Deck 18: The Age of the City

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Question
In the late nineteenth century,suburbs on the edges of American cities were largely populated by

A)very poor people.
B)the working class.
C)moderately well-to-do people.
D)people from all income backgrounds.
E)very wealthy people.
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Question
One significant innovation of urban America in the late nineteenth century was

A)city fire-fighting companies.
B)large public parks.
C)paved roads.
D)public hospitals.
E)water treatment facilities.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,immigrants in the United States

A)were generally better educated than immigrants who arrived a generation before.
B)took up semi-skilled craft jobs.
C)avoided ports like Ellis Island for fear they would be denied entry.
D)generally lacked the capital to buy farmland.
E)settled overwhelmingly in the relatively empty Northwest.
Question
By 1890,the percentage of the populations of Chicago,New York,and Detroit that were made up of immigrants was roughly

A)20-30 percent.
B)40-50 percent.
C)50-60 percent.
D)60-65 percent.
E)80-85 percent.
Question
In the 1890s,Jacob Riis

A)favored stopping immigration as a way to improve urban American cities.
B)crusaded to expose political corruption in major American cities.
C)documented the stories of wealthy Americans who came from humble origins.
D)reported on the living conditions of the urban poor to encourage improvements.
E)pushed for the creation of mass transit systems and outlying suburbs in America's cities.
Question
Tenement buildings in urban America were

A)first constructed in Chicago in the 1880s.
B)intended to be occupied as single-family dwellings.
C)initially praised as an improvement in housing for the poor.
D)subsidized by city governments.
E)considered luxury housing by most urban residents.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,most immigrants to the United States

A)were already experienced as urban-dwelling,industrial workers.
B)found the transition to their new country to be fairly easy.
C)formed close-knit ethnic communities within the cities.
D)totally cut their links to their native countries.
E)read English-language newspapers and frequented chain stores.
Question
The primary goal of the American Protective Association was to

A)require immigrants to sign loyalty oaths to the United States government.
B)limit immigration to those who already had relatives living in the United States.
C)give "native" Americans preference over immigrants in employment opportunities.
D)stop immigrants from entering the United States.
E)make English the official language of the United States.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,the assimilation of immigrants was encouraged by

A)the sale of American products.
B)public education.
C)church leaders.
D)religious reform.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The largest number of immigrants to the United States in the late nineteenth century came from

A)southern and eastern Europe.
B)Mexico and Central America.
C)Great Britain and Germany.
D)China and Japan.
E)Ireland and Italy.
Question
The principle force behind the creation of great public buildings in the late nineteenth century was

A)wealthy residents.
B)community service organizations.
C)state governments.
D)the federal government.
E)ethnic political machines.
Question
The "city beautiful" movement in the United States was inspired,in part,by

A)the economic depression of 1893.
B)the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
C)the new technology of skyscrapers.
D)both the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago,and the new technology of skyscrapers.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Question
In 1894,the Immigration Restriction League

A)sought a ban on all immigration to the United States for fifteen years.
B)proposed screening immigrants to allow only the "desirable" ones to enter.
C)sought a ban on immigrants from Europe,but not Asia.
D)called for the establishment of a tax on all immigrants.
E)pushed strongly for the passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act.
Question
Compared with the first generation,second generation immigrants were more likely to

A)hold on to their old ethnic habits.
B)lose faith in the United States due to the hardships they experienced.
C)break from their traditional culture.
D)resist external social pressures to assimilate.
E)return to the Old World for good.
Question
By 1900,the transportation systems of American cities included

A)elevated railroads.
B)subways.
C)electric trolleys and cable cars.
D)suspension bridges.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,compared to other immigrant ethnic groups,Jews

A)advanced rapidly economically.
B)placed a high value on education.
C)huddled together in ethnic neighborhoods.
D)both advanced rapidly economically,and huddled together in ethnic neighborhoods.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
In 1894,the population density of Manhattan in New York was

A)significantly lower than the density of New York today.
B)equal to the density of Paris.
C)significantly lower than that of most major European cities.
D)greater than that of all major American cities except Boston.
E)far greater than the most crowded European cities.
Question
In 1882,the first group of immigrants to be excluded from the United States on the basis of their nationality were

A)Chinese.
B)Japanese.
C)Mexicans.
D)Slavs.
E)Irish.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,the population in urban areas of the United States

A)increased mainly as a result of longer life expectancy.
B)experienced massive growth even where there was little immigration.
C)rose as the number of children born into urban families doubled between 1870 and 1900.
D)soared as the rates of infant mortality and disease significantly declined.
E)mostly came from Europe.
Question
The 1920 census of the United States revealed that

A)the western frontier had ended.
B)a majority of Americans lived in "urban" areas.
C)for the first time since 1790,American women outnumbered men.
D)the majority of the nation's population had arrived as immigrants since 1880.
E)California was now the most populous state.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,the Tammany Hall political machine

A)saw its most famous boss,William M.Tweed,sent to prison.
B)was one of the few machines that did not engage in graft and corruption.
C)operated out of Chicago.
D)operated out of Chicago and saw its most famous boss,William M.Tweed,sent to prison.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The national network of grocery stores that started in the 1850s was

A)the A&P.
B)Food Lion.
C)Seven-Eleven.
D)Piggly Wiggly.
E)Harris Teeter.
Question
In the last decades of the nineteenth century,incomes in the United States

A)rose for almost all Americans.
B)declined for most unskilled workers.
C)remained the same for most Americans.
D)increased for white Americans,but decreased for most other ethnic groups.
E)grew more unequal,while the middle class shrunk.
Question
In 1869,Princeton and Rutgers played the first intercollegiate game in America of

A)baseball.
B)boxing.
C)football.
D)basketball.
E)soccer.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,political "machines" in cities owed their existence to the

A)rapid growth of urban America.
B)influx of millions of immigrants.
C)lack of Democratic and Republican organization in cities.
D)rapid growth of urban America and the influx of millions of immigrants.
E)influx of millions of immigrants and the lack of Democratic and Republican organization in cities.
Question
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,the growth of newspapers

A)resulted in most large cities being serviced by one dominant paper.
B)led to a significant decline in the telegraph industry.
C)was largely due to national population growth.
D)saw newspaper circulation increase much more rapidly than the general population.
E)did not coincide with a rise in journalists' salaries.
Question
In the 1890s,Florence Kelley and the National Consumers League sought to

A)encourage immigrants to become greater consumers.
B)improve the safety and quality of consumer products.
C)protect family businesses from the competition of corporate retailers.
D)improve the wages and working conditions of employees of manufacturers and retailers.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
At the end of the nineteenth century,most Americans viewed leisure time as

A)the province solely of children and the elderly.
B)on par with laziness.
C)something not attainable for the average worker.
D)reserved for the extremely wealthy.
E)being desirable.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,urban political bosses did all of the following EXCEPT

A)give out patronage.
B)win votes for their political organization.
C)provide material assistance to the poor.
D)enrich themselves through graft and corruption.
E)reduce the costs of city services.
Question
Theodore Dreiser's 1900 novel,Sister Carrie,dealt with

A)his belief that religious organizations were perverting society.
B)the qualities of the upper class.
C)the need to return to a more rural and natural life.
D)the dehumanization of mass communications.
E)social dislocations and injustices of the present.
Question
The nineteenth-century game of "rounders" became the modern sport of

A)basketball.
B)baseball.
C)golf.
D)football.
E)soccer.
Question
Which American writer would be LEAST associated with the trend toward social realism in literature in the late nineteenth century?

A)Mark Twain
B)Upton Sinclair
C)Frank Norris
D)Stephen Crane
E)Theodore Dreiser
Question
Which of the following innovations did NOT occur in consumer goods in the late nineteenth century?

A)the emergence of ready-made clothing
B)the formation of credit card companies
C)the ability to refrigerate foods artificially
D)the opening of large department stores
E)the development and mass production of tin cans
Question
Which of the following statements regarding Coney Island is FALSE?

A)The average daily attendance at Luna Park in 1904 was 90,000 people.
B)Many visitors relaxed their conventions of Victorian social behavior.
C)The park developed a reputation for wholesome family attractions.
D)The park experienced phenomenal popularity until after World War I.
E)The park provided lavish reproductions of exotic places and spectacular adventures.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,leisure activities tended to be divided by

A)gender.
B)class.
C)race.
D)both race and gender.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,efforts to reduce poverty in America

A)saw the Salvation Army focus primarily on establishing shelters for the homeless.
B)saw charitable organizations try to limit aid to those deemed "deserving poor."
C)included federally-funded studies attempting to identify the causes of poverty.
D)generally were led by reformers who had grown up in impoverished communities.
E)included public works programs funded by municipal property taxes.
Question
In the early twentieth century,efforts to improve occupational safety

A)were nonexistent.
B)focused on the wealthy and ignored the urban poor.
C)included a new federal regulatory agency.
D)led many cities to require employers to create safe workplaces.
E)included health standards for factories that had far-reaching impact.
Question
In the nineteenth century,vaudeville theater

A)consisted of a variety of stage acts.
B)only employed white performers.
C)was a uniquely American form of theater.
D)both consisted of a variety of stage acts,and only employed white performers.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,crime in large American urban centers

A)led many city governments to create professional public police departments.
B)swelled in the twenty years between 1880 and 1900.
C)was often blamed on the violent proclivities of immigrant groups.
D)was often blamed on the violent proclivities of immigrant groups,and led many city governments to create professional public police departments.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
In 1884,the first "modern" skyscraper built in the United States

A)had no elevators.
B)was located in Boston.
C)was constructed with steel girders.
D)was built entirely of brick.
E)was located in New York City.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,American universities

A)significantly grew in number due to the Morrill Land Grant Act.
B)had a strong commitment to practical knowledge.
C)began to form relationships with the private sector and the government.
D)both had a strong commitment to practical knowledge,and began to form relationships with the private sector and the government.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
According to the philosophy of pragmatism,society should be guided by

A)scientific inquiry.
B)inherited ideals.
C)democratic tradition.
D)moral principles.
E)religious faith.
Question
Central to the success of American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T)was how it

A)focused solely on commercial uses of the telephone.
B)provided telephone service only,not equipment.
C)controlled both the telephone equipment and telephone service.
D)made subscribers buy the necessary equipment.
E)made telephone equipment and depended on other companies to provide the service.
Question
Most late nineteenth-century immigrants arrived with a little money and initially settled in rural areas,where they attempted to buy land.
Question
When the first tenements were built in 1850,they were viewed as a great improvement in housing for the poor.
Question
The assimilation process of the late nineteenth century was aided by the public schools.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,most city parks were simply lands between houses and other buildings that had yet to be developed.
Question
By the end of the nineteenth century,efforts to restrict the numbers of immigrants kept out only a small number of those who wished to immigrate to the United States.
Question
Without immigration,American cities would have grown relatively slowly.
Question
During the late nineteenth century,college education for American women

A)did not exist.
B)had expanded significantly.
C)offered no coeducational opportunities.
D)allowed women to be schooled only by male faculty.
E)had no real effect on the marrying age of nineteenth-century women.
Question
At the end of the nineteenth century,the population density of Manhattan was higher than that of the most crowded cities of Europe.
Question
As a result of the "city beautiful" movement,most major American cities were largely rebuilt during the late nineteenth century.
Question
In late nineteenth-century cities,it was not uncommon for the very wealthy to live in the heart of the city.
Question
Which statement about education in the late nineteenth century is FALSE?

A)It was a period of rapid expansion for public schools.
B)By 1900,most states required compulsory school attendance.
C)Educational opportunities extended to Indian tribes as well.
D)Southern blacks had far less access to education than southern whites.
E)Funding for public education was highest in rural areas.
Question
Among the new immigrant arrivals to late nineteenth-century America,no single national group could be said to have dominated the scene.
Question
The great movement of people from rural to urban areas was unique to the United States.
Question
The American artistic movement known as the "Ashcan school"

A)portrayed an idealized image of rural life.
B)was strongly influenced by Old World masters.
C)included the painter Edward Hopper.
D)was most identified with the work of John Singer Sargent.
E)rejected expressionism and abstraction as artistic fads.
Question
Electric trolleys were in use in American cities before World War I.
Question
In the late nineteenth century,the construction of the majority of great cultural institutions was paid for by wealthy residents.
Question
Charles Darwin's theories of evolution met initial resistance from

A)theologians.
B)scientists.
C)educators.
D)both theologians and educators.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
Immigrant Americans were more likely to commit crimes than were native-born Americans.
Question
Both baseball and football appealed primarily to working-class males.
Question
Much of the popular entertainment at the turn of the century had a public dimension to it.
Question
The new consumer economy appealed to women as consumers and hired women as sales clerks.
Question
Coney Island provided a way of experiencing mass American culture on an equal footing with people from different backgrounds.
Question
The Chrysler Building in New York City is considered the first modern American skyscraper.
Question
By the end of the nineteenth century,most public high schools readily accepted women.
Question
Although the plight of poor children in cities often drew the most attention of late nineteenth-century reformers,little was done to improve the children's situations.
Question
Frederick Olmsted and Calvert Vaux designed New York City's ________.
Question
Prior to the late nineteenth century,few Americans placed much value in leisure.
Question
The census of 1920 revealed that for the first time in American history a majority of Americans lived in ________ areas.
Question
The first American subway system came into use in Boston in 1897.
Question
At the end of the nineteenth century,the participation of women in sports was nearly nonexistent.
Question
Both Theodore Dreiser and Stephen Crane found a market by writing novels that explained the city to their readers.
Question
Reform organizations of the late nineteenth century proved to be more permanent than the urban political machines.
Question
Pragmatic philosopher John Dewey promoted a democratic approach to education.
Question
It can be said that Darwinism helped spawn the philosophy of pragmatism.
Question
Henry Bowers's hatred of immigration led him to found the American ________.
Question
By the turn of the century,primary and secondary education were nearly universal in the United States.
Question
By the turn of the century,professional baseball and professional football were both important spectator sports.
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Deck 18: The Age of the City
1
In the late nineteenth century,suburbs on the edges of American cities were largely populated by

A)very poor people.
B)the working class.
C)moderately well-to-do people.
D)people from all income backgrounds.
E)very wealthy people.
moderately well-to-do people.
2
One significant innovation of urban America in the late nineteenth century was

A)city fire-fighting companies.
B)large public parks.
C)paved roads.
D)public hospitals.
E)water treatment facilities.
large public parks.
3
In the late nineteenth century,immigrants in the United States

A)were generally better educated than immigrants who arrived a generation before.
B)took up semi-skilled craft jobs.
C)avoided ports like Ellis Island for fear they would be denied entry.
D)generally lacked the capital to buy farmland.
E)settled overwhelmingly in the relatively empty Northwest.
generally lacked the capital to buy farmland.
4
By 1890,the percentage of the populations of Chicago,New York,and Detroit that were made up of immigrants was roughly

A)20-30 percent.
B)40-50 percent.
C)50-60 percent.
D)60-65 percent.
E)80-85 percent.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
In the 1890s,Jacob Riis

A)favored stopping immigration as a way to improve urban American cities.
B)crusaded to expose political corruption in major American cities.
C)documented the stories of wealthy Americans who came from humble origins.
D)reported on the living conditions of the urban poor to encourage improvements.
E)pushed for the creation of mass transit systems and outlying suburbs in America's cities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Tenement buildings in urban America were

A)first constructed in Chicago in the 1880s.
B)intended to be occupied as single-family dwellings.
C)initially praised as an improvement in housing for the poor.
D)subsidized by city governments.
E)considered luxury housing by most urban residents.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
In the late nineteenth century,most immigrants to the United States

A)were already experienced as urban-dwelling,industrial workers.
B)found the transition to their new country to be fairly easy.
C)formed close-knit ethnic communities within the cities.
D)totally cut their links to their native countries.
E)read English-language newspapers and frequented chain stores.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The primary goal of the American Protective Association was to

A)require immigrants to sign loyalty oaths to the United States government.
B)limit immigration to those who already had relatives living in the United States.
C)give "native" Americans preference over immigrants in employment opportunities.
D)stop immigrants from entering the United States.
E)make English the official language of the United States.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
In the late nineteenth century,the assimilation of immigrants was encouraged by

A)the sale of American products.
B)public education.
C)church leaders.
D)religious reform.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The largest number of immigrants to the United States in the late nineteenth century came from

A)southern and eastern Europe.
B)Mexico and Central America.
C)Great Britain and Germany.
D)China and Japan.
E)Ireland and Italy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The principle force behind the creation of great public buildings in the late nineteenth century was

A)wealthy residents.
B)community service organizations.
C)state governments.
D)the federal government.
E)ethnic political machines.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The "city beautiful" movement in the United States was inspired,in part,by

A)the economic depression of 1893.
B)the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
C)the new technology of skyscrapers.
D)both the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago,and the new technology of skyscrapers.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In 1894,the Immigration Restriction League

A)sought a ban on all immigration to the United States for fifteen years.
B)proposed screening immigrants to allow only the "desirable" ones to enter.
C)sought a ban on immigrants from Europe,but not Asia.
D)called for the establishment of a tax on all immigrants.
E)pushed strongly for the passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Compared with the first generation,second generation immigrants were more likely to

A)hold on to their old ethnic habits.
B)lose faith in the United States due to the hardships they experienced.
C)break from their traditional culture.
D)resist external social pressures to assimilate.
E)return to the Old World for good.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
By 1900,the transportation systems of American cities included

A)elevated railroads.
B)subways.
C)electric trolleys and cable cars.
D)suspension bridges.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In the late nineteenth century,compared to other immigrant ethnic groups,Jews

A)advanced rapidly economically.
B)placed a high value on education.
C)huddled together in ethnic neighborhoods.
D)both advanced rapidly economically,and huddled together in ethnic neighborhoods.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In 1894,the population density of Manhattan in New York was

A)significantly lower than the density of New York today.
B)equal to the density of Paris.
C)significantly lower than that of most major European cities.
D)greater than that of all major American cities except Boston.
E)far greater than the most crowded European cities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
In 1882,the first group of immigrants to be excluded from the United States on the basis of their nationality were

A)Chinese.
B)Japanese.
C)Mexicans.
D)Slavs.
E)Irish.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
In the late nineteenth century,the population in urban areas of the United States

A)increased mainly as a result of longer life expectancy.
B)experienced massive growth even where there was little immigration.
C)rose as the number of children born into urban families doubled between 1870 and 1900.
D)soared as the rates of infant mortality and disease significantly declined.
E)mostly came from Europe.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The 1920 census of the United States revealed that

A)the western frontier had ended.
B)a majority of Americans lived in "urban" areas.
C)for the first time since 1790,American women outnumbered men.
D)the majority of the nation's population had arrived as immigrants since 1880.
E)California was now the most populous state.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
In the late nineteenth century,the Tammany Hall political machine

A)saw its most famous boss,William M.Tweed,sent to prison.
B)was one of the few machines that did not engage in graft and corruption.
C)operated out of Chicago.
D)operated out of Chicago and saw its most famous boss,William M.Tweed,sent to prison.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The national network of grocery stores that started in the 1850s was

A)the A&P.
B)Food Lion.
C)Seven-Eleven.
D)Piggly Wiggly.
E)Harris Teeter.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In the last decades of the nineteenth century,incomes in the United States

A)rose for almost all Americans.
B)declined for most unskilled workers.
C)remained the same for most Americans.
D)increased for white Americans,but decreased for most other ethnic groups.
E)grew more unequal,while the middle class shrunk.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
In 1869,Princeton and Rutgers played the first intercollegiate game in America of

A)baseball.
B)boxing.
C)football.
D)basketball.
E)soccer.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
In the late nineteenth century,political "machines" in cities owed their existence to the

A)rapid growth of urban America.
B)influx of millions of immigrants.
C)lack of Democratic and Republican organization in cities.
D)rapid growth of urban America and the influx of millions of immigrants.
E)influx of millions of immigrants and the lack of Democratic and Republican organization in cities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,the growth of newspapers

A)resulted in most large cities being serviced by one dominant paper.
B)led to a significant decline in the telegraph industry.
C)was largely due to national population growth.
D)saw newspaper circulation increase much more rapidly than the general population.
E)did not coincide with a rise in journalists' salaries.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
In the 1890s,Florence Kelley and the National Consumers League sought to

A)encourage immigrants to become greater consumers.
B)improve the safety and quality of consumer products.
C)protect family businesses from the competition of corporate retailers.
D)improve the wages and working conditions of employees of manufacturers and retailers.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
At the end of the nineteenth century,most Americans viewed leisure time as

A)the province solely of children and the elderly.
B)on par with laziness.
C)something not attainable for the average worker.
D)reserved for the extremely wealthy.
E)being desirable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In the late nineteenth century,urban political bosses did all of the following EXCEPT

A)give out patronage.
B)win votes for their political organization.
C)provide material assistance to the poor.
D)enrich themselves through graft and corruption.
E)reduce the costs of city services.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Theodore Dreiser's 1900 novel,Sister Carrie,dealt with

A)his belief that religious organizations were perverting society.
B)the qualities of the upper class.
C)the need to return to a more rural and natural life.
D)the dehumanization of mass communications.
E)social dislocations and injustices of the present.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The nineteenth-century game of "rounders" became the modern sport of

A)basketball.
B)baseball.
C)golf.
D)football.
E)soccer.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Which American writer would be LEAST associated with the trend toward social realism in literature in the late nineteenth century?

A)Mark Twain
B)Upton Sinclair
C)Frank Norris
D)Stephen Crane
E)Theodore Dreiser
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 107 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which of the following innovations did NOT occur in consumer goods in the late nineteenth century?

A)the emergence of ready-made clothing
B)the formation of credit card companies
C)the ability to refrigerate foods artificially
D)the opening of large department stores
E)the development and mass production of tin cans
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34
Which of the following statements regarding Coney Island is FALSE?

A)The average daily attendance at Luna Park in 1904 was 90,000 people.
B)Many visitors relaxed their conventions of Victorian social behavior.
C)The park developed a reputation for wholesome family attractions.
D)The park experienced phenomenal popularity until after World War I.
E)The park provided lavish reproductions of exotic places and spectacular adventures.
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35
In the late nineteenth century,leisure activities tended to be divided by

A)gender.
B)class.
C)race.
D)both race and gender.
E)All these answers are correct.
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36
In the late nineteenth century,efforts to reduce poverty in America

A)saw the Salvation Army focus primarily on establishing shelters for the homeless.
B)saw charitable organizations try to limit aid to those deemed "deserving poor."
C)included federally-funded studies attempting to identify the causes of poverty.
D)generally were led by reformers who had grown up in impoverished communities.
E)included public works programs funded by municipal property taxes.
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37
In the early twentieth century,efforts to improve occupational safety

A)were nonexistent.
B)focused on the wealthy and ignored the urban poor.
C)included a new federal regulatory agency.
D)led many cities to require employers to create safe workplaces.
E)included health standards for factories that had far-reaching impact.
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38
In the nineteenth century,vaudeville theater

A)consisted of a variety of stage acts.
B)only employed white performers.
C)was a uniquely American form of theater.
D)both consisted of a variety of stage acts,and only employed white performers.
E)None of these answers is correct.
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39
In the late nineteenth century,crime in large American urban centers

A)led many city governments to create professional public police departments.
B)swelled in the twenty years between 1880 and 1900.
C)was often blamed on the violent proclivities of immigrant groups.
D)was often blamed on the violent proclivities of immigrant groups,and led many city governments to create professional public police departments.
E)All these answers are correct.
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40
In 1884,the first "modern" skyscraper built in the United States

A)had no elevators.
B)was located in Boston.
C)was constructed with steel girders.
D)was built entirely of brick.
E)was located in New York City.
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41
In the late nineteenth century,American universities

A)significantly grew in number due to the Morrill Land Grant Act.
B)had a strong commitment to practical knowledge.
C)began to form relationships with the private sector and the government.
D)both had a strong commitment to practical knowledge,and began to form relationships with the private sector and the government.
E)All these answers are correct.
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42
According to the philosophy of pragmatism,society should be guided by

A)scientific inquiry.
B)inherited ideals.
C)democratic tradition.
D)moral principles.
E)religious faith.
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43
Central to the success of American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T)was how it

A)focused solely on commercial uses of the telephone.
B)provided telephone service only,not equipment.
C)controlled both the telephone equipment and telephone service.
D)made subscribers buy the necessary equipment.
E)made telephone equipment and depended on other companies to provide the service.
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44
Most late nineteenth-century immigrants arrived with a little money and initially settled in rural areas,where they attempted to buy land.
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45
When the first tenements were built in 1850,they were viewed as a great improvement in housing for the poor.
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46
The assimilation process of the late nineteenth century was aided by the public schools.
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47
In the late nineteenth century,most city parks were simply lands between houses and other buildings that had yet to be developed.
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48
By the end of the nineteenth century,efforts to restrict the numbers of immigrants kept out only a small number of those who wished to immigrate to the United States.
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49
Without immigration,American cities would have grown relatively slowly.
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50
During the late nineteenth century,college education for American women

A)did not exist.
B)had expanded significantly.
C)offered no coeducational opportunities.
D)allowed women to be schooled only by male faculty.
E)had no real effect on the marrying age of nineteenth-century women.
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51
At the end of the nineteenth century,the population density of Manhattan was higher than that of the most crowded cities of Europe.
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52
As a result of the "city beautiful" movement,most major American cities were largely rebuilt during the late nineteenth century.
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53
In late nineteenth-century cities,it was not uncommon for the very wealthy to live in the heart of the city.
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54
Which statement about education in the late nineteenth century is FALSE?

A)It was a period of rapid expansion for public schools.
B)By 1900,most states required compulsory school attendance.
C)Educational opportunities extended to Indian tribes as well.
D)Southern blacks had far less access to education than southern whites.
E)Funding for public education was highest in rural areas.
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55
Among the new immigrant arrivals to late nineteenth-century America,no single national group could be said to have dominated the scene.
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56
The great movement of people from rural to urban areas was unique to the United States.
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57
The American artistic movement known as the "Ashcan school"

A)portrayed an idealized image of rural life.
B)was strongly influenced by Old World masters.
C)included the painter Edward Hopper.
D)was most identified with the work of John Singer Sargent.
E)rejected expressionism and abstraction as artistic fads.
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58
Electric trolleys were in use in American cities before World War I.
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59
In the late nineteenth century,the construction of the majority of great cultural institutions was paid for by wealthy residents.
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60
Charles Darwin's theories of evolution met initial resistance from

A)theologians.
B)scientists.
C)educators.
D)both theologians and educators.
E)All these answers are correct.
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61
Immigrant Americans were more likely to commit crimes than were native-born Americans.
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62
Both baseball and football appealed primarily to working-class males.
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63
Much of the popular entertainment at the turn of the century had a public dimension to it.
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64
The new consumer economy appealed to women as consumers and hired women as sales clerks.
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65
Coney Island provided a way of experiencing mass American culture on an equal footing with people from different backgrounds.
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66
The Chrysler Building in New York City is considered the first modern American skyscraper.
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67
By the end of the nineteenth century,most public high schools readily accepted women.
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68
Although the plight of poor children in cities often drew the most attention of late nineteenth-century reformers,little was done to improve the children's situations.
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69
Frederick Olmsted and Calvert Vaux designed New York City's ________.
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70
Prior to the late nineteenth century,few Americans placed much value in leisure.
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71
The census of 1920 revealed that for the first time in American history a majority of Americans lived in ________ areas.
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72
The first American subway system came into use in Boston in 1897.
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73
At the end of the nineteenth century,the participation of women in sports was nearly nonexistent.
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74
Both Theodore Dreiser and Stephen Crane found a market by writing novels that explained the city to their readers.
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75
Reform organizations of the late nineteenth century proved to be more permanent than the urban political machines.
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76
Pragmatic philosopher John Dewey promoted a democratic approach to education.
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77
It can be said that Darwinism helped spawn the philosophy of pragmatism.
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78
Henry Bowers's hatred of immigration led him to found the American ________.
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79
By the turn of the century,primary and secondary education were nearly universal in the United States.
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80
By the turn of the century,professional baseball and professional football were both important spectator sports.
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