<P> Tindall stresses the continuing importance of the Progressive movement in the South in the 1920s involving increased democracy, efficient government, corporate regulation, social justice, and governmental public service . William Link finds political Progressivism dominant in most of the South in the 1920s . Likewise it was influential in the Midwest . </P> <P> Historians of women and of youth emphasize the strength of the Progressive impulse in the 1920s . Women consolidated their gains after the success of the suffrage movement, and moved into causes such as world peace, good government, maternal care (the Sheppard--Towner Act of 1921), and local support for education and public health . The work was not nearly as dramatic as the suffrage crusade, but women voted and operated quietly and effectively . Paul Fass, speaking of youth, says "Progressivism as an angle of vision, as an optimistic approach to social problems, was very much alive ." International influences that sparked many reform ideas likewise continued into the 1920s, as American ideas of modernity began to influence Europe . </P> <P> There is general agreement that the Era was over by 1932, especially since a majority of the remaining Progressives opposed the New Deal . </P> <Ul> <Li> Jane Addams </Li> <Li> Susan B. Anthony, suffragist </Li> <Li> Robert P. Bass, New Hampshire politician </Li> <Li> Charles A. Beard, historian and political scientist </Li> <Li> Louis Brandeis, Supreme Court justice </Li> <Li> William Jennings Bryan, Democratic presidential nominee in 1896, 1900, 1908; Secretary of State </Li> <Li> Lucy Burns, suffragist </Li> <Li> Andrew Carnegie, steel magnate, philanthropist </Li> <Li> Carrie Chapman Catt, suffragist </Li> <Li> Winston Churchill (novelist), author (not the British politician) </Li> <Li> Herbert Croly, journalist </Li> <Li> Clarence Darrow, lawyer </Li> <Li> John Dewey, philosopher </Li> <Li> W.E.B. Du Bois, Black scholar </Li> <Li> Thomas Edison, inventor </Li> <Li> Irving Fisher, economist </Li> <Li> Abraham Flexner, education </Li> <Li> Henry Ford, automaker </Li> <Li> Henry George, writer on political economy </Li> <Li> Charlotte Perkins Gilman, feminist </Li> <Li> Susan Glaspell, playwright, novelist </Li> <Li> Emma Goldman, anarchist, philosopher, writer </Li> <Li> Lewis Hine, photographer </Li> <Li> Charles Evans Hughes, statesman </Li> <Li> William James, philosopher </Li> <Li> Hiram Johnson, Governor of California </Li> <Li> Mary Harris "Mother" Jones, union activist </Li> <Li> Samuel M. Jones, politician, reformer </Li> <Li> Florence Kelley, child advocate </Li> <Li> Robert M. La Follette, Sr., Governor of Wisconsin </Li> <Li> Fiorello LaGuardia, U.S. Congressman from New York; New York City mayor </Li> <Li> Walter Lippmann, journalist </Li> <Li> Mayo Brothers, medicine </Li> <Li> Fayette Avery McKenzie, sociology </Li> <Li> John R. Mott, YMCA leader </Li> <Li> George Mundelein, Catholic leader </Li> <Li> Alice Paul, suffragist </Li> <Li> Ulrich B. Phillips, historian </Li> <Li> Gifford Pinchot, conservationist </Li> <Li> Walter Rauschenbusch, theologian of Social Gospel </Li> <Li> Jacob Riis, reformer </Li> <Li> John D. Rockefeller, Jr., philanthropist </Li> <Li> Theodore Roosevelt, President </Li> <Li> Elihu Root, statesman </Li> <Li> Margaret Sanger, birth control activist </Li> <Li> Anna Howard Shaw, suffragist </Li> <Li> Upton Sinclair, novelist </Li> <Li> Albion Small, sociologist </Li> <Li> Ellen Gates Starr, sociologist </Li> <Li> Lincoln Steffens, reporter </Li> <Li> Henry Stimson, statesman </Li> <Li> William Howard Taft, President and Chief Justice </Li> <Li> Ida Tarbell, muckraker </Li> <Li> Frederick Winslow Taylor, efficiency expert </Li> <Li> Frederick Jackson Turner, historian </Li> <Li> Thorstein Veblen, economist </Li> <Li> Lester Frank Ward, sociologist </Li> <Li> Woodrow Wilson, President </Li> <Li> Ida B. Wells, Black leader </Li> <Li> Burton Kendall Wheeler, Montana politician </Li> </Ul>

Who were the progressives and where did they live