Amendments
Post-Slavery Laws
Immigration
Working Conditions
Living Conditions
100

Which amendment abolished slavery in the United States?

The 13th Amendment
100

What was the law that prohibited African-Americans from owning property?

Black Codes

100

What are the 5 largest immigrant groups?

 Mexico, The Philippines, India, China, and Vietnam

100

What was it like in a factory from the 1800s?

People had to suffer the loss of limbs, burns, and nerve damages

100

What were urban living conditions like?

Poor air and water quality, insufficient water availability, waste-disposal problems, and high energy consumption

200

Who was the president that fought against slavery?

Abraham Lincoln

200

________ passed three constitutional amendments that permanently prohibited slavery

Congress
200

What were the reasons of immigrants moving to the U.S.?

Some people move in search of work or economic opportunity, to join family, or to study

200

This type of labor refers to children being forced to work inside terrible factories

Child labor
200

These were some housing challenges people had to face

Tenement buildings were constructed with cheap materials, had little or no indoor plumbing and lacked proper ventilation

300

Which amendment provides that no state may deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law?

The 14th Amendment

300

What were some social challenges after slavery?

Most black Americans, though free, had to live in desperate rural poverty

300

What are some challenges about immigration?

Precariousness, discrimination, and a lack of protection

300

This type of movement fought for better wages, reasonable hours and safer working conditions

Labor Movement

300

What was the social impact of living inside these tenements?

These conditions contributed to a high incidence of domestic conflict, as families were forced to live in cramped quarters with little privacy or personal space