Cincinnati: Machine Boss, Structural Reformers and Social Reform Mayor Cincinnati in the Progressive Era offers a case study which includes three of our alternative policy
Category: Gilded Age Big Cities
Cleveland’s Tom Johnson–Social Reform Mayor
In Cleveland, Thomas Johnson, a wealthy businessman who acquired his wealth through an innovative streetcar technology/ownership[1], ruled for four terms (1901-1909)[2]. He was followed by
Rise of Social Reform Mayors:
Big City Progressive Era Policy Systems The ultimate purpose of this chapter is to describe municipal policy systems that typified the Progressive Era. Despite the
Gilded Age Municipal Bureaucracies
The Rise of Bureaucracies Although, I discuss city bureaucrats last in a series of Gilded Age policy actors, it is very unclear they are last
Gilded Age Real Estate Boards
Real Estate Boards Real Estate Exchanges[1] were common throughout the United States and they pretty much did what their name implies. Real estate boards were,
Civic Reform Clubs: NYC and Tweed
Civic Reform Clubs The alter-ego of chambers in the early Gilded Age, the “dark side of their force” was undoubtably the civic reform or good