Effects Of The Progressive Movement

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Towards the end of the nineteenth century, the Progressive era was in full swing. Many reformers drew from social aspects such as segregation and prohibition to motivate the changes that later took place. As is with any country, views were divided amongst the citizens of the United States when it came to hot topic issues. As the Progressive movement picked up, many reformers became prominent for their stances, such as Booker T. Washington and W.E.B Du Bois with segregation and how African Americans and whites should live together. Overall, the fundamental differences between reformers and the issues they attempted to change through various means led to the Progressive movement leading to reforms of the problems affecting the United States. …show more content…

The Niagara Movement, founded by William Monroe Trotter and W.E.B Du Bois in 1905, had a mission to develop an aggressive way of fighting racial inequality. Du Bois believed that African Americans should fight for racial equality through violence and other means to prove their race as equal to the white people. Though an aggressive way of fighting racial inequality would be to combat the violence demonstrated towards the African Americans, such as the lynchings in the South, which were famously reported by Ida B. Wells, many African Americans disagreed and thought that the best course of action was to attempt to be peaceful with the white people. The Niagara Movement eventually led to the formation of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1909 as an outgrowth. The NAACP, rather than fighting the discrimination through violence, chose to fight the social and racial inequalities through legislation, court cases and protests. One reformer, Booker T. Washington, believed that African Americans should learn trades and work with the white people who were oppressing them rather than use violent tactics. Washington and Du Bois famously disagreed about the course of action which should be taken to ensure racial equality amongst whites and …show more content…

Thousands of people lived in slums and lived desperately below the poverty line in cities. A photographer, Jacob Riis, captured the devastating effects of the population by photographing and publishing “How the Other Half Lives”. From the publication of his book, nationwide attention was drawn to the shoddy living conditions in which thousands of people were living. The formation of settlement houses, most famously Jane Addams’s Hull House in Chicago, began to help those living in slums become more financially stable while learning community values. Many other reformers also arose during this time, including Margaret Sanger, who educated the urban poor about their benefits of family planning through birth control by establishing Planned Parenthood. Another famous reformer of the Progressive era is Booker T. Washington, a former slave who founded the Tuskegee Institute. The Tuskegee Institute focused on teaching African Americans trade skills to earn a living and gain the trust of a white society. Although W.E.B Du Bois, a founder of the Niagara Movement, later an outgrowth into the NAACP, originally believed that violence was a valid means of ensuring racial equality amongst African Americans and whites, he later focused on the need for a traditional liberal arts education in which African Americans could use their education to insist on equal treatment and rights from a

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