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In the late nineteenth century, industry in the United States |
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saw the federal government eager to assist in its growth. |
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Prior to the Civil War, the steel industry in the United States |
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Orville and Wilbur Wright’s first successful airplane flight in 1903 |
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took place near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. |
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In the early twentieth century, a principle goal of “Taylorism” was to |
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make industrial production more efficient by organizing it into many simple tasks. |
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The first significant oil production in the United States occurred in |
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In the late nineteenth century, the social writer Henry George argued in favor of |
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a single land tax to replace all other taxes. |
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n the 1870s, the “internal combustion engine” was developed in |
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Orville and Wilbur Wright’s first successful airplane flight in 1903 |
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took place near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. |
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In the early twentieth century, a principle goal of “Taylorism” was to |
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Definition
make industrial production more efficient by organizing it into many simple tasks. |
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A key to Henry Ford’s success in mass production of automobiles was |
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the use of interchangeable parts |
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Who among the following was NOT significantly associated with the steel industry? |
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The business structure of Carnegie Steel was a good example of |
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The business structure of Standard Oil was a good example of |
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vertical and horizontal integration. |
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To John D. Rockefeller, the great “curse” of business in the late nineteenth century was |
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In the late nineteenth century, the first and most important promoter of Social Darwinism was |
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The 1920 census of the United States revealed that |
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a majority of Americans lived in “urban” areas. |
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In the late nineteenth century, most immigrants to the United States |
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formed close-knit ethnic communities within the cities. |
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In the late nineteenth century, compared to other immigrant ethnic groups, Jews |
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All these answers are correct. |
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In the late nineteenth century, the assimilation of immigrants was encouraged by |
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All these answers are correct. |
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The primary goal of the American Protective Association was to |
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stop immigrants from entering the United States. |
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In 1894, the Immigration Restriction League |
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proposed screening immigrants to allow only the “desirable” ones to enter. |
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In the late nineteenth century, suburbs on the edges of American cities were largely populated by |
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the moderately well-to-do people. |
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Tenement buildings in urban America were |
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initially praised as an improvement in housing for the poor. |
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In the late nineteenth century, efforts to reduce poverty in America |
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saw charitable organizations try to limit aid to those deemed “deserving poor.” |
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A major consequence of industrialization in the United States was: |
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