EBOOK

The Age of Reform

America's Progressive Era, 1900–1920

Clarence Bradford Whitmore
(0)
Year
2026
Language
English

About

Ida Tarbell took on Standard Oil - and won.** Upton Sinclair turned a meatpacking exposé into a national food-safety law. Theodore Roosevelt smashed monopolies. Jane Addams reinvented social work. Women won the vote. The country invented the income tax, the Federal Reserve, the national parks, and the eight-hour day - all in twenty years.

You sense modern America was built in the Progressive Era - but the textbook reduces the most reform-minded decades in U.S. history to a list of names and amendments. You're left with no real understanding of how a handful of journalists, presidents, organizers, and activists actually beat the corporations, the bosses, and the corrupt machines. If you care about reform today, about how change really happens, you need the full story of how it was done.

This book delivers it.

THE AGE OF REFORM: America's Progressive Era, 1900–1920** brings the era roaring back - the muckrakers, the trust-busters, the suffragettes, and the settlement houses - told as the page-turning fight it truly was.

Inside, you will discover:
HOW the muckrakers - Tarbell, Sinclair, Steffens, Riis - used journalism to topple corporate giants
WHY Theodore Roosevelt's trust-busting and conservation revolution shaped modern government
WHAT really happened in the fight for women's suffrage, child-labor laws, and the income tax
HOW the Progressive Era founded the Federal Reserve, food safety, and the national parks
WHY the reforms succeeded - and where they tragically failed on race and civil rights

This isn't a parade of dates. It's the Age of Reform as the human drama of organized citizens beating concentrated power.

The Progressives changed America. Learn how - and what we can still learn from them.

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