Andrew Carnegie’s Abnormal Rise in Steel Industry
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
Andrew Carnegie
answer
achieved an abnormal rise in class system (steel industry), pioneered vertical integration (controlled Mesabie Range to ship ore to Pittsburgh), opposed monopolies, used partnership of steel tycoons (Henry Clay Frick as a manager/partner), Bessemer steel process
question
Standard Oil Trust
answer
small oil companies sold stock and authority to Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company (consolidation), cornered world petroleum market
question
John D. Rockefeller
answer
Standard Oil Company, ruthless business tactics (survival of the fittest)
question
Vertical and horizontal integration
answer
beginnings of trusts (destruction of competition); vertical- controlling every aspect of production (control quality, eliminate middlemen - Rockefeller); horizontal- consolidating with competitors to monopolize a market (highly detrimental)
question
Sherman Anti-Trust Act
answer
forbade restraint of trade and did not distinguish good from bad trusts, ineffective due to lack of enforcement mechanism (waited for Clayton Anti-Trust Act)
question
United States vs. EC Knight Company
answer
decision under Sherman Anti-Trust Act shot down by Supreme Court - sugar refining was manufacturing rather than trade/commerce
question
National Labor Union
answer
founded by William Sylvis (1866); supported 8-hour workday, convict labor, federal department of labor, banking reform, immigration restrictions to increase wages, women; excluded blacks
question
Knights of Labor
answer
founded by Uriah Stephens (1869); excluded corrupt and well-off; equal female pay, end to child/convict labor, employer-employee relations, proportional income tax; "bread and butter" unionism (higher wages, shorter hours, better conditions)
question
Terence V. Powderly
answer
Knights of Labor leader, opposed strikes, producer-consumer cooperation, temperance, welcomed blacks and women (allowing segregation)
question
American Federation of Labor
answer
craft unions that left the Knights (1886), led by Gompers, women left out of recruitment efforts
question
Samuel Gompers
answer
focused on skilled workers (harder to replace than unskilled), coordinated crafts unions, supported 8-hour workday and injury liability
question
"Yellow dog contracts"
answer
fearing the rise of labor unions, corporations forced new employees to sign and promise not to be part of a union
question
Pinkertons
answer
detectives hired by employers as private police force, often used to end strikes
question
Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)
answer
10-year moratorium on Chinese immigration to reduce competition for jobs (Chinese willing to work for cheap salaries)
question
Haymarket Bombing
answer
bomb thrown at protest rally, police shot protestors, caused great animosity in employers for workers' unions
question
Eugene V. Debs
answer
led railroad workers in Pullman Strike, arrested; Supreme Court (decision in re Debs) legalized use of injunction (court order) against unions and strikes
question
Social Darwinism
answer
natural selection applied to human competition, advocated by Herbert Spencer, William Graham Sumner
question
Henry George, Progress and Poverty
answer
single tax on speculated land to ameliorate industrialization misery
question
Edward Bellamy, Looking Backwards
answer
state-run economy to provide conflict-free society
question
Karl Marx, Das Kapital
answer
working class exploited for profit, proletariat (workers) to revolt and inherit all society
question
Thomas Edison
answer
electric light, phonograph, mimeograph, Dictaphone, moving pictures
question
Louis Sullivan
answer
led architectural movement to create building designs that reflected buildings' functions, especially in Chicago
question
Interstate Commerce Act
answer
created Interstate Commerce Commission to require railroads to publish rates (less discrimination, short/long haul), first legislation to regulate corporations, ineffective ICC
question
Social Gospel movement
answer
stressed role of church and religion to improve city life, led by preachers Walter Raushenbusch and Washington Gladen; influenced settlement house movement and Salvation Army
question
Young Men's and Young Women's Christian Association (YMCA & YWCA)
answer
provided housing and recreation to city youth, imposing Protestant morals, unable to reach out to all youth
question
Jane Addams
answer
helped lead settlement house movement, co-founded NAACP, condemned war and poverty
question
Hull House
answer
Jane Addams's pioneer settlement house (center for women's activism and social reform) in Chicago
question
Salvation Army
answer
established by "General" William Booth, uniformed volunteers provided food, shelter, and employment to families, attracted poor with lively preaching and marching bands in order to instill middle-class virtues
question
Declining death rate
answer
sewer systems and purification of water
question
New immigrants vs. old immigrants
answer
old immigrants from northern and western Europe came seeking better life; new immigrants came from southern and eastern Europe searching for opportunity to escape worse living conditions back home and often did not stay in the US
question
Cult of domesticity
answer
Victorian standards confined women to the home to create an artistic environment as a statement of cultural aspirations
question
William Marcy Tweed
answer
leader of Tammany Hall, gained large sums of money through the political machine, prosecuted by Samuel Tilden and sent to jail
question
Tammany Hall
answer
Democratic political machine in NYC, "supported" immigrants and poor people of the city, who were needed for Democratic election victories
question
Theodore Dreiser, Sister Carrie, The Financier
answer
attacked industrial elite, called for business regulation, publisher refused works breaking with Victorian ideals
question
Regionalist and naturalist writers
answer
writing took a more realistic approach on the world, regionalist writers focused on local life (Sarah Orne Jewett), naturalist writers focused on economy and psychology (Stephen Crane)
question
Bland-Allison Act (1878)
answer
government compromised to buy and coin $2-4 million/month; government stuck to minimum and inflation did not occur (lower prices); economy grew
question
Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890)
answer
government to buy silver to back money in addition to gold
question
James G. Blaine
answer
Republican candidate for president in 1884, quintessence of spoils system; highly disgusted the mugwumps (many Republicans turned to Democrat Cleveland)
question
Pendleton Civil Service Act
answer
effectively ended spoils system and established civil service exams for all government positions, under Pres. Garfield
question
Farmers' Alliance movement
answer
Southern and Midwestern farmers expressing discontent, supported free silver and subtreasury plan (cash advance on future crop - farmers had little cash flow during the year), criticized national banks
question
Greenback Party
answer
supported expanded money supply, health/safety regulations, benefits for workers and farmers, granger(farmer)-supported
question
Populist Party
answer
emerged from Farmers' Alliance movement (when subtreasury plan was defeated in Congress), denounced Eastern Establishment that suppressed the working classes; Ignatius Donnelly (utopian author), Mary E Lease, Jerry Simpson
question
Convict-lease system
answer
blacks who went to prison taken out and used for labor in slave-like conditions, enforced southern racial hierarchy
question
Civil Rights Cases
answer
Civil Rights Act of 1875 declared unconstitutional by Supreme Court, as the fourteenth amendment protected people from governmental infringement of rights and had no effect on acts of private citizens
question
Plessy v. Ferguson
answer
Supreme Court legalized the "separate but equal" philosophy
question
Munn v. Illinois
answer
private property subject to government regulation when property is devoted to public interest; against railroads
question
Jim Crow laws
answer
educational and residential segregation; inferior facilities allotted to African-Americans, predominantly in South
question
Coxey's Army
answer
Coxey and unemployed followers marched on Washington for support in unemployment relief by inflationary public works program
question
Panic of 1893
answer
8,000 businesses collapsed (including railroads); due to stock market crash, overbuilding of railroads, heavy farmer loans, economic disruption by labor efforts, agricultural depression; decrease of gold reserves led to Cleveland's repeal of Sherman Silver Purchase Act
question
William Jennings Bryan
answer
repeat candidate for president, proponent of silver-backing (16:1 platform), cross of gold speech against gold standard; Democratic candidate (1896)
question
Free silver
answer
Populists campaigned for silver-backed money rather than gold-backed, believed to be able to relieve working conditions and exploitation of labor
question
Triangle Shirtwaist fire
answer
workers unable to escape (locked into factory), all died; further encouraged reform movements for working conditions
question
Gifford Pinchot
answer
head of federal Division of Forestry, contributed to Roosevelt's natural conservation efforts
question
Frederick W. Taylor, Principles of Scientific Management
answer
increase working output by standardizing procedures and rewarding those who worked fast; efficiency
question
Industrial Workers of the World
answer
supported Socialists, militant unionists and socialists, advocated strikes and sabotaging politics, aimed for an umbrella union similar to Knights of Labor, ideas too radical for socialist cause
question
"Big Bill" Haywood
answer
leader of IWW, from Western Federation of Miners
question
Thorstein Veblen, The Theory of the Leisure Class
answer
satirized wealthy captains of industry, workers and engineers as better leaders of society
question
Herbert Croly, The Promise of American Life
answer
activist government to serve all citizens (cf. Alexander Hamilton); founded New Republic magazine
question
John Dewey
answer
social ideals to be encouraged in public school (stress on social interaction), learning by doing
question
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
answer
law meant to evolve as society evolves, opposed conservative majority
question
Booker T. Washington
answer
proponent of gradual gain of equal rights for African-Americans
question
"Atlanta Compromise" speech
answer
given by BTW to ease whites' fears of integration, assuring them that separate but equal was acceptable, ideas challenged by DuBois
question
WEB DuBois, Souls of Black Folk
answer
opposed BTW's accommodation policies, called for immediate equality, formed Niagara Movement to support his ideas
question
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
answer
formed by white progressives, adopted goals of Niagara Movement, in response to Springfield Race Riots
question
Muckrakers
answer
uncovered the "dirt" on corruption and harsh quality of city/working life; heavily criticized by Theodore Roosevelt; Ida Tarabell (oil companies), David Graham Phillips (Senate), Aschen School (child labor - photography), mass magazines McClure's and Collier's
question
Upton Sinclair, The Jungle
answer
revealed unsanitary nature of meat-packing industry, inspired Meat Inspection Act and Pure Food and Drug Act (1906)
question
Thomas Nast
answer
political muckraking cartoonist, refused bribes to stop criticism
question
Robert La Follette
answer
created the Wisconsin Idea (as governor of Wisconsin) - regulated railroad, direct-primary system, increased corporate taxes, reference library for lawmakers
question
Mann Act
answer
made it illegal to transport women across state borders for "immoral purposes," violated by black boxer Jack Johnson (w/ white woman)
question
Women's Christian Temperance Union
answer
led by Francis Willard, powerful "interest group" following the civil war, urged women's suffrage, led to Prohibition
question
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
answer
women must gain economic rights in order to impact society (cf. rising divorce rates)
question
Northern Securities Case
answer
Northern Securities Company (JP Morgan and James G. Hill - railroads) seen by Roosevelt as "bad" trust, Supreme Court upheld his first trust-bust
question
Theodore Roosevelt
answer
first "modern" president, moderate who supported progressivism (at times conservative), bypassed congressional opposition (cf. Jackson), significant role in world affairs
question
Square Deal
answer
Roosevelt's plan that aimed to regulate corporations (Anthracite coal strike, Dept. of Commerce and Labor, Elkins and Hepburn Acts), protect consumers (meat sanitation), and conserve natural resources (Newlands Reclamation Act)
question
Preservationism vs. Conservationism
answer
Roosevelt and Pinchot sided on conservation rather than preservation (planned and regulated use of forest lands for public and commercial uses)
question
William H. Taft
answer
"trustbuster" (busted twice as many as Roosevelt), conservation and irrigation efforts, Postal Savings Bank System, Payne-Aldrich Tariff (reduction of tariff, caused Republican split)
question
Bull Moose Party
answer
party formed from Republican split by Roosevelt, more progressive values, leaving "Republican Old Guard" to control Republican party
question
New Nationalism
answer
federal government to increase power over economy and society by means of progressive reforms, developed by Roosevelt (after presidency)
question
New Freedom
answer
ideas of Wilson: small enterprise, states' rights, more active government, trustbusting, left social issues up to the states
question
Woodrow Wilson
answer
Democratic candidate 1912, stood for antitrust, monetary change, and tariff reduction; far less active than Roosevelt, Clayton Anti-trust Act (to enforce Sherman), Child Labor Act
question
Federal Reserve Act
answer
created Federal Reserve System, regional banks set up for twelve separate districts, final authority of each bank lay with the Federal Reserve Board, paper money to be issued "Federal Reserve Notes"