The Politics of the Gilded Age
Unit 3 Class Notes- The Gilded Age The Politics of the Gilded Age The term “Gilded Age” was coined by Mark Twain in 1873 to describe the era in America following the Civil War; an era that from the outside looked to be a fantastic growth of wealth, power, opportunity, and technology. But under its gilded (plated in gold) surface, the second half of the nineteenth century contained a rotten core. In politics, business, labor, technology, agriculture, our continued conflict with Native Americans, immigration, and urbanization, the “Gilded Age” brought out the best and worst of the American experiment. While our nation’s population continued to grow, its civic health did not keep pace. The Civil War and Reconstruction led to waste, extravagance, speculation, and graft. The power of politicians and their political parties grew in direct proportion to their corruption. The Emergence of Political Machines- As cities experienced rapid urbanization, they were hampered by inefficient government. Political parties organized a new power structure to coordinate activities in cities. • *** British historian James Bryce described late nineteenth-century municipal government as “the one conspicuous failure of the United States.” • Political machines were the organized structure that controlled the activities of a political party in a city. o City Boss: § Controlled the political party throughout the city § Controlled access to city jobs and business licenses • Example: Roscoe Conkling, New York City o Built parks, sewer systems, and water works o Provided
[Show full text]