New Inventions
Working Conditions & Child Labor
Labor Unions & Strikes
Big Business Leaders
Government & Laissez-Faire
100

What was a time when machines started doing the work people used to do by hand, changing how goods were made called.

Industrial Revolution

100

What were working conditions like in most factories?

Long hours, low pay, unsafe conditions

100

What is a labor union?

A group of workers who fight for better pay and working conditions

100

Who led the oil industry during the Industrial Era?

John D. Rockefeller

100

What does laissez-faire mean?

“Hands off” — the government should not interfere in business

200

Who/what company used the assembly line

Henry Ford/Ford

200

Why did factory owners hire children?

They could pay them less and fit them into small spaces

200

What is a strike?

When workers stop working to protest conditions

200

Who led the steel industry during the Industrial Era?

Andrew Carnegie

200

Why did business owners like laissez-faire

It allowed them to make money without government rules

300

A form of transportation that connected the East and West coasts of the U.S., making travel and trade easier.

Transcontinental Railroad

300

How many hours did many factory workers work each day?

12–14 hours

300

Name one early union.

Knights of Labor or American Federation of Labor (AFL)

300

Who led the Banking industry during the Industrial Era?

J.P. Morgan

300

What is an monopoly 

When a business or business owner, owns all of a certain industry 

400

What process made steel cheaper and stronger?

The Bessemer Process

400

What types of jobs did children often do in factories and mines during the Industrial Revolution?

They fixed machines, cleaned cotton, carried coal, and worked in tight spaces underground.



400

What did unions want from business owners?

Better pay, shorter hours, safer workplaces

400

Who led the railroad industry during the Industrial Era?

Cornelius Vanderbilt

400

What law tried to stop monopolies and trusts?

The Sherman Antitrust Act

500

How did new inventions help cities grow?

They made work faster, safer, and more efficient

500

How did child labor affect children’s lives outside of work

Most child workers couldn’t go to school and often got sick or injured from long hours, unsafe machines, and poor living conditions.

500

Why were labor unions important to American workers, and what lasting impact did they have on the workplace?

Labor unions helped workers earn fair pay, shorter hours, and safer conditions — and they set the stage for future worker rights laws and protections.

500

What’s the difference between a Robber Baron and a Captain of Industry?

Robber Barons were seen as greedy; Captains of Industry helped society

500

Why did the government eventually stop being “hands off”?

To protect workers, stop monopolies, and create fair competition