Reconstruction
Reconstruction - Who Is It?
Gilded Age
Progressive Era
Gilded Age - Who Is It?
100

Former Confederates adopted these laws limiting the freedom of former slaves.

Black Codes

100

This man was a Democrat and a former U.S. Senator from Tennessee.

Andrew Johnson

100

Immigration checkpoint for Europeans.

Ellis Island

100

This term refers to writers who exposed corruption in government and business.

Muckrakers

100

He made his fortune in the steel business.

Andrew Carnegie

200

Under this system a farmer worked a parcel of land in return for a share of the crop.

Sharecropping

200

This Union General became President in 1868 and worked to destroy the Ku Klux Klan.

U.S. Grant

200

John D. Rockefeller became a billionaire after he started this dominant company.

Standard Oil Company

200

This 1911 fire in NYC led to factory safety reforms.

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

200

He urged African Americans to seek practical training in trades and professions.

Booker T. Washington

300

Name for Northern Republicans who came to the South during Reconstruction.

Carpetbaggers

300

This Democrat won the popular vote in 1876 and would not become president.

Samuel J. Tilden

300

This term refers to one company or trust that controls all of one type of business, eliminating competition.

Monopoly

300

This law broke up trusts and did not allow companies to have monopolies.

Sherman Antitrust Law

300

This infamous "boss" ran the Tammany Hall political machine in New York City during the 1860s and 70s.

William "Boss" Tweed

400

This organization distributed food and clothing, set up hospitals, and operated schools in the South following the war.

Freedmen's Bureau

400

This African American was elected to Congress as a Senator from Mississippi.

Hiram Revels

400

This 1882 law was passed in response to nativist fears of new immigrants.

Chinese Exclusion Act

400

In this 1906 novel Upton Sinclair wrote of "'splitters' who earned 50 cents an hour doing nothing but chopping hogs down the middle."

The Jungle

400

This female reformer established Hull House in Chicago, providing social services to immigrants and the poor.

Jane Addams

500

The Supreme Court upheld the idea of separate but equal.

Plessy v. Ferguson

500

This Radical Republican from Pennsylvania proposed taking land from Southern planters and giving it to freedmen.

Thaddeus Stevens

500

This amendment to the Constitution led to the development of the federal income tax.

16th Amendment

500

Identify two goals of the Progressives.

Regulate big business, protect workers and consumers, expose corruption, promote social welfare, increase government involvement, break up trusts, etc.

500

One of first women in America to become a millionaire. She become rich on hair care products.

Madame C.J. Walker

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