Vocabulary
Rise of Industry
Railroads
People
Strikes
100

People who risk their capital in organizing and running a business

Entrepreneurs 
100

Millions left ________ to work in mines and factories

Farms

100

The railroad company that began in Omaha and built west while constructing the Transcontinental Railroad

Union Pacific

100

Invented the electric light bulb

Thomas Edison

100

Replacement workers hired by companies during a strike

Strikebreakers

200

Business leaders who were so powerful they could influence the US government

Robber Barons

200

An important factor in industrialization that resulted from large families and a flood of immigrants

Large Workforce

200

The railroad company that used Chinese laborers to build the Transcontinental Railroad east from California

Central Pacific

200

Oil tycoon who started Standard Oil Co.

John D. Rockefeller

200

Occurring in 1877, this was the first nationwide labor protest 

The Great Railroad Strike

300

When a company owns all the different businesses on which it depends for its operation

Vertical Integration

300
Raw materials necessary for industrialization

Natural Resources

300

The place where the Union Pacific and Central Pacific met to complete the Transcontinental Railroad

Promontory Point

300

Steel tycoon

Andrew Carnegie

300

After a strike left 1 striker dead, a group formed to protest the killing, which resulted in a confrontation with police, a bomb being thrown, and a shootout

Haymarket Riot

400

Combining many firms engaged in the same type of business into one large corporation

Horizontal Integration

400

Also known as free enterprise, this "hands-off" attitude allowed the US to industrialize rapidly

Laissez-Faire

400

Passed in 1862, this law provided for the construction of a transcontinental railroad

Pacific Railway Act

400

Former riverboat captain who became a successful consolidator of railroads

Cornelius Vanderbilt

400

Sparked by wage cuts, this strike was ended when railroad managers attached US mail cars to their freight cars to force the strikers back to work

Pullman Strike

500

When corporations make goods cheaper because they produce so much so quickly

Economies of Scale

500

Passed in 1861 to protect American industry, this actually hurt many Americans by causing other countries to raise their tariffs on American goods

Morrill Tariff

500

Built without federal money, this is the only transcontinental railroad that wasn't eventually forced into bankruptcy

Great Northern Railroad

500

The first leader of the American Federation of Labor

Samuel Gompers

500

Strike at a Carnegie steel mill which resulted in the Pinkertons killing 9 workers

Homestead Strike