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The Making and Unmaking of Progress: A Two-State Comparison of Organized Educators, Politics, and Fiscal Policy-Reform, 1880s - 1920s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2025

Joan Malczewski*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA
Nancy Beadie
Affiliation:
Department of History, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
*
Corresponding author: Joan Malczewski; Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

The expansion of schooling in the early 20th Century required the modernization of state governments at the subnational level and related fiscal policy reform. Organized educators in California and Washington promoted legislation in 1920 that would increase each state’s support for schooling. In spite of similar fiscal policy goals and a shared commitment to the support of public schooling in both states, the legislation passed in California and failed in Washington. This comparative analysis of fiscal policy reform in the two states demonstrates the relationship between education fiscal policy and state formation, between tax policy and social change, the role of states as subnational sites for fiscal policy experimentation in the early twentieth century, and the role of policy feedback in fiscal policy reform. A close study of factors contributing to the divergent legislative outcomes illuminates underlying relationships between fiscal policy and associative action at state levels over the 70-year-period preceding the 1920 reform campaigns and demonstrates the centrality of education to research in fiscal sociology and political development.

Type
Research Article
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Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press.

Organized educators in California and Washington, promoted legislation for fiscal policy reform in 1920 that included similar measures. California’s ballot initiative, known as Amendment 16, and Washington’s Senate Bill #10 had common funding elements designed to increase each state’s share of support for education. Organized educators collaborated across the two states and in conversation with the National Education Association (NEA), demonstrating the important role of associative action in fiscal policy reform.Footnote 1 In spite of similar fiscal policy goals and a shared commitment to the suport of public schooling, the outcomes diverged. This comparative analysis explores how state variation and feedback effects shaped the policy landscape for fiscal policy reform that led to legislative success in California and failure in Washington.

The legislation in California and Washington was the culmination of decades of efforts to increase state support of public education, reflecting strong education cultures that could be traced to the nineteenth century. Both states had developed schooling as a colonial project and expanded that system under the guidance of organized educators. Key education provisions in California’s amended Constitution of 1879 provided a model for comparable provisions in Washington’s new Constitution, ratified in 1889.Footnote 2 Both strongly supported public education and ensured its ongoing support through the provision of state funds for a “general and uniform” system of public schools. By 1910, Washington and California ranked No. 1 and 2 respectively on the Russell Sage Foundation’s statistical index for state school systems, based on several standard measures of school expenditures, operations, and attendance. The 1920 legislative measures would enhance these rankings.Footnote 3

This comparative analysis of fiscal policy reform in California and Washington makes four important and related contributions to the scholarship. First, the analysis demonstrates the centrality of education as an important site of policy innovation and political development at the state and local level during the time period. Second, the analysis reveals the significance of organized educators among interest groups in constructing the associational state of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Third, the narratives demonstrate how policy feedback shaped interest groups, governance structures, and the contours of the associational state and its contributions to policy diffusion during the time period. Fourth, the centrality of education fiscal policy as a central determinant of the policy context at the state and local level makes it an important link between scholarship in fiscal sociology, policy processes, and political development.

Education and fiscal policy reform converged nationally in the early twentieth century. The fiscal and rhetorical significance of education as a function of state government had increased substantially in response to higher and more diverse enrollments and a wide range of new programming that included kindergartens, vocational programs, public health, infrastructure, special education, and Americanization. New programs and related staffing substantially increased the costs of public education, making it the largest fixed expenditure in the majority of state budgets, which required new funding sources and fiscal policy innovations at local, county, and state levels of government. Fiscal policy reform included increased state funding, district consolidation, the incorporation of “scientific” budgeting to eliminate waste and streamline costs, equalization measures to redistribute costs between individuals and corporations and across regions, legislation allowing certain localities special tax powers, and the separation of sources between state and local government.Footnote 4

Scholarship in education history demonstrates the centrality of education to state formation. Policies that supported nineteenth-century schooling and its subsequent expansion reflected conceptualizations about the scope and structure of the state, particularly its role in promoting conditions of relative social equity and equal opportunity.Footnote 5 Tracy Steffes demonstrates that education policy became a central site of state administrative expansion across the nation beginning in 1890 and Joan Malczewski has demonstrated the relationship between education reform and state and local administrative expansion in the South.Footnote 6 Until recently, however, scholarship in the field has paid relatively little attention to the tax and fiscal side of such policies, the local and regional variations of context that supported or inhibited school financing, and the relationship between school financing and political development. A developing body of scholarship is now addressing some of those gaps, including greater attention to the interaction between fiscal policy and structural inequality.Footnote 7 However, this body of literature has focused more on the impact of fiscal policies on education, rather than on the politics that produced them.

Meanwhile, education as a domain of social spending receives little attention in mainstream political and economic history. Economic historians demonstrate that education spending as a function of government increased significantly by the beginning of the twentieth century, but do not focus on how such spending was financed or the politics behind that increased spending.Footnote 8 Ajay Mehrotra recognizes a national shift to direct and progressive taxation that generated new revenue sources for progressive era reforms and fostered equalization of tax burdens. It represented a new form of statecraft that was shaped by social concerns about economic justice, civic identity, administrative capacity, public power, and efforts to replace a laissez faire political economy that protected private property with policies that reallocated economic responsibility across class and region and reordered political arrangements and institutions.Footnote 9 While Mehrotra recognizes education as a site of innovation in tax policy in states like California, his primary focus is federal tax policy and national trends. Since public school funding is primarily a state function in the United States, he pays relatively little attention to education as a domain of public expenditure or revenue generation.

Scholarship in fiscal sociology considers the dynamic relationship between fiscal policy development but again focuses more on national-level analysis, which explains a relative absence of education history in the literature. In 1918, Joseph Schumpeter called for a scientific study of public finance that would unite the study of economics with the study of history, politics, and society and suggested that scholars treat tax policy as both a “symptom” and a “cause” of large-scale changes in the economy and society.Footnote 10 Subsequent scholarship has focused more on taxation as a symptom of social change and less on taxation as a cause of social change.Footnote 11

This paper does both. An analysis of education fiscal policy reform in California and Washington circa 1920 addresses the need for more state-level analysis of fiscal policy reforms that shaped the twentieth century and demonstrates the centrality of education to that history. At the state and local levels, fiscal policy reform takes place primarily in the domain of education, the largest share of most state budgets. Debates about fiscal policy reform during the progressive era were an important part of the process of both setting goals for public schooling and logics about the role of the state, which makes education central to conversations about state building at the subnational level.

It is in debates about taxation that conceptions of the role and scope of state and local government are often formulated. The collective agreement to pay taxes requires consensus around particular policy goals and represents a kind of social contract that simultaneously defines the expectations of government and the social and cultural meaning of citizenship.Footnote 12 However, while the perception of fairness plays a crucial role in maintaining ongoing support for government policies, interpretations of “fairness” are subjective.Footnote 13 Individual voters seek taxation policies that reflect a particular conceptualization of the state and seek to negotiate the relationship to their advantage, a process that promotes the development of interest groups, institutions, and cooperative alliances.Footnote 14

Mehrotra suggests that fiscal policy debates are both fiscal and intellectual processes because policies promoted by interest groups require support from the larger community.Footnote 15 The intellectual exercise is necessary to reach consensus about the role of the state and precedes a willingness to make sacrifices through taxation to achieve it. For example, advocates of “social taxation” are aware that every tax has nonrevenue effects, whether deliberate or inadvertent, that might potentially remake society.Footnote 16 While many scholars see the New Deal as a key moment in the formation of the American tax state, particularly the Revenue Act of 1935 that attempted to raise taxes on the rich, the roots of the twentieth-century tax state and ideals about social taxation can be traced to the early twentieth century when states confronted the requirement for revenues sufficient to state modernization, particularly in the domain of schooling, and determined through taxation policy the relative responsibility between state and local governments. This comparative analysis can strengthen the fiscal sociology literature by highlighting how policy processes determined the associative politics that shaped fiscal policy reform.

Scholarship in American political development pays substantial attention to the shifts toward social spending that occurred during the progressive era, including associated fiscal policies and politics and the role of interest groups and institutions. Scholars have described a “policy state” that developed through progressive reformers who conceived of social change in terms of social obligations that legitimized big business through regulation, demanded equalization policies that increased revenues, and placed a greater burden on corporations and railroads.Footnote 17 It required experts more than political parties and fostered interest group formation and activism at every level of government. Balogh describes how trade associations and professional societies by the 1920s provided an important bridge between civil society and the state by dealing with local problems without requiring an expansion of the centralized state.Footnote 18 State and local governments could adapt agendas to national needs in order to act in concert on a national scale. Fiscal policy reform in Washington and California, pursued in communication between the two states and with the leadership of the NEA, highlights education policy as a leading edge of associative action.Footnote 19

Scholarship on the modernization of state governments in the early twentieth century demonstrates the importance of state-level analysis. For education fiscal policy, national debates about taxation policy and education rights included efforts to pass the Blair Bill, proposed in Congress multiple times between 1883 and 1890 and strongly supported by the NEA and other federated organizations, to provide federal aid for education. The ultimate failure of that bill stimulated renewed focus on state and local funding and control of education and related tax policies during the progressive era.Footnote 20 The emergence of the federal income tax made states into “subnational” units of government and important sites for fiscal policy experimentation.Footnote 21

Recent scholarship on policy feedback provides a framework for understanding the relationship between education fiscal policy reform and state-level politics. Feedback theory explains how policy decisions transform state capacities, increase or decrease political participation, and affect the identities and goals of social groups.Footnote 22 In other words, policies affect politics which, in turn, affects subsequent policy decisions. Positive feedback from existing policies can be self-reinforcing and make deviation to newer policies more difficult over time, while negative feedback effects can create backlash, interrupt path dependency, and undermine policy gains.Footnote 23 Policy diffusion, by which policymakers in one location learn from the experiences and innovations of those in another, is communicated through interest groups and associations and is highlighted in this analysis.Footnote 24

Policy innovation in Washington and California developed through similar policy contexts and political networks that shaped education fiscal policy.Footnote 25 This analysis demonstrates that teacher organizations in each state were influenced by state and national fiscal policy trends and networks, and in collaboration with the NEA.Footnote 26 Organized educators played significant and deliberate roles in shaping public finance and administrative governance structures at both federal and state levels from the mid-nineteenth through the twentieth centuries to an extent largely unrecognized in the larger literature on interest group politics, the administrative state, and the U.S. political economy. At the federal level, this organized influence dated from the 1830s, manifesting in predecessor organizations for the NEA and eventually in the founding of the Bureau of Education and its statistical regime in 1867, the formulation of Reconstruction legislation and also, importantly, in state formation itself, including the funding and administrative provisions of new state constitutions of western territories.Footnote 27 At state levels, educator organizations formed often in direct collaboration with legislative and administrative leaders, with the explicit and acknowledged aim of influencing the details of statute law defining jurisdictional authority, funding structures, and state regulation and oversight of public school systems. As professional bodies with grassroots constituencies in every major and minor jurisdiction of a state, organized educators and administrators maintained ties to local state legislators, as well as, from the 1860s, with leadership of the NEA, federal officials in the Department of Interior, and members of Congress.Footnote 28 They had the potential to mobilize formidable political influence, a capacity that certain state organizations increasingly perfected in the progressive era, as education systems themselves expanded and came to embody the very idea of “progress.”

In her defining study of organizational innovation in interest group politics from 1890 to 1925, Elisabeth Clemens considers the West, including California and Washington where partisan politics was weakest, to be an important site for policy innovation.Footnote 29 Clemens demonstrated that political and organizational leaders actively sought to learn from policy innovation across states when crafting new laws and policies and showed that western states in particular were seen as “experimental stations” for the testing and refinement of political and policy innovations. She identified several distinctive political innovations in the West, including women’s suffrage and direct democracy initiatives, that facilitated new forms and levels of organizational influence in policy and created opportunities for interest group participation.

The most significant contribution in this analysis is its focus on education as a major but almost entirely neglected policy domain for political and policy innovation in this era, one that links Clemens’ work on interest groups to more recent literature on policy processes. Education interest groups in California and Washington were a powerful force in education fiscal policy development. Those policies, including taxation, were not just a product of politics but also an important input that reshaped the political environment, changed incentives for collective action, and altered state capacities.Footnote 30 Given the centrality of education to political development at the state and local level, this analysis of teacher organizations in matters of tax and social policy demonstrates distinctive forms of organizational influence and power at state and local levels, with policy connections to the federal level as well.

The decision to raise revenues sufficient to the development of a centralized, state system of public schooling is an implicit commitment to serve all students with some measure of equity. Scholars have recognized that politics influences education policy more than other domestic policy issues because schooling is a uniquely shared responsibility between all levels of government.Footnote 31 The extension of its benefits to a majority of citizens can also develop in a greater number of citizens the civic skills and social networks that are important to civic engagement and reshape conceptions of the role of government in promoting equity, interpretive effects that are important to policy feedback.Footnote 32 Education fiscal policy reform requires a set of shared beliefs around the goals of schooling that are institutionalized in an administrative organization with sufficient autonomy to promote the collective good and withstand social divisions.Footnote 33

This history of education fiscal policy reform in Washington and California begins in the mid-nineteenth century, encompassing different dates and contexts of statehood for the two states, to 1922. The analysis highlights the influence of five different types of fiscal policy in these states that shaped political development and subsequent fiscal policy reform: school land policies; constitutional funding provisions; special tax legislation; federal funding allocated to the states for categorical programs; and broad fiscal policy reforms aimed at restructuring school tax support. A particularly interesting intersection of fiscal policy, place-based power, and local policies occurred in education, which demonstrates the cause and effect of fiscal policy that Schumpeter described and highlights factors in political development that might not otherwise be as visible.

1. Fiscal policy reform in a western context: Washington and California narratives

California and Washington proposed major fiscal policy reform in 1920. In California, Proposition 16 was an initiated constitutional amendment that was designed to increase the state education allocation. Specifically, the Amendment added kindergarten to the public school system, an addition to the state school fund and the creation of a high school fund to ensure a minimum allocation of $30 per student, an amount that would be matched by counties and doubled for secondary schools. It would reserve 60 percent of the total fund for teacher salary equalization.Footnote 34 Washington’s Senate Bill #10 precisely paralleled fiscal policy provisions in California’s Amendment 16, aiming to increase the state share of school funding to the same level of $30 per student, create a state fund for support of high schools, and equalize school funding across districts.Footnote 35 California’s proposed amendment included a provision regarding the state board of education, but Washington’s legislation aimed to reorganize comprehensively the administration of the public schools by consolidating primary responsibility for school administration and taxation at the county rather than local levels, requiring the constitution of new county-level school boards, and making the positions of state and county superintendent appointed rather than elective offices.Footnote 36 These measures reflected collaboration between the states and with national education and fiscal policy leaders, including university-based intellectual leaders of administrative and policy reform.

The success of the legislation in California and its failure in Washington were not just the result of unique state “culture,” which risks being ahistorical, but of institutional factors that had developed in response to earlier fiscal policy development and reform, particularly in the domain of education. The divergent outcomes highlight the complexities of policy processes that were shaped by a relatively weak party structure, progressive era expansion of state government that impacted fiscal policy reform, and institutional innovation.Footnote 37

The relative weakness of the national party structure was more pronounced in the newer western states, where political parties were less entrenched and the environment was more conducive to policy innovation.Footnote 38 In the decade preceding the 1920 fiscal policy legislation, fiscal policy reform was shaped more by interest group than party activism. Clemens describes a “politics of method” that created opportunities for new forms of political participation, particularly direct democracy initiatives that provided special interest groups with a means to present and pass legislation that reflected voter rather than partisan concerns.Footnote 39 Educators organized in both states during the nineteenth century but were particularly visible after 1910.

These two states share important conceptual categories that define the policy landscape and support a comparative analysis.Footnote 40 Both promoted universal education and conceptions of equity that shaped early education legislation. Organized educators in both were important to education fiscal policy beginning in the nineteenth century and operated in similar policy landscapes, defined in part by a western context that included shared policy networks across states and with the NEA.Footnote 41 Interest group activism developed in a region recognized for its role in policy innovation, including direct democracy and women’s suffrage. Finally, while teacher organizations were successful in expanding state fiscal policies to benefit public education, fiscal policy reform created positive and negative policy feedback that determined the policy context in each state and shaped interest groups and policy outcomes.Footnote 42

The comparative analysis presented here recognizes that state variation can significantly impact feedback effects, which led to important differences in each state’s policy landscape. Early policy development led to variation in how teacher organizations were structured and operated in each state.Footnote 43 In California, there was centralized support for teacher organizations; subsequent education and fiscal policy reform fostered their expansion and consolidation of power. In Washington, structured teacher organizations were shaped by urban, rural, and gendered dimensions that were distinct from those of California.Footnote 44 Subsequent policy feedback shaped distinctive forms of associational activity. In Washington, a concentrated campaign to simultaneously achieve organizational consolidation and mobilize that consolidated organization behind fiscal policy reform did not work out as its advocates hoped or expected. A close look at the Washington campaign with comparative reference to the simultaneous effort in California reveals the importance of organizational consolidation for the success of fiscal reform. At the same time, it reveals some limits and pitfalls of political and policy diffusion across states.

Each of these dynamics shaping fiscal policy is multilayered and invokes multiple literatures. Certainly, they cannot all be fully developed across two state contexts in a single article. Instead, this analysis focuses on a common set of innovations in tax policy and state administration and highlights the distinctive forms of policy feedback that developed and affected the policy landscape in each state.

1.1. California

California embraced centralized schooling in its original 1848 constitution. It provided for a school fund from the income derived from the sale and rental of public lands. It also included a provision for a superintendent of public instruction, followed by legislation that established a State Board of Education, funding for a state school journal, and teacher institutes that led to the creation of the California Educational Society, a teacher organization that promoted minimum terms and professional standards.Footnote 45 In Clemen’s terms, these early institutes represented a distinct organizational innovation that facilitated the political participation of ordinary teachers and other educators, including women. The efforts to use land for the creation of a school fund, however, required the state to transform dispossessed Indigenous and Mexican lands in a process that was time consuming, politically difficult, and sometimes unsuccessful.Footnote 46 Revenues were insufficient to building a public system that met the needs of a vast state with diverse regions and population.

The state teachers’ institutes were an important venue for addressing and publicizing these early fiscal policy concerns. The 1871 institute registered 463 educators and advocated education to hundreds of citizens who attended public talks over 4 days.Footnote 47 The result was the enactment of a state school tax that demonstrated the potential of nascent educator organization. The State Teachers Association formed in 1876 and fiscal policy reform remained a central concern.

The second state Constitution in 1879 introduced new fiscal policies in education that reflected the populist political context. It eliminated the State Board of Education and specified that the entirety of the state’s central school fund be directed exclusively to the support of common schools, not high schools. This provision represented a populist critique of traditions of school funding dating back to the Revolutionary Era, when the proceeds of central state funds were directed to “higher” schools such as colleges, academies, and high schools serving a very small proportion of the population (approximately 2 percent of the relevant age cohort) and selected localities, rather than to “common” or elementary schools serving as mass institutions for the population and state as a whole.Footnote 48

The fiscal policies introduced by the 1879 Constitution reflected a populist critique of that tradition but created new problems. Subsequent legislation shifted responsibility for high school funding from the state to the local level, which highlighted ineffective county-level administrative systems and insufficient funding. The State Board of Education was no longer a legal state institution but continued to meet, coordinating with the State Teachers Association and education activists to address new fiscal policy constraints and establish the first constitutionally supported state Board of Education, comprised of leaders of secondary teacher training institutions.Footnote 49

The group promoted legislation that would provide state support for high schools. This included an 1883 act to create a “grammar school course” with several years of advanced instruction that escaped the Constitutional prohibition. The Union District Bill enacted in 1891 allowed towns of 1500 or more, or small districts uniting to reach that number, to establish a high school, and the County District Bill in the same year allowed county residents to vote a high school tax.Footnote 50 In 1903, a State High School Teachers Association formed and the state successfully passed an act that provided for free high schools.Footnote 51 However, this concerted and protracted action on behalf of fiscal policy reform was difficult to sustain because the leaders of the new State Board of Education were simultaneously managing teacher training institutions.Footnote 52 The state teachers’ organization would fill the void.

The State Teachers Association had been effective in advocating for high schools. It had created an “Advisory Council” in 1891 that held annual meetings in small towns across the state for teachers and citizens to create “common sentiment” around public schooling.Footnote 53 It spoke as an authority on education issues, propagandized on the state’s educational responsibilities, and investigated a range of topics, like textbook selection, teacher certification, rural school supervision, and curricular offerings.Footnote 54 Its powerful networks promoted activism on behalf of public education through the dissemination of what Clemens refers to as “organizational repertoires” in support of schooling.Footnote 55

The work institutionalized and empowered state teacher organizing and further developed the social underpinnings of the state’s education culture, efforts that were central to the associational action that defined early twentieth-century fiscal policy reform. It was broadly inclusive, including participation from state agencies and affiliated organizations like university faculties, women’s groups, school boards, principals, welfare agencies, and powerful state and national education leaders who could draw on extensive experience and foster connections to teacher organizations outside of the state.Footnote 56 The Advisory Council became an “ambitiously extensive, all-inclusive state educational association, utilizing the varied intellectual and professional resources for large ends.”Footnote 57 When the State Teachers Association reorganized in 1905, the new California Teachers Association (CTA) created an organizational structure that fostered teacher activism that would support fiscal policy reform through direct democracy initiatives.Footnote 58

The CTA developed a central organization, the California Council on Education (CCE), which replaced the Advisory Council and oversaw six regional associations led by executive committees that included a representative for every 300 paid memberships and had the autonomy and authority to address local concerns.Footnote 59 The CCE continued to provide oversight and a strong synergy with state and national education and political leaders.

The CTA helped to obviate urban/rural and gender distinctions in a way that proved significant for subsequent legislative initiatives and diverged with the pattern of educator organization in Washington State. What proved important was its representational structure, which created coherence across regions and organizational interests, and created opportunities at the state and local level for educators to exercise agency, particularly women who served as teachers and superintendents. Members within their respective regions elected representatives to a central decision-making council rather than voting as individuals on major matters of policy and strategy. The structure had the effect of reconciling different interests under a rationalized central authority that could claim to act on behalf of the whole, even as it subordinated some perspectives to others. The association was led by the state superintendent, which conferred important advantages for education policy initiatives by providing entre into local teacher associations and schools.Footnote 60 There were 10,000 teachers in the state in 1909 and two-thirds were members of the CTA, which became their primary bargaining unit.Footnote 61 However, the group became a powerful force in state politics because of its focus on fiscal policy concerns.

The growing reliance on local property taxes as a primary source for school funding exacerbated fiscal problems by the early twentieth century. The general property tax was not uniformly applied throughout districts until after 1890, and state funds were insufficient to support the schools.Footnote 62 California increasingly relied on local property taxation for education costs, which excluded intangible wealth like securities, and local property was typically underassessed to limit local taxation.Footnote 63 While the 1879 Constitution had included a novel clause that provided for corporate taxation, the Southern Pacific Railroad used the Fourteenth Amendment to withhold payment of the assessment.Footnote 64 The state failed to develop equalization policies between communities, state and local government, and corporations.

A 1906 state tax commission criticized the state for systemic inequalities that handicapped state growth, for taxing real estate instead of personal property, and because it “penalized honesty and paid a high premium for dishonesty.”Footnote 65 The commission recommended that the state separate state and local taxation, which was enacted as Amendment 1 to the state constitution in 1910. Local revenues would include taxes on real estate and state revenues would include a $2 poll tax earmarked for schooling, an inheritance tax, and a set of constitutionally defined business taxes that could only be modified with a two-thirds vote of the legislature.Footnote 66

The plan was lauded by fiscal policy reformers within and outside the state as a progressive and innovative policy that would more accurately reflect cost centers. It established corporate taxation as a source of state revenue, advanced the theory that statewide activities should be taxed at the state level and local activities at the local level, and challenged the premise that a uniform and equal taxation of all property accurately captured the varying taxpaying abilities of different individuals and property interests.Footnote 67 However, in practice, the plan proved far less “progressive” and more problematic in its effects than initially portrayed, resulting in decreased shares of revenue from corporate taxes and increased funding disparities among school districts. How far such consequences were anticipated and/or intended by the amendment’s chief author, Carl Plehn, and the plan’s proponents, is an open question and a matter of continuing historiographical debate.Footnote 68 Clemens recognizes the use of special “commissions” as one of the organizational innovations used to promote social innovation.Footnote 69 However, in this case the final recommendations changed materially the tax structure without sufficiently affecting outcomes, given Plehn’s central role and the benefits that redounded to business interests. What is clear is that the new fiscal policies inspired new rounds of political activism on the part of both business interests and organized educators.

Governor-elect Hiram Johnson, leader of the Progressive Party, was initially optimistic about Amendment 1 because it would potentially strengthen the state’s fiscal structure and make local communities responsible for ensuring that private property assessments met local needs, particularly in schooling. It would provide sufficient revenues for a progressive reform agenda that he believed could be funded primarily at the level of the state and obviate a requirement for the state to increase local property taxes. The Amendment was also initially supported by both business interests and the CTA.

Johnson, in his optimism, ignored the Amendment’s limitations. State tax revenues were based on economic conditions that affected business income and provided no guarantee of stable budgets.Footnote 70 The business community perceived correctly that it was relatively good for business because a single-state assessment would be less in total than that imposed by fifty-seven local assessors and would address inequitable taxation across counties in which businesses operated. Further, a two-thirds vote of the legislature was required to modify business tax rates, a high bar that provided greater power to corporations. Individual tax assessments were determined by local property assessors with rates fixed by a simple local majority. Citizens would pay an additional ad valorem tax in the case of a state shortfall, while corporations would not be required to assist with local deficits.

There were also significant changes to the state’s public school system in the decade after Amendment 1 was enacted. The state’s school-age population doubled between 1911 and 1922 and average daily attendance increased more than 60 percent with associated costs for longer school terms, schoolhouse construction, and related debt.Footnote 71 State educators promoted innovations such as kindergarten, Americanization, vocational schools, junior high schools, and a higher education system that included junior colleges. The system included diverse urban areas with explosive growth and demand for modern methods, and a vast rural system of small, costly schools. Economic diversity across communities led to resource inequality and demands for equalization. By the early 1910s, school cost was increasing faster than attendance. By the 1920s, a third of the state budget went to education and the state ranked second in the nation in per pupil spending.Footnote 72

The Amendment effectively distributed increased costs and related tax burdens to local government. The state was responsible for 28.9 percent of public-school costs in 1910 and 22 percent in 1915; the county was responsible for 24.3 percent in 1910 and 19.1 percent in 1915; and, the decrease in state and county tax burdens was assumed at the local level where the share of costs increased from 45 percent in 1910 to 56.1 percent in 1915.Footnote 73 State contributions per elementary school student decreased from $29.34 per pupil in 1890 to $14.31 per pupil by 1920 and property-owning voters were faced with much higher tax increases than corporations.Footnote 74 The shift in responsibility from state to district was exacerbated by the difficulty of raising sufficient state income through corporate taxation. While overall state tax revenue from corporations grew, it was not at a pace that matched population growth and the expansion of public education.

The new tax policies inspired lobbying and a weakened party structure facilitated it. The Republican Party had dominated California politics beginning in the 1890s, though its governing capacity was shaped by the considerable power of the Southern Pacific Railroad. In the early twentieth century, party factions developed, including the Lincoln–Roosevelt League in 1907 that led to the formation of the Progressive Party and the election of Governor Hiram Johnson.Footnote 75 The Progressive Party pursued social reform, worked to destroy the power of the Southern Pacific, and weakened party control over state politics. However, while the two-party system had integrated the goals of the major parties into a manageable range of action, the creation of the state’s Progressive Party in 1913, a weak Democratic Party, and a cross-filing system that allowed candidates to file with more than one party weakened party control over state politics.

The dynamic of non-partisanship in state and local elections resulted in a majority of the California legislature affiliated with at least two political parties.Footnote 76 Chester Rowell, editor and publisher of the Fresno Republican, claimed that “non-partisanship in the government of California is not a thing that is proposed as a novelty. It is a thing that is and long has been.”Footnote 77 Before his election as governor in 1927, Clement Calhoun Young had been elected for five consecutive terms to the California Assembly beginning in 1909 as a candidate of the Progressive, Republican, and Democratic parties.Footnote 78 Many Republicans in the progressive camp remained loyal to Johnson and surrendered the party organization to him in 1914.Footnote 79 Those who remained became anti-Progressive and more reactionary.

Johnson had campaigned to limit the power of the Southern Pacific Railroad and return government “to the People.”Footnote 80 He strengthened the executive power of the Governor through a “Board of Control” that provided central oversight. However, he also supported a more horizontal government that included direct democracy legislation that enhanced voter power and held public servants accountable, home rule charters that authorized cities to exercise authority over municipal affairs bounded only by constitutional limits, and autonomy for certain state agencies, particularly the schools.Footnote 81 The state’s administrative reforms intersected with the larger political context so that monopoly control by one special interest, the Southern Pacific Railroad, was replaced by the competitive power of many special interests that provided a counterbalance to the railroad's elite influence and created a more highly competitive policy context for organized educators in the state’s policy domain.Footnote 82 Interest groups defined alternatives through lobbying and public relations and then utilized direct democracy to implement reforms across public domains, including labor, business, and public utilities. Johnson’s policies and a weakened political party structure privileged even further the relationship of the CTA to the state government bureaucracy.Footnote 83

The separation of taxes through Amendment 1 shaped CTA goals for the next decade. While the amendment resulted from state fiscal policy processes that had begun decades earlier, its enactment reshaped the political environment and inspired interest group efforts to manage its implementation.Footnote 84 The CTA was able to provide leadership and mobilize educators across the state through its Advisory Council led by state superintendent Will Woods and its journal, The Sierra Educational News. The group focused primarily on fiscal policy after 1910 and became a powerful force in local politics.Footnote 85 Its strength in electoral politics was beneficial to direct democracy initiatives that expanded and protected state and local revenues for public education.

At the same time, the ongoing threat of business tax increases given periodic economic downturns and Progressive Party initiatives inspired corporate lobbying and limited efforts to address fiscal policy concerns at the state level. For example, California voters in 1914 abolished the Poll Tax, an important component of the state education budget, resulting in a 5 percent loss to the total state budget and a 10 percent loss for the 1915 education allocation.Footnote 86 The CTA called on the state to augment the public-school budget, but public utility corporations lobbied the legislature to vote against possible tax rate increases. The result was a compromise business tax increase that covered 75 percent of the education budget loss and created significant pressures on local school budgets to raise the remainder, a dynamic that undermined the intent of Amendment 1.Footnote 87 The new tax rates were unsatisfactory to both the CTA and business interests.

A 1915 state tax commission criticized Amendment 1 for its limitations and urged the state to develop a “fundamentally sound and permanent system of taxation.”Footnote 88 A repeal of the amendment would likely have been impossible given the increase in interest group activism and a likely difficult public debate. It had been only 5 years since the Amendment passed, but it had already shaped a new policy environment, one that prioritized Progressive Party initiatives that cut across traditional party lines and limited partisanship. The CTA sought to transfer tax burdens to the state, while business interests sought to ensure that education was funded locally to limit corporate tax burdens. Fiscal policy reform was fostering deeply entrenched positions on private property rights, state formation, and equity that shaped the goals of interest groups.Footnote 89

Business activism converged with post WWI anti-communism crusades. The Sixteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1913, created the federal income tax and, with it, a national policy threat to the wealthy. Isaac Martin describes anti-tax clubs that developed in response to the Sixteenth Amendment but does not include in his analysis California and the Better American Federation (BAF), which was the most prominent anti-tax group in the state.Footnote 90 This superpatriot group represented business interests with a focus on private property rights as a basis for organization and membership.Footnote 91 At its 1917 inception, the organization’s mission sought to “urge upon businessmen the necessity of taking a more active part in legislative matters … through patriotic, educational, governmental, and cooperative methods.”Footnote 92 The group’s anti-communism campaigns equated patriotism with adherence to private property rights that yielded an $800,000 operating budget through subscriptions in its first year of operation.Footnote 93 In 1918, the BAF distributed more than 300,000 pieces of literature throughout the state with recommendations on twenty-five amendments on a range of governance issues to demonstrate the group’s commitment to good governance, patriotism, and private property rights.Footnote 94

The BAF also associated education elites like Will Wood with increased tax rates and directed political campaigns against him and the CTA to shape public attitudes about the role of schools and the cost of equity.Footnote 95 These efforts were part of an anti-statist, anti-taxation zeitgeist that captured the state by 1920 and promoted efforts to use patriotic appeals to mobilize supporters and demobilize enemies. The BAF developed organizational repertoires that questioned the patriotism and professionalism of teachers and were intended to shape attitudes about schooling, the scope of the state, and policy around educational equity.Footnote 96

William Stephens succeeded Johnson in 1917 and faced difficult state fiscal constraints from insufficient revenues and the economic uncertainty created by WWI. Individual taxpayers perceived that relative tax assessments favored corporations, with claims that costs per taxpayer had increased $95 per year, while costs per corporation had decreased $83 per year.Footnote 97 With schooling the largest fixed cost in state and local budgets, Stephens signed into law Assembly Bill 1013 in 1917, the “tax limitation law,” which made it illegal for counties to increase tax revenues more than 5 percent of the previous year’s revenues.Footnote 98

School officials considered the bill a threat to public education. Because local school costs were dependent upon municipal property tax revenues, the bill might “wreck the entire system of school financial support.”Footnote 99 A committee chaired by Mark Keppel, Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent, initiated a referendum to block the legislation. The CTA backed the legislation, voters repealed the tax-limitation law, and school officials celebrated that school revenues were “once again safe.”Footnote 100 However, business interests, including the California Taxpayer's Association, were incensed that the CTA had been effective in getting the law repealed and characterized the efforts as a “gross usurpation of power” by a powerful political machine.Footnote 101 On the one hand, it is unlikely that business interests cared much about whether local property taxes increased because higher local taxes would protect corporate interests. However, business taxes had increased with the loss of the poll tax so the referendum was also likely perceived as a tax threat. Business interests were also perhaps rightly concerned about the lack of attention to appropriate costs. Anti-tax groups sought governance structures that would protect business interests and were frustrated that the CTA had enough organizational strength and voter support to repeal Assembly Bill 2013. They were likely shocked by the CTA’s effectiveness, which inspired efforts to limit the group’s increasing power.

The referendum demonstrated to both groups that direct democracy could be a powerful tool for fiscal reform. Los Angeles county superintendent Keppel and state superintendent Will Wood developed Proposition 16 in 1920, a constitutional amendment designed to promote equalization and increase state educational allocations.Footnote 102 When Keppel presented the Amendment to the annual meeting of the California High School Teachers’ Association, he focused on the state’s role in promoting equity. He explained that the education burden had shifted to county and districts to the disadvantage of the schools. He argued that all property should be taxed but “the revenue from such taxation should be distributed where the children are, and fairly and equitably to the end that equality of educational opportunity shall by guaranteed to each and every child.”Footnote 103 State superintendent Wood argued that the Proposition would restore “the old principle that the state and the county should be equal partners in supporting elementary schools,” especially because hundreds of districts were too poor to do so.Footnote 104

The Amendment asked more of corporations, but its scope highlighted the expansion in public schooling and the strength of the education bureaucracy and the CTA. The organization’s extensive networks included by 1920 labor, progressive organizations, local political interest groups, political activists, and national education leaders that included the NEA. When Proposition 16 passed in 1920, it solidified the electoral power of the CTA and education leaders, who were perceived by many as “masterful tacticians.”Footnote 105

The amendment had an immediate fiscal impact. The Board of Control projected a $14 million deficit in the state’s 1921 biennial budget after the Amendment passed, a significant increase over the initial deficit projection of $1 million.Footnote 106 The projected deficit increased the state's share of education costs, which had been 22 percent of the state budget in 1920–21 to 40 percent in the following year.Footnote 107 Friend Richardson, in his 1922 California gubernatorial campaign, characterized it as “the most vicious, iniquitous measure ever written into the statutes.”Footnote 108

The Amendment inspired an attack on the “school machine.”Footnote 109 Business interests sought to undermine public education leaders both ideologically and strategically. They also promoted public schooling as a venue that could serve private property rights by shaping the public's conception of the state through education. The BAF argued that the “kind of instruction the children receive, both in precept and example, will determine the kind of government and society this country will have in 15 or 20 years hence” and their literature demanded a curriculum and teacher that could be trusted to promote anti-tax interests.Footnote 110 Their claims inspired accusations that more liberal minded teachers were unpatriotic, socialist in their support of unions, and disloyal to the constitutional right to private property. Many conservative groups, particularly the anti-tax interests, believed their success depended upon taking control of the public schools.

The same ballot in 1920 that included Proposition 16 also included an unsuccessful bill supported by anti-tax interest groups to undermine direct democracy by limiting the use of the initiative for purposes of changing tax policies that was, ironically, put on the ballot through the initiative.Footnote 111 In 1921, Assembly member Carlton Greene, with support from the BAF, promoted new legislation to weaken the initiative and roll back progressive social reforms, and another bill to revoke certification of any teacher who disparaged to a pupil or the school any provision of the U.S. Constitution, or suggested any change to the Constitution. While the bill failed, 26 to 42, many of its supporters had been involved with the emerging anti-tax movement in the state, and six were members of an anti-tax organization.Footnote 112 Pro-business interests explicitly linked direct democracy to tax reform, including the CTA’s success in overturning Assembly Bill 2013 and passing Proposition 16. In 1921, the BAF invited LA businesspeople and legislators to meet with Harry Atwood, president of the Chicago-based Constitutional Educational Association, who warned that direct democracy initiatives had caused tax rates to be “twelve times higher” in California and too much democracy was the greatest menace to society.Footnote 113

The backlash against teachers was perhaps not surprising. While business interests, particularly the Southern Pacific Railroad in earlier years, had dominated California politics and used fiscal policy to their benefit throughout the period of this analysis, the CTA had effectively shaped fiscal policy reform between 1910 and 1920 to benefit public education. Many residents after 1910 perceived that Amendment 1 to separate taxes and increase corporate assessments, as well as Johnson’s campaign to end the power of the Southern Pacific, had successfully reigned in corporations. That perception did not quite meet the reality of the limitations of Amendment 1, the growth in corporate lobbying that supplanted the railroad’s power, and the close relationship between fiscal policy experts like Carl Plehn and business interests in the state. The railroad menace had fostered earlier voter antipathy for business interests but was perceived to have been eliminated, which made it easier for anti-tax groups to present the CTA, which fostered state expansion, as a new menace.

The problem with Proposition 16 was that it did not effectively reform fiscal policy to address problems of inflation and population growth. Further, in spite of advertising campaigns to the contrary, it did little to address equity. It required minimum contributions to education at all levels of government, but no consideration of appropriate costs. The CTA’s singular focus on raising school revenues impeded its ability to think broadly about the political costs of such a strategy.Footnote 114 The Proposition enshrined schooling in the Constitution as an exception to “scientific budgeting” efforts that included oversight by Johnson's Board of Control, which was exercised over other state institutions to manage costs and eliminate waste. The primary focus on revenues in Proposition 16 inspired the wrath and scrutiny of anti-tax activists and created an easy opening to criticize educators for profligate spending.Footnote 115

The state’s increased responsibilities for the cost of schooling under Proposition 16 led to state budget deficits without a clear path forward for effectively managing revenues or costs. The King Tax Bill, proposed in 1921 to require a reassessment of corporate taxation, highlighted a powerful ideological divide. Corporate efforts to avoid taxation at all costs and CTA efforts to expand schooling and promote equity manifested in divisive ideological debates about how to define the scope of the state and its responsibilities to citizens and allocate relative fiscal responsibility.

Public debates on the bill provided corporations with a soapbox for speaking to common taxpayer concerns, including high local tax rates, an implied attack on public schooling. The BAF was particularly vocal. While the King Tax Bill benefitted individual taxpayers by taxing corporations in order to prevent an additional ad valorem tax on property, a well-organized and effective campaign by business interests in the state’s major newspapers claimed the bill would ultimately cost individual taxpayers. The director of the Taxpayers’ Association, with BAF backing, issued a statewide advertisement that claimed the bill would cost taxpayers $7 million and would lead to additional taxes on citizens.Footnote 116 The group sent to each of the seventy-nine members of the Assembly a personal telegram urging defeat and organized additional telegrams sent from all parts of the state.Footnote 117 The Taxpayers’ Association reiterated claims that the problem was not state revenues, but state costs. While the bill was about equalization it inspired a movement for economy and small government, which became a focus of weekly BAF newsletters subtitled, “Less Government in Business; More Business in Government.”Footnote 118

Supporters of the King Tax Bill, including the CTA, were similarly vocal about the bill's merits. They accused the business special interests of inappropriate efforts “to capture political control of the state.”Footnote 119 One senator’s scathing critique of the BAF in the Senate chamber demonstrates the divisive legal fight.

So far as they dare they will advocate the repeal of all regulatory agencies of Government designed to protect the people. Their purpose is to restore big business and the corporate interests in power. They would reopen the doors of the capitol to special privilege.… To be ruled by the People is intolerable to them.… In this Legislature, the Better American Federation controls a number of votes, sufficient to jeopardize the King Tax Bill.Footnote 120

The bill, which required a two-thirds majority because it would change corporate tax rates, narrowly passed by one vote after failing in the first attempt.Footnote 121

The legislative difficulty highlighted how education fiscal policy reform had shaped voter interests. Governor Stephens appealed to voters:

Our State Senate has withstood this tremendous power and influence of the special interests. The fight has been bitter and grueling…I appeal to the people of California to communicate at once with their representatives in the Assembly not to yield to this gigantic corporation lobby, the likes and strength of which has never before been seen in Sacramento.Footnote 122

The San Francisco Chronicle described debates about the King Tax Bill as an effort by corporate interests to “evade just taxation.… Their purpose is to restore crooked big business and the corporate interests in power … they will whenever they can shift burdens of taxation to the backs of the people.”Footnote 123 When the bill passed, the railroads challenged it in court and won a tax rate reduction.Footnote 124

The debates solidified the deep ideological divides between interest groups about the scope of government that had been shaped by a decade of fiscal policy reform. The idea of “economy in government as a way out of the taxation problem,” inspired Richardson’s campaign and a critique of state education leaders.Footnote 125 Education had become a focal point of the pro-business lobby, which resented the political success of the CTA and the ability of teachers’ groups to insulate themselves from political oversight in state government that resulted in part because of the extent to which a significant portion of education costs were fixed. The state board of education was relatively weak, but its leaders operated through the CTA’s political and regional networks.

Friend Richardson won the gubernatorial election in 1922 on the basis of campaign promises for fiscal economy. He introduced the first budget in the state’s history that did not increase appropriations. Instead, it cut $12 million, taken from offices and functions across the state government, to arrive at a total budget of almost $79 million, with a planned surplus of more than $1 million to prevent additional taxation, which he claimed represented a longer-term savings of approximately 70 million.Footnote 126 The budget fulfilled the pledge to eliminate useless expenses, but Richardson focused his wrath on public schooling.

Richardson’s first biennial budget gutted state support for education and his rhetoric castigated public school leaders, a strategy that had been shaped by BAF activism. The cuts included the elimination of appropriations for the supervision of programs in vocational education, part-time education, and Americanization initiatives, as well as a reduction of Board of Education expenditures from $204,000 to $125,000 a biennium, salaries paid to state education commissioners, and funding to teachers’ colleges.Footnote 127 The decisions were explicitly fiscal, but intellectual in the sense that the budget potentially reshaped conceptions of the scope of state government and public schooling. The budget cuts to the state Board of Education affected its ability to represent holistically educational interests and created the possibility that divergent forces in the state could capture public schooling and impact educational fiscal policy.Footnote 128

State Superintendent Wood called the education budget “a gruesome jest at the sincerity of campaign pledges” and a deliberate effort to wreck the Department of Education and starve its institutions.Footnote 129 Richardson denounced the professionalism of his detractors. He claimed children learned about many subjects but knew little of any, could not spell, write legibly, or do simple problems. He accused politicians who were “under the guise of educators” for failing to see that “reckless extravagance has characterized the management of the schools.”Footnote 130 Richardson’s accusations drew on conservative sentiment that had been developing in the state during the progressive era, especially after the federal income tax amendment and the King Tax Bill.

Public budget discussions demonstrated the potential effect of anti-tax efforts on schooling. Nellie Pierce, Governor Richardson’s budget director, argued that the greater proportion of education work would be best carried out by localities. Susan Dorsey, Superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District, responded that the “first duty of education is to equalize opportunities for every child; and this cannot be done unless the State and the nation help to bear the burdens of education.”Footnote 131 The Los Angeles School Journal argued that the budget was merely a “camouflaged attempt” to limit corporate taxes.Footnote 132

The League of Women Voters pointed out that many people voted for Richardson because they thought economy would lead to a tax reduction, an idea that was promoted by Plehn, Elwood Cubberley, and other education finance experts who refused to acknowledge the inequality that resulted from district funding.Footnote 133 Instead, the League recognized that the shift from state to local funding that started with Amendment 1 and culminated in Richardson’s drastic cuts in state education funding meant higher taxes on private property, which potentially raised taxes on individuals and reduced corporate responsibility.Footnote 134 Matthew Kelly describes how fiscal policy reform after 1910 helped to further entrench local financing, and increase inequalities across the state.Footnote 135 Scholars have demonstrated that state centralization brings resource decisions into the public sphere and puts the state in a position to address equalization, but requires consensus about the role of the state in promoting educational equity.Footnote 136 With the help of an efficacious organizational structure, educators in California achieved considerable success at promoting this important state responsibility through fiscal policy reform, but at the cost of galvanizing organized opposition that remained active in subsequent decades.

1.2. Washington

The weak party politics that facilitated associative action and policy innovation in California and broadly in the West was particularly pronounced in Washington and other Upper West states, due in part to their later dates of statehood, and in part to their different patterns of economic and political development. In Washington, an explicitly anti-party politics of People's Conventions, non-partisan candidates, cross-party alliances, populist policy measures, and popular initiatives, took root during the territorial period, shaped the politics of statehood itself in 1889, and continued through the peak of populist politics nationally in the 1890s and into the progressive era. Notably for the analysis presented here, these aspects of weak party organization also facilitated the election of women to office in the policy domain of education, beginning in the territorial period and accelerating in the twentieth century.Footnote 137

When Washington became a state in 1889, two major components of the state constitution fostered a centralizing dynamic between education organizations and fiscal policy similar to, and potentially even stronger than, that in California. First, the constitution granted authority to the state in the strongest possible terms to fund and regulate the public school system.Footnote 138 Using distinctively strong language for the time, it made it “the paramount duty of the state” to “amply” provide for the education of “all” children inhabiting the state “without distinction or preference on account of race, color, caste, or sex.”Footnote 139 Second, like California and other states established during the nineteenth century, the Constitution initiated the process for the State to claim the “school lands” that the federal government had set aside for school funding when Washington first became a formal U.S. territory in 1854.Footnote 140 As compared with states established earlier in the century, including California, Washington’s constitution specified particularly strong terms for managing those lands in order to realize their maximum possible value and preserve the yield as a common fund to support the state’s schools. As in other states, the precise terms upon which those central funds would be allocated were left to subsequent legislation.Footnote 141 In 1876, the first Washington Teachers Institute convened with the express purpose of proposing new common school legislation for the territory, a practice continued in subsequent years. After statehood in 1889, the Washington State Teachers Association (WSTA) made “securing wise legislation through its legislative committee” an explicit mission of its operation.Footnote 142 These initiatives promoted a statewide culture of collaboration among educators.

At the same time, however, another major fiscal policy component of the state’s constitution, borrowed directly from California, had the effect of reinforcing distinctions among different districts and educators that had developed during the State’s long territorial period. The Washington Constitution mandated that the state’s Common School Fund be exclusively applied to support common schools, as distinct from high schools, normal schools, technical schools, or other “special” schools and allowed that sometime later such “special” schools might be included in the public system.Footnote 143 As with California’s 1879 Constitution, this provision of the Washington Constitution was shaped by populist politics, aiming to concentrate public resources in the support of mass education of the people rather than distributing them to the very small proportion of the population that sought “higher” schooling.Footnote 144

In time, however, these provisions of the Washington Constitution paradoxically reinforced hierarchies of place and differences of interest in the State. The commitment of the entire proceeds of the state’s school fund to “common” schools meant that in order to establish high schools or technical schools, localities had to raise their own funds. This in turn effectively created urban/rural distinctions that shaped teacher interests and organization. Because high schools and technical schools were excluded from central state funding, the state legislature enacted laws allowing urban areas of certain sizes to raise special tax levies to support those schools. At the same time, the state exempted city districts of more than 10,000 inhabitants from county school taxes and apportionments. Eventually, legislation allowed urban areas special votes to double the 10 mill rate (1903) and classed districts by size (1907, 1909) in order to increase maximum taxation caps for larger districts.Footnote 145 Thus, state fiscal policies supported the state’s common schools but sustained distinct systems of municipal and county-based units of school funding and administration.

These early fiscal policies structured different policy interests among educators. As long as the central state tax and income from state permanent funds went only to common schools, common school teachers shared an interest in statewide policies directing the administration of those funds. Teachers and administrators of high school districts, meanwhile, shared an interest in special legislation that authorized urban districts to levy their own special taxes and manage the resulting revenue autonomously. Those differences shaped teacher organization.

As early as the 1890s grade school teachers and high school teachers organized separately in some urban districts. For example, “The Puget Sound Schoolmasters Club,” which convened in Seattle in 1890 and remained active for decades, accepted exclusively male membership from institutions excluded from common school fund provisions, including academies, high schools, independent vocational schools, normal schools, and the state university.Footnote 146 Other Seattle educators, meanwhile, organized a “Primary Teachers Association” and then the Grade School Teachers Club in 1912, composed entirely of women, who were active in local salary issues and state legislative matters. A distinct High School Teachers’ League in Seattle advocated for the interests of its much smaller membership.Footnote 147

These examples suggest that early fiscal policy decisions inspired educators to organize along overlapping but not wholly congruent group lines defined by hierarchies of place (rural/urban), academic grade levels (grade school/high school), and sex (male/female).

Scholars have tended to focus on urban cases and to portray urban growth and development as the driver of politics and policy change during the progressive era. Tracy Steffes, by contrast, highlights the expansion of state administrative capacity in relation to rural school development and reform in states throughout the country from 1900 to 1930, while acknowledging variation in the “timing, form, and degree” of such expansion from state to state.Footnote 148 In Washington, the early, long (35 years), and influential development of certain rural regions before statehood in 1889 allowed distinctive rural patterns of school organization, funding, and administration to become well-established and remain every bit as important as urban change to interest group politics, state development, and fiscal policy through the progressive era.

Patterns of regional economic development contributed to the significance of rural constituencies in progressive politics and policy in Washington. In the 1870s, the Walla Walla region in the southeastern corner of Washington Territory became the locus of a settled agricultural region of large wheat farms in the Palouse hills and of expansive agricultural and grazing lands in the Columbian Plain, with a world market in grain that the region continues to supply to this day. As late as 1885 it seemed possible, even likely, that that region would achieve statehood as part of a different territory than Washington. After statehood in 1889, the rich Walla Walla region continued to exercise substantial political weight in the state, though with the arrival of the railroad, the eastern city of Spokane overtook the river city of Walla Walla in commercial significance. The western port cities of Tacoma and Seattle that focused on shipping and resource extraction also grew quickly after 1890 with the completion of the Northern Pacific Railroad, but that commercial significance was still very much tied to the globally significant agricultural production of wheat in the Palouse and Great Columbian Plain.Footnote 149

For a time from the 1890s through the 1910s, those economic ties supported a variety of political alliances between laborers in the shipping and timber industries in the western part of the state and agricultural interests in the eastern part of the state. Animated by a sense of shared western grievance against discriminatory banking, railroad, labor, and tariff practices and policies that favored eastern economic interests, populist forces carried the state of Washington for William Jennings Bryan in 1896. Once the Populist moment faded, Grange organizations and organized labor forged a series of coalitions to various effects at local, state, and national levels. At local and county levels, those alliances found a wide variety of expressions, including as Democrats, non-partisans, socialists, a Triple Alliance wing of the Republican Party (Grange, AF of L, brotherhood of Railway workers), and briefly, a Farmer–Labor Party. At state and national levels, the alliances expressed themselves in formal politics primarily through different wings of the Republican Party and, also briefly, the Progressive Party.Footnote 150

During the first decade of the twentieth century, the ongoing political significance of farmer–labor alliances and of the Walla Walla/Spokane region of eastern Washington became a focus of both state and national attention as part of what came to be called the country life movement, a social movement that aimed to improve rural life by infusing it with progressive ideals, technologies, and institutional structures, including progressive education, school reform, and agricultural extension services. The Country Life Commission, appointed by Theodore Roosevelt in 1908 and chaired by Liberty Hyde Bailey, the nationally recognized authority in agricultural education and nature study, made rural education a central focus of its investigation and recommendations, with the Pacific Northwest figuring prominently in its vision of rural progress.Footnote 151 Accordingly, in 1910, the Country Life Commission held a convention in Spokane, and highlighted the Walla Walla and Spokane regions as models for policy ideas and reforms, including in the domain of education.Footnote 152

At the same time, progressive alliances won several legislative achievements. In 1910, Washington State granted women full suffrage rights by state constitutional amendment. The next year, in one session in 1911, it enacted direct democracy, the 8-hour workday for women, workmen's compensation, and ratification of the federal income tax.Footnote 153 Such policies were very much the product of what by then was a long history of anti-party politics and farmer–labor alliances within the State and their leverage within the Progressive Party and the progressive wing of the Republican Party. Also significant within and alongside those alliances, though less often called out in this context, were politically active women. In Seattle in these years, women were prominent in the leadership of the Socialist Party and the Central Labor Council, as labor organizers, and as experts providing economic data, analysis, and testimony in support of Washington State’s vanguard labor legislation.Footnote 154

The significance of Washington’s labor legislation, including provisions such as mother’s pensions and women and child labor laws, the influence of Washington’s Grange and women’s organizations, and its relatively early passage of full women’s suffrage, were among the factors that led Clemens to include Washington in her study of organizational innovation and progressive politics in the first decades of the twentieth century.Footnote 155 Arguably, however, industrial labor law represented a very small slice of the issues that animated progressive politics and constituencies in Washington in the 1910s. The expansion of public education played a central role in embodying ideas of progress in this period, and in mobilizing broad grassroots constituencies around progressive ideas and politics.

As a domain of social policy, education brought together many of the same elements—including farm, labor, and women’s interests–that animated Clemens analysis of interest group politics in the West, but in a different configuration. In Washington in particular, education was a domain where women dominated not only the labor force and political organization, but certain categories of elected officials. This gendered politics intersected with place-based power. Rural interests were essential for promoting state support for public education in Washington during the progressive era. Moreover, rural schools in Washington were regarded as “progressive” by national standards, as represented by the Country Life Movement.Footnote 156 Rural school supervision already occurred under a sophisticated system of state standards and inspections by county superintendents. The relative success of that system contributed substantially to the state’s number 1 ranking in 1910 across a range of standard measures of school progress.Footnote 157 Women educators played significant roles in creating this success and exercised substantial political influence in Washington in the domain of education, the largest fiscal responsibility of the state, even before they won general state suffrage in 1910.Footnote 158 Suffrage then furthered that influence. By 1915, a near-majority (49 percent) of county superintendents, who were elected and paid, were women.Footnote 159

This convergence between a rural place-based progressive politics and women’s political agency was embodied in the career of Josephine Corliss Preston, elected State Superintendent of Public Instruction from 1913 to 1928. Preston began her career teaching in Walla Walla County, became deputy county superintendent in 1904 and county superintendent in 1908. In 1911, acknowledging the significance of the Walla Walla region in the state’s economy and the increasing significance of women in state politics, Republican Governor Hay appointed her to the state school board. The next year, during the first state election in which women exercised full suffrage rights, she won election as State Superintendent of Public Instruction, the first woman to hold state office in Washington.Footnote 160 Preston’s election reflected her considerable political skill and illuminates the broader significance of education as an arena of political agency for women in the West. To some extent, it seems, voters and political leaders acknowledged this significance by promoting women for office in the education domain.

Educator organizations were essential to realizing this political recognition and influence. State education leaders, including normal school principals, the state superintendent or her staff, and county or city superintendents, addressed the teacher labor force at annual teachers’ institutes on a range of issues, from educational philosophies and curricula, to issues of school governance, funding, and salaries. In addition, the state teachers’ organization met annually, rotating among different regions of the state. In 1904, the WSTA renamed itself the Washington Education Association (WEA), embracing the membership of city and county superintendents and normal school faculty as well as teachers.Footnote 161

The WEA, like the CTA and other state teachers’ organizations operated in a cooperative, but loose, relationship with the NEA. Many of the same educational leaders who addressed annual teachers’ institutes—especially normal school faculty and superintendents at various levels—participated in various subgroups of the national organization that had historically strategized across jurisdictions around a range of issues at both state and national levels, including federal bureau of education leadership, data collection, and policy. Rank and file teachers might rise to leadership in their local organizations and eventually find themselves nominated for positions in the NEA. Most ordinary teachers, however, were likely to engage the NEA only if it happened to hold its annual meeting in their state or in a city readily accessible to them by train. There they could network, hear addresses by national leaders, and vote on whatever issues happened to be before the body.

These relationships between local or state organizations and the NEA remained loose through the 1910s. During the 1910s, however, several factors led to efforts to tighten structural relationships among educator organizations. Chief among these were fiscal issues associated with the expansion of education over the previous 20 years. That expansion occurred along four main dimensions: growth in the size and proportion of the population that public schools served; increased persistence of school populations through higher grades; increased number and types of education programs offered for portions of the student population; and increased use of schools as sites for the delivery of other social services. Such expansion, for which the NEA, state organizations, and their allies, including women, farm, and labor groups, had often advocated, contributed to rising costs and demand for increased revenues, which organized educators further sought to promote and influence. At the same time, during the 1910s, the federal government provided the first support for K-12 education since Reconstruction in the form of categorical funding for certain programs, including Americanization beginning in 1914, agricultural education in 1914, and industrial and home economics education in 1917.Footnote 162 Monies for these programs were allocated to the states, which became responsible for structuring distribution, a process that organized educators also sought to influence. State and national leaders sought to strengthen the interorganizational capacity of educators to mobilize support for these specific legislative and administrative objectives.

California and Washington educators figured prominently in this effort at national organizational innovation and consolidation, with the CTA providing the organizational template and certain Washington educators playing key leadership roles. The basic plan for reorganization at the national level was advanced in 1913 by California educator, Henry Suzzallo, who would become president of the University of Washington in 1915.Footnote 163 The proposal owed much to the CTA, with which Suzzallo was familiar from his years as an educator in San Francisco, where the CTA was headquartered. It organized teachers into a multitiered federated structure, with local associations at its base, state associations in the middle, and national organization at the top. Formal integration of these tiers would occur through a representative system by which local associations elected delegates to a state “representative council” and state associations likewise elected delegates to an equivalent national council. To support this multitiered organization and a more deliberate legislative and policy focus, Suzzallo further recommended that the national group maintain a central office in Washington D.C. with a paid executive secretary.Footnote 164

Reorganization of the NEA on Suzzallo’s model did not occur without controversy. The plan stimulated significant opposition that prefigured and intersected events in Washington State. At the national level, advocates made three attempts from 1915 to 1919 to win approval of organizational changes proposed by Suzzallo, only to be defeated all three times. Female educators, who constituted a majority of NEA membership, perceived that a structure that granted formal decision-making power only to a small number of individuals would radically reduce the influence of women. Under the leadership of Margaret Haley, founder and leader of the Chicago Teachers Federation, women teachers in 1915, 1918, and 1919 successfully mobilized to defeat the proposed reorganization.Footnote 165 Advocates of NEA reorganization did not give up, however, and their campaign gained momentum in the context of U.S. entry into WWI.

Two aspects of the war-time context proved particularly salient for education policy and politics in Washington State. First was the challenge that war-time federal education policy presented to the existing fiscal structure for education in Washington.Footnote 166 Under the State’s existing fiscal structure, which defined separate funding sources and administrative regimes for common schools and high schools, federal funding for vocational education strengthened the hand of (mostly male) high school educators in larger municipal districts. However, those high school educators and districts still had no formal structure through which their influence could be expressed at the state level and had no access to any dedicated sources of state funds. That challenge in turn created a demand both for major fiscal policy reform and for organizational innovations that could bridge divisions among educators.

A second aspect of the war-time context that proved particularly salient was war-time inflation. Inflation aggravated deteriorating salaries and working conditions for teachers, making the need and demand for effective teacher organization apparent. At the same time, federal funding for vocational education made visible the potential for both federal and state governments to support educational expansion. At the national level, leaders of the NEA sought to use teacher salary issues to push for NEA reorganization. In 1918, the NEA established a Commission on the Emergency in Education, ostensibly to coordinate educator response to war exigencies, but also to speak to teacher salary grievances and let teachers know that the NEA saw itself as representing those concerns.Footnote 167 Washington’s Superintendent of Public Instruction, Josephine Preston, figured prominently in this salary campaign at both state and national levels.

During the 1910s, Preston had risen to the top of the NEA’s elected leadership.Footnote 168 As President-elect and President of the NEA in 1919 and 1920, she served on the Executive Committee and as a member of the NEA’s Commission on the Emergency in Education. In March 1920, Preston also staged a successful surprise lobbying effort for increased state funding for teacher salaries during a special session of the Washington Legislature.Footnote 169 Having proved her political efficacy on behalf of teachers at the state level, she used that political capital and her position as a rare woman superintendent among the NEA leadership to suppress objections to the NEA reorganization plan and facilitate its final passage at the 1920 NEA annual meeting.Footnote 170

Together, these intersections between general wartime contexts and specific Washington conditions recommended the State as a site for fiscal policy experimentation in 1920. During the special legislative session in March, educators had cooperated in lobbying the legislature for state salary relief, but that legislation did not address the underlying structural issues such as the lack of state-level funding and infrastructure to support high schools or vocational education, and the consequent reliance of high school districts on high levels of local taxation and special legislation. To address those larger structural issues would require a massive overhaul of school legislation and a major mobilization of political forces, especially educator organizations.

In 1920, a self-appointed subset of Washington educators took the lead in trying to address those issues. They did so first by developing a base of support among interested educators outside the main state education organization, through a separate association called the Washington State Teachers’ League (WSTL). Consisting almost entirely of schoolmen–normal school principals and faculty, mid-size city superintendents, high school teachers, and some male county superintendents, the WSTL did not represent a majority, or even a significant minority of teachers in the State, but it was well-networked with peers on the West Coast and in the NEA.

Drawing on those connections, the WSTL deployed many of the same strategies and tactics as their counterparts at the national level and in California. Following California’s example of establishing a special “tax commission” of experts to mastermind the major tax overhaul that had become Amendment 1 a decade earlier, the WSTL network convinced the Governor and Washington legislature in March 1920 to establish what came to be known as the “[School] Code Commission” to develop a plan for overhauling the system for funding the State’s public schools. The Commission began meeting in June 1920 with the aim of promoting the introduction of legislation in the next legislative session in January 1921.Footnote 171

Clemens has highlighted the practice of naming special commissions as characteristic of the kind of tactics that promoted social legislation by voluntary organizations. Such commissions, in her analysis, proved an effective means of tying the electoral power of voluntary organizations to specific state agencies and legislation.Footnote 172 That dynamic is readily observable in the Washington Code Commission’s development of Senate Bill #10, even as the case also reveals some of the limitations and pitfalls of such tactics, and of the process of policy and tactical diffusion from state to state described by Clemens.

Having succeeded in launching the Code Commission, the WSTL turned to the organizational problem of how to mobilize a solid constituency behind their reform agenda when they in fact represented a minority of the state’s educator population. Again looking to California, the WSTL network determined to put pressure on the larger WEA to reorganize on the CTA model. In effect, WSTL leaders pursued their agenda by acting as though the new structure they envisioned already existed and they were its leaders, essentially constituting themselves as the equivalent of the CTA leadership group known as the CCE. They then acted as if they had been commissioned by educators statewide to restructure the WEA and “pursue a legislative agenda” that would seriously overhaul the funding and administration of education in Washington State.Footnote 173 Mimicking the CTA, the WSTL secured a full-time executive secretary, H. L. Hopkins, former superintendent for a small city in the Puget Sound region, to prosecute their organizational campaign. That work also converged with the larger effort to restructure the NEA, which required that state organizations develop a system for electing state representatives to the NEA.Footnote 174

Hopkins described differences between the WSTL and the WEA as essentially functional. The State League, in his account, was the political and policy arm of the state’s education profession, while the WEA tended more to the business of actual teaching, or “technical discussions and inspirational addresses.”Footnote 175 That description captured some partial truths. However, it also obscured fundamental differences of membership and representation between the two groups. Those differences were grounded in the state’s different fiscal policies for supporting primary and secondary education, and female and male teachers, and rural and urban school systems. Thus, in September 1920, the differences between the two organizations were both functional and representational. Those differences had significant consequences.

From September through December of 1920, Hopkins and the WSTL network pursued an intense campaign to simultaneously restructure educator organization in the state and mobilize educator support for fiscal policy reform. As revealed by extensive surviving correspondence to and from Hopkins in this period, the campaign proceeded in three stages, with no one stage complete before the next began. During the first phase, from August through September of 1920, Hopkins and his networks focused on expanding membership in the WSTL, both individually, and through formal affiliation with local county or municipal organizations. Hopkins did this through correspondence itself and through an extensive schedule of speeches and meetings at city and county teachers’ institutes around the state. In the second stage, Hopkins and his network performed an organizational pivot, somewhat breathless in its speed, of proposing a joint meeting of the WEA and WSTL in October, with the goal of achieving a formal “merger” of the two organizations under a new constitution that he and a committee of allies would be charged with drafting. This new structure would also include provisions for selecting future Washington State representatives to, and thus formal affiliation with, the NEA.

The third and final phase of the effort that did not really get underway until December was the campaign to mobilize educators behind the reforms embodied in Senate Bill #10. Given the complexity of the Bill and the plan to introduce it in the new legislative session beginning in January, the December campaign represented a very compressed timeline for mobilizing political support. That compression appears to have been the product of deliberate strategy, however.

Throughout the autumn of 1920, Hopkins and WSTL insiders worked in continuous backstage communication with the Code Commission. They also tried to prepare local leaders and associations to support the anticipated legislation, even as the content of the Commission's recommendations remained unknown to most educators and the public at large. They did so by outlining likely legislative provisions in the most general terms—that is, “fixing the state's revenue system and administration,” never mentioning the legislation’s most controversial provisions even when they knew what those provisions were and expressed concern privately about their controversial nature. This culture of secrecy on the part of both of Commission itself and the WSTL and its leaders was deliberate. By emphasizing general goals of increased school funding and improved teacher welfare, they tried to prevent early open opposition to the work. This strategy backfired, however, when it compromised the capacity of those most disposed to favor the legislation from effectively lobbying local constituencies and legislators. Hopkins received multiple letters from correspondents pleading with him to send more precise information about the proposed legislation's provisions.Footnote 176 In addition, the lack of public disclosure left the power to provide such information to groups inclined to oppose it, a power they incisively seized.

Ultimately, the failure of Senate Bill #10 suggests some of the hazards and pitfalls of the diffusion of innovation across states as analyzed by Clemens.Footnote 177 More precisely, the short career of Senate Bill #10 shows how the shared wisdom of voluntary organizations about how to get “progressive” legislation “done” may at times have induced an unwarranted cockiness on the part of its practitioners. This overconfidence showed up in several ways in the Washington case. First, it was in the composition of the Code Commission itself. Though at first the Governor declared that the Commission would be composed entirely of businessmen, the selection process soon led to appointment of key members from the WSTL network.Footnote 178 Of course, packing a Commission with reformers was the rule, rather than the exception, when deploying such a strategy. But in this case the network constituted a very partial representation of organized educators that would eventually need to be mobilized in support of reform. Hopkins and his allies also had to fight a perception among educators that the work represented an attempt to “put something over” WEA membership and seize control of the organization.Footnote 179 The opposition was not wrong about this, as Hopkins’ own correspondence documents.Footnote 180

A second dimension of overreach, and a direct contrast with the simultaneous fiscal policy reform effort in California, was the extent to which Washington’s Code Commission worked around, rather than with, the State's chief education agency—the State Office of Public Instruction. Clemens highlights the “disruptive” aspects of the extra-party politics of voluntary organizations.Footnote 181 From that perspective, disrupting existing patterns of state operation could be seen as the point of Commission work. But in this case, many of the beneficiaries and agents of the state office of public instruction saw it as already representing progressive politics and policy, making the intention of disrupting its operations politically problematic. Moreover, those same agents and constituencies that supported the work of the state office formed the major part of the electoral power that advocates of reform would eventually need to mobilize to secure the passage of reform legislation.

Finally, the most consequential overreach on the part of Senate Bill #10’s advocates appeared in the content of its provisions. The Bill was a highly complex piece of omnibus legislation. As formally introduced in January 1921, it included a constitutional amendment, tax law changes, and governance reforms. Considered alone, the tax law changes were fairly straightforward, reflecting an effort to shift more of the funding burden to the state level, raising the amount of state apportionment from $20 to $30 per child, with an additional $10 per child apportioned at the county level. Local districts would retain the capacity to assess local school taxes of up to 15 mils without special voter approval. Hence, the finance part of the proposal came to be known as the 30-10-15 plan. Overall, this plan would have increased the total amount of funding in the system and would have made the state responsible for a greater share of the total, thus promoting greater equalization of school funds. The shift would still have been limited, however, increasing the state’s share only up to an average of about 50 percent.Footnote 182

However, the legislation also contained measures pertaining to school governance that were, by comparison, a radical structural departure from existing practice. Most “elective” school offices in the state would be replaced with appointed officials, including the state superintendent and all county superintendents. The county would become the fundamental administrative unit, with local school boards eliminated and replaced by countywide boards of appointed officials.Footnote 183 The Commission also recommended that the county become the chief taxing unit rather than existing local districts.Footnote 184 These equalization measures were undercut, however, by recommendations to increase allowable local tax rates from 10 to 15 mills and exclude the largest urban districts from county administration.Footnote 185

This “county unit plan,” was the pet idea of Ellwood P. Cubberley, Dean of the School of Education at Stanford University and an important intellectual influence on fiscal policy reform in both California and Washington. In Washington, however, reformers sought to impose a full-scale version of Cubberley’s idea in a single sweeping bill, whereas in California elements of county-level school support and administration had been adopted more piecemeal. The prospect of losing local school decision-making power predictably triggered extensive resistance.Footnote 186 Moreover, the negative consequences of consolidation, and its impact on citizens’ sense of political representation, would be experienced primarily by rural districts and populations.

The impact would also be pronounced for women. To take aim at elective school offices in Washington in 1920 was to take aim at women’s political agency and leadership in education generally, and at Josephine Preston’s leadership specifically. That this was the deliberate intent of certain key players in Washington is clear. For individuals such as Governor Hart, who had been cornered politically by Preston on teacher salary issues earlier in 1920, and Albert S. Barrows, a member of the Commission appointed by Hart, who had sought the office of State Superintendent back in 1912 when Preston first won election, the immediate elimination of Preston and all county superintendents from public office (over 50 percent women in 1920) was a feature of the county unit plan.Footnote 187 As stated by Noah Showalter, president of Cheney Normal School and a close behind-the scenes collaborator on the Commission’s recommendations,

I am very much in favor of selecting the county superintendent in the manner prescribed by the commission. It removes the office from politics and makes it attractive for men of exceptional ability … only men of college presidential caliber should be selected to fill such positions. Under the plan proposed by the commission, a longer tenure of office is assured. (emphasis added)Footnote 188

In this comment, Showalter echoed similar statements made by Cubberley, who had referred in his own textbooks on school administration to the qualities required of the “men” who should serve as school administrators, while simultaneously referring to the presumed incapacity of teachers, consistently gendered as female, for making data-based assessments and decisions.Footnote 189

Senate Bill #10’s governance provisions were an expression of gender backlash against women's dominance in the policy domain of education, but the Bill also engendered a backlash of its own. Besides representing a strong reassertion of patriarchal power in the domain of education, the Code Commission’s recommendations proved to be politically and strategically naïve. Whether out of arrogance or ignorance, the members vastly underestimated both the breadth and the depth of opposition among rural constituencies to its proposed recommendations. Even more importantly, they underestimated Preston’s skill at mobilizing that opposition.

Preston utilized her political skills and well-organized professional and political network to take aim at each of the chief recommendations and justifications.Footnote 190 In her annual Superintendent’s Report in the fall of 1920, she devoted a whole section to naming and refuting each recommendation, point by point, emphasizing its disruption to existing schools, districts, and school governance and highlighting the violation of democratic principles that would be effected by removing chief school officers from accountability to the electorate. She devoted another section of the Report to “The Program of Rural Education,” including extensive reporting from each county, exhibiting various kinds of “success” achieved in rural schools under the existing system.Footnote 191 She then published sections of her Report as a separate pamphlet, had 7,000 copies printed and distributed throughout the state, convening a statewide meeting of educators to discuss the recommendations a full month before the Report was finalized.Footnote 192 By the time legislation was formally introduced in January 2021, organized opposition had solidified. The resulting legislation, though repeatedly amended, lost by one vote on February 25, 1921.Footnote 193

In Washington, where all but two of the forty-two members of the state Senate in 1921 identified as Republican, mainstream party politics cannot illuminate the vote on Senate Bill #10. Nor does any other category of analysis yield a clear-cut way of distinguishing Ayes from Nays. The final tally does provide some evidence of division along urban/rural lines, however. Senators from cities on the west side of the state generally voted in favor of the Bill, though some also opposed it. Three of the four Senators from the city of Tacoma voted for the Bill, for example, but the other opposed it. Five Senators from Seattle voted for the Bill, while three others did not. Senators from the eastern city of Spokane also favored the Bill 2 to 1, with a fourth Spokane Senator absent or not voting. Notably, though, the two Spokane Senators who voted in favor identified themselves as “lawyers,” while the one who voted against the Bill identified as a farmer. (The abstention was a banker.) Of all the nine Senators who identified as farmers, three voted for the Bill (though one of those was a former President of one of the state’s normal schools), while the other six farmer-senators voted against it. Representatives from the towns where other state normal schools were located (Bellingham and Ellensberg) joined their colleague in voting for the Bill. Both Senators from the eastern farming center of Walla Walla voted “no.”Footnote 194

In published statements, reasons for opposition centered on the loss of local governance that some districts would suffer under the proposed changes. Called upon to explain his “no” vote after the tally had been recorded, Senator Hutchinson, the farmer from Spokane, stated:

I vote No on Senate Bill 10 for the reasons that the … bill takes the management of the schools out of the hands of the people, who are most interested, and placed them in the hands of five salaried persons in each county who cannot be in touch with the conditions in the various school districts.Footnote 195

Interestingly, the Senator called upon to represent those who had voted in favor of the measure raised similar issues. Senator Karshner from Puyallup, a somewhat rural area in the West of the State, began by saying that he favored the Bill’s fiscal provisions: “I believe this school code is correct in theory but premature in installation. I concur in its main provisions. I believe in a blanket county tax and in an enlarged uniform state tax which make an equal distribution of schools funds.” However, he suggested a more equivocal view of the Bill's administrative provisions.

I believe in the centralization of school authority to secure efficiency and economy in school government … I cannot concur, however, with its radical method of taking out of the local school board the question of local self-government … I then vote for the bill in the belief that more good than harm can come to the child in the rural school.Footnote 196

These statements suggest how the decision of the Commission and its legislative partners to advance a “radical” attack on direct democracy in rural schooling ran counter to the strong tradition of “progressive” direct democracy in Washington that is highlighted in Clemens.Footnote 197 The Bill cut into the important coalition of farmer, labor, and women's groups that had often been important to the passage of progressive legislation. Senate Bill #10 effectively betrayed the recognition of women in politics by eliminating virtually their only viable path to elective office.

In this way, divisions among professional educators were key to the defeat of fiscal policy reform in Washington in 1920–21. Those differences of interest derived from fiscal policies that can be traced first to the delay in central state funding during Washington’s long territorial period, then through the fiscal provisions of the State constitution that excluded high schools and other “special” schools from benefits of the central common school fund, and finally through many pieces of legislation aimed at circumventing that exclusion by giving cities special taxing powers. These school funding structures both created and reinforced divergences of interests along three overlapping but not entirely congruent hierarchies of place (rural/urban), academic grade (common school/high school), and sex (female/male). Those divergences in turn had significant consequences for subsequent fiscal policy and state administrative capacity.

2. Conclusion

Scholarship in political development has treated education policy as mostly anomalous to political history and development though it has played a central role. Both California and Washington sought legislation in 1920 that would solidify central state support of a comprehensive, modern school system and equalize benefits and burdens across districts. The ability to pass this legislation was shaped by unique political structures that operated in a dynamic relationship to fiscal policy reform and with larger implications for state formation at the subnational level.

This comparative analysis demonstrates a dynamic relationship between taxation, interest group formation, political development, and social change in California and Washington from the mid-nineteenth century until 1920. It shows that fiscal policy was both a “symptom” and a “cause” of large-scale changes in the economy and society of these two states.Footnote 198 Educator organizations were formed and shaped by nineteenth-century education fiscal policy in both states and, in turn, shaped subsequent fiscal policy. Scholarship in political development, particularly policy feedback, provides a theoretical framework for understanding interest group activism and the variation in forms of associative action at the state level.Footnote 199 Education fiscal policy is the connective tissue that integrates these distinctive scholarship domains.

The expansion of public education played a central role in embodying ideas of progress from 1890 to 1920, and in mobilizing grassroots constituencies around progressive ideas and politics. Paradoxically, however, this broad-based vision of social progress through public education could also make education policy a site of political fracture. By 1920, the multiplying functions and programs assumed by public education and their associated costs, combined with WWI inflation, produced a fiscal crisis that organized educators and their political allies in the states of California and Washington, and to some degree nationally, sought to address. In 1920, these efforts at fiscal policy reform achieved success in California, while failing in Washington. In both states, however, efforts at fiscal reform played a central role in deconstructing progressive alliances and in the construction of an anti-progressive opposition. In Washington, however, similar fiscal policy measures drew different dividing lines than in California.

In California, fiscal policy reform in 1920 was successful, but taxation debates simultaneously reinforced teacher activism and a backlash from anti-tax activists that revealed deep disagreement between those who believed in an expanded state and those who sought to protect private property rights. Both groups coalesced around conceptualizations of the state that supported these opposing interests.Footnote 200 There were reformers who sought “social taxation,” and anti-tax activists who fought for private property rights and a fiscal status quo at the expense of state-shaped equity. Their vitriolic and public debates reveal a lack of consensus about the role of the state that foreshadowed and shaped both conservative and progressive social policy in subsequent decades. The conservative backlash reshaped politics and had longer term implications for political development and fiscal policy reform in the twentieth century.Footnote 201 Scholars have attributed late twentieth-century conservatism to the mobilization of American capitalists beginning with the Great Depression, but at the state level the BAF was an early strain of conservative thinking that provided a foundation for those ideas in California politics.Footnote 202

In Washington, fiscal policy reform failed in 1920 because its advocates overreached, attaching to tax code revisions additional administrative measures that threatened interests of key constituencies. That overreach can be seen as a by-product of the interstate, interorganizational process of policy diffusion as propelling much previous progressive legislation in Washington and other states. A cadre of organized educators and political allies in Washington sought to borrow and build upon organizational forms, policies, and tactics already successfully modeled in California to address underlying structural problems in the state education system. Their efforts fell victim, however, to a kind of technocratic fallacy that solutions developed over time in relation to conditions in one place could be implanted all of a piece and in a flash in another place without regard to underlying structural and political differences.Footnote 203 The policy landscapes in California and Washington in the nineteenth century were similar, but then varied through state-shaped policy feedback.

Fiscal policy reform in Washington had the paradoxical effect of accentuating divergences of interest among groups of educators rather than bridging them, with consequences for progressive coalitions statewide. The period from 1919 to 1924 was one of political reaction in the state in ways that mirrored California —for example, rising anti-Japanese and anti-immigrant agitation, red-baiting, anti-tax groups, and rising opposition to labor and socialist party organization. Those issues intersected with school issues in multiple ways, for example in the election or recall of school board members, banning of textbooks, elimination of certain school health services, and policies regarding Japanese language education. Because education policy remained more decentralized in Washington than in California, however, those battles played out more at local district levels than in relation to major state policy.Footnote 204 At the state level, key lines of battle developed not between educators and business groups, as in California, but between urban and rural constituencies, and between corresponding groups of educators.

Compared with California, organized educators in Washington did not have the consolidated representational structure necessary to reconcile and/or suppress differences in favor of a shared agenda. Achievement of such organizational consolidation could have enabled rural educators to mobilize more solidly behind fiscal reform and in turn exercise their influence with local constituencies and political leaders. Such a consolidated organization could also have forced key reformers to recognize sooner how politically problematic their plan to eliminate local school governance structures and elective school offices would be.

Competing interests

The authors declare none.

References

1 Brian Balogh, The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016); Balogh, A Government Out of Sight; The Mystery of National Authority in Nineteenth Century America (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009).

2 Policy diffusion was facilitated by California and Washingtons’ location in the West and strong connections between state actors. See Frances Stokes Berry and William D. Berry, “Innovation and Diffusion Models in Policy Research,” in Theories of the Policy Process, 4th Edition, ed. Christopher M. Weible and Paul A Sabatier (New York: Westview Press, 2018); Clemens, The People's Lobby, 72–73.

3 Leonard P. Ayres, An Index Number for State School Systems (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1920), 47.

4 For information on equalization and other tax and budgeting reform initiatives, see John Teaford, The Rise of the States: Evolution of American State Government (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002), 59. Carl C. Plehn, “The Nature and Causes of the Tax Reform Movement in the United States, The Economic Journal 20, no. 77 (March 1910): 4–5; Edwin R.A. Seligman, “The Separation of State and Local Revenues,” State and Local Taxation: National Conference under the Auspices of the National Tax Association: Addresses and Proceedings, Volume 1 (November 12-15, 1907), 485–8; Ajay Mehrotra, Making the Modern Fiscal State: Law, Politics, and the Rise of Progressive Taxation, 1877–1929 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 200–28. School consolidation is often cited as a modernizing element but proceeded in an uneven and “patchwork fashion” between 1910 and 1930 because of its potential to undermine local control. The highest consolidation rates were at the district level in New England and at the county level in the South. Tracy Steffes, School, Society and State: A New Education to Govern Modern America, 1890 – 1940 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012), 72. On southern consolidation, see Joan Malczewski, Building a New Educational State: Foundations, Schools, and the American South (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016). Matthew Kelly argues that a reliance on local funding limited consolidation efforts in California prior to 1920. Matthew Gardner Kelly, Dividing the Public: School Finance and the Creation of Structural Inequity (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2024), 118–21. For statistical information about national trends toward consolidation, larger units of control, and more efficient and cost-effective administration see Philander Priestly Claxton “Biennial Survey of Education 1916-1918,” U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Bulletin, 1919 (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1921), 88, 785.

5 For scholarship on schooling and state formation in early America see Carl Kaestle, Pillars of the Republic: Common Schools and American Society, 1780-1860 (NY: Hill and Wang, 1983); David Tyack, Thomas James, and Aaron Benavot, Law and the Shaping of Public Education, 1785-1954; Nancy Beadie, “Education, Social Capital, and State Formation in Comparative Historical Perspective: Preliminary Investigations,” Pedagogica Historica: International Journal of the HIstory of Education, 46 (1-2) (April): 15–32; Hilary Moss, Schooling Citizens: The Struggle for African American Education in Antebellum America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009). A comparative perspective can be found in Johannes Westberg, Lukas Boser, and Ingrid Bruhwiler, School Acts and the Rise of Mass Schooling (NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019).

6 Steffes, School, Society and State; Malczewski, Building a New Educational State.

7 Scholarship on southern education has explored the variety of taxation and jurisdictional policies used by southern whites to maintain the racial state both prior to and following formal school desegregation. See Malczewski, Building a New Educational State; Esther Cyna, “Schooling the Kleptocracy: Racism and School Finance in Rural North Carolina, 1900-2018,” Journal of American History 108, no. 4 (March 2022): 745–66; Camille Walsh, Racial Taxation: Schools, Segregation, and Taxpayer Citizenship, 1869-1973 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2018); J. Morgan Kousser, “The Onward March of Right Principles”: State Legislative Actions on Racial Discrimination in Schools in Nineteenth Century America,” Historical Methods 35, no. 4 (Fall 2002): 177–204. Robin Einhorn centralizes the institution of slavery in southern efforts to develop the administrative state and related taxation. See Einhorn, American Taxation, American Slavery (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008), 220–2. Recent scholarship explores distinctive fiscal policies that have shaped structural inequality in the West. Matthew Kelly traces the development of district level taxation for public education and its alternatives in California and highlights the role of certain leading political actors in shaping the contours of fiscal policy, while Nancy Beadie has illuminated how variations in the implementation of school land policies structured education finance in western states. Malczewski explores debates over state formation and fiscal policy reform in California. Kelly, Dividing the Public; Beadie, “Resource Extraction and Education Funding: Nature and Political Economies of State Formation in the United States,” Pedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 56 (1-2), 2019, 150–170; Beadie, et al, “Gateways to the West, Part I: Education in the Shaping of the West,” History of Education Quarterly, 56 no. 3 (August, 2016): 418–444. Malczewski, “‘More Business and Less Politics!’, Schooling, Fiscal Structure, and the 1923 California State Budget,” History of Education Quarterly, 63, no.4 (November, 2023): 492–515. Steffes details complex interaction between multiple levels of state, urban, and suburban tax, fiscal, and jurisdictional policies in education in Chicago and Illinois in the late 20th century. Steffes, Structuring Inequality, 4; Steffes, “Assessment Matters: The Rise and Fall of the Illinois Resource Equalizer Formula,” History of Education Quarterly 60, no. 1 (February 2020): 24–57. Adam Nelson explores the impact on state government and district schools of new fiscal incentives built into post-1954 federal education policy in Massachusetts and Boston. Adam Nelson, The Elusive Ideal: Equal Educational Opportunity and the Federal Role in Boston's Public Schools, 1950-1985 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005).

8 Peter Lindert, “Revealing Failures in the History of School Finance,” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. w15491 (November 2009); Lindert, “The Rise of Social Spending, 1880–1930,” Explorations in Economic History 31, no. 1 (January 1994): 1–37; Lindert, Growing Public: Social Spending and Economic Growth Since the Eighteenth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2nd edn, 2010); Claudia Goldin and Lawrence Katz, The Race between Education and Technology (New York: Belknap Press, 2008); Goldin and Katz, “Why the United States Led in Education: Lessons from Secondary School Expansion, 1910–1940,” in Human Capital and Institutions: A Long-Run View, ed., David Eltis, Frank D. Lewis and Kenneth L. Sokoloff, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009): 143–178. Scholarship on policy and political development includes limited analysis of education policy. Mettler and Soss recognize that education opportunity can affect civic engagement, but do not address the relationship between education policy development and the political process. See Suzanne Mettler and Joe Soss, “The Consequences of Public Policy for Democratic Citizenship: Bridging Policy Studies and Mass Politics,” Perspectives on Politics 2, no. 1 (March 2004): 55–73.

9 Ajay K Mehrotra, Making the Modern American Fiscal State: Law, Politics, and the Rise of Progressive Taxation, 1877–1929 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 8–10.

10 Isaac William Martin, Ajay K. Mehrotra, and Monica Prasad, “The Thunder of History: The Origins and Development of the New Fiscal Sociology,” in The New Fiscal Sociology: Taxation in Comparative and Historical Perspective, ed. Martin, Mehrotra, and Prasad (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009), 2.

11 Ibid.

12 Karen Orren and Stephen Skowronek, The Policy State: An American Predicament (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2017), 175; Mehrotra, “Fiscal Forearms: Taxation as the Lifeblood of the Modern Liberal State,” in The Many Hands of the State, 285; Martin, Mehrotra, and Prasad, The New Fiscal Sociology, 18; Einhorn, American Taxation, American Slavery, 5. Prasad explores the relationship of taxation to state formation in Prasad, The Land of Too Much: American Abundance and the Paradox of Poverty (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2012), 149.

13 Mehrotra, The Many Hands of the State, 285.

14 For scholarship on the relationship between fiscal policy and the path dependencies that structure interest groups, institutions, and future tax policies, see Margaret Weir, “When Does Politics Create Policy? The Organizational Politics of Change,” in Rethinking Political Institutions: The Art of the State, ed. Shapiro, Skowronek, and Galvin (New York: New York University Press, 2006), 171; Martin, Mehrotra, and Prasad, The New Fiscal Sociology, 3–4, 19; Orren and Skowronek, The Policy State, 12. Lieberman explores the development of AIDS policy in the late twentieth century, which reflects unique state histories and creates path dependencies that shape subsequent political development and related fiscal policies. He argues that the politics of taxation can best be understood as a product of group dynamics and moral obligations, and the prism of social identity is particularly relevant. Evan S. Lieberman, “The Politics of Demanding Sacrifice: Applying Insights from Fiscal Sociology to the Study of AIDS Policy and State Capacity,” in The New Fiscal Sociology, ed. Martin, Mehrotra, and Prasad, 101–18.

15 Mehrotra, “Fiscal Forearms: Taxation as the Lifeblood of the Modern Liberal State, in The Many Hands of the State, ed. Martin, Mehrotra, and Prasad, 285.

16 Joseph J. Thorndike, “The Unfair Advantage of the Few”: The New Deal Origins of “Soak the Rich” Taxation, in The New Fiscal Sociology, ed. Martin, Mehrotra, and Prasad, 101.

17 Orren and Skowronek, The Policy State, 153. For information about the attitudes of progressive reformers toward business regulation, see R. Rudy Higgins-Evenson, The Price of Progress: Public Services, Taxation, and the American Corporate State, 1877 – 1929 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003), 5. On specific tax reform initiatives, see Carl C. Plehn, “The Nature and Causes of the Tax Reform Movement in the United States,” The Economic Journal 20, no. 77 (March 1910): 4–5; Edwin R.A. Seligman, “The Separation of State and Local Revenues,” in State and Local Taxation: National Conference under the Auspices of the National Tax Association: Addresses and Proceedings, Volume 1 (November 12-15, 1907), 485–8.

18 Balogh, The Associational State, 4.

19 Frances Stokes Berry and William D. Berry, “Innovation and Diffusion Models in Policy Research,” in Theories of the Policy Process, 253. Desmond King and Robert Lieberman describe how national institutions play an integrative role in promoting a common national vision. Desmond King and Robert C. Lieberman, “Finding the American State: Transcending the “Statelessness” Account,” Polity 40, no. 3 (July 2008): 375.

20 Four different versions failed congressional approval. On this push for federal aid and the role of organized educators and other federated organizations in promoting it, see Beadie, “The Federal Role in Education and the Rise of Social Science Research: Historical and Comparative Perspectives,” Review of Research in Education, Centennial Volume 40 (March 2016): 1-37; William James Hull Hoffer, To Enlarge the Machinery of Government: Congressional Debates and the Growth of the American State, 1858-1891 (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007); Gordon C. Lee, The Struggle for Federal Aid: First Phase: A History of the Attempts to Obtain Federal Aid for Common Schools, 1870–1890 (NY: Teachers College, Columbia University, 1949). Southerners also debated the bill's merits. Some supported it to force the federal government to assume responsibility for the significant education costs created from ending slavery, while others believed it would lead to federal oversight over educational decisions in southern states. Most of the black community supported it because more centralized education decisions limited local determination of education policy, which made it more likely the state might address problems of education inequality. Further, federal oversight might prevent discrimination in the distribution of monetary aid even if it would not prevent school discrimination. Daniel W. Crofts, “The Black Response to the Blair Education Bill,” The Journal of Southern History 37, no. 1 (February 1971): 43; “Black Americans in Congress: 1970–1922,” U.S. House of Representatives (Washington DC: U.S. Government Publishing Office, 2022), 39–47.

21 Mehrotra, Making the Modern American Fiscal State, 185–241. John Teaford demonstrates that state governments became increasingly powerful in response to expanded services and a fear of concentrated national authority, and often relied on nonpartisan and expert state bureaucracies to modernize. John Teaford, The Rise of the States, 6–8. Rudy Higgins-Evenson distinguishes activist state governments from those that focused more on local control in policy contexts driven by unique local political cultures. Higgins-Evenson, The Price of Progress, 2–9.

22 Daniel Beland, Andrea Louise Campbell, and R. Kent Weaver, Policy Feedback: How Policies Shape Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022); Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson, “Policy Feedback in an Age of Polarization,” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 685 (September 2019): 8–28; Suzanne Mettler and Joe Soss, “The Consequences of Public Policy for Democratic Citizenship: Bridging Policy Studies and Mass Politics,” Perspectives on Politics 2, no. 1 (March 2004), 55–73.

23 Richard C. Fording and Dana Patton, “The Affordable Care Act and the Diffusion of Policy Feedback: The Case of Medicaid Work Requirements,” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 6, no. 2 (July 2020): 133; Orfeo Fioretos, Tulia G. Falleti, and Adam Sheingate, “Historical Institutionalism in Political Science,” in The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016), 11; Paul Pierson, Politics in Time: History, Institutions, and Social Analysis (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004.

24 Suzanne Mettler and Mallory Sorelle, “Policy Feedback Theory,” in Theories of Policy Processes, 103–34; Berry and Berry, “Innovation and Diffusion Models in Policy Research,” in Theories of the Policy Process, 253; Eric M. Patashnik and Julian E. Zelizer, “The Struggle to Remake Politics: Liberal Reform and the Limits of Policy Feedback in the Contemporary American State, Perspectives on Politics 11, no. 4 (December 2013): 1075. For a discussion of how national institutions play an integrative role by providing a common vision of the nation, see Desmond King and Robert C. Lieberman, “Finding the American State: Transcending the “Statelessness” Account,” Polity 40, no. 3 (July 2008): 375.

25 On the merits of comparative research for understanding the policy process, see Weible and Sabatier, Theories of the Policy Process, 1–13; Jake Tosun and Samuel Workman, Theories of the Policy Process, 329–62.

26 Mettler and Sorelle, in Theories of Policy Processes, 103–34.

27 Beadie, “The Federal Role in Education and the Rise of Social Science Research: Historical and Comparative Perspectives,” Review of Research in Education, 40 (March 2016): 1-37.

28 The extent of this interorganizational and interstate collaboration among organized educators is readily apparent in the Annual Reports of the Commissioner of Education as well as in the published Proceedings of the NEA.

29 Clemens, The People's Lobby.

30 Ibid., 75, 95–99; Mettler and Sorelle, “Policy Feedback Theory,” in Theories of Policy Process, 103–34; Berry and Berry, “Innovation and Diffusion Models in Policy Research,” in Theories of the Policy Process, 253; Patashnik and Zelizer, “The Struggle to Remake Politics: Liberal Reform and the Limits of Policy Feedback in the Contemporary American State,” Perspectives on Politics 11, no. 4 (December 2013): 1075.

31 Michael Hartney and Patrick Flavin, “From the Schoolhouse to the Statehouse: Teacher Union Political Activism and U.S. State Education Reform Policy,” State Politics and Policy Quarterly 11, no. 3 (September 2011): 252.

32 Mettler and Sorelle, Theories of Policy, 122–3; Malczewski, “’More Business and Less Politics!’ Schooling, Fiscal Structure, and the 1923 California State Budget,” History of Education Quarterly 63, no. 4 (November 2023): 492–515). Andrea Louise Campbell argues that universal programs like education can incorporate disadvantaged groups into citizenship, expand conceptions of the state, and promote political activism. See Andrea Louise Campbell, How Policies Make Citizens: Senior Political Activism and the American Welfare State (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003), 140–1.

33 Dietrich Rueschemeyer and Peter B. Evans, “The State and Economic Transformation,” in Bringing the State Back In, ed. Peter B. Evans, Dietrich Rueschemeyer and Theda Skocpol (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985), 56.

34 Voter Information Guide for 1920, General Election (1920), http://repository.uchastings.edu/ca_ballot_props/150. The apportionment of taxes between the state and county would be based on attendance (e.g. $4,732,500 to Los Angeles, instead of the $2,640,000). See Mark Keppel, “Adequate Support for Elementary Schools,” Sierra Educational News 14 (January 1919), 25. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=iau.31858046290346&view=1up&seq=31&q1=Keppel

35 “Report of the Public School Administrative Code Commission of the State of Washington,” January 11, 1921 (Olympia: Framk M. Lamborn Public Printer, 1921), 112.

36 Ibid.

37 Policy processes refers to the “interactions that occur over time between public policies and surrounding actors, events, contexts, and outcomes.” See Weible, Theories of Policy Processes, 4th Ed., 2; Mettler and Sorelle, Theories of Policy Processes, 103–34. For information about the strength of narrative as a framework for understanding the policy process, see Elizabeth A. Shanahan, et al., “The Narrative Policy Framework,” in Theories of Policy Processes, 173–213. Jale Tosun and Samuel Workman, “Struggle and Triumph in Fusing Policy Process and Comparative Research,” in Theories of Policy Processes, 346–7.

38 Clemens, The People's Lobby, 65.

39 Ibid., 27, 85.

40 For information about theoretical frameworks in comparative research on the policy process, see Tosun and Workman, “Struggle and Triumph in Fusing Policy Process and Comparative Research,” in Theories of the Policy Process.

41 Clemens, The People's Lobby; Elizabeth A. Shanahan, et al., “The Narrative Policy Framework,” in Theories of Policy Processes, 176.

42 Paul Pierson, “When Effect Becomes Cause: Policy Feedback and Political Change,” World Politics 45 (July 1993): 595–628; Pierson, “Increasing Returns, Path Dependence, and the Study of Politics,” The American Political Science Review 94, no. 2 (June 2000): 251–67; Eric M. Patashnik and Julian E. Zelizer, “The Struggle to Remake Politics: Liberal Reform and the Limits of Policy Feedback in the Contemporary American State,” Perspectives on Politics 11, no. 4 (December 2013); Suzanne Mettler and Joe Soss, “The Consequences of Public Policy for Democratic Citizenship: Bridging Policy Studies and Mass Politics,” Perspectives on Politics 2, no. 1 (March 2004): 55–73; Suzanne Mettler, “Bringing the State Back in to Civic Engagement: Policy Feedback Effects of the G.I. Bill for World War II Veterans,” The American Political Science Review 96, no. 2 (June 2002): 351–65; Joe Soss and Sanford F. Schram, “A Public Transformed? Welfare Reform as Policy Feedback,” The American Political Science Review 101, no. 1 (February 2007): 111–27; Peter A. Hall, “Politics as a Process Structured in Space and Time,” in The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism, 31–50; Alan M. Jacobs, “Social Policy Dynamics,” in The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism, 339–53.

43 Mettler and Sorelle demonstrate that feedback effects are contingent on the design of policies that shape participatory citizenship. See Suzanne Mettler and and Mallory Sorelle, “Policy Feedback Theory,” in Theories of Policy Processes, 112. Fording and Patton demonstrate that state variation in the policy landscape affects patterns of feedback. See Richard C. Fording and Dana Patton, “The Affordable Care Act and the Diffusion of Policy Feedback: The Case of Medicaid Work Requirements,” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 6, no. 2 (July 2020), 133. For a discussion of the role of voluntary activity in shaping the allocation of economic, social and cultural benefits for collective purposes, see Sidney Verba, Kay Lehman Schlozman, and Henry E. Brady, Voice and Equality: Civic Voluntarism in American Politics (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995), 7. For a discussion of how conflicts between institutions and governance influence politics and the related policy context, see Fioretos, Falleti, and Sheingate, The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism, 14. Shanahan, et al., explores whether narrative can affect the policy process including policy development, implementation and regulation at various levels of public analysis in Elizabeth A. Shanahan, et al., “The Narrative Policy Framework,” in Theories of Policy Processes, 173–214.

44 Ingen argues that suffrage in California failed to create favorable conditions for female candidates. See L.V. Ingen, “The Limits of state suffrage for California Women Candidates in the Progressive Era,” Pacific Historical Review 73, no. 1 (February 2004): 25.

45 Richard Gause Boone, A History of Educational Organization in California (Sacramento: a publication of the California Teachers’ Association, March 1926), 10.

46 Kelly, Dividing the Public, 29–34.

47 Boone, A History of Educational Organization in California, 34–35.

48 As late as 1890, high school enrollment ranged between 2 and 4 percent of relevant age cohorts, even in the relatively well-educated states of the West and Northeast. On nineteenth-century debates over public funding of high schools, see William J. Reese, The Origins of the American High School (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995), esp. 59–79. On high school enrollment rates by region, see John Rury, Education and Women's Work: Female Schooling and the Division of Labor in Urban America, 1870—1930 (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1991), esp. Table 2.2, pp. 62–3; and Goldin and Katz, The Race Between Education and Technology, 20–28. Rury and Goldin & Katz use different methods of calculating high school enrollments or years of schooling by age cohort, but the results for the last decades of the nineteenth century are similarly low.

49 The group also included the governor and state superintendent. Boone, A History of Educational Organization in California, 14; A History of the California State Department of Education, 1900–1967 (Sacramento: California State Department of Education Bureau of Publications, 1968), 3.

50 Philip M. Fisher, “The Story of the California High Schools,” Sierra Educational News, Proceedings: California High School Teacher's Association, July-August, 1919 (San Francisco: California Council of Education), 13–17; Kelly, Dividing the Public, 129.

51 There were 200 high schools by 1908 and a significant increase in related state costs. Fisher, “The Story of the California High Schools,” Sierra Educational News, July-August, 13–17.

52 A History of the California State Department of Education, 1900–1967, 7.

53 Boone, A History of Educational Organization in California, 26.

54 Ibid., 20–25.

55 Clemens, The People's Lobby, 14.

56 The group’s network included Elwood Cubberley, who had been a superintendent in San Diego in 1892 and became the founding dean of the Stanford School of Education before moving to Columbia University; William T. Harris. U.S. Commissioner of Education; Andrew Draper, New York State School Commissioner; G. Stanley Hall, president of Clark University; Ella Flagg Young, who was at the University of Chicago; and, Booker T. Washington from Tuskegee. Boone, 29.

57 Ibid., 28.

58 For information on organizational networks and civil voluntarism, see Sidney Verba, Kay Lehman Schlozman, and Henry E. Brady, Kay Lehman Schlozman, and Henry E. Brady, Voice and Equality: Civic Voluntarism in American Politics (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995), 269–87.

59 This structure became a model for the NEA reorganization in the 1910s. Boone, A History of Educational Organization in California, 8–9, 69; E. Morris Cox, “A Brief History of Fifty-nine Years of Educational Organization,” The Sierra Educational News, XVI n 5, May 1920 (San Francisco: Publication of the California Council of Education): 281–6.

60 While the CTA did not benefit from collective bargaining laws that subsidized the cost of mobilization, its organizational structure and placement within the state’s public education structure, redounded similar benefits. For more information on collective bargaining as an agent for political change, see Patrick Flavin and Michael Hartney, “When Government Subsidizes its Own: Collective Bargaining Laws as Agents of Political Mobilization,” American Journal of Political Science 59, no. 4 (October 2015): 898–9.

61 E. Morris Cox, “A Brief History of Fifty-nine Years of Educational Organization,” The Sierra Educational News, XVI n 5, May 1920 (San Francisco: Publication of the California Council of Education), 53.

62 Kelly, Dividing the Public, 151.

63 Ibid, 83–87.

64 Kelly discusses how the railroad’s use of the Fourteenth Amendment set a precedent for subsequent cases and debates about corporate “personhood.” Ibid., 104. For information on property tax politics, including the supervision of the assessment of railroad property and local property see Isaac William Martin, The Permanent Tax Revolt: How the Property Tax Transformed American Politics (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008), 22; Stockwell, Studies in California Taxation, 1910–1935 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1939), 1–2.

65 Preliminary Report of the Commission on Revenue and Taxation of the State of California, August 1906 (Sacramento: W.W. Shannon, Superintendent State Printing, 1906), 11–13.

66 Business taxes included a corporate franchise tax, a gross receipts tax on public service corporations, a gross premiums tax on insurance companies, and a capital stock tax upon banks. For an analysis of Amendment 1, see Stockwell, Studies in California Taxation, 2; For information about the legislative session and the statute, see The Statutes of California Passed at the Third Extra Session of the Thirty-Eighth Legislature, Section 14, part (f), October 3-5, 1910 (California State Assembly: Office of the Chief Clerk), page 17.2, https://clerk.assembly.ca.gov/content/statutes-and-amendments-codes-1910-11.

67 Higgens-Evenson, The Price of Progress, 79; Mehrotra, Making the Modern American Fiscal State, 218.

68 Kelly, Dividing the Public, 142-5. The amendment was referred to as the “Plehn Plan” after Carl Plehn, Berkeley finance professor, author of the 1906 State Tax Commission recommending the separation of taxes, and the 1910 report promoting Amendment 1. Plehn was spokesperson for corporations that fought the state a decade later in debates about the King Tax Bill, which would increase corporate tax rates. See Preliminary Report of the Commission on Revenue and Taxation of the State of California, August 1906 (Sacramento: W.W. Shannon, Superintendent State Printing, 1906); and, Hichborn, Story of the Session of the California Legislature of 1921 (San Francisco: Press of the James H. Barry Company, 1922), 22–23.

69 Clemens, The People’s Lobby, 7, 244.

70 The Statutes of California Passed at the Third Extra Session of the Thirty-Eighth Legislature, Section 14, part (f), October 3-5, 1910. For a discussion of the relationship of the Amendment to state budgeting, see Teaford, The Rise of the States, 52 – 54; and Laichas, “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul”: Public Finance and Political Change in California, 1850 – 1930 (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Los Angeles, 1999), 395–436.

71 Specifically, the school population increased 103 percent. Laichas, “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul,” 23, 524.

72 The largest state budget item was road building and maintenance, which was supported by a massive construction bond issue initially in 1910, followed by two additional bond issues over the next decade. Ibid., 33, 44, 520.

73 Laichas details in Table 9:2 education sources between 1900 and 1930. These sources do not add to 100 percent because miscellaneous funds, which can be found in Table 5:3, are not included. Those amounts were 1.7 percent in 1910 and 2.9 percent in 1915. See Laichas, “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul” 268, 521.

74 Kelly, Dividing the Public, 148.

75 J. Casey Sullivan, “Way Before the Storm: California, the Republican Party, and a New Conservatism, 1900–1930,” Journal of Policy History 26, no. 4 (Fall 2014), 569.

76 The election for the 1914 California Legislature demonstrates non-partisanship. In the Assembly, of eighty members elected, twenty-four were listed as Republicans; ten as Democrats; seven as Progressives; two as Socialists; eight as Democrat/Republicans; ten as Progressives/Republicans; seven as Democrat/Progressive; six as Progressive/Democrat/Republican; one as Republican/Democrat/Prohibitionist; one as Prohibitionist/Progressive/Democrat; one as Progressive/Republican/Democrat/Socialist; one as Progressive/Republican/Democrat/Prohibitionist; one as Progressive/Republican/Democrat/Progressive/Prohibitionist; and, one as Progressive/Socialist/Democrat/Republican/Prohibitionist. For the Senate, of twenty members who were elected, two were nominated as Republicans; two as Progressives; four as Democrats; five as Republican/Progressive; two as Democrat/Progressive; two as Democrat/Progressive/Socialist; one as Democrat/Republican/Prohibitionist; one as Progressive/Democrat/Republican; and, one as Progressive/Democrat/Republican/Prohibitionist. The California Legislature in 2021 reflects similar trends in party affiliation. Frank Hichborn, Story of the California Legislature of 1921 (San Francisco: Press of the James H. Barry Company, 1922), 221; List of Members, Officers, Committees, and the Rules of the Two Houses, 1917–1955 (Sacramento: The Legislature), 26–31.

77 “Argument by Chester H. Rowell,” Transactions of the Commonwealth Club, X n 1 (January, 1915), 463.

78 “Remarks by Honorable C.C. Young,” Transactions of the Commonwealth Club, X n 1 (January 1915), 475.

79 “Was Hughes Betrayed in California? A Statement by the Republican State Executive Committee” (San Francisco: Rincon Publishing Company, 1917), 12.

80 Spencer C. Olin, Jr., California's Prodigal Sons: Hiram Johnson and the Progressives, 1911-1917 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1968), 34–36.

81 Direct democracy also included the primary, cross-filing, the secret ballot, at-large local elections, executive budgeting, and civil service, all of which made it possible for groups to assume visible power in defining policy. Allswang, “The Origins of Direct Democracy in Los Angeles and California: The Development of an Issue and its Relationship to Progressivism,” Southern California Quarterly 78, no. 2 (Summer 1996): 175–198.

82 J. Casey Sullivan, “Way Before the Storm: California, the Republican Party, and a New Conservatism, 1900–1930,” Journal of Policy History 26, no. 4 (Fall 2014), 571.

83 State support of labor organizations can include measures beyond financial support. See Patrick Flavin and Michael Hartney, “When Government Subsidizes its Own: Collective Bargaining Laws as Agents of Political Mobilization,” American Journal of Political Science 59, no. 4 (October 2015), 908.

84 Paul Pierson points out that public policies can create “spoils” that provide a strong motivation to mobilize in favor of programmatic maintenance or expansion. Paul Pierson, “When Effect Becomes Cause: Policy Feedback and Political Change,” World Politics 45 (July 1993): 595–628. See also Verba, Schlozman, and Brady, Voice and Equality, 7; Andrea Louise Campbell, How Policies Make Citizens: Senior Political Activism and the American Welfare State (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003).

85 By 1920, the CTA had 10,869 members (an increase from 5,984 in 1911). John David Phillips, “The Politics of State School Support: California as a Case Study, 1919-1960,” (Ph.D. diss., Stanford University, 1965), 94, 139.

86 Laichas, “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul,” 602, 523.

87 Ibid., 523.

88 The Commission claimed the bill failed to provide an appropriate system for assessing corporate taxes, required a two-thirds majority for rate changes, did not address equalization, and promoted lobbying. Report of the State Tax Commission (Sacramento: California State Printing Office, 1917), 8, 11–13.

89 Mettler and Sorelle refer to this as the “interpretive effects” of policies that serve as a source of information and meaning and impact political activity. Mettler and Sorelle, Theories of Policy Processes, 122–3; Malczewski, “More Business and Less Politics! Schooling, Fiscal Structure, and the 1923 California State Budget,” History of Education Quarterly, 63, no.4 (November 2023), 492–515.

90 Martin explores the relationship between the 16th Amendment and anti-tax revolts, which he characterizes as twentieth-century “rich people” social movements. Martin, The Permanent Tax Revolt, xii.

91 The Board included business leaders from across the state, including James Delaney (San Jose Bean Spray Pup Company), J.L. Howard, Jr., (Howard Company in Oakland), C.A. Batchelder (Holt Manufacturing, Stockton), F.B.McKevitt (California Fruit Distributing Co., Sacramento), E.R. Throop (Schmeiser Manufacturing, Davis), F.D. Prescott (Valley Lumber Company, Fresno), F.M. White (Benson Lumber Co., San Diego), C.W. Schelder (Great Western Electric Chemical Co., Pittsburg), and E.J. Fowler (Pacific Foundry Co., San Francisco). John Randolph Haynes to Senator Hiram W. Johnson, July 28, 1920, Folder 13 B5, Series 1241, John Randolph Haynes Papers, Charles E. Young Special Collections, University of California at Los Angeles. For information about the formation of interest groups in opposition to the Amendment, see Paul Pierson, “When Effect Becomes Cause: Policy Feedback and Political Change,” World Politics 45 (July 1993), 595–628.

92 “Causes Leading up to the Organization of the commercial Federation and Accomplishments to Date,” undated, Papers of Margaret Ann Kerr, Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California (hereinafter Hoover-MAK). “Commercial Federation of America: To our Members and Friends,” November 19, 1918, Hoover-MAK.

93 John Randolph Haynes to Senator Hiram W. Johnson, July 28, 1920, Folder 13 B5, Series 1241, JRH-UCLA. Frank Hichborn charged that public utilities had made pledges to the BAF but charged the subscription as a deductible operating expense, thereby passing costs to customers (e.g. The San Joaquin Light and Power Co. subscribed $300; the Southern California Edison Co. pledged $3,000 per year, charged to “miscellaneous general office supplies and expense) Frank Hichborn, San Francisco Daily News, February 18, 1924.

94 “Commercial Federation of America: To our Members and Friends,” November 19, 1918, Hoover-MAK; “Causes Leading up to the Organization of the Commercial Federation and Accomplishments to Date,” undated, Hoover-MAK, 2.

95 Fording and Patton describe how negative policy feedback can undermine policy development and form interest groups in opposition to policy, like the BAF. See Richard C. Fording and Dana Patton, “The Affordable Care Act and the Diffusion of Policy Feedback: The Case of Medicaid Work Requirements,” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 6, no. 2 (July 2020): 140.

96 See Martin, The Permanent Tax Revolt; Clemens, The People's Lobby: 92-93; for information about shaping citizen's attitudes in policy development see Tosun and Workman, in Theories of the Policy Process. For information about how shared cognitive frameworks can create relational actors see Hall, The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism, 35.

97 Hichborn, Story of the California Legislature of 1921, 38–39. Poor reporting practices make comparative data suspect, but even after acknowledging inaccuracies, the two-third majority required to raise corporate tax rates had moved more of the burden of schools from the state to local governments.

98 “Assembly Bill No. 1013 in Review,” California Taxpayers’ Journal: Official Publication of the Taxpayers’ Association of California 1, no. 4 (July-August 1917): 2–3.

99 Los Angeles City Teachers Club: Yearbook, 1917-1920, 22, Box 2665, Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education Records, Charles E. Young Special Collections, University of California at Los Angeles, (hereinafter UCLA-LAUSD).

100 Ibid., 22.

101 Ibid. “Editorial,” California Taxpayers’ Journal: Official Publication of the Taxpayers’ Association of California 1, no. 3 (June 1917): 2.

102 Voter Information Guide for 1920, General Election (1920), http://repository.uchastings.edu/ca_ballot_props/150. The apportionment of taxes between the state and county would be based on attendance (e.g. $4,732,500 to Los Angeles, instead of the $2,640,000). See Mark Keppel, “Adequate Support for Elementary Schools,” Sierra Educational News 14 (Jan. 1919), 25. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=iau.31858046290346&view=1up&seq=31&q1=Keppel

103 Keppel, Mark, “Adequate State Support – The Initiative Amendment,” in Proceedings of Annual Meeting: California High School Teachers Association (September 1920), 14.

104 Will C. Wood, “Argument for Constitutional Amendment Relative to Increase of School Funds,” Sierra Educational News 16, no. 7 (September 1920): 412. Wood’s statement was also included as a primary argument in favor of the bill in the state’s voter information guide, Voter Information Guide for 1920, General Election (1920), http://repository.uchastings.edu/ca_ballot_props/150, 48.

105 Phillips argues that the CTA organizing success effectively ended the hopes of the A.F.T., which had hoped to compel educators to unionize. Phillips, The Politics of State School Support, 157.

106 Laichas, “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul, 754.

107 Ibid., 37.

108 “Constitutional Amendment Sixteen: Its Meaning, Its Accomplishment,” California Teachers Association, with data assembled by A.R. Heron, Deputy Director of Education for California (1923), Folder Miscellaneous Education–California, Box 53, Charles E. Young Special Collections, University of California at Los Angeles (hereinafter UCLA-Hichborn), 2.

109 Ibid.

110 “Weekly Letter No. 43,” of the Commercial Federation, April 13, 1920, Hoover-MAK, 2.

111 Voter Information Guide for 1920, General Election (1920), http://repository.uchastings.edu/ca_ballot_props/150. The initiative on the ballot would have required a greater number of signatures than that mandated in the Constitution for all matters related to taxation or repeal of the initiative to weaken the initiative. “Amendments to Constitution and Proposed Statutes with Arguments Respecting the Same, Ballot Item 4, November 2, 1920” (Sacramento: Office of the Secretary of State); Better American Federation: An Analytical Statement of its Purposes,” 8, F2, B6, Series 1241, John Randolph Haynes Papers, Charles E. Young Special Collections, University of California at Los Angeles (hereafter UCLA-JRH).

112 Franklin Hichborn to Dr. John R. Haynes, May 9, 1921, Folder 14, Box 5, UCLA-JRH.

113 “’Democracy Denounced’: Atwood Appeals for Return to the Republic: Says Direct Government by People Means Chaos,” Los Angeles Times, May 19, 1922. II, 1. “Better American Federation: An Analytical Statement of its Purposes,” 8, F2, B6, Series 1241, UCLA-JRH.

114 Phillips, The Politics of State School Support, 165–66.

115 Ibid., 173–74.

116 “Administration Ready for Finish Fight on Public Utilities Tax,” January 24, 1921, Los Angeles Times, 12; Kenneth C. Adams, “Taxpayers’ Association Held Corporation Tool: Heated Fight Expected over King Tax Bill,” January 24, 1921, San Francisco Chronicle, 3.

117 Hichborn, Story of the California Legislature of 1921, 68.

118 “Better America Federation of California: Weekly Newsletter.” See all newsletters from 1920-1924, F12, Box 6, Series 1241, UCLA-JRH.

119 E.B. Couch, “Six Dollars Worth,” Los Angeles School Journal 4, no. 35 (Los Angeles: Educational Associations of Los Angeles, 1921), 6.

120 Hichborn, Story of the California Legislature of 1921, 103-04, fn. 63.

121 The first vote on the Bill received seventy-nine votes (66.4 percent) in favor and forty votes (33.6 percent) against but did not meet the requirement for a two-third majority on corporate tax rates. On the second vote, it received eighty-nine votes (67.5 percent) in favor and thirty-nine (32.5 percent) opposed, meeting two-third narrowly by one vote. Ibid., 18–19.

122 Ibid., 64, fn 31.

123 Kenneth C. Adams, “King Bill Passes 27 to 13: Administration Wins Fight by Narrow Margin,” March 1, 1021, San Francisco Chronicle, 1.

124 Kenneth C. Adams, “Taxpayers’ Association Held Corporation Tool: Heated Fight Expected over King Tax Bill,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 24, 1921. Kyle D. Palmer, “Gov. Richardson Keeps Pledges to the Letter: Promises of Economy Met; Budget Submitted to Legislature Cut $12,000,000,” Los Angeles Times, February 2, 1923, I,1.

125 Kenneth C. Adams, “King Bill Passes 27 to 13: Administration Wins Fight by Narrow Margin,” March 1, 1921, San Francisco Chronicle, 1.

126 The total budget was $78,974,629. “Transactions of the Commonwealth Club of California,” XVIII n 1 (March 1923), 1. Kyle D. Palmer, “Gov. Richardson Keeps Pledges to the Letter: Promises of Economy Met; Budget Submitted to Legislature Cut $12,000,000,” Los Angeles Times, February 2, 1923, I,1. For the full transcript of the budget transmission, see the inaugural message “to the Senate and Assembly of the State of California,” Friend Richardson, January 9, 1923, The Journal of the Assembly During the 45th Session of the Legislature of the State of California (Sacramento: California State Printing Office, 1923), 98.

127 “The Budget,” The Bulletin of the Los Angeles City Teachers Club 12, no. 8 (March 12, 1923), 19–23.

128 For information on the relationship between state intervention and economic development, which has some implications from conceptions of the state in terms of addressing equity, see Dietrich Rueschemeyer, Peter B. Evans, “The State and Economic Transformation,” in Bringing the State Back In, ed. Peter B. Evans, Dietrich Rueschemeyer and Theda Skocpol (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985), 56.

129 Kyle D. Palmer, “Richardson Keeps Pledges to the Letter: Promises of Economy Met; Budget Submitted to Legislature Cut $12,000,000,” Los Angeles Times, February 2, 1923, I, 1.

130 Kyle D. Palmer, “Rips School Politics: Governor Scored Demagoguery,” Los Angeles Times, April 7, 1923, I,1.

131 Mrs. Pierce and Mrs. Dorsey Discuss Matters Before the Principal’s Club,” Los Angeles School Journal, Vol. VI. no. 25, February 12, 1923 (Los Angeles: Publication of the Principals Club – High School Teachers Association and Secondary Schools Principals Club), 58–59.

132 Charles Conger, “Camouflage” Los Angeles School Journal, Vol. VI n 26, March 12, 1923 (Los Angeles: Publication of the Principals Club – High School Teachers Association and Secondary Schools Principals Club), 11–12.

133 Kelly, Dividing the Public, 158–62.

134 Mrs. Arthur S. Heineman to Fellow Members of the League of Women Voters, “Cuts the Budget Makes in Education,” Los Angeles School Journal, VI, no. 27, March 19, 1923 (Los Angeles: Publication of the Principals Club – High School Teachers Association and Secondary Schools Principals Club): 12–14.

135 Kelly, Dividing the Public.

136 Scholarship has shown that strong political institutions are essential to the relationship between civil society and democracy, and that localism did much to promote and sustain discrimination and inequality in education. Theda Skocpol, Diminished Democracy: From Membership to Management in American Civil Life (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2003); Jennifer Hoschschild and Nathan Scovronick, The American Dream and the Public Schools (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), 28–36. Jill Quadagno demonstrates that the implementation of Medicare in the South led to greater integration in medical care and centralized services that took precedent over local culture and attitudes. Jill Quadagno, “Promoting Civil Rights through the Welfare State: How Medicare Integrated Southern Hospitals,” Social Problems 47 (2000), 69, 71.

137 For a thorough and detailed account of the late nineteenth-century history of strong anti-party and non-partisan politics in Washington State as well as its role in facilitating women's election to local and county school offices, see Kathryn Ann Nicholas, “Women's Political Agency and Public Education in the 19th Century,” (University of Washington, unpublished PhD dissertation, 2018), 106–56.

138 For an extended discussion of the significance of Washington State’s constitutional provisions for education as compared with other states, see Beadie, Paramount Duty of the State: A Brief History of Educational Equity and Inequality in Washington State (produced as part of the “Roadmap to Reducing Barriers as Part of Educational Justice in Washington State,” Project Funded by the Washington Education Association and the National Education Association, Manka Varghese, Project Lead, 2021).

139 Article IX, Education, “Constitution of Washington–1889,” Francis Newton Thorpe, ed. Constitutions, Colonial Charters, and Other Organic Laws of the States, Territories, and Colonies now or heretofore forming the United States (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1909), Vol. 7, 1391–2. Source hereafter referred to as Thorpe, Constitutions.

140 On the history of school lands and state formation in the U.S., see Beadie, “Resource Extraction and Education Funding: Nature and Political Economies in State Formation in the United States,” Pedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 56 (1-2), (2019): 150–170.

141 Article XVI, School and Granted Lands, “Constitution of Washington–1889,” Thorpe, Constitutions, Vol. 7, 4000.

142 Frederick Bolton claimed in 1934 that the history of legislation in Washington was interwoven with the history of this teachers’ organization. Frederick E. Bolton and Thomas W. Bibb, History of Education in Washington, Bulletin, 1934, No. 9, Department of the Interior, Office of Education (Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office, 1935), 429.

143 Article IX (Education), Section 2, “Constitution of Washington–1889,” Thorpe, Constitutions, Vol. 7, 1391.

144 On California's 1879 Constitution, see Article IX (Education), Section 4, “Constitution of California–1879,” Thorpe, Constitutions, Vol. 1, 431. During the 1880s, high schools enrolled only a small proportion of a given age-cohort—around 2 percent of the age-relevant population nationally. See note 48.

145 Bolton and Bibb, History of Education in Washington, 134.

146 Ibid., 430–1.

147 Doris Pieroth, Seattle's Women Teachers of the Interwar Years: Shapers of a Livable City (Seattle: University of Washington, 2004), 151–73; also, Bryce Nelson, Good Schools: The Seattle Public School System, 1901–1930 (Seattle: University of Washington, 1988), 48–9.

148 Tracy L. Steffes, “‘Solving the ‘Rural School Problem’: New State Aid, Standards, and Supervision of Local Schools, 1900–1933,” History of Education Quarterly 48, no. 2 (May 2008): 181–220.

149 On the historical and international economic significance of this wheat-growing region, see D.W. Meinig's classic study, The Great Columbian Plain: A Historical Geography, 1805-1910 (Seattle: University of Washington, [1968] 1995). For a focused discussion of the educational dimensions of this history and region, see Beadie, Paramount Duty of the State: A Brief History of Educational Equity and Inequality in Washington State, Produced as part of the “Roadmap to Reducing Barriers to Educational Justice in Washington State,” Project funded by the Washington Education Association and the National Educationa Association, Manka Varghese, Project Lead, 2021.

150 Howard W. Allen, “Miles Poindexter and the Progressive Movement,” The Pacific Northwest Quarterly 53, no. 3 (July 1962): 114–22; and Hamilton Cravens, “The Emergence of the Farmer-Labor Party in Washington Politics, 1919-1920,” Pacific Northwest Quarterly 57, no. 4 (October 1966): 148–57. More broadly, see Lawrence Goodwyn, The Populist Moment: A Short History of the Agrarian Revolt in America (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978).

151 On the County Life Commission and rural education, see Steffes, “Solving the ‘Rural School Problem’” 2008. On the County Life Commission's convention in Spokane, see Robert A. Harvie, “How ‘Ya Gonna Keep ‘Em Down on the Farm,” Columbia: The Magazine of Northwest History 19, no. 2 (2005): 36–45.

152 For accounts of the national natural history and nature study movement with which Liberty Hyde Bailey became associated, and the formative significance of women educators in it, see Sally Gregory Kohlstedt, Teaching Children Science: Hands-On Nature Study in North America, 1890-1930 (Chicago: University of Chicago, 2010); and Kim Tolley, The Science Education of American Girls: A Historical Perspective (NY: Routledge/Falmer, 2003), 95–148.

153 This concentrated legislative achievement is highlighted in Cravens, “The Emergence of the Farmer-Labor Party,” 149 and Clemens, The People's Lobby, 97.

154 Anna Louise Strong served as an editor of the influential Seattle Union Record and a member of Seattle’s Central Labor Council, and because of her affiliations both with organized labor and women’s social welfare organizations, won election as the first female member of the Seattle School Board in 1916 (though later recalled during the WWI Red Scare); Lena Morna Lewis was state secretary of Washington’s Socialist Party in 1920; and Theresa McMahon, Professor of Economics at the University of Washington testified and worked in collaboration with labor and women’s organizations to win key women’s and child labor legislation. Nelson, Good Schools, 108–32; Anna Louise Strong, I Change Worlds (NY: 1935, Henry Holt and Company); Cravens, “The Emergence of the Farmer-Labor Party;” Theresa Schmid McMahon, “My Story,” reprinted with biographical introduction, in Geraldine Clifford, Lone Voyagers: Academic Women at Co-ed Universities, 1870–1937 (NY: Feminist Press, 1989), 223–80; Theresa Schmid McMahon, Social and Economic Standards of Living (Massachusetts: D.C. Heath, 1925).

155 Clemens, The People's Lobby, 95–9.

156 “The Country Life Movement” refers to a broad set of efforts, both indigenous and official, to promote “progress” of various kinds—social, technological, economic, cultural, educational—to rural America in the 1910s and 1920s. Liberty Hyde Bailey, Cornell-based horticulture professor and Dean of the New York State College of Agriculture appointed in 1908 by Theodore Roosevelt as chairman of the National Commission on Country Life, deployed the phrase both descriptively and strategically in his 1911 book by that title. Despite the economic concerns of its official manifestation in the 1910s and 1920s, the “movement” had strong historical roots in education, including the Nature Study Movement, a normal-school-promoted, teacher-based-approach to public school curricula that promoted the study of nature directly, rather than from books, beginning in the 1880s and 90s; university-based agricultural schools and extension services; labor and education issues in the rural south after the demise of Reconstruction and of the Blair Bill in 1890; and a set of administrative reforms for rural school promoted by the National Education Association, also in the 1890s. Report of the Committee of Twelve on Rural Schools (NEA Addresses and Proceedings, 1897); Liberty Hyde Bailey, The Country Life Movement in the United States (NY: Macmillan Co., 1911); Mabel Carney, Country Life and the Country School (Chicago: Row, Petterson & Co., 1912); Report of the Commission on Country Life (New York: Sturgis and Walton Company, 1917); Wayne Fuller, RFD: The Changing Face of Rural America (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, orig. 1964, 1966); William A. Link, A Hard Country and a Lonely Place: Schooling, Society and Reform in Rural Virginia, 1870-1920 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 1986); Paul Theobald, Call School: Rural Education in the Midwest to 1918 (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1995); David R. Reynolds, There Goes the Neighborhood: Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Early Twentieth-Century Iowa (Iowa City: Iowa University Press, 1999); Kohlstedt, Teaching Children Science; Steffes, School, Society and State, 47–82; and idem, “Solving the ‘Rural School Problem,’” 190–2.

157 Ayres, “An Index Number for State School Systems,” 47.

158 Kathryn Nicholas has documented this role and Michael Pisapia has analyzed women's roles more broadly for the U.S West. See Nicholas, “Reexamining Women’s Nineteenth-Century Political Agency: School Suffrage and Office-holding,” The Journal of Policy History 30, no.3 (2018): 452–88;” and Michael Callaghan Pisapia, “The Authority of Women in the Political Development of American Public Education, 1860–1930,” Studies in American Political Development 24, no. 1 (2010): 24–56.

159 Kathryn Ann Nicholas, “Women's Political Agency and Public Education in the 19th Century,” (University of Washington, unpublished PhD dissertation, 2018), Table 3, 103–5. See also, Kathryn A. Nicholas, “Reexamining Women's Nineteenth-Century Political Agency: School Suffrage and Office-holding,” The Journal of Policy History 30, no. 3 (2018): 452–88.

160 Details of Josephine Corliss Preston's biography and career from Kathryn Nicholas, “Female Leadership, Rural Constituencies, and the Failure of Administrative Progressives to Centralize Public Schools” (unpublished master's thesis, University of Washington, 2012).

161 Bolton and Bibb, History of Education in Washington, 429.

162 On the various forms of federal support for Americanization beginning 1914, the multiple governmental and quasi-governmental agencies involved, and their relationships to state organizations, see Frank Van Nuys, Americanizing the West: Race, Immigrants, and Citizenship, 1890-1930 (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2002), esp. 33–69; also, Jeffrey E. Mirel, Patriotic Pluralism: Americanization Education and European Immigrants (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2010). For an overview of vocational education funding, the Smith-Lever and the Smith Acts of 1914 and 1917, see Norton Grubb and Marvin Lazerson, The Education Gospel: The Economic Power of Schooling (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 2004).

163 San Francisco Call, 105:123: April 2, 1909.

164 Wayne Urban, Gender, Race, and the National Education Association: Professionalism and Its Limits (NY: Routledge Falmer, 2000), 3–7.

165 Ibid., 8–19.

166 For a comprehensive study of state- and municipal-level implementation of federal vocational education legislation and funding, albeit for California, see Harvey A. Kantor, Learning to Earn: School, Work, and Vocational Reform in California, 1880-1930 (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1988). For case studies of vocational education in Washington State, see Nelson, Good Schools; and Daniel F. Jacoby, “Schools, Unions and Training : Seattle 1900-1940,” (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Washington, 1986).

167 Urban, Gender, Race, and the National Education Association, 8-19.

168 Ibid., 12–19.

169 Nicholas, “Female Leadership,” 40–50.

170 Urban, Gender, Race, and the National Education Association, 14–16.

171 Bolton and Bibb, History of Education in Washington, 139–42; Nicholas, “Female Leadership,” 51–65.

172 Clemens, The People's Lobby, 7 and 244.

173 This foregoing summary of the activities of Hopkins and his network of allies and correspondents in the WSTL, WEA, and beyond is based on a reading of hundreds of letters and official communications in the WEA Collection, Box 1 and Box 24.

174 For a summary account of the origins and early history of the NEA, see Beadie, “The Federal Role in Education and the Rise of Social Science Research: Historical and Comparative Perspectives,” Review of Research in Education, Centennial Volume 40 (March 2016): 1–37. Author, 2016. On policy, see Berry and Berry, in Theories of the Policy Process.

175 Letter from H.L. Hopkins to Olive Hoffine, September 28, 1920, WEA Collection, Box 1.

176 WEA Collection, passim.

177 Clemens, The People's Lobby, 65-99. For information on policy diffusion, see Mettler and Sorelle, Theories of Policy Processes, 103–34; Berry and Berry, Theories of the Policy Process.

178 The Code Commission consisted of just six official members. These included 2 of the chief organizers of the WSTL and the drive for fiscal reform, William J. Sutton, a former principal of Cheney State Normal School, now a senator; and Albert S. Burrows, King County Superintendent of Schools (Seattle’s County) who had competed for the position of State Superintendent the year that Preston won. Additional members of the Commission included Alfred Lister of Tacoma, brother of the former governor and ally of the current governor; Irene Reed, wife of the current Speaker of the House; Elizabeth Meyer, a former county superintendent of schools who resigned her position and moved out of state shortly after the Commission’s work got started. The only possible skeptic on the Commission was William M. Kern, Superintendent of Walla Wall City Schools, who may well have been Preston’s chief informant about the Commission’s work, otherwise kept under wraps. Nicholas, “Female Leadership,” 57.

179 Hopkins and his associates circulated a defense against this charge of trying to “put something over” the membership of the NEA as part of a sixteen-page pamphlet presenting a proposed new constitution and plan for merging the WEA and WSTL in the winter of 1920-21. “Revised Constitution and Bulletin of the Washington Education Association,” 1920-1921, Box 24, Folder 1, WEA Collection.

180 For a discussion of how political actors seek to change the “rules of the game” through coalitions that institutionalize power structures in order to create further advantages in the future, see Pierson, The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism, 130–6.

181 Clemens, The People's Lobby, 50–59.

182 Bolton and Bibb, History of Education in Washington, 139–42.

183 See for example, Ellwood P. Cubberley, Public School Administration (NY: Houghton Mifflin, 1916), 325–39.

184 Nicholas, “Female Leadership,” 70–86.

185 Ibid.

186 On the issues of school consolidation and examples of resistance to it see, for example, Reynolds, There Goes the Neighborhood.

187 Letter from Hopkins to Mr. J. Wesley Smith, Superintendent of Schools, Woodland, WA, December 23, 1920, WEA Collection, Box 1. Around this time Hopkins’ correspondence with potential allies switched its language to emphasize the necessity of getting “men” to actively support the legislation. The last paragraph of this letter was typical and repeated almost verbatim in others:

I hope you will take time off some day and write me how the situation seems to you as regards the possibility of getting over our legislative program. It seems to me there never has been an opportunity so great as that which we now face. Our legislative program will be opposed by certain interests. In order to get it over, it seems to me that every man in the state must do his level best. I should certainly like to know how you feel about conditions in your own county with reference to the men who are to represent you at Olympia.

188 “Leading Educators Approve Report of Code Commission,” The Seattle Daily Times, December 17, 1920, 2, as cited in Nicholas, “Female Leadership,” 81.

189 See, for example, Ellwood P. Cubberley, Public School Administration, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1916), 325–39.

190 Nicholas, “Female Leadership,” 43–54.

191 State of Washington, Office of Education, 25th Biennial Report of the Office of State Public Instruction, for the Biennium ending June 10, 1920, submitted November 1, 1920 (Olympia, WA: Frank M. Lamborn, Public Printer, 1921), 13–53.

192 Nicholas, “Female Leadership,” 90.

193 Senate Journal of the Seventeenth Legislature of the State of Washington, February 26, 1921 (Olympia: Frank M. Lamborn, Public Printer, 1921), 312.

194 Ibid., as compared with “Senate Roster—Session 1921,” Senate Journal, 591.

195 R. A. Hutchinson, February 26, 1921, as quoted in Senate Journal, 313.

196 Warner M. Karshner, February 26, 1921, as quoted in Senate Journal, 313.

197 Clemens, The People's Lobby, 131–4.

198 Martin, Mehrotra, and Prasad, The New Fiscal Sociology, 2.

199 Isaac William Martin, Ajay K. Mehrotra, and Monica Prasad, “The Thunder of History,” in The New Fiscal Sociology: Taxation in Comparative and Historical Perspective, ed. Martin, Mehrotra, and Prasad (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), 2.

200 Robert S. Erikson, et al., in their research on the “Macro Polity” recognize that policy preferences are typically shaped by an electorate that is composed of two groups, those who want more government and will pay for it and those who want less government and resent increases in taxation. Direct democracy initiatives provide an opportunity to assess the preferences of the macro polity on issues of education fiscal policy. Robert S. Erikson, Michael B. Mackuen, and James A. Stimson, The Macro Polity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 17.

201 Tosun and Workman, Theories of the Policy Process, 338.

202 Jacobs, The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism, 350. For information about conservatism in California beginning with WWII, see Kim Phillips-Fein, Invisible Hands: The Businessmen's Crusade Against the New Deal (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 2010).

203 Fording and Patton specifically address state variation in policy feedback and diffusion. Fording and Patton, “The Affordable Care Act and the Diffusion of Policy Feedback: The Case of Medicaid Work Requirements,” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 6 n 2 (July 2020).

204 For an in-depth account of retrenchment on a range of these issues in Seattle after 1920, see Nelson, Good Schools. For an incisive comparative analysis of anti-Japanese agitation in western states showing how Washington (unlike other states) refrained from passing anti-Japanese legislation at the state level, see Noriko Asato, Teaching Mikadoism: The Attack on Japanese Language Schools in Hawaii, California, and Washington, 1919-1927 (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2006).