front 1 A major source of money that fueled U.S. industrial growth in the late 1800s came from | back 1 private foreign investors |
front 2 The federal government supported transcontinental railroad construction by giving companies | back 2 land grants and loans |
front 3 The only transcontinental railroad built without government assistance was the | back 3 Great Northern |
front 4 The most important economic impact of the transcontinental railroad system was that it | back 4 created a unified national market |
front 5 The single most important force behind post–Civil War industrial growth was | back 5 the railroad system |
front 6 The U.S. adopted standard time zones when | back 6 railroads agreed on uniform time to keep schedules and prevent accidents |
front 7 Which was NOT essential to the modern railroad system? | back 7 The caboose |
front 8 The two industries most expanded by railroad growth were | back 8 mining and agriculture |
front 9 Railroad agreements to divide customers and profits were called | back 9 pools |
front 10 Which was NOT a common corrupt practice of railroad tycoons? | back 10 Forcing workers to buy company stock |
front 11 In Wabash v. Illinois, the Court ruled states could not regulate railroads because | back 11 they were interstate businesses |
front 12 The earliest efforts to regulate railroad monopolies came from | back 12 state governments |
front 13 The first federal regulatory agency created to oversee big business was the | back 13 Interstate Commerce Commission |
front 14 Countries that invested the most foreign capital in U.S. industry included | back 14 Britain, France, and the Netherlands |
front 15 European investors usually | back 15 let Americans manage companies unless profits declined |
front 16 The most important source of a key raw material for early industrial growth was the | back 16 Mesabi iron range of Minnesota |
front 17 Which was NOT a major raw material driving early U.S. industrialization? | back 17 Rubber |
front 18 A nationwide market encouraged Americans to favor | back 18 mass production of standardized goods |
front 19 Interchangeable parts encouraged capitalists to | back 19 replace skilled workers with machines |
front 20 Industrial leaders invented machines mainly to | back 20 replace expensive skilled labor with cheaper workers |
front 21 Two inventions that expanded women’s employment were the | back 21 typewriter and telephone |
front 22 Which invention was NOT associated with Thomas Edison? | back 22 Electric dynamo |
front 23 One way post–Civil War business leaders increased profits was by | back 23 eliminating competition |
front 24 Carnegie’s vertical integration involved | back 24 controlling all stages of production in one company |
front 25 Rockefeller’s horizontal integration involved | back 25 forcing competitors to give stock to Standard Oil |
front 26 The steel industry advanced largely because of | back 26 Henry Bessemer |
front 27 Morgan’s tactic of placing bank officials on company boards was called | back 27 interlocking directorates |
front 28 America’s first billion-dollar corporation was | back 28 U.S. Steel |
front 29 The oil industry’s first major product was | back 29 kerosene |
front 30 Oil became a huge industry because of | back 30 the internal combustion engine |
front 31 Which tactic was NOT used by Rockefeller? | back 31 using federal agents to destroy competitors |
front 32 Carnegie’s “Gospel of Wealth” argued | back 32 the rich had a moral duty to use wealth responsibly |
front 33 Social Darwinists relied most on | back 33 laissez-faire economists like Malthus and Ricardo |
front 34 Supporters of “survival of the fittest” believed | back 34 the wealthy deserved their riches |
front 35 Courts used the Fourteenth Amendment to | back 35 shield corporations from state regulation |
front 36 The amendment most useful to corporations was the | back 36 Fourteenth Amendment |
front 37 The Sherman Anti-Trust Act outlawed | back 37 combinations in restraint of trade |
front 38 The Sherman Anti-Trust Act was first used mainly against | back 38 labor unions |
front 39 During industrialization, the South | back 39 remained rural and agricultural |
front 40 The South’s main attraction for investors was | back 40 cheap labor |
front 41 Tax incentives especially attracted | back 41 this type of manufacturing to the New South: textiles |
front 42 James Duke’s southern monopoly produced | back 42 cigarettes |
front 43 Textile mill work was often seen as | back 43 the only steady employment available |
front 44 Which statement about southern textile mills is NOT true? | back 44 Rural Blacks and whites got high-quality jobs |
front 45 One major change industrialization caused was | back 45 adjusting life to the factory time clock |
front 46 The group most affected by industrialization was | back 46 women |
front 47 Industrial workers were vulnerable to all EXCEPT | back 47 new educational requirements |
front 48 The “Gibson Girl” represented | back 48 the independent and athletic new woman |
front 49 Most women worked in the 1890s because of | back 49 economic necessity |
front 50 Women entered industry mainly due to | back 50 inventions like the typewriter and telephone |
front 51 Child labor reform gained support through | back 51 photography |
front 52 Which is least like the others? | back 52 Closed shop |
front 53 Late 1800s Supreme Court decisions generally favored | back 53 corporations |
front 54 The National Labor Union won | back 54 an eight-hour day for government workers |
front 55 Which group was excluded from the Knights of Labor? | back 55 Nonproducers |
front 56 The Knights believed labor conflict would end when | back 56 workers owned businesses |
front 57 The Knights believed republican ideals could be preserved by | back 57 strengthening worker independence |
front 58 A major reason the Knights of Labor failed was | back 58 lack of class consciousness |
front 59 The most successful post–Civil War labor union was | back 59 the American Federation of Labor |
front 60 Even as labor gained support, | back 60 employers continued to resist unions |
front 61 Critics of captains of industry argued they | back 61 exploited workers |
front 62 Class protest was weak in the U.S. because | back 62 America had greater social mobility than Europe |
front 63 Which did NOT contribute to post–Civil War industrial expansion? | back 63 Immigration restrictions |