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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The election of 1912 was referred to as a race that would define the future because of tremendous changes taking place due to progressivism. With Roosevelt's New Nationalism, Wilson's New Freedom, technological advancement and a significant surge in immigrants, the Progressive Era would prove to define America's future in more ways than one. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCProgism.rtf
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technological advancement and a significant surge in immigrants, the Progressive Era would prove to define Americas future in more ways than one. One
of the most significant reasons why the election of 1912 helped to define the future was because of the influx of immigrants changing Americas very social landscape. There was
much dissension between Americans and their government at that time with more than twenty million immigrants leaving behind a world of heartbreak and disappointment to find a new life in
the United States. During that span of forty years, nearly thirty-five percent of the American population was non-native born; in the minds of United States citizens, the foreign-born populace
-- mostly from southern and eastern Europe -- had begun to overtake the country (Berkin PG). This sharp upsurge in the number of
immigrants put a great fear into those who were born on American soil; what concerned them the most was the potential for religious upheaval or the radical political beliefs the
newcomers supposedly brought with them to their new land. The unrest had been labeled nativism and was guilty of branding the newly transplanted immigrants as culturally or racially inferior
merely because they were not of American heritage (Berkin PG). Organizations soon formed for no other purpose than to force the non-natives to
leave behind all trace of their previous lives in order for them to immediately become accustomed to the American way of life. It was as though they were stripped
of whatever heritage they brought with them. Still others heartily believed that there was no place at all for the new arrivals, as they were racially unacceptable in their
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