Populist Era - History of Populist Era from The Oxford Companion to United States History at Encyclopedia.com.
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Populist Era 1880–1900, as a response to the overwhelming power of Big Business. “Why did the Populist Party fail to ally itself with African American...
www1.cuny.edu/portal_ur/content/voting_curriculum/11th_... www1.cuny.edu/portal_ur/content/voting_curriculum/11th_pdfs/11th%20Lesson%205_Voting%20(59-65).pdf
The People's (Populist) Party 2. The Populist Movement Agricultural and Rural Life during the; Gilded Age and Progressive Era: a Bibliography...
www.colorado.edu/AmStudies/lewis/2010/populism.htm
The Populist Movement emerged from the farmersí alliances of the 1870s and 1880s. In the 1890s the Populist Party appeared to represent a viable third party ­ independent of the Democrats and Republicans.
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Men of property (such as Mark Hanna) who joined to crush the nation's largest democratic mass movement named the post-Populist era as "Progressive.
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Author info | Abstract | Publisher info | Download info | Related research | Statistics Additional information is available for the following registered author(s): Barry Julian Eichengreen...
ideas.repec.org/a/aea/aecrev/v74y1984i5p995-1015.html
To economic historians, the Populist era is endlessly fascinating, raising as it does such issues as the Brandeisian conflict between democracy and concentrated wealth, the relative merits of the gold standard versus a bimetallic standard or fiat money, and, of course, the "puzzle of farm discontent" at a time when...
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Rockoff, who saw in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz "a sophisticated commentary on the political and economic debates of the Populist Era," discovered a surprising number of new analogies.
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Men of property (such as Mark Hanna) who joined to crush the nation's largest democratic mass movement named the post-Populist era as "Progressive." Yet the years 1900-1920 saw increasing economic concentration, a resurgence in white supremacy and denial of African American and Native People's rights,
www.ratical.org/corporations/WWPopulists.html www.ratical.org/corporations/WWPopulists.html
The Populist Party The People's Party (or Populist Party, as it was widely known) was much younger than the Democratic and Republican Parties, which had been founded before the Civil War. Agricultural areas in the West and South had been hit by economic depression years before industrial areas.
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