Neither owners nor workers, they gathered and organized information for others
managers
Union of skilled and unskilled, labor and ownership, blacks and whites
Knights of Labor
Multi-story apartment building often associated with poverty
tenement
Main reason epidemic disease was common in the cities
poor sensitization--sewage drinking water
Event that caused SC secession
Lincoln's election
Railroads popularized this form of business organization
corporation
Violent clash with Carnegie steel; ended when the PA national guard was called out
homestead strike
First group excluded from immigration to the US in the Gilded Age
Chinese
One city that experienced an enormous fire in the Gilded Age
Boston, Chicago
One of two outstanding Union Generals
Grant, Sherman
He made the moving assembly line popular
Ford
Organizer of the AFL
One of two advantages of a corporation, according to your text
sell stock, limited liability
According to your text, this retail establishment, created by Marshall Field, was designed to bring wonder and excitement to shopping
department stores
Key part of the congressional reconstruction was this constitutional act to protect black rights
14th amendment
One method of organizing a horizontally integrated monopoly, created by John Rockefeller
trust or holding company
Violent event that turned much of the US against the organized labor movement
Haymarket Riot
Organized by Florence Kelley to pressure manufactures to provide better wages, working conditions
Most famous of the corrupt city bosses of the Gilded Age; he ran NYC
William M. Tweed
Failed attempt to reconcile North and South in the winter of 1860-1861
Crittenden Compromise
Combining related business firms, from primary processing of resources to final production into one large firm
vertical integration
The Great Labor Campaign of 1886 was this change in working conditions
8 hour day
1890s labor clash in Chicago, led by Eugene Debs and the National Railway Union
Pullman Strike
His sensational photos exposed the life of the poor in cities, but did little to make their lives better
Jacob Riis
One of the radical leaders of Congressional Reconstruction
Charles Sumner, Thaddeus Stevens