Feared that factory owners would use immigrants to keep wages low and to replace striking workers
Interstate commerce act
NAWSAWorked to secure voting rights for women
Great railroad strikeRailroad companies cut salaries due to a recession. Railroad workers went on strike in 11 states. When the strike got violent, 11 people were killed before President Hayes sent in federal troops
Homestead actGave settlers 160 acres of land if they lived there for 5 years.
A severe economic depression during which nearly a quarter of railroads declared bankruptcy. This caused bankers to buy up many of the railroads, leading to consolidation.
Gospel of wealthAndrew Carnegie argued that those with wealth should invest it into society
Andrew Carnegie
Railroads
Growth of immigration16 million immigrants (mostly from Europe) came looking for better economic opportunities
Debates over moneyFarmers wanted to print more money so they could more easily pay back their debts, but the bankers and the wealthy wanted to keep the U.S. Dollar on the gold standard
Booker T. Washington
Frozen!
Frozen!
Boost!
Boost!
International migration society
Women's Christian Temperance UnionWorked to ban alcohol, had over 500,000 members
Political machinesCorrupt political bosses and their followers
Jim Crow lawsForced segregation and prevented african americans from exercising their civil liberties
congress sparked a new fight with the Sioux, by passing a law that nullified all previous treaties made with native Americans
Indian nations were assigned land called reservations. However this land was much less than before, and many decided to just keep following buffalo
Changes in farming
Government support for railroadsRailroads supported by the government through money and land grants
Boost!
Boost!
Pendleton ActPolitical appointments were very corrupt after a guy shot the president because he didn't get a job, congress passed the Pendleton Act, which created an exam that was used for deciding who would get a job
Laissez-faire economics
National Grange movementSocial and educational collective aimed at brining farmers together. Soon became political to lobby for farmers
Wanted to end indian culture by forcing them to assimilate to American values.
Pullman strike
Ghost dance movementnationwide movement of resistance. They began to believe that if they took up the ritualistic ghost dance, that their ancestors would return and drive the Americans out.
White collar workersAll the industrialization created a new type of work for managers and administrators who ran the factories instead of working in them
John D. RockefellerPioneered horizontal integration, where one company controls every seller in the market.
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Frozen!
Starting in 1865 many Americans started pushing westward again after the interruption of the civil war
Nativists successfully pressured Congress to stop the flow of Chinese immigrants who were coming over during the gold rush.
Wanted to end indian culture by forcing them to assimilate to American values.
Boost!
Boost!
National Grange movement
Feared that factory owners would use immigrants to keep wages low and to replace striking workers
Panic of 1893A severe economic depression during which nearly a quarter of railroads declared bankruptcy. This caused bankers to buy up many of the railroads, leading to consolidation.
Editor of a newspaper editorialized against lynching and jim crow. She fled north due to threats against her
Facilitated the migration of black people to africa
Haymarket square riot
Jim Crow lawsForced segregation and prevented african americans from exercising their civil liberties
American federation of laborGrew to over a million members by 1901 and had some modest successes
American protective association
Women's Christian Temperance Union
Frozen!
Frozen!
Boost!
Boost!
Changes in farmingA new focus on cash-crops in the north and west, and a shift to more expensive mechanized farming methods put smaller farms out of business. Big trusts that farmers relied on (like railroads) also raised prices, making it even harder for farmers to make a living
Political machinesCorrupt political bosses and their followers
Railroads
NAWSAWorked to secure voting rights for women
Tammany HallThe most famous political machine organized and met the needs of immigrants and the poor in exchange for votes
By 1890, the U.S. Census Bureau declared that the frontier was officially settled
Pullman strikeAfter a railroad car manufacturer cut wages, and the union tried to negotiate, the company failed them all. The railroad union decided to not work on any trains with Pullman cars in them. The railroad owners tied the Pullman cars to mail trains in order to get the government to keep them moving, and the union members were jailed
Chinese exclusion act
Enabled manufacturers to produce huge quantities of steel
Sherman antitrust actMade monopolizing an entire market illegal
Required railroad rates to be reasonable and just, and established a federal commission to oversee the railroads
Anti-Saloon leagueWorked to close down saloons
Homestead act
Debates over moneyFarmers wanted to print more money so they could more easily pay back their debts, but the bankers and the wealthy wanted to keep the U.S. Dollar on the gold standard
Andrew Carnegie argued that those with wealth should invest it into society
Indian nations were assigned land called reservations. However this land was much less than before, and many decided to just keep following buffalo
Frozen!
Frozen!
Labor unionsWorkers formed labor unions to have more negotiating power and fight for better pay and working conditions
Booker T. Washingtonformer slave who trained other black men to become economically self-sufficient, and argued this was a better way to gain power than to campaign for better voting rights