Corruption of the Gilded Age Slavery has recently been abolished and there are lots of differences in America. We were divided and we still aren’t fully back together. Not everyone wanted to follow the president and his commands. The Gilded Age started, corrupt men were in charge and people couldn’t trust everyone that was in charge of them so sometimes there was no one to rely on. This shows why the gilded age was a very corrupt time for America. Many things may have looked good during the gilded age, but America had very many corrupt politicians in their government. During the gilded age America progressed quite a bit and developed very many new things within our nation. We could’ve done a lot more if there weren’t men in government stealing a portion of our money. We had new forms of art, music, and entertainment, but we were being held back by the corrupt men that call themselves politicians. Those men only cared about personal benefit over caring about those they were in charge of. Now I’m going to talk to you about some of the corrupt men during this time that I talked about in the previous paragraph. Boss Tweed, the leader of everything that made us corrupt. He had men in low places and used illegal schemes and ideas to get into office. If you wanted to stop everything that was going on, you would need to …show more content…
We elected men ignorantly, we thought about what was best for us as an individual and ignored what was best for everyone. That is exactly what the men we elected planned on doing also, they cared about personal wealth and not those they were in command of. Many large cities such as Chicago and New York were the main place for these types of men since there was a larger population of lower-class people that were looking to someone for help and in turn these political machines took advantage of the disparity of those lower-class
In 1934 Senator Huey Long from Louisiana criticized President Roosevelt for not “doing enough for the common people” and he came up with a plan called the Share-the-Wealth Society. He wanted to raise the taxes of the wealthy and give it to the poor, kind of like Robin Hood. The plan would have provided pensions to retirees, reduced work hours, paid bonuses to military veterans and ensured every qualified student could attend college. The problem was that he didn’t seem to understand that it would have cost a lot more money than it would have raised. Father Charles E. Coughlin was another of President Roosevelt’s critic.
The poor thought he was a common man who swept into power my large majorities. The poor agreed with him more and thought he was a champion. Long often used the law against the people by pushing for a few bills from his campaign promises, including a free textbook program for schoolchildren, night courses for adults and piping natural gas for New Orleans. To pay for these programs Long taxed oil operators,
During the 1930’s, the United States was undergoing the Great Depression and wealth inequality was increasing. Long exploited the political environment and the sentiments of the working class by often criticizing political elites for undermining the working man. Long often had good policy ideas like providing free textbooks, building roads to rural areas, and creating a program to curb wealth inequality, which would serve the better good of the public. However, his means of implementation were corrupt, viewed as undemocratic and heavily disparaged by his political counterparts. Long was a strategic politician and supposing he was able to secure the presidency, the separations of powers set in place by the branches of the federal government would not enable him to maneuver the system as he did with the states.
The Gilded Age has been often portrayed as one of those dark periods in American history—a period of greed and corruption, of brutal industrial competition and harsh exploitation of
The obvious reason is that the Unions demanding more from the Barons meant less money in the Barons’ pockets. Essentially nothing was going to get between the wealthy industrialists and the money and power they felt was their right. Some key examples include: Cornelius Vanderbilt was already a millionaire when he entered the railroad business.
The Gilded Age was an age of rapid economic growth. Railroads, factories, and mines were slowly popping up across the country, creating a variety of new opportunities for entrepreneurs and laborers alike. These new inventions and opportunities created “...an unprecedented accumulation of wealth” (GML, 601). But the transition of America from a small farming based nation to a powerful industrial one created a huge rift between social classes. Most people were either filthy rich or dirt poor, with workers being the latter.
Politics in the Gilded Age were no more corrupt than at any other era in American political history, but it is viewed as one of the more corrupt periods in our history. There are several reasons for this and chief among them is that historians have traditionally interpreted the era that way. When studying primary sources of Gilded Age politics, especially newspapers, it becomes apparent that most were harsh toward politicians on both sides of the spectrum. The reason for this is that newspapers were extremely loyal to one party or the other and sought to paint the other side as vile, corrupt, and without morals. Charges were made based on little or no real evidence which made the era appear more corrupt than it really was.
The similarities between modern day America and the Gilded Age are astounding. To understand why this is occurring
Jessica HillisMr. GillardAP US History5 January 2007Essay 16: Gilded AgeThroughout history, certain periods of time have been given certain names based on thehappenings that occurred. Many have called the period of 1865 to 1901 the “Gilded Age”, be-cause it was “shiny and pretty” on the outside but it was “rough and ugly” underneath. The term“Gilded Age” was actually coined by Mark Twain who satired the Gilded Age with a GoldenAge.
Imagine working sixteen hours a day in an unsanitary, dangerous, place for a big business gaining two dollars. This is what laboring-class Americans had to go through during the Gilded age. Politically, the first largest American labor union was formed during the Gilded age and many other organizations formed as well as violent strikes. Socially, different ethnics joined together to share their thoughts and realize the evils of big business and of the federal government. Mentally, most we 're losing their personal life while some were financially stable and glad.
Corporate greedy and corrupt politicians were specific problems and injustices that were present in American life during the late 1800s and early 1900s however these were addressed during the progressive era with laws and regulations. Throughout the gilded era corrupt politicians and corporate greedy allowed the upper class and businessmen to take advantage of the working class. This means that a majority of the population were hurt during the gilded age whereas a small percentage benefitted. As seen in document 1, living conditions were crowded, dirty, and unsafe.
The Gilded Age was to describe America in the late nineteenth century. The outside of the US seemed glamorous and splendid alongside industrial development and massive economic growth. However, the dark sides were hidden beneath it. In my perspective, I believe we are living in the 2nd Gilded age.
While in "Gilded Age", all levels of government had corruption, graft public money for their own. One of the most notorious New York City Boss Tweed William M. Tweed, his wealth has more than $25 million in 1871, all was dirty money. During the period he served as mayor of New York, the city requires all public officials to report false, false ratio as high as 85%. He presided over the construction of the New York county government office buildings, 40 chairs and 3 tables then discount about $179000, but a thermometer was quoted $7500. According to statistics, in 1860 ~ 1900, American municipal debt by $200 million soared to $1.4 billion, most of them are the City boss and partisans pocketed.
This angered both political parties and upper-class citizens (business owners) because it threatened their wealth and
It is something in the past and Americans should be proud of how far they have come. Learning only good side of history does not educate the young ones and lead them to be patriotic, rather, understanding the hardships of the lost ones and learning the struggle people had to go through in order to get to where they are now is going to work wonders in helping youngsters choose the right path. It is inexcusable to hold back information for financial gain. Alteration to the events of the past and learning about them later will only infuriate the readers and believers. Term like “Gilded Age” was completely new to me, as I had no idea about what had actually transpired during that time period.