CH 23 APUSH
James Garfield
President whose assassination after only a few months in office spurred the passage of a civil-service law
Tom Watson
Radical Populist leader whose early success turned sour, and who then became a vicious racist
Half-Breeds
Republican party faction led by Senator James G. Blaine that paid lip service to government reform while still battling for patronage and spoils
Stalwarts
Republican party faction led by Senator Roscoe Conkling that opposed all attempts at civil-service reform
Liberal Republican Party
Short-lived third party of 1872 that attempted to curb Grant administration corruption
McKinley Tariff
Sky-high Republican tariff of 1890 that caused widespread anger among farmers in the Midwest and the South
Civil Service
System of choosing federal employees on the basis of merit rather than patronage introduced by the Pendleton Act of 1883
Jim Crow
Term for the racial segregation laws imposed in the 1890s
Laissez-faire
The doctrine of noninterference, especially by the government, in matters of economics or business
Pork barrel
In American politics, government appropriations for political purposes, especially projects designed to please a legislator's local constituency
Populists
Insurgent political party that gained widespread support among farmers in the 1890s
Denis Kearney
Irish-born leader of the anti-Chinese movement in California
Gilded Age
Mark Twain's sarcastic name for the post-Civil War era, which emphasized its atmosphere of greed and corruption
Grandfather Clause
Notorious clause in southern voting laws that exempted from literacy tests and poll taxes anyone whose ancestors had voted in 1860, thereby excluding blacks
Silver
Precious metal that "soft-money" advocates demanded by coined again to compensate for the "Crime of '73"
Greenback Labor Party
"Soft-money" third party that polled over a million votes and elected fourteen congressmen in 1878 by advocating inflation
Amnesty
A general pardon for offenses or crimes against a government
Coalition
A temporary alliance of political factions or parties for some specific purpose
Deflation
An increase in the value of money in relation to available goods, causing prices to fall
Censure
An official statement of condemnation passed by a legislative body against one of its other members or some other official of government
Chinese
Asian immigrant group that experienced discrimination on the West Coast
Jim Fisk
Bold and unprincipled financier whose plot to corner the U.S. gold market nearly succeeded in 1869
James G. Blaine
Charming but corrupt "Half-Breed" Republican senator and presidential nominee in 1884
Grand Army of the Republic
Civil War Union veterans' organization that became a potent political bulwark of the Republican party in the late nineteenth century
Horace Greeley
Colorful, eccentric newspaper editor who carried the Liberal Republican and Democratic banners against Grant in 1872.
Consensus
Common or unanimous opinion
Credit Mobilier
Corrupt construction company whose bribes and payoffs to congressmen and others created a major Grant administration scandal
Roscoe Conkling
Imperious New York senator and leader of the "Stalwart" faction of Republicans
William Jennings Bryan
Eloquent young Congressman from Nebraska who became the prominent advocate of "free silver" in the early 1890s.
J.P. Morgan
Enormously wealthy banker whose secret bailout of the federal government in 1895 (as arranged by Grover Cleveland) aroused fierce public anger
Grover Cleveland
First Democratic president since the Civil War; defender of laissez-faire economics and low tariffs
Ulysses S. Grant
Great military leader whose presidency foundered in corruption and political ineptitude
Boss Tweed
Heavyweight New York political boss whose widespread fraud landed him in jail in 1871
Kickback
The return of a portion of the money received in a sale or contract, often secretly or illegally, in exchange for favors
Bloody Shirt
The symbol of the Republican political tactic of attacking Democrats with reminders of the Civil War
Jay Cooke
Wealthy New York financier whose bank collapse in 1873 set off an economic depression
Rutherford B. Hayes
Winner of the contested 1876 election who presided over the end of Reconstruction and a sharp economic downturn
Compromise of 1877
he complex political agreement between Republicans and Democrats that resolved the bitterly disputed election of 1876