Deck 23: Making the World Over: the Progressive ERA

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Question
The phrase "Square Deal" is associated with Theodore Roosevelt.
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Question
The author of The Shame of the Cities was:

A) George F. Baer
B) Ray Stannard Baker
C) Henry Demarest Lloyd
D) Lincoln Steffens
E) Ida M. Tarbell
Question
Theodore Roosevelt took a strong, activist approach to the presidency.
Question
Theodore Roosevelt initiated more anti-trust suits than any president in history.
Question
William Howard Taft finished second in the presidential election of 1912.
Question
Woodrow Wilson was a minister's son who grew up in the South.
Question
When Standard Oil refused to turn over its records, the government brought an anti-trust suit that resulted in the breakup of the huge company in 1911.
Question
Federal money for farm demonstration agents was approved in the Adamson Act.
Question
WCTU:

A) was the first radio station in America
B) stood for Women's Christian Temperance Union
C) was the radio station Roosevelt made famous while president
D) stood for Western Colorado Teamsters Union
E) was the abbreviation of Western Connecticut University, where Wilson got his start as a professor
Question
Theodore Roosevelt gave muckrakers their name.
Question
Progressives generally believed government should not interfere with big business.
Question
The Underwood-Simmons Tariff created the first regular federal income tax.
Question
The muckrakers saw their primary objective as:

A) converting Americans to socialism
B) exposing social problems to the public
C) increasing the circulation of sensationalist newspapers
D) proposing detailed legislation
E) destroying the Republican party
Question
William H. Taft achieved the most significant tariff reduction of any progressive president.
Question
Ida M. Tarbell's revelations in her History of the Standard Oil Company (1904) helped convince the Supreme Court in 1911:

A) to rule that the company must be dismantled
B) to dismiss the suit against it
C) to rule that Standard Oil was the model for all future companies
D) to postpone its ruling
E) it lacked jurisdiction in all cases against the company
Question
Wilson was a weak president who trusted Congress to adopt the proper policies.
Question
Woodrow Wilson was elected president in 1908.
Question
Theodore Roosevelt considered the Federal Trade Commission to be the cornerstone of his program for big business.
Question
One of Taft's major issues became his support for high tariffs.
Question
Among the varied sources of progressivism were populism and the Mugwumps.
Question
Jane Addams called the impulse to found settlement houses:

A) "a woman's response to alcoholism and abuse"
B) "urban enlightenment"
C) "the upper-class prayer answered"
D) "my duty as a mother to my children's future"
E) "Christian humanitarianism"
Question
During the coal strike of 1902:

A) President Theodore Roosevelt won support for his use of the "big stick" against corporations
B) thousands of striking miners marched on Washington, starting a riot that lasted three days
C) President Theodore Roosevelt threatened to use the army to force strikers back to work
D) arbitrators awarded the miners all their demands
E) more than 800 miners and their families died in the Rockies
Question
The Hepburn Act of 1906:

A) was the first federal law regulating labor standards
B) said that coal miners were required to be paid in cash
C) in effect outlawed the Northern Securities Company
D) regulated the meatpacking industry
E) authorized the Interstate Commerce Commission to set maximum rates for railroads
Question
Frederick W. Taylor:

A) was an Oregon reformer responsible for many progressive measures enacted there
B) wrote The Principles of Scientific Management
C) was the progressive editor of Arena
D) was founder of the National Child Labor Committee
E) authored the bill on reclamation for the western states
Question
The commission plan of city government was first adopted in:

A) Atlanta, Georgia
B) Durham, North Carolina
C) Galveston, Texas
D) Springfield, Missouri
E) Columbia, South Carolina
Question
Which of the following statements regarding the coal strike of 1902 is NOT true?

A) The coal strike ended on October 23.
B) In 1902, Roosevelt threatened to take over coal mines in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
C) UWA leaders called mine owners "wooden headed."
D) Roosevelt once bellowed that "the Constitution is more important than coal!"
E) the United Mine Workers (UMW) walked off the job in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Question
The title of the novel that described the terrible conditions of the meat-packing industry was:

A) Chicago
B) The Great American Fraud
C) The Jungle
D) Maggie
E) How the Other Half Lives
Question
In the case of Lochner v. New York, the Supreme Court:

A) upheld a Utah law limiting miners to eight-hour workdays
B) ordered the breakup of the "beef trust"
C) ordered the breakup of the American Tobacco Company
D) voided a state-legislated ten-hour day because it violated workers' "liberty of contract"
E) said that a "death tax" (inheritance tax) was illegal
Question
Theodore Roosevelt's close friend Gifford Pinchot was:

A) the president's chief speechwriter
B) a strict prohibitionist who pushed for the Seventeenth Amendment
C) one of the most famous muckrakers
D) the attorney general who broke up the Northern Securities Company
E) a forestry expert and leading conservationist
Question
The originator of the "Wisconsin idea" of efficient government was:

A) Lewis Hine
B) Hiram Johnson
C) Florence Kelley
D) Robert M. La Follette
E) Louis Brandeis
Question
The National Child Labor Committee pushed:

A) to allow as many immigrant children to enter the workforce as possible
B) to open more technical schools
C) federal legislation allowing children to work more hours
D) for laws prohibiting the employment of young children
E) for mandatory scholarships for employees' children
Question
George Bird Grinnell is associated with:

A) the Audubon Society
B) writing Man and Nature
C) the anti-conservation movement
D) San Francisco
E) the Bureau of Reclamation
Question
In 1917, a Prohibition amendment to the Constitution:

A) passed Congress, then went to the states for ratification
B) was ratified by the states as the Eighteenth Amendment
C) was overturned by the Twenty-first Amendment
D) failed passage by Congress, but was ratified by the states anyway
E) passed Congress but was vetoed by the president
Question
Congress established the Bureau of Corporations:

A) to monitor the activities of interstate corporations
B) to encourage the development of American industry
C) to educate businesses about tariff standards
D) to keep an eye on the lobbying efforts in Congress
E) to educate businesses about new interpretations of the Fourteenth Amendment
Question
Frances Willard lobbied:

A) for child labor laws
B) for dams to be built in the West
C) for the eight-hour workday
D) for women to become ministers
E) for Roosevelt to appoint him to the Supreme Court
Question
In the area of conservation, Theodore Roosevelt:

A) believed strongly that natural resources should be preserved but felt that this was a matter for state, not federal, action
B) angered many conservationists by his appointment of Gifford Pinchot, a businessman with no experience in conservation, as head of the Division of Forestry
C) used the Forest Reserve Act to withdraw over 170 million acres of timberland from logging
D) vetoed a bill authorizing a National Conservation Commission
E) angered western hunters by closing much of the western public lands
Question
At the Triangle Shirtwaist Company in 1911:

A) a strike resulted in the intervention of federal troops
B) Frederick Taylor first applied his scientific management principles
C) workers died as a result of a fire
D) the labor force was found to be made up entirely of children
E) Samuel Gompers first developed his idea for what became the Hepburn Act
Question
This company refused to turn over its records to the government, leading to a suit and the breakup of the company in 1911:

A) Ford Motorcoach
B) Standard Oil
C) Duke Tobacco
D) United States Steel
E) International Harvester
Question
Which of the following best describes the method used by most progressives to solve the problem of economic power and its abuses?

A) adopt a socialist program of public ownership
B) follow the principles of laissez-faire government
C) regulate big business
D) allow business to work out its own destiny
E) lower taxes so that companies would raise wages
Question
Progressives supported all of the following as measures to democratize government EXCEPT:

A) the initiative
B) the referendum
C) the party primary
D) the poll tax
E) the popular election of senators
Question
Which candidate was shot during the 1912 presidential campaign?

A) Eugene V. Debs
B) Theodore Roosevelt
C) William H. Taft
D) Woodrow Wilson
E) Grover Cleveland
Question
The Federal Reserve Act did all of the following EXCEPT:

A) made currency and bank credit more elastic
B) created twelve Federal Reserve banks
C) lessened the power of the huge New York banks
D) was the first major banking and currency reform in half a century
E) shifted the U.S. Treasury back to the gold standard
Question
President Taft's domestic policies generated a storm of controversy:

A) overseas
B) within the Democratic party
C) within the Progressive party
D) in the military
E) within his own party
Question
The issue that provoked an open break between Taft and Roosevelt was:

A) Taft's support for lower tariffs
B) Taft's reduction in the size of the navy
C) Taft's anti-trust suit against United States Steel
D) Taft's support for the federal income tax
E) Taft's firing of Pinchot
Question
The Underwood-Simmons Tariff:

A) raised the average tariff and hence was supported by Wilson
B) lowered the average tariff and hence was opposed by Wilson
C) raised the average tariff and hence was opposed by Wilson
D) lowered the average tariff and hence was supported by Wilson
E) kept tariffs the same as under Taft and Roosevelt
Question
The Seventeenth Amendment:

A) authorized the popular election of U.S. senators
B) gave women the right to vote
C) called for direct primaries
D) authorized the federal income tax
E) made the production and distribution of alcohol illegal
Question
In the presidential election of 1912, William Howard Taft:

A) was the Republican candidate
B) campaigned for his "Bull Moose" program
C) named George W. Norris as his vice-presidential running mate
D) defeated Woodrow Wilson
E) lost to Grover Cleveland
Question
Woodrow Wilson's New Freedom platform:

A) proposed vigorous anti-trust action to break up corporate concentration
B) accepted gigantic corporations as a fact of modern economic life
C) was the creation of a writer named Herbert Croly
D) was the reason he won the 1912 election
E) was vehemently opposed by Louis Brandeis
Question
Upon becoming president, Wilson appointed as secretary of state:

A) Louis Brandeis
B) Champ Clark
C) Colonel Edward House
D) William Jennings Bryan
E) William Howard Taft
Question
Of the four presidential candidates in 1912, the one most likely to advocate government ownership of big business was:

A) William Jennings Bryan
B) Woodrow Wilson
C) William Howard Taft
D) Theodore Roosevelt
E) Eugene Debs
Question
The Clayton Anti-Trust Act:

A) was more lenient toward big business than was the Sherman Anti-Trust Act
B) outlawed price discrimination and interlocking directorates
C) was originally opposed by labor union leaders
D) was considered by Theodore Roosevelt the crowning achievement of his administration
E) made it possible for corporate officials to be held responsible for violations
Question
Contrary to his party's tradition, President Taft called for:

A) a moderately high tariff
B) no tariff
C) a lower tariff
D) a high tariff only on luxury items
E) a drastically higher inheritance tax
Question
A major factor in Woodrow Wilson's victory in the 1912 presidential campaign was the fact that:

A) many Republicans supported his nomination
B) wealthy Democrats poured millions of dollars into his campaign
C) the United States was at war
D) people liked Mrs. Wilson
E) the Republican party had split in two
Question
In his first term as president, Wilson did all of the following EXCEPT:

A) refused to support a federal amendment for women's suffrage
B) allowed the spread of racist practices in the federal government
C) withheld support from federal child-labor legislation
D) failed to reorganize the banking system
E) opposed a bill for low-interest loans to farmers
Question
William Howard Taft:

A) was Roosevelt's choice as his successor
B) was described by many journalists as "the ultimate politician"
C) found solid support from voters only in the South and Southwest
D) was, in the Republican tradition, opposed to a lower tariff
E) eventually was elected president as a member of the Progressive party
Question
______ eventually became chief justice of the Supreme Court.

A) William Jennings Bryan
B) Herbert Croly
C) Louis Brandeis
D) William Howard Taft
E) Gifford Pinchot
Question
Woodrow Wilson was:

A) a professor and college president
B) the leading Roman Catholic politician at the turn of the century
C) the progressive governor of Oregon
D) influenced mainly by Populist reformers
E) the first Californian to win the White House
Question
The Newlands Act of 1902:

A) created new homesteading areas in Alaska
B) established a new federal agency to deal with water in the West
C) was one Nevada senator's attempt to lessen the role of a "socialist" government
D) made it illegal for children to work night shifts
E) made closed shops legal
Question
In the 1908 presidential race:

A) Theodore Roosevelt sought reelection
B) the Democrats once again nominated William Jennings Bryan
C) the Socialist vote practically disappeared
D) prohibition became the major issue
E) Taft lost to Cleveland
Question
As president, Taft:

A) was able to unite a faction-ridden Republican party with his towering personality
B) opposed both the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Amendments
C) brought fewer than one-third the number of anti-trust suits prosecuted under Roosevelt
D) preserved more public lands in four years than Roosevelt had in nearly eight
E) was the first divorcee to hold the office
Question
Louis D. Brandeis:

A) was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
B) led the conservative opposition to federal labor laws
C) was Theodore Roosevelt's vice-presidential running mate in 1912
D) was president of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company
E) ran the Federal Farm Loan Board
Question
Match between columns
Alton B. Parker
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Alton B. Parker
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Alton B. Parker
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Alton B. Parker
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Alton B. Parker
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Alton B. Parker
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Alton B. Parker
wrote The Jungle
Alton B. Parker
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Alton B. Parker
was the original "efficiency expert"
Alton B. Parker
wrote Congressional Government
Lincoln Steffens
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Lincoln Steffens
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Lincoln Steffens
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Lincoln Steffens
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Lincoln Steffens
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Lincoln Steffens
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Lincoln Steffens
wrote The Jungle
Lincoln Steffens
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Lincoln Steffens
was the original "efficiency expert"
Lincoln Steffens
wrote Congressional Government
Theodore Roosevelt
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Theodore Roosevelt
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Theodore Roosevelt
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Theodore Roosevelt
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Theodore Roosevelt
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Theodore Roosevelt
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Theodore Roosevelt
wrote The Jungle
Theodore Roosevelt
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Theodore Roosevelt
was the original "efficiency expert"
Theodore Roosevelt
wrote Congressional Government
William H. Taft
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
William H. Taft
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
William H. Taft
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
William H. Taft
wrote The Shame of the Cities
William H. Taft
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
William H. Taft
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
William H. Taft
wrote The Jungle
William H. Taft
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
William H. Taft
was the original "efficiency expert"
William H. Taft
wrote Congressional Government
Frederick W. Taylor
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Frederick W. Taylor
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Frederick W. Taylor
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Frederick W. Taylor
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Frederick W. Taylor
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Frederick W. Taylor
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Frederick W. Taylor
wrote The Jungle
Frederick W. Taylor
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Frederick W. Taylor
was the original "efficiency expert"
Frederick W. Taylor
wrote Congressional Government
Eugene V. Debs
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Eugene V. Debs
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Eugene V. Debs
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Eugene V. Debs
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Eugene V. Debs
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Eugene V. Debs
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Eugene V. Debs
wrote The Jungle
Eugene V. Debs
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Eugene V. Debs
was the original "efficiency expert"
Eugene V. Debs
wrote Congressional Government
Herbert Croly
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Herbert Croly
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Herbert Croly
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Herbert Croly
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Herbert Croly
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Herbert Croly
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Herbert Croly
wrote The Jungle
Herbert Croly
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Herbert Croly
was the original "efficiency expert"
Herbert Croly
wrote Congressional Government
Woodrow Wilson
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Woodrow Wilson
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Woodrow Wilson
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Woodrow Wilson
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Woodrow Wilson
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Woodrow Wilson
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Woodrow Wilson
wrote The Jungle
Woodrow Wilson
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Woodrow Wilson
was the original "efficiency expert"
Woodrow Wilson
wrote Congressional Government
Upton Sinclair
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Upton Sinclair
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Upton Sinclair
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Upton Sinclair
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Upton Sinclair
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Upton Sinclair
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Upton Sinclair
wrote The Jungle
Upton Sinclair
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Upton Sinclair
was the original "efficiency expert"
Upton Sinclair
wrote Congressional Government
Louis D. Brandeis
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Louis D. Brandeis
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Louis D. Brandeis
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Louis D. Brandeis
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Louis D. Brandeis
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Louis D. Brandeis
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Louis D. Brandeis
wrote The Jungle
Louis D. Brandeis
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Louis D. Brandeis
was the original "efficiency expert"
Louis D. Brandeis
wrote Congressional Government
Question
Trace the events that led to the 1902 coal strike. What were the major issues, and what was the eventual outcome?
Question
What changes did progressivism bring to America? How was America different in 1920 from what it had been in 1900 because of progressivism?
Question
Discuss the issue of conservation and what President Theodore Roosevelt did to promote this important issue.
Question
Despite his racist views, President Wilson still nominated Josephus Daniels for:

A) secretary of state
B) secretary of the navy
C) secretary of war
D) secretary of the interior
E) secretary of transportation
Question
In what ways was the election of 1912 significant?
Question
"From its beginning to its end, the progressive movement was, more than anything else, paradoxical." What evidence could be used to support this statement?
Question
Describe the five major themes of progressive reform.
Question
Who were the muckrakers, and what impact did they have on American society?
Question
In the progressive period:

A) reformers were generally pessimistic about finding solutions to social ills
B) voter turnout increased
C) many groups-blacks, the poor, the unorganized-had little influence
D) conservative politicians destroyed any semblance of a welfare state
E) Roosevelt proved that the president ultimately has his hands tied
Question
Having been elected in his own right to a second term, Theodore Roosevelt set his sights on regulation and control of business. Trace his agenda in these endeavors. Was he successful?
Question
The Federal Highways Act:

A) passed in 1889
B) was vetoed by pro-railroad politicians
C) passed in 1916
D) illustrated the power of the Ford family
E) authorized a mere $10 million in funds
Question
Describe the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft. Show how the two men eventually found themselves running against each other for president.
Question
Which of the progressive presidents was the most progressive? Which was the least progressive? Explain.
Question
The Adamson Act of 1916:

A) restricted child labor
B) provided low-interest loans to farmers
C) provided federal funds to build highways
D) established the eight-hour day for railroad workers
E) made the consumption of alcohol legal for soldiers
Question
The election of 1912 brought about all of the following EXCEPT:

A) Democrats gained effective national power for the first time in over half a century
B) signaled the return of southerners to national and international affairs for the first time since the Civil War
C) altered the character of the Republican party, making it more conservative
D) offered a high-water mark for progressivism
E) brought the same man to the White House in nonconsecutive terms
Question
MATCHING
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Deck 23: Making the World Over: the Progressive ERA
1
The phrase "Square Deal" is associated with Theodore Roosevelt.
True
2
The author of The Shame of the Cities was:

A) George F. Baer
B) Ray Stannard Baker
C) Henry Demarest Lloyd
D) Lincoln Steffens
E) Ida M. Tarbell
Lincoln Steffens
3
Theodore Roosevelt took a strong, activist approach to the presidency.
True
4
Theodore Roosevelt initiated more anti-trust suits than any president in history.
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5
William Howard Taft finished second in the presidential election of 1912.
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6
Woodrow Wilson was a minister's son who grew up in the South.
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7
When Standard Oil refused to turn over its records, the government brought an anti-trust suit that resulted in the breakup of the huge company in 1911.
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8
Federal money for farm demonstration agents was approved in the Adamson Act.
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9
WCTU:

A) was the first radio station in America
B) stood for Women's Christian Temperance Union
C) was the radio station Roosevelt made famous while president
D) stood for Western Colorado Teamsters Union
E) was the abbreviation of Western Connecticut University, where Wilson got his start as a professor
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10
Theodore Roosevelt gave muckrakers their name.
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11
Progressives generally believed government should not interfere with big business.
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12
The Underwood-Simmons Tariff created the first regular federal income tax.
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13
The muckrakers saw their primary objective as:

A) converting Americans to socialism
B) exposing social problems to the public
C) increasing the circulation of sensationalist newspapers
D) proposing detailed legislation
E) destroying the Republican party
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14
William H. Taft achieved the most significant tariff reduction of any progressive president.
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15
Ida M. Tarbell's revelations in her History of the Standard Oil Company (1904) helped convince the Supreme Court in 1911:

A) to rule that the company must be dismantled
B) to dismiss the suit against it
C) to rule that Standard Oil was the model for all future companies
D) to postpone its ruling
E) it lacked jurisdiction in all cases against the company
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16
Wilson was a weak president who trusted Congress to adopt the proper policies.
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17
Woodrow Wilson was elected president in 1908.
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18
Theodore Roosevelt considered the Federal Trade Commission to be the cornerstone of his program for big business.
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19
One of Taft's major issues became his support for high tariffs.
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20
Among the varied sources of progressivism were populism and the Mugwumps.
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21
Jane Addams called the impulse to found settlement houses:

A) "a woman's response to alcoholism and abuse"
B) "urban enlightenment"
C) "the upper-class prayer answered"
D) "my duty as a mother to my children's future"
E) "Christian humanitarianism"
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22
During the coal strike of 1902:

A) President Theodore Roosevelt won support for his use of the "big stick" against corporations
B) thousands of striking miners marched on Washington, starting a riot that lasted three days
C) President Theodore Roosevelt threatened to use the army to force strikers back to work
D) arbitrators awarded the miners all their demands
E) more than 800 miners and their families died in the Rockies
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k this deck
23
The Hepburn Act of 1906:

A) was the first federal law regulating labor standards
B) said that coal miners were required to be paid in cash
C) in effect outlawed the Northern Securities Company
D) regulated the meatpacking industry
E) authorized the Interstate Commerce Commission to set maximum rates for railroads
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Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Frederick W. Taylor:

A) was an Oregon reformer responsible for many progressive measures enacted there
B) wrote The Principles of Scientific Management
C) was the progressive editor of Arena
D) was founder of the National Child Labor Committee
E) authored the bill on reclamation for the western states
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Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The commission plan of city government was first adopted in:

A) Atlanta, Georgia
B) Durham, North Carolina
C) Galveston, Texas
D) Springfield, Missouri
E) Columbia, South Carolina
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26
Which of the following statements regarding the coal strike of 1902 is NOT true?

A) The coal strike ended on October 23.
B) In 1902, Roosevelt threatened to take over coal mines in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
C) UWA leaders called mine owners "wooden headed."
D) Roosevelt once bellowed that "the Constitution is more important than coal!"
E) the United Mine Workers (UMW) walked off the job in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
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27
The title of the novel that described the terrible conditions of the meat-packing industry was:

A) Chicago
B) The Great American Fraud
C) The Jungle
D) Maggie
E) How the Other Half Lives
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In the case of Lochner v. New York, the Supreme Court:

A) upheld a Utah law limiting miners to eight-hour workdays
B) ordered the breakup of the "beef trust"
C) ordered the breakup of the American Tobacco Company
D) voided a state-legislated ten-hour day because it violated workers' "liberty of contract"
E) said that a "death tax" (inheritance tax) was illegal
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Theodore Roosevelt's close friend Gifford Pinchot was:

A) the president's chief speechwriter
B) a strict prohibitionist who pushed for the Seventeenth Amendment
C) one of the most famous muckrakers
D) the attorney general who broke up the Northern Securities Company
E) a forestry expert and leading conservationist
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30
The originator of the "Wisconsin idea" of efficient government was:

A) Lewis Hine
B) Hiram Johnson
C) Florence Kelley
D) Robert M. La Follette
E) Louis Brandeis
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31
The National Child Labor Committee pushed:

A) to allow as many immigrant children to enter the workforce as possible
B) to open more technical schools
C) federal legislation allowing children to work more hours
D) for laws prohibiting the employment of young children
E) for mandatory scholarships for employees' children
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32
George Bird Grinnell is associated with:

A) the Audubon Society
B) writing Man and Nature
C) the anti-conservation movement
D) San Francisco
E) the Bureau of Reclamation
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33
In 1917, a Prohibition amendment to the Constitution:

A) passed Congress, then went to the states for ratification
B) was ratified by the states as the Eighteenth Amendment
C) was overturned by the Twenty-first Amendment
D) failed passage by Congress, but was ratified by the states anyway
E) passed Congress but was vetoed by the president
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34
Congress established the Bureau of Corporations:

A) to monitor the activities of interstate corporations
B) to encourage the development of American industry
C) to educate businesses about tariff standards
D) to keep an eye on the lobbying efforts in Congress
E) to educate businesses about new interpretations of the Fourteenth Amendment
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35
Frances Willard lobbied:

A) for child labor laws
B) for dams to be built in the West
C) for the eight-hour workday
D) for women to become ministers
E) for Roosevelt to appoint him to the Supreme Court
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36
In the area of conservation, Theodore Roosevelt:

A) believed strongly that natural resources should be preserved but felt that this was a matter for state, not federal, action
B) angered many conservationists by his appointment of Gifford Pinchot, a businessman with no experience in conservation, as head of the Division of Forestry
C) used the Forest Reserve Act to withdraw over 170 million acres of timberland from logging
D) vetoed a bill authorizing a National Conservation Commission
E) angered western hunters by closing much of the western public lands
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37
At the Triangle Shirtwaist Company in 1911:

A) a strike resulted in the intervention of federal troops
B) Frederick Taylor first applied his scientific management principles
C) workers died as a result of a fire
D) the labor force was found to be made up entirely of children
E) Samuel Gompers first developed his idea for what became the Hepburn Act
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38
This company refused to turn over its records to the government, leading to a suit and the breakup of the company in 1911:

A) Ford Motorcoach
B) Standard Oil
C) Duke Tobacco
D) United States Steel
E) International Harvester
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39
Which of the following best describes the method used by most progressives to solve the problem of economic power and its abuses?

A) adopt a socialist program of public ownership
B) follow the principles of laissez-faire government
C) regulate big business
D) allow business to work out its own destiny
E) lower taxes so that companies would raise wages
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40
Progressives supported all of the following as measures to democratize government EXCEPT:

A) the initiative
B) the referendum
C) the party primary
D) the poll tax
E) the popular election of senators
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41
Which candidate was shot during the 1912 presidential campaign?

A) Eugene V. Debs
B) Theodore Roosevelt
C) William H. Taft
D) Woodrow Wilson
E) Grover Cleveland
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42
The Federal Reserve Act did all of the following EXCEPT:

A) made currency and bank credit more elastic
B) created twelve Federal Reserve banks
C) lessened the power of the huge New York banks
D) was the first major banking and currency reform in half a century
E) shifted the U.S. Treasury back to the gold standard
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43
President Taft's domestic policies generated a storm of controversy:

A) overseas
B) within the Democratic party
C) within the Progressive party
D) in the military
E) within his own party
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44
The issue that provoked an open break between Taft and Roosevelt was:

A) Taft's support for lower tariffs
B) Taft's reduction in the size of the navy
C) Taft's anti-trust suit against United States Steel
D) Taft's support for the federal income tax
E) Taft's firing of Pinchot
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45
The Underwood-Simmons Tariff:

A) raised the average tariff and hence was supported by Wilson
B) lowered the average tariff and hence was opposed by Wilson
C) raised the average tariff and hence was opposed by Wilson
D) lowered the average tariff and hence was supported by Wilson
E) kept tariffs the same as under Taft and Roosevelt
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46
The Seventeenth Amendment:

A) authorized the popular election of U.S. senators
B) gave women the right to vote
C) called for direct primaries
D) authorized the federal income tax
E) made the production and distribution of alcohol illegal
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47
In the presidential election of 1912, William Howard Taft:

A) was the Republican candidate
B) campaigned for his "Bull Moose" program
C) named George W. Norris as his vice-presidential running mate
D) defeated Woodrow Wilson
E) lost to Grover Cleveland
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48
Woodrow Wilson's New Freedom platform:

A) proposed vigorous anti-trust action to break up corporate concentration
B) accepted gigantic corporations as a fact of modern economic life
C) was the creation of a writer named Herbert Croly
D) was the reason he won the 1912 election
E) was vehemently opposed by Louis Brandeis
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49
Upon becoming president, Wilson appointed as secretary of state:

A) Louis Brandeis
B) Champ Clark
C) Colonel Edward House
D) William Jennings Bryan
E) William Howard Taft
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50
Of the four presidential candidates in 1912, the one most likely to advocate government ownership of big business was:

A) William Jennings Bryan
B) Woodrow Wilson
C) William Howard Taft
D) Theodore Roosevelt
E) Eugene Debs
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51
The Clayton Anti-Trust Act:

A) was more lenient toward big business than was the Sherman Anti-Trust Act
B) outlawed price discrimination and interlocking directorates
C) was originally opposed by labor union leaders
D) was considered by Theodore Roosevelt the crowning achievement of his administration
E) made it possible for corporate officials to be held responsible for violations
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52
Contrary to his party's tradition, President Taft called for:

A) a moderately high tariff
B) no tariff
C) a lower tariff
D) a high tariff only on luxury items
E) a drastically higher inheritance tax
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53
A major factor in Woodrow Wilson's victory in the 1912 presidential campaign was the fact that:

A) many Republicans supported his nomination
B) wealthy Democrats poured millions of dollars into his campaign
C) the United States was at war
D) people liked Mrs. Wilson
E) the Republican party had split in two
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54
In his first term as president, Wilson did all of the following EXCEPT:

A) refused to support a federal amendment for women's suffrage
B) allowed the spread of racist practices in the federal government
C) withheld support from federal child-labor legislation
D) failed to reorganize the banking system
E) opposed a bill for low-interest loans to farmers
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55
William Howard Taft:

A) was Roosevelt's choice as his successor
B) was described by many journalists as "the ultimate politician"
C) found solid support from voters only in the South and Southwest
D) was, in the Republican tradition, opposed to a lower tariff
E) eventually was elected president as a member of the Progressive party
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56
______ eventually became chief justice of the Supreme Court.

A) William Jennings Bryan
B) Herbert Croly
C) Louis Brandeis
D) William Howard Taft
E) Gifford Pinchot
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57
Woodrow Wilson was:

A) a professor and college president
B) the leading Roman Catholic politician at the turn of the century
C) the progressive governor of Oregon
D) influenced mainly by Populist reformers
E) the first Californian to win the White House
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58
The Newlands Act of 1902:

A) created new homesteading areas in Alaska
B) established a new federal agency to deal with water in the West
C) was one Nevada senator's attempt to lessen the role of a "socialist" government
D) made it illegal for children to work night shifts
E) made closed shops legal
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59
In the 1908 presidential race:

A) Theodore Roosevelt sought reelection
B) the Democrats once again nominated William Jennings Bryan
C) the Socialist vote practically disappeared
D) prohibition became the major issue
E) Taft lost to Cleveland
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60
As president, Taft:

A) was able to unite a faction-ridden Republican party with his towering personality
B) opposed both the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Amendments
C) brought fewer than one-third the number of anti-trust suits prosecuted under Roosevelt
D) preserved more public lands in four years than Roosevelt had in nearly eight
E) was the first divorcee to hold the office
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61
Louis D. Brandeis:

A) was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
B) led the conservative opposition to federal labor laws
C) was Theodore Roosevelt's vice-presidential running mate in 1912
D) was president of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company
E) ran the Federal Farm Loan Board
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62
Match between columns
Alton B. Parker
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Alton B. Parker
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Alton B. Parker
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Alton B. Parker
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Alton B. Parker
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Alton B. Parker
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Alton B. Parker
wrote The Jungle
Alton B. Parker
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Alton B. Parker
was the original "efficiency expert"
Alton B. Parker
wrote Congressional Government
Lincoln Steffens
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Lincoln Steffens
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Lincoln Steffens
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Lincoln Steffens
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Lincoln Steffens
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Lincoln Steffens
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Lincoln Steffens
wrote The Jungle
Lincoln Steffens
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Lincoln Steffens
was the original "efficiency expert"
Lincoln Steffens
wrote Congressional Government
Theodore Roosevelt
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Theodore Roosevelt
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Theodore Roosevelt
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Theodore Roosevelt
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Theodore Roosevelt
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Theodore Roosevelt
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Theodore Roosevelt
wrote The Jungle
Theodore Roosevelt
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Theodore Roosevelt
was the original "efficiency expert"
Theodore Roosevelt
wrote Congressional Government
William H. Taft
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
William H. Taft
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
William H. Taft
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
William H. Taft
wrote The Shame of the Cities
William H. Taft
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
William H. Taft
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
William H. Taft
wrote The Jungle
William H. Taft
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
William H. Taft
was the original "efficiency expert"
William H. Taft
wrote Congressional Government
Frederick W. Taylor
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Frederick W. Taylor
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Frederick W. Taylor
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Frederick W. Taylor
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Frederick W. Taylor
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Frederick W. Taylor
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Frederick W. Taylor
wrote The Jungle
Frederick W. Taylor
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Frederick W. Taylor
was the original "efficiency expert"
Frederick W. Taylor
wrote Congressional Government
Eugene V. Debs
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Eugene V. Debs
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Eugene V. Debs
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Eugene V. Debs
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Eugene V. Debs
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Eugene V. Debs
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Eugene V. Debs
wrote The Jungle
Eugene V. Debs
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Eugene V. Debs
was the original "efficiency expert"
Eugene V. Debs
wrote Congressional Government
Herbert Croly
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Herbert Croly
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Herbert Croly
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Herbert Croly
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Herbert Croly
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Herbert Croly
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Herbert Croly
wrote The Jungle
Herbert Croly
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Herbert Croly
was the original "efficiency expert"
Herbert Croly
wrote Congressional Government
Woodrow Wilson
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Woodrow Wilson
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Woodrow Wilson
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Woodrow Wilson
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Woodrow Wilson
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Woodrow Wilson
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Woodrow Wilson
wrote The Jungle
Woodrow Wilson
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Woodrow Wilson
was the original "efficiency expert"
Woodrow Wilson
wrote Congressional Government
Upton Sinclair
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Upton Sinclair
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Upton Sinclair
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Upton Sinclair
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Upton Sinclair
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Upton Sinclair
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Upton Sinclair
wrote The Jungle
Upton Sinclair
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Upton Sinclair
was the original "efficiency expert"
Upton Sinclair
wrote Congressional Government
Louis D. Brandeis
was the first Jewish member of the Supreme Court
Louis D. Brandeis
influenced New Nationalism with The Promise of American Life
Louis D. Brandeis
was the Socialist party presidential candidate
Louis D. Brandeis
wrote The Shame of the Cities
Louis D. Brandeis
was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1904
Louis D. Brandeis
was the Progressive party presidential candidate in 1912
Louis D. Brandeis
wrote The Jungle
Louis D. Brandeis
served on the Ohio Supreme Court
Louis D. Brandeis
was the original "efficiency expert"
Louis D. Brandeis
wrote Congressional Government
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63
Trace the events that led to the 1902 coal strike. What were the major issues, and what was the eventual outcome?
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64
What changes did progressivism bring to America? How was America different in 1920 from what it had been in 1900 because of progressivism?
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65
Discuss the issue of conservation and what President Theodore Roosevelt did to promote this important issue.
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66
Despite his racist views, President Wilson still nominated Josephus Daniels for:

A) secretary of state
B) secretary of the navy
C) secretary of war
D) secretary of the interior
E) secretary of transportation
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67
In what ways was the election of 1912 significant?
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68
"From its beginning to its end, the progressive movement was, more than anything else, paradoxical." What evidence could be used to support this statement?
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69
Describe the five major themes of progressive reform.
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70
Who were the muckrakers, and what impact did they have on American society?
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71
In the progressive period:

A) reformers were generally pessimistic about finding solutions to social ills
B) voter turnout increased
C) many groups-blacks, the poor, the unorganized-had little influence
D) conservative politicians destroyed any semblance of a welfare state
E) Roosevelt proved that the president ultimately has his hands tied
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72
Having been elected in his own right to a second term, Theodore Roosevelt set his sights on regulation and control of business. Trace his agenda in these endeavors. Was he successful?
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73
The Federal Highways Act:

A) passed in 1889
B) was vetoed by pro-railroad politicians
C) passed in 1916
D) illustrated the power of the Ford family
E) authorized a mere $10 million in funds
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74
Describe the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft. Show how the two men eventually found themselves running against each other for president.
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75
Which of the progressive presidents was the most progressive? Which was the least progressive? Explain.
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76
The Adamson Act of 1916:

A) restricted child labor
B) provided low-interest loans to farmers
C) provided federal funds to build highways
D) established the eight-hour day for railroad workers
E) made the consumption of alcohol legal for soldiers
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77
The election of 1912 brought about all of the following EXCEPT:

A) Democrats gained effective national power for the first time in over half a century
B) signaled the return of southerners to national and international affairs for the first time since the Civil War
C) altered the character of the Republican party, making it more conservative
D) offered a high-water mark for progressivism
E) brought the same man to the White House in nonconsecutive terms
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77
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
MATCHING Match each description with the item below.
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