Westward Expansion
The New South
The Gilded Age
Labor
Progressive Era
100
The discovery of this precious metal triggered a massive population boom in California and throughout the West.

Gold

100

This term refers to the post-Reconstruction South's efforts to industrialize and modernize.

The New South

100

This term, coined by Mark Twain, refers to the era of rapid industrial growth and wealth, but also underlying social problems.

Gilded Age

100

A refusal to work organized by many employees as a form of protest, typically in an attempt to gain a concession from their employer.

Strike

100

These journalists exposed social problems and corruption.

Muckrakers

200

This technological achievement, completed in 1869, connected the East and West coasts of the United States

The Transcontinental Railroad

200

This system of agricultural labor tied poor farmers, usually African American, to land through debt. 

Sharecropping

200

These powerful industrialists, like Rockefeller and Carnegie, dominated various industries in the Gilded Age

Robber Barons

200

This violent strike outside of Chicago, involving railroad workers, disrupted transportation across the country.

Pullman Strike
200

This book, written by Upton Sinclair, exposed the unsanitary conditions in the meatpacking industry

The Jungle

300

This act, passed in 1862, gave 160 acres of land to anyone who would farm it for 5 years. 

The Homestead Act

300

These discriminatory laws, legalized through the Plessy v Ferguson decision, segregated African Americans.

Jim Crow laws

300

This economic philosophy, prevalent during the Gilded Age, emphasized free markets and no government intervention.

Laissez-Faire Capitalism

300
An organized association of workers, often in a trade or profession, formed to protect and further their rights and interests.

Union

300

This movement advocated for the banning of alcohol.

Temperance Movement (or Prohibition movement)

400

This law attempted to forcefully assimilate Native Americans into white culture by dissolving tribal ownership of land.

The Dawes Act

400

This prominent African American leader challenged Booker T Washington's approach and advocated for immediate social and political equality.

W.E.B. DuBois

400

This form of business organization, where a single entity controls a large segment of the industry, became common during the Gilded Age

Monopolies OR Trusts

400

This labor protest turned violent after a makeshift bomb was thrown into the crowd of police officers. Ultimately the Knights of Labor were blamed.

Haymarket Riot

400

This Progressive-Era president went after almost 3x as many trusts as Teddy Roosevelt, largely under the Sherman Antitrust Act.

Howard Taft

500

Sitting Bull and other Lakota Sioux successfully defended the Black Hills from U.S. Troops at this 1876 battle.

Battle of Little Bighorn

500

This form of public violence, frequently used against African Americans in the South, was intended to intimidate and terrorize. (Hint: Ida B. Wells worked to publicize these events)

Lynching

500

This term refers to a policy that benefits the interests of American-born folks over immigrants.

Nativist

500

This labor union, founded by Samuel Gompers, focused on improving wages and working conditions for skilled workers (it still exists today!)

The American Federation of Labor (AFL)

500

This constitutional amendment granted women the right to vote.

19th amendment

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