Gilded Age Vs Progressive Era

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Between the time of the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era in the United States, the mobilization of people and the communication of messages sent to the people changed. These changes led to many different movements throughout the country such as the creation of the American West Myth and the women’s push towards equality in all the states by gaining the right to vote. Both of these movements relied on the press’s manipulation of things and the effective use of photographs taken during the time and other printed material as well such as news articles, books, and speeches. In Alfred Bryan’s song called She’s Good Enough to be Your Baby’s Mother and She’s Good Enough to Vote with You, he addressed that men are not greater than women and …show more content…

According to Ida Harper, “ In this struggle, women handicapped by motherhood, domestic requirements and physical limitations, had not been able to keep pace with man, and, as the natural result, had become wholly subject to his laws, customs and commands.” Women were not seen as equal to men because society saw them to have limitations to hold them back, but that was not true at all. In my opinion, I think the women had to do a lot more than the men and did not get the credit they deserved at all. The right to vote should have been given to them because of all they do for men, without women our society would not grow. Some articles and media coverage on the women’s suffrage movement may state the opposite of what I believe, but a lot others will show my opinion is not that far …show more content…

“Buffalo Bill” Cody on May 19, 1883. William Cody was an American scout, who mastered buffalo hunting on the frontier, and later became a showman in the theater. Cody received the name Buffalo Bill after the American Civil War, when he killed thousands of American bison to supply the Kansas railroad workers with their meat. In 1869, he met Ned Buntline who published a story based on his adventures and a novel called; Buffalo Bill, King of the Bordermen, which helped lead to his world famous career as a western showman. With the creation of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West, Cody created the myth of the adventuresome and exciting wild western frontier. According to Paul Fees, “Cody gave the show a dramatic narrative structure.” The show traveled all around the United States and Europe attracted thousands of people daily to come out and watch it. Each show was about 3-4 hours and consisted of reenactments of many historical events with displays of showmanship and fictional ideas of what actually happened on the western

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