front 1 The tremendously rapid growth of American cities in the post-Civil War decades was a. uniquely American. b. fueled by an agricultural system suffering from poor production levels. c. attributable to the closing of the frontier. d. a trend that affected Europe as well. e. a result of natural reproduction. | back 1 D |
front 2 The major factor in drawing country people off the farms and into the big cities was the a. development of the skyscraper. b. availability of industrial jobs. c. compact nature of those large communities. d. advent of new housing structures known as dumbbell tenements. e. lure of cultural excitement. | back 2 B |
front 3 In 1900, the two largest cities in the world were a. Buenos Aires and Mexico City. b. Paris and London. c. Shanghai and Calcutta. d. London and New York City. e. Berlin and Madrid. | back 3 D |
front 4 The development of electric trolleys in the late nineteenth century transformed the American city by a. ending horse-drawn transportation in the city. b. enabling cities to build upward as well as outward. c. separating the mass transportation of the working class from the private vehicles of the wealthy. d. enabling cities to plan streets along regular grid lines. e. creating distinct districts devoted to residential neighborhoods, commerce, and industry. | back 4 E |
front 5 All of these were factors that increasingly made cities more attractive than farms for young adults except a. electricity, indoor plumbing and telephones. b. the advent of skyscrapers and suspension bridges. c. urban nightlife. d. industrial jobs. e. the lower cost of living. | back 5 E |
front 6 One of the early symbols of the dawning era of consumerism in urban America was a. mass-production factories. b. the Sears catalog. c. advertising billboards. d. public transportation systems. e. large department stores. | back 6 E |
front 7 The move to cities led to what major and enduring change in American lifestyles? a. Delayed marriages b. Fragmented family life c. More waste and the need for waste disposal d. An emphasis on thrift e. Increased wealth | back 7 C |
front 8 Which one of the following has the least in common with the other four? a. Slums b. Dumbbell tenements c. Bedroom communities d. Flophouses e. The "Lung Block" | back 8 C |
front 9 American cities increasingly abandoned wooden construction for brick and steel in their downtown districts after a. the great Chicago fire of 1871. b. the development of the electric elevator and the skyscraper. c. brickmaking became cheaper and iron was superseded by more durable steel for construction purposes. d. Architects like Louis Sullivan preferred to design steel and brick structures. e. wooden tenements collapsed in the new York inner city in the 1880s. | back 9 A |
front 10 The New Immigrants who came to the United States after 1880 a. had experience with democratic governments. b. arrived primarily from Germany, Sweden, and Norway. c. were culturally different from previous immigrants. d. received a warm welcome from the Old Immigrants. e. represented nonwhite racial groups. | back 10 C |
front 11 The two immigrant ethnic groups who were most harshly treated in the mid to late nineteenth century were the a. Spanish and Greeks. b. Irish and Chinese. c. Germans and Swedes. d. Japanese and Filipinos. e. French and Russians. | back 11 B |
front 12 Most Italian immigrants to the United States between 1880 and 1920 came to escape a. political oppression. b. famine. c. the political disintegration of their country. d. the military draft. e. the poverty and backwardness of southern Italy. | back 12 E |
front 13 A bird of passage was an immigrant who a. passed quickly from eastern ports to the Midwest or West. b. only passed through America on the way to Canada. c. came to the United States looking for a wife. d. came to America to work for a short time and then returned to Europe. e. flew from job to job. | back 13 D |
front 14 Most New Immigrants a. eventually returned to their country of origin. b. tried to preserve their Old Country culture in America. c. were subjected to stringent immigration restrictions. d. quickly assimilated into the mainstream of American life. e. converted to mainstream Protestantism. | back 14 B |
front 15 By the late nineteenth century, most of the Old Immigrant groups from northern and Western Europe a. actively promoted the idea of a multicultural America. b. were still regarded with suspicion and hostility by the majority of native Americans. c. had largely abandoned their ethnically based churches, clubs, and neighborhoods. d. were largely accepted as American, even though they often lived in separate ethnic neighborhoods. e. still maintained a primary loyalty to their country of origin, especially Ireland or Germany. | back 15 D |
front 16 New Immigrant groups were regarded with special hostility by many nativist Americans because a. most Americans considered Italian, Greek, or Jewish culture inferior to their own. b. many New Immigrants attempted to convert Americans to Catholicism, Orthodox Christianity, or Judaism. c. in many New Immigrant families, women were kept in distinctly subordinate roles. d. New Immigrants were often more politically loyal to their homelands than to the United States. e. their religions were distinctly different and some New Immigrants were politically radical. | back 16 E |
front 17 While big city political bosses and their machines were often criticized, they proved necessary and effective in the new urban environment because a. they were better able to leverage grant money from the federal government. b. they consistently upheld high ethical standards. c. they were closely allied to other urban institutions like the church and big business. d. they were more effective in serving urban immigrants' needs than weak state or local governments. e. their support for the Democratic party helped to balance small-town Republican power. | back 17 D |
front 18 Prominent Protestant pastors like Walter Rauschenbusch and Washington Gladden argued that a. the ancient Bible should be replaced by more modern scientific sociology and social theory. b. the Christian Gospel required that churches address poverty and other burning social issues of the day. c. the churches were in danger of being taken over by anti-intellectual fundamentalism. d. it was up to women to lead the church in an age of industrial democracy. e. the clergy should become the advance guard of a militant working class revolution. | back 18 B |
front 19 In the new urban environment, most liberal Protestants a. believed that a final Judgment Day was coming soon. b. were driven out of mainstream seminaries and colleges. c. welcomed ecumenical conversations with Roman Catholics. d. sharply criticized American society and American government. e. rejected biblical literalism and adapted religious ideas to modern culture. | back 19 E |
front 20 A sign of increasing diversity, by the late 1890s the number of religious denominations in America topped a. 50. b. 75. c. 100. d. 150. e. 200. | back 20 D |
front 21 The Darwinian theory of organic evolution through natural selection affected American religion by a. turning most scientists against religion. b. creating a split between religious conservatives who denied evolution and accomodationists who supported it. c. raising awareness of the close spiritual kinship between animals and human beings. d. causing a revival of the doctrine of original sin. e. sparking the rise of new denominations based on modern science. | back 21 B |
front 22 Besides serving immigrants and the poor in urban neighborhoods, settlement workers like Jane Addams and Florence Kelley a. actively lobbied for social reforms like anti-sweatshop laws and child labor laws. b. created the new, largely female profession of teaching. c. looked down on the immigrant populations they served. d. saw themselves primarily as feminists who worked to advance women's causes. e. steered clear of controversial international questions like war and peace. | back 22 A |
front 23 Settlement houses, such as Hull House, engaged in all of the following activities except a. child care. b. instruction in English. c. cultural activities. d. evangelical religious instruction. e. lobbying for social reform. | back 23 D |
front 24 The place that offered the greatest opportunities for American women in the period 1865-1900 was a. the big city. b. the West. c. suburban communities. d. rural America. e. New England. | back 24 A |
front 25 In the 1890s, white collar positions for women as secretaries, department store clerks, and telephone operators were largely reserved for a. Jews. b. Irish-Americans. c. African Americans. d. the college-educated. e. native-born Americans. | back 25 E |
front 26 The vast majority of employed female workers in the late nineteenth century were a. African Americans. b. just arrived from the country. c. single. d. married but without children. e. college-educated. | back 26 C |
front 27 Labor unions favored immigration restriction because most immigrants were all of the following except a. opposed to factory labor. b. used as strikebreakers. c. willing to work for lower wages. d. difficult to unionize. e. non-English speaking. | back 27 A |
front 28 The American Protective Association a. preached the social gospel that churches were obligated to protect New Immigrants. b. was led for many years by Florence Kelley and Jane Addams. c. supported immigration restrictions. d. established settlement houses in several major cities in order to aid New Immigrants. e. sought to organize mutual-aid associations. | back 28 C |
front 29 The religious denomination that was most positively engaged with the New Immigration was a. Roman Catholics. b. Baptists. c. Episcopalians. d. Christian Scientists. e. Mormons. | back 29 A |
front 30 The intellectual development that seriously disturbed the churches in the late nineteenth century was the a. growing feminist assault on theories of male superiority. b. growing awareness of non-Christian religions. c. rise of theories of white racial superiority. d. new geological studies. e. biology of Charles Darwin. | back 30 E |
front 31 When liberal Protestantism attempted to accommodate religion to modern science, it also tended to a. relegate religion to a private sphere of personal conduct and family life. b. make Protestantism a powerful actor on the national political stage. c. link religion to theories of racial superiority and imperialistic survival of the fittest. d. try to prove that religion itself was rooted in scientific fact. e. survive only in the universities and advanced intellectual circles. | back 31 A |
front 32 The new, research-oriented modern American university tended to a. focus primarily on theory rather than practical subjects. b. give a new emphasis to the importance of religion and cultural tradition. c. take the lead in movements of social and political reform. d. challenge Charles Darwin's theory of organic evolution and natural selection. e. de-emphasize religious and moral instruction in favor of practical subjects and professional specialization. | back 32 E |
front 33 The two major sources of funding for the powerful new American research universities were a. tuition paid by undergraduate students and fees charged to those served by the universities. b. state land grants and wealthy, philanthropic industrialists. c. the federal government and local communities. d. income from successful patents and corporate research grants. e. churches and numerous private individual donors. | back 33 B |
front 34 The pragmatists were a school of American philosophers who emphasized a. the provisional and fallible nature of knowledge and the value of ideas that solved problems. b. that ideas were largely worthless and only practical experience should be pursued. c. that the traditional Greek ideals of Plato and Aristotle should be revived. d. that scientific experimentation provided a new and absolutely certain basis for knowledge. e. that most academic knowledge was based on bourgeois ideas that oppressed the working class. | back 34 A |
front 35 Americans offered growing support for a free public education system a. to combat the growing strength of Catholic parochial schools. b. when the Chautauqua movement began to decline. c. because they accepted the idea that a free government cannot function without educated citizens. d. when private schools began to fold. e. as a way of identifying an intellectual elite. | back 35 C |
front 36 Booker T. Washington believed that the key to political and civil rights for African Americans was a. the vote. b. rigorous academic training. c. the rejection of accommodationist attitudes. d. to directly challenge white supremacy. e. economic independence and education | back 36 E |
front 37 The post-Civil War era witnessed a. an increase in compulsory school-attendance laws. b. the collapse of the Chautauqua movement. c. rejection of the German system of kindergartens. d. a slow rise in the illiteracy rate. e. an emphasis on liberal arts colleges. | back 37 A |
front 38 The success of the public schools is best evidenced by a. the large numbers of students graduating from them. b. the ways in which they helped assimilate massive numbers of immigrants. c. the falling illiteracy rate to just over 10 percent by 1900. d. the large numbers of average Americans going on to attend college. e. the movement of men into the teaching profession. | back 38 C |
front 39 As a leader of the African American community, Booker T. Washington a. helped to found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. b. advocated social equality. c. discovered hundreds of uses for the peanut. d. promoted black self-help but did not challenge segregation. e. promoted black political activism. | back 39 D |
front 40 The Morrill Act of 1862 a. established women's colleges like Vassar. b. required compulsory school attendance through high school. c. established the modern American research university. d. mandated racial integration in public schools. e. granted public lands to states to support higher education. | back 40 E |
front 41 In criticizing Booker T. Washington's educational emphasis on manual labor and industrial training, W.E.B. DuBois emphasized instead that black education should concentrate on a. adult education. b. education for political action. c. developing separate black schools and colleges. d. primary and secondary education. e. an intellectually gifted talented tenth. | back 41 E |
front 42 Black leader, Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois a. demanded complete equality for African Americans. b. established an industrial school at Tuskegee, Alabama. c. supported the goals of Booker T. Washington. d. was an ex-slave who rose to fame. e. None of these | back 42 A |
front 43 In the decades after the Civil War, college education for women a. became more difficult to obtain. b. was confined to women's colleges. c. became much more common. d. resulted in the passage of the Hatch Act. e. blossomed especially in the South. | back 43 C |
front 44 Which of the following was not among the major new research universities founded in the post-Civil War era? a. Harvard University b. The University of California c. Johns Hopkins University d. The University of Chicago e. Stanford University | back 44 A |
front 45 During the industrial revolution, life expectancy a. decreased. b. changed very little. c. was much higher in Europe than in the United States. d. measurably increased. e. rose for women more than men. | back 45 D |
front 46 The public library movement across America was greatly aided by the generous financial support from a. the federal government's Morrill Act. b. Andrew Carnegie. c. John D. Rockefeller. d. local "friends of the library." e. women's organizations. | back 46 B |
front 47 The two late-nineteenth-century newspaper publishers whose competition for circulation fueled the rise of sensationalistic yellow journalism were a. Horatio Alger and Harlan E. Halsey. b. Henry Adams and Henry James. c. Henry George and Edward Bellamy. d. William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer. e. Edwin L. Godkin and Stephen Crane. | back 47 D |
front 48 American newspapers expanded their circulation and public attention by a. printing hard-hitting editorials. b. crusading for social reform. c. repudiating the tactics of Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst. d. focusing on coverage of the local community and avoiding syndicalized material. e. printing sensationalist stories of sex and scandal. | back 48 E |
front 49 Henry George believed that the root of social inequality and social injustice lay in a. stock speculators and financiers who manipulated the price of real goods and services. b. labor unions that artificially drove up the prices of wages and therefore goods. c. landowners who gained unearned wealth from rising land values. d. businesspeople who gained excessive profits by exploiting workers. e. patriarchal ideologies that regarded women as inferior domestic beings. | back 49 C |
front 50 Edward Bellamy's novel, Looking Backward, inspired numerous late-nineteenth-century social reformers by a. demonstrating that women's work in the home was seriously undervalued. b. showing how a single tax on land speculation would end poverty. c. portraying the sufferings of an immigrant worker in Chicago's stockyard meat industry. d. showing the hypocrisy of the urban wealthy. e. portraying a utopian America in the year 2000, where nationalized industry had solved all social problems. | back 50 E |
front 51 General Lewis Wallace's book, Ben Hur a. achieved success only after his death. b. was based on a popular early movie. c. emphasized that virtue, honesty, and hard work were rewarded by success. d. detailed Wallace's experiences in the Civil War. e. defended Christianity against Darwinism. | back 51 E |
front 52 Match each of these late-nineteenth-century writers with the theme of his work. A. Lewis Wallace 1. success and honor as the products of honesty and hard work B. Horatio Alger C. Henry James 2. anti-Darwinism support for the Holy Scriptures D. William Dean Howells 3. contemporary social problems like divorce, labor strikes, and socialism 4. psychological realism and the dilemmas of sophisticated women. a. A-4, B-2, C-3, D-1 b. A-1, B-3, C-2, D-4 c. A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3 d. A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2 e. A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1 | back 52 C |
front 53 Which of the following prominent post-Civil War writers did not reflect the increased attention to social problems by those from less affluent backgrounds? a. Mark Twain b. William Dean Howells c. Stephen Crane d. Kate Chopin e. Henry Adams | back 53 E |
front 54 In the decades after the Civil War, changes in sexual attitudes and practices were reflected in all of the following except a. soaring divorce rates. b. the spreading practice of birth control. c. more children being born out of wedlock. d. increasingly frank discussion of sexual topics. e. more women working outside the home. | back 54 C |
front 55 In the course of the late nineteenth century a. the birthrate increased. b. the divorce rate fell. c. family size gradually declined. d. people tended to marry at an earlier age. e. children were seen as a greater economic asset. | back 55 C |
front 56 By 1900, advocates of women's suffrage a. acknowledged that women were biologically weaker than men but claimed that they deserved the vote anyway. b. temporarily abandoned the movement for the vote. c. formed strong alliances with African Americans seeking voting rights. d. argued that the vote would enable women to extend their roles as mothers and homemakers to the public world. e. insisted on the inherent political and moral equality of men and women. | back 56 D |
front 57 One of the most important factors leading to an increased divorce rate in the late nineteenth century was the a. decline in farm income. b. stresses of urban life. c. emerging feminist movement. d. passage of more liberal divorce laws. e. decline of religious organizations. | back 57 B |
front 58 Reflecting women's increasing independence in the late 1890s, author and feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman supported all of the following except a. women abandoning their dependent status. b. women seeking power via their roles as wives and mothers. c. notions that biology made women fundamentally different from men. d. centralized nurseries and cooperative kitchens. e. women becoming productive members of the economy as workers. | back 58 B |
front 59 The National American Woman Suffrage Association a. achieved its central political goal in 1898. b. conducted an integrated campaign for equal rights. c. abandoned the goals of Susan Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. d. elected Ida B. Wells as its president. e. limited its membership to whites. | back 59 E |
front 60 The growing prohibition movement especially reflected the concerns of a. the new immigrants. b. big business. c. the poor and working classes. d. middle class women. e. industrial labor unions. | back 60 D |
front 61 During industrialization, Americans increasingly a. had less free time. b. outlawed cruel and violent sports like boxing. c. became less involved in physical sports and games. d. shared a common and standardized popular culture. e. fragmented into diverse consumer markets. | back 61 D |
front 62 Which of the following sports was not developed in the decades following the Civil War? a. Basketball b. Bicycling c. Croquet d. College football e. Baseball | back 62 E |