Reconstruction
The West
Gilded Age
The New South
Misc.
100

This amendment prohibited denial of voting rights based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude

15th Amendment

100

The group of laborers that most contributed to building the western leg of the Transcontinental Railroad

Chinese Immigrants

100

Overcrowded, low-quality urban housing for working-class and immigrant populations

Tenements

100

Laws passed by Southern states after the Civil War to restrict the freedom of African Americans and maintain white supremacy, limiting their economic opportunities, movement, and civil rights.

Black Codes

100

This animal almost went extinct after over-hunting in the west for sport, meat, leather, and fertilizer 

Bison

200

A federal agency established in 1865 to provide support to former slaves, including food, housing, medical aid, education, and legal assistance during the Reconstruction period.

Freedmen's Bureau

200

The process by which different cultural groups adopt the practices, values, and customs of the dominant culture, often leading to the loss of their original cultural identity.

Assimilation

200

A business or market situation where a single company or group controls the entire supply of a particular good or service, eliminating competition and often leading to high prices and limited consumer choices.

Monopoly

200

Formerly enslaved people turned agricultural workers who farmed land owned by someone else and paid rent through a portion of their crop harvest, often trapping them in a cycle of economic dependency

Sharecroppers

200

This Act funded creation of institutions, mostly higher ed for agriculture, science (U of I, Ohio State, Purdue, etc)

The Morrill Act (The Land-Grant College Act)

300

Northerners who moved to the Southern United States during Reconstruction to seek economic or political opportunities

Carpetbaggers

300

This Act provided federal subsidies to fund land and supplies to build railroads

The Pacific Railroad Act

300

Wealthy industrialists and businessmen of the late 19th century who accumulated massive fortunes through aggressive and often unethical business practices, monopolistic strategies, and exploitation of workers.

Robber Barons

300

A white supremacist hate group founded after the Civil War that used violence, intimidation, and terror to oppose Reconstruction and suppress African American civil rights.

Ku Klux Klan

300

Journalists who exposed business practices, poverty, and corruption

Muckrakers

400

Southern whites who supported Reconstruction and the Republican Party after the Civil War

Scalawags

400

Name 3 "Western Industries" or jobs someone might have 

Miners, Farmers, Cattle Ranchers, Cowboys

400

An economic system characterized by minimal government intervention, where businesses and markets are allowed to operate with little to no regulation, based on the principle of free-market capitalism.

Laissez Faire Economy

or Hands-Off Economy

400

Lincoln and his cabinet had a plan called Special Field Order 15 that would give formerly enslaved people 40 acres and a mule. Who revoked this plan?

Andrew Johnson

400

What is the official title of the photograph that records the celebration marking the completion of the first transcontinental railroad lines at Promontory Summit, Utah, on May 10, 1869 and famously excludes Chinese workers. 

The Golden Spike

500

Removal or suppression of voting rights for specific groups of people

Example: Southern states using literacy tests and poll taxes to prevent African Americans from voting

Disenfranchisement

500

This act reserved 160 acres for settlers for a very small fee, encouraged people to move west

The Homestead Act 1862

500

Thorstein Veblen’s book (looking for the title) that defines wealth as having time for hobbies, hosting, and travel.

Theory of the Leisure Class (1890)

500

In 1877, President Hayes made this deal to end reconstruction if he became president. 

This meant all military presence and monitoring of the south would be gone. 

Corrupt Bargain or the Compromise of 1877

500

Name the two photo-journalists that we analyzed their photography both in tenements and of child labor conditions.

Jacob Riis &

Lewis Hine

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