New South
Urbanization/Immigration
Labor and Reform
Westward Expansion
Native Oppression
100

Era during which local and state laws enforced the legal segregation of white and black citizens from the 1870s into the 1960s

Jim Crow

100

The first significant law restricting immigration into the United States

Chinese Exclusion Act

100

Labor unions begin to form after industrialization due to this factor

Poor working conditions

100

The biggest contributor to westward expansion which allowed for trade and travel from east to west coast

Transcontinental Railroad

100

Death march relocating the Five Civilized Tribes (Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole) to territories that would become the states of Kansas, Nebraska, and Oklahoma

Trail of Tears

200

Vigilante group that would enact "justice" on anyone who attempted to resist racial oppression

Ku Klux Klan

200

The main reason for urbanization that rapidly occurred between 1845-1900

Industrialization

200

Organization known as the first labor union to fight for labor reform

Knights of Labor

200

Key American idea that led to westward expansion

Manifest Destiny

200

A series of bloody massacres when Natives resisted the imposition of the reservation system, where the U.S. army ultimately succeeded in relocating most

Indian Wars

300

System that included renting land and paying rent by giving a portion of crops to the landowner, which often resulted in a slavery-like treatment towards African Americans who were pushed into it by economic circumstances

Sharecropping

300

After their lands were taken by the United States, their citizenship was promised but infringed upon when white settlers displaced them.

Mexican Immigrants

300

Investigative journalists that exposed the harsh realities of industrial life.

Muckrakers

300

The discovery of precious metals and minerals that drew people to the West

California Gold Rush

300

1887 act that ended the reservation system by authorizing the federal confiscation and redistribution of tribal lands

Dawes Act

400

government agency established to aid former slaves

Freedmen's Bureau

400

Brought in by the allure of gold found in California, the population of this minority group rose from <1000 in 1849 to 25,000 in just 3 years, mostly finding work on the Transcontinental Railroad

Chinese Immigrants

400

Foundational U.S. federal law designed to protect free-market competition by banning trusts, monopolies, and conspiracies that unreasonably restrain interstate or foreign trade

Sherman Anti-Trust Act

400

War fought over a border dispute between Texas and Mexico that had the United States gain a large amount of land in the Southwest

Mexican-American War

400

Act that institutionalized the practice of forcing Native Americans off of their ancestral lands in order to make way for European settlement.

Indian Removal Act of 1830

500

Southern Democrats agreed not to block contested electoral college votes and Rutherford B. Hayes became president. In return, Republicans agreed to withdraw federal troops from actively intervening in the politics of the South, effectively ending reconstruction

The Compromise of 1877

500

The purpose of settlement houses such as Jane Addam's Hull House

Provide services to poor immigrants and the needy

500

The leader of the American Federation of Labor, a union focusing on concrete improvements like higher wages, shorter hours & improved working conditions

Samuel Gompers

500

Act signed in 1862 that awarded land to any U.S. citizen who pledged to settle and farm the land for at least 5 years

Homestead Act of 1862

500

Authorized the establishment of reservations in Oklahoma and encouraged other states to do so in order to keep Natives off of the land that white Americans wished to settle.

Indian Appropriations Act of 1851

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