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  2. Important facts regarding the Progressive Era of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The era witnessed the embrace of a wide array of social and economic reforms, including women’s suffrage, the dismantling of business monopolies, the elimination of child labor, and the adoption of social welfare programs.

    • Overview
    • 1886
    • 1889
    • 1890
    • July 2, 1890
    • September 14, 1901
    • 1902–04
    • 1906
    • March 25, 1911
    • 1912

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    Samuel Gompers helps to establish the American Federation of Labor (AFL), one of many labor unions formed during the Progressive Era. Labor unions fight for safer working conditions and higher wages.

    Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr open Hull House, a settlement house in Chicago, Illinois, that provides social services to poor immigrants.

    Jacob Riis, a photojournalist, publishes How the Other Half Lives, a book of photographs showing the shocking living conditions and suffering of poor residents of New York City’s largely immigrant neighborhoods.

    Congress passes the Sherman Antitrust Act, the first legislation enacted by Congress to curb concentrations of power that interfere with trade and reduce economic competition. (“Trusts” are a kind of business monopoly.)

    Upon the assassination of U.S. President William McKinley, his vice president, Theodore Roosevelt, becomes president. Roosevelt takes office with progressive ideas and hopes to reform several arenas of American society.

    Ida Tarbell publishes “The History of the Standard Oil Company”, a series of investigative reports about the unethical business practices of one of the country’s biggest trusts.

    Food safety practices in the meat processing industry are brought to the public’s attention by muckrakers such as Upton Sinclair, whose book The Jungle (1906) outraged and disgusted people. This led Congress to pass legislation on June 30 to help regulate food safety, including the Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act, which passed on...

    The Triangle shirtwaist factory fire leads to the deaths of 146 workers, mostly young immigrant women, in an overcrowded and unsafe New York City clothing factory. The tragedy brings attention to the sweatshop conditions that many labor in.

    For the 1912 presidential election the Republican party decides to support the reelection of President William Howard Taft, causing progressive Republicans to form the Progressive Party as competition. With former president Theodore Roosevelt as its nominee, the party is also called the Bull Moose Party, a nod to Roosevelt’s perceived strength. The...

  3. The Progressive Era (1901–1929) was a period in the United States during the early 20th century of widespread social activism and political reform across the country.

  4. Jul 1, 2014 · The timeline history of the progressive reform societies, the crusading authors and important people and political events in the Progressive Era Timeline. Interesting facts via the Progressive Era Timeline with info on important Progressives are detailed below.

  5. List of some of the major causes and effects of the Progressive Era. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries progressive reformers in the United States made a comprehensive effort to address the problems that arose with the emergence of a modern urban and industrial society.

  6. Jul 1, 2014 · The Progressive Era was the period in the history of the United States that was dominated by reform ideals from 1890 - 1920. The Progressive Movement covered social reform issues relating to female suffrage, education, working conditions, unionization, the problems of urbanization, industrialization and child labor.

  7. The Progressive Era. The presidency of Theodore Roosevelt. Muckrakers. Progressivism.

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