However, Progressive women also helped bring about other important reforms related to public health, prohibition, the treatment of juvenile delinquents, child labor, and immigrants' rights (Krainc). Their efforts were instrumental in advancing social justice and establishing a more equitable society for all. In addition, in those days, the government did not provide welfare programs such as home visits from social workers, food stamps, and other forms of social support (Krainc). In the 1920s, the Progressive movement, active in the first two decades of the 20th century, began to lose momentum and was gradually replaced by several different movements. These movements included the New Deal, which was focused on economic recovery and social welfare programs, the Civil Rights Movement, which sought to secure equal rights and protections for African Americans, and the Women's Rights Movement, which aimed to secure greater political, social, and economic equality for women. Additionally, the 1920s saw the rise of several conservative and nativist movements, which sought to protect traditional values and restrict