty-ninth parallel. South of this line lay U.S.-owned Oregon, and north lay the British-owned
Washington territories. Oregon was admitted as a state in 1859.
white ways. Other humanitarians suggested that the best approach would be to fully integrate the tribes
into white society.
These latter concerns were expressed in the 1887 Dawes Severalty Act (or simply the Dawes Act),
which called for the breakup of the reservation system and the treatment of Native Americans as
individuals rather than as tribes. Congressman Henry Dawes believed that private land ownership
would help Native Americans become civilized and assimilated. Under the act, formally communal
land from the reservations was distributed to individuals in 160-acre allotments, and these individuals
were guaranteed U.S. citizenship after twenty-five years. The surplus land that remained of the
reservations after these allotments had been made was sold to white settlers and land speculators. In
practice, much of the land parceled out to Native Americans wound up in white hands after poverty
forced many Native Americans to sell their plots. As a result, many Native Americans were left
homeless, destitute, and dependent on federal aid for survival. Though passed with good intent, the
Dawes Act had disastrous effects: it disintegrated tribal communities and deprived Native Americans of
millions of acres of land, clearing the way for American settlement in the process.
Another factor impairing the Native American way of life was the mass slaughter of buffalo. Many
Plains tribes depended on buffalo for food, leather, and other material needs. But by the 1870s the
buffalo population hovered near extinction, as white hunters killed 9 million buffalo between 1872 and
1875. American hunters often killed the animals solely for their hide, leaving the carcass to rot, while
Army generals killed the buffalo in deliberate attempts to drive Native Americans off of desired lands.
of the Ohio River, as proof that the founding fathers opposed the extension of slavery, and
therefore that America should add no new slave states.
Southerners, led by John C. Calhoun, argued that all lands acquired from Mexico should
become slave-holding.
Moderates, including President Polk, suggested that the 3630' line from the Missouri
Compromise be extended into the Western territory, so that all territory north of the line would
be free, and all territory south of the line would be slave-holding.
Others suggested the system of popular sovereignty, in which the settlers themselves,
through their local governments, would decide whether their regions should be slave-holding or
free.
Before the 1848 election, antislavery advocates united to form the Free-Soil Party and nominated
Martin Van Buren for president. The Free-Soil Party consisted of antislavery Whigs, members of the
abolitionist Liberty Party, and a faction of the Democratic Party (known as the Barnburners) that
supported the Wilmot Proviso. Although the Free-Soil Party did not win any electoral votes, it did earn
10 percent of the national popular vote. Van Buren lost the election to Whig candidate Zachary
Taylor.
Mexico and Utah, and these territories would decide by popular sovereignty whether to be
slave-holding or free.
Texas would cede its claim to parts of the New Mexico territory, and, in exchange, the
government would cover Texass $10 million war debt.
The slave trade would be abolished in the District of Columbia, but slavery itself would
continue.
Congress would strengthen the Fugitive Slave Act by requiring citizens of any state, slave or
free, to assist in the capture and return of runaway slaves.
Clays proposal threw Congress into an eight-month discussion known as the Great Debate.
Proponents of each sidethe North and the Southcriticized Clays compromise for being too lenient
on the other. Most prominent among the debaters were Clay, Daniel Webster, and John C.
Calhoun. Eventually, the bill passed. Two events in particular facilitated its passage: first, when
President Taylor died in July 1850, Vice President Millard Fillmore took over and adopted a procompromise position. Second, Stephen A. Douglas took over for Henry Clay as speaker of the house
and divided the compromise bill up into separate components, each of which passed. Together, the
separate bills became known as the Compromise of 1850.
The Compromise of 1850 called for the admission of California as a free state; the strengthening of
the Fugitive Slave Law; popular sovereignty in Utah and New Mexico concerning the question of
slavery; the abolition of the slave trade in D.C.; and the federal assumption of Texass debt.
Bible, Moses led the Israelites to freedom.) Less systematic resistance came in the form of violent
protest. In 1854, a Boston mob broke into a courthouse and killed a guard in a failed attempt to free a
fugitive slave.
Controversial provisions of the Fugitive Slave Act prompted Northerners to resist its enforcement
through violent protest, clandestine efforts to aid escaped slaves, and legal tactics such as personal
liberty laws.
Such strong-armed resistance against the Fugitive Slave Act revealed that Northern abolitionist
sentiment was rising. No event did more to encourage Northern abolitionism and sympathy for
runaway slaves than the 1852 publication of Uncle Toms Cabin, written by Harriet Beecher Stowe.
Stowe wrote about slavery with grim reality, telling the story of a black slave who is torn from his
family, sold from place to place, and eventually whipped to death. Three hundred thousand copies of
Uncle Toms Cabin were sold in 1852, and 1.2 million had been sold by the summer of 1853.
Dramatized versions of the story were produced at playhouses throughout the North, attracting
audience members from all segments of society.
Election of 1852
As a symptom of the national division, the Whig party disintegrated during the 1850s along North and
South lines, and its 1852 presidential candidate fared badly. The Free Soil Partys candidate also won
little support. The winner was Democratic nominee Franklin Pierce.
Compromise Collapses
President Franklin Pierce sought to avoid the controversial slave issue and instead focused on
territorially expanding into Mexico and Cuba and on opening up international trade. However, he could
not keep the slavery issue at bay for long. Beginning with the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, the
tenuous stalemate of the Compromise of 1850 dissolved. Regional passions soon exploded into violence
that foreshadowed the coming Civil War.
violence, earning the territory the nickname Bleeding Kansas. Three years later, in 1859, Brown led
an even larger antislavery revolt in Virginia, when he attempted to seize federal arsenal at Harpers
Ferry in order to arm a massive slave uprising. His raid was unsuccessful, however, and he was caught
and hanged.
Toward War
Abraham Lincolns victory in the election of 1860 began a chain of events that pushed the nation
rapidly toward civil war.
Secession
During the 1860 election, some Southerners threatened secession pending Lincolns victory, even
though he promised that while he would forbid the extension of slavery into the territories, he would
not interfere with slavery in the South. In December 1860, soon after Lincolns victory, a special South
Carolina convention voted unanimously for secession. By February 1861, six more Southern states
followed suit: Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. Delegates from all seven
states met to establish the Confederate States of America, and they chose Jefferson Davis as the
Confederacys first president.
Lincoln refused to recognize the confederacy and declared the secession legally void. Although he
personally favored the gradual emancipation of slaves with compensation given to slave owners, as
president, he strove to preserve the Union first and foremost, by whatever means necessaryeven if
that meant freeing no slaves at all. He once said, If I could save the Union without freeing any slaves I
would do it, and if I could save the Union by freeing all the slaves I would do it. Lincoln hoped that
loyal Unionists in the South would help him overturn secession.
However, the nations rift only widened in the early months of Lincolns presidency. In April 1861,
Confederate troops opened fire on the federal army base at Fort Sumter, forcing federal troops to
surrender. Lincoln proclaimed the Lower South in rebellion and called for an army to suppress the
insurrection. The threat of incoming federal troops prompted Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee, and North
Carolina to secede and join the Confederacy. Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, and Missouri, all slave
states, remained in the Union.
The Confederate attack on federal troops at Fort Sumter sparked the secession of the Upper South
and the commitment of the North to war
.
million (11 states). Northern forces totaled 2,100,000, compared to the Souths paltry 800,000.
Greater wartime funding: Both the North and South sold war bonds, but the North also
instituted an income tax and had more effective tax collection. The Northern economy also
fared better during the war, suffering only moderate inflation,while the Southern economy
collapsed from severe inflation (prices in the South rose more than 300 percent annually).
More advanced industry: The North held more than 90 percent of the nations industrial
plants and could easily produce heavy artillery weapons. The North also had 70 percent of the
nations railroad tracks and could therefore effectively transport arms and food to distant
troops. The South, on the other hand, had to import arms until it could build an industrial base,
could not afford supplies, and could not efficiently ship food and equipment to its troops.
More abundant food resources: Northern agriculture was geared toward grain, whereas
the South specialized in the growing of inedible cash crops like cotton, tobacco, and indigo.
entering enemy territory. Whereas the North would have to ship men and supplies long
distances and occupy conquered territory, the South could maintain an arc of defense by
moving its men around very little.
Military tradition and morale: The South had a stronger military tradition and more
experienced military leaders. During the war, fewer Southern troops defected than Northern
troops, suggesting a higher morale among Confederate forces.
Black Soldiers
The Emancipation Proclamation did significantly affect the war by bolstering the Unions forces. After
the Proclamation, the Union began to enlist black soldiers in conquered areas of the South. In all,
almost 200,000 blacks enlisted. By the end of the war, black soldiers comprised almost one-tenth of
the Union Army. Although blacks were paid less than whites and assigned to less desirable posts, their
military service was an important symbol of black citizenship.
Union Victory
In early 1864, Lincoln appointed General Ulysses S. Grant commander of all Union armies. The string
of Union victories that followed that summer, especially General William T. Shermans victories in
Georgia, helped Lincoln win reelection in 1864. Union forces continued to rout the Confederate Army
after Lincolns reelection, destroying much of Georgia and South Carolina in what is known as
Shermans March to the Sea: Sherman and his troops first burned Atlanta, and then marched
toward the coast, demolishing everything in their way, including railroads and factories. Sherman
estimated that his forces ruined $100 million worth of property.
One month after Shermans forces conquered Charleston, South Carolina, Grant took the Confederacy
capital in Richmond, Virginia. Robert E. Lees forces officially surrendered to Grant on April 9, 1865.
One month later, Confederacy President Jefferson Davis was captured in Georgia.
Reconstruction
More Americans died in the Civil War than in any other conflict before or since. The war was
particularly disastrous for the South, where one in twenty white men were killed or wounded, and the
land lay in ruins. After the Union victory, the nation faced the complex tasks of reintegrating the
damaged South into the Union and helping heal the nations wounds.
Congressional Reconstruction
Congress reconvened in December 1865 and immediately expressed displeasure with Johnsons
Reconstruction plan. Radical Republicans, led by Senator Charles Sumner and Representative
Thaddeus Stevens, set out to dismantle Johnsons Reconstruction plan and to dictate Reconstruction
on Congresss terms. They called for black voting rights, confiscation of Confederate estates, and
military occupation of the South.
Congress then passed two bills by overriding Johnsons veto: the Civil Rights Act, which granted blacks
full citizenship and civil rights, and an act to extend the life of the Freedmens Bureau. Johnsons
attempt to veto these two bills prompted many moderates to ally themselves with the Radicals against
his plan.
To give the Civil Rights Act constitutional protection, Congress passed the Fourteenth Amendment
in 1866, which declared all persons born or naturalized in the United States to be citizens of their states
and of the nation, and prohibited states from denying citizens equal protection and due process of the
law. Congress thus reversed the Dred Scott decision, which had denied blacks citizenship. Not
surprisingly, Johnson opposed the amendment and every Southern state except Tennessee rejected it,
leaving the radicals without enough support to ratify the amendment.
After an overwhelming victory in the 1866 Congressional election, Radicals gained the power they
needed to push for passage of the Fourteenth Amendment and military occupation of the South. With a
two-thirds majority in the House and a four-fifths majority in the Senate, Republicans charged ahead
with Reconstruction on their own terms. In March 1867, Congress passed the Reconstruction Act of
1867 over Johnsons veto, which invalidated state governments formed under presidential
Reconstruction and imposed martial law on the ex-Confederate states. Only Tennessee, which had
ratified the Fourteenth Amendment, escaped invalidation and military subjugation. The other ten
states were reorganized into five military districts run by Union generals. The act also expedited
passage of the Fourteenth Amendment by requiring that Southern states ratify the Fourteenth
Amendment in order to be eligible for readmission into the Union. In June 1868, seven ex-Confederate
states voted to ratify the amendment, and the amendment finally passed.
Under the stringent terms of congressional Reconstruction, ratification of the Fourteenth
Amendment was made a condition of readmission to the Union.
Impeachment Crisis
In March 1867, the same month Congress passed the Reconstruction Act, Congress passed two bills to
limit President Johnsons authority. The Tenure of Office Act prohibited the president from removing
civil officers without Senate approval, while the Command of the Army Act prevented the president
from issuing military orders except through the commanding general, Ulysses S. Grant (who could
not be removed without the Senates approval). In August 1867, with Congress out of session, Johnson
suspended Secretary of War Edwin Stanton and replaced him with Grant. Republicans in Congress
refused to approve Johnsons change, and called for impeachment on the grounds that Johnson had
violated the Tenure of Office Act. In truth, Johnsons violation served as a mere excuse for Congress to
launch impeachment proceedings; Congresss real motivation was to remove a president hostile to
Reconstruction.
Johnsons impeachment trial began in March 1868 and lasted nearly three months. Johnson escaped
impeachment by one vote but was left effectively powerless. His acquittal set a precedent against
impeachment based on political rivalry, lasting until the Clinton impeachment crisis of the late 1990s.
Reconstruction Wanes
During the 1870s, the Radical Republicans lost influence in Congress when two key leaders, Charles
Sumner and Thaddeus Stevens, died, and many others turned moderate. The Radicals demise, along
with reports of corruption in reconstructed governments, sapped Northerners enthusiasm for
Reconstruction. At the same time, economic panic and political scandal diverted the nations attention.
Another factor contributing to the end of Reconstruction were the rulings of the Supreme Court. In a
series of decisions, the Court reversed many of the trends the Radicals had begun.
blacks were poor and uneducated, and their grandfathers had not voted, they could not pass these new
voting requirements. The Court also limited the scope of the Fifteenth Amendment, ruling that the
amendment did not confer the right of suffrage upon anyone, but merely prohibited the barring of
suffrage based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude. Since the Enforcement Acts of 1870
and 1871 served to reinforce the Fifteenth Amendment, the Court declared key parts of the acts invalid.
last two occupied states in the South and allowed Democrats in those states to take control of the
legislature.
Any concern for the plight of the poor during this time was minimized by the tenets of social
Darwinism, which became popular in the late 1800s. Social Darwinism adapted Charles Darwins
theory of evolution, survival of the fittest, to the business world, arguing that competition was
necessary to foster the healthiest economy (just as competition in the natural world was necessary to
foster the healthiest, or fittest, species). Proponents of social Darwinism adhered to a help those who
help themselves philosophy: government shouldnt invest in programs for the poor, because the poor
had no positive impact on the nations financial health. The rich, meanwhile, were strong, hard working
citizens who contributed to national progress, and, as such, should not be subject to government
regulation. Prominent social Darwinists included Herbert Spencer and Andrew Carnegie, whose essay
promoting free market economy, The Gospel of Wealth, was published in 1889.
More radical labor organizations also emerged, most notably the Industrial Workers of the World,
nicknamed the Wobblies, founded in 1905. More famous for their militant anticapitalism than for being
large or influential, the Wobblies never grew to more than 30,000 members before fading away in
about 1920.
Between 1880 and 1905, union activity in the the United States led to well over 35,000 strikes. As
evidenced by the Haymarket riot, these demonstrations at times erupted in violence. This violence
alienated much of the American public and the popular support for unions plunged, and employers
were free to exact severe retribution on striking workers. As a result, strikes proved largely ineffective
at advancing the labor cause.
Major strikes and outbreaks of stike-related violence during the later nineteenth century tended to
impair the labor cause instead of advance it. Public sympathy for unions plummeted, companies
imposed anti-union hiring policies, and the Supreme Court authorized the use of injunctions against
strikers.
In addition to the Haymarket riot, some of the more notable strikes include:
The railroad strike followed the onset of a national economic recession in 1877. Railroad
workers for nearly every rail line struck, provoking widespread violence and requiring federal
troops to subdue the angry mobs. The strike prompted many employers to get tough on labor by
imposing an antiunion policy: they required workers to sign contracts barring them from
striking or joining a union. Some employers even hired private detectives to root out labor
agitators and private armies to suppress strikes.
Workers staged the 1892 Homestead strike against Carnegie Steel Company to protest a pay
cut and seventy-hour workweek. Ten workers were killed in the riot. Federal troops were called
in to suppress the violence, and non-union workers were hired to break the strike.
In the 1894 Pullman strike, Eugene Debs led thousands of workers in a strike against the
Pullman Palace Car Company after wages were slashed. The courts ruled that the strikers
violated the Sherman Antitrust Act and issued an injunction against them. When the strikers
refused to obey the injunction, Debs was arrested and federal troops marched in to crush the
strike. In the ensuing frenzy, thirteen died and fifty-three were injured. The Supreme Court
later upheld the use of injunctions against labor unions, giving businesses a powerful new
weapon to suppress strikes. Organized labor began to fade in strength, and did not resurge until
the 1930s.
Immigration
Roughly 10 million European immigrants settled in the U.S. between 1860 and 1890. Nearly all of these
immigrants were from northern and western Europe, which was the traditional point of origin for
European immigrants to the United States. During the 1890s, though, new immigrants began to come
to the United States: Greeks, Slavs, Armenians, and Jews from various countries. Most of these new
European immigrants settled in the Northeast, dominated by Irish and Italians, and the Midwest,
dominated by Germans. While the West also experienced an influx of European immigrants, it mostly
attracted immigrants from China. Lured by the prospect of earning money by working on the
expanding western railroad system, many Chinese immigrants settled in California.
Many immigrants found the transition to American life difficult, despite their efforts to ease the
transition by founding churches and charity organizations. Often poor, immigrants lived in dirty,
crowded conditions and worked unskilled jobs in potentially dangerous factories. More than 500,000
injuries to workers were reported each year in the 1880s and 1890s. Immigrants, especially new
immigrants, also faced extreme discrimination in the workplace from native workers who resented the
immigrants willingness to accept lower wages and work in worse conditions. In the presidential
election of 1880, both major party platforms included anti-immigration measures, and in 1882
Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, placing a ten-year ban on Chinese immigration.
Machine Politics
Local politics during this era were marked by machine politics, so called because the system and the
party, rather than individuals, held power. In virtually every region of the U.S., local officials, or
machines, controlled voter loyalty by distributing political and economic benefits such as offices, jobs,
and city contracts. Machines were presided over by party bosses, professional politicians who
dominated city government. These bosses often controlled the jobs of thousands of city workers and
influenced the activities of schools, hospitals, and other city-run services. Machine politics thrived on
corruption, which contributed to the systems collapse around the turn of the twentieth century.
U.S. Presidents
The presidents of this period were generally weak, pro-business, and never served more than one term
in office (with the exception of Grover Cleveland, who served two non-consecutive terms). None of
these presidents are terribly important in terms of the test, though it is helpful to have a general sense
of the politics of the nation during the period. We have included a quick overview of each
administration so you can keep track of all the political turnover.
James Garfield, elected in 1880, was fatally shot four months after taking office.
Chester Arthur, Garfields vice president, served as president from 1881 to 1885. Congress,
What Social Classes Owe to Each Other, argued that social programs to help the poor worked
against nature and sapped the hardworking individual of his due reward. In an 1889 essay, The
Gospel of Wealth, Andrew Carnegie applied Charles Darwins theories to human society,
stating that free-market economics and governmental noninterference provided a forum where
survival of the fittest could play out.
The Gospel of Success centered on the claim that any man could achieve wealth through hard
work. Horatio Alger wrote fictional tales of hard-working young men going from rags to
riches based solely on their ambition and determination.
Andrew Carnegie and Horatio Alger, among others, tried to justify the gap between rich and poor by
arguing that hard work could make any man wealthy and that programs to help the poor went
against the natural process of evolution as played out in human society.
These justifications for the growing gap between rich and poor did not go unchallenged. Henry
Georges book Progress and Poverty (1879) urged that the government use tax income to fund social
programs for the poor, while Lester Frank Wards Dynamic Sociology (1883) also argued that
government power be harnessed for social aid. In 1890, Jacob Riis exposed the conditions of
immigrants in New York City tenements in How the Other Half Lives, and in 1899, Thorsten Veblens
Theory of the Leisure Class attacked the conspicuous consumption of the affluent.
Many other works directly criticized the capitalist system. In an 1888 book entitled Looking Backward
From 2000 to 1887, Edward Bellamy conceived of a socialist utopia in which the government
controlled all means of production and distribution. Bellamys moderate socialism accompanied a rise
in American interest in Marxism, which condemned the capitalists exploitation of the working class
and foretold revolution. Marxism, however, never gained a significant following in the U.S., perhaps
because other means, short of revolution, eventually emerged to address poverty and exploitation.
Addressing Poverty
In the late nineteenth century, most middle-class reformers believed that poverty arose from lax morals
and lack of self-discipline. They therefore focused their relief efforts on improving morality rather than
addressing the cripplingly low wages and unhealthy working and living conditions of the poor. Among
their aims, reformers sought to Americanize poor immigrants and rid them of customs deemed
offensive or impractical. Their programs mostly targeted children, whom they believed to be the most
malleable. Organizations like the Young Mens Christian Association and later the Young
Womens Christian Association (YMCA, YWCA), provided housing and recreational activities for urban
children. Imported from England in 1880, the Salvation Army provided food, shelter, and
employment to the urban poor while preaching temperance and morality. The New York Charity
Organization Society operated similarly, promoting morality and self-sufficiency.
In the 1880s, a new generation of social workers, led by Jane Addams, argued that providing
education and opportunity was more important than preaching morality. In 1889, Addams and a friend
established Hull House in Chicago, where they lived and worked among the poor immigrants they
aimed to help. Addams set up a kindergarten, a day nursery, and an employment bureau for the poor.
Works of Fiction
Social commentary of a subtler sort emerged in the works of fiction produced by American authors
during the period of industrialization. Realism replaced romanticism as the genre of choice for
American authors. Henry James, an expatriate who left America for Europe in 1875, wrote about the
psychological experience of being an American in Europe in books like Daisy Miller (1879) and The
Portrait of a Lady (1881). Other authors hit much closer to home, commenting on the era of
industrialization around them. No author was better known for this than Mark Twain, whose 1873
satirical novel, The Gilded Age (cowritten with Charles Dudley Warner), described the Industrial
Revolution as a period that looked like gold on the outside but on the inside was hollow. Twain, like
other authors, described an America full of urban poverty, political crookedness, and class tensions.
These elements, especially class and racial tensions, are present in his most famous works, The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), in which he uses
the perspective of two young boys to expose ignorance and hatred in American society
Expansionism
In the 1860s and early 1870s, the U.S. focused primarily on domestic issues: Reconstruction,
settlement of the American West, and industrialization. Apart from acquiring Alaska from Russia in
1867, the U.S. achieved little in the area of foreign expansion. But as the American factory system
developed and industrial output soared, the nation began to look abroad with new interest, because, as
a rising industrial power, the U.S. needed to find foreign markets in which to sell its manufactured
products and from which to acquire raw goods. Initially, the policy that the U.S. pursued to meet its
growing economic needs was one of expansionism rather than imperialism. Instead of imposing a
military presence and colonial governmentas many European countries were doing in Africa and
throughout the globethe U.S. aimed to advance its interests through investments and business
transactions. American businesses began opening up production sites and markets in Latin America
and elsewhere.
Cuba
In 1901, the Platt Amendment enumerated the conditions for the U.S. Armys withdrawal from
Cuban soil. The amendment required Cuba to vow to make no treaty with a foreign power, to limit its
independence, and reserved for the U.S.:
The right to intervene in Cuba when it saw fit.
The right to maintain a naval base in Cuba, at Guantnamo Bay.
Though the Cubans did not like the restrictions on Cuban sovereignty, they did accept the amendment.
The U.S. held wide powers over Cuba for more than thirty years, and maintains its military base to this
day.
The Philippines
In the Senate, proponents of expansionism won the debate about the Philippines. Influenced by
business interests who saw the Philippines as a valuable gateway to China, the Senate voted to annex
the country rather than give it independence. Filipino rebels resisted U.S. rule by attacking the U.S.
base of operations, setting off two years of fighting that finally ended with a U.S. victory. The
Philippines remained a part of the United States until 1946, when the U.S. granted it independence.
Anti-imperialism
Not all Americans supported American imperialism. In November 1898, after the fighting had ended in
the Spanish-American War but before any treaty had been signed, an organization known as the AntiImperialist League arose in the U.S. The league opposed American expansion and foreign
involvement on the grounds that the U.S. had no right to force its will upon others and also because
such involvement would likely incite further conflict. The group had many illustrious members,
including the writer Mark Twain and the philosopher William James. In 1899 the anti-imperialists had
nearly succeeded in preventing the Senate from ratifying the expansionist Treaty of Paris. This time,
however, the forces of imperialism won out, and the Anti-Imperialist League lost whatever strength it
might have had.
Assassination of McKinley
In September 1901, President McKinley was shot by an anarchist named Leon Czolgosz. Vice President
Theodore Roosevelt became president, and continued to implement an aggressive foreign policy.
His presidency marked the beginning of the Progressive Era.
Novelists and journalists helped spread the progressive spirit through the nation by exposing the
political corruption and corporate immorality that had been the norm during the Industrial Revolution.
Known as muckrakers, a term coined by Roosevelt to describe their journalistic tactics of raking
the filth in search of wrongs, these authors and journalists wrote searing accounts of corporate and
political evils. Their writings moved the public to demand reform. Among the most notable muckraking
exposs:
Ida Tarbells History of Standard Oil (1904) exposed the ruthless and exploitative practices of
governments.
Through their writings, muckrakers such as Upton Sinclair exposed the dark side of industrialization
during the early 1900s, leading to public calls for reform.
Black Rights
During the Progressive Era, those fighting for the rights of black Americans were torn between two
charismatic and intelligent leaders. Booker T. Washington advocated patience, arguing that blacks
must first acquire vocational skills and prove their economic worth before hoping to be treated equally.
In 1881, Washington had founded what would become Tuskegee University in his efforts to implement
this plan. Many northern blacks, however, rejected Washingtons philosophy in favor of the more
radical ideas presented by W.E.B. Du Bois, who demanded immediate equal treatment for blacks and
their equal access to all intellectual opportunities, not just vocational training.
The two main black leaders of the Progressive Era were Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois.
The former advocated patience and the development of vocational skills. The latter demanded
immediate change in the treatment of American blacks.
In 1909, a group of blacks led by W.E.B. Du Bois joined with a group of white reformers to form the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), which called for an
end to racial discrimination. The NAACP, along with groups like the National Urban League, attacked
Jim Crow laws in the South and the 1896 Supreme Court decision in Plessy v. Ferguson. These
organized efforts led to few actual political or social gains, but they did begin laying the foundation for
the future.
Feminism
Female suffrage, the granting of the right to vote to women, was the primary feminist cause of the
Progressive Era. In its early stages, this movement was led by Susan B. Anthony, who retired as
president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) in 1900. During the early
1900s, the NAWSA served as the point of central control for nationwide grassroots groups that lobbied
legislators, held small rallies, and distributed literature. Other suffragists were more aggressive, staging
demonstrations and picketing the White House. Nevertheless, women would have to wait until after
World War I for the Nineteenth Amendment, which granted them suffrage in 1920.
Women were active beyond the suffrage movement, supporting campaigns for building playgrounds
and nurseries, improving conditions for women workers, equalizing womens wages with those of men,
and banning child labor. Feminists also actively pushed for womens education and birth control.
system of inspection.
The early twentieth century also saw a rise in concern for the environment. Those who supported
conservation and protection of wilderness sites were called preservationists. Preservationists were
often in conflict with business interests who saw the wilderness in terms of resources and space for
commercial and residential development. Roosevelt was at heart a preservationist, but understood the
need for compromise. He achieved this compromise through his conservation program, which provided
for the regulated use of the nations wilderness. Roosevelt designated 200 million acres as national
forests, mineral reserves, and potential waterpower sites, and added five national parks and eighteen
national monuments to the list of protected lands. In 1908 Roosevelt created the National
Conservation Commission to inventory the nations resources and manage their use more
efficiently.
Conservationism was a hallmark of Roosevelts presidency. He protected land through the creation of
national parks and monuments, and advocated the responsible use of the nations resources by
establishing the National Conservation Commission.
Dollar Diplomacy
In foreign affairs, Taft moved away from Roosevelts big stick policies toward what became known as
dollar diplomacy. Aiming to avoid military intervention, Taft argued that the influx of American
investment abroad, as well as the advancement of American economic interests, would promote
stability. Dollar diplomacy failed in China, where European and Japanese economic interests squeezed
American businesses out, and it proved only marginally more successful elsewhere. In 1912, Taft finally
resorted to military intervention in Nicaragua when he sent marines in to suppress a revolt.
Republicans Divided
Taft alienated the progressive members of his party by supporting the Payne-Aldrich Act, which raised
protective tariff ratesa move supported by conservative pro-business interests. He further outraged
progressives by supporting the ultra-conservative speaker of the house, Joseph Cannon, and the ultraconservative secretary of the interior, Richard A. Ballinger, who reversed Roosevelts conservation
efforts by, among other things, selling off several million acres of public land in Alaska to bankers
interested in mining the land for coal. Angered by Tafts lack of enthusiasm for reform, Roosevelt
himself campaigned for progressive candidates in the 1910 midterm election. Roosevelt advocated
increasing regulation for business and even went so far as to suggest that the popular vote be used to
overturn Supreme Court decisions. Roosevelts defection split the Republican Party in half entering the
election of 1912.
Tafts support for the Payne-Aldrich Act and other conservative moves precipitated a split within the
Republican Party approaching the election of 1912.
Lowering Tariffs
Wilsons first legislative action was to lower the tariff. In 1913, he sponsored the Underwood Tariff,
which cut tariffs substantially. It was the nations first reduction in tariffs since before the civil war.
Also in 1913, Wilson helped launch an investigation into the possibly corrupt relations between protariff lobbyists and certain senators.
Business Regulation
Wilson pushed two important regulatory measures through Congress in 1914. First, the Federal
Trade Commission Act created a five-member agency to investigate suspected violations of
interstate trade regulations and to issue cease and desist orders should it find corporations guilty of
unfair practices. Secondly, the Clayton Antitrust Act improved upon the vague Sherman
Antitrust Act by enumerating a series of illegal business practices. The Wilson administration
initiated antitrust suits against almost one hundred corporations.
Proclaimed Neutrality
World War I pitted the Allies (Great Britain, Russia, France, and, later, Italy) against the Central
Powers (Germany and Austria-Hungary). In August 1914, Wilson proclaimed U.S. neutrality, and
urged the public to remain neutral in opinion as well. The American public, however, was partial to the
Allies: though most Americans were glad to be remote from the war, strong emotional, historic, and
economic ties to Great Britain and France meant great public sympathy for the Allied cause. While
American investment in the Central Powers nations dwindled between 1914 and 1917, it surged in the
Allied nations. American sources provided weapons, food, and funding to the Allies equal to nearly one
hundred times that provided to the Central Powers. Wilson himself seemed to favor an Allied victory, in
part because he saw a victory by Germany and its autocratic ruler, Kaiser Wilhelm, as antagonistic to
his vision of a world order based on liberalism, democracy, and capitalism. Nonetheless, he clung to
neutrality.
After 1914, it became increasingly clear that American neutrality would be difficult to maintain. British
naval vessels seized American ships headed for German ports and filled the North Sea with mines,
despite American protests. In 1915, Germany announced a U-boat blockade of the Allies ports and, in
the ensuing months, killed a number of Americans in torpedo attacks on British vessels and one U.S.
tanker. On May 7, 1915, a U-boat sank the British ocean liner Lusitania, killing close to 1,200 people,
including 128 Americans. This event provoked an anti-German backlash in American public opinion,
and, at Wilsons encouragement, Congress passed the National Defense Act in 1916, which called for
the buildup of military forces in anticipation of wara policy known as preparedness.
After the Lusitania incident, Germany stopped attacking passenger ships for a few months. But in
August 1915, Germany resumed attacks, sinking both British and French vessels. In 1916, when Wilson
threatened to break diplomatic relations after one such attack, Germany responded with the Sussex
Pledge, promising not to attack merchant ships without warning. This pledge eased the strain on U.S.
neutrality for the remainder of 1916.
In 1916, Wilson was reelected on the slogan He kept us out of war, a tribute to his maintenance of
American neutrality. Wilson and the Democrats portrayed the Republican Party as the party of war and
uncertainty.
Raising an Army
At the time the U.S. passed the declaration of war against Germany, the U.S. Army included 120,000
enlisted men and 80,000 National Guardsmen. In 1917, Congress passed the Selective Service Act,
which required all men from age 21 to 30 to register for military duty. By November 1918, some three
million men had been drafted. About 11,000 women served in the Navy, and a few hundred more
joined the Marines. Women were invaluable in the noncombat positions open to them during the war.
More than 250,000 black Americans served in the war, but racism was strong in the military, and black
troops were segregated from white troops, given menial positions, and excluded from the marines
altogether.
Making Peace
Even before the armistice (or truce) in November 1918, complex negotiations for peace had begun.
Achieving international peace was an arduous and complex process.
determination to nations formerly under the control of the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman
empires.
One point advocated the settlement of colonial disputes with due consideration given to the
colonized peoples, as well as to the colonial powers.
Five points broadly laid out Wilsons plan for a new world order. Wilson proposed unrestricted
sea travel, free trade, arms reductions, an end to secret treaties, and, most importantly, a
general association of nations to protect peace and resolve conflicts.
Republicans in Congress opposed the plan, and no Allies fully endorsed itsome lent cautious support,
others opposed it outright. Many Americans, however, agreed with Wilson, and the Fourteen Points
became a rallying issue for the U.S. war effort.
Wilsons Fourteen Points, enumerated in January 1918, set forth U.S. aims in World War I. The most
important point called for a general association of nations to preserve international peace.
Red Scare
After World War I, anti-German hysteria turned into anti-Russian hysteria in response to the Bolshevik
revolution of 1917, which brought a communist regime to power. Although fewer than 100,000
Americans were members of the nations communist parties, many Americans feared that communist
influence went deeper, and had infiltrated the working class, immigrant communities, and labor
unions.
In 1919, Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer assigned J. Edgar Hoover to head a new Intelligence
Division to root out subversives. Hoover arrested hundreds of suspected radicals and deported many
undesirable aliens, especially those of Eastern European background. In 1920, in a coordinated
operation, police and federal marshals raided the homes of suspected radicals and the headquarters of
radical organizations in thirty-two cities. These Palmer Raids resulted in more than 4,000 arrests,
550 deportations, and uncountable violations of civil rights.
The central event of the postwar Red Scare, the Palmer Raids of January 2, 1920, resulted in more
than 4,000 arrests and more than 550 deportations of suspected radicals.
discredited all critics of the government and set up guidelines for self-censorship. The committee also
enlisted the help of artists, journalists, and authors to publicize the war through speeches, posters,
articles, and films. These pro-war efforts helped generate and intensify the publics mistrust and hatred
of Germany and the Central Powers.
The patrioticbut often intolerantsentiments inspired by such propaganda spilled over into public
policy as well. The Espionage Act, passed in 1917, enumerated a vague list of anti-war activities
warranting fines or imprisonment. The 1918 Sedition Amendment to the Espionage Act provided for
punishment of anyone using disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language in regard to the
government, flag, or military. Government officials invoked these measures to suppress dissent and
justify the arrest of roughly 1,500 people during the war. Eugene Debs, a prominent socialist and fivetime presidential candidate, was imprisoned in 1918 for denouncing the governments aggressive
tactics under the Sedition Amendment (he was released in 1921). The Espionage Act was also used to
bar a number of periodicals from circulation by mail. The Supreme Court upheld these laws when they
were challenged until well after the war had ended, most notably in Schenk v. U.S. (1919), in which the
Court ruled that speech could be restricted when free speech presented a clear and present danger.
The Espionage Act and the Sedition Amendment were used to stamp out anti-war ideology and
activism during World War I.
Pro-Business Policies
The Republican presidents of the 1920sHarding, Coolidge, and Hooverreversed the Progressive Era
trend of regulating big business and lowering tariffs. Instead, Republican policies generally gave
corporations free rein, raised protective tariffs, and cut taxes for the rich. Big business and wealthy
businessmen especially benefited from the following policies:
The Supreme Court overturned a number of measures designed to regulate the activities of big
business. The Court declared boycotts by labor unconstitutional and authorized the use of
antitrust laws against unions.
The Fordney-McCumber Tariff of 1922 and the Smoot-Hawley Tariff of 1930 were two of six
major tariffs passed that hiked importation rates to all-time highs. These tariffs protected
American companies from international competition.
Andrew Mellon, treasury secretary from 1921 to 1932, persuaded Congress to lower income tax
A Decade of Prosperity
Following a postwar recession from mid-1920 to the end of 1921, the economy picked up again and
remained strong until the end of the decade. This prosperity, combined with tax cuts for the rich, led to
a rising consumer culture.
The very nature of consumerism changed during this period, as new products filled the market. The
automobile first became popular outside wealthy circles in the 1920s. Electrical appliances grew rapidly
in popularity as electricity reached almost two-thirds of American homes by the mid-1920s.
Refrigerators, washing machines, and vacuum cleaners flew off the shelves. The vast reach of the newly
invented radio created a national market and spurred advertising to unprecedented levels.
One effect of prosperity was the consolidation of big business and banks. By the decades end, more
than 1,000 companies per year were being swallowed up by mergers. A few corporationssuch as Ford,
Chrysler, and General Electricdominated major industries. Industry leaders became immensely
popular public figures.
Rising Productivity
New technologies allowed corporations to meet public demand by increasing productivity. Henry Ford
installed the assembly line process in his automobile plants, maximizing outputs by allowing workers
to stay in one place and master one repeated task. New developments in management methods
increased efficiency by departmentalizing varied business concerns and creating a class of professional
managers. Installment buying and credit programs allowed consumers to buy expensive goods they
could not afford to purchase with one payment.
During the 1920s, industry benefited from the consolidation of large firms, assembly line
manufacturing, professional management, and installment buying and credit programs.
Isolationism
The Republican-dominated government of the 1920s advocated a spirit of isolationism, which meant
retreating from global affairs. The U.S. refused to join both the League of Nations and the World Court
established by the League. In 1928, the U.S. and France (and later, sixty other nations) signed the
Kellogg-Briand Pact, which called for the outlawing of war and an end to aggression. This pact, however
strong in theory, provided no enforcement mechanism.
Despite its isolationism, the U.S. did become involved in international affairs over the issue of war
debts and reparations. The Allies had borrowed significantly from the U.S. during World War I and
could not pay back this debt. Meanwhile, Germany owed reparations to the Allies but also could not
pay. The Dawes Plan, devised by American banker Charles G. Dawes in 1924, scaled back U.S.
demands for debt payments and reparations and established a cycle of U.S. loans that provided
Germany with funds for reparations to the Allies, thus funding Allied debt payments to the U.S.
immigrants coming to the U.S. Between 1900 and 1915, more than 13 million immigrants came to the
U.S., many of them from eastern and southern Europe and many either Catholic or Jewish, to the
general dismay of the Protestant American public. Many Americans viewed these immigrants as a
threat to American religious and social values, as well as to economic opportunities (because
immigrants competed for jobs). In 1921, Congress set a quota of 350,000 for annual immigration. In
1924, the National Origins Act cut that number to 164,000 and restricted immigration from any one
nation to 2 percent of the number of people in the U.S. of that national origin in 1890. This standard
curtailed immigration from southern and eastern Europe and excluded Asians entirely.
Anti-immigrant sentiment peaked in the Sacco-Vanzetti case of 1921. Sacco and Vanzetti were two
Italian immigrants charged with an April 1920 murder in Massachusetts. They were anarchists as well
as immigrants, arousing frank hatred from the media and the judge in their case, who sentenced them
to death. The case against Sacco and Vanzetti was circumstantial and poorly argued (although evidence
now suggests that they were in fact guilty). The case was significant for its demonstration of nativist
and conservative forces in America.
Prohibition
The Eighteenth Amendment, which made it illegal to manufacture, sell, or transport alcoholic
beverages, went into effect in January 1920. Enforcement of prohibition, however, was sporadic and
underfunded and faced opposition in many states and cities, especially northern cities, where many
prohibition laws were repealed. Given this lax enforcement, many Americans viewed prohibition as
something of a joke. Bootleggers smuggled liquor from the West Indies and Canada, while
speakeasies in every city provided alcohol illegally. Organized crime controlled the distribution of
alcohol in major American cities, and gangsters such as Al Capone made a fortune while law
enforcement officials often looked the other way. Capones income in 1927 was reportedly over $1
million, while the average Americans income was below $2,500. Prohibition fueled much debate
within the United States until its repeal in 1933.
itself through jazz, an improvisational and spontaneous musical form derived in part from slave songs
and African spirituals. Jazz first emerged in the early 1900s in New Orleans then spread to Chicago,
New York City, and elsewhere. The 1920s is often called the Jazz Age because jazz flourished and
gained widespread appeal during the decade. The improvisational character of the music was often
associated with the loose morals and relaxed social codes of the time. Among the famous jazz
performers of the period were Louis Armstrong, Bessie Smith, and Duke Ellington.
The flowering of black literature in the Northeast, especially in Harlem in New York City, was known as
the Harlem Renaissance. Black artists explored the African American perspective through poetry
and novels. One of the most famous authors of the time was the poet Langston Hughes, who published
The Weary Blues, in 1926. Harlem was the site of social activity as well as intellectual activity, as
prominent and wealthy blacks hosted extravagant gatherings for Harlem Renaissance figures.
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for being too radical. In 1923, Marcus Garvey was found
guilty of fraud, and in 1927 he was deported to Jamaica. The UNIA could not survive without his
leadership, but it left an important legacy as a prominent African American mass movement.
The NAACP was a more conservative force for social reform. Led by W.E.B. Du Bois, the NAACP
called for integration and equal treatment for blacks. In part because of the migration of blacks
northward during World War I, membership in the NAACP grew markedly during the early 1920s. Still,
lynchings continued in the South, and racist Americans gained influence through organizations such as
the Ku Klux Klan.
The Crash
During the Roaring Twenties, the United States basked in unprecedented prosperity. Levels of
investment, often speculative investments, grew to new heights. The economy, however, could not
support such unchecked growth. On Thursday, October 24, 1929, dubbed Black Thursday, the stock
market crashed. When trading closed, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had fallen 9 percent. Despite
the crash, reports remained optimistic. New York banks united to buy up $30 million worth of stock in
efforts to stabilize the market, and President Herbert Hoover announced that recovery was expected.
But the situation only became bleaker during the next week. On October 29, known as Black Tuesday,
the Dow dropped over 17 percent, confirming the permanency of the crash. By mid-November, market
losses topped $30 billion.
Hoovers Response
During the first few months of the Depression, Herbert Hoover was optimistic about the prospects of
recovery, believing that the economy would rebound by itself. But, as the Depression continued into
1930, he was forced to take action.
Hoovers most notable foray into trade regulation was his advocacy of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff in
1930. The tariff was designed to protect the nations farmers but did not have its intended effect: it hurt
farmers more than it helped them and further intensified the national depression. Other steps that
Hoover took to help farmers included overseeing the activity of the Federal Farm Board, which
administered loans to farmers, and creating the Grain Stabilization Corporation, which bought wheat at
high prices in attempts to drive prices up.
Hoovers principal attempts to address the Depressions effects on agriculture included the SmootHawley Tariff and the Grain Stabilization Corporation.
To help businesses, Hoover authorized $2 billion in funding for the creation of the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation (RFC). The RFC was intended to loan money to large, stable institutions such
as banks, railroads, and insurance firms. The RFC authorized almost $2 billion in loans in 1932. In July
1932, Hoover authorized the RFC to spend an additional $2 billion on state and local public works
projects. These actions, however, were largely ineffective at countering the Depression.
To spur business recovery, Hoover created the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which loaned
money to companies attempting to rebuild after the market crash. It did little to help the market
recover.
The onset of the Great Depression left many Americans without jobs, without homes, and without
hope. In an effort to address these problems, Hoover established the Emergency Committee for
Employment in 1930 to coordinate the efforts of private agencies to provide unemployment relief but
granted the committee limited resources. He remained firmly opposed to the use of federal funds for
public works programs, preferring private charity to public relief.
But Hoovers efforts did little to spur the economy or redress unemployment. The consummate symbol
of Hoovers failure was the Hooverville. Hoovervilles, or communities of homeless Americans living
in shanties and makeshift shacks, sprang up around many U.S. cities and served as stark reminders of
the Depressions terrible toll.
Conservation Corps (CCC), a program to employ the destitute in conservation and other
productive work.
May 12 saw the passage of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, creating the Agricultural
Adjustment Administration (AAA) to manage federal aid to farmers and control
production. The AAA controlled the production of crops, and thus prices, by offering subsidies
to farmers who produced under set quotas. The same day, the Federal Emergency Relief
Act (FERA) was passed, appropriating $500 million to support state and local treasuries that
had run dry.
On May 18 a bill was passed creating the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), a plan to
develop energy production sites and conserve resources in the Tennessee Valley.
On May 27, the Federal Securities Act was passed in efforts to improve corporate honesty
about stocks and other securities, prefacing the creation of the Securities Exchange Commission
(SEC) in 1934.
On June 16, the National Industrial Recovery Act was passed, creating the National Recovery
Administration (NRA) to manage the recovery of industry and finance. The NRA established
regulations for fair competition that bound industry during the entire New Deal. The National
Industrial Recovery Act also created the Public Works Administration (PWA), which spent
over $4 million on projects designed to employ the jobless and infuse the economy with money.
June 16 also saw the passage of the Banking Act of 1933, creating the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to back individuals bank deposits with federal funds.
After June 16, Congress recessed, officially ending the first hundred days of reform which created the
framework for heavy government involvement to help bring the U.S. out of the Depression.
FDRs first hundred days in office saw unprecedented government intervention in the economy,
industry, and agriculture. Democrats in Congress, at FDRs behest, passed measures creating a
massive structure of agencies under executive control.
Legislation and Agencies of the First New Deal
Emergency Banking Relief Act
employed more than two million young men from 1933 to 1941
employed jobless men and women from all fields (industrial workers, artists,
teachers)
Another source of criticism was the conservative American Liberty League, composed of elites who
claimed that the New Deal restricted democratically guaranteed freedoms to earn and save money and
acquire property. Other challenges to the New Deal arose from those appealing to the discontented
lower and middle classes, including Father Charles Coughlin and Huey Long, who argued that the
New Deal was not going far enough in alleviating poverty. The most famous political opposition
movement of the Great Depression years, Longs Share Our Wealth program pressed for far greater
income redistribution and benefits for the poor.
These challenges passed, at least in part, with the midterm elections of 1934. Despite a vocal minority
of dissenters, FDR remained a popular president because of his efforts at relief, his charismatic
leadership, and his connection with the citizens symbolized by his frequent fireside chatsradio
broadcasts that he used to rally the support of the people and to offer assurances of economic recovery.
FDRs popularity and public confidence in the New Deal resulted in a resounding approval of the
Democratic program in the elections of 1934. Democrats gained seats in both the House and Senate.
Labor. Black Americans, as the group most devastated by unemployment, had benefited extensively
from New Deal measures. Black support gradually shifted toward FDR and the Democratic Party away
from Republican Party, which had consistently won the black vote since the late 1800s (remember that
Lincoln and those in Congress favoring emancipation had been Republican).
The election of 1936 saw the rise of a new Democratic coalition, including farmers, urban workers,
women, and blacks. This coalition helped FDR win the 1936 election by a landslide.
FDRs presidency and the New Deal thus brought about a realignment of the Democratic and
Republican parties. As Democrats won the support of blacks, urban workers, and farmers, they lost the
support of the white South, a traditional Democratic stronghold. The Republican Party, meanwhile, lost
its long-held black vote.
Legislation and Agencies of the Second New Deal
Resettlement Administration
employed workers of all fields, from industry to art (the PWA became a
subdivision of the WPA)
created social security, or benefits for the elderly and the disabled
Revenue Act
raised personal income taxes for those in the highest tax bracket
emerged as an important American writer, examining southern life in novels such as A Light in August,
published in 1932, and Absalom! Absalom!, published in 1936.
Disillusioned with capitalism, many intellectuals and writersincluding Langston Hughes, John Dos
Passos, and Ernest Hemingwayformed allegiances, direct and indirect, to the Communist Party.
Along with other intellectuals, these writers joined the Popular Front, a political group active in
aiding the leftist forces in the Spanish Civil War against fascist powers. Hemingways 1940 novel, For
Whom the Bell Tolls, portrays the life of an American soldier fighting in the Spanish Civil War against a
fascist dictatorship.
antiwar sentiments ran high. A series of Neutrality Acts, passed between 1935 and 1937, reflected
these isolationist currents. The acts made arms sales to warring countries illegal and forbade American
citizens to travel aboard the ships of belligerent nations. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt
supported the neutrality acts only half-heartedly but found it impossible to fight the will of the majority
and urge U.S. involvement in international affairs. FDR did succeed in helping to defeat the 1938
proposal for a constitutional amendment, the Ludlow Amendment, which would have required a
national referendum on any declaration of war not sparked by a direct attack.
American isolationism before World War II led to the passage of a series of Neutrality Acts between
1935 and 1937, and to the proposal for a constitutional amendment requiring a national referendum
on any declaration of war not provoked by direct attack.
In this atmosphere of isolationism, American response to the rise of fascist states in Germany and Italy
was limited and weak. During most of the 1930s, few Americans saw Adolph Hitler and Benito
Mussolini as dangerous. FDR urged negotiations with Hitler, but never openly advocated military
action before the late 1930s. He suggested a plan to quarantine the aggressor nations in Europe in
1937, but the plan received little public support.
The only sign of wavering in Americas isolationism during the early and mid-1930s was its
involvement in China. In 1931, Japan invaded the Chinese province of Manchuria and in 1937 began
launching attacks on the remainder of China as part of its aim to build an Asian empire. Alarmed that
Japans aggressive expansionism might threaten U.S. holdings in the Pacific, if not the U.S. itself, the
U.S. refused to recognize the Japanese government in Manchuria. In 1937, the U.S. extended loans to
China and urged a boycott of Japanese silk.
Waning Isolationism
American public opinion began to turn against the fascist powers during the late 1930s, mostly in
response to the publicized brutality of Hitlers Nazis toward German Jews and other groups.
Nonetheless, many Americans continued to push for neutrality and for immigration restriction, in part
because roughly 60,000 Jewish refugees fled to the U.S. between 1933 and 1938.
In early 1939, FDR asked Congress to appropriate funds for a military buildup and an increased
production of military material. In September 1939, FDR succeeded in pushing Congress to revise the
Neutrality Acts to allow warring nations to purchase arms from the U.S. as long as they paid in cash
and carried the arms away on their own ships. This cash-and-carry provision appealed to a nation
that was increasingly committed to aiding the Allied war effort but did not want to get directly
involved.
Opposition to war continued to fade as Hitlers troops invaded and conquered Denmark and Norway in
April 1940, Belgium and the Netherlands in May, and France in June, followed by the Battle of
Britain throughout the summer and fall, in which German planes bombed British cities.
Early support for the Allies could be seen in the cash-and-carry policy, which allowed warring
nations to purchase American arms only if they paid in cash and carried the arms away on their own
ships.
In this atmosphere of growing alarm, FDR decided to run for an unprecedented third term in office.
(George Washington had established the convention that no president serve more than two terms in
office, which every president until FDR had followed.) During his 1940 campaign, Roosevelt appointed
a Council of National Defense to oversee defense production, appointed Republican Henry Stimson
secretary of war, and approved a peacetime draft by signing the Selective Service and Training
Act. Although he approved the draft, FDR pledged never to send an American boy to fight in a
European war. Isolationists opposed to FDRs reelection sponsored the Committee to Defend
America First, urging neutrality and claiming that the U.S. could stand alone regardless of Hitlers
advances in Europe. FDR won reelection in spite of the committees efforts.
tracking German submarines and warning the British of their location, and by convoying British ships
carrying lend-lease suppliesthat is, surrounding British ships with U.S. Navy vessels ordered to attack
any menacing vessel.
In August 1941, FDR met with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill on a British ship off
Newfoundland. The two discussed military strategy and issued the Atlantic Charter, which outlined
their ideal postwar world: among other provisions, it called for disarmament and freedom of the seas.
In response to a German attack against a U.S. destroyer, Roosevelt issued the shoot-on-sight order
in September 1941, which authorized American naval patrols to fire on all Axis ships found between the
U.S. and Iceland. After American destroyers were twice attacked in October, Congress authorized the
arming of merchant ships.
The final provocation for American entry into the war came from Japan, which had joined the RomeBerlin-Tokyo Axis in September 1940 by signing the Tripartite Pact. Japans desires to build an East
Asian empire had alarmed the U.S. since Japans invasion of China in 1931. In September 1940,
Japanese forces continued their invasion into French Indochina. The U.S. responded to this invasion as
it had to other invasions in the past: it added items to a lengthy list of embargoed Japanese goods, and
eventually froze all trade with Japan. In 1941, U.S. intelligence became aware of plans for a Japanese
attack and sent out warnings to commanders of U.S. bases in the Pacific, but most American officials
did not believe that the threat was immediate. These officials were proved wrong on December 7, 1941,
when, in an attempt to destroy American sea power in the Pacific, Japanese planes bombed the U.S.
base at Pearl Harbor. The Japanese destroyed nearly 200 aircraft, eight battleships, three cruisers,
and three destroyers. Almost 2,400 Americans died. On December 8, the Senate voted unanimously in
favor of FDRs request for a declaration of war on Japan. The House passed the declaration over only
one dissenting vote. On December 11, Germany and Italy joined Japan in war against the U.S.
The Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, and the U.S. declared war against Japan
on December 8. On December 11, Germany and Italy declared war on the U.S., completing the entry
of the U.S. into World War II.
On January 1, 1942, representatives of 26 nations signed the Declaration of the United Nations,
pledging support for the Atlantic Charter and vowing not to make separate peace agreements with the
Axis powers.
Boosting Production
The U.S. mobilized industry to assist in the war effort. The War Production Board, created in 1942,
oversaw the production of thousands of planes, tanks, and artillery pieces required for the war. The
War Production Board allocated scarce resources and offered incentives for civilian firms to produce
military goods. The last civilian car was produced in the U.S. in 1942, after which plants were
redesigned to produce tanks, planes, weapons, and munitions. By the end of the war, the U.S. had built
about 300,000 aircraft, 85,000 tanks, 375,000 artillery pieces, 2.5 million machine guns, and 90,000
sea shipsmore war material than the four Axis powers, combined, had produced. This feat was
accomplished through substantial investment of capital and the development of new, highly efficient
manufacturing techniques.
During World War II, American industry shifted from producing civilian goods to military goods
under the supervision of the War Production Board. Due to this shift in production, heavy
investment, and new, efficient techniques, the U.S. produced more war material than all of the Axis
powers combined.
War Economy
The federal budget multiplied tenfold between 1940 and 1945. U.S. expenditures during World War II
totaled nearly twice the amount spent by the U.S. government in its previous 150 years of existence.
Spending on war production precipitated a shift in American income distribution, with the share of
national income allocated to the richest Americans decreasing and that allocated to the middle class
doubling. The Revenue Act of 1942, passed to help pay for the war, increased taxes for the wealthiest
Americans.
War spending, accompanied by the draft, ended the high rate of unemployment which had not
rebounded from from the Great Depression. Organized labor grew strong and wealthy during World
War II, with union membership growing by about 60 percent. Although most unions abided by a nostrike policy, unions secured new benefits (such as fewer hours and better health plans) for their
members, partially as a concession from the National War Labor Board, which limited wage
increases to avoid inflation. Union power suffered a setback when a series of coal miners strikes
provoked Congress to pass the Smith-Connolly War Labor Disputes Act in June 1943, which
limited the right to strike in key industries and allowed the president to take control of any firm beset
by strikes.
The Office of Price Administration waged a battle against inflation and the over-use of resources. The
OPA oversaw a rationing program designed to curb new purchases and conserve materials, in
particular gas, sugar, coffee, butter, and meat. The American people largely complied with these efforts
by forsaking many goodsfor example, implementing meatless Tuesdaysand by planting victory
gardens and conducting collection drives to gather materials for recycling. Another tactic aimed at
financing the war was the sale of war bonds.
The Office of Price Administration oversaw a rationing program with which most Americans
cooperated, giving up many goods and otherwise doing their part to support the war effort.
Japanese Internment
During World War II, the U.S. government rounded up more than 110,000 Japanese immigrants and
U.S.-born Japanese-Americans and sent them to relocation centers guarded by military police. Military
leaders, West Coast farmers, and others rationalized this policy as necessary to prevent acts of sabotage
and espionage in support of Japan. In 1942, FDR authorized this relocation in Executive Order 9066,
and in 1944 the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the order in Korematsu v. U.S. In
1988, Congress voted to pay reparations of $20,000 to every internee still living.
narrowest margin ever. Shortly after Roosevelts fourth term began, he died of a cerebral hemorrhage
in April 1945, leaving Truman to oversee the war effort.
Nagasaki, killing 40,000 and injuring 60,000. On August 14, 1945, Japan surrendered.
Atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and August 9, 1945, killing
more than 110,000 in the blasts and injuring many more who died soon thereafter. This destruction
prompted Japan to surrender on August 14, ending World War II.
Although Truman claimed the use of the atomic bombs was necessary to end the war quickly with
minimal loss of American life, his motives have been questioned. Some believe racism inspired the
bombs use, and some claim that Truman could have forced Japans surrender simply by demonstrating
the bombs effect on an abandoned island. Others argue that the bombs were used mainly to intimidate
Joseph Stalin and to prevent the Soviet Union, which declared war on Japan on August 8, 1945, from
claiming a share in victory over Japan. Truman would thereby gain a diplomatic edge over the
communist Soviets.
Another element of the postwar settlement in Asia was the division of Korea at the thirty-eighth
parallel, an agreement reached between the Soviet Union and the U.S. shortly before the end of the war
as part of the Japanese surrender. The Soviets occupied North Korea and the U.S. occupied South
Korea, each supporting governments antagonistic toward each other. This antagonism would erupt in
the Korean War in 1950.
In September 1949, the USSR detonated its first atomic bomb. This development, combined with the
establishment of a communist regime in China, inspired a new and fiercer anticommunism in the U.S.
government, expressed in its decision to more than triple the defense budget and to mount a furious
campaign to develop a hydrogen bomb. The drive for the hydrogen bomb succeeded in the November
1952 detonation of an H-bomb in the Marshall Islands. But the American advantage was short-lived. In
July 1953, the Russians detonated their own H-bomb.
The Cold War conflict in Asia erupted into outright war in June 1950, when troops from Sovietsupported North Korea invaded South Korea. Without asking for a declaration of war, Truman
committed U.S. troops as part of a United Nations police action. In actuality, the Korean War was
carried out by predominantly American forces under the command of General Douglas MacArthur.
By late September, MacArthurs troops had forced the North Koreans back past the thirty-eighth
parallel, the dividing line between North and South Korea. Truman authorized an offensive drive across
this divide and toward China, but MacArthur was repelled by Chinese forces in November. Fighting
stabilized around the previous border, and in the spring of 1951 Truman sought to scale back the war
effort and negotiate peace, despite MacArthurs proposals for bombing attacks north of the Yalu River
in China. After a month of publicly denouncing the administrations policy of restraint, MacArthur was
relieved from duty in April 1951. Limited fighting would continue until June 1953, when an armistice
restored the prewar border between North and South. U.S. forces had lost almost 55,000 lives.
promote stability.
The Eisenhower Doctrine, elucidated after the Suez Canal crisis, committed the U.S. to military
involvement in the Middle East when necessary to counter communist advances.
Investigating Loyalty
The American Communist Party had peaked in strength during World War II and had been linked to
covert operations designed to aid the Soviet Union. Such espionage was known to have involved
individuals within the federal government. In March 1947, Truman issued an executive order
establishing the Federal Employee Loyalty Program, which became so powerful that it often abridged
the rights of officials in its search for disloyalty. Employees who criticized American policy were subject
to humiliating investigations. By 1956, this program had led to more than 2,500 dismissals and 12,000
resignations from official posts.
As Cold War fears grew, much of the nation became convinced that communists within the country
were working on a large scale to subvert the American government. Thirty-nine states passed
antisubversion laws and loyalty programs. Any criticism of the government was likely to meet with
investigation and denouncement. In 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee
(HUAC) led a series of highly publicized hearings, in which witnesses were forced into confessions, or,
if they refused to confess, faced restrictions of their rights. HUAC attacked a number of prominent
screenwriters and directors, prompting Hollywood to establish an unofficial blacklist that prevented
any questionable individuals from getting work. During the presidential campaign of 1948, Truman
sought to demonstrate his stance against communism by prosecuting eleven leaders of the Communist
Party under the 1940 Smith Act, which prohibited any conspiracy from overthrowing the government.
Unions shrank from public action lest they be labeled communist. The Communist Party itself began to
fade in strength, with membership falling to about 25,000. But some government officials nevertheless
asserted that the communist threat was everywhere.
McCarthyism
Anticommunism reached its peak in the U.S. with the rise of McCarthyism. In 1950, Senator Joseph
McCarthy claimed to have a list of 205 people known to be members of the Communist Party who were
still working in the State Department. McCarthy continued to make such speeches, though he reduced
the number of names on his list and modified the allegations to merely bad risks. Although a Senate
committee called these accusations a hoax, McCarthy continued his rhetoric. Republicans in the Senate
soon came to support McCarthy, if only for the political benefits to be gained from attacks on liberals.
McCarthys appeal grew steadily throughout the nation, until the Democrats feared that to oppose him
would mean certain humiliation and charges of disloyalty. In 1950, in the spirit of McCarthyism,
Congress passed the McCarran Internal Security Act, which stated that organizations the attorney
general deemed communist had to register with the Department of Justice and provide member lists
and financial statements. The act also barred communists from working in defense plants, and allowed
the government to deport any alien suspected of subversion.
The anticommunism of the late 1940s and early 1950s took its most radical form in McCarthyism.
Joseph McCarthy led an anticommunist witch-hunt designed to root out subversive elements in
American government and society.
In 1954, at the height of his powers, McCarthy accused the military of being a haven for spies. The army
countered by accusing McCarthy of using his power to secure preferential treatment for a member of
his staff who had been drafted. In televised congressional hearings on these matters, McCarthy behaved
poorlyhe appeared aggressive and bullyingand thereby turned public opinion against him. The
Senate voted to censure McCarthy in December 1954, with support from Eisenhower. The fall of
McCarthy lessened the fervor of anticommunism, though it did not wipe out fears of subversion.
corporate-oriented course for his administration, staffing his cabinet largely with business executives.
He was determined to work with the Democratic Party rather than against it and at times opposed
proposals made by more conservative members of his own party. Ike, as Eisenhower was known,
advocated a strong effort by the government to stimulate the economy. Faced with economic
depressions in 1953 and 1957, he went against the tendency of his party by increasing spending rather
than trying to maintain a balanced budget. He cooperated with the Democratic Congress in expanding
Social Security benefits and raising the minimum wage. In 1956, Eisenhower supported the Interstate
Highway Act, the most expensive public works program in American history. His success in boosting
prosperity and pleasing many different factions while keeping the U.S. out of war resulted in his
landslide victory in the election of 1956.
segregation and discrimination, King and other black ministers established the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC) in 1957. The SCLC soon found an ally in the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which formed after a number of sit-ins at businesses that
discriminated against blacks.
The civil rights movement gained strength by employing the doctrine of nonviolent civil disobedience
during the 1950s. Led by Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
southern blacks staged direct acts of defiance against segregation
to about 180 million during the 1950s. The baby boom, as this explosion was called, was a product of
and a cause for conservative family valuesespecially about the place of women in American society.
Dr. Benjamin Spock, author of the wildly successful Baby and Child Care (1946), suggested that
mothers devote themselves to the full-time care of their children. Popular culture depicted marriage
and feminine domesticity as a primary goal for American women, and the education system reinforced
this portrayal. This revival of domesticity as a social value was accompanied by a revival of religion.
Religious messages began to creep into popular culture as religious leaders became famous faces. It was
during the 1950s that Congress added the words under God to the Pledge of Allegiance.
national security affairs, and the presidents brother Robert Kennedy filled the post of attorney general.
JFK carefully crafted his image as a young, intelligent, and vibrant leader.
Despite JFKs reputation, he was unable to push much reform through Congress, where he faced an
opposing coalition of Republicans and southern Democrats. After a string of early legislative failures,
Kennedy backed off from his reform program. His plans for increased federal aid to education, urban
renewal, and government-provided medical care went unrealized. Kennedys primary achievements at
home were the raising of the minimum wage and the 1961 establishment of the Peace Corps, a
program created to send volunteer teachers, health workers, and engineers to Third World countries.
Despite JFKs image as a dynamic and successful leader, he was unable to push his plans for social
welfare reform through Congress, where he faced an opposing coalition of Republicans and southern
Democrats.
An important aspect of JFKs domestic record arose near the end of his time as president. Rachel
Carsons publication of Silent Spring in 1962, which exposed the environmental hazards of the
pesticide DDT, touched off a broad movement to push environmental measures through Congress. In
1963, this effort spurred the passage of the Clean Air Act to regulate factory and automobile emissions.
This act, along with the 1960 Clean Water Act, marked the beginning of a period during which the
federal government became increasingly invested in environmental matters.
On November 22, 1963, JFKs presidency abruptly ended when he was assassinated by Lee Harvey
Oswald in Dallas, Texas. Kennedys vice president, Lyndon B. Johnson, was sworn in as president
aboard Air Force One.
interracial marriage unconstitutional. That same year, Thurgood Marshall was appointed to the
Supreme Court, making him the first African American to receive such an honor.
After Malcolm Xs death, the mantle of Black Power was carried on by Stokely Carmichael, the
leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee who came to reject nonviolence in favor of
violent resistance. In 1966, Carmichaels influence led to the founding of the Black Panthers by Huey
Newton and Bobby Seale. The Panthers carried firearms and at times engaged in violent confrontations
with police.
The slogan Black Power, however, did not apply exclusively to radical groups such as the Black
Panthers; it also applied to more moderate groups who worked to reaffirm black culture as distinct
from white culture and equally valuable. Off-shoots of the Black Power movement included Native
American Power and Chicano Power, movements that sought to assert the value of ethnic heritage
and to counter oppression from mainstream white society.
Assassination
On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr., the most prominent black leader of his era, was shot and
killed in Memphis, Tennessee, by white racist James Earl Ray. Blacks responded by taking to the
streets in anger in more than 100 U.S. cities, causing enormous property damage and social chaos. The
riots led to 46 deaths, over 3,000 injuries, and 27,000 arrests. The effect of Kings death on the civil
rights movement and on America cannot be measured.
South Vietnam, concerned Kennedy from the very beginning of his presidency. He believed in
Eisenhowers domino theory, which held that when one nation fell under Soviet domination,
others in the region would soon follow. In efforts to stave off communist advances, Kennedy boosted
the number of U.S. forces in South Vietnam to 16,000 by 1963. These forces aimed to protect the South
Vietnamese from the pro-communist National Liberation Front, called the Vietcong.
Less than a month later, JFK was assassinated and Lyndon Johnson took over the presidency and the
oversight of American operations in Vietnam. In August 1964, two American destroyers allegedly
clashed with North Vietnamese patrol boats in the Gulf of Tonkin, off North Vietnam. Johnson
announced that Americans had been attacked without cause and ordered air strikes. Congress passed
the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution in August 1964, which authorized the escalation of American troops
involvement in Vietnam. Nearly equivalent to a declaration of war, this resolution allowed Johnson to
act as he saw fit in Vietnam. In 1965, Johnson ordered Operation Rolling Thunder, which launched
continuous bombing of North Vietnam. This plan, however, failed to force North Vietnam to negotiate,
and did not stop the flow of soldiers and supplies to communist forces in the South.
Since bombing was ineffective, Johnson decided in March 1965 to commit ground forces to the
struggle. By the end of 1967, nearly 500,000 U.S. troops were stationed in Vietnam. The enemy these
soldiers facedthe North Vietnamese Army and the Vietcongused guerrilla tactics and were well
supplied, well reinforced, and determined to fight until U.S. forces left Vietnam.
The haphazard guerrilla warfare provided little measurable indication of failure or success, and the
American public gauged victories from casualty rates. In January 1968, the North Vietnamese Army
and the Vietcong launched a massive offensive, known as the Tet Offensive. Though American troops
repelled the offensive after about a month of fighting, many thousands of Americans were killed, and
the enemy managed to breach many areas thought to be secure. The American public began to believe
that victory in Vietnam was impossible. The growing antiwar movement gained immense strength and
support, and Johnsons approval ratings plummeted. During the 1968 presidential campaign, Johnson
halted the sustained bombing of North Vietnam and announced that he would not seek reelection. The
increasingly unpopular war would be placed in the hands of his successor.
The Tet Offensive was a major turning point in the Vietnam War. Though a tactical defeat for the
pro-communist forces, thousands of American deaths and the scope of the offensive convinced many
Americans of the impossibility of victory.
Society (SDS), a group founded in 1962. The SDS aimed to create a New Left in the U.S. in order to
mobilize support for leftist goals throughout the nation. Students sat-in, marched, and rallied to end
mandatory ROTC programs, halt military research, address racism, and, most prominently, to express
their disgust with the Vietnam War. The antiwar cause inspired huge rallies, draft-card burning, and
harassment of anyone connected to the military.
Notable student protests included a mass demonstration at Columbia University in the spring of 1968,
which resulted in a temporary shutdown of the school, and the fall 1969 March Against Death, in
which about 300,000 people marched in a long, circling path through Washington, D.C., for 40 hours
straight, each holding a candle and the name of a soldier killed or a village destroyed in Vietnam.
The youth movement began to fade following a series of violent crackdowns on protesters. In the most
infamous, on May 4, 1970, students at Kent State University in Ohio who were protesting Richard
Nixons expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia were met by armed National Guardsmen and
inundated with tear gas. Then a panicking troop of guardsmen fired into the crowd, killing four and
wounding nine; two of the dead had not even been a part of the demonstration. Events like this sapped
the student movement of its zeal, and college campuses grew steadily quieter.
Womens Liberation
The feminist movement, which had grown somewhat dormant in the 1950s, reawakened in the U.S.
during the 1960s. The most prominent symbol of this resurgence was the 1963 publication of Betty
Friedans The Feminine Mystique, which urged women to break free from the domestic role and
seek something more. JFK created the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women, which
issued a report in 1963 detailing the inequalities between men and women in the American workforce.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited sexual as well as racial discrimination in hiring practices. The
National Organization for Women (NOW) formed in 1966 to lobby Congress, file lawsuits, and
publicize the feminist cause. By 1970, more than 40 percent of all women worked outside the home.
Spurred on by the publication of Betty Friedans The Feminist Mystique, the feminist movement
reawakened in the 1960s. Organizations like NOW pushed for change at the national level to promote
equality.
Many women involved in the liberation movement had gained experience in the antiwar or civil rights
movements and dedicated the same tactics to the feminist cause. They encouraged women to meet in
small groups to discuss their problems and met in larger groups to burn bras and beauty items seen as
demeaning. They founded health centers geared toward women and advocated abortion education. In
1970, the Womens Strike for Equality saw tens of thousands of women nationwide hold
demonstrations to demand the right to equal employment and legal abortions. Pro-choice activists
gained a major success in 1973, when the Supreme Court legalized abortion in the landmark decision
Roe v. Wade.
Watergate
Nixons presidency ended with the Watergate scandal. During the 1972 presidential campaign, Nixon
created the Committee to Re-elect the President (CREEP). In June 1972, burglarslater found to be
employed by CREEPwere caught breaking into Democratic National Committee headquarters in the
Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C., to plant bugs. A massive cover-up effort began, with
Nixon vowing that no one in his administration was involved in the break-in. Attempts to destroy
paperwork and bribe key individuals were gradually exposed, most prominently in a series of articles in
the Washington Post. Reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward unmasked the Nixon
administrations corruption and attempted cover-up, having received much of their information from
an unnamed informant known as Deep Throat. Top officials from Nixons administration resigned,
including Vice President Spiro Agnew.
In July 1974, the House Judiciary Committee adopted an article of impeachment charging Nixon with
obstructing justice. In August, Nixon turned over tapes of conversations proving his involvement in the
cover-up and resigned as president before impeachment proceedings began. Gerald Ford assumed
the presidency (Ford had been appointed vice president following Agnews resignation). Coming on the
heels of the Vietnam War, the Watergate scandal inflamed the American publics mistrust of the
national government.
Facing impeachment because of his involvement in the Watergate scandal cover-up, Nixon resigned
as president on August 9, 1974.
Reaganomics
Ronald Reagans economic program, dubbed Reaganomics, was founded on the belief that a
capitalist system free from taxation and government involvement would be most productive, and that
the prosperity of a rich upper class would trickle down to the poor. He pushed a three-year, 25
percent tax cut through Congress in 1981, as well as a $40 billion cut in federal spending on school
lunches, student loans, and public transportation, among other services.
To curb inflation, the Federal Reserve Board hiked interest rates in 1981, plunging the country into a
severe recession. Unemployment soared to 10 percent, and because of Reagans cut in social spending
the impoverished found themselves without social programs. Along with unemployment, trade and
federal deficits skyrocketed (the federal deficit rose because the government offset its cuts in social
spending with huge increases in military spending). Recession, however, gave way to a rebound in early
1983, when inflation stabilized and consumers began to spend in great amounts.
From 1983 to 1987, the economy boomed, spurred by speculation in the stock market. The bubble
burst, however, on October 19, 1987, when 20 percent of the stock markets value was lost, the largest
single-day decline in history. The crash exposed the economic problems concealed by the four boom
years: a high trade deficit and the widening gap between rich and poor. These problems were still
unresolved when the economy began to recover in 1988.
brink of economic collapse, hard-line Communists attempted to oust Mikhail Gorbachev to prevent the
collapse of the Soviet Union. Their efforts, however, were blocked by Boris Yeltsin, the president of
the new Russian federation, who led the drive to dissolve the USSR. Yeltsin and the leaders of the other
Soviet republics soon declared an end to the USSR, forcing Gorbachev to resign.
In November 1989, the Berlin Wall was torn down, symbolizing an end to the Cold War.
After the fall of the USSR, U.S. foreign relations radically transformed around the globe as the Bush
administration extended economic support to the former Soviet republics and revoked its support from
governments favored only for their opposition to leftist forces. China remained staunchly communist,
however, and relations with China soured in 1989 when the Chinese army violently crushed a prodemocracy protest in Tiananmen Square.
The Environment
One important area of George Bushs domestic policy was the environment. In March 1989, the Exxon
Valdez oil tanker ran aground, spilling over 10 million gallons of crude oil into the waters of Alaskas
Prince William Sound. The spill galvanized environmentalists and provoked a worldwide initiative to
clean up the environment. Bush cooperated with the Democratic Congress to pass the Clean Air Act in
1990. At other times, though, the Bush administration clashed with environmentalists, advocating
fossil-fuel extraction in Alaska, avoiding international environmental treaties, and even ridiculing
environmentalists.
Legislative Struggles
Bill Clinton struggled to push his domestic reform package through an antagonistic Congress, which
was controlled by conservatives after the midterm elections of 1994. His most notable failure came in
the realm of healthcare, when Congress blocked his efforts to create a national healthcare system.
Clinton did manage to push an anti-crime bill and a welfare reform bill through Congress, but both
were modified from his proposals and represented exceptions to the trend of his administrations
legislative defeats. Political divisiveness over the budget peaked in late 1995, when the Republican
Congress twice shut down the government because it could not agree on a budget. The shutdown hurt
the Republicans public image, however, and boosted Clintons. In this newly supportive atmosphere,
Clinton was able to revise the welfare system and increase the minimum wage.
Impeachment
Clinton was harangued throughout his first campaign for president and his time in office by
accusations and rumors of sexual misconduct. The accusations came to a head in August 1998, when
Clinton testified in front of a grand jury that he had not engaged in inappropriate sexual relations with
Monica Lewinsky, a White House intern. Later, he was forced to admit that he had. In December 1998,
the House of Representatives approved articles of impeachment for perjury and obstruction of justice.
Clinton became only the second president to be impeached, the first being Andrew Johnson in 1868. In
February 1999, the Senate defeated both articles of impeachment. Clinton remained in office, but the
scandal overshadowed the rest of his presidency. Many pundits believe that Clintons scandals helped
pave the way for the victory of Republican George W. Bush in the heavily disputed 2000 presidential
election.