
In Our Time The American Populists
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Jun 15, 2017 Lawrence Goldman, a historian at the University of London, along with Mara Keire from Oxford and Christopher Phelps from Nottingham, dive deep into the significance of the American Populist movement during the Gilded Age. They discuss the challenges faced by struggling farmers and their formation of the People's Party as a political response. The conversation highlights how themes of race and class intertwined with economic issues, and they even explore how 'The Wizard of Oz' symbolizes these populist ideals, revealing the enduring impact of this movement on American society.
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From Cooperatives To Politics
- Farmers built regional Alliances to pool resources and attempt cooperative marketing and purchasing as self-help solutions.
- When cooperatives failed from undercapitalisation, these groups shifted toward political reform.
Political Program To Relieve Farmers
- Demand monetary expansion by advocating bimetallism to ease credit and raise farm prices.
- Push for public control of transport, banking and storage to protect small producers from private monopolies.
Democratic Backlash And Election Fraud
- Southern Democrats used fraud, violence and ballot manipulation to crush populist challenges and maintain white elite control.
- That repression included bringing in false voters, intimidation, and stolen elections.











