This resource of primary documents and commentary spans the
Hayes and McKinley administrations, selecting and describing five
to ten of the foremost issues of the day. The actual texts of the
presidents' positions, along with the opposing viewpoints, are
presented. Helpful background information and commentary clarifies
the primary sources, accurately depicting this dynamic time in the
country's past and providing an invaluable resource to any student
of American history.
The period from 1877 to 1901 marked the end of one United
States-a country still reeling from the Civil War, a divided nation
of Reconstruction, a land of economic depression, sectional
hostility, and governmental corruption. A new United States was
emerging. It was an empire, an international power that both
negotiated with and fought against European nations with great
success, and a country with a rebounding economy, vigorous
industry, and restored faith. During this Gilded Age, the nation
expanded as settlers moved west and displaced native populations.
Immigrants entered at the highest rate in the country's history.
Geographic expansion gave rise to mighty railroads, and industrial
expansion brought corporations, company towns, and monopolies. This
unprecedented industrialism bolstered urban growth, yet economic
hardships afflicted rural countrysides. Labor and agrarian
interests organized.
General
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