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United States History Chapter 14

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Title: United States History Chapter 14


1
United States HistoryChapter 14
  • Higher Order Thinking Skills
  • Homework

2
1. Explain how the abundance of natural
resources, new recovery and refining methods ,
and new uses for them led to intensive
industrialization.
  • What led to the nations oil boom?
  • Edwin L. Drakes invention of a steam-powered Oil
    Drill that made possible the extraction of oil
    from beneath the earths surface.
  • What was the Bessemer Process and how did it fuel
    steel production?
  • Created a faster and cheaper method for producing
    steel, making steel the primary building material
    of the Second Industrial Revolution.
  • What were some of the new uses in the United
    States for steel?
  • Railroads, Bridge Construction (The Brooklyn
    Bridge), and innovative Skyscrapers (The Home
    Insurance Building in Chicago).

3
2. Identify inventions that changed the way
people lived and worked.
  • How did the harnessing of electricity transform
    American business?
  • Factories could be constructed away from Rivers
    and closer to the labor force.
  • The incandescent light bulb allowed factories to
    operate 24 hours a day.
  • Electricity was cheap and convenient, which
    increased profit.
  • How did new inventions and products affect people
    at home and at work?
  • Elias Howe invents the Sewing Machine
  • Alexander Graham Bell invents the Telephone
  • Christopher Sholes invents the Typewriter

4
3. Identify the role of the railroads in unifying
the country
  • How did the government facilitate the expansion
    of the railroads?
  • The Government made huge land grants and loans to
    Railroad Companies to encourage their expansion.
  • What were the positive and negative aspects of
    railroad expansion?
  • Positives encouraged western expansion, gave
    the downtrodden a new lease on life, helped
    unify the North, South, and West economically.
  • Negatives abuse of the farmer, abuse of the
    immigrant (Irish and Chinese) labor force that
    built the railroads, and government corruption.
  • How did Railroad time work?
  • The world was divided into 24 time zones (one for
    each hour of the day), then clocks were
    synchronized so that noon in New York City wasnt
    somehow different than noon in San Francisco.
    This helped make the Railroads more efficient.

5
4. List positive and negative effects of
railroads on the nations economy
  • How did the growth of Railroad lines promote the
    growth of cities and trade?
  • Increased travel created more cities, which
    created more markets for the sale of goods, which
    stimulated economic growth.
  • What was the Credit Mobilier scandal?
  • The Union Pacific Railroad created a Construction
    company to build its own tracks, paid the company
    (itself) two to three times what the work was
    worth by charging the government two to three
    times what the project should have cost then
    pocketed the profits. To protect its scheme the
    Union Pacific bribed 20 Representatives of
    Congress.
  • Destroyed the reputation of the Republican Party

6
5. Summarize reasons for, and outcomes of, the
demand for railroad reform.
  • For what reasons were farmers angry at railroad
    companies?
  • Corruption
  • Misuse of land grants
  • Unfair rate practices
  • Charging different customers different rates
  • Charging more for short hauls, where their was no
    competition between lines
  • Agreements between Railroad Companies to fix
    prices.
  • How did the Granger laws help farmers?
  • They established the governments right to
    regulate industries that serve the public
    interest.
  • What was the Interstate Commerce Act?
  • Allowed the Federal Government to supervise
    Railroad Activities, however it took until 1906
    under the Roosevelt (Theodore) administration to
    become truly effective.

7
6. Identify management and business strategies
that contributed to the success of business
tycoons such as Andrew Carnegie.
  • What industry did Andrew Carnigie dominate?
  • Steel (he own U.S. Steel)
  • What was the difference between vertical
    integration and horizontal integration?
  • Horizontal integration happens when a company
    buys other companies that produce a similar
    product (owns the market, creation of
    monopolies).
  • Vertical integration happens when a company buys
    other companies that produce the materials it
    needs to make and distribute their product (owns
    the process).

8
7. Explain Social Darwinism and its effects on
society.
  • What does the theory of Social Darwinism
    advocate?
  • The application of the law of Natural Selection
    to the Business World and society.
  • That when a business fails it does so because a
    stronger business is successful and that is would
    helps the economy grow.
  • What methods did ruthless business operators use
    to eliminate their competition?
  • They formed Holding Companies and bought out the
    stock of rival companies.
  • They formed Trust Agreements where they ran
    multiple companies as one giant Corporation.
  • This eliminated competition and resulted in the
    abuse of the consumer and worker by Big Business.
  • Why did the nations business boom bypass the
    south?
  • The South lack industrial resources and Capital.
  • The South was still very much recovering from the
    Civil War and not suited for Industrial growth.

9
8. Summarize the emergence and growth of unions
  • What conditions did many factory workers face in
    the late 19th Century?
  • Long hours, low wages, and dangerous working
    conditions
  • What did labor unions advocate?
  • Eight-hour Workday
  • Equal Pay for Equal Work
  • Collective Bargaining
  • What different types of unions emerged during the
    nations industrial boom?
  • National Labor Union (William Sylvis)
  • Knights of Labor (Uriah Stephens)
  • American Federation of Labor (Samuel Gompers)
  • American Railway Union (Eugene V. Debs)
  • Industrial Workers of the World (William Big
    Bill Haywood)

10
9. Explain the violent reactions of industry and
government to union strikes
  • What were the reasons for the various strikes
    during the late 19th Century?
  • Wage cuts (Great Strike of 1877)
  • Dangerous Working Conditions (Homestead Strike)
  • Equal Pay (Sugar Beet and Farm Laborers Strike)
  • What role did women play in the labor movement?
  • Mary Harris Jones was a key player in the Labor
    Movement
  • Women worked for Equal Pay, better working
    conditions, and an end to child labor
  • How did management and the government react to
    union activity?
  • Injunctions were issued forcing workers back to
    the job.
  • In some cases the police were called in to break
    up strikes and protests, oftentimes violently.
  • Best example is the Haymarket Square Riot, which
    (ironically) turned the public against labor
    unions.
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