1 / 48

Populism & the Election of 1896

This article explores the challenges farmers faced in the 1880s, such as low crop prices, foreign competition, and high costs. It examines the Farmers' Alliances movement and the demand for unlimited coinage of silver. The article also discusses the formation of the Populist Party and the election of 1896.

laureenr
Download Presentation

Populism & the Election of 1896

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Populism & the Election of 1896

  2. CHALLENGES FACED BY FARMERS IN 1880s • (1) Prices of crops too low • (2) Foreign competition (Argentina, Australia, Canada) • (3) High costs: • Ex: mortgages; interest rates; railroad rates; insurance ; grain storage

  3. Price Indexes for Consumer & Farm Products: 1865-1913

  4. FARMERS’ REPONSES • 1876: started The Grange Movement • 1880s: Farmers’ Alliances movement • Hoped to gain strength from cooperative groups, ex: buying & selling in bulk (like Costco) • But not too effective b/c racism in Southern Alliance

  5. Founder of the National Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry (1867)

  6. United We Stand, Divided We Fall • In 1889 both the Northern andSouthern Alliancesmerged into one—the Farmers’ Alliance.

  7. Ocala Demands • Adopted by Alliance in Fla • Called for: • (1) Allowing farmers to store crops in gov’t warehouses in exchange for loans Would allow crop prices to rise as demand rose

  8. (2) Unlimited coinage of silver in 16:1 ratio (16 ounces of silver for every 1 ounce of gold that was coined) Gov’t had been using bimetallism(using 2 metals – gold and silver (“specie”or hard currency) – for coinage of money

  9. Why did farmers support unlimitedcoinage of silver ?

  10. Silver has lower value than gold • Thus, converting currency based more on silver cheapens the value of money, leading to inflation • Why did farmers want inflation?

  11. What happens if we convert currency based on a gold standard ? • Deflation results • ***Bottom line: • Gold standard hurts farmers • The more silver in the mix, the better for farmers

  12. Controversy over currency • In 1873, U.S. gov’t decided to end the coinage of silver money • Would keep US on gold std • Angered farmers who called it “Crime of '73” • Ocala Demands convinced gov’t to begin coining silver again thru passage of : • Bland-Allison Act (1878) & • Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890)

  13. Ocala Demands also called for: • Lower tariffs • New federally-regulated banking system • More gov’t regulation of RRs • Direct election of US Senators • Most of their proposals weren’t adopted during this time

  14. But led to farmers starting a 3rd political party, the Populist Party(or the People's Party) • WHY? • Farmers believed Northeast industrialists and bankers controlled 2 major parties • Sought to remedy abuses of big biz and to promote greater democracy

  15. The Populist (Peoples’) Party • Founded by James B. Weaverand Tom Watson. • Omaha, NE Convention in July,1892. • Got almost 1 million popularvotes. • Several Congressional seatswon. James B. Weaver, Presidential Candidate &James G. Field, VP

  16. In 1892, Populists adopted platform similar to Ocala • Demands, plus: • restrict immigration • better working conditions for city workers • govt ownership of RRs • a graduated income tax

  17. Platform of Lunacy

  18. 1892 Election

  19. Bi-Metallism Issue

  20. The Panic of 1893

  21. Here Lies Prosperity

  22. Coxey’s Army, 1894 • Jacob Coxey & his “Army of the Commonweal of Christ.” • March on Washington  “hayseed socialists!”

  23. Result of Election Returns • Populist voteincreased by40% in the bi-election year,1894. • Democratic party losses in the West werecatastrophic! • But, Republicanswon control of the House.

  24. The 1896 Election

  25. ELECTION OF 1896: BATTLE OF SILVER VS. GOLD, TURNING POINT FOR AMERICA WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN (D)– “The Great Commoner” WILLIAM MCKINLEY (R)– pro gold & big business

  26. Revivalist oratory style (Dem Party convention, Chicago 1896)

  27. Bryant’s famous“Cross of Gold” Speech “You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns; you shall not crucify mankind upon across of gold!”

  28. Bryan: The Farmer’s Friend(The Mint Ratio) 18,000 miles of campaign “whistle stops.”

  29. Democratic Party Taken Over by the Agrarian Left Platform  tariff reductions; income tax; strictercontrol of the trusts (esp. RRs); free silver.

  30. Populist Party as snake with Bryan’s head swallowing Dem Party donkey

  31. Republican Mark Hanna: The man behind McKinley’s “Front - Porch” Campaign

  32. Mark Hanna to Candidate McKinley

  33. “A Giant Straddle”: Suggestion for a McKinley Political Poster

  34. The Seasoned Politician vs. The “Young” Newcomer

  35. Into Which Box Will the Voterof ’96 Place His Ballot?

  36. 1896 Election Results

  37. Gold Triumphs Over Silver • 1900  GoldStandard Act • confirmed thenation’s commitment tothe gold standard. • A victory for the forces ofconservatism.

  38. The Wizard of Ozby L. Frank Baum

  39. Henry Littlefield’s “Thesis” (1964): Was it Political Allegory?

  40. Possible metaphors: • Tornado  ? • Dorothy  ? • Toto  ? • Kansas  ? • Wicked Witch of theEast  ? • Tin Woodsman  ? • Scarecrow  ? • Cowardly Lion  ? • Yellow Brick Road  ? • Silver Slippers  ? • Emerald City  ? • Oz  ? • The Wizard  ? • Munchkins  ? • Wicked Witch of the West  ? • Flying Monkeys  ?

  41. Cartoon from the popular “Puck” Magazine • Cyclone = metaphor for political revolution

  42. Book illustration: Political cartoon: Scarecrow/farmer shown in both as helpless, hung up in tree

  43. Mark Hanna as “wizard”(Rocky Mountain News)

  44. Heyday of Western Populism

  45. WHAT WAS IMPACT OF POPULIST PARTY? • Failed to achieve many of their goals • But still one of most successful & influential 3rd parties in U.S. history • **IMPORTANT: Many early Populist proposals later adopted by Progressive-era reformers after 1900

  46. How Populist Party ideas lived on into 20th C. • Graduated income tax  16th Amendment (1913) • Direct election of U.S. senators  17th Amendment (1913) • Gov’t regulation of telephone, telegraph & RRs (altho not ownership!) •  done by Pres. T. Roosevelt &Taft (1900-10s) • Banking reform done by Pres. Wilson (1914)

  47. Populist influence till ali today?

More Related