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Gilded Age politics
Late-1870s–1890s political era marked by high voter turnout and strong party loyalty, but also corruption, close elections, and limited major policy innovation due to coalition-based parties.
Patronage
Practice of awarding government jobs and favors to political supporters; helped parties mobilize voters but encouraged corruption and incompetence.
Political machine
Strong party organization (often in cities) that traded services (jobs, aid, legal help) for votes and then steered contracts and jobs to allies, sometimes through kickbacks.
Tariff
A tax on imported goods that raises their price; often supported as protection for U.S. manufacturers and criticized for increasing consumer costs and benefiting big business.
Gold standard ("tight money")
Monetary system tying currency mainly to gold; tends to limit the money supply, keeping prices stable but often making debts harder to repay.
Free silver / bimetallism ("easy money")
Policy of expanding the money supply by coining silver alongside gold; tends to create inflation, often helping debtors (like farmers) and hurting lenders.
Pendleton Civil Service Act (1883)
Federal law launching civil service reform by requiring competitive exams for some government jobs and protecting them from political firing; reduced patronage gradually, not instantly.
Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)
Federal law restricting Chinese immigration, reflecting nativism and racial/labor anxieties in the West.
Wabash v. Illinois (1886)
Supreme Court decision limiting states’ ability to regulate interstate railroad rates, pushing regulation toward the federal government.
Interstate Commerce Act (1887)
Federal law creating the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) to regulate railroads; early enforcement power was limited but set a precedent for federal regulation.
Sherman Antitrust Act (1890)
Federal law intended to curb monopolistic business combinations that restrained trade; early enforcement was uneven, showing regulation’s limited initial bite.
Populism
1890s political movement rooted mainly in farmers’ economic distress and belief that finance, railroads, and politics were rigged against producers.
The Grange (Patrons of Husbandry)
Farm organization promoting cooperative purchasing and political action, especially supporting railroad regulation.
Farmers’ Alliances
Regional cooperative networks of farmers that pushed beyond self-help toward political solutions to debt, rail rates, and tight credit.
People’s (Populist) Party
National political party formed in the early 1890s to advance Populist reforms, especially on money supply, regulation, and democratic change.
Omaha Platform (1892)
People’s Party program calling for reforms such as free silver, government ownership or heavy regulation of key utilities/railroads, graduated income tax, direct election of senators, and secret ballot protections.
Free coinage of silver
Populist-backed policy to mint silver freely to expand the money supply and create inflation that would make debts easier to repay.
Election of 1896
Turning-point election in which Republican William McKinley backed tariffs and the gold standard while Democrat William Jennings Bryan ran on pro-silver, anti-elite themes with Populist support; signaled Populism’s decline as an independent party.
Settlement houses
Community centers in poor urban neighborhoods offering services like childcare, education, job training, and immigrant assistance while also promoting broader reform.
Hull House
Major settlement house in Chicago founded by Jane Addams in 1889; model for later social work and urban reform.
Social Gospel
Protestant Christian reform movement arguing that faith should address social problems like poverty and injustice, supplying moral language for reform politics.
Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
Leading temperance organization associated with Frances Willard that sought to reduce/eliminate alcohol use through education and political pressure; often framed as protecting families and household stability.
National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA)
Major women’s suffrage organization formed in 1890 that pursued voting rights through a mix of state-by-state strategies and federal efforts.
American Federation of Labor (AFL)
Union federation founded in 1886 and led by Samuel Gompers; focused on skilled workers and “bread-and-butter” goals like wages, hours, and working conditions.
Haymarket Affair (1886)
Chicago labor rally that turned violent after a bomb exploded; fueled public fears of radicalism and damaged the broader labor movement’s image.