Compare And Contrast The Goals Of The Progressive Movement

1913 Words4 Pages

Define Tenement Housing are apartments where a large group of people and families, typically poor and immigrants, live. Prohibition is the 18th amendment, the only one that has been repealed, that made selling, making, and buying alcohol illegal. Suffrage is the right to vote. A Women’s Sphere is a place or area, the home and kitchen, where it has been deemed acceptable for to be in charge and act like a woman. Progressives were people, typically educated middle class, who wanted to solve the problems of society, which included social justice, democracy, and anti monopoly, through the government’s power. Muckrakers were reporters that would investigate the problems of American society and expose them to the public. The Square Deal, with the three c’s of controlling corporations, consumer protection, and conservation of natural resources, was Roosevelt’s government program aimed at protecting the consumers and the everyday man from big businesses. Progressives: Describe. The goals of the Progressive Movement were to solve the problems created during the Gilded Age. This included social justice, democracy and politics, and big businesses. Progressives felt that people weren't being treated fairly by the government, and that the government was being controlled by big businesses. One of the main goals of the movement, however, was that the …show more content…

Carrie Chapman Catt and Alice Paul lead the Women's suffrage movement in the 1910s separately. Catt lead NAWSA, the National American Women’s Suffrage Association, and NWP, the National Women's Party. The early suffrage movement was focused on the black males getting to vote. Some women assumed that they would get to vote before they did. The movement tried to win people over state by state and by passing a Constitutional Amendment. In the 1910s, there were two different organizations fighting against each other, NAWSA trying to get votes state by state, and NWP trying to get votes through a Constitutional

Open Document