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Foreword | ||
Preface | ||
Pt. 1 | Introduction : the story of 1912 : "a year supreme with possibilities" | 1 |
1 | "Progressive" : the popular label | 3 |
2 | The problem of the progressive era | 21 |
3 | The candidates debate | 34 |
Pt. 2 | The documents | 63 |
4 | The procorporatists : Theodore Roosevelt and Charles Van Hise | 65 |
1 | The new nationalism, August 31, 1910 | 65 |
2 | Making a new platform, September 10, 1910 | 70 |
3 | Letters to Theodore Roosevelt Jr., Benjamin Barr Lindsay, and Chase Salmon Osborn, August 22, 1911, December 5, 1911, and January 18, 1912 | 71 |
4 | A charter of democracy, February 12, 1912 | 75 |
5 | Letters, October 21, 1911, and October 27, 1911 | 82 |
6 | For chairman of the convention, June 18, 1912 | 85 |
7 | A confession of faith, August 6, 1912 | 86 |
8 | The senior partner, September 8, 1912 | 94 |
9 | Letters to Mary Eila Lyon Swift, Florence Kelley, and Jane Addams, March 7, 1911, January 9, 1912, and ca. August 8, 1912 | 95 |
10 | Letter to Julian La Rose Harris, August 1, 1912 | 97 |
11 | Letters to Senator Robert M. La Follette, October 30, 1911, and November 21, 1911 | 100 |
12 | Letter to Charles R. Van Hise, June 4, 1912, and Charles R. Van Hise from Concentration and control, 1912 | 102 |
5 | The anticorporatists : Robert M. La Follette, Louis D. Brandeis, and Woodrow Wilson | 106 |
13 | Speech at Jamestown, North Dakota, March 14, 1912 | 106 |
14 | Speech at Bismarck, North Dakota, March 14, 1912 | 108 |
15 | Letter to Senator Jonathan Bourne, January 2, 1911 | 111 |
16 | Letter to Blanche Morse, March 28, 1912 | 112 |
17 | The only way, September 17, 1912, and Pay day, September 7, 1912 | 114 |
18 | Letter to Norman Hapgood, July 3, 1912 | 116 |
19 | Letter to Alfred Brandeis, August 28, 1912 | 117 |
20 | Correspondence, September 27, 1912, and September 30, 1912 | 118 |
21 | Letter to Arthur Norman Holcombe, September 11, 1912 | 121 |
22 | Trusts, efficiency, and the new party, September 14, 1912 | 122 |
23 | Speech at Buffalo, New York, September 2, 1912 | 124 |
24 | Speech at Sioux City, Iowa, September 17, 1912 | 127 |
25 | Speech at Pueblo, Colorado, October 7, 1912 | 130 |
26 | The biggest monopolies, October 9, 1912 | 134 |
27 | Diary, August 14, 1912 | 135 |
28 | Maud Malone Halts Wilson, October 20, 1912 | 136 |
29 | The times, the place, and the girl, June 25, 1912 | 140 |
6 | Neither a "flubdub" nor second rate : William Howard Taft | 141 |
30 | Speech at Nashua, New Hampshire, March 19, 1912 | 141 |
31 | Speech at the American Academy of Political and Social Science, March 30, 1912 | 145 |
32 | Letters to Horace D. Taft and Charles F. Brooker, March 1, 1912, and March 5, 1912 | 148 |
33 | Speech at Elkton, Maryland, May 4, 1912 | 151 |
34 | He eats 'em up - and grows! : September 19, 1910 | 155 |
35 | The presidency, September 29, 1912 | 156 |
36 | Progressive : the popular label, October 6, 1912 | 157 |
7 | Socialism as progressivism : Eugene V. Debs | 158 |
37 | Socialism gives only cure for trust evils, November 25, 1911 | 158 |
38 | A study of competition, May 28, 1910 | 162 |
39 | Acceptance speech, undated | 163 |
40 | Opening speech of the campaign, August 10, 1912 | 167 |
41 | Platform, May 25, 1912 | 170 |
42 | Mr. voter beware ..., November 2, 1912 | 173 |
43 | The woman question, January 13, 1912, and What socialism offers, September 28, 1912 | 174 |
44 | Letter to Eugene V. Debs, August 8, 1912 | 175 |
45 | Eugene V. Debs says Moose party stole socialist planks, August 15, 1912 | |
The acid test, September 21, 1912 | 177 | |
App | A 1912 election chronology (1877-1930) | 180 |
App: Questions for consideration | 185 | |
App: Selected bibliography | 187 | |
Index | 195 |
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Add 1912 Election and the Power of Progressivism: A Brief History with Documents, Faced with the challenge of adapting America's political and social order to the rise of corporate capitalism, in 1912 four presidential candidates — Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson, and Eugene Debs — shaped Americans' thought, 1912 Election and the Power of Progressivism: A Brief History with Documents to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add 1912 Election and the Power of Progressivism: A Brief History with Documents, Faced with the challenge of adapting America's political and social order to the rise of corporate capitalism, in 1912 four presidential candidates — Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson, and Eugene Debs — shaped Americans' thought, 1912 Election and the Power of Progressivism: A Brief History with Documents to your collection on WonderClub |