Ideas of age
famous people
Popular culture
Reform
law
100

People tried to portray people realistically instead of romantically

Realism

100
James Garfield

assassinated by Charles Guiteau who was frustrated with Garfield’s administration because they wouldn’t give him a job

100

were a place that urban workers (mostly men) gathered, and even organized politically

Saloons

100

Establish to help poor neighborhoods

Settlement houses 

100

o try to appease concerns and discourage people from voting for Populists, Congress Republicans passed

Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890

200

one of the strongest beliefs in the era. . .that one could succeed no matter their beginnings

Individualism


200

focused on the daily realities of the average man.

Mark Twain

200

music highlighted the fast-moving pace of the city,

Ragtime

200

was passed in 1890 which made it illegal for companies to conspire together and interfere with interstate commerce

The Sherman Antitrust Act

200

A tax that taxed higher earnings more heavily

Graduated income tax

300

City schools taught immigrant children about American culture and values through a process known as

Americanization 

300

famous for creating the Hull House, a settlement house in Chicago in 1889

Jane Addams

300

Those in favor of the old system were known as ____ because they were loyal to the old system

Stalwarts

300

made for the creation of a bipartisan Civil Service Commission, which required exams for hiring and prevented employees from being fired for political reasons

The Pendleton Act

300

believed that coining silver in unlimited quantities would solve the nation’s economic problems

Silverite

400

Traditionally, the political system operated under the spoils system

Patronage 

400

was a former minister turned novelist who became famous due to his “rags to riches” stories, which all promoted individualism

Horatio Alger

400

wealthy Americans had the responsibility to engage in philanthropy, or use their wealth to benefit society

Gospel of Wealth

400

This act forbade rebates to high-volume users and limited rates to what was “reasonable and just”

Interstate commerce Commission

400

which allowed any man to vote if he had an ancestor on the voting rolls in 1867

Grandfather clause

500

abeled decision to stop printing silver coins as

Crime of 73

500

published Dynamic Sociology, which argued that human beings were different than animals and they had the ability to think, plan ahead, and cooperate

Lester Frank Ward

500

ecame a popular attraction in cities, showcasing theater performances, acrobats, animals, and dancers.

Vaudeville

500

government would give farmers low-interest loans and hold crops until prices increased

Sub treasuries

500

Democratic leaders feared the power the Populist Party would gain and used racist tactics to discourage

Colored Farmers’ National Alliance

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