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

The Gilded Age's Wild West: Buffalo Bill Cody and the Myth of the Frontier

7 min · 24. juni 2026
episode The Gilded Age's Wild West: Buffalo Bill Cody and the Myth of the Frontier cover

Description

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how William F. 'Buffalo Bill' Cody crafted the enduring image of the American West during the Gilded Age. From his career as a buffalo hunter and scout to the creation of his world-famous Wild West show, Cody transformed real frontier history into a spectacle that toured the globe. The episode delves into the show's cast of real figures—including Sitting Bull, Annie Oakley, and sharpshooter Lillian Smith—and examines how Cody's performances shaped international perceptions of the United States. It also considers the darker side: the exploitation of Native performers, the erasure of violence against Indigenous peoples, and how the myth of the 'Wild West' served political and economic interests. Lucas explains how the show coincided with the closing of the frontier (as declared by the 1890 Census), the massacre at Wounded Knee, and the rise of American imperialism abroad. The conversation touches on Cody's own contradictions: a man who fought Native Americans on the plains and later employed them as performers, who claimed to preserve history while commercializing it. Rich with specific detail—from the show's 1893 Chicago premiere to its influence on early Hollywood—this episode invites listeners to question the stories they think they know about the American West. #BuffaloBill #WildWestShow #SittingBull #AnnieOakley #AmericanFrontier #GildedAge #MythOfTheWest #WilliamFCody #WoundedKnee #1890Census #CowboysAndIndians #Imperialism #AmericanHistory #HistoryPodcast #FexingoHistory #NorthAmerica #19thCentury #PopularCulture Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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131 episodes

episode The Gilded Age's Carnegie Libraries: Steel Magnate's Philanthropy artwork

The Gilded Age's Carnegie Libraries: Steel Magnate's Philanthropy

Andrew Carnegie built over 1,600 public libraries across the United States between 1883 and 1929, funding them with the fortune amassed from Carnegie Steel. This episode explores the philosophy behind his philanthropy, rooted in his 'Gospel of Wealth' essay, and the practical realities of building libraries in small towns and industrial cities. We examine the conditions Carnegie imposed—matching funds, maintenance commitments, and often controversial design choices—and how communities responded. From the first library in Allegheny City to the elaborate Beaux-Arts buildings in cities like Detroit and New York, we trace the spread of these institutions and their role in shaping American public education and civic life. We also address the tensions: some criticized Carnegie as buying a legacy while his workers toiled in brutal conditions; others saw the libraries as genuine tools for self-improvement. The episode includes stories of local fundraising struggles, the architecture of knowledge, and the lasting impact on literacy and community identity. Join Lucas and Luna as they explore how Carnegie's libraries became a defining feature of the Gilded Age's cultural landscape. #CarnegieLibraries #AndrewCarnegie #GildedAge #PublicLibraries #Philanthropy #GospelOfWealth #AlleghenyCity #SteelMagnate #FreeLibrary #BeauxArts #AmericanHistory #Education #Literacy #CivicLife #Pittsburgh #HomesteadStrike #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday5 min
episode The Gilded Age's Thanksgiving: A National Holiday Born in Crisis artwork

The Gilded Age's Thanksgiving: A National Holiday Born in Crisis

In the midst of the Gilded Age's labor wars, economic panics, and rising immigration, President Abraham Lincoln's 1863 proclamation making Thanksgiving a national holiday was a deliberate act of nation-building. But it was Sarah Josepha Hale, the 74-year-old editor of Godey's Lady's Book, who spent 17 years lobbying for the holiday. This episode traces Hale's relentless campaign through the Civil War, her vision of a unifying 'national festival', and how Gilded Age Americans — from immigrants to industrialists — adopted the holiday. We explore the first Macy's parade (born from immigrant employees), the rise of football as a Thanksgiving tradition, and how the holiday became a stage for debates about charity, consumption, and American identity. From the 'Queen of the Household' magazine to the 'Turkey Day' football games, this is the story of how a day of gratitude became a mirror of America's contradictions. #Thanksgiving #SarahJosephaHale #AbrahamLincoln #GildedAge #NationalHoliday #CivilWar #MacyParade #Football #Immigration #AmericanIdentity #GodeysLadyBook #TurkeyDay #Charity #Consumption #NationBuilding #History #FexingoHistory #NorthAmerica Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday8 min
episode The Gilded Age's Great Uprising: The 1877 Railroad Strike artwork

The Gilded Age's Great Uprising: The 1877 Railroad Strike

In the summer of 1877, a massive labor uprising shook the United States. It began when railroad workers in Martinsburg, West Virginia, walked off the job after a second wage cut in a year. Within days, the strike spread like wildfire across the nation, from Baltimore to Chicago to San Francisco. In Pittsburgh, state militia fired on crowds, leading to battles that left dozens dead and millions in property destroyed. President Rutherford B. Hayes called in federal troops, marking the first time the U.S. government used military force to break a strike. Lucas and Luna explore the causes, key events, and lasting impact of the Great Railroad Strike of 1877, including the role of the secret labor organization the Trainmen's Union, the violence in Pittsburgh and Chicago, and the rise of working-class consciousness that set the stage for later labor movements. #GreatRailroadStrike #1877 #GildedAge #LaborHistory #RailroadStrike #Martinsburg #Pittsburgh #Chicago #RutherfordBHayes #TrainmensUnion #Strikebreaking #FederalTroops #WorkingClass #IndustrialRevolution #AmericanHistory #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

30. juni 20267 min
episode Jay Gould and the Gold Corner of 1869 artwork

Jay Gould and the Gold Corner of 1869

In September 1869, financier Jay Gould hatched a daring plot to corner the U.S. gold market, bringing the nation's economy to the brink of collapse. This episode unpacks Gould's scheme, his secret dealings with President Ulysses S. Grant's inner circle, and the chaotic Black Friday that followed. We trace Gould's rise from a modest New York farm to the helm of the Erie Railroad, his partnership with James Fisk, and the web of bribery that nearly toppled the Grant administration. Along the way, we examine how the gold conspiracy epitomized the Gilded Age's fusion of wealth, corruption, and political power — and why it prompted lasting reforms in federal financial policy. Featuring Abel Corbin, Grant's brother-in-law, and Treasury Secretary George Boutwell, this is a story of greed, panic, and the birth of modern market regulation. #JayGould #GoldCorner #BlackFriday1869 #JamesFisk #UlyssesGrant #AbelCorbin #GeorgeBoutwell #ErieRailroad #WallStreet #GildedAge #FinancialHistory #MarketCorner #GoldPanic #USHistory #GrantAdministration #Speculation #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

30. juni 20267 min
episode The Gilded Age's Tenement Poor: Jacob Riis and How the Other Half Lives artwork

The Gilded Age's Tenement Poor: Jacob Riis and How the Other Half Lives

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the tenement slums of New York City through the lens of Jacob Riis, a Danish immigrant turned journalist and photographer. When Riis published 'How the Other Half Lives' in 1890, the flash powder images inside shocked readers with their stark portrayal of poverty, filth, and overcrowding. Lucas details how Riis used his camera to expose the dark, airless back alleys and 'dumb-bell tenements' where some 1.5 million people lived in the Lower East Side at the time. We learn about the 1879 Tenement House Act that inadvertently created these cramped floor plans, and how reformers like Riis—alongside figures like Lawrence Veiller—pushed for the 1901 New York Tenement House Act, which mandated larger windows, indoor toilets, and better ventilation. The episode also touches on the racial and ethnic tensions of the era, including anti-Irish and anti-Italian sentiment, and the rise of settlement houses like the Henry Street Settlement founded by Lillian Wald. Riis's work sparked a national conversation about housing reform and influenced future muckrakers, but his methods and paternalistic views also drew criticism from later historians. Through Riis's lens, we see how the Gilded Age's immense wealth coexisted with unimaginable squalor—and how one man's photographs helped change the way America saw its urban poor. #JacobRiis #HowTheOtherHalfLives #TenementHousing #GildedAge #Muckraking #PhotographyHistory #NewYorkCityHistory #LowerEastSide #TenementMuseum #LillianWald #LawrenceVeiller #SettlementHouse #UrbanPoverty #ReformMovement #ImmigrationHistory #ProgressiveEra #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. juni 20269 min