Industrialists & Their Industries
Social Changes and Reforms
Vocab
Labor practices
Immigration
100

this industrialist was known for his dominance in the oil industry.

Rockefeller

100

These laws were created to address problems like poor working conditions, child labor, and political corruption.

Progressive Era Laws

100

This process involves the growth of cities as people move from rural areas.

Urbanization 

100

This form of protest was used by labor unions, where workers refused to work until their demands were met.

strike

100

This 1882 law targeted a specific group, making it the first U.S. immigration restriction based on nationality.

Chinese Exclusion Act

200

This industrialist built his fortune in the railroad and shipping industries.

Vanderbilt

200

This author revealed the unsanitary practices of the meatpacking industry in his novel The Jungle.

Upton Sinclair

200

This term describes when a single company has exclusive control over an entire industry.

Monopoly 

200

The term for the practice of employing young children in factories, often in harsh conditions.

Child Labor

200

This type of law restricts the number of immigrants allowed from specific countries.

Immigration Quota

300

This banker and financier had a significant influence over the banking industry.

JP Morgan

300

This journalist wrote about the corrupt practices of Standard Oil, targeting John D. Rockefeller.

Ida Tarbell

300

This transportation system expanded rapidly during the Industrial Era, facilitating westward expansion and economic growth.

Railroads

300

These organizations were formed by workers to demand better wages and working conditions.

Labor Unions

300

This term describes the anti-immigrant attitude that led to policies limiting the rights and freedoms of new arrivals.

Nativism 

400

This industrialist was a giant in the steel industry.

Carnegie

400

This muckraker exposed the harsh conditions of tenement life in his book How the Other Half Lives. He used photographs to highlight the unsettling conditions in tenements

Jacob Riis

400

The act of donating wealth to promote the welfare of others, often seen among wealthy industrialists.

Philanthropy

400

This tragic event in 1911 led to major reforms in workplace safety laws.

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

400

This term describes conditions like poverty, famine, and persecution that drove immigrants to leave their home countries.

Push Factors

500

This industrialist believed in giving back and funded libraries, universities, and other institutions to improve society.

Carnegie

500

Journalists who exposed societal problems in factories, tenements, and food production, sparking public demand for change.

Muckrakers

500

This theory applied the concept of "survival of the fittest" to justify the success of certain businesses and individuals.

Social Darwinism 

500

These two terms describe contrasting perspectives on industrialists: one highlights exploitation, while the other celebrates innovation.

Robber Barrons vs. Captains of Industry 

500

These immigrants, primarily from Southern and Eastern Europe, faced cultural and language barriers when arriving in the U.S.

New Immigrants 

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