American History Tellers - The Progressive Era | The New Freedom | 5
Episode Date: June 4, 2025In 1913, Woodrow Wilson entered the White House, ready to fulfill his promise of a “New Freedom.” It was a vision of domestic reform that aimed to wrest power away from special interests ...and expand economic opportunities to all. Over the next two years, he fought for lower tariffs, banking reform, and antitrust laws.But the outbreak of war in Europe threatened to derail his agenda. As America moved closer to the brink of intervention, Progressives wondered whether war would reenergize their movement, or destroy it once and for all.Be the first to know about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterListen to American History Tellers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting wondery.com/links/american-history-tellers/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Imagine it's just after four o'clock in the morning on March 4th, 1917 in Washington, D.C. You're a congressional aide and you're pacing outside
the Senate chambers. Congress is set to adjourn in just a few short hours, and since yesterday,
your father, Republican Senator Robert LaFollette and his fellow progressive supporters,
have been filibustering a bill they believe will draw the nation into war with Europe.
They're hoping to run out the clock before the Senate can pass it.
The heavy oak doors open and your father bursts from the chambers. His face is
flushed and his gray hair is unrulier than usual. You've never seen him so
flustered. They're trying to silence me. What do you mean father? They took me
off the speakers list. They mean to jam this bill through without letting me
make a closing statement. It's an outrage. You glance over his shoulder at a pair of clerks
nervously eye your father as they shuffle past.
Father, I think you need to calm down a bit.
How can I be calm when our entire movement is at stake?
The United States must remain neutral.
I thought Wilson understood that,
yet here we are talking about arming civilian ships
against the Germans.
If that's not a step toward war, I don't know what is.
You pat your father on the shoulder, reassuringly.
I believe it might be okay. The bill will likely fail in any case. There are only a
few hours remaining. Not enough time for a proper debate and vote.
We can't take any risks on something this important. This bill will make war inevitable,
and once we go to war, it will benefit no one but the greedy industrialists. J.P. Morgan
and his friends are trying to send our boys into the trenches to line their
own pockets.
You rub your eyes, exhausted from the round-the-clock filibuster.
Okay, well, let's go to your office and have a cup of coffee and make a plan.
Maybe we can come back and try to persuade the presiding officer to let you speak, but
I'm worried this is getting too tense.
I've heard several Democrats threatening anyone who tries to drag this out further.
I will not calm down and I will not be threatened.
I'm going back in there and I will be heard.
You sigh as your father storms back through the doors of the Senate chamber.
He's always been a fighter, but you've never seen him so agitated.
You know he's right about the importance of staying out of the war in Europe.
Not only would thousands of American lives be lost, but he would be a death now to many
of the progressive causes your father's championed all these years. But you worry
just how far he'll go to prevent that from happening.
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Hello, I'm Alice Levine.
And I'm Matt Ford, and we're the hosts of British Scandal.
Yes, and you need to strap in for our next series,
The Salisbury Poisonings.
Key ingredients, a botched assassination,
a military-grade nerve agent,
and an innocent lad's trip
to the world-famous Salisbury Cathedral.
Who can forget?
Seven years ago, former Russian spy Sergey Skripal
and his daughter were poisoned by two Putin goons
right here on British soil. Cue a British city on lockdown, one of the single most bizarre TV interviews in
British scandal history and a game of diplomatic cat-and-mouse between then
Prime Minister Theresa May and still Russian President Vladimir Putin.
We often say that when we look back scandals are just plain weirder than we
remember. This is definitely one of those times. Follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts
and binge entire seasons early and at free on Wandery+.
From Wandery, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is American History Tellers, our history,
your story. In March 1917, in the final hours before Congress was set to adjourn, progressive Republican
Senator Robert La Follette spearheaded a filibuster against a bill to arm U.S. merchant ships
against German submarines. He was convinced that this legislation would bring the nation
closer to war, which he believed would only benefit rich and powerful business leaders and harm progressive causes. In the Senate chamber,
rumors of violence spread as pro-war senators conspired to keep La Follette from speaking.
And although he was denied the opportunity to make an official address,
La Follette refused to be silenced. The bill ultimately died on the Senate floor as La Follette
had hoped, but much to his dismay the United States would continue to inch toward war.
Nearly five years had passed since Woodrow Wilson won the presidency promising Americans
a new freedom. This was a vision of domestic reform that aimed to wrest power away from
special interests and expand economic opportunities for all. Over the next two years Wilson fought
for a series of progressive laws to help build a more
just economy, but he would also face criticism from the left for his reluctance to support
social justice causes. Then, in 1914, the outbreak of war in Europe threatened to derail his agenda
altogether. Despite his early insistence on U.S. neutrality and efforts to stay focused on domestic
issues, Wilson would eventually be compelled to prepare
the U.S. to enter the fight. And as America moved toward the precipice of global conflict,
progressives wondered whether war would re-energize their movement or destroy it once and for
all. This is Episode 5, The New Freedom.
As President Woodrow Wilson made his way to his inauguration on March 4, 1913, progressives
throughout Washington, D.C. were celebrating. In the months since his election victory,
they had finally won several hard-fought reforms that had been decades in the making. Prohibitionists
were ecstatic over the recent passage of a law regulating the interstate liquor trade.
Next, they planned to push for a constitutional
amendment to ban alcohol altogether. And two progressive proposals dating back to the 1890s
had just become federal law. A month before the inauguration, in February 1913, the 16th
amendment had been ratified, granting Congress the power to levy a federal income tax. Progressives
saw this tax as an important alternative to tariffs,
which they believed harmed the working class and an important source of government revenue
to fund social welfare programs. Progressives were also rejoicing over the soon-to-be-ratified
Seventeenth Amendment, which would establish the direct election of U.S. Senators.
The framers of the Constitution had put the power to elect senators in the hands of state legislatures, but now the American voters themselves would decide. This amendment
was a landmark victory in the progressive struggle to combat corruption and restore
power to the American people. Wilson himself supported direct democracy reforms like this.
As a young man he had declared, the ear of the leader must ring with the voices of the
people and as he proceeded toward the Capitol for his inaugural address, he prepared to this. As a young man he had declared, the ear of the leader must ring with the voices of the people,
and as he proceeded toward the capital for his inaugural address, he prepared to lay out his
vision of a government that would create equal opportunity for all. But on the morning of his
inauguration, he was startled by five thousand suffragists protesting his arrival with a march
down Pennsylvania Avenue. They demanded a constitutional amendment that guaranteed women the right to vote. Wilson looked on, as tens of thousands of male spectators
heckled and assaulted the marchers while police looked the other way. More than one hundred
women were hospitalized in the violence. But as Wilson took the inaugural stage that morning,
he made no mention of suffrage. Instead, with the analytical skill of a professor and the soaring oratory of a preacher, he focused on economic progress,
calling for an assault on what he termed the Triple Wall of Privilege,
the tariffs, the banks, and the trusts. He closed with a stirring appeal, declaring,
Men's hearts wait upon us, men's lives hang in the balance, Men's hopes call upon us to say what we will do.
And in the days that followed, Wilson said he would tackle tariffs first. At the time, tariffs made up the bulk of federal revenue. Progressives had long wanted a reduction
in tariff rates accompanied by an income tax to offset any revenue losses. So, Wilson called
Congress into special session to begin work on tariff reform.
But rather than send a message to Congress in writing, as every president since Thomas
Jefferson had done, he broke with precedent by appearing in person to deliver his appeal.
He said that he wanted to show that the president was not a mere department of the government
hailing Congress from some isolated island of jealous power, but a human being trying
to cooperate with other human
beings in a common service. But in his in-person address, Wilson showed that he was ready to take
command of his legislative agenda, and he was prepared to be just as aggressive as Theodore
Roosevelt had been. On the ride back to the White House, following the speech to Congress,
First Lady Ellen Wilson said, that's the sort of thing Roosevelt would have loved to do if he had thought of it. And laughing, Wilson replied, yes, I think
I put one over on Teddy.
The progressive majority in the House shared Wilson's view that high tariffs strengthened
industry at the expense of average Americans, so they passed a bill providing for a major
reduction in taxes on imported goods. But when lobbyists quickly descended on the Senate
to try to torpedo the bill, Wilson was livid. He told reporters that Washington was so full
of lobbyists that a brick couldn't be thrown without hitting one of them.
So Wilson again decided to take matters into his own hands, issuing a direct message to
the American people, denouncing corporate lobbyists and urging them to hold their representatives
to account. He warned the country, Washington has seldom seen so numerous, so industrious or so insidious
a lobby, and it's of serious interest to the country that the people at large should
be voiceless in these matters while great bodies of astute men seek to overcome the
interest of the public for their private profit.
Wilson's public appeal worked. The Senate launched an investigation
into lobbying, requiring members to disclose their finances and potential conflicts of
interest. The opposition to tariff reform soon crumbled, and the Senate passed the Underwood
Tariff, enacting the largest reduction in tariffs since the Civil War. To make up for
lost revenue, it was accompanied by a reform made possible by the recently ratified 16th
Amendment, a graduated income tax on corporations and wealthy Americans.
Following these successful tariff and lobbying reforms, in June 1913, Wilson returned to
Congress for the second item on his agenda, comprehensive reform of the banking and currency
system.
The instability of the nation's financial system had been made clear six years
earlier during the Panic of 1907, when financier J.P. Morgan had to personally step in and
save Wall Street from disaster. By 1913, both Republicans and Democrats agreed on the need
for a central bank. As a result, at the end of 1913, Wilson would sign the Federal Reserve
Act into law. This act created a government-appointed
Federal Reserve Board to regulate the amount of money circulating in the economy and prevent
economic depressions. It would become the most consequential piece of legislation passed during
Wilson's presidency and the most important economic law passed between the Civil War and the New Deal.
Finally, in yet another appearance before Congress, Wilson went after
a third pillar of his triple wall of privilege, the trusts. This time, legislators responded
with the Federal Trade Commission Act aiming to prevent unfair trade practices, and they also
passed the Clayton Anti-Trust Act, which strengthened the government's power to break up trusts.
This Clayton Act also protected labor, a major achievement for the progressive
movement. For years, conservative courts had prosecuted labor unions under antitrust laws,
interpreting unions as illegal associations that restricted trade. To counter that, the Clayton Act
exempted unions from prosecution and explicitly legalized strikes and peaceful picketing.
One progressive leader hailed the law as labor's Magna Carta.
With his three-pronged approach to
economic reform, Wilson hoped to expand
opportunities to all citizens, fulfilling
his campaign promise of a new freedom.
But it would soon become clear that his
vision of reform did not apply to all Americans.
Imagine it's November 6, 1913 at the White House.
You're a newspaper editor and the spokesman for a group of black activists who have traveled
here today to meet with President Woodrow Wilson.
When you enter it, you discover that the Oval Office is smaller than you expected, more
intimate.
You and your fellow activists stand at the center of the room and you hold a petition
in hand, feeling as though you're carrying the weight of thousands of Americans' hopes and expectations.
Mr. President, we came here today with this petition signed by 20,000 men and women from 36
states asking you to reverse the segregation policies within your administration.
Wilson peers at you over his glasses with a look of mild surprise.
I'm not sure what you're talking about.
You're stunned he could be so obtuse.
But you stifle your frustration, careful to keep your tone measured.
Well, Mr. President, the facts are indisputable.
Since you took office, black civil service workers have come under attack.
The Treasury, the Post Office, they've all forced black clerks into separate washrooms
and lunchrooms.
They've erected screens to keep black workers out of sight. Men and women who have loyally served the federal government for years are
being demoted or even dismissed. Wilson gives you a guarded look. Well, I can't claim to
know everything that goes on in this administration, but the situation has surely been overblown.
I'm certain any changes to the federal workforce have been made in the interest of improving
efficiency and easing racial tensions.
Easing racial tensions by introducing segregation where there was none before.
Mr. President, segregation is an indignity, an insult.
It suggests that black Americans are inferior.
I'm not sure that was the intention.
Sir, you ran for president promising fair and equal treatment for all Americans, and
we believed you.
Many of us voted for you based on that promise.
And I thank you for your support.
We share the same goals, there just may be some different ways of going about it.
And if any mistakes have been made, they will be corrected.
Does that mean you will end your government's policy of segregation?
I appreciate your concern and I assure you I will investigate the matter thoroughly."
You feel as though he's dodged your question, but before you can inquire any further, a
White House aide steps forward, signaling the meeting's end.
You gaze at the other activists.
The President's words ring hollow to you, but you're baffled to see that they seem satisfied.
The President stands and extends a hand.
You shake it, searching Wilson's face
for some sign of sincerity. But his expression is unreadable, and you fear he's made you an empty promise.
Although progressives applauded Wilson's economic reforms, they urged him to do more
in the realm of social justice. But as a Southern Democrat and advocate of small
government, he believed that social issues should be decided by individual states, and
he continued to withhold support for such causes as organized labor, child labor laws,
and women's suffrage. And nowhere was Wilson's reticence more apparent than in the realm
of racial justice. His administration was dominated by Southern Democratic policymakers
who reversed
a long-standing policy of integration within the federal government. Instead, they instituted
unprecedented segregation in federal offices and restricted black employment in the civil
surface. This segregation of the federal government sparked outcry among black Americans, and
in the fall of 1913, black newspaper editor William Monroe Trotter led a group of activists
to the White House to confront the president.
During their meeting, Wilson made vague assurances that he would investigate the matter.
But when nothing changed, Trotter returned a year later to confront the president once
again, asking Wilson, have you a new freedom for white Americans and a new slavery for
your Afro-American fellow citizens?
At this,
Wilson lost his temper, telling Trotter,
"'If this organization wishes to approach me again, it must choose another spokesman.
You have spoiled the whole cause for which you came.'"
In the end, Wilson defended his segregation policy, declaring,
"'I honestly believe segregation to be in the best interest of the colored people,
as exempting them from friction and criticism.
So, ignoring the call of fellow progressives to further social justice, at the end of 1914, Wilson declared his reform agenda complete. Bucking tradition, he had kept
Congress in continuous session for nearly 18 months, requiring legislators to work through
Washington's sweltering summers. So, by the time the 63rd Congress finally adjourned in the fall of 1914, it was the longest-serving Congress in history, and also one of the most
productive. In less than two years, Wilson had secured a series of transformative laws
that would impact the country for decades to come. But global events soon proved a distraction
from domestic reform. In August 1914, war broke out in Europe.
Wilson vowed to keep America out of the conflict,
but with each passing month,
the struggle loomed ever closer to America's shores,
and progressives sensed that the future
of their movement was at stake.
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By the winter of 1914, President Woodrow Wilson had made the decision to stay out of the war
in Europe, which most Americans supported. But Theodore Roosevelt and the imperialist wing of the Republican Party branded his neutrality as treason. The former Roughrider
was an ardent proponent of the U.S. entering the war and demanded intervention, insisting
that Wilson was worse than the Germans for weakening American morale.
Roosevelt's criticism grew louder in May of 1915 after a German submarine sank the British passenger liner
Lusitania off the coast of Ireland, killing 128 Americans. But the peace-loving Wilson
continued to stand his ground, declaring, there is such a thing as a man being too proud to fight.
He feared that war would divide the nation and he was determined to stay focused on his
domestic agenda. And with his re-election campaign on the horizon, Wilson decided he needed to turn his attention
to cultivating support with progressives.
He believed his best option was to build a coalition of progressive Democrats and former
members of Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose Party.
And seeing the political necessity of expanding his base, he reversed his previous opposition
to social justice reform, turning
his focus to passing new laws that he believed would be popular with workers, farmers, and reformers.
To that end, in the spring of 1916, Wilson signed a law mandating an eight-hour day for
railroad workers, a measure that impacted nearly two million Americans. He also approved a law for
workmen's compensation, guaranteeing benefits to federal workers injured on the job. He also approved a law for workmen's compensation, guaranteeing benefits to federal workers injured
on the job.
He also signaled his support for child labor protections by signing a law that banned the
interstate trade of goods manufactured by children.
In addition, he signed a law to make it easier for farmers to secure loans and he approved
an income tax heavily weighted against corporations and the wealthy.
That same year, in 1916, he continued delighting
progressives by nominating Louis Brandeis to the Supreme Court. Brandeis was dubbed the People's
Lawyer for defending workers and challenging banks, railroads, and insurance companies.
He also had the distinction of being the first Jewish justice in American history.
And after strengthening his legislative record to appeal to the more progressive voter base,
Wilson ran for re-election in 1916 on a platform of peace, prosperity, and reform, campaigning
under the slogan, He Kept Us Out of War.
As he'd hoped, among his supporters were large numbers of socialists and former Bull Moose
progressives.
Wilson's Republican challenger, Charles Evans Hughes, was a Supreme Court Justice and former
New York governor, but Wilson had worked hard to appeal to independent progressive voters
and it paid off. On election day he managed to defeat Hughes, though only by a narrow
margin.
Wilson had won a second term, but as the New Year dawned he faced the reality that the
war in Europe was growing ever closer. On January 22, 1917, Wilson reaffirmed America's commitment
to neutrality. But just nine days later, Germany announced that it would resume
unrestricted submarine warfare in the Atlantic, preparing to attack all ships,
including American civilian vessels. Progressives were divided over the possibility of intervention.
Some feared the war would distract the country from sorely needed domestic reforms. Settlement House pioneer Jane Addams predicted,
this will set back progress for a generation. And progressives like Wisconsin Senator Robert
LaFollette also argued that the war would line the pockets of the rich at the expense of ordinary
Americans. But other progressives were more optimistic, predicting that the fight against
tyranny abroad would ignite interest in combating social problems at home. Writer Walter Lippman
declared,
We shall turn with fresh interest to our own tyrannies, to our Colorado mines, our autocratic
steel industries, our sweatshops and our slums. Others argued that the war would cause the
government to expand its power and reach to the benefit of the American people. And on March 3, 1917, Progressive's concerns about intervention in the war would come to a head
when the Senate took up a bill proposing to arm U.S. merchant ships against German submarine attacks.
Wisconsin Senator Robert La Follette feared the law would bring the country one step closer to war,
so with just 26 hours left before the 64th Congress adjourned, he and a dozen like-minded senators launched a filibuster.
But by the early morning of March 4th, rumors of violence had spread through the Senate.
La Follette worried that these threats were part of a conspiracy to silence him, and his
fears were soon proven true. When it was finally La Follette's turn to give concluding remarks,
the presiding officer refused to recognize him. La Follette was furious. He screamed out for recognition, and the Senate
fell into chaos. A Kentucky Democrat charged La Follette with a pistol under his coat.
An ally of La Follette grabbed a steel file to protect his friend, later telling La Follette
he planned to plunge it into the Democrat's neck if he drew his weapon. Ultimately, no firearms or files were
brandished, but in his fury Lafollette tried to hurl a brass spittoon at the presiding officer.
He dared his colleagues to carry him off the floor while his son begged him to calm down.
The disruption continued for hours until finally the bill died at noon as the 64th
Congress was forced to adjourn their session. The United States remained
out of the war for the moment.
But calls for intervention arose again in late March, when German submarines sank another
four American merchant vessels. These attacks finally forced Wilson to change his stance
on the war. He knew Americans would no longer stand by while their fellow citizens were
killed in the crossfire of Europe's conflict.
So on April 2, Wilson stood before Congress and asked for a declaration of war to make the world
safe for democracy. Robert LaFollette was just one of six senators to vote against the declaration.
Because of his refusal to support entry into the war, he was branded a traitor and a coward,
burned in effigy, and threatened with expulsion from the Senate.
But despite the fears of many progressives like Lafayette, America's entry into the war would ultimately become the catalyst for some of the progressive movement's biggest
achievements. Proponents of Prohibition had won an early victory with the passage of a
law regulating the interstate liquor trade in 1913, and now the war helped prohibitionists achieve their ultimate goal, a nationwide ban
on alcohol. Because as anti-German sentiment spread through society, propagandists exploited
the hysteria to connect German immigrant communities to breweries, leading many Americans to boycott
German beer. And the Anti-Saloon League pushed the idea that grain used for distilling alcohol
should instead be reserved for
feeding soldiers and starving Europeans. As a result of these and other efforts, in December 1917,
Congress passed the Eighteenth Amendment, banning the sale, production, and distribution of alcohol.
Prohibition would become the law of the land in 1920.
The war also marked a turning point for the suffrage movement.
Suffragists picketed the White House with banners painting Wilson as a hypocrite for promoting democracy abroad
while denying women voting rights at home.
At the same time, women were lauded for their patriotic efforts powering the nation's assembly lines while men went to war,
bolstering their argument that they contributed equally to society and deserved equal participation in the democratic process. And by 1917, women had already been fully enfranchised in 12 states and
partially enfranchised in another six. Wilson also knew that he would need the
support of women to keep control of Congress in the midterms, so once again
choosing political expediency, he changed course on suffrage. In January
1918, he summoned a group of House
Democrats to the White House and asked them to vote for a constitutional
amendment guaranteeing women the right to vote. In a speech before the Senate
later that year, he framed passage of the suffrage amendment as critical to the
success of the war effort. And to manage the war effort, William would rely on
experienced progressive reformers to oversee unprecedented regulation of the nation's economy.
Imagine it's September 1918 in Washington, DC.
You're the chair of the War Labor Policies Board and you're in your tiny office in Slidell House, across from the White House.
Albert Gary, the chairman of US Steel, lowers himself into the chair across from your desk.
For months you've been pressuring Gary to give his steel workers an eight-hour workday. Albert Gary, the chairman of U.S. Steel, lowers himself into the chair across from your desk.
For months you've been pressuring Gary to give his steelworkers an eight-hour workday.
He's finally agreed to meet with you in person after you threatened to make your correspondence
public exposing his selfish refusal to help his workers in the middle of a war.
Mr. Gary, I'm glad you found the time to come to Washington.
Gary nods stiffly, glancing down at the gold watch chain
hanging from his finely tailored vest. You know, he's far more accustomed to having the government
do his bidding than the other way around. Seems I have no other choice, so let's make this quick.
My train back to New York leaves in an hour. Well, I'll be brief. The War Labor Board has
ruled that all industries engaged in the war effort must adopt an eight-hour workday for worker safety
and to ensure the success of the war effort, but U.S. Steel has refused to comply.
I'm aware of the ruling, yet you continue to disregard it.
Am I correct in my understanding that your steel workers labor for ten hours a day at
$0.42 an hour?
That's right.
Well, that stops now.
U.S. Steel must institute an eight-hour day, plus time and a half for any overtime.
Gary folds his hands over his stomach, his jaw tightening.
Sounds to me like a wage increase under false pretenses.
Henry Ford has adopted an eight-hour day into his auto plants.
I don't give a damn what Henry Ford does.
Perhaps you should.
You may discover an increase in productivity and morale.
I don't run an automobile plant.
I don't take orders from a Harvard professor half my age.
You maintain a neutral expression, refusing to let him provoke you.
My background makes no difference here.
The president has entrusted me with ensuring that all war industries treat their workers
fairly and U.S. Steel is no exception.
I'll tell you something.
I work more than eight hours a day, and I imagine you do too.
Why shouldn't my men?
Because you and I sit behind desks all day, while those men exhaust themselves in sweltering
steel mills, risking life and limb to power the war effort.
Gary fixes you with a hard, unyielding gaze.
The silence stretches, but you don't dare blink.
Suddenly Gary rises to his feet.
I will speak to my board about this.
He turns and strides out of your office and you breathe a long sigh of relief. You know it's not exactly a concession, but it is a start.
You're closer than you've ever been to protecting workers at the largest employer in the country.
To keep production rolling during the war, Woodrow Wilson's administration knew it had
to be friendly to organize labor. The newly created War Labor Board forced some of the
nation's biggest employers to accept long fought for union demands, including an eight-hour
workday, union recognition, collective bargaining, and a living wage. These new policies spurred
a surge in union membership, and nearly
three million Americans were unionized by the end of the war. Wilson also created a
war industries board, a food administration board, and a fuel administration board. He
waged a fierce propaganda campaign to persuade the American people to support government
control of the economy and these wartime policies. Progressive groups and labor unions were elated
by the new regulations and urged Wilson to preserve these reforms after the war.
But despite this groundswell of progressive support, not all Americans were happy with
wartime reforms. And this became evident in the midterm elections in November 1918,
when popular backlash against the progressive war effort and Wilson's plans for a post-war League of Nations
put a reunited Republican party back in control of both houses of Congress.
Once a staunch advocate of small government, during the war Wilson had overseen an unprecedented expansion of government programs.
But after years of increasing government intervention, voters now made it clear that they wanted lower taxes,
a return to smaller government, and fewer regulations. Theodore Roosevelt declared, Mr. Wilson has
no authority whatsoever to speak to the American people at this time. His leadership has just
been emphatically repudiated by them.
And then, less than a week after the 1918 midterm elections, the political landscape
for Wilson changed once again. Germany and the allied powers signed an armistice agreement.
After four years of gruesome trench warfare and the death of millions,
World War I officially came to an end.
The United States and its allies had won the war abroad.
But in the aftermath of the war, inflation, strikes, and race riots
threatened to tear the country apart and dampen the spirit
of progressive reform.
Last year, long crime brought you the trial that captivated the nation.
She's accused of hitting her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe with her car.
Karen Reed is arrested and charged with second degree murder.
The six week trial resulted in anything but resolution. We continue to find
ourselves at an impasse. I'm declaring a mistrial in this case. But now the
case is back in the spotlight. And one question still lingers. Did Karen Reed
kill John O'Keefe? The evidence is overwhelming that Karen Reed is
innocent. How does it feel to be a cop killer, Karen?
I'm Kristin Thorn, investigative reporter with Law and Crime and host of the podcast, Karen, The Retrial.
This isn't just a retrial. It's a second chance at the truth.
I have nothing to hide. My life is in the balance and it shouldn't be.
I just want people to go back to who the victim is in this.
It's not her.
Listen to episodes of Karen, The Retrial, exclusively and ad free on Wondery Plus.
This is Nick.
And this is Jack.
We're best friends, ex-finance guys, and resident 90s experts.
And every week on our podcast, The Best Idea Yet,
we're bringing you the untold stories behind your favorite products.
For instance, can you guess which billion dollar fashion company went viral thanks to
a rhinestone covered tracksuit?
Or which cartoon turned four turtles into a global toy empire by accident?
It started as a joke.
Last one, which cold beverage was so hated by Starbucks they actually ended up acquiring
it?
Spoiler, the Frappuccino.
Howard Schultz apparently thought cold coffee was super lame, and then he bought it.
From Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles to Juicy Couture to the Orange Mocha Frappuccino.
Join us every week to learn how your favorite things got made.
Follow the best idea yet on the Wondered app or wherever you get your podcasts.
And you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery+.
And if this podcast lasts longer than 45 minutes, call your doctor.
After the Democrats suffered major losses in the 1918 midterms, President Woodrow Wilson shifted
away from progressive politics, quickly dismantling wartime agencies and boards, dashing
progressive hopes for a post-war program of reconstruction.
Going forward, Wilson would pour all of his energy into winning support for his plans
for the League of Nations, an international organization dedicated to preserving world
peace. But this peace plan faced stiff opposition in the now Republican-controlled Senate.
So with Wilson occupied by his foreign policy plans,
the Progressive movement was left rudderless.
In January 1919, Theodore Roosevelt died in his sleep at the age of 60.
In the Senate, Robert LaFollette, or Fighting Bob as he came to be known,
continued to face intense backlash over his earlier opposition to the war.
And later in 1919, President Wilson was debilitated
by a crippling stroke. Progressives found themselves politically adrift, just as America descended
into a period of explosive violence and unrest. After the war, an exodus of black Southerners to
northern cities fueled competition between black and white workers for limited housing and jobs.
White mobs terrorized and killed black people in more than two dozen cities in the summer of 1919.
Over the course of the year, 76 black Americans were lynched, including 10 veterans of the recent
war still in uniform. With three million workers unionized by the end of the war,
labor leaders had high hopes of winning new reforms. But the end of government support
for labor and rising inflation
set off a wave of strikes that paralyzed cities. One out of every five workers walked off the job
in 1919. In Seattle, more than 100 unions shut down the city for five days and the mayor accused
striking workers of trying to duplicate the anarchy of Russia. His statement reflected the
paranoia gripping America in the aftermath of the 1917
Socialist Revolution in Russia and wartime civil liberties restrictions. During the war, Wilson
signed a harsh sedition law that made it a federal crime to criticize the government
and the war effort. It was used to silence dissent and target immigrants, labor leaders,
and left-wing activists. The atmosphere of suspicion continued after the war,
as labor unrest sparked fears that the nation
was on the verge of its own socialist revolution.
The federal government conducted mass raids
and deportations targeting thousands of suspected radicals.
But this so-called red scare did not only target
socialists and labor radicals,
even mainstream progressives who had previously enjoyed
widespread public support
fell victim to the hysteria.
Imagine it's February 1919 and you're standing center stage in an auditorium in Chicago's central
music hall. You run a speakers program and you've just finished setting up a microphone for tonight's
lecture on medieval art. You step back from the podium to inspect the lighting when you spot Jane Addams walking up the darkened aisle with a stack of papers underneath
her arm. You rake a hand through your hair nervously. Miss Addams, what brings you here?
I was hoping that we could go over my lecture for next week. I've come upon some fascinating
new statistics on child labor in Illinois. Oh, I should have given you more warning because the truth is I've decided to cancel the lecture.
Her smile falters.
I don't understand it.
I've been lecturing here for more than 20 years.
Well, people complained.
They don't want to hear any talk about labor.
Ah, I see.
This wouldn't have anything to do with my name
being on that so-called trader's list
put out by the War Department.
You fiddle with the microphone, avoiding her gaze.
I'm sorry, Ms. Adams, but the United States government has labeled you a dangerous radical.
And the truth is, several of our regulars have asked for refunds on their tickets.
I'm in fielding calls all week. People want to learn, not listen to propaganda.
You've surprised me. I thought you knew better than to believe that nonsense.
We've known each other for years. Do you really honestly think I'm a dangerous radical?
What I think is I can't risk angering our donors.
She steps closer, adjusting her hat so she can peer up at you.
You know there are still children working 10-hour days in factories and sweatshops,
girls choking on cotton dust in mills, boys losing their fingers in machines they're too young to operate.
I am not the problem and you know it.
Yeah, you may be right, but Principal alone won't keep the lights on here.
There's nothing I can do.
She stares at you for a moment, the corners of her mouth trembling as if she's holding
back from saying something she might regret.
Then with a shake of her head, she turns around and walks back up the aisle.
You feel a pang of guilt, but you force yourself to shake it off because if someone as beloved
as Jane Addams can turn into a public pariah, you know that you're better off playing it
safe.
In 1919, public opinion turned against the revered progressive reformer Jane Addams.
During the war, she gave
speeches on behalf of government programs such as Liberty Bonds and the Food Administration.
But because of her early opposition to the war, ultra-patriotic groups branded her the
most dangerous woman in America. Adams lost writing and lecturing income, and her fall from
grace silenced other progressives. A progressive lawyer later reflected on the dramatic change in
attitudes writing, To doubt, to question the dramatic change in attitudes, writing,
To doubt, to question the wisdom of the powers that be,
to advance new and disturbing ideas, had ceased to be an act of virtue.
Progressivism was losing its supreme asset, respectability.
Then, in August 1920, in what was to be one of the final victories of the progressive era,
suffragists celebrated the ratification of the 19th Amendment, the culmination of a seven-decade fight for women's voting
rights. Less than three months later, the 1920 presidential election signaled the Progressive
Movement's demise. Voters elected conservative Republican Warren G. Harding, who blamed progressive
governance for post-war chaos and promised a return to normalcy. Progressive ideals lingered on,
but the Progressive Era had come to an end. Jane Addams would describe the 1920s as a period of
political and social sag. Republican administrations undid many progressive economic reforms in favor of
smaller government. And in the ensuing economic boom of the Roaring Twenties, reformers were also
dismayed to see Americans prioritize personal freedom and the pursuit of pleasure over moral duty.
Adams complained that youth lacked reforming energy.
The stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression that followed devastated American
families.
But it also ushered in a new era of reform.
In response to this crisis, many former progressives would
find home in Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal administration. And the spirit of reform
that would come to animate the New Deal, Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, and the government
interventions that followed were unthinkable at the close of the 19th century. But from
the 1890s until World War I, progressives proved that democracy could survive the wrenching changes of the industrial era.
They exposed corruption and protected workers.
They enfranchised women and conserved America's natural resources.
They reigned in the worst abuses of industry and held elected officials to account.
But segregation, racial violence, and rising nativism revealed the glaring limits of progressive
reforms.
Yet, for all our contradictions, the progressives showed that government could be harnessed
to address economic inequality and social injustice.
They were ambitious in their vision for America and fearless in their challenges to the moneyed and powerful.
In the end, their most enduring legacy was reimagining the responsibility of government to its citizens
and empowering citizens to demand more from their
government. From Wondery, this is episode five of our five-part series The Progressive Era from
American History Tellers. On the next episode, I'll speak with Edward O'Keefe, CEO of the Theodore
Roosevelt Presidential Library Foundation. We'll discuss Roosevelt's force of personality and the
evolution of his views as a progressive throughout his life.
If you like American History Tellers, you can binge all episodes early and ad-free right
now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
Prime members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music.
And before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at Wondery.com
slash survey.
American History Tellers is hosted, edited and produced by me, Lindsey Graham for Airship.
Audio editing by Christian Peraga.
Sound design by Molly Bach.
Supervising sound designer Matthew Filler.
Music by Lindsey Graham.
This episode is written by Ellie Stanton.
Edited by Dorian Marina. produced by Alida Rozanski,
managing producer Desi Blaylock,
senior managing producer Callum Pluse,
senior producer Andy Herman, and executor producers
are Jenny Lauer Beckman, Marsha Louie,
and Erin O'Flaherty for Wondering.
You know those creepy stories that give you goosebumps? The ones that make you really question what's real?
Well, what if I told you that some of the strangest, darkest, and most mysterious stories
are not found in haunted houses or abandoned forests, but instead in hospital rooms and
doctor's offices?
Hi, I'm Mr. Ballin, the host of Mr.ollin's Medical Mysteries, and each week on my podcast,
you can expect to hear stories about bizarre illnesses no one can explain, miraculous recoveries
that shouldn't have happened, and cases so baffling they stumped even the best doctors.
So if you crave totally true and thoroughly twisted horror stories and mysteries, Mr.
Bollin's Medical Mysteries should be your new go-to weekly show. Listen to Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries on the Wondry app or wherever
you get your podcasts. You can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondry Plus
in the Wondry app or on Spotify or Apple podcasts.