Deck 17: Industrial Supremacy

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Question
In 1900, the emergence of research laboratories in American corporations

A)occurred as federal funding for research greatly expanded.
B)led to a diversification of research interests.
C)developed similar research goals as in Europe.
D)was deemed unnecessary since so many American university laboratories existed.
E)centralized the sources of research funding.
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Question
In the 1870s, the "internal combustion engine" was developed in

A)Europe.
B)the United States.
C)Asia.
D)Africa.
E)Australia.
Question
A key to Henry Ford's success in mass production of automobiles was

A)the use of welds instead of rivets to speed production.
B)a reduction in the size of his labor force.
C)the use of interchangeable parts.
D)the training of highly skilled workers.
E)his encouragement of labor unions in organizing his factories.
Question
The first significant oil production in the United States occurred in

A)Ohio.
B)Texas.
C)California.
D)Michigan.
E)Pennsylvania.
Question
Who among the following developed the first telephone with commercial capacity?

A)Cyrus Field
B)Charles F.Brush
C)Alexander Graham Bell
D)Guglielmo Marconi
E)Samuel Morse
Question
In the late nineteenth century, the needs of the American steel industry directly contributed to the further development of all of the following EXCEPT

A)the automobile industry.
B)steam engine technology.
C)freighters on the Great Lakes.
D)the Pennsylvania Railroad.
E)the oil industry.
Question
The open-hearth process of making steel

A)was replaced by the Bessemer process.
B)was first done in the United States.
C)produced small quantities of high-grade steel.
D)made the production of large dimension pieces possible.
E)was ridiculed by established steelmakers such as Abram Hewitt.
Question
Orville and Wilbur Wright's first successful airplane flight in 1903

A)took place near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.
B)used a battery-powered engine.
C)lasted just over one minute.
D)did not in fact take off by itself.
E)All the answers are correct.
Question
Who among the following was NOT significantly associated with the steel industry?

A)Henry Bessemer
B)Andrew Carnegie
C)J.Pierpont Morgan
D)Henry Clay Frick
E)James J.Hill
Question
In the late nineteenth century, industry in the United States

A)obtained the bulk of its raw materials from Central and South America.
B)faced a growing shortage of laborers.
C)saw the federal government eager to assist in its growth.
D)lacked adequate capital to expand the domestic market.
E)suffered from an entrepreneurial deficit.
Question
The process of making steel developed by Henry Bessemer

A)included blowing air through molten iron.
B)involved adding ingredients to molten iron.
C)was also developed by an American, William Kelly.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Question
During the late nineteenth century, the growth of large corporations was helped by

A)sales of company stock to the public.
B)"limited liability" laws.
C)the realization that great ventures could not be financed by any single person.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Question
In the early twentieth century, a principle goal of "Taylorism" was to

A)make industrial workers more independent in carrying out their jobs.
B)emphasize the importance of craft and quality in the workplace.
C)encourage industrial workers to act creatively to solve production problems.
D)create a large labor force of highly skilled workers.
E)organize industrial production into many simple tasks.
Question
In 1917, automobile production in the United States

A)was the nation's largest industry.
B)saw Charles and Frank Duryea build the first practical gasoline-powered car.
C)saw five million cars on American roads.
D)was almost nonexistent.
E)finally became feasible thanks to the innovations of Henry Ford.
Question
Prior to the Civil War, the steel industry in the United States

A)boomed as a result of the expanding United States Navy.
B)emerged as an important supplier for railroad construction.
C)largely replaced the iron industry.
D)resulted in the construction of large commercial ocean freighters.
E)barely developed at all.
Question
The business structure of Carnegie Steel was a good example of

A)vertical integration.
B)horizontal integration.
C)diagonal integration.
D)central integration.
E)vertical and horizontal integration.
Question
In 1929, the base price of a Ford Model T was

A)$290.
B)$470.
C)$630.
D)$950.
E)$1120.
Question
All of the following cities became important centers for steel production EXCEPT

A)Pittsburgh.
B)Chicago.
C)Atlanta.
D)Birmingham.
E)Detroit.
Question
Which of the following statements about the American railroad industry in the late nineteenth century is FALSE?

A)It included the nation's largest businesses.
B)It saw Congress outlaw railroad combinations.
C)It relied partially on government subsidies for its growth.
D)It was among the first to adopt new corporate forms of organization.
E)It became a national symbol of concentrated economic power.
Question
In the United States, the steel industry first emerged in

A)Pennsylvania and Ohio.
B)Vermont and Massachusetts.
C)Illinois and Indiana.
D)New Jersey and New York.
E)Alabama and Mississippi.
Question
In the late nineteenth century, Social Darwinists argued that people who failed economically in the United States did so because

A)they had not received a college education.
B)racism and other prejudices held them back.
C)they had poor individual character.
D)business wealth was concentrated into the hands of a few.
E)they were not members of "the Elect."
Question
The late nineteenth century sociologist Lester Frank Ward

A)suggested that industrialism was creating "Organization Men."
B)believed that government intervention in society would be harmful.
C)sought to apply Darwinian laws to human society.
D)argued that people could do little to alter the economic stratification of society.
E)believed that human intelligence, not natural selection, shaped society.
Question
The business structure of Standard Oil was a good example of

A)vertical integration.
B)horizontal integration.
C)diagonal integration.
D)central integration.
E)vertical and horizontal integration.
Question
In the late nineteenth century, Daniel De Leon

A)created the ideas of laissez-faire.
B)founded the Socialist Labor Party in the United States.
C)argued that large corporations were ultimately of benefit to American workers.
D)led the American Federation of Labor.
E)became a strong advocate of Taylorism.
Question
According to the ideas expressed by Andrew Carnegie in his The Gospel of Wealth,

A)successful businessmen had every right to live as they pleased.
B)only pious Americans would prosper.
C)it was the "Christian duty" of every American to become wealthy.
D)the rich had great responsibilities to society.
E)the wealthy had earned their money through God's blessing alone.
Question
During the late nineteenth century, child labor in the United States

A)increased significantly.
B)was unregulated by laws in most states.
C)saw more children working in factories than in agriculture.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Question
Edward Bellamy's 1888 book, Looking Backward,

A)described an America engaged in a second civil war due to concentrated wealth.
B)promoted the virtues of economic competition.
C)depicted a world presided over by an industrialist-king modeled on J.P.Morgan.
D)accepted the necessity of class divisions in a capitalist economy.
E)imagined an ideal future in which all corporations were combined into one great trust.
Question
In the American business community at the end of the nineteenth century,

A)one percent of businesses controlled one-third of all manufacturing.
B)almost all corporations had achieved stability through "pool" arrangements.
C)federal reforms of corporations had ended the most predatory business practices.
D)most states had made it illegal for one corporation to buy another one.
E)rampant competitiveness and labor shortages helped to keep prices down and wages up.
Question
By 1900, the average yearly income of American workers

A)was about $600.
B)allowed most workers to maintain a reasonably comfortable standard of living.
C)remained generally unaffected by economic boom-and-bust cycles.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Question
During the 1870s and 1880s, most of the immigrants to the United States came from

A)Italy and the Slavic countries.
B)Great Britain and northern Europe.
C)Poland, Hungary and Russia.
D)Japan and China.
E)Mexico.
Question
In the late nineteenth century, the first and most important promoter of Social Darwinism was

A)Henry George.
B)Horatio Alger.
C)Russell Conwell.
D)Jacob Riis.
E)Herbert Spencer.
Question
To John D.Rockefeller, the great "curse" of business in the late nineteenth century was

A)government regulation.
B)cutthroat competition.
C)the income tax.
D)the corporate tax.
E)the chronic labor shortage.
Question
In the late nineteenth century, the social writer Henry George argued in favor of

A)taxing only the richest Americans.
B)a single land tax to replace all other taxes.
C)government efforts to increase land values.
D)heavier taxes on the raw materials of industry.
E)abolishing all taxes.
Question
Until its repeal in 1885, the Labor Contract Law

A)discouraged immigration from non-European countries.
B)prevented the formation of labor unions.
C)put many new immigrants in debt to American businessmen.
D)was an attempt to reform American business practices.
E)mandated that each worker sign an individual contract with a company.
Question
In his books, Horatio Alger

A)offered true accounts of poor Americans who had become wealthy.
B)took issue critical with the ideas of Social Darwinism.
C)emphasized the value of personal character in business.
D)criticized child labor in American industry.
E)argued that wealth and privilege were ultimately hollow achievements.
Question
The social theory of Social Darwinism

A)argued the new industrial economy was limiting the potential for individual wealth.
B)contended that ruthless corruption may be necessary in the attainment of wealth.
C)was created by Charles Darwin to explain industrial economies.
D)promoted the idea that capitalism offered all people a chance for great wealth.
E)argued that it behooved industrial titans to spread their wealth to the lower classes.
Question
The Molly Maguires were a militant

A)offshoot of the Knights of Labor.
B)anti-immigration organization.
C)woman suffrage organization.
D)anarchist group.
E)labor union in the coal industry.
Question
In 1900, in regards to the work conditions in American factories,

A)workers generally controlled the pace of production.
B)laborers could expect to work at least sixty hours a week.
C)job security for industrial workers had significantly increased since 1865.
D)while safety conditions were poor, mechanization reduced the overall rate of accidents.
E)first-generation workers generally had little trouble adjusting to the nature of industrial labor.
Question
In the late nineteenth century, most American business millionaires

A)railed against the implications of Social Darwinism.
B)came from financially humble origins.
C)were living examples of "self-made men."
D)had made their fortune in the railroad industry.
E)began their careers from positions of wealth and privilege.
Question
In the late nineteenth century, due to the growth of industrial capitalism, American workers

A)saw a rise in their standard of living.
B)experienced a loss in their control over their own work.
C)were forced to contend with arduous and dangerous working conditions.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Question
Eugene Debs played a leading role in what labor event?

A)the Homestead strike
B)the Pullman strike
C)the Haymarket Square riot
D)the Railroad strike of 1877
E)All the answers are correct.
Question
Which of the following events did NOT occur during the Homestead strike of 1892?

A)Henry Frick shut down the plant in an attempt to destroy the Amalgamated union.
B)The entire Pennsylvania National Guard was ordered to protect strikebreakers.
C)Hundred of guards hired by Homestead were defeated in a deadly battle with strikers.
D)One radical made a failed attempt to assassinate Henry Clay Frick.
E)The Amalgamated trade union won the strike.
Question
At its height in 1886, the Knights of Labor were led by

A)Uriah S.Stephens.
B)Eugene Debs.
C)Henry Clay Frick.
D)Terence V.Powderly.
E)John Peter Altgeld.
Question
During the late nineteenth century, anarchists in the United States

A)were relatively peaceful.
B)were linked with violence and terrorism in the public mind.
C)became tied to the labor movement in the public mind.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Question
In what industry did the Homestead strike of 1892 occur?

A)steel
B)railroad
C)meatpacking
D)coal
E)oil
Question
"Scientific management" was seen to be a way to increase the decision-making abilities of employees in the workplace.
Question
The Haymarket Square Riot of 1886

A)saw public outrage over the police firing into a crowd of workers.
B)resulted in the conviction and execution of several anarchists.
C)took place in Indianapolis.
D)resulted in a strike at the McCormick Harvester Company.
E)proved the catalyst for several wide-ranging labor reforms.
Question
In the late nineteenth century, organized labor failed to make great gains for all of the following reasons EXCEPT

A)tensions between ethnic and racial groups which divided the work force.
B)labor unions which faced powerful and wealthy corporations.
C)geographical mobility which served to dilute institutional ties and class consciousness.
D)major labor organizations which represented only a small percentage of the industrial work force.
E)state and federal laws to protect the rights of workers which did not exist.
Question
The Pullman strike of 1894 began when George Pullman, owner of the company,

A)ordered rail workers to move into company-owned housing.
B)referred to workers as his "children."
C)cut wages by twenty-five percent due to a slumping economy.
D)refused to implement an eight-hour work day.
E)began hiring African-American workers in his factories.
Question
The great railroad strike of 1877

A)began in the West and spread east.
B)saw the federal government refuse to intervene.
C)was launched in response to a wage cut.
D)saw organized labor gain its first major victory in the United States.
E)resulted in only two deaths around the country.
Question
Henry Ford built the first gasoline-driven motor vehicle in America.
Question
The Pullman strike of 1894

A)saw the president of the United States order federal troops to break the strike.
B)was ultimately successful for the strikers.
C)had little effect on rail transportation throughout the nation.
D)ended when George Pullman dropped his demand that workers live in company housing.
E)ended when Governor John Peter Altgeld called out the militia to protect employers.
Question
Samuel Gompers was the leader of the

A)American Federation of Labor.
B)Molly Maguires.
C)Knights of Labor.
D)Congress of Industrial Organization.
E)American Railway Union.
Question
Carnegie Steel was a good example of vertical integration.
Question
The Knights of Labor

A)was primarily a trade union.
B)did not allow women to join.
C)began as a secret fraternal organization.
D)focused its efforts on improving wages and reducing hours.
E)tried in particular to enlist support for their cause from lawyers.
Question
The American oil industry emerged in the late nineteenth century largely in response to the needs of the steel industry.
Question
The significant use of air power in World War I quickly led to the development of commercial air flights.
Question
By 1900, electric power was becoming commonplace in urban areas.
Question
America's rise to industrial supremacy was not as sudden as has been suggested.
Question
The open-hearth process made possible the production of steel in great quantities and large dimensions.
Question
The economy began to fluctuate rapidly beginning in 1873.
Question
Henry George sought to do away with social ills by levying a "single tax" on corporate profits.
Question
Horatio Alger spoke out against child labor in his novels.
Question
Social Darwinism was an ideology that had its critics, but it did have a lot to do with the realities of the late nineteenth-century corporate economy.
Question
Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company was an example of a combination of horizontal and vertical integration.
Question
The history of American business organization saw the "pool" replace the "trust."
Question
The new rationale for capitalism in the late nineteenth century rested on an older ideology of individualism.
Question
Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner could both be called Social Darwinists.
Question
Andrew Carnegie's The Gospel of Wealth promoted philanthropy by the rich.
Question
Most of the late nineteenth-century business tycoons began their careers in poverty or lower class circumstances.
Question
Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward discovered a utopian world in eighteenth-century America.
Question
The Knights of Labor accepted both the eight-hour day and the wage system.
Question
Social Darwinism was designed to eliminate competition in the marketplace.
Question
Lester Frank Ward was a sociologist who rejected applying Darwinian laws to human society.
Question
In the 1870s, most immigrants to the United States came from southern Europe.
Question
Congress's decision in 1885 to abolish the Labor Contract Law was a victory for labor.
Question
At the end of the nineteenth century, the average income of an American worker was somewhat higher than the minimum required to maintain a reasonable level of comfort.
Question
Neither Henry George nor Edward Bellamy was an advocate of revolution.
Question
By 1900, factory work in the United States required ever-increasing levels of skill.
Question
The great railroad strike of 1877 was put down by both state militias and federal troops.
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Deck 17: Industrial Supremacy
1
In 1900, the emergence of research laboratories in American corporations

A)occurred as federal funding for research greatly expanded.
B)led to a diversification of research interests.
C)developed similar research goals as in Europe.
D)was deemed unnecessary since so many American university laboratories existed.
E)centralized the sources of research funding.
led to a diversification of research interests.
2
In the 1870s, the "internal combustion engine" was developed in

A)Europe.
B)the United States.
C)Asia.
D)Africa.
E)Australia.
Europe.
3
A key to Henry Ford's success in mass production of automobiles was

A)the use of welds instead of rivets to speed production.
B)a reduction in the size of his labor force.
C)the use of interchangeable parts.
D)the training of highly skilled workers.
E)his encouragement of labor unions in organizing his factories.
the use of interchangeable parts.
4
The first significant oil production in the United States occurred in

A)Ohio.
B)Texas.
C)California.
D)Michigan.
E)Pennsylvania.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Who among the following developed the first telephone with commercial capacity?

A)Cyrus Field
B)Charles F.Brush
C)Alexander Graham Bell
D)Guglielmo Marconi
E)Samuel Morse
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
In the late nineteenth century, the needs of the American steel industry directly contributed to the further development of all of the following EXCEPT

A)the automobile industry.
B)steam engine technology.
C)freighters on the Great Lakes.
D)the Pennsylvania Railroad.
E)the oil industry.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The open-hearth process of making steel

A)was replaced by the Bessemer process.
B)was first done in the United States.
C)produced small quantities of high-grade steel.
D)made the production of large dimension pieces possible.
E)was ridiculed by established steelmakers such as Abram Hewitt.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Orville and Wilbur Wright's first successful airplane flight in 1903

A)took place near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.
B)used a battery-powered engine.
C)lasted just over one minute.
D)did not in fact take off by itself.
E)All the answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Who among the following was NOT significantly associated with the steel industry?

A)Henry Bessemer
B)Andrew Carnegie
C)J.Pierpont Morgan
D)Henry Clay Frick
E)James J.Hill
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
In the late nineteenth century, industry in the United States

A)obtained the bulk of its raw materials from Central and South America.
B)faced a growing shortage of laborers.
C)saw the federal government eager to assist in its growth.
D)lacked adequate capital to expand the domestic market.
E)suffered from an entrepreneurial deficit.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The process of making steel developed by Henry Bessemer

A)included blowing air through molten iron.
B)involved adding ingredients to molten iron.
C)was also developed by an American, William Kelly.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
During the late nineteenth century, the growth of large corporations was helped by

A)sales of company stock to the public.
B)"limited liability" laws.
C)the realization that great ventures could not be financed by any single person.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In the early twentieth century, a principle goal of "Taylorism" was to

A)make industrial workers more independent in carrying out their jobs.
B)emphasize the importance of craft and quality in the workplace.
C)encourage industrial workers to act creatively to solve production problems.
D)create a large labor force of highly skilled workers.
E)organize industrial production into many simple tasks.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In 1917, automobile production in the United States

A)was the nation's largest industry.
B)saw Charles and Frank Duryea build the first practical gasoline-powered car.
C)saw five million cars on American roads.
D)was almost nonexistent.
E)finally became feasible thanks to the innovations of Henry Ford.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Prior to the Civil War, the steel industry in the United States

A)boomed as a result of the expanding United States Navy.
B)emerged as an important supplier for railroad construction.
C)largely replaced the iron industry.
D)resulted in the construction of large commercial ocean freighters.
E)barely developed at all.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The business structure of Carnegie Steel was a good example of

A)vertical integration.
B)horizontal integration.
C)diagonal integration.
D)central integration.
E)vertical and horizontal integration.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In 1929, the base price of a Ford Model T was

A)$290.
B)$470.
C)$630.
D)$950.
E)$1120.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
All of the following cities became important centers for steel production EXCEPT

A)Pittsburgh.
B)Chicago.
C)Atlanta.
D)Birmingham.
E)Detroit.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which of the following statements about the American railroad industry in the late nineteenth century is FALSE?

A)It included the nation's largest businesses.
B)It saw Congress outlaw railroad combinations.
C)It relied partially on government subsidies for its growth.
D)It was among the first to adopt new corporate forms of organization.
E)It became a national symbol of concentrated economic power.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In the United States, the steel industry first emerged in

A)Pennsylvania and Ohio.
B)Vermont and Massachusetts.
C)Illinois and Indiana.
D)New Jersey and New York.
E)Alabama and Mississippi.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
In the late nineteenth century, Social Darwinists argued that people who failed economically in the United States did so because

A)they had not received a college education.
B)racism and other prejudices held them back.
C)they had poor individual character.
D)business wealth was concentrated into the hands of a few.
E)they were not members of "the Elect."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The late nineteenth century sociologist Lester Frank Ward

A)suggested that industrialism was creating "Organization Men."
B)believed that government intervention in society would be harmful.
C)sought to apply Darwinian laws to human society.
D)argued that people could do little to alter the economic stratification of society.
E)believed that human intelligence, not natural selection, shaped society.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The business structure of Standard Oil was a good example of

A)vertical integration.
B)horizontal integration.
C)diagonal integration.
D)central integration.
E)vertical and horizontal integration.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
In the late nineteenth century, Daniel De Leon

A)created the ideas of laissez-faire.
B)founded the Socialist Labor Party in the United States.
C)argued that large corporations were ultimately of benefit to American workers.
D)led the American Federation of Labor.
E)became a strong advocate of Taylorism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
According to the ideas expressed by Andrew Carnegie in his The Gospel of Wealth,

A)successful businessmen had every right to live as they pleased.
B)only pious Americans would prosper.
C)it was the "Christian duty" of every American to become wealthy.
D)the rich had great responsibilities to society.
E)the wealthy had earned their money through God's blessing alone.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
During the late nineteenth century, child labor in the United States

A)increased significantly.
B)was unregulated by laws in most states.
C)saw more children working in factories than in agriculture.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Edward Bellamy's 1888 book, Looking Backward,

A)described an America engaged in a second civil war due to concentrated wealth.
B)promoted the virtues of economic competition.
C)depicted a world presided over by an industrialist-king modeled on J.P.Morgan.
D)accepted the necessity of class divisions in a capitalist economy.
E)imagined an ideal future in which all corporations were combined into one great trust.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In the American business community at the end of the nineteenth century,

A)one percent of businesses controlled one-third of all manufacturing.
B)almost all corporations had achieved stability through "pool" arrangements.
C)federal reforms of corporations had ended the most predatory business practices.
D)most states had made it illegal for one corporation to buy another one.
E)rampant competitiveness and labor shortages helped to keep prices down and wages up.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
By 1900, the average yearly income of American workers

A)was about $600.
B)allowed most workers to maintain a reasonably comfortable standard of living.
C)remained generally unaffected by economic boom-and-bust cycles.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
During the 1870s and 1880s, most of the immigrants to the United States came from

A)Italy and the Slavic countries.
B)Great Britain and northern Europe.
C)Poland, Hungary and Russia.
D)Japan and China.
E)Mexico.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
In the late nineteenth century, the first and most important promoter of Social Darwinism was

A)Henry George.
B)Horatio Alger.
C)Russell Conwell.
D)Jacob Riis.
E)Herbert Spencer.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
To John D.Rockefeller, the great "curse" of business in the late nineteenth century was

A)government regulation.
B)cutthroat competition.
C)the income tax.
D)the corporate tax.
E)the chronic labor shortage.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 123 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
In the late nineteenth century, the social writer Henry George argued in favor of

A)taxing only the richest Americans.
B)a single land tax to replace all other taxes.
C)government efforts to increase land values.
D)heavier taxes on the raw materials of industry.
E)abolishing all taxes.
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34
Until its repeal in 1885, the Labor Contract Law

A)discouraged immigration from non-European countries.
B)prevented the formation of labor unions.
C)put many new immigrants in debt to American businessmen.
D)was an attempt to reform American business practices.
E)mandated that each worker sign an individual contract with a company.
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35
In his books, Horatio Alger

A)offered true accounts of poor Americans who had become wealthy.
B)took issue critical with the ideas of Social Darwinism.
C)emphasized the value of personal character in business.
D)criticized child labor in American industry.
E)argued that wealth and privilege were ultimately hollow achievements.
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36
The social theory of Social Darwinism

A)argued the new industrial economy was limiting the potential for individual wealth.
B)contended that ruthless corruption may be necessary in the attainment of wealth.
C)was created by Charles Darwin to explain industrial economies.
D)promoted the idea that capitalism offered all people a chance for great wealth.
E)argued that it behooved industrial titans to spread their wealth to the lower classes.
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37
The Molly Maguires were a militant

A)offshoot of the Knights of Labor.
B)anti-immigration organization.
C)woman suffrage organization.
D)anarchist group.
E)labor union in the coal industry.
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38
In 1900, in regards to the work conditions in American factories,

A)workers generally controlled the pace of production.
B)laborers could expect to work at least sixty hours a week.
C)job security for industrial workers had significantly increased since 1865.
D)while safety conditions were poor, mechanization reduced the overall rate of accidents.
E)first-generation workers generally had little trouble adjusting to the nature of industrial labor.
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39
In the late nineteenth century, most American business millionaires

A)railed against the implications of Social Darwinism.
B)came from financially humble origins.
C)were living examples of "self-made men."
D)had made their fortune in the railroad industry.
E)began their careers from positions of wealth and privilege.
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40
In the late nineteenth century, due to the growth of industrial capitalism, American workers

A)saw a rise in their standard of living.
B)experienced a loss in their control over their own work.
C)were forced to contend with arduous and dangerous working conditions.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
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41
Eugene Debs played a leading role in what labor event?

A)the Homestead strike
B)the Pullman strike
C)the Haymarket Square riot
D)the Railroad strike of 1877
E)All the answers are correct.
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42
Which of the following events did NOT occur during the Homestead strike of 1892?

A)Henry Frick shut down the plant in an attempt to destroy the Amalgamated union.
B)The entire Pennsylvania National Guard was ordered to protect strikebreakers.
C)Hundred of guards hired by Homestead were defeated in a deadly battle with strikers.
D)One radical made a failed attempt to assassinate Henry Clay Frick.
E)The Amalgamated trade union won the strike.
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43
At its height in 1886, the Knights of Labor were led by

A)Uriah S.Stephens.
B)Eugene Debs.
C)Henry Clay Frick.
D)Terence V.Powderly.
E)John Peter Altgeld.
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44
During the late nineteenth century, anarchists in the United States

A)were relatively peaceful.
B)were linked with violence and terrorism in the public mind.
C)became tied to the labor movement in the public mind.
D)All the answers are correct.
E)None of the answers are correct.
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45
In what industry did the Homestead strike of 1892 occur?

A)steel
B)railroad
C)meatpacking
D)coal
E)oil
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46
"Scientific management" was seen to be a way to increase the decision-making abilities of employees in the workplace.
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47
The Haymarket Square Riot of 1886

A)saw public outrage over the police firing into a crowd of workers.
B)resulted in the conviction and execution of several anarchists.
C)took place in Indianapolis.
D)resulted in a strike at the McCormick Harvester Company.
E)proved the catalyst for several wide-ranging labor reforms.
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48
In the late nineteenth century, organized labor failed to make great gains for all of the following reasons EXCEPT

A)tensions between ethnic and racial groups which divided the work force.
B)labor unions which faced powerful and wealthy corporations.
C)geographical mobility which served to dilute institutional ties and class consciousness.
D)major labor organizations which represented only a small percentage of the industrial work force.
E)state and federal laws to protect the rights of workers which did not exist.
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49
The Pullman strike of 1894 began when George Pullman, owner of the company,

A)ordered rail workers to move into company-owned housing.
B)referred to workers as his "children."
C)cut wages by twenty-five percent due to a slumping economy.
D)refused to implement an eight-hour work day.
E)began hiring African-American workers in his factories.
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50
The great railroad strike of 1877

A)began in the West and spread east.
B)saw the federal government refuse to intervene.
C)was launched in response to a wage cut.
D)saw organized labor gain its first major victory in the United States.
E)resulted in only two deaths around the country.
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51
Henry Ford built the first gasoline-driven motor vehicle in America.
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52
The Pullman strike of 1894

A)saw the president of the United States order federal troops to break the strike.
B)was ultimately successful for the strikers.
C)had little effect on rail transportation throughout the nation.
D)ended when George Pullman dropped his demand that workers live in company housing.
E)ended when Governor John Peter Altgeld called out the militia to protect employers.
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53
Samuel Gompers was the leader of the

A)American Federation of Labor.
B)Molly Maguires.
C)Knights of Labor.
D)Congress of Industrial Organization.
E)American Railway Union.
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54
Carnegie Steel was a good example of vertical integration.
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55
The Knights of Labor

A)was primarily a trade union.
B)did not allow women to join.
C)began as a secret fraternal organization.
D)focused its efforts on improving wages and reducing hours.
E)tried in particular to enlist support for their cause from lawyers.
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56
The American oil industry emerged in the late nineteenth century largely in response to the needs of the steel industry.
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57
The significant use of air power in World War I quickly led to the development of commercial air flights.
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58
By 1900, electric power was becoming commonplace in urban areas.
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59
America's rise to industrial supremacy was not as sudden as has been suggested.
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60
The open-hearth process made possible the production of steel in great quantities and large dimensions.
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61
The economy began to fluctuate rapidly beginning in 1873.
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62
Henry George sought to do away with social ills by levying a "single tax" on corporate profits.
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63
Horatio Alger spoke out against child labor in his novels.
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64
Social Darwinism was an ideology that had its critics, but it did have a lot to do with the realities of the late nineteenth-century corporate economy.
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65
Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company was an example of a combination of horizontal and vertical integration.
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66
The history of American business organization saw the "pool" replace the "trust."
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67
The new rationale for capitalism in the late nineteenth century rested on an older ideology of individualism.
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68
Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner could both be called Social Darwinists.
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69
Andrew Carnegie's The Gospel of Wealth promoted philanthropy by the rich.
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70
Most of the late nineteenth-century business tycoons began their careers in poverty or lower class circumstances.
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71
Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward discovered a utopian world in eighteenth-century America.
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72
The Knights of Labor accepted both the eight-hour day and the wage system.
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73
Social Darwinism was designed to eliminate competition in the marketplace.
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74
Lester Frank Ward was a sociologist who rejected applying Darwinian laws to human society.
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75
In the 1870s, most immigrants to the United States came from southern Europe.
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76
Congress's decision in 1885 to abolish the Labor Contract Law was a victory for labor.
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77
At the end of the nineteenth century, the average income of an American worker was somewhat higher than the minimum required to maintain a reasonable level of comfort.
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78
Neither Henry George nor Edward Bellamy was an advocate of revolution.
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79
By 1900, factory work in the United States required ever-increasing levels of skill.
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80
The great railroad strike of 1877 was put down by both state militias and federal troops.
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