The Gilded Age: Wealth, Corruption, and the New America — Fexingo History

The Gilded Age's Millionaires' Row: Vanderbilt's Fifth Avenue

9 min · 27 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Gilded Age's Millionaires' Row: Vanderbilt's Fifth Avenue

Descripción

In this episode, hosts Lucas and Luna explore the rise of Millionaires' Row along Fifth Avenue in New York City during the Gilded Age. They focus on the Vanderbilt family's construction of opulent mansions, particularly the triple palace built by William Henry Vanderbilt and his sons at 640, 642, and 644 Fifth Avenue. Lucas discusses the social competition among the ultra-wealthy, the architectural styles from Richard Morris Hunt to the French Renaissance, and the eventual decline of the neighborhood as commercial interests took over. The episode also touches on the broader context of wealth inequality and the cultural shift from private palaces to public museums, like the transformation of the Vanderbilt mansion into the Bergdorf Goodman department store. Listeners will learn about figures like Alva Vanderbilt, the role of architects such as Hunt and George B. Post, and the significance of the 1898 merger that created New York City. The conversation is a deep dive into the physical manifestation of Gilded Age excess and its lasting legacy on the city's urban fabric. #GildedAge #MillionairesRow #FifthAvenue #Vanderbilt #NewYorkCity #RichardMorrisHunt #AlvaVanderbilt #FrenchRenaissance #Architecture #WealthInequality #BergdorfGoodman #GeorgeBPost #NewYorkHistory #Opulence #SocialHistory #UrbanDevelopment #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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157 episodios

episode The Gilded Age's 1898 Trans-Mississippi Exposition and the Myth of the Vanishing Frontier artwork

The Gilded Age's 1898 Trans-Mississippi Exposition and the Myth of the Vanishing Frontier

In the summer of 1898, as the Spanish-American War raged in Cuba and the Philippines, Omaha, Nebraska hosted the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition — a sprawling world's fair that tried to capture the spirit of the 'closing frontier' just eight years after the Census Bureau declared it gone. Lucas and Luna explore the fair's grand 'Indian Congress,' where over 500 Native Americans from 35 tribes were brought to perform daily 'war dances' and mock battles for white audiences, presented as living relics of a dying race. They discuss how the fair's organizers — led by journalist and booster William Allen — used the event to promote white settlement of the West, celebrate industrial progress, and showcase Native peoples as vanishing curiosities. Meanwhile, the fair's 'Government Building' displayed the latest census data and maps, reinforcing the idea that the frontier had closed and that Native lands were fully incorporated. Lucas draws on the writings of historian Frederick Jackson Turner (who visited the fair) and the photographs of Frank Rinehart (who captured iconic images of Native leaders, including Geronimo, who was forced to appear). The conversation also touches on the fair's role in cementing the 'vanishing Indian' trope in American popular culture, and how it contrasted with the actual resilience of Native communities. A nuanced look at how a single event crystallized a nation's myths about itself. #TransMississippiExposition #Omaha1898 #IndianCongress #VanishingIndian #FrederickJacksonTurner #FrankRinehart #Geronimo #WilliamAllen #ClosureOfFrontier #WorldsFair #NativeAmericanHistory #GildedAge #AmericanWest #1898 #FexingoHistory #History #USHistory #IndigenousHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15 de jul de 20267 min
episode The Gilded Age's 1890s Bicycle Craze: Wheels of Freedom artwork

The Gilded Age's 1890s Bicycle Craze: Wheels of Freedom

In the 1890s, America was swept by a bicycle craze that reshaped transportation, fashion, and social norms. By 1896, there were over 4 million bicycles in the US, and the 'safety bicycle' with pneumatic tires made cycling accessible to the masses. This episode explores how the bicycle became a symbol of freedom for women, with Annie 'Londonderry' Kopchovsky cycling around the world in 1895. We discuss the League of American Wheelmen, which lobbied for better roads (paving the way for cars), and the backlash against female cyclists, who were accused of moral decay. We also look at the rise of bicycle racing, the six-day races, and the 1899 race where Charles 'Mile-a-Minute' Murphy paced behind a train. The craze peaked in the late 1890s, then faded as automobiles took over, but its impact on infrastructure, gender roles, and leisure was profound. #GildedAge #BicycleCraze #AnnieLondonderry #SafetyBicycle #LeagueOfAmericanWheelmen #WomenCyclists #BicycleRacing #CharlesMurphy #PneumaticTires #GoodRoadsMovement #1890s #TransportationHistory #FashionHistory #SocialChange #NorthAmerica #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode The Gilded Age's 1880s Labor Wars: The Knights of Labor vs. the Terrible Swamp artwork

The Gilded Age's 1880s Labor Wars: The Knights of Labor vs. the Terrible Swamp

In the 1880s, the Knights of Labor grew into a massive, secretive union that welcomed all workers—Black, white, women, immigrants. But as they challenged railroad barons and industrialists, they faced brutal repression. This episode dives into the 1885–86 Southwest Railroad Strike, a forgotten labor war that swept across Kansas, Missouri, and Texas. Hear about the shadowy 'General Master Workman' Terence Powderly, the terror of the 'Pinkerton detectives,' and the violent showdown in the 'Terrible Swamp' of Arkansas. We explore how the Knights' inclusive vision collided with racism, craft divisions, and the march of industrial capitalism. Featuring the Jay Gould railroad empire, the mysterious 'Vagrancy Laws,' and the tragic fragmentation of a movement that once promised a 'cooperative commonwealth.' #KnightsOfLabor #TerencePowderly #SouthwestRailroadStrike #JayGould #LaborHistory #GildedAge #RailroadStrike #Pinkertons #TerribleSwamp #CraftUnionism #AmericanHistory #1880s #IndustrialCapitalism #CooperativeCommonwealth #VagrancyLaws #LaborRepression #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode The Gilded Age's 1895 Anti-Saloon League and the Fight for Prohibition artwork

The Gilded Age's 1895 Anti-Saloon League and the Fight for Prohibition

In 1895, a small group of Ohio temperance activists founded the Anti-Saloon League, a single-issue political organization that would reshape American politics and eventually usher in the 18th Amendment. This episode unpacks how the League pioneered modern lobbying techniques, including relentless grassroots pressure, targeted campaigns against 'wet' politicians, and the use of church networks as political machines. We meet key figures like Wayne Wheeler, the League's master strategist, and explore the League's alliance with progressive reformers and nativist groups. We also examine the opposition from German-American breweries, the working-class saloon culture they defended, and the racial dynamics of the temperance movement—how white southerners used prohibition as a tool of social control, while Black activists like Ida B. Wells saw it as a distraction from lynching. This is the story of how a moral crusade became a political juggernaut, and the unintended consequences that would follow. #AntiSaloonLeague #WayneWheeler #Temperance #Prohibition #18thAmendment #GildedAge #ProgressiveEra #Ohio #WCTU #FrancesWillard #Saloon #Brewers #GermanAmericans #IdaBWells #Lobbying #SingleIssuePolitics #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13 de jul de 20266 min
episode The 1884 Presidential Election: Dirty Politics and a Baby artwork

The 1884 Presidential Election: Dirty Politics and a Baby

In the 1884 presidential election, Grover Cleveland faced James G. Blaine in one of the dirtiest campaigns in American history. This episode dives into the mudslinging: the 'Ma, Ma, Where's My Pa?' chant over Cleveland's alleged illegitimate child, the 'Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion' gaffe that cost Blaine New York, and the pivotal role of the 'Mugwumps,' reform Republicans who bolted their party. We explore how a secret meeting at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, a forged letter, and a single minister's speech swung the election. The episode also covers the broader context of Gilded Age politics—the Stalwarts vs. Half-Breeds, the spoils system, and the rise of civil service reform. Plus, we discuss the election's aftermath: Cleveland's cautious presidency, the Interstate Commerce Act, and the simmering tensions that led to the 1888 rematch. A tale of scandal, strategy, and a nation finding its political footing. #GildedAge #Election1884 #GroverCleveland #JamesGBlaine #Mugwumps #Stalwarts #HalfBreeds #RumRomanismRebellion #MamasWhereMyPa #DirtyCampaign #CivilServiceReform #FifthAvenueHotel #NewYorkElection #AmericanHistory #History #FexingoHistory #19thCentury #PoliticalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13 de jul de 20265 min