
Theodore
Roosevelt on the campaign trail in Waterville, Maine,
1904. (The Gilder Lehrman Collection GLC06449.22)
The Square Deal: Theodore Roosevelt
and the Themes of Progressive Reform
by Kirsten Swinth
Progressivism arrived at a moment of crisis for the
United States. As the nineteenth century came to a close,
just decades after the Civil War, many feared the nation
faced another explosive and violent conflict, this time
between the forces of industrial capitalism and militant
workers. Armed conflict between workers and government
and private militias broke out repeatedly. The great
railroad strike of 1877 triggered armed confrontation;
the 1892 strike at Andrew Carnegie’s Homestead,
Pennsylvania steel plant included a bloody battle; and
just two years later, the strike at Pullman Palace Car
Company brought army troops into a violent clash with
workers on the streets of Chicago on the Fourth of July.
In the same period, cyclical economic downturns spawned
massive protests, including marches by millions of largely
rural farmers drawn into the populist movement. Citizens
even marched on Washington as workers unemployed in
the depression of 1893-94 formed “industrial armies”
to demand relief. To increasing numbers of Americans,
something seemed dreadfully wrong.
These economic and social crises stemmed from the rise
of industrial capitalism, which had transformed America
between the Civil War and 1900. By the turn of the century,
American factories produced one-third of the world’s
goods. Several factors made this achievement possible:
unprecedented scale in manufacturing, technological
innovation, a transportation revolution, ever-greater
efficiency in production, the birth of the modern corporation,
and the development of a host of new consumer products.
Standard Oil, Nabisco, Kodak, General Electric, and
Quaker Oats were among those companies and products
to become familiar household words. Many negative consequences
accompanied this change. Cities, polluted and overcrowded,
became breeding grounds for diseases like typhoid and
cholera. A new unskilled industrial laboring class,
including a large pool of child labor, faced low wages,
chronic unemployment, and on-the-job hazards. Business
owners didn’t mark high voltage wires, locked
fire doors, and allowed toxic fumes to be emitted in
factories. It was cheaper for manufacturers to let workers
be injured or die than to improve safety–so they
often did. Farmers were at the mercy of railroad trusts,
which set transport rates that squeezed already indebted
rural residents. Economic growth occurred without regard
to its costs to people, communities, or the environment.
Many were appalled. Even middle-class Americans became
outraged as the gap widened between the working and
middle ranks of society, and wealthy capitalists smugly
asserted their superiority. A new class of muckraking
journalists fed this outrage with stunning exposés
of business exploitation and corruption of government
officials. Lincoln Steffens’s 1902 The Shame
of the Cities, for example, demonstrated the graft
dominating politics in American urban centers. To many,
such a society violated America’s fundamental
principles and promises. Progressivism emerged out of
that dismay and a desire to fix what many saw as a broken
system.
Progressivism emerged in many different locations, from
1890 to 1917, and had varied emphases. Sometimes it
had a social justice emphasis with a focus on economic
and social inequality. At other times an economic and
political emphasis dominated, with primary interest
in moderate regulation to curtail the excesses of Gilded
Age capitalists and politicians. It was, in short, a
movement that is very difficult to chart. Historians
most conventionally trace its movement from local initiatives
through to the state and national levels. But it is
potentially more useful to think of progressivism as
falling under three broad areas of reform: efforts to
make government cleaner, less corrupt, and more democratic;
attempts to ameliorate the effects of industrialization;
and efforts to rein in corporate power.
Despite their anxieties about the problems in all three
areas, progressives accepted the new modern order. They
did not seek to turn back the clock, or to return to
a world of smaller businesses and agrarian idealism.
Nor, as a general rule, did they aim to dismantle big
business. Rather, they wished to regulate industry and
mitigate the effects of capitalism on behalf of the
public good. To secure the public good, they looked
to an expanded role for the government at the local,
state, as well as national levels. Theodore Roosevelt
declared in a 1910 speech that the government should
be “the steward of the public welfare.”
Progressivism was a reform movement that, through a
shifting alliance of activists, eased the most devastating
effects of industrial capitalism on individuals and
communities. Except in its most extreme wing, it did
not repudiate big business, but used the power of the
state to regulate its impact on society, politics, and
the economy.
These progressive reformers came from diverse backgrounds,
often working together in temporary alliances, or even
at cross-purposes. Participants ranged from well-heeled
men’s club members seeking to clean up government
corruption to radical activists crusading against capitalism
altogether. They swept up in their midst cadres of women,
many of them among the first generation of female college
graduates, but others came from the new ranks of young
factory workers and shop girls. Immigrant leaders, urban
political bosses, and union organizers were also all
drawn into reform projects.
Still, some common ground existed among progressives.
They generally believed strongly in the power of rational
science and technical expertise. They put much store
by the new modern social sciences of sociology and economics
and believed that by applying technical expertise, solutions
to urban and industrial problems could be found. Matching
their faith in technocrats was their distrust for traditional
party politicians. Interest groups became an important
vehicle for progressive reform advocacy. Progressives
also shared the belief that it was a government responsibility
to address social problems and regulate the economy.
They transformed American attitudes toward government,
parting with the view that the state should be as small
as possible, a view that gained prominence in the post
Civil War era. Twentieth-century understandings of the
government as a necessary force mediating among diverse
group interests developed in the Progressive Era. Finally,
progressives had in common an internationalist perspective,
with reform ideas flowing freely across national borders.
To address the first major area—corrupt urban
politics—some progressive reformers tried to undercut
powerful political machines. “Good government”
advocates sought to restructure municipal governments
so that parties had little influence. The National Municipal
League, which had Teddy Roosevelt among its founders,
for example, supported election of at-large members
of city councils so that council members could not be
beholden to party machines. Ironically, such processes
often resulted in less popular influence over government
since it weakened machine politicians who were directly
accountable to immigrant and working-class constituents.
The good government movement attracted men of good standing
in society, suspicious of the lower classes and immigrants,
but angered by effects of business dominance of city
governments. Other reforms, however, fostered broader
democratic participation. Many states adopted the initiative
(allowing popular initiation of legislation) and referendum
(allowing popular vote on legislation) in these years,
and in 1913, the Seventeenth Amendment to the Constitution
mandated the direct election of United States Senators.
Perhaps the most dramatic campaign for more democratic
government was the woman suffrage movement which mobilized
millions to campaign for women’s right to the
franchise.
Ameliorating the effects of industrialization had at
its heart a very effective women’s political network.
At settlement houses, for example, black and white women
reformers, living in working-class, urban neighborhoods
provided day nurseries, kindergartens, health programs,
employment services, and safe recreational activities.
They also demanded new government accountability for
sanitation services, for regulation of factory conditions
and wages, for housing reform, and for abolishing child
labor. Leaders like Jane Addams and Ida B. Wells-Barnett
in Chicago as well as Lillian Wald in New York pioneered
a role for city and state governments in securing the
basic social welfare of citizens. This strand of progressive
reform more broadly involved improving city services,
like providing garbage pickup and sewage disposal. Some
activists concentrated on tenement reform, such as New
York’s 1901 Tenement House Act, which mandated
better light, ventilation, and toilets. Laws protecting
worker health and safety mobilized other reformers.
Protective legislation to limit the hours worked by
women, abolish child labor, and set minimum wages could
be found across the country. Twenty-eight states passed
laws to regulate women’s working hours and thirty-eight
set new regulations of child labor in 1912 alone.
The second major area—the effort to rein in corporate
power--had as its flagship one of the most famous pieces
of legislation of the period: the Sherman Antitrust
Act of 1890. The Act outlawed business combination “in
restraint of trade or commerce.” In addition to
trust-busting, progressive reformers strengthened business
regulation. Tighter control of the railroad industry
set lower passenger and freight rates, for example.
New federal regulatory bureaucracies, such as the Interstate
Commerce Commission, the Federal Reserve System, and
the Federal Trade Commission, also limited business’s
free hand. These progressive initiatives also included
efforts to protect consumers from the kind of unsavory
production processes revealed by Upton Sinclair’s
The Jungle. Somewhat unexpectedly, business
leaders themselves sometimes supported such reform initiatives.
Large meatpackers like Swift and Armour saw federal
regulation as a means to undercut smaller competitors
who would have a harder time meeting the new standards.
Among progressivism’s greatest champions was Theodore
Roosevelt. Roosevelt had a genius for publicity, using
the presidency as a “bully pulpit” to bring
progressivism to the national stage. Roosevelt’s
roots were in New York City and state government, where
he served as state assemblyman, New York city police
commissioner, and governor. As governor, he signaled
his reformist sympathies by supporting civil service
reform and a new tax on corporations. Republican party
elders found him so troublesome in the governor’s
office that in 1900 they proposed him for the vice presidency,
a sure-fire route to political insignificance. The assassination
of William McKinley just months into his presidency,
however, vaulted Roosevelt into national leadership
of progressive reform.
Although Roosevelt was known as a trust buster, his
ultimate goal was not the destruction of big business
but its regulation. For Roosevelt the concentration
of industry in ever fewer hands represented not just
a threat to fair markets but also to democracy as wealthy
industrialists consolidated power in their own hands.
He turned to the Sherman Antitrust Act to challenge
business monopolies, bringing suit against the Northern
Securities Company (a railroad trust) in 1902. The Justice
Department initiated forty-two additional antitrust
cases during his presidency. During Roosevelt’s
second term, regulating business became increasingly
important. Roosevelt had always believed big business
was an inevitable economic development; regulation was
a means to level the playing field and provide the “square
deal” to citizens, as Roosevelt had promised in
his re-election campaign. He supported laws like the
1906 Hepburn Act, which regulated the railroads, and
the same year’s Pure Food and Drug and Meat Inspection
Acts, which controlled the drug and food industries.
Although not always successful in achieving his goals,
Roosevelt brought to the federal government other progressive
causes during his presidency, including support for
workers’ rights to organize, eight-hour workdays
for federal employees, workers’ compensation,
and an income and inheritance tax on wealthy Americans.
Under his leadership, conservation of the nation’s
natural resources became a government mandate. He encouraged
Congress to create several new national parks, set aside
sixteen national monuments, and established more than
fifty wildlife preserves and refuges. Through the new
Bureau of Fisheries and National Forest Service, Roosevelt
emphasized efficient government management of resources,
preventing rapacious use by private businesses and landowners.
After leaving the presidency in 1909, Roosevelt initially
withdrew from politics. But his dismay at the slow pace
of reform under his successor, William Howard Taft,
prompted him to return for the 1912 election. When Republicans
failed to nominate him, he broke with the party and
formed the Progressive Party. He campaigned under the
banner of a “New Nationalism.” Its tenets
united the themes of his leadership of progressivism:
faith in a strong federal government, an activist presidency,
balancing of public interest and corporate interest,
and support for a roll-call of progressive reform causes,
from woman suffrage and the eight-hour work day to abolishing
child labor and greater corporate regulation.
While progressives guided the country down the path
it would follow for much of the twentieth century toward
regulation of the economy and government attention to
social welfare, it also contained a strong streak of
social control. This was the darker side of the movement.
Progressive faith in expert leadership and government
intervention could justify much that intruded heavily
on the daily lives of individual citizens. The regulation
of leisure activities is a good example. Commercial
leisure—dance halls, movies, vaudeville performances,
and amusement parks like Coney Island—appeared
to many reformers to threaten public morality, particularly
endangering young women. Opponents famously deemed Coney
Island “Sodom by the Sea.” Seeking to tame
such activities, reformers, most of whom were middle
class, promoted “Rules for Correct Dancing”
(no “conspicuous display of hosiery”; no
suggestive dance styles) and enacted a National Board
of Censorship for movies. These rules largely targeted
working-class and youth entertainments with an eye to
regulating morality and behavior.
Eugenics also garnered the support of some progressive
reformers. Eugenics was a scientific movement which
believed that weaker or “bad” genes threatened
the nation’s population. Eugenicists supported
laws in the name of the rational protection of public
health to compel sterilization of those with “bad”
genes–typically focusing on those who were mentally
ill or in jails, but also disproportionately affecting
those who were not white. Any assessment of the progressive
movement must grapple with this element of social control
as reformers established new ways to regulate the daily
lives of citizens, particularly those in the lower ranks
of society, by empowering government to set rules for
behavior. It was often middle-class reformers who made
their values the standard for laws regulating all of
society.
Progressive reform’s greatest failure was its
acquiescence in the legal and violent disfranchisement
of African Americans. Most progressive reformers failed
to join African American leaders in their fight against
lynching. Many endorsed efforts by southern Progressives
to enact literacy tests for voting and other laws in
the name of good government that effectively denied
black Americans the right to vote and entrenched Jim
Crow segregation. By 1920, all Southern states and nine
states outside the South had enacted such laws.
Progressivism’s defining feature was its moderateness.
Progressives carved out what historian James Kloppenberg
describes as a via media, a middle way between the laissez-faire
capitalism dominant in the Gilded Age and the socialist
reorganization many radicals of the period advocated.
It was a movement of accommodation. Some regulation
of business joined some protection of workers. But no
dramatic overhaul of the distribution of wealth or control
of the economy occurred. Instead, progressives bequeathed
the twentieth century faith in an active government
to moderate the effects of large-scale capitalism on
citizens and communities. Government would secure the
public claim to unadulterated food, safer workplaces,
decent housing, and fair business practices, among many
other things. Theodore Roosevelt epitomized progressive
rebuke of the outrageous excesses of capitalists and
their cronies, but also typified progressive accommodation
of the new order. He opposed unregulated business, deemed
monopolies antithetical, defended labor unions, supported
consumer protections, and initiated government protection
of natural resources. Yet he never believed we could
turn away from the new economy and the transformation
it had wrought in American society. The balancing act
of reform and regulation that Roosevelt and other progressives
pursued led the nation through the moment of crisis
at the end of the nineteenth century and accommodated
it to the modern industrial society of the twentieth
century.
Kirsten Swinth is Magis Distinguished Professor of
History at Fordam University in New York and the author
of Painting Professionals: Women Artists and the
Development of Modern American Art, 1870-1930.
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