Causes of Rapid Industrialization
Consequences of Economic Growth
Labor & Reform Movements
Progressive Aims & Policies
Success of Progressivism (to 1920)
100

This natural resource was essential to the growth of steel, railroads, and heavy industry in the late 1800s.

Coal

100

This new class expanded as a result of industrialization and increased access to consumer goods.

The middle class

100

This organization, led by Samuel Gompers, focused on skilled workers and collective bargaining.

American Federation of Labor (AFL)

100

This movement sought to address corruption, inequality, and social problems caused by industrialization.

The Progressive Movement

100

This amendment allowed the federal government to collect an income tax.

16th Amendment

200

This post–Civil War policy protected American manufacturers by raising import taxes on foreign goods.

Protective tariffs

200

This term describes extremely wealthy industrial leaders such as Rockefeller and Carnegie.

Captains of Industry / Robber Barons

200

This violent 1894 labor conflict involved railroad workers and federal troops.

Pullman Strike

200

These journalists exposed corruption and abuses in business and government.

Muckrakers

200

This law aimed to improve food safety after the publication of The Jungle.

Pure Food and Drug Act

300

Name one way the federal government actively supported industrial growth in the late nineteenth century.

Land grants to railroads / protective tariffs / limited regulation

300

Identify one negative impact of rapid industrial growth on urban life.

Overcrowding / pollution / poor sanitation / unsafe housing

300

Name one key demand commonly made by labor unions during the Gilded Age.

Higher wages / shorter hours / safer working conditions

300

Name one Progressive reform designed to make government more democratic.

Initiative / Referendum / Recall / Direct election of senators

300

Identify one area where Progressive reforms were limited or unsuccessful.

Racial equality / labor rights for all workers / treatment of immigrants

400

This technological innovation by Andrew Carnegie revolutionized steel production by lowering costs.

The Bessemer Process

400

This 1890 law attempted to limit monopolies and promote competition.

Sherman Antitrust Act

400

This group advocated for government ownership of railroads and major industries.

Socialists / Populists

400

This constitutional amendment granted women the right to vote.

19th Amendment

400

This Supreme Court decision limited child labor laws before 1920.

Hammer v. Dagenhart

500

Explain why immigration contributed significantly to industrial expansion in the late nineteenth century.

Immigrants provided a large, cheap labor force willing to work long hours for low wages

500

Assess how industrialization increased both opportunity and inequality in the late nineteenth century.

It created wealth and jobs but widened the gap between rich and poor due to low wages and unsafe conditions

500

Explain why the federal government often sided with business rather than labor during strikes.

Belief in laissez-faire economics and fear that strikes threatened economic stability

500

Analyze how Progressives believed government should respond to social and economic problems.

Government should actively regulate business and protect the public welfare

500

Evaluate the overall success of the Progressive Movement by 1920.

It achieved major political and economic reforms but failed to address racial inequality and fully protect workers