1. In the immediate aftermath of the Civil War
a. the push for
social, political, and economic reforms intensified and gained
momentum in and out of state,
local, and the federal
government.
b. Americans retained a strong sense of idealistic
sacrifice.
c. the North developed a strong sense of moral
superiority.
d. concern for racial questions took precedence over
economics.
e. waste, speculation, and corruption afflicted both
business and government.
e
2. Which of the following internal developments in China resulted in
Chinese immigration to the United States?
a. the disintegration
of the Chinese Empire
b. the seizure of farmland by
landlords
c. the intrusion of European powers
d. internal
political turmoil
e. All of these choices are correct.
e
3. Which of these is NOT a true statement about the relationship
between blacks and sharecropping in the years
after
Reconstruction?
a. As sharecroppers, blacks found themselves at
the mercy of former masters who were now their
landlords and
creditors.
b. Some merchants manipulated the system so that
farmers remained perpetually in debt to them.
c. Black
sharecroppers often lived in conditions scarcely better than when they
were slaves.
d. White Southerners did not work as
sharecroppers.
e. Sharecroppers barely scraped by economically.
d
4. An epidemic of violent strikes and labor conflict in 1892 led to
the prospect of
a. a switch of urban workers from the Democratic
to the Republican party.
b. Populists declaring their opposition
to immigration restrictions.
c. Populist support for a
revolutionary overthrow of reactionary state governments.
d. the
Populists adding industrial workers to their base of support among
farmers.
e. Grover Cleveland's switch to a pro-labor and
pro-farmer campaign platform.
d
5. The major electoral problem in the 1876 presidential election
centered on
a. who would be Speaker of the House.
b. the two
sets of different election returns, one Democratic, and one
Republican, submitted by Florida,
South Carolina, and
Louisiana.
c. Samuel Tilden's association with corrupt
politicians of the Northeast.
d. President Grant's campaign for a
third term.
e. Rutherford Hayes's controversial ties to U.S.
Senator Roscoe Conkling and the Stalwarts.
b
6. Despite the lack of national political issues, Gilded Age
elections often produced fierce local contests over
culturally
and religiously charged issues like
a. imperialism and foreign
missions.
b. prohibition and education.
c. race relations
and racial justice in the South.
d. sexual morality and women's
rights.
e. treatment of criminal prisoners and the mentally ill.
b
7. The 1884 presidential election contest between James G. Blaine and
Grover Cleveland was noted for
a. its emphasis on policy
differences on economic and social issues.
b. low voter
turnout.
c. its viciously personal attacks between the two
candidates.
d. a landslide victory for the reform-minded
Republicans.
e. its absence of geographic sectionalism in the
respective popular support of each candidate.
c
8. President Ulysses S. Grant was reelected in 1872 because
a.
the Democrats and Liberal Republicans could not decide on a single
candidate.
b. he promised reforms in the political
system.
c. he was the only candidate who enjoyed support in both
the North and South.
d. the Democrats and Liberal Republicans
chose the politically and personally eccentric and dubiously
sound
editor Horace Greeley as their candidate.
e. of the
massive support of Black voters in the Reconstruction South.
d
9. In religious and cultural terms, the Republicans appealed
especially to groups that derived their views from
a.
transcendentalism and utopian traditions that opposed war and proposed
alternatives to traditional
marriage.
b. Catholic and
Lutheran traditions of creed, liturgy, and understanding of human
weakness.
c. Baptist tradition that feared government intrusion
on personal and religious freedom.
d. scientific tradition that
saw religion as a fading force in American society.
e. Puritan
tradition of strict moral codes and government regulation of morality
and society.
e
10. The Pendleton Act required people applying for many federal
government jobs to
a. take a competitive examination.
b.
present a written recommendation from a congressman or
senator.
c. agree to make financial contributions to their
political party.
d. submit a resume listing their experience and
providing references.
e. agree not to take a job in a related
private business for two years after leaving government service.
a
11. At the end of Reconstruction, Southern whites disenfranchised
African Americans using
a. literacy requirements.
b. poll
taxes.
c. onerous and intimidating voter registration
laws.
d. lynching.
e. All of these choices are correct.
e
12. One result of Republican hard money policies in the mid-1870s
was
a. the rise of the American dollar against foreign
currencies.
b. damage to the country's credit rating.
c. the
return to the silver "Dollar of Our Daddies" as the dominant
form of U.S. money.
d. the defeat of a Democratic House of
Representatives in 1874.
e. a political turn to the Democrats and
the rise of the new Greenback Labor party.
e
13. The legal codes that established the system of segregation
were
a. found only in the North.
b. called Jim Crow
laws.
c. overturned by Plessy v. Ferguson.
d. undermined by
the crop lien system.
e. unconnected to the informal separation
of blacks and whites in the immediate post-Civil War years.
b
14. In the presidential election of 1868, Ulysses S. Grant
a.
transformed his personal popularity into a large majority in the
popular vote.
b. owed his victory to the votes of former
slaves.
c. gained his victory by winning the votes of the
majority of whites.
d. won a clear majority of electoral votes in
the Electoral College, but narrowly lost the popular vote in
the
country.
e. All of these choices are correct.
b
15. The Compromise of 1877 resulted in
a. a renewal of the
Republican commitment to protect black civil rights in the South and
the continued
presence of federal troops in the South.
b.
the withdrawal of federal troops and abandonment of federal protection
of black civil and voting rights in
the South.
c. the
election of Democrat presidential candidate Samuel Tilden to the
presidency.
d. Republican support for an inflationary
silver-money policy.
e. None of these choices are correct.
b
16. A major cause of the panic that broke in 1873 was
a. the
issuance of millions of dollars in greenbacks.
b. the expansion
of more factories, railroads, and mines than existing markets would
bear.
c. a credit crunch caused by extremely high interest
rates.
d. Wall Street's fears about the power of the radical
Greenback Labor party.
e. excessive speculation in mining stocks.
b
17. Which one of the following Gilded Age presidents had a Democratic
party affiliation, differing from the other
four
presidents?
a. Ulysses S. Grant
b. Rutherford Hayes
c.
Grover Cleveland
d. Benjamin Harrison
e. Chester Arthur
c
18. The presidential elections of the 1870s and 1880s
a. were
all won by Republicans.
b. revolved primarily around the
charismatic personalities running for the presidency.
c. were all
won by Democrats.
d. usually involved sharp partisan differences
over issues like currency policy and civil-service reform.
e.
aroused enormous turnouts among voters even though there were few
significant issues.
e
19. Which of the following was NOT among the regional groups that
formed the solid political base of the
Republican party in the
late 19th century?
a. immigrants living in the large Northeastern
cities.
b. Union Civil War veterans of the Grand Army of the
Republic.
c. Southern Black freedmen
d. Midwestern farmers
and small merchants.
e. rural and small-town Northeast residents.
a
20. The political base of the Democratic party in the late 19th
century lay especially in
a. the small towns of the Northeast and
the South.
b. big business and those involved in international
trade.
c. Midwestern farmers.
d. the white South and
big-city immigrant machines.
e. Northern African Americans and
Asian immigrants.
d
21. In the wake of anti-Chinese violence in California, the United
States Congress
a. negotiated a restricted-immigration agreement
with China.
b. did nothing, as it was California's
problem.
c. prosecuted the Kearneyites and other inciters of
anti-Kearneyites in San Francisco.
d. sent many Chinese back to
their homeland.
e. passed a law prohibiting the immigration of
Chinese laborers to America.
e
22. The Liberal Republican revolt from the regular Republican party
in 1872 was motivated primarily by
a. dismay at the Republicans'
weakness in upholding radical Reconstruction in the South.
b. a
desire to see President Grant reelected among these Liberal
Republicans and a fear that the regular
Republican Party would
not re-nominate Grant for president because of his policies.
c.
disgust at the corruption and scandals of the Grant
administration.
d. a fervent passion for reforms on behalf of
women and Black people.
e. a desire to strengthen the federal
government's regulation of big business.
c
23. With the Pendleton Act prohibiting political contributions from
many federal workers, politicians increasingly
sought money
from
a. new immigrants.
b. contractors doing business with
the federal government.
c. factory workers and farmers.
d.
foreign contributors.
e. big corporations.
e
24. The Crédit Mobilier scandal involved
a. public utility
company bribes.
b. Bureau of Indian Affairs payoffs.
c.
railroad construction kickbacks.
d. bribes to French government
officials in exchange to promises of favorable tariff treatment of
French
goods.
e. manipulating agricultural commodities
traded on the Chicago Board of Trade.
c
25. The example of New York's Boss Tweed illustrated
a. the
typical lack of ethics of the Gilded Age, which also pervaded
government in the form of bribery, graft,
and fraudulent
elections.
b. the concern of urban political bosses with
representing the best political and economic interests of
their
urban constituents.
c. the high value on honesty and
ethics put on governing during this age.
d. the inability of the
press and the legal establishment to take down a notoriously venal
political figure after
a lifetime of managing a politically
corrupt machine.
e. the effectiveness of the federal government
in ferreting out urban political corruption at an early stage
in
its development.
a
26. Those who enjoyed a successful political career in the post-Civil
War decades were usually
a. reformers.
b.
incorruptible.
c. party loyalists.
d. political independents
and gadflies.
e. politicians who did not rely on Civil War
veterans or their fraternal organizations for support.
c
27. President James A. Garfield was assassinated
a. by an
ex-Confederate bitter at Garfield's Union army service.
b. by an
unknown and an undiscovered assassin.
c. by a jealous former
lover.
d. by a deranged, disappointed office seeker.
e. by a
political anarchist.
d
28. The absence of children in largely all-male Chinese immigrant
communities meant that
a. the economic benefits of child labor
were largely absent.
b. the cultural and language assimilation
fostered by children were harder to attain.
c. many Chinese
organizations sought to bring in adopted children from China.
d.
white social work agencies were slower to become involved with Chinese
communities.
e. education was seldom a priority in Chinese communities.
b
29. Match each politician below with the Republican political faction
with which he was associated.
A. Roscoe Conkling 1.
"Half-Breeds"
B. James Blaine 2. Stalwarts
C.
Horace Greeley 3. Regular Republicans
D. Ulysses Grant 4. Liberal
Republicans
a. A-2, B-3, C-4, D-1
b. A-3, B-1, C-2,
D-4
c. A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
d. A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
e. A-4,
B-3, C-1, D-2
d
30. Despite his status as a military hero, General Ulysses S. Grant
proved to be a weak political leader because he
a. was personally
dishonest and corrupt.
b. did not believe in the principles of
the Republican party.
c. was incapable of striking the type of
political compromises necessary for a successful political
leader.
d. had no political experience and was a poor judge of
character.
e. lacked political ambition.
d
31. The sequence of presidential terms of the "forgettable
presidents" of the Gilded Age (including Cleveland's
two
nonconsecutive terms) was
a. Cleveland, Hayes, Harrison,
Cleveland, Arthur, and Garfield.
b. Garfield, Hayes, Harrison,
Cleveland, Arthur, and Cleveland.
c. Cleveland, Garfield, Arthur,
Hayes, Harrison, and Cleveland.
d. Hayes, Garfield, Arthur,
Cleveland, Harrison, and Cleveland.
e. Hayes, Garfield, Harrison,
Cleveland, Arthur, and Cleveland.
d
32. The early Populist campaign to create a coalition of poor white
and poor black farmers resulted in
a. a racist backlash that
eliminated black voting in the South through the widespread use of
literacy tests
and poll taxes to deny blacks the ballot.
b.
the transformation of white Populist political leader Tom Watson into
a fervent civil rights leader.
c. an alignment of wealthy Bourbon
whites with moderate blacks.
d. a long-term political coalition
between poor white and poor black farmers being sustained for many
years.
e. the emergence of Republican political power and the
breakdown of Democratic political power in the
South.
a
33. In the 1896 case of Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court ruled
that
a. African Americans could be denied the right to
vote.
b. segregation was always unconstitutional.
c.
"separate but equal" public schools and facilities were
constitutional under the "equal protection" clause
of
the Fourteenth Amendment.
d. the Fourteenth Amendment
protections of "equal protection" applied only to African
Americans who
could prove that an individual segregated black
school or facility was unequal to comparable white public
school
or public facility.
e. African Americans born as slaves could not
sue in federal court.
c
34. Economic unrest and the repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act
led to the rise in the 1890s of the pro-silver
political
leader
a. Tom Watson.
b. William Jennings Bryan.
c.
William McKinley.
d. Thomas Reed.
e. Samuel Gompers.
b
35. During the mid-to-late 19th century, Chinese women
a. did
not emigrate to the United States at all.
b. settled mostly on
the East Coast.
c. outnumbered Chinese men as immigrants to the
United States.
d. were very few in number, and most became
prostitutes.
e. competed with Irish and black women for jobs in
domestic service.
d
36. Which of the following was NOT among the platform planks adopted
by the Populist party in their convention of
1892?
a.
government ownership of the railroads, telephone, and
telegraph
b. free and unlimited coinage of silver in the ratio of
16 to 1
c. the adoption of the initiative petition and the
referendum
d. government guarantees of parity prices for
farmers
e. immigration restrictions
d
37. The presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes began with
a. improved
race relations in the South and the West
b. increased overseas
expansion.
c. sharp class conflict and a national railroad
strike.
d. public demands for positive immigration
reform.
e. All of these choices are correct
c
38. President Grover Cleveland aroused widespread public anger by
his
a. vetoing the Wilson-Gorman Tariff Act.
b. declining to
take any federal government action to address the worst economic
downturn of the 19th
century.
c. taking the United States
off the gold standard.
d. borrowing $65 million in gold from J.P.
Morgan's banking syndicate.
e. wasting the federal surplus on
pork-barrel spending.
d
39. The fundamental attitude of Hayes and other Republican
administrations toward labor agitation was
a. strong support for
the railroads and other business in their efforts to crush labor
organizing.
b. attempts to establish the federal government as a
neutral arbiter between business and labor.
c. support for
organized labor's efforts to unionize various industries.
d. to
support reasonable regulation of business.
e. to try to enlist
farmers as a political counterbalance to industrial laborers.
a
40. Black Americans were hard hit by the gloom times of the
depression years of the mid 1870s because
a. many had put their
savings in the Freedman's Savings and Trust, only to see it vanish due
to bad
investments by the savings bank.
b. they did not set
aside significant amounts of money for savings, preferring to spend or
invest almost every
dollar that they earned.
c. mobs of
unemployed workers took out their frustrations through violence
against Black Americans.
d. they lost what little money they
owned to directly investing in speculation schemes that had
gone
bankrupt.
e. None of these choices are correct.
a
41. All of the following are true statements about the Civil Rights
Act of 1875 EXCEPT
a. it marked a last political gasp of the
congressional radical Republicans.
b. it was supposed to
guarantee equal rights in voting and access to education for blacks
and whites.
c. its purpose was to ensure equal accommodations in
public places.
d. it prohibited racial discrimination in jury
selection.
e. much of its content was deemed unconstitutional in
the Civil Rights cases of 1883.
b
42. The conservative white Bourbon Democrats of the South largely
succeeded in crushing the Populist revolt by
a. demonstrating
that Populist economic policies would harm Southern cotton
interests.
b. adopting some of the Populist economic policies to
appeal to poor white farmers and their
economic
interests.
c. bribing the Populist leadership to
betray the rank and file.
d. persuading black farmers that the
Populists really did not have their interests at heart.
e.
appealing to poor white farmers' anti-black racial feelings against
their economic interests.
e
43. In an attempt to avoid prosecution for their corrupt dealings,
the owners of the Crédit Mobilizer
a. left the country.
b.
belatedly started to follow honest business practices.
c. used
shady bookkeeping to conceal their insider financial deals.
d.
tried to gain immunity by testifying before Congress.
e. bribed
key congressmen by giving them shares of the company's valuable stock.
e
44. Blacks who violated the Jim Crow laws or other elements of the
South's racial code were often
a. criminally prosecuted in
federal courts.
b. ostracized by their own community.
c.
assailed from both white and black churches.
d. losing their
sharecropping and tenant farming employment.
e. lynched by
Southern whites.
e
45. In seeking congressional approval to enact lower tariffs in 1887,
President Grover Cleveland
a. sought to reduce an embarrassing
federal Treasury surplus of over $100 million.
b. incurred the
political wrath of nervous industrialists who provided heavy financial
support to the
Republicans and their legally dubious vote buying
operations during the 1888 presidential election.
c. divided and
demoralized his own Democratic party, which was forced to fight the
upcoming election over
the controversial tariff issue.
d.
probably cost himself reelection in 1888 because the tariff issue
mobilized the Republicans quite
effectively.
e. All of these
choices are correct.
e
46. In the late 19th century, those political candidates who
campaigned by "waving the bloody shirt" were
reminding
voters
a. of the gory memories of the Civil War
and the Republican party's role in the Union's victory.
b. that
the Civil War had been caused by the election of a Republican
president.
c. that Republicans had reformed the corrupt radical
regimes in the Reconstruction South.
d. that radical Republicans
catered to freed slaves during Reconstruction.
e. of Ku Klux Klan
violence against Black people.
a
47. Public executions and lynchings of black men in the Jim Crow
South were
a. retaliation for violent crimes against
whites.
b. designed to intimidate African Americans to accept
second-class status.
c. done to scare blacks into moving out of
the South.
d. exceedingly rare during the decade between 1890 and
1900.
e. prosecuted vigorously by Southern state and local legal authorities.
b
48. The four states completely carried by the Populists in the
election of 1892 were
a. Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, and
South Dakota.
b. Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois.
c.
Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Kansas.
d. Massachusetts,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
e. Kansas, Colorado,
Idaho, and Nevada.
e
49. During the Gilded Age, the lifeblood of both the Democratic and
the Republican parties was/were
a. political and social reform
movements.
b. the Roman Catholic Church.
c. ideological
commitment.
d. big-city political machines.
e. political patronage.
e
50. The national railroad strike of 1877 started when
a.
President Hayes refused to use troops to keep the trains
running.
b. the four largest railroads cut salaries by 10
percent.
c. working hours were cut back by the railroad
companies.
d. the railroad workers refused to cross the picket
lines of cargo loaders.
e. the railroads tried to hire Chinese workers.
b
51. Labor unrest during the Hayes administration stemmed from
a.
agitation by Communist sympathizers and other political
radicals.
b. workers being given the legal right to unionize by
the federal government.
c. the collapse of the steel
industry.
d. workers' unreasonable demands and strikes for higher
pay and benefits during a period of economic
stagnation.
e.
years of depression and deflation that undermined workers' wages and
living standards.
e
52. The main reason(s) that the Chinese came to the United States
from the 1850s until 1882 was/were to
a. dig for gold and
sledgehammer the tracks for the transcontinental railroad in the
West.
b. marry and raise families on the West Coast.
c.
replace the newly freed slaves in the South.
d. buy their own
farms and cultivate agriculture.
e. work as skilled factory
workers on the East Coast.
a
53. President Cleveland's response to the depression of the 1890s
demonstrated that he
a. was able to work effectively with J.P.
Morgan to address the problems of unemployment.
b. understood the
problems of urban workers better than those of farmers.
c. had a
weak grasp of the economic theory that lay behind the demand for free
silver.
d. was unable to deal effectively with such a massive
economic crisis.
e. was able to skillfully incorporate some
Populist proposals into the Democratic party.
d
54. The political developments of the 1890s were largely shaped
by
a. the widespread prosperity and federal budget
surpluses.
b. America's growing involvement in overseas
conflicts.
c. the most severe and extended economic depression up
to that time.
d. the growing black rebellion against segregation
and racial oppression.
e. the deadlock among Republicans,
Democrats, and Populists in Congress.
c
55. President Cleveland's hostility to silver and silver-backed
currency was driven primarily by his fear that
a. the growing
drain of gold from the U.S. Treasury would force the United States off
the gold standard.
b. the unlimited supplies of silver within the
United States would cause an extended depression.
c. supporting
free silver would be politically beneficial to Democrats such as
William Jennings Bryan.
d. soon gold and silver would both be
replaced by strictly paper currency.
e. the U.S. Treasury did not
have sufficient capacity to store silver bullion at Fort Knox.
a
56. As a solution to the depression that followed the panic of 1873,
debtors strongly advocated
a. a return to gold as the only form
of American money.
b. establishment of a federally regulated
system of savings and loan banks.
c. the appointment of farmers
and workers to the Treasury Department.
d. bankers making
additional, greater loans at lower interest rates to finance new
economic ventures by
promoters who were having trouble realizing
profits from their previous railroad, mines, factory, and
grain
field investments.
e. inflation through issuance of
far more greenback paper currency.
e
57. In late 19th -century elections, Democrats could generally count
on the support of
a. the white South.
b. northern industrial
cities.
c. immigrant groups.
d. the Midwest.
e.
Catholics and Lutherans.
a, b, c, e
58. The Liberal Republican movement favored
a. an end to
military Reconstruction in the South.
b. civil-service
reform.
c. cheap money.
d. denying Ulysses S. Grant a second
term as president.
e. a two-term limit on the presidency.
a, b, d
59. In the Gilded Age, hard money policies were reflected in
a.
the Resumption Act of 1875.
b. Congress formally dropping the
coinage of silver dollars in 1873, the "Crime of
'73."
c. Grant's veto of a bill to print more paper currency
at the behest of creditors.
d. the monetary policy of the
Greenback Labor party.
e. the demand for more coinage of silver.
a, b, c
60. In the late 19th century, the Republican party was associated
with the cultural values of
a. religions derived from the Puritan
tradition.
b. a highly permissive personal morality
c.
toleration of moral and cultural differences in an imperfect
world.
d. government involvement in moral and economic
affairs.
e. belief in a common set of American moral values.
a, d, e