Technology
Vocabulary
Wealth Conflicts
Pioneers of Industry
100

Thomas Edison lit up the world with this invention in 1879

Light Bulb

100

What is the exclusive control or possession of a whole industry

Monopoly

100

Reasons unions formed and went on strikes

Increase wages

Better Hours

Safer conditions

100

Pioneer of the steel industry, famous for Vertical Integration

Andrew Carnegie 

200

This invention brought fresh water and sanitation to urban areas

Sewers

200

This was a ban on people from a group of people coming to America

Chinese Exclusion

200

A serious economic depression where 600 banks and 15,000 businesses closed, with 4 million jobs lost.

Panic of 1893

200

Pioneer of the oil industry, combined companies into Standard Oil Trust

John D. Rockefeller

300

Invention that allowed messages to be sent quickly over long distances.

Telegraph

300

A number of workers, states and etc joined together for a common purpose

A Union

300

Series of protests and strikes in U.S. where laborers sabotaged trains and caused millions of dollars of damage

The Great Upheaval

300

Bought Carnegie steel and merged businesses to become the largest business in the world.

J.P. Morgan

400

This invention replaced horse-drawn carriages and was cheap to make/buy

Ford Model T

400

A combination of companies or businesses under one board.

trust

400

Name of Andrew Carnegie's article that stated God gave the wealthy skills and a responsibility to share their wealth with the needy.

Gospel of Wealth

400

Someone who became wealthy from exploiting workers or by receiving preferential government treatment

Robber Baron

500

The process of making steel cheaper and easier.

Bessemer Process

500

When a group of workers refuse to work. This is meant to show their employer how valuable they are

A Strike

500

Theory that only people who had skills would be successful and those who did not would fail. Did not support social welfare or safety laws.

Social Darwinism

500

This Congress act was designed to break monopolies but failed due to undefined terms.

Sherman Anti-Trust Act