Honors US History Unit 4 Test
All of the following were ways to assimilate the Native Americans
All of the Above
What major contradiction existed in white Americans' attempts to assimilate Indians into a common culture shared by all Americans?
America had no unified culture, as religion and class divided even white Americans.
The Gospel of Wealth was written by this successful businessman who owned a large steel corporation.
Andrew Carnegie
Which was the Ellis Island of the West?
Angel Island.
Which event marked the end of the Indian wars?
Battle of Wounded Knee.
Who migrated to Kansas during the Kansas Exodus?
Blacks.
The massive hunting of what animal hurt the Plains Indians?
Buffalo.
After the Civil War, which of the following became a symbol of a life of freedom on the open range?
Cowboys.
Which inventor is responsible for the assembly line being used in the United States?
Ford
All of the following Great Lakes Cities grew into large urban areas because of Industry, except:
Green Bay
What early 1868 action by Andrew Johnson sparked his impeachment by the U.S. House of Representatives?
He allegedly violated the Tenure of Office Act.
Why was the Ghost Dance movement perceived as dangerous by many white Americans?
It represented a complete rejection of American culture
The __________ were a group of senators who took bribes in exchange for creating business favorable legislation
Millionaire's Club
The total or complete control of a service, product or industry that prevents competition
Monopoly
___________ refers to the Gilded Age belief that only the strong should survive and are better than the weak in society
Social Darwinism
Who used the Sherman Antitrust Act to dissolve J. P. Morgan's Northern Securities Company?
Theodore Roosevelt
The Progressive presidents were:
Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson.
True or False: The Dawes Act stripped over 90 million acres of Native American tribal land and redistributed it to white settlers and industrialist.
True
True or False: The objective of the Dawes Act was to assimilate Native American Indians into mainstream US Society by annihilating their cultural and social traditions
True
The first billion-dollar enterprise corporation was:
U.S. Steel.
The Whiskey Ring scandal took place during the administration of:
Ulysses Grant.
Which of the following social groups was NOT heavily involved in the Progressive movement?
Unskilled immigrant workers.
The writer whose work encouraged the passage of the Meat Inspection Act was:
Upton Sinclair.
The Sixteenth Amendment:
authorized Congress to implement a graduated income tax.
The Triangle Shirtwaist fire:
brought in its wake much-needed safety legislation.
The Spanish-American War:
brought the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico under U.S. control.
Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller:
built up giant corporations that dominated their respective markets.
The Social Gospel:
called for an equalization of wealth and power.
A cause not widely championed by Progressives was:
civil rights for blacks.
The Civil Rights Bill of 1866:
defined the rights of American citizens without regard to race.
The Dawes Act of 1887:
divided tribal lands into parcels of land for Indian families.
In the South, the Redeemers:
imposed a new racial order.
After 1900, the campaign for women's suffrage:
included both middle- and working-class women.
Thomas Edison:
invented, among other things, a system for generating and distributing electricity.
For most former slaves, freedom first and foremost meant:
land ownership.
All of the following measures expanded democracy during the Progressive era EXCEPT:
literacy tests and residency requirements.
Most new immigrants who arrived during the early years of the twentieth century:
lived in close-knit communities.
The American working class:
lived in desperate conditions
All of the following factors contributed to explosive economic growth during the Gilded Age EXCEPT:
low tariffs
The Freedmen's Bureau:
made notable achievements in improving African-American education and health care.
The Fourteenth Amendment:
marked the most important change in the U.S. Constitution since the Bill of Rights.
The Progressive movement drew its strength from:
middle-class reformers.
Newspaper and magazine writers who exposed the ills of industrial and urban life, fueling the Progressive movement, were known as:
muckrakers.
Most of those termed "scalawags" during Reconstruction had been:
non-slaveholding white farmers from the southern up-country prior to the Civil War.
The Indian victory at Little Bighorn:
only temporarily delayed the advance of white settlement.
All of the following were used by southern whites to maintain domination over blacks EXCEPT:
outlawing the use of black female domestic workers in white homes
The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882:
prohibited any Chinese from entering the United States.
Between 1890 and 1906, southern state governments and white Southerners eliminated black voting using all of the following EXCEPT:
racial tests.
The __________ made possible the second industrial revolution in America.
railroads
In Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), the Supreme Court:
ruled that "separate but equal" accommodations were constitutional.
As a Progressive president, Woodrow Wilson:
signed into law the Keating-Owen Act.
The Dawes Act of 1887:
sought to break up the tribal system
The Fifteenth Amendment:
sought to guarantee that one could not be denied suffrage rights based on race.
The Enforcement Acts, passed by Congress in 1870 and 1871, were designed to:
stop the activities of terrorist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan.
As a Progressive president, Theodore Roosevelt:
supported the conservation movement.
What did the freedmen request in their "Petition of Committee on Behalf of the Freedmen to Andrew Johnson" in 1865?
the right to purchase a homestead
The theory of Social Darwinism argued that:
the theory of evolution applied to humans, thus explaining why some were rich and some were poor.
Bonanza farms:
typically had thousands of acres of land or more.
Chief Joseph:
wanted freedom for his people, the Nez Percé.
In 1912, New Freedom:
was Woodrow Wilson's campaign pledge that government should renew economic competition with less government intervention.
The Ghost Dance:
was a religious revitalization campaign among Indians, feared by whites.
Sharecropping:
was preferred by African-Americans to gang labor (because they were less subject to supervision).
The election of 1876:
was tainted by claims of fraud in Florida, South Carolina, and Louisiana.
In the nineteenth century, pools, trusts, and mergers were:
ways that manufacturers sought to control the marketplace.
How did industrialization affect the distribution of wealth?
wealth was concentrated in the hands of a few industrialist
By 1890, the majority of Americans:
worked for wages