Industrialization & Big Business
Urbanization & Immigration
Working Conditions & Labor
Progressive Reformers
Political & Social Reforms
100

This term describes the period of rapid economic growth in the late 1800s that hid deep social problems.

The Gilded Age

100

Most immigrants entered the U.S. through this New York Harbor processing center.

Ellis Island

100

This organization formed to fight for better pay and safer conditions.

Labor Union

100

These journalists exposed corruption and social problems.

Muckrakers

100

The Progressive movement aimed to solve problems caused by this during the Gilded Age era.

Industrialization

200

These business leaders, like Rockefeller and Carnegie, were often called this for their ruthless tactics.

Robber Barons

200

This law was the first major restriction on immigration in U.S. history.

Chinese Exclusion Act

200

The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire led to new laws improving this aspect of workplaces.

Safety

200

He wrote The Jungle, which exposed unsanitary meatpacking conditions.

Upton Sinclair

200

This amendment allowed citizens to elect U.S. senators directly.

The 17th Amendment

300

This economic idea argued that the government should leave business alone.

Laissez-Faire Captialism

300

This belief favored native-born Americans over immigrants.

Nativism

300

Many children worked long hours in mines and factories during this era.

The Gilded Age
300

This muckraker exposed political corruption in Standard Oil.

Ida Tarbell

300

Women's Suffrage was fought for to gain rights for women.

The Right to Vote/19th Amendment

400

The construction of this connected the east and west coasts, boosting trade and migration.

Transcontinental Railroad

400

Immigrants often lived in these overcrowded apartment buildings in urban areas.

Tenements

400

This economic class grew rapidly as industrial jobs increased in cities.

The Working Class
400

His photos and book How the Other Half Lives showed poverty in urban slums.

Jacob Riis

400

The Temperance Movement led the fight for what?

Banning alcohol/Prohibition

500

This idea claimed that the “strongest” businesses or people would naturally succeed.

Social Darwinism

500

Immigrants formed these types of neighborhoods to maintain cultural traditions.

Ethnic Neighborhoods

500

Name one reason why unions often faced strong opposition.

Fear of strikes/belief they were "un-American"

500

The exposure from The Jungle led directly to the passage of these two federal laws.

Meat Inspection Act and Pure Food and Drug Act

500

This type of local organization often controlled city politics by exchanging jobs and favors for votes.

Political Machine