HIST 2620 Exam 1 terms
Dry farming
a way of farming dry land in which seeds are planted deep in ground where there is some moisture
13th Amendment
Abolished Slavery
Wade-Davis Bill
Bill proposed by radical Republicans Benjamin Wade and Henry W. Davis; requires 50% of all eligible voters in the 1860 election to pledge loyalty; pocket vetoed by Lincoln.
Haymarket Bombing
Bomb thrown at a labor protest rally, led to the public turning against labor gatherings and unions
Albion W. Tourgee
Carpetbagger against racial segregation and the beginning of Jim Crow laws in the 1890's
Election of 1876
Close race, ended with Hayes winning and ended Reconstruction
Quanah Parker
Comanche chief who left reservation and fought US army; eventually returned to the Reservation
Industrial Workers of the World
Emerged through the Western Federation of Miners, sought to raise wages, improve working conditions, and gain union recognition for the most exploited segments of American Labor. Nicknamed the "Wobblies," wanted to overthrow capitalism
Gospel of Wealth
Essay by Andrew Carnegie where he distinguished between charity and philanthropy, the latter meaning to build institutions that would raise educational and cultural standards, and that the rich should act as stewards of the wealth they earned.
Roosevelt Corollary
Extended the Monroe Doctrine and claimed that Latin American countries had to behave or else the US army would come in.
Hiram Revels
First black senator during Reconstruction; symbol of black success after Civil war
Ku Klux Klan
First version founded during Reconstruction; targeted mainly white republicans in the South, who were the ones predominantly lynched during this time
Terrance Powderly
Founder of the Knights of Labor; labor union that promoted strikes; had radical demands
Nathan Bedford Forest
Founder of the first KKK from Tennessee; refused to acknowledge participation; said it was a social group
Treaty of Fort Laramie
Gives the Black Hills to the Sioux, promises that the US army will keep Americans out
Radical Republicans
Hardcore abolitionists; spent entire Civil War mad at Lincoln for not being harsh enough on the South
Evidence
Have to back up history with supporting documents, media, art, etc.
Compromise of 1877
Hayes wins the election if he promises to do 2 things: 1) elect some democrats 2) end Reconstruction and remove Army from the South
John M. Harlan
Held the dissenting opinion in Plessy v. Ferguson. Became a black rights activist in his time after seeing the KKK; used to oppose emancipation, but changed his mind.
Interpretation
History is open to change depending on time, new evidence, etc.
Dawes Act
Homestead Act for American Indians; stop being a nomad, start being a farmer; leads to the US stripping the reservations of over half of their lands
Farmers' Alliance
"The Grange 2.0" 1) get rid of gold standard 2) subtreasury plan 3)bi-racial
Battle of Wounded Knee
(1890) US army massacred over 250 Indians (mainly women and children) in an attempt to stop the Ghost Dance. This is the end of Indian resistance, and there is no more armed conflict between the US and the tribes.
14th Amendment
1) makes civil rights act of 1866 permanent 2) if you deny men the right to vote, your representation can be decreased 3) any oaths taken to protect the US constitution that were broken by joining the COnfederacy, you cannot serve in Congress 4) cannot pay back confederate debts 5) Congress has right to enforce the amendment
Abraham Lincoln
16th President during the Civil War; moderate Republican, wanted to get the South to rejoin the Union without severe punishment
Andrew Johnson
17th president of the US; 1st president to be impeached but not convicted, strongly disliked by Congress, tried to be harsh on the South but ended up being pretty lenient on everyone except rich plantation owners
Homestead Act
1862 gave free land in the West to those who supported the North during the Civil War
Gilded Age
1865-1900; named by Mark Twain; shiny on the outside but worthless on the inside; big business boom
Tenure of Office Act
1867 deemed unconstitutional; Congress prohibits Johnson from firing officials without congressional approval
Enforcement Acts
1870-1871 laws that were created to supress the KKK and other anti-Republican groups; not super effective; did not allow people to wear masks and made harsher punishments for those convicted
15th Amendment
1870; all american men have the right to vote, and that right cannot be denied by any state; made to remind the South of this fact
American Centennial Exposition
1876 Official end of Reconstruction; America's 100th Birthday; northerners no longer care about Reconstruction, but want to look into the future
Battle of Little Big Horn
1876 Sioux defeat and kill entire troop led by Custer
Interstate Commerce Act
1887 gives federal jurisdiction over businesses that cross over state lines (mainly railroads); not effective
Sherman Anti-Trust Act
1890 makes monopolies illegal; poorly worded with many loopholes and not effective
Pullman Strike
1894 railway strike that the militias joined; unsuccessful; led to major wage cuts and many people were fired
Industrial Pirates
1st type of robber barons during the Gilded Age. Predators in the industrial businesses and only sought out for their own financial gains. Did not care about making anything that could last. Jay Gould, etc.
Industrial Statesmen
2nd type of robber barons. They built rather than destroyed, and built huge entreprises that lasted and led to technological advancements during the Gilded Age. Carnegie, Rockefeller, etc.
Freedmen
A person who has been freed from slavery
Coxey's Army
A protest march in DC led by populist Jacob Coxey; mainly unemployed people who marched and wanted federal public works programs to provide jobs. It was broken up by police and completely disregarded.
Civil Rights Act of 1866
Anyone (male) born or naturalized is a U.S. Citizen; gives blacks the right to vote; vetoed by Johnson, overridden by Congress; extended the Freedmen's Bureau
James Longstreet
Confederate general, right hand man to Robert E. Lee, leads all-black police force in New Orleans
Emancipation Proclamation
Declared all slaves free, even in the South
Pullman Sleeping Car
Developed by George M. Pullman; A luxury car with seats that converted into beds for overnight journeys
Ghost Dance
Indian prophet Wavoka from the Paiute tribe had a vision that Indians would regain control of their lands, and that the Creator provided him a dance that would make that happen. It spread among the tribes, leading the massacre at Wounded Knee where the US army killed 250 Indians, mostly women and children.
Jack Wavoka
Indian prophet who created the Ghost Dance
Indian Boarding Schools
Indians were forced to assimilate to Anglo-American Culture; when returned to Reservations, were caught between two worlds
Swing around the Circle Tour
Johnson goes on speaking tour around the North to convince them not to ratify the 14th Amendment; everyone turns against Johnson
Henry B. Brown
Justice who delivered the verdict of Plessy v. Ferguson. Upheld that separate but equal was constitutional
Black Codes
Laws created right after the Civil War in the South to try to limit the rights of Blacks to the point of making them slaves again
10 Percent Plan
Lincoln's plan for allowing the South back into the Union; if 10% of eligible voters in the 1860 election in each state promised to be loyal; no further restitution needed.
Anti-Imperialist
Many opposed the Spanish-American war, such as Mark Twain, Samuel Gompers, and others. They argued it violates the US's anti-colonialist heritage by taking the Philippines, as well as the financial cost and racial inferiority
Homer A. Plessy
Mostly white guy (partially black) who bought a seat ticket in the white section. He was then forced off the train and arrested, and he took his case to court, where the famous Plessy v. Ferguson case established that you could be separated by race if the conditions were equal.
Samuel Tilden
NY democrat who ran in the Election of 1876 on an anti-corruption campaign
Jay Gould
NY robber baron with a financial mind; bought out many companies, mainly newspapers, and harassed people to bankruptcy. Once he gained control of a company, he manipulated it to suit his own personal finance needs and then retire, leaving a broken company in his wake.
James Weaver
Nominee for the populist party; won 4 states in the electoral college and over 1 million voters; showed influence of party and the frustrations of poor Americans.
1892 Election
One of few times where a 3rd party managed to take multiple states and have a significant amount of voters
Populist Party
Party formed in 1892 to represent farmers and laborers. Bi-racial alliance, technically a 3rd party
Freedman's Bureau
Provided services for freedmen during and after the Civil War; find jobs, prevent them from signing exploitative contracts, establish a separate court system, sometimes provided food and shelter, establish schools
Congressional Election of 1866
Radical republicans hold 3/4 of House and Senate (veto-proof congress); Congress fully in charge of Reconstruction
New South
Reconstruction failed to make the south more industrial; still rural with many farmers and the farmers start to get fed up with being mistreated
Rutherford B. Hayes
Republican who ran (and won, kind of) in the Election of 1876 on an anti-corruption and 1-term only campaign
Alfred Thayer Mahan
Sexist; loved war
Sitting Bull
Sioux chief who led and won the Battle of Little Big Horn, tried to flee to Canada but was captured and sent to the reservation
Zitkala-Sa
Sioux woman who was forced into assimilation and later opposed it; hair cut in the style of cowards in her culture
Redemption
Southern democrats return to power during the 1870's; electing democrats to office, taking Ironclad Oath to get back into politics
Corner Stone Speech
Speech by Alexander Stephens that claimed slavery is the corner stone of the country, and that's what it was built for
Second Industrial Revolution
Steel, chemicals, electricity. This is the name for the new wave of more heavy industrialization starting around the 1860s and has Civil War origins
Knights of Labor
Superunion of all races and genders to end the labor disparity; unsuccessful and eventually dwindled in influence
Edmund J. Davis
TX Unionist who fought against Confederacy; elected governor and had Republican ideals
Oran Roberts
TX governor that led them out of the Union, and elected many former confederates to Congress
Las Gorras Blancas
The White Caps in english, Mexican Amercian laborers in the West who were masked night riders who protested the treatment they received from Anglo-Americans.
Context
The circumstances, atmosphere, attitudes, and events surrounding a text. History looks different depending on what time you're looking at it.
Treaty of Medicine Lodge
Treaty in which Southern Plains Indians agreed to move onto reservations in exchange for medicine, supplies, and ability to hunt buffalo on special occasions
Depression of 1893
Triggered when the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad went bankrupt; the stock market crashed, and Europe was already in an economic downturn. Many banks failed and along with them credit. 12% of the workforce unemployed. Became chief political issue. Populist party collapsed.
George A. Custer
US general who led, lost, and died in the Battle of Little Big Horn
Alexander Stephens
Vice President of the confederacy; elected to be a senator for GA despite not having a presidential Pardon and therefore was not a citizen of the US
Chief Joseph
Wants to be treated the same, wants land returned to his tribe, addressed congress in DC and didn't understand why they were promising so many things but nothing never came of it
Ellen Parton
Woman who was a victim of a vicious KKK attack
Whiskey Ring
a scandal, exposed in 1875, involving diversion of tax revenues in a conspiracy among government agents, politicians, whiskey distillers, and distributors.
Grange
an organization made to support poor farmers in the South and West and to get change in policy. They wanted 1) keep low taxes/keep govt small 2) cut out middle man in sales 3) regulate the railroads. They dwindle away, not super successful
J. P. Morgan
banker who invests selectively and supports people who had potential to be successful, and helps failing businesses and fixes them
Social Darwinism
belief that some people in society are better suited for success than others; survival of the fittest; Carnegie and Rockefeller's success fueled this theory
John D. Rockefeller
born poor, founded the Standard Oil Company, started the Trust form of management, developed Horizontal integration
Horizontal Integration
buy out all competitors
Adobe Walls
camps of white buffalo hunters that Quanah Parker and the Comanche attacked
Ranald S. Mackenzie
colonel who fought the Comanche with Indian Scouts and killing the horses; wins the Red River War
Red River War
conflict between US army and Comanches that lasts for around a year; Comanche yield and return to the reservation
Mail-Order Catalog
created by Aaron Montgomery Ward; allowed people out in the West to purchase and receive the same luxuries that they had in the East
Command of the Army Act
deemed unconstitutional; 1867, prevented Johnson from directly talking to overseeing military leaders in the South, can only talk to Commanding General or Sec. of War
Amnesty Act of 1872
done with punishment of southerners, allows all people to vote, leading to republicans being removed from office
Aaron Montgomery-Ward
eastern shop owner who made it easier to buy and receive things in the West via his Mail Order Catalogs and the railroads
Tenant Farming
farming system where people with the materials and tools needed to farm go to a landlord to grow crops on their land and pay them once the crops come in. Still poor, but they can pay back their debts at the end of the season.
Sharecropping
farming system where the farmer has nothing and has to rent out everything from the landlord. Can't pay back debt, get stuck in a cycle of being basically enslaved again.
Exodusters
former slaves who moved West to avoid South and the KKK; formed all-black communities; mainly in KS
Samuel Gompers
founded the American Federation of Labor; skilled cigar roller; against stirkes
Andrew Carnegie
immigrant who saves up enough money to found a steel company, thus monopolizing the steel industry with vertical integration
Convict Lease System
imprisoned blacks (typically on minor offenses) were hired out to private companies to serve their time of pay off their debt. Left black laborers impoverished and virtually enslaved
Carpetbaggers
northerners who moved to the south after the Civil War; smallest group in coalition
Reconstruction Act of 1867
outlines what the South has to do to re-enter Union; Ironclad oath, 5 military districts to rule over south
Vertical Integration
owning the business from any and all angles; cut out the middle man; spend less, lover prices, end competitors; monopoly
Pacific Railroad Act
passed in 1862, finished in 1867; 1st transcontinental railroad
Thomas Edison
patented the lightbulb, changed America's working and social life
Alexander Graham Bell
patented the telephone; real-time business decisions
Robber Barons
people who make money by taking from others; typically refers to big business owners
Depression of 1893
reduced wages, less workers, scaled back production
Great Railroad Strike of 1877
started in Pennsylvania but spanned 10 different states; laborers took control of switch places; eventually broken up by army; led by the Knights of Labor; had wages raised
Laissez Faire Capitalism
the economy works best if left to its own devices; hands -off capitalism
Tenements
thrown-together housing for the working class in urban places; no windows, no privacy, no electricity nor heat; covered in soot; no individual bathrooms; tons of disease and death
American Federation of Labor
white skilled laborers who asked for small negotiations, against strikes
Scalawags
white southerners who decide to work with republicans