The Civil War
Reconstruction Era
Big Business Expansion
Cities & Immigration
Labor, Populists & The West
100

This was Abraham Lincoln’s main goal when the Civil War first began in 1861.

To preserve/save the Union

100

Abraham Lincoln gave this famous, short speech in November 1863 to dedicate a cemetery on a battlefield.

Gettysburg Address

100

Mark Twain used this two-word term to describe the late 1800s because the outside looked shiny and rich, but underneath there was terrible poverty.

Gilded Age

100

 This vocabulary word describes the rapid growth of, or increase in, large cities.

Urbanization

100

 This famous law encouraged people to move out west and start farming by offering them 160 acres of free public land.

Homestead Act

200

These were the very first shots of the Civil War, fired between Federal troops and Southern soldiers.

Battle at Fort Sumter

200

This famous actor and Southern sympathizer assassinated President Abraham Lincoln at Ford's Theatre

John Wilkes Booth

200

This business tycoon owned the Standard Oil Company and is considered the richest American of all time.

John D. Rockefeller

200

In the late 19th century, immigration shifted as millions of people arrived from these two specific regions of Europe.

Southern and Eastern Europe

200

This political party was formed by struggling American farmers to fight against high railroad prices and big corporations.

Populist Party

300

This 1862 fight is famous for being the single bloodiest day of battle in the entire Civil War.

Battle of Antietam

300

This Constitutional Amendment officially ended slavery in all states across the country.

13th Amendment

300

This Scottish immigrant went from "rags to riches" in the steel industry and argued that the wealthy should give back to their communities.

Andrew Carnegie

300

 This group of voters was the most important support system for corrupt city political machines like Tammany Hall.

Immigrants

300

This 1887 law attempted to "Americanize" Native Americans by breaking up reservations into individual family farms.

Dawes Act

400

This document symbolically changed the purpose of the war for the North by focusing on ending slavery.

Emancipation Proclamation

400

This group in Congress disagreed with Lincoln and wanted to strictly punish the South during Reconstruction.

Radical Republicans

400

This hands-off economic theory states that the economy runs best when the government does not interfere with business.

Laissez-faire capitalism 

400

This political cartoonist used his drawings in Harper's Weekly to expose the corruption of Boss Tweed.

Thomas Nast

400

This major labor protest in Chicago turned into a violent riot, dealing a severe blow to the early labor union movement.

Haymarket Square Riot

500

These two specific battle victories in July 1863 are widely considered the main turning points of the Civil War.

Gettysburg and Vicksburg

500

This insults-based term was used by Southerners to describe Northerners who moved south after the war to make money.

Carpetbaggers

500

This social belief used human nature to argue that the most talented or "fittest" people will naturally rise to the top of society.

Social Darwinism

500

 This term means using your political power, influence, or bribes illegally for personal financial gain.

Graft

500

This was the Native Americans' greatest military success against the U.S. Army, where they killed General Custer and his men.

Battle of the Little Bighorn

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