front 1 In post-Civil War America, Indians surrendered their lands only when they a. chose to migrate farther west. b. received solemn promises from the government that they would be left alone and provided with supplies on the remaining land. c. lost their mobility as the whites killed their horses. d. were allowed to control the supply of food and other staples to the reservations. e. traded land for rifles and blankets. | back 1 B. received solemn promises from the government that they would be left alone and provided with supplies on the remaining land. |
front 2 For Native Americans in the West, tribes were a. the way they perceived their differences with other Indian groups. b. a system of socially organizing themselves. c. a fiction of the white imagination. d. a better alternative to the scattered bands that they had had in the past. e. None of these | back 2 C. a fiction of the white imagination. |
front 3 In the warfare that raged between the Indians and the American military after the Civil War, a. the Indians were never as well armed as the soldiers. b. the U.S. army was able to dominate with its superior technology. c. there was often great cruelty and massacres on both sides. d. Indians proved to be no match for the soldiers. e. Indians and soldiers seldom came into face-to-face combat. | back 3 C. there was often great cruelty and massacres on both sides |
front 4 The Buffalo Soldiers were a. U. S. Army units who survived on the plains by killing buffalo. b. African American cavalry and soldiers who served in the frontier wars. c. Soldiers who sought to defeat the Indians by depriving them of their primary food supply. d. Soldiers who were killed in the Fetterman massacre. e. Military officials who criticized George M. Custer's tactics. | back 4 B. African American cavalry and soldiers who served in the frontier wars. |
front 5 The Indians battled whites for all the following reasons except to a. rescue their families who had been exiled to Oklahoma. b. avenge savage massacres of Indians by whites. c. punish whites for breaking treaties. d. defend their lands against white invaders. e. preserve their nomadic way of life against forced settlement. | back 5 A. rescue their families who had been exiled to Oklahoma |
front 6 Match each Indian chief below with his tribe. A. Chief Joseph B. Sitting Bull C. Geronimo A. Apache 2. Cheyenne 3. Nez Percé 4. Sioux a. A-1, B-2, C-3 b. A-3, B-4, C-1 c. A-2, B-4, C-3 d. A-4, B-3, C-2 e. A-1, B-3, C-4 | back 6 B. A-3, B-4, C-1 |
front 7 As a result of the complete defeat of Captain William Fetterman's command in 1866 a. the government sent extensive military reinforcements to the Dakotas and Montana. b. the government abandoned the Bozeman Trail and guaranteed the Sioux their lands. c. the government adopted a policy of civilizing the Indians rather than trying to conquer them. d. white settlers agreed to halt their expansion beyond the 100th meridian. e. the conflict between the U.S. army and the Sioux came to a peaceful end. | back 7 B. the government abandoned the Bozeman Tail and guaranteed the Sioux their lands |
front 8 A new round of warfare between the Sioux and U.S. Army began in 1874 when a. the U.S. Army decided to retaliate for the Fetterman massacre. b. Sioux Chief Crazy Horse began an effort to drive all whites from Montana and the Dakotas. c. Colonel George Custer led an expedition to Little Big Horn, Montana. d. Colonel George Custer discovered gold on Sioux land in the Black Hills. e. the federal government announced that it was opening all Sioux lands to settlement. | back 8 D. Colonel George Custer discovered gold on Sioux land in the Black Hills. |
front 9 The Plains Indians were finally forced to surrender a. because they were decimated by their constant intertribal warfare. b. when they realized that agriculture was more profitable than hunting. c. after such famous leaders as Geronimo and Sitting Bull were killed. d. when the army began using artillery against them. e. by the coming of the railroads and the virtual extermination of the buffalo. | back 9 E. by the coming of the railroads and the virtual extermination of the buffalo. |
front 10 The Nez Percé Indians of Idaho were goaded into war when a. the Sioux began to migrate onto their land. b. gold was discovered on their reservation. c. the federal government attempted to force them onto a reservation. d. the Canadian government attempted to force their return to the United States. e. their alliance with the Shoshones required it. | back 10 C. the federal government attempted to force them onto a reservation. |
front 11 The buffalo were nearly exterminated a. as a result of being overhunted by the Indians. b. when their grasslands were turned into wheat and corn fields. c. when their meat became valued in eastern markets. d. by disease. e. through wholesale butchery by whites. | back 11 E. through wholesale butchery by whites. |
front 12 All of the following are true statements about Indians who ended up on reservations in the 1870s and 1880s except a. they could theoretically preserve their cultural autonomy. b. they were forced to eke out an existence. c. they became wards of the U.S. government. d. they felt protected by the U.S. government. e. many died from diseases. | back 12 D. they felt protected by the U.S. government |
front 13 A Century of Dishonor (1881), which chronicled the dismal history of Indian-white relations, was authored by a. Harriet Beecher Stowe. b. Helen Hunt Jackson. c. Chief Joseph. d. Joseph F. Glidden. e. William F. Cody. | back 13 B. Helen Hunt Jackson |
front 14 Helen Hunt Jackson's novel, Ramona, was centered around a. the cruel mistreatment of Indians in California. b. the cheating of Indians by federal agents on the reservations. c. the efforts of Christian reformers to prevent the killing of Indians. d. an Indian girl's attempt to retain her culture in an Indian boarding school. e. the last Indian wars between the U.S. army and the Apaches in the Southwest. | back 14 A. the cruel mistreatment of Indians in California |
front 15 The nineteenth-century humanitarians who advocated kind treatment of the Indians a. had no more respect for traditional Indian culture than those who sought to exterminate them. b. advocated allowing the Ghost Dance to continue. c. opposed passage of the Dawes Act. d. understood the value of the Indians' religious and cultural practices. e. advocated improving the reservation system. | back 15 A. had no more respect for traditional Indian culture than those who sought to exterminate them. |
front 16 To assimilate Indians into American society, the Dawes Act did all of the following except a. dissolve many tribes as legal entities. b. try to make rugged individualists of the Indians. c. wipe out tribal ownership of land. d. promise Indians U.S. citizenship in twenty-five years. e. outlaw the sacred Sun Dance. | back 16 E. outlaw the sacred Sun Dance |
front 17 The United States government's outlawing of the Indian Sun (Ghost) Dance in 1890 resulted in the a. Battle of Wounded Knee. b. Sand Creek massacre. c. Battle of Little Big Horn. d. Dawes Severalty Act. e. Carlisle Indian School. | back 17 A. Battle of Wounded Knee |
front 18 The Dawes Severalty Act was designed to promote Indian a. prosperity. b. annihilation. c. assimilation. d. culture. e. education. | back 18 C. assimilation |
front 19 Arrange the following events in chronological order: (A) Dawes Severalty Act is passed; (B) Oklahoma land rush takes place; (C) Indians are granted full citizenship; and (D) Congress restores the tribal basis of Indian life. a. A, B, C, D b. B, A, C, D c. A, D, B, C d. D, C, A, B e. C, B, D, A | back 19 A. A, B, C, D |
front 20 The largest single source of silver and gold in the frontier of the West was discovered in 1859 in a. Montana. b. the Black Hills of South Dakota. c. California. d. New Mexico. e. Nevada. | back 20 E. Nevada |
front 21 The mining frontier played a vital role in a. bringing law and order to the West. b. attracting the first substantial white population to the West. c. enabling the government to go off the gold standard. d. ensuring that the mining industry would remain in the hands of independent, small operations. e. forcing the Indians off the Great Plains. | back 21 B. attracting the first substantial white population to the West |
front 22 The bitter conflict between whites and Indians intensified a. during the Civil War. b. as a result of vigilante justice. c. when big business took over the mining industry. d. as the mining frontier expanded. e. after the Battle of Wounded Knee. | back 22 D. as the mining frontier expanded |
front 23 Which of these is NOT a true statement about women on the frontier? a. Women worked as prostitutes on the frontier. b. Some women made money running boarding houses. c. Women earned a kind of equality on the frontier. d. Frontier women got the right to vote much later than women in the East. e. Women found a variety of opportunities in the West. | back 23 D. Frontier women got the right to vote much later than women in the East |
front 24 The wild frontier towns where the three major cattle trails from Texas ended were a. Kansas City, Kansas; Pueblo, Colorado; and Laramie, Wyoming. b. Tulsa, Oklahoma; Santa Fe, New Mexico; and Denver, Colorado. c. Topeka, Kansas; Omaha, Nebraska; and Casper, Wyoming. d. Abilene, Kansas; Ogalalla, Nebraska; and Cheyenne, Wyoming. e. Atchison, Kansas; Greeley, Colorado; and Bozeman, Montana. | back 24 D. Abilene, Kansas; Ogalalla, Nebraska; and Cheyenne, Wyoming |
front 25 One major problem with the Homestead Act was that a. the government continued to try to maximize its revenue from public lands. b. 160 acres were inadequate for productive farming on the rain-scarce Great Plains. c. midwestern farmers had to give up raising livestock because of stiff competition with the West. d. most homesteaders knew little or nothing about farming in the West. e. it took several years to earn a profit from farming a homestead. | back 25 B. 160 acres were inadequate for product farming on the rain-scarce Great Plains. |
front 26 Large numbers of Europeans were persuaded to come to America to farm on the northern frontier by a. the Populist party. b. churches and other nonprofit organizations. c. the offer of free homestead land by the U.S. government. d. European governments. e. railroad agents who offered to sell them cheap land. | back 26 E. railroad agents who offered to sell them cheap land. |
front 27 All of the following are true statements about the Homestead Act except a. it was consistent with previous government public land policy designed to raise revenue. b. about a half million families carved out new homes in the 40 years after its passage. c. ten times more of the public land ended up in the hands of land speculators than farmers. d. thousands of people didn't last the five years required by the Homestead Act. e. the law was designed to provide a stimulus to the family farm. | back 27 A. it was consistent with previous government public land policy designed to raise revenue |
front 28 A major problem faced by settlers on the Great Plains in the 1870s was a. the high price of land. b. the low market value of grain. c. the scarcity of water. d. overcrowding. e. the opposition of miners. | back 28 C. the scarcity of water |
front 29 In the long run, the group that probably did the most to shape the modern West was the a. trappers. b. miners. c. railroad men. d. cowboys. e. hydraulic engineers. | back 29 E. hydraulic engineers |
front 30 Sooners were settlers who "jumped the gun" in order to a. pan gold in California. b. stake claims in the Comstock Lode in Nevada. c. claim land in Oklahoma before the territory was legally opened to settlement. d. drive the first cattle to Montana and Wyoming. e. grab town sites in the Dakotas. | back 30 C. claim land in Oklahoma before the territory was legally opened to settlement |
front 31 Among the following, the least likely to migrate to the cattle and farming frontier were a. eastern city dwellers. b. eastern farmers. c. recent immigrants. d. blacks. e. midwestern farmers. | back 31 A. eastern city dwellers |
front 32 After exploring much of the West, geologist John Wesley Powell warned in 1874 that a. the rush of settlers was devastating the western environment. b. land west of the 100th meridian could not be farmed without extensive irrigation. c. damming western rivers for irrigation purposes would damage mountains and forests. d. mining was the only industry that could sustain the western economy. e. the cattle industry would eventually falter because of severe western winters. | back 32 B. land west of the 100th meridian could not be farmed without extensive irrigation |
front 33 In 1890, when the superintendent of the census announced that a stable frontier line was no longer discernible, Americans were disturbed because a. they knew that the Homestead Act would no longer do them much good. b. they thought that there would be a renewal of Indian warfare. c. the idea of an endlessly open West had been an element of America's history from the beginning. d. many of them hoped eventually to migrate to the West. e. they feared that an influx of new western states would strengthen the Populists and other radicals. | back 33 C. the idea of an endlessly open West had been an element of America's history from the beginning |
front 34 The safety valve theory that the West dampened class conflict, while exaggerated, did have some validity because a. free western land did attract many immigrants to the West who might have crowded urban job markets. b. western farmers tended to be politically more conservative than those in the East. c. wealthy western farmers hired many unemployed laborers from eastern cities. d. eastern city dwellers headed west to get free homesteads during depressions. e. western cities had less class conflict than those in the East. | back 34 A. free western land did attract many immigrants to the West who might have crowded urban job markets. |
front 35 Western cities like Denver and San Francisco did serve as a major safety valve by providing a. a home for new immigrants. b. recreational activities for its inhabitants. c. a home for economically struggling farmers, miners, and easterners. d. None of these e. All of these | back 35 C. a home for economically struggling farmers, miners, and easterners. |
front 36 In the decades after the Civil War, most American farmers a. became attached to their family farms. b. diversified their crops. c. became increasingly self-sufficient. d. saw their numbers grow as more people moved west. e. grew a single cash crop. | back 36 E. grew a single cash crop |
front 37 The root cause of the American farmers' problems after 1880 was a. urban growth. b. foreign competition. c. the declining number of farms and farmers. d. the shortage of farm machinery. e. low prices and a deflated currency. | back 37 E. low prices and a deflated currency |
front 38 In the last decades of the nineteenth century, the volume of agricultural goods ____, and the price received for these goods ____. a. increased; decreased b. decreased; increased c. increased; also increased d. decreased; also decreased e. increased; stayed the same. | back 38 A. increased; decreased |
front 39 Late-nineteenth-century farmers believed that their difficulties stemmed primarily from a. low tariff rates. b. overproduction. c. a deflated currency. d. immigration laws. e. the federal government. | back 39 C. a deflated currency |
front 40 With agricultural production rising dramatically in the post-Civil War years a. more farmers could purchase land. b. tenant farming spread rapidly throughout the Midwest and South. c. bankruptcies declined. d. western farmers prospered, while southern farmers had grave troubles selling their cotton. e. the government began encouraging the development of soil banks. | back 40 B. tenant farming spread rapidly throughout the Midwest and South |
front 41 Farmers were slow to organize and promote their interest because they a. were not well educated. b. did not possess the money necessary to establish a national political movement. c. were divided by the wealthier, more powerful manufacturers and railroad barons. d. were too busy trying to eke out a living. e. were, by nature, highly independent and individualistic. | back 41 E. were, by nature, highly independent and individualistic |
front 42 The first major farmers' organization was the a. National Grange. b. Populists. c. Greenback Labor party. d. Farmers' Alliance. e. American Farm Bureau. | back 42 A. National Grange |
front 43 The original purpose of the Grange was to a. get involved in politics. b. support an inflationary monetary policy. c. stimulate self-improvement through educational and social activities. d. improve the farmers' collective plight. e. support the Homestead law. | back 43 C. stimulate self-improvement through educational and social activities. |
front 44 For farm men and women , Granges were a godsend because a. they required members to pitch in and help each other during harvest season. b. the picnics, concerts and lectures they offered helped ease their isolation. c. their secret rituals kept out people they didn't like. d. they sold farming supplies at a deep discount. e. they helped members join together to take advantage of opportunities via the Homestead Act. | back 44 B. the picnics, concerts, and lectured they offered helped ease their isolation. |
front 45 In several states, farmers helped to pass the Granger Laws, which were designed to a. provide state subsidies for farm exports. b. lower farm mortgage interest rates. c. allow the formation of producer and consumer cooperatives. d. prohibit bankruptcy auctions. e. regulate railroad rates and grain storage fees. | back 45 E. regulate railroad rates and grain storage fees. |
front 46 The Farmers' Alliance was originally formed to a. drive up farm prices by reducing crop production. b. advance agriculturally useful education in state land-grant colleges. c. end the rise of tenant farming. d. undermine eastern bankers by providing low-cost loans to farmers. e. break the economic grip of the railroads through farmers' cooperatives. | back 46 E. break the economic grip of the railroads though farmers' cooperatives. |
front 47 The Farmers' Alliance was especially weakened by a. its political ineptitude. b. its inability to overcome racial divisions in the South. c. corrupt leadership. d. its failure to target landowners. e. regional concentration in the South. | back 47 B. its inability to overcome racial divisions in the South |
front 48 The Populist party arose as the direct successor to the a. Greenback Labor party. b. Farmers' Alliance. c. Silver Miners' Coalition. d. Liberal Republican party. e. Grange. | back 48 B. Farmers' Alliance |
front 49 The Populist party's presidential candidate in 1892 was a. James B. Weaver. b. William Jennings Bryan. c. Mary Elizabeth Lease. d. Adlai Stevenson. e. William "Coin" Harvey. | back 49 A. James B. Weaver |
front 50 Which one of the following was not among influential Populist leaders? a. William "Coin" Harvey b. Ignatius Donnelley c. Mary Elizabeth Lease d. James B. Weaver e. Eugene V. Debs | back 50 E. Eugene V. Debs |
front 51 In a bid to win labor's support, the Populist party a. supported restrictions on immigration. b. nominated Samuel Gompers for president. c. opposed injunctions against labor strikes. d. endorsed workmen's compensation laws. e. proposed a law guaranteeing the right to organize and strike. | back 51 C. opposed injunctions against labor strikes |
front 52 The severe economic depression of the 1890s strengthened the Populists' argument that a. the abolition of all metallic money in favor of paper was essential. b. white and black farmers had common economic interests c. they should form a progressive coalition with pro-silver Democrats. d. farmers had nothing in common with the residents of industrial cities. e. wage earners and farmers alike were victims of an oppressive economic system. | back 52 E. wage earners and farmers alike were victims of an oppressive economic system |
front 53 During the 1892 presidential election, large numbers of southern white farmers refused to desert the Democratic Party and support the Populist Party because a. they did not think the Populists represented their political interests. b. they were not experiencing the same hard times as Midwestern farmers. c. the history of racial division in the region made it hard to cooperate with blacks. d. they believed that too many Populists were former Republicans. e. they could not accept the Populists' call for government ownership of the railroads, telegraph, and telephones. | back 53 C. the history of racial division in the region made it hard to cooperate with blacks. |
front 54 Jacob Coxey and his army marched on Washington, D.C., to a. demand a larger military budget. b. protest the repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act. c. demand that the government relieve unemployment with a public works program. d. try to promote a general strike of all workers. e. demand the immediate payment of bonuses to Civil War veterans. | back 54 C. demand that the government relieve unemployment with a public works program |
front 55 Which one of the following was least sympathetic to workers and farmers hard-pressed by the Depression of 1893? a. John P. Altgeld b. Richard Olney c. Eugene V. Debs d. Jacob Coxey e. William Jennings Bryan | back 55 B. Richard Olney |
front 56 President Grover Cleveland justified federal intervention in the Pullman strike of 1894 on the grounds that a. the union's leader, Eugene V. Debs, was a socialist. b. strikes against railroads were illegal. c. the strikers were engaging in violent attacks on railroad property. d. shutting down the railroads threatened American national security. e. the strike was preventing the transit of U.S. mail. | back 56 E. the strike was preventing the transit of U.S. mail. |
front 57 Match each individual with his role in the Pullman strike: A. Richard Olney B. Eugene V. Debs C. George Pullman D. John P. Altgeld 1. Head of the American railway Union that organized the strike 2. Governor of Illinois who sympathized with the striking workers 3. United States attorney general who brought in federal troops to crush the strike 4. Owner of the "palace railroad car" company and the company town where the strike began a. A-1, B-2, C-4, D-3 b. A-2, B-1, C-3, D-4 c. A-3, B-1, C-4, D-2 d. A-4, B-3, C-2, D-l e. A-2, B-4, C-l, D-3 | back 57 C. A-3, B-1, C-4, D-2 |
front 58 Labor unions, Populists, and debtors saw in the brutal Pullman episode a. proof of an alliance between big business, the federal government, and the courts against working people. b. a strategy by which united working-class action could succeed. c. the need for a socialist party in the United States. d. the potential of the federal government as a counterweight to big business. e. the crucial role of middle-class public opinion in labor conflicts. | back 58 A. proof of an alliance between big business, the federal government, and the courts against working people. |
front 59 The Pullman strike created the first instance of a. management recognition of the right of workers to organize and strike. b. government use of federal troops to break a labor strike. c. violence during a labor strike. d. a united front between urban workers and agrarian Populists. e. government use of a federal court injunction to break a strike. | back 59 E. government use of a federal court injunction to break a strike |
front 60 The depression of the 1890s and episodes like the Pullman Strike made the election of 1896 shape up as a a. battle between down-and-out workers and farmers and establishment conservatives. b. conflict between the insurgent Populists and the two established political parties. c. sectional conflict with the West aligned against the Northeast and South. d. contest over the power of the federal government to manage a modern industrial economy like the United States. e. clash of cultures between ordinary middle-class Americans and European-oriented radicals and reformers. | back 60 A. battle between down-and-out workers and farmers and the establishment conservatives |
front 61 Which of the following was not among the qualifications that helped William McKinley earn the Republican presidential nomination in 1896? a. He came from the key electoral swing state of Ohio. b. He had gained a national reputation by sponsoring the high McKinley Tariff Bill. c. He was a likable Civil War veteran. d. He was backed by the skilled political manager and fund raiser Mark Hanna. e. He was an energetic and charismatic campaigner. | back 61 E. He was an energetic and charismatic campaigner |
front 62 Mark Hanna, the Ohio Republican president-maker, believed that the prime function of the federal government was to a. defend against foreign enemies. b. maintain a laissez-faire policy. c. not "rock the boat" of prosperity. d. overturn the trickle down theory of economics. e. provide aid to big business. | back 62 E. provide aid to big business |
front 63 The Democratic party nominee for president in 1896 was ____; the Republicans nominated ____; and the Populists endorsed ____. a. William McKinley; Mark Hanna; William Jennings Bryan b. William Jennings Bryan; William McKinley; James B. Weaver c. William Jennings Bryan; William McKinley; William Jennings Bryan d. Mark Hanna; William Jennings Bryan; William Jennings Bryan e. William Jennings Bryan; Theodore Roosevelt; William Jennings Bryan | back 63 C. William Jennings Bryan; William McKinley; William Jennings Bryan |
front 64 All of the following characteristics describe William Jennings Bryan in 1896 except he a. disliked the concept of class conflict. b. was very youthful. c. was an energetic and charismatic campaigner. d. was an excellent orator. e. radiated honesty and sincerity. | back 64 A. disliked the concept of class conflict |
front 65 William Jennings Bryan gained the presidential nomination of the Democratic party primarily because he a. had already gained the nomination of the Populist party. b. had the support of urban workers. c. possessed a brilliant political mind. d. eloquently supported the farmers' demand for the unlimited coinage of silver. e. was backed by the Democratic Party establishment. | back 65 D. eloquently supported the farmers' demand for the unlimited coinage of silver |
front 66 In the election of 1896, the major issue became a. restoration of protective tariffs. b. enactment of an income tax. c. government programs for those unemployed as a result of the depression. d. the rights of farmers and industrial workers. e. free and unlimited coinage of silver. | back 66 E. free and unlimited coinage of silver |
front 67 One key to the Republican victory in the 1896 presidential election was a. McKinley's ability to create divisions between western and southern farmers. b. the huge financial and propaganda effort of Mark Hanna and the Republicans. c. McKinley's ability to make the tariff issue more important than free silver. d. the wide travel and numerous speeches made by William McKinley. e. the ability of Republicans to disrupt the solid South. | back 67 B. the huge financial and propaganda effort of Mark Hanna and the Republicans |
front 68 The strongest ally of Mark Hanna and the Republicans in the 1896 presidential election was a. the drop in wheat prices. b. McKinley's vigorous campaigning. c. fear of the alleged radicalism of William Jennings Bryan and his free silver cause. d. the nearly unanimous support of the nation's trained economists. e. the divisions in the Democratic Party. | back 68 C. fear of the alleged radicalism of William Jennings Bryan and his free silver cause. |
front 69 The 1896 presidential election marked the last time that a. rural America would defeat urban America. b. the South remained solid for the Democratic party. c. a third-party candidate had a serious chance at the White House. d. factory workers would favor inflation. e. a serious effort to win the White House would be made with mostly agrarian votes. | back 69 E. a serious effort to win the White House would be made with mostly agrarian votes |
front 70 The 1896 victory of William McKinley ushered in a long period of Republican dominance that was accompanied by a. diminishing voter participation in elections. b. strengthening of party organizations. c. greater concern over civil-service reform. d. less concern for industrial regulation. e. sharpened conflict between business and labor. | back 70 A. diminishing voter participation in elections |
front 71 As president, William McKinley can best be described as a. cautious and conservative. b. a man of little ability. c. an active reformer. d. a person willing to go against the opinion of the majority. e. a skillful negotiator. | back 71 A. cautious and conservative |
front 72 The monetary inflation needed to relieve the social and economic hardships of the late nineteenth century eventually came as a result of a. the Gold Standard Act. b. McKinley's adoption of the bimetallic standard. c. an increase in the international gold supply. d. Populist fusion with the Democratic party. e. the creation of the Federal Reserve Board. | back 72 C. an increase in the international gold supply |