Westward Expansion & The "New South"
Tech, Industrial Capitalism, and Labor in the Gilded Age
Immigration and Reform in the Gilded Age
Government and Politics in the Gilded Age
100

This business became the largest and most powerful in the country, largely as a result of expansion through the west. 

BONUS: How did the federal government support this industry? 

Railroads

100

This was the prevailing attitude of the federal government towards regulating the economy during the Gilded Age. 

BONUS: Where did this idea originate? 

Conservative Economics: Hands off/Laissez-faire

100

This was the major difference between the so-called "old" and "new" immigrant groups. 

Origin in Europe:

Old: Northern/Western (Scandinavia, Germany, UK, Ireland)

New: Central/Eastern/Southern (Russia, Italy, Spain, Poland) 

100

This new political party formed as a response to the challenges facing western farmers, and became a national party by the 1890s. 

BONUS: Describe their platform

Populists

200

These were TWO social impacts of westward expansion after the Civil War

- Displacement & forced assimilation of the Native Americans

- New opportunities for farming, development

- Mining & cattle towns/ghost towns

- Faster, safer, easier migration (RR) 

- Farmers organization (Grangers, Populists)

200

These were TWO technologies besides the railroad that revolutionized industry in the period after the Civil War.

BONUS: Describe how these technologies supported industrial/economic expansion

Bessemer Process/steel

Power plants/power grid

Telegraph/telephone

Camera/radio

200

These were TWO effects of the massive influx of migrants from Europe. 

- Nativist backlash

- Immigrant communities/ethnic neighborhoods

- Overcrowding of cities

- Reform & assimilation: Settlement House movement

- Exclusionary legislation and quotas

- Growth of the workforce = expansion of industrial output

200

These were TWO similarities between the Democratic and Republican parties in the Gilded Age

- Widespread corruption

- Inaction/inertia - inability to deal with substantial policy issues

- Support for business/industry

- Hands-off economic policy

300
These were three effects of the Jim Crow laws that oppressed African Americans after the end of Reconstruction
- Disenfranchisement of up to 99% of the black population (poll taxes, literacy tests, grandfather clauses)

- Cycle of poverty due to sharecropping/tenant farming and labor contracts

- Mob violence, lynchings, intimidation (KKK)

- Mass migration to the west and north

- Plessy vs. Ferguson (legalized segregation)

- Formation of black organizations and resistance (Wells, DuBois, Washington)

300

These were three challenges that workers faced during the Gilded Age.

BONUS: How did they respond to these challenges? 

- Long hours (10-12 hours)

- Dangerous conditions (pollution, chemical exposure, machinery)

- No right to organize/unionize

- No safety protections

- Low wages

300

These were THREE examples of reform efforts that expanded and/or developed in the Gilded Age. 

- Urban renewal & reform

- Social gospel

- Women's suffrage

- Temperance

- Anti-corruption

300

These were THREE of the major political issues at stake in the election of 1896

BONUS: Who won the election, and why? 

- Monetary policy - gold standard vs. bimetallism (hard money vs. soft money)

- Immigration

- Agrarian interests - Populist party

- Tariffs

- Support for industry vs. agriculture

- Political corruption