front 1 In post-Civil War America, Indians surrendered their lands only when
they: | back 1 B |
front 2 The Indians battled whites for all the following reasons except
to: | back 2 A |
front 3 The Plains Indians were finally forced to surrender: | back 3 E |
front 4 The humanitarians who wanted to treat the Indians kindly: | back 4 A |
front 5 To assimilate Indians into American society, the Dawes Act did all of
the following except: | back 5 E |
front 6 The United States government´s outlawing of the Indian Sun (Ghost)
Dance in 1890 resulted in the: | back 6 A |
front 7 The Dawes Severalty Act was designed to promote Indian: | back 7 C |
front 8 The enormous mineral wealth taken from the mining frontier: | back 8 E |
front 9 The mining frontier played a vital role in: | back 9 B |
front 10 The Homestead Act assumed that public land would be administered in
such a way as to: | back 10 E |
front 11 The Homestead Act: | back 11 B |
front 12 Among the following, the least likely to migrate to the cattle and
farming frontier were: | back 12 A |
front 13 Which of the following provides the least valid support for the
theory that the frontier served as a "safety valve" for
American social discontent and economic conflict? | back 13 D |
front 14 The area of the country in which the federal government has done the
most to aid economic and social development is: | back 14 A |
front 15 The real "safety valve" in the late nineteenth century
was: | back 15 A |
front 16 In the decades after the Civil War, most American farmers: | back 16 E |
front 17 In the last decades of the late nineteenth century, the volume of
agricultural goods ________, and the price received for these goods
__________. | back 17 A |
front 18 Farmers were slow to organize and promote their interest because
they: | back 18 A |
front 19 In several states, farmers helped to pass the "Granger
Laws," which: | back 19 E |
front 20 The Populists: | back 20 E |
front 21 President Grover Cleveland justified federal intervention in the
Pullman strike of 1894 on the grounds that: | back 21 E |
front 22 Labor unions, Populists, and debtors saw in the brutal Pullman
episode: | back 22 A |
front 23 The Depression of the 1890s and episodes like the Pullman Strike made
the election of 1896 shape up as: | back 23 A |
front 24 Which of the following was not among the qualifications that helped
William McKinley earn the Republican presidential nomination in
1896? | back 24 E |
front 25 In the election of 1896, the major issue became: | back 25 E |
front 26 The 1896 presidential election marked the last time that: | back 26 E |
front 27 The 1896 of William McKinley ushered in a long period of Republican
dominance that was accompanied by: | back 27 A |
front 28 The decline of the long drive and the cattle boom resulted
from: | back 28 A, B, C, D, E |
front 29 Factors eventually leading to the defeat of the Plains Indians
included: | back 29 A, B, C, D |
front 30 Late nineteenth-century Populist farmers held grievance
against: | back 30 A, B, C, D, E |
front 31 The Populists' political program called for: | back 31 A, B, D, E |
front 32 Match each Indian chief below with his tribe. | back 32 B |
front 33 As a result of the complete defeat of Captain William Fetterman's
command in 1866 | back 33 B |
front 34 The Plains Indians were finally forced to surrender | back 34 E |
front 35 The Nez Perce Indians of Idaho were goaded into war when | back 35 B |
front 36 The buffalo were nearly exterminated | back 36 E |
front 37 A Century of Dishonor (1881), which chronicled the dismal history of
Indian-white relations, was authored by | back 37 B |
front 38 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; (D) Congress restores the tribal
basis of Indian life. | back 38 A |
front 39 The mining frontier played a vital role in | back 39 B |
front 40 The bitter conflict between whites and Indians intensified | back 40 D |
front 41 The wild frontier towns where the three major cattle trails from
Texas ended were | back 41 D |
front 42 One problem with the Homestead Act was that | back 42 B |
front 43 The Homestead Act assumed that public land should be administered in
such a way as to | back 43 E |
front 44 Major problem faced by settlers on the Great Plains in the 1870s
was | back 44 C |
front 45 In the long run, the group that probably did the most to shape the
modern West was the | back 45 E |
front 46 "Sooners" were settlers "who jumped the gun" in
order to | back 46 C |
front 47 In 1890, when the superintendent of the census announced that a
stable frontier line was no longer discernible, | back 47 C |
front 48 Cities Denver and San Francisco did serve as a major "safety
valve" by providing | back 48 C |
front 49 In the decades after the Civil War, most American farmers | back 49 E |
front 50 The root cause of the American farmers' problem after 1880
was | back 50 E |