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Progressive Era

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 169.233.37.38 (talk) at 19:18, 10 February 2005 (changed "lasted through the 1910s" to "lasted through the 1920s". Prohibition, women's suffrage were in 1919/1920). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In the United States, the Progressive Era was a movement of reform that began in America's cities in the 1890s and lasted through the 1920s. Reformers sought change in labor and fiscal policies in different levels of government; initially it was successful at local level, and then it progressed to state and gradually national.

Many reforms dotted this era, including Prohibition with the 18th Amendment and women's suffrage through the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, both in 1920 as well as the initiation of the Income Tax with the Sixteenth Amendment and direct election of Senators with the Seventeenth Amendment. Muckrakers, a term given to the reaction-producing writers of the time period by President Theodore Roosevelt (1901-1909), were among some of the best examples of progressive reformers. Progressives shared a common belief in the ability of human nature to improve by bettering its living and working conditions.

Another famous progressive of the era was Robert M. La Follette, Sr.

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