Questions and Answers correct
Gilded Age - answer1870s - 1890s; time period looked good on the outside, despite the
corrupt politics and growing gap between the rich and poor
Technological (Second Industrial) Revolution - answerbased on steel, railroads,
electricity, oil-based products
Alexander Graham Bell - answerHe was an American inventor who was responsible for
developing the telephone.
Thomas Edison - answerAmerican inventor best known for inventing the electric light
bulb, acoustic recording on wax cylinders, and motion pictures.
Telephone - answerA device that converts sound into electrical signals that can be
transmitted over distances. Invented by Alexander Graham Bell.
Free Enterprise System - answerAn economic system in which people are free to
operate their businesses as they see fit, with little government interference.
Laissez-Faire - answerNo government intervention in business.
Corporation - answerA business that is owned by many investors.
Bessemer Process - answerA process for making steel more efficiently, patented in
1856.
Entrepreneurship - answerAccepting the risk of starting and running a business.
Monopoly - answerA market in which there are many buyers but only one seller.
Andrew Carnegie - answerA business man that increased his power through by gaining
control of the many different businesses that make up all phases of steel production
development.
John Rockefeller - answerCreator of the Standard Oil Company who made a fortune on
it and joined with competing companies in trust agreements that in other words made an
amazing monopoly.
Robber Baron - answera negative term for business leaders that implied they built their
fortunes by stealing from the public
,Captain of Industry - answerbusiness leader who has a positive impact
Philanthropy - answerGiving money to help the poor
Political Machines - answerCorrupt organized groups that controlled political parties in
the cities. A boss leads the machine and attempts to grab more votes for his party.
Political Boss - answerrepresentative for or head of the political machine; gained votes
for their parties by doing favors for people.
Immigration - answerComing to live permanently in a foreign country
Push and Pull Factors - answerThe push factor involves a force which acts to drive
people away from a place and the pull factor is what draws them to a new location.
Nativists - answerU.S. citizens who opposed immigration because they were suspicious
of immigrants and feared losing jobs to them
Ethnic Ghettos - answerimmigrants lived here due to cultural similarities, especially in
big cities
Child Labor - answerChildren were viewed as laborers throughout the 19th century.
Many children worked on farms, small businesses, mills and factories.
Labor Union - answerAn organization of workers that tries to improve working
conditions, wages, and benefits for its members
Strikes - answertimes when workers refuse to work until owners improve conditions
Knights of Labor - answer1st effort to create National union. Open to everyone but
lawyers and bankers. Vague program, no clear goals, weak leadership and
organization. Failed
Haymarket Massacre - answerWas when there was a peaceful protest at the the
Haymarket square and a bomb was thrown at the police and the police started shooting
at innocent people
AFL (American Federation of Labor) - answerA labor union created by Samuel
Gompers that was the ONLY labor union that only accepted skilled workers
Samuel Gompers - answerHe was the creator of the American Federation of Labor. He
provided a stable and unified union for skilled workers
IWW (Industrial Workers of the World) - answerA labor organization for unskilled
workers, formed by a group of radical unionists and socialists in 1905. Sometimes
called Wobblies
, Manifest Destiny - answerA notion held by a nineteenth-century Americans that the
United States was destined to rule the continent, from the Atlantic the Pacific.
Westward Migration - answerthe movement of people to the western and mid-western
states to find new opportunities (ex. jobs, land, and gold).
Homestead Act - answer1862 - provided free land in the west as long as the person
would settle there and make improvements in five years
Transcontinental Railroad - answerCompleted in 1869 at Promontory, Utah, it linked the
eastern railroad system with California's railroad system, revolutionizing transportation
in the west
Great Plains - answerA mostly flat and grassy region of western North America
Frontier - answera wilderness at the edge of a settled area of a country
Klondike Gold Rush - answera frenzy of gold rush immigration to and for gold
prospecting, along the Klondike River near Dawson City, Yukon, Canada after gold was
discovered there in the late 19th century.
Indian Wars - answer1850 to 1890; series of conflicts between the US Army / settlers
and different Native American tribes
Reservations - answerareas of federal land set aside for American Indians
Dawes Act - answer1887 law which gave all Native American males 160 acres to farm
and also set up schools to make Native American children more like other Americans
New Immigration - answerImmigrants from Southern and Eastern European countries
and Asia arriving in the late 1800s
Ellis Island - answerAn immigrant receiving station that opened in 1892, where
immigrants were given a medical examination and only allowed in if they were healthy
Boss Tweed of Tammany Hall - answerLeader of the Tammany Hall, New York political
machine
Tenement - answerA building in which several families rent rooms or apartments, often
with little sanitation or safety
Pendleton Civil Service Act - answerMade appointments to federal jobs through a merit
system based off candidates performance on an exam