Michigan: Reform Movements
Reform Movements
After the war the state remained firmly Republican until 1882. Then Michigan farmers, moved by the same financial difficulties and outrage at high transportation and storage rates that aroused other Western farmers, supported movements advocating agrarian interests, such as the Granger movement and the Greenback party. The farmers joined with the growing numbers of workers in the mines and lumber camps to elect a Greenback-Democratic governor in 1882 and succeeded in getting legislation passed for agrarian improvement and public welfare.
Reforms influenced by the labor movement were the creation of a state board of labor (1883), a law enforcing a 10-hr day (1885), and a moderate child-labor law (1887). The lumbering business, with its yield of wealth to the timber barons, declined to virtual inactivity. Some of the loggers joined the ranks of industrial workers, which were further swelled by many Polish and Norwegian immigrants.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Racial Tensions and Recession
- Assembly Lines and Labor Strife
- Reform Movements
- Settlement and Statehood
- Resistance to British Occupation
- Native Americans and French Explorers
- Government and Higher Education
- Economy
- Geography
- Facts and Figures
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