With the publishing of Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, which depicted the horrific meatpacking industry and reports of the factories such as Document B, the public was informed of what they were receiving from factories and how factory workers were living. The disgusting conditions compelled some reformers to get to work and change the conditions of factory workers. Jane Addams created settlement houses in the heart of cities and was also a leading activist against child labor. The conditions of the factories were no place for adults to work in, nonetheless children, yet because of immense poverty many children had to work to help support their families. Because of this, many reformers called for federal help and change. With the pictures of Lewis Hines, who captured children working in precarious positions, and Jane Addams (Document C), Wilson finally agreed to pass the Child Labor Act which prevented children under …show more content…
Through the maintenance of trusts, the enforcement of labor laws and better conditions for laborers and women’s rights and suffrage, America made some radical steps to be a modernized and reigning nation. But conflict between Europe’s leading powers beckoned America out of her golden Progressive Age and into war. Although the reform movement could have continued past the Great War, post-bellum America was too shook to continue the reform movements and the doors were opened for a whole new era from the one started by muckrakers and reformers, Roosevelt and