American Decades
The New Freedom and the Trusts
Social Responsibility.
In 1913 Woodrow Wilson came to office in the midst of the Progressive Era, a time in which a general liberal spirit swept through the nation. Both parties felt a renewed sense of social responsibility and a need for the government to address the problems of industrialization and urban growth. The period facing Wilson was tumultuous, as he had to deal with the trusts, labor disturbances, and the arrival of more than twelve million immigrants since 1900. The election of 1912, furthermore, was a bitter contest pitting these forces against one another. Once elected, President Wilson initiated his "New Freedom" legislation and steered the country along with policies influenced by the reform movement. He exercised a charismatic and principled leadership, often guiding the nation down a middle path that carefully balanced government intervention with controlled reform.
Reform Crawls Forward.
Reform...
[The entire page is 1175 words long]
1910's Business and the Economy
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Big Business: The Modern Corporation
- Creating the Federal Reserve System
- Economic Diplomacy in the 1910s
- The Five-Dollar Day
- Labor in the 1910s
- The New Freedom and the Trusts
- Organized Labor and the Wilson Administration
- Postwar Labor Distress
- The Retail Industry
- Seamstresses and Strikes: Women Organizers and the Garment Industry
- Taxation, Tariffs, and the National Economy
- The War Industries Board
- World War I and the Economy
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1910–1919
