APUSH Chapter 8
Which of the following historical developments contributed most directly to the market revolution?
The emergence of new forms of transportation
Which of the following describes "the Lowell system" in early nineteenth-century New England?
A plan to promote and expand textile manufacturing activities
Which of the following pieces of historical evidence from the United States census could best be used to support the argument in the excerpt?
Data showing changes in the number of textile mills
Which of the following most directly made possible the ideas described in the excerpt?
Innovations including textile machinery, steam engines, and interchangeable parts
The ideas described in the excerpt contributed most directly to which of the following?
More Americans producing goods for national markets
The expansion of a market economy in the early nineteenth century is reflected in which of the following?
The improvement of transportation and availability of goods
Which of the following most directly contributed to the situation described in the excerpt?
The market revolution
Which of the following developments in the early nineteenth century could best be used as evidence to support the argument in the second paragraph of the excerpt?
The rise of a regional economy based on the production and export of cotton
During the first half of the nineteenth century, some women increasingly "bolster[ed] the household income," as described in the excerpt, by
obtaining positions in textile mills
The Southern economy before the Civil War increasingly
produced more cotton and other crops but did not develop much industry
The National Road was constructed primarily for the purpose of
promoting trade and communication with the Old Northwest
The method of mass production that developed during the nineteenth century was a process that
relied on the use of power-driven machinery
The opening of the Erie Canal in 1825 was important because it
strengthened the ties between the eastern manufacturing and western agricultural regions
In the early 1830's, the majority of workers in the textile mills of Massachusetts were
young unmarried women from rural New England