front 1 In post-Civil War America, Indians surrendered their lands only when
they | back 1 B |
front 2 For Native Americans in the West, tribes were | back 2 C |
front 3 In the warfare that raged between the Indians and the American
military after the Civil War, | back 3 C |
front 4 The Buffalo Soldiers were . supply. | back 4 B |
front 5 The Indians battled whites for all the following reasons except
to | back 5 A |
front 6 Match each Indian chief below with his
tribe. a | back 6 B |
front 7 As a result of the complete defeat of Captain William Fetterman's
command in 1866 | back 7 B |
front 8 A new round of warfare between the Sioux and U.S. Army began in 1874
when | back 8 D |
front 9 The Plains Indians were finally forced to
surrender | back 9 E |
front 10 The Nez Percé Indians of Idaho were goaded into war
when | back 10 C |
front 11 The buffalo were nearly exterminated e | back 11 E |
front 12 All of the following are true statements about Indians who ended up
on reservations in the 1870s and | back 12 D |
front 13 A Century of Dishonor (1881), which chronicled the dismal history of
Indian-white relations, was | back 13 B |
front 14 Helen Hunt Jackson's novel, Ramona, was centered
around | back 14 A |
front 15 The nineteenth-century humanitarians who advocated kind treatment of
the Indians . | back 15 A |
front 16 To assimilate Indians into American society, the Dawes Act did all of
the following except | back 16 E |
front 17 The United States government's outlawing of the Indian Sun (Ghost)
Dance in 1890 resulted in the | back 17 A |
front 18 The Dawes Severalty Act was designed to promote Indian | back 18 C |
front 19 Arrange the following events in chronological order: (A) Dawes
Severalty Act is passed; (B) b | back 19 A |
front 20 The largest single source of silver and gold in the frontier of the
West was discovered in 1859
in | back 20 E |
front 21 The mining frontier played a vital role
in | back 21 B |
front 22 The bitter conflict between whites and Indians
intensified | back 22 D |
front 23 Which of these is NOT a true statement about women on the
frontier? | back 23 D |
front 24 The wild frontier towns where the three major cattle trails from
Texas ended were | back 24 D |
front 25 One major problem with the Homestead Act was
that | back 25 B |
front 26 Large numbers of Europeans were persuaded to come to America to farm
on the northern frontier by e | back 26 E |
front 27 All of the following are true statements about the Homestead Act
except | back 27 A |
front 28 A major problem faced by settlers on the Great Plains in the 1870s
was | back 28 C |
front 29 In the long run, the group that probably did the most to shape the
modern West was
the | back 29 E |
front 30 Sooners were settlers who "jumped the gun" in order
to d | back 30 C |
front 31 Among the following, the least likely to migrate to the cattle and
farming frontier were | back 31 A |
front 32 After exploring much of the West, geologist John Wesley Powell warned
in 1874 that | back 32 B |
front 33 In 1890, when the superintendent of the census announced that a
stable frontier line was no longer . radicals. | back 33 C |
front 34 The safety valve theory that the West dampened class conflict, while
exaggerated, did have some | back 34 A |
front 35 Western cities like Denver and San Francisco did serve as a major
safety valve by providing | back 35 C |
front 36 In the decades after the Civil War, most American
farmers | back 36 E |
front 37 The root cause of the American farmers problems after 1880
was . | back 37 E |
front 38 In the last decades of the nineteenth century, the volume of
agricultural goods ____, and the price | back 38 A |
front 39 Late-nineteenth-century farmers believed that their difficulties
stemmed primarily from | back 39 C |
front 40 With agricultural production rising dramatically in the post-Civil
War years | back 40 B |
front 41 Farmers were slow to organize and promote their interest because
they . | back 41 E |
front 42 The first major farmers' organization was
the | back 42 A |
front 43 The original purpose of the Grange was to | back 43 C |
front 44 For farm men and women , Granges were a godsend
because | back 44 B |
front 45 In several states, farmers helped to pass the Granger Laws, which
were designed to | back 45 E |
front 46 The Farmers' Alliance was originally formed
to | back 46 E |
front 47 The Farmers' Alliance was especially weakened
by | back 47 B |
front 48 The Populist party arose as the direct successor to
the | back 48 B |
front 49 The Populist party's presidential candidate in 1892
was | back 49 A |
front 50 Which one of the following was not among influential Populist
leaders? | back 50 E |
front 51 In a bid to win labor's support, the Populist
party | back 51 C |
front 52 The severe economic depression of the 1890s strengthened the
Populists'; argument that | back 52 E |
front 53 During the 1892 presidential election, large numbers of southern
white farmers refused to desert the | back 53 C |
front 54 Jacob Coxey and his army marched on Washington, D.C.,
to | back 54 C |
front 55 Which one of the following was least sympathetic to workers and
farmers hard-pressed by the | back 55 B |
front 56 President Grover Cleveland justified federal intervention in the
Pullman strike of 1894 on the grounds d | back 56 E |
front 57 Match each individual with his role in the Pullman
strike: strike B. Eugene V. Debs 2. Governor of Illinois who sympathized with the striking workers C. George Pullman 3. United States attorney general who brought in federal troops to crush the strike D company town where the strike began a | back 57 C |
front 58 Labor unions, Populists, and debtors saw in the brutal Pullman
episode | back 58 A |
front 59 The Pullman strike created the first instance
of | back 59 E |
front 60 The depression of the 1890s and episodes like the Pullman Strike made
the election of 1896 shape up | back 60 A |
front 61 Which of the following was not among the qualifications that helped
William McKinley earn the | back 61 E |
front 62 Mark Hanna, the Ohio Republican president-maker, believed that the
prime function of the federal | back 62 E |
front 63 The Democratic party nominee for president in 1896 was ____; the
Republicans nominated ____; and | back 63 C |
front 64 All of the following characteristics describe William Jennings Bryan
in 1896 except he | back 64 A |
front 65 William Jennings Bryan gained the presidential nomination of the
Democratic party primarily because | back 65 D |
front 66 In the election of 1896, the major issue
became . | back 66 E |
front 67 One key to the Republican victory in the 1896 presidential election
was | back 67 B |
front 68 The strongest ally of Mark Hanna and the Republicans in the 1896
presidential election was | back 68 C |
front 69 The 1896 presidential election marked the last time
that | back 69 E |
front 70 The 1896 victory of William McKinley ushered in a long period of
Republican dominance that was . | back 70 A |
front 71 As president, William McKinley can best be described
as | back 71 A |
front 72 The monetary inflation needed to relieve the social and economic
hardships of the late nineteenth | back 72 C |