Flashcards on APUSH Chapter 20

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
laissez-faire
answer
A practice of avoiding intervention in public affairs and economics.
question
second industrial revolution
answer
Begun in the mid-nineteenth century and centered in the United States and Germany, the second industrial revolution was sparked by an array of innovations and inventions in the production of metals, machinery, chemicals, and foodstuffs, and transformed the economy and society into its modern urban-industrial form.
question
transcontinental railroad
answer
First line across the continent from Omaha, Nebraska, to Sacramento, California, established in 1869 with the linkage of the Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroads at Promontory, Utah.
question
Union Pacific Railroad
answer
1,086 miles of railroad built along a north-central route westward from Omaha and linked up with the Central Pacific, completed on May 10, 1869.
question
Central Pacific Railroad
answer
689 miles of railroad built along a north-central route eastward from Sacramento and linked up with the Union Pacific line, completed on May 10, 1869.
question
Promontory, Utah
answer
Site where California governor Leland Stanford drove a gold spike to symbolize the completion of the transcontinental railroad in May 10, 1869.
question
robber baron
answer
Epithet applied to railroad entrepreneurs and other "captains of industry" for their shady financial practices.
question
captain of industry
answer
Label applied to entrepreneurs and businessmen in the latter half of the nineteenth century who were shrewd, determined, often dishonest men, driven more by greed than glory.
question
Credit Mobilier Company
answer
A construction company controlled by insiders that paid off congressmen and overcharged the Union Pacific Railroad by $50 million.
question
Jay Gould
answer
The prince of the railroad "robber barons" who mastered the fine art of buying rundown railroads, making cosmetic improvements, paying dividends out of capital, and selling out at a profit, meanwhile using corporate funds for personal speculation and judicious bribes.
question
Cornelius Vanderbilt
answer
One of the railroad barons who directed the first of the major eastern railroad consolidations.
question
Alexander Graham Bell
answer
Inventor of the telephone, which was patented in 1876; later formed the National Bell Telephone Company.
question
Thomas Edison
answer
Inventor who created or perfected hundreds of new devices and processes, among them an improved version of Alexander Graham Bell's telephone which became the prototype of the modern instrument; the Edison Electric Illuminating Company began the great electric utility industry.
question
George Westinghouse
answer
Inventor of the air brake for trains who developed the first alternating-current system in 1886, which allowed electric currents to cover long distances, and manufactured the equipment through the Westinghouse Electric Company.
question
"Battle of the Currents"
answer
Conflict in the late 1880s between inventors Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse over direct versus alternating electric current; Westinghouse's alternating current (AC), the winner, allowed electricity to travel over long distances.
question
John D. Rockefeller
answer
Entrepreneur behind the Standard Oil Company which, through his aggressive business tactics such as vertical integration, the trust, and the holding company, grew to control 90 to 95 percent of the oil refining in the country; made a fortune which he then distributed among causes such as education and medicine, becoming the world's leading philanthropist.
question
Andrew Carnegie
answer
Entrepreneur who succeeded in industries ranging from telegraphy, railroading, bridge building, iron-and steel-making and investments; stood out from other business titans as a thinker who fashioned and publicized a philosophy for big business, a conservative rationale that became deeply implanted in the conventional wisdom of some Americans.
question
Standard Oil Company
answer
Founded in 1870 by John D. Rockefeller in Cleveland, Ohio, it soon grew into the nation's first industry-dominating trust; the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890) was enacted in part to combat abuses by Standard Oil.
question
vertical integration
answer
Company's avoidance of middlemen by producing its own supplies and providing for distribution of its product.
question
trust
answer
Companies combined to control competition.
question
interlocking directorates
answer
Business device through which the board of directors of one company was made identical or nearly so to the boards of the others.
question
holding company
answer
Investment company that holds controlling interest in the securities of other companies.
question
Bessemer converter
answer
A process by which steel could be produced directly and quickly from pig iron (crude iron made in a blast furnace), invented in 1856 by Sir Henry Bessemer.
question
"Gospel of Wealth"
answer
Andrew Carnegie's best-remembered essay, published in 1889, in which he argued that in the evolution of society the contrast between the millionaire and the laborer measures the distance society has come.
question
J. P. Morgan
answer
Investment banker whose firm J. Pierpont Morgan and Company, under various names, channeled European capital into America and grew into a financial power; he also controlled one-sixth of the nation's railway system, and consolidated the steel industry with the United States Steel Corporation, the first billion-dollar corporation.
question
investment banker
answer
Bankers who would buy corporate stocks and bonds wholesale and then sell them at a profit, but were also capable of becoming involved in the operation of their clients' firms and influencing company policies.
question
Aaron Montgomery Ward
answer
Traveling salesman whose company beginning in the early 1870s eliminated the "middlemen," whose services increased the retail price of goods, by reaching consumers directly through mail-order catalogs.
question
Sears and Roebuck
answer
Retailer who dominated the mailorder industry and by 1907 had become one of the largest business enterprises in the nation; the Sears catalog helped create a truly national market.
question
Molly Maguires
answer
Secret organization of Irish coal miners that used violence to intimidate mine officials in the 1870s.
question
Railroad Strike of 1877
answer
Violent but ultimately unsuccessful interstate strike, which resulted in extensive property damage and many deaths.
question
Knights of Labor
answer
Founded in 1869, the first national union picked up many members after the disastrous 1877 railroad strike but lasted, under the leadership of Terence V. Powderly, only into the 1890s; supplanted by the American Federation of Labor.
question
Terence V. Powderly
answer
Labor leader who succeeded Uriah S. Stephens as head of the Knights of Labor in 1879.
question
Haymarket Affair
answer
Riot during an anarchist protest at Haymarket Square in Chicago on May 4, 1886, over violence during the McCormick Harvester Company strike; the deaths of eleven, including seven policemen, helped hasten the demise of the Knights of Labor, even though they were not responsible for the riot.
question
industrial union
answer
Organization of industrywide unions of the skilled and unskilled that was initiated by the Knights of Labor; later propagated by the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).
question
craft union
answer
Unions of workers who shared special skills and opposed industrial unionism; organized into the American Federation of Labor (AFL) in 1886.
question
Samuel Gompers
answer
Union leader and president of the American Federation of Labor (AFL) who focused on concrete economic gains, avoiding involvement with utopian ideas or politics.
question
American Federation of Labor
answer
Founded in 1881 as a federation of trade unions, the AFL under president Samuel Gompers successfully pushed for the eight-hour workday.
question
Homestead Steel Strike
answer
Violent strike of 1892 at the Homestead Works in Pittsburgh over a lockout of unionists that lasted for five months and ended with the destruction of the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers, probably the largest craft union at that time.
question
H. C. Frick
answer
President of the Carnegie company during the Homestead Steel Strike of 1892 who was shot and stabbed by a deranged anarchist.
question
Pullman Strike
answer
Strike against the Pullman Palace Car Company in the company town of Pullman, Illinois, on May 11, 1894, by the American Railway Union under Eugene V. Debs; the strike, was crushed by court injunctions and federal troops two months later.
question
Eugene V. Debs
answer
Labor leader and socialist who was a tireless spokesman for labor radicalism; founded the American Railway Union and was caught up in the Pullman Strike of 1894 and sentenced to six months in jail as a result; organized the Social Democratic party in 1897 and ran for President in 1900, 1904 and 1912.
question
Industrial Workers of the World
answer
Radical union organized in Chicago in 1905 and nicknamed the Wobblies; its opposition to World War I led to its destruction by the federal government under the Espionage Act.
question
William D. Haywood
answer
Leader of the Industrial Workers of the World who promoted the concept of one all-inclusive union whose credo would be the promotion of socialism.
question
What fueled the growth of the post-Civil War economy?
answer
Second Industrial Revolution The postwar economy was characterized by large-scale industrial development and a burgeoning agriculture sector. The Second Industrial Revolution was fueled by the creation of national transportation and communications systems, the use of electric power, and the application of scientific research to industrial processes. The federal government encouraged growth by imposing high tariffs on imported products and granting the railroad companies public land.
question
Who composed the labor force of the period, and what were labor's main grievances?
answer
Labor Conditions and Organizations The labor force was largely composed of unskilled workers, including recent immigrants and growing numbers of women and children. Some children as young as eight years of age worked twelve hours a day in coal mines and southern mills. In hard times, business owners cut wages without discounting the rents they charged for company housing or the prices they charged in company stores.
question
The Americsn Federation was an organization of craft unions.
answer
False
question
In 1900, the average worker in manufacturing only worked about 45 hours per week.
answer
False
question
All of the following are true of American workers in the 1800s, except:
answer
They joined unions in large numbers
question
Anarchists advoacated a stateless society and the disappearence of government altogether.
answer
True
question
The first transcontinental railroad was completed in
answer
1869
question
Who consolidated the steel industry into U. S. Steel?
answer
Andrew Carnegie
question
The organization that wanted to destroy the state and replace it with "one big union" was the
answer
Industrial Workers of the World
question
The Great Railroad Strike of 1877
answer
The first major interstate strike
question
Samuel Gompers was a leader of the
answer
American Federation of Labor
question
By the 1870s who led the world in agricutural prouction?
answer
America
question
What was the first big business in the US?
answer
Railroads
question
The Homestead Strike of 1892 was against
answer
Carnegie's steel mill
question
The use of the trust device for consolidating industry originated with
answer
John D. Rockefeller
question
Who originated in the mail-order retail industry?
answer
Sears and Roebuck
question
Samuel Gompers
answer
He was the creator of the American Federation of Labor from1886-1924. He provided a stable and unified union for skilled workers.
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New