Term
What are the 4 interpretave traditions of the Civil War and Reconstruction? |
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Definition
1. Lost Cause/Redeemer 2. Union/Republican 3. Abolition/Freedom 4. Reconciliation |
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Term
What poplular 1915 film depicted the "Lost Cause" and Redeemer myths? |
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Definition
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Term
What were the causes of the Civil War? |
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Definition
11 Southern states formed a new nation to proctet slavery from the GOP. This is opposed by Pres. Lincoln. |
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Term
What was President Lincoln's original goal at the beginning of the war? |
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Definition
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Term
What new goal did Lincoln adopt during the war? |
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Definition
Abolishing Slavery (1862-3) |
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Term
What did Lincoln's Republican Party achieve with its victory in the Civil War? |
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Definition
Democracy prevails, and the USA remains in tact. Slavery is also abolished by the 13th Amendment. |
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Term
When did Reconstruction take place? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Ex-confederate states were brought back into the USA |
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Term
On what terms were the states of the former CSA incorporated back into the USA? |
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Definition
The South was incorporated back into the USA economically by becoming an agricultural region involved in extractive industry. |
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Term
What was the "Solid South" and what political party and race would rule the southern states after the end of Reconstruction? |
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Definition
Solid South = period of White, Democratic rule |
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Term
What happened to ex-slaves at the end of Reconstruction? |
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Definition
They had few civil and political rights, and most worked as sharecroppers, which paid very little. |
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Term
How did whites in both the North and the South reconcile after the end of Reconstruction? |
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Definition
In the national culture, white supremacy was a shared view. Whites overwhelmingly accept the "Lost Cause/Redeemer" traditions up to the 1960s. |
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Term
What is the gunfighter myth of the Wild West? |
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Definition
The myth is that personal conflict was resolved through a climactic showdown. |
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Term
How was Hollywood's depiction of the gunfighter myth inaccurate? |
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Definition
Hollywood portrayed the West being tamed by the handgun, when really the handgun was tamed by the West. |
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Term
Why were there so few homicides during the cattle towns' peak years? |
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Definition
The towns are run by the local business elite, who demanded a controlled environment to conduct commercial activity. There were strict gun control policies, and all vices provided for cowboys were heavily taxed and monitored. |
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Term
What was the West's economic role in the USA by the end of the nineteenth century? |
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Definition
The West's resources were enclosed, and their large corporations such as ranching, agro-business, mining, and timber supplied the industrial East and Midwest. |
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Term
What are the main components of the USA's ideal environment of economic growth? |
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Definition
1. "Rule of Law" 2. Respect of private property 3. Continental "free trade" zone 4. Risk-Taking culture 5. Mobile population 6. Government support 7. Adapt/invent technologies |
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Term
What kind of economy did the USA contain on the eve of the Civil War in 1861? |
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Definition
Primarily agrarian economy while there were few large manufacturing firms for craft production and few small merchants/bankers. There were no great retail firms or financial markets. |
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Term
What economy did the USA contain by the 1920s? |
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Definition
Unprecedented economic growth occured, and it became the leader in steel, oil, coal, electricity, and railroad mileage. |
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Term
Identify the 5 main reasons for the USA's Gilded age economic "take-off." |
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Definition
1. Agricultural efficiency 2. Larger domestic market 3. Integrated market 4. Corporation 5. Mass retailing |
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Term
Name 4 features of the modern corporation. |
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Definition
1. Ability to raise capital 2. Limited Liability 3. Continuity 4. professional managers (Not owners) |
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Term
What is vertical integration? |
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Definition
The merging of DIFFERENT stages of production into one corporation. |
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Term
What is horizontal integration? |
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Definition
Combining the SAME stage of production into a single corporation. |
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Term
How did professional corporate managers change the nature of manufacturing? |
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Definition
Managers are able to work together to develop policies and plans, often in terms of projects and programs, which are designed to achieve these goals, and then assigning resources to implement the policies and plans, projects and programs. |
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Term
Name two features of modern mass retailing. |
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Definition
1. division of labor 2. new machine tools for an assembly line. |
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Term
What role did advertising play in changing the USA's consumer culture? |
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Definition
Advertising created desire in the consumer for the product. |
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Term
Explain the myth of social mobility and its purpose. |
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Definition
talent + effort = social class Purpose: Overcome workers' hostility, reward hard workers. Main idea: blame the individual--not the system. |
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Term
What type of books did Horatio Alger write? |
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Definition
Youth fiction: Rags to Riches Biographies of industrialists |
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Term
What did conservatives mean when they advocated a laissez-faire approach to the industrial economy? |
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Definition
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Term
What did progressives mean when they advocated reform and regulation? |
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Definition
Failures are victims; they didn't bring fate upon themselves. |
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Term
What were the thee Gilded Age anti-monopoly movements? |
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Definition
1. Workers 2. Farmers 3. Small-Town Capitalists |
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Term
What is a producers' republic? |
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Definition
A republic founded on the maintainence of small economic units with ownership distributed widely among the citizenry. |
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Term
How did labor change during the Gilded Age? |
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Definition
There were more wage workers, and the workplace became impersonal. Economic inequality was at a high, and volient strikes began. Economy was unstable. |
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Term
What was the Knights of Labor and what were its goals? |
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Definition
The Knights of Labor were national union of workers who feared inequality from aggregated wealth. They want to see restoration in workers' self respect, the "producers' republic" and community. |
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Term
How did the Knights attempt to build a community of "producers"? |
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Definition
They included in their union all workers that "produced" something, ie: factory workers. They also allowed women and black men into the union, but not Asians. |
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Term
Why did the Knights fail? |
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Definition
Skilled workers quit. There was huge employer opposition; they blamed the Knights for "anarchism", haymarket bombing, and blacklisting. |
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Term
What farmers' problems does the song "The Farmer is the Man" Identify? |
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Definition
Povery; farmers give their crops and their labor and get little to nothing in return. |
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Term
What was the Jeffersonian Ideal? |
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Definition
A belief that the people run the government & the government should be small and simple. |
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Term
What was the farmers' "debt squeeze"? |
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Definition
The era of falling prices; they favored inflation, but the consumers did not. |
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Term
Why did farmers favor infation? |
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Definition
Farmers have to borrow money from banks or other lenders with the expectation that they will pay them back after the harvest. If money is undergoing a period of inflation, then the real value of the loan is decreasing so the farmers get a break. |
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Term
Whom did farmers blame for their problems? |
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Definition
The "money power:" bankers, railroads, middlemen |
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Term
What was the Farmers Alliance? |
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Definition
A group of co-operatives that headed an educational movement. This alliance was strongest in the South and Plains States. |
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Term
What was the People's (or Populist) Party and what were its goals? |
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Definition
They were a political party that wanted to restore the old farmers' republic. They wanted a radical, active government. The govn't should own the railroads. Farmland should be reserved for farmers only. Money supply should be expanded. Sub-treasuries should exist to hold goods until prices go up. |
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Term
What was the outcome of the 1869 U.S. Presidential election-who and what party won and from what region did it get most of its votes? |
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Definition
Republican candidate William McKinley won in 1896. He got most of the urban votes-votes in the Northeast and parts of the northern Midwest |
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Term
What was the Sherman Anti-Trust Act? |
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Definition
The first measure passed by Congress to prohibit trusts, named for Senator John Sherman. Trust busting! |
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Term
Who supported the Anti-Trust Act and why? |
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Definition
Small town capitalists hated trusts because they feared they would lose small-town harmony. |
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Term
Why did the anti-trust movement fail? |
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Definition
"Bigness" was no longer an issue; the people didn't have a problem with it. Rule of Reason developed by Supreme Court: only combinations and contracts unreasonably restraining trade are subject to actions under the anti-trust laws, and that possession of monopoly power is not inherently illegal. |
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Term
Identify two main legacies of the Gilded Age anti-monopoly movements. |
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Definition
1. Populist language (People vs Elite) 2. Government regulation (modern liberalism) |
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