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Progressive Era Vocab

  • Women's Suffrage

    Women's Suffrage
    The right to vote for women, given by the 19th Amendment in 1920.
  • Social Gospel

    Social Gospel
    Protestant movement that applied Christian ethics to social problems, especially issues of social injustice such as economic inequality, poverty, alcoholism, crime, racial tensions, slums, unclean environment, child labor, inadequate labor unions, poor schools, and the danger of war.
  • Settlement Houses

    Settlement Houses
    Reformist social movement with the goal of getting the rich and poor to live more closely together in an interdependent community.
  • Chicago's Hull House

    Chicago's Hull House
    Hull House was a settlement house in the United States that was co-founded in 1889 by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr. Located on the Near West Side of Chicago, Illinois, Hull House (named after the original house's first owner Charles Jerald Hull) opened to recently arrived European immigrants.
  • Progressive Era

    Progressive Era
    Movement from the 1890s to 1920s to support widespread social activism and political reform across the United States. The main objectives were to eliminate problems caused by industrialization, urbanization, immigration, and political/economic corruption in government from the Gilded Age.
  • Muckrakers

    Muckrakers
    Journalists who attacked business and government leaders as corrupt in order to raise awareness of the many issues left over from the Gilded Age.
  • How the Other Half Lives

     How the Other Half Lives
    A publication by photojournalist Jacob Riis which documented the filthy living conditions in New York City tenements and slums in the 1800s.
  • The Jungle

    The Jungle
    1906 novel written by Upton Sinclair which portayed the harsh conditions and exploited lives of immigrants in Chicago but most readers were more concerned with his exposure of health violations and unsanitary practices in the American meatpacking industry. Sinclair famously said of the public reaction, “I aimed at the public’s heart, and by accident, I hit it in the stomach."
  • Pure Food and Drug Act

    Pure Food and Drug Act
    The first of a series of significant consumer protection laws enacted by Congress with the main purpose to ban foreign and interstate trade in contaminated or mislabeled food and drug products.
  • NAACP

    NAACP
    Civil Rights organization formed in 1909 to advance justice for African Americans (W.E.B. Du Bois)
  • Prohibition/Temperance

    Prohibition/Temperance
    The movement to ban the sale and consumption of alcohol, which went into effect with the 18th amendment in 1920.