How did grassroots progressives attack the problems of industrial America?

> CHRONOLOGY

1889
  • Jane Addams opens Hull House in Chicago.

1893
  • Lillian Wald opens Henry Street settlement house in New York.

1903
  • Women’s Trade Union League founded.

1908
  • Muller v. Oregon decided.

1909
  • Garment workers strike.

1911
  • Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire kills workers.

Much of progressive reform began at the grassroots level and percolated upward into local, state, and eventually national politics as reformers attacked the social problems fostered by urban industrialism. Although progressivism flourished in many different settings across the country, urban problems inspired the progressives’ greatest efforts. In their zeal to “civilize the city,” reformers founded settlement houses, professed a new Christian social gospel, and campaigned against vice and crime in the name of “social purity.” Allying with the working class, women progressives sought to better the lot of sweatshop garment workers and to end child labor. These local reform efforts often ended up being debated in state legislatures and in the U.S. Congress.