Term
Main agent for opening up west. Connected east and west coast, grew incredibly over the time period, owners were enticed to build out west by government offering incentives such as giving away land for free and low interest loans |
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Government aid in order to convince farmers to move from east to west. Government would offer 160 acres and farmers were to improve it over 5 years and they would receive title to land. Government did not regulate land once it was given out |
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Land given to states in order to finance agricultural and mechanical colleges in the west. Utilized to understand all parts of maintaining and improving farms |
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Born a slave and received doctoral degree and then held a career as an educator. Part of woman-suffrage movement |
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Grew faster than those in any other region of the country |
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A period of white Democratic Party rule that lasted into the 1950s |
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Began working in textile mills, city factories, or as servants |
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Definition
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By 1900, the ______ boasted a growing iron and steel industry, textile mills, and tobacco and timber-processing industries |
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Installed first cigarette-making machine in his Durham, North Carolina plant in 1884 and by 1900, controlled 80% of all tobacco manufacturing in the United States. Robber baron. Marketed to 8-14 year old boys |
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Term
In 1884, ____________ invented Coca-Cola and sold the rights to ___________ and he improved the taste in 1889 |
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Definition
Dr. John Pemberton, Asa Candler |
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Term
During the 1880s, Southern urban growth was _______ the national average |
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Definition
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Southern industrial workers earned roughly ________ the national average manufacturing wage during the late 19th century |
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In 1880, Massachusetts had _______ times as much bank capital as the entire South |
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Definition
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______ of the textile-mill labor force by 1900 consisted of children under the age of 14 and women who worked 12 hours a day, 6 days a week |
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Definition
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Was only commodity accepted as credit in South |
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Definition
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Originated in Texas in the late 1870s. Provided members with discounts on supplies and credit. Claimed 1 million members by 1890 |
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Definition
Southern Farmers' Alliance |
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He became driving force of Southern Farmers' Alliance in 1887 |
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Definition
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Term
Formed in Texas in 1886. Had fewer landowners and more tenant and sharecroppers |
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Definition
Colored Farmers' Alliance |
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Term
Store crops in a warehouse, keeping the cotton off of the market until the price rose. The government would loan the farmers up to 80% of the value of the stored crops |
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Definition
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Term
Appropriated the Alliance program and challenged Democrats in the South and Republicans in the West |
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Definition
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Opened settlement houses in black and white neighborhoods in the 1890s |
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Definition
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Term
Promoted middle-class values in poor neighborhoods and provided them with a permanent source of services |
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Definition
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Involved women directly in public policy. Visited schools to educate children about the evils of alcohol, addressed prisoners, and blanketed mens' meetings with literature. Campaigned for restrictive liquor laws. Frances Willard was leader. Laws against rape |
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Definition
Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) |
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Term
Became first woman of the US Senate in 1922 |
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Definition
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Appeared in 1894 to preserve southern history and honor its heroes |
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Definition
United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) |
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Term
Many women worked for ______ _____ and some slipped into _________ |
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Definition
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A black journalist who was allowed to remain in his chosen seat on a train in 1885. The whites of the south were less afraid to have contact with colored people than the whites of the north |
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Definition
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Opened an African-American grocery store in Memphis in 1892 (The People's Grocery) |
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Definition
Tom Moss, Calvin McDowell, and William Stewart |
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A critic of lynching who became an active civil-rights leader |
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Definition
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Term
Much desegregation occurred in the North, but _______ of the nation's black population lived in the South |
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Definition
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Term
Louisiana's segregation law did not violate the Constitution as long as railroads or the state provided equal accommodations for black passengers. Black facilities were rarely equal to their white counterparts |
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Definition
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) |
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Term
Segregation statues collectively |
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Definition
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Term
Looked at it as a way to stabilize politics and make elections more predictable |
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Definition
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Term
Required citizens to pay to vote |
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Definition
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Term
Granted the vote automatically to anyone whose grandfather could have voted prior to 1867 |
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Definition
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Black delegate _________ noted the irony of white people clamoring for supremacy when they already held the vast majority of the states elected offices |
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Definition
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Term
Founded by Lugenia Burns Hope in 1908 and provided playgrounds and a health center and obtained a grant from a New York foundation to improve black education |
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Definition
Atlanta's Neighborhood Union |
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Term
Born a slave and enrolled in Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute and founded the Tuskegee Institute for black students in rural Alabama in 1881 |
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Definition
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Term
African Americans should accommodate themselves to segregation and disfranchisement until they could prove their economic worth to American society. White people should help provide black people with the education and job training they would need to gain their independence |
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Definition
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Term
First African American to earn a doctorate at Harvard. Promoted self-help, education, and pride |
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Definition
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Term
An interracial organization dedicated to restoring African American political and social rights |
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Definition
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) |
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Term
Helped transform the cattle industry because the cattle could be slaughtered and sent to the east without spoilage |
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Definition
Refrigerated railroad cars |
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Term
Branded to show ownership |
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Definition
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Term
Invented barbed wire fence because it was inexpensive and easy to put up |
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Definition
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Term
Big businessmen began ________ in the watering holes so the cattle could not get to them and fighting began because cattle owners began to suffer because their cattle could not get to the watering holes |
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Definition
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Term
Native Americans killed Custer and all of his men. Only way to eradicate the cavalry was for many of the Native American tribes to band together. Approximately 2,500 Native Americans against approximately 200 soldiers |
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Definition
Battle of Little Bighorn (1876) |
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Term
Would split up tribes into families. Would provide Native Americans with up to 160 acres of land to live on and improve. Land given was unsuitable for farming |
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Definition
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Term
All tribes on the reservations would get together at night to partake in this so the cavalry outlawed it and said it could be punishable by death |
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Definition
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Term
Cavalry found out a peaceful tribe were practicing the Ghost religion. Soldiers first killed any man that could be considered warriors. Soldiers then killed all men, women, and children left in the village. Symbolized the death of the Plains Indian culture |
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Definition
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Term
The ______ had agriculture, while the _________ had transportation, industrialization, and agriculture |
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Definition
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Would provide land to farm and workers and property owners would split the crops. Property owners would make a contract so that the workers could possibly own the land one day but most would never actually own the land because of the way the contracts were written |
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Definition
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Elected in 1876, Inaugurated in 1877, Republican. There was a tie between his running mate, Samuel Tilden, and him so the preceding president, Ulysses S. Grant (Republican) chose him. Vetoed Chinese Exclusion Act |
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Believed you should support the government regardless of their mistakes. Led by Roscoe Conkling |
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Definition
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Term
Wanted to get rid of corruption at all costs. Led by James Blaine |
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Definition
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Elected in 1880, Republican. He was a Half-Breed and Chester Arthur was his Stalwart Vice-President. Alienated a large portion of Republican Party by choosing James Blaine as Secretary of State. Shot and died 11 weeks later |
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Definition
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Passed the Pendleton Act in order to make sure people who were the most qualified would get government jobs. Upset many Republicans and he was not re-elected. Was Garfield's vice-president and became president when Garfield died |
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Definition
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Elected in 1884 and upset Congress by vetoing a pension bill |
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Definition
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Term
Tax on imports. Revenue for federal government |
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Definition
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Term
Extremely high tax on imports that is designed to protect the US from foreign competition. Attempt to cut out foreign competition so Americans would buy American products |
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Definition
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Term
Jewish girl from Russia. Wrote on immigrant issues, lectured widely, and worked for Theodore Roosevelt's Progressive Party |
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Definition
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Term
Small area of Philadelphia that reflected the promise and failure of late 19th century America. Shallow worship of wealth and the veneer of respectability and prosperity covering deep economic and social divisions |
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Definition
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Term
Between 1870 and 1900, the US transformed from an agricultural nation into the world's foremost industrial power, producing more than ______ of the world's manufactured goods |
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Definition
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Term
Consolidation of all functions related to a particular industry, from the extraction and transport of raw materials to manufacturing and finished-product distribution and sales |
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Definition
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Term
The merger of competitors in the same industry |
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Definition
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Term
Consolidated much of American's steel industry within his Steel Company. Produced 1/4 of country's steel by 1900. Started out making $3 million a year to making $40 million a year. Sold his company for half a billion dollars. Philanthropist |
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Definition
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Term
European immigrants received less than ________ a week and typically worked 10 hours a day, 6 days a week |
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Definition
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Term
Small, cramped, poorly ventilated dwellings |
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Definition
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Term
Girls under 16, made up ________ of the silk mills workforce |
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Definition
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Term
Women receive ______ a week where men received ______ a week |
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Definition
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Term
By 1900, _______ of wage-earning women were unmarried and under the age of 25 |
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Definition
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Term
Was a banker that many railroad owners turned to for re-financing. Investment banker. Sold stocks and bonds. Andrew Carnegie sold his Steel Industry to him |
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Definition
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Term
Oil merchant from Cleveland. Formed Standard Oil Company. Owned oil business from top to bottom. Competition was disappearing and profits were soaring. 1/3 of industrial production. Retired with $100 million |
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Definition
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Term
Four-to-six-story buildings on tiny lots in urban slums with poor ventilation and light |
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Definition
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Term
Founded by Jane Addams in 1889 and was the most famous settlement house |
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Definition
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Term
Theory popular among industrialists, intellects, and some politicians, any intervention on behalf of the poor was of doubtful benefit. Led to wealth. Poverty resulted from flawed character of the poor |
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Definition
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Term
Human race evolves only through competition. The fit survive, the weak perish, and humanity moves forward |
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Definition
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Term
Captured country's imagination. Beginning in the late 1860s with a series of best-selling stories about rags-to-riches heroes |
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Definition
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Term
Depressions of 1873 and 1893 threw as many as _________ laborers out of work |
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Definition
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Term
Railroad strike of 1877. President Hayes dispatched federal troops to deal with railroad workers. More than 100 had been killed in the end |
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Definition
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Term
A union of craft workers that grew dramatically after the Great Uprising under the leadership of Terrence V. Powderley. Welcomed black and women workers. Nearly 1 million members by 1886. Led movement for 8 hour work day. Fewer than 100,000 members by 1890. Excluded bankers, lawyers, liquor deals, speculators, and stock brokers |
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Definition
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Term
Founded in 1886 and became major organizing body for skilled workers. Led by British immigrant Samuel Gompers. Discouraged political activism. Better pay, conditions, and hours |
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Definition
American Federation of Labor (AFL) |
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Term
Negotiations between management and union representatives |
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Definition
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Term
Union workers hired in place of striking workers |
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Definition
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Term
Led American Railway Union (ARU) and went to jail for 6 months |
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Definition
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Term
Series of violent attacks on Jewish settlements sanctioned by the government |
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Definition
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Term
Entire villages migrated, drawn by the good fortune of 1 or 2 compatriots |
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Definition
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Term
Typically got their first job with the help of a countryman who provided housing, loans, and other services for them |
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Definition
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Term
Target was no longer Irish Catholics, but even more numerous Catholics and Jews of Southern and Eastern Europe |
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Definition
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Term
Limited citizenship to "white persons and persons of African descent" Not lifted until 1943 |
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Definition
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Term
Made Chinese only ethnic group in the world that could not immigrate freely into the US |
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Definition
Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) |
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Term
Sought to limit Catholic civil rights in the US to protect the jobs of Protestant workingmen |
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Definition
American Protective Association (APA) (1887) |
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Term
Proposed to require prospective immigrants to pass a literacy test that most southern and eastern Europeans would presumably fail |
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Definition
Immigration Restriction League (IRL) (1894) |
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Term
By 1910, ______ _______ lived in all-electric homes with indoor plumbing |
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Definition
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Term
Railroad journey from Ogden to Promontory Summit, Utah on May 10, 1869 |
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Definition
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Term
Enabled Native Americans to move freely over the plains and use the energy stored in the valuable grasses |
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Definition
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Term
Provided meat, hides, bones and horns for tools, and focus for spiritual life for the Native Americans |
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Definition
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Term
John Chivington, a Methodist minister who had organized Denver's first Sunday school, led a militia force to the Sand Creek camp of a band of Cheyennes under Black kettle. Attacked without warning |
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Definition
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Term
US abandoned Bozeman Trail and other routes and military posts on Sioux territory. Whites killed hordes of buffalo to feed construction crews and to prevent buffalo from obstructing railway traffic |
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Definition
2nd Treaty of Fort Laramine (1868) |
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Term
Americans wanted to change Indian religious and family life, train Indian children in Protestant beliefs, and force Indians to accept private-ownership and market capitalism |
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Definition
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Term
Founded communities, stimulated railroad construction that brought further development, and contributed to the disorderly heritage of the frontier |
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Definition
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Term
Consisted of flimsy shanties, saloons, crude stores, dance halls, and brothels. Population was mostly male. Violence against immigrants was prevalent |
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Definition
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Term
Required massive capital investment to build reservoirs, ditches, and troughs to power high-pressure water cannons that would pulverize hillsides and uncover mineral deposits. Deposited debris in canyons and valleys to a depth of 100 feet or more, clogged rivers, and caused flooding and buried thousands of acres of farmlands |
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Definition
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Term
Transformed miners into wage workers with restricted opportunities |
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Definition
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Term
One of the nation's largest and most militant unions |
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Definition
Western Federation of Miners (1893) |
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Term
Opened by Texans through Indian territory to drive their cattle northward toward Abilene |
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Definition
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Term
Consisted of grocers, tailors, bootmakers, laundresses, barbers, druggists, blacksmiths, lawyers, and hotelkeepers. Contributed to growth of urban frontier |
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Definition
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Term
Killed over 100 people they viewed as challenging their power |
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Definition
Fence-Cutters War of 1883-1884 |
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Term
Larger ranchers, their foreman, and hired Texas gunmen set out with a list of 70 people to eliminate |
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Definition
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Term
Replaced nutritious grasses with sagebrush, Russian thistle, and other plants livestock found unpalatable |
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Definition
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Term
First time government placed regulations on railroads. Was not heavily enforced |
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Definition
Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 |
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Term
The only way to fight capitalism was to become a capitalist. Invited men of all races, women, immigrants, unskilled and skilled laborers to join the National Labor Union |
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Definition
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Term
Established the Woman's National Republican Association in 1888 and built it into an organizing machine for the Republican Party and with numerous states and local clubs |
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Definition
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Term
Championed abolition of alcohol but also supported electoral reforms such as woman suffrage, economic reforms such as railroad regulation and income taxes, and social reforms including improved race relations. Won 1/4 million votes |
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Definition
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Term
Denounce the infamous financial legislation which takes all from the many to enrich the few. Stimulate and democratize economy |
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Definition
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Term
Both men and women. 1 million members by 1879. Public regulation of rates charged by railroads and gain elevators helped convince Midwestern states to pass Granger laws |
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Definition
Patrons of Husbandry (the Grange) (1867) |
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Term
Objected tariffs and government regulations farmers favored as interfering with natural economic laws. Honest and efficient government through civil service reform. Organized National Civil Service Reform League |
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Definition
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Term
By mid-1890s, gained women suffrage in Wyoming, Colorado, Idaho, and Utah and partial suffrage in many other states |
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Definition
National American Woman Suffrage Association |
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Term
Investigated conditions of women and children in workshops and factories and successfully campaigned for protective labor legislation and compulsory school-attendance laws |
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Definition
Illinois Woman's Alliance (1888) |
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Term
Political club for women concerned with education, sanitation, public health, and police and fire protection |
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Definition
Woman's Municipal League (1894) |
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Term
Victorious politicians awarded government jobs to party workers with little regard for qualifications, and ousted previous employees |
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Definition
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Term
Prohibited federal employees from soliciting or receiving political contributions from government workers and created Civil Service Commission to administer competitive exams to applicants for government jobs |
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Definition
Pendleton Civil Service Act |
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Term
Raised tariffs to prohibitive levels |
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Definition
McKinley Tariff Act of 1890 |
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Term
State governments had the right to regulate private property when it was devoted to public use |
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Definition
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Term
Only federal government could regulate interstate commerce |
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Definition
Wabash St. Louis and Pacific Railway v. Illinois |
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Term
Investigated and prosecuted violations of prohibiting rebates, discriminatory rates, and pooling |
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Definition
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) |
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Term
Prohibited combination in restraint of trade (any attempt to restrict competition). Made monopolies and trusts illegal |
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Definition
Sherman Antitrust Act (1890) |
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Term
Limited money supply to ensure economic stability, maintain property values, and retain investor confidence |
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Definition
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Term
Major parties had failed to take the side of the people and instead supported the great moneyed institutions |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Required government to buy and coin at least $2 million of silver a month |
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Definition
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Term
Treasury had to buy a larger volume of silver and pay for it with treasure notes redeemable in either gold or silver |
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Definition
Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890 |
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Term
Men and women of producing class stood against encroachments of monopolies and in opposition to the growing corruption of wealth and power. Free silver, government control of railroad, and banking reform, all to no avail |
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Definition
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Term
New laws regulated banks and railroads and protected debtors by capping interest rates and restricting mortgage foreclosures |
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Definition
The People's (Populist) Party |
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Term
Former Greenbacker James B. Weaver was presidential candidate and rejected laissez-faire policies of old parties. Won more than 1 million votes |
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Definition
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Term
Government should not intervene in economy, especially through regulation |
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Definition
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Term
_________ of labor force was unemployed during the Depression of 1893 |
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Definition
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Term
Populist businessman from Ohio who proposed a government public-works program for the unemployed to be financed with paper money. Would provide jobs for unemployed and provide an inflationary stimulus to counteract depression's deflationary effects |
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Definition
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Term
March of unemployed to Washington as a petition with boots on to support his ideas |
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Definition
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Term
Gutted Sherman Antitrust Act ruling manufacturing, as opposed to commerce, way beyond reach of federal regulation |
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Definition
United States v. E.C. Knight Company |
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Term
Republican presidential candidate was William McKinley and Democratic presidential candidate was William Jennings Bryan |
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Definition
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Term
__________ of acres of forest were cut down setting the stage for erosion, floods, and dust bowls during the expansion of the West |
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Definition
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Term
From 1865 to 1890, the white population of the West increased _________ |
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Definition
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Term
The discovery of _______ in Colorado and Dakota, _______ in Nevada, and ______ in Montana and elsewhere brought about huge mining complexes and, soon, problems between miners and mine owners |
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Definition
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Term
Mexican owners of vast tracts of land in Texas, California, and much of the remaining Southwest saw their lands _______ _________ as new settlers arrived |
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Definition
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Term
New South philosophy did much to justify the buildup of southern _________ and ________ _________, but southern workers' per capita income remained only 2/5 of the national average |
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Definition
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Term
Reached an all-time high during the 1890s, averaging about 188 per year |
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Definition
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Term
Disappointed office seeker who shot Garfield and caused Garfield to die 11 weeks later, on September 19, 1881. Found guilty and hanged even though his lawyer tried the insanity plea |
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Definition
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Term
Grover Cleveland was the Democratic presidential candidate and Benjamin Harrison was the Republican presidential candidate, whose grandfather was the former president William Henry Harrison. Cleveland polled more popular votes, but Harrison won in the Electoral College |
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Definition
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Term
Passed Sherman Antitrust Act and the McKinley tariff, which raised rates on agricultural goods as well |
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Definition
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Term
When competing companies agreed to raise prices in all competing companies |
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Definition
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Term
Elected for the second time in 1892 |
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Definition
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Term
By 1920, more Americans lived in the ________ than in the __________ |
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Definition
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Term
Played a large role in the transition from countryside to city living |
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Definition
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Term
Powered inventions of people like Edison and Bell, ran the factory machines and city trolleys, lighted the city streets, and illuminated houses |
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Definition
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Term
Made possible the automobile, which in turn created a new transportation revolution and spurred the growth of subsidiary industries, such as oil refining and rubber manufacturing |
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Definition
Internal combustion engine |
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Term
A radical organization that called for one big union of all workers - regardless of their skill, race, or ethnic background - the violent overthrow of capitalism |
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Definition
Industrial Worker's of the World |
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Term
Arrived in the 1890s and by 1910, thousands of movie theaters offered hundreds of thousands of customers and chance to experience the new world of cinema |
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Definition
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Term
Led by anarchists on behalf of the Knights of Labor. August Spies, an anarchist and labor agitator called for a protest. Meeting was held on May 4, 1885 and as the meeting was breaking up, police charged the crowd. Somebody threw a bomb, killing police and protesters |
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Definition
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Term
Occurred at Homestead Plant owned by Andrew Carnegie. Director of plant was Henry Clay Frick who came up with a new wage system that would cut employee wages, some as much as 25%. Frick closed plant for negotiations and then decided to not negotiate by hiring 300 Pinkerton agents to help strikebreakers through the line |
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Definition
The Homestead Strike (1892) |
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Term
George Pullman cut worker's wages and they went on strike. Asked Governor John Altgeld to send him troops and was refused. Pullman appealed to Cleveland who said that the strike was interfering with the mail. Cleveland told the American Railway Union they would have to stop striking. Their leader, Eugene Debs went to jail for 6 months. Cleveland sent troops and this showed that workers had no federal support |
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Definition
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Term
Embraced things like government regulation of the railroad and the telegraph. Ran in the election of 1892 with James Weaver as their presidential candidate |
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Definition
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