front 1 When private railroad promoters asked the United States government
for subsidies to build their railroads, they gave all of the following
reasons for their request except that it was | back 1 C |
front 2 During the Gilded Age, most of the railroad barons | back 2 B |
front 3 The national government helped to finance transcontinental railroad
construction in the late nineteenth century by providing railroad
corporations with | back 3 B |
front 4 Match each railroad company below with the correct
entrepreneur. | back 4 A |
front 5 The only transcontinental railroad built without government aid was
the | back 5 E |
front 6 One by-product of the development of the railroads was | back 6 C |
front 7 The greatest single factor helping to spur the amazing
industrialization of the | back 7 E |
front 8 The United States changed to standard time zones when | back 8 B |
front 9 Agreements between railroad corporations to divide the business in a
given area and share the profits were called | back 9 A |
front 10 Early railroad owners formed "pools" in order to | back 10 C |
front 11 Efforts to regulate the monopolizing practices of railroad
corporations first came in the form of action by | back 11 B |
front 12 The first federal regulatory agency designed to protect the public
interest from business combinations was the | back 12 B |
front 13 One of the most significant aspects of the Interstate Commerce Act
was that it | back 13 B |
front 14 After the Civil War, the plentiful supply of unskilled labor in the
United States | back 14 A |
front 15 One of the methods by which post-Civil War business leaders increased
their profits was | back 15 E |
front 16 Match each entrepreneur below with the form of business combination
with which he is historically identified. | back 16 C |
front 17 Match each entrepreneur below with the field of enterprise with which
he is historically identified. | back 17 D |
front 18 The steel industry owed much to the inventive genius of | back 18 B |
front 19 J.P. Morgan monitored his competition by placing officers of his bank
on the boards of companies that he wanted to control. This method was
known as a(n) | back 19 A |
front 20 America's first billion-dollar corporation was | back 20 E |
front 21 The first major product of the oil industry was | back 21 A |
front 22 The oil industry became a huge business | back 22 C |
front 23 John D. Rockefeller used all of the following tactics to achieve
success in the oil industry except | back 23 C |
front 24 The gospel of wealth, which associated godliness with wealth, | back 24 B |
front 25 To help corporations, the courts ingeniously interpreted the
Fourteenth Amendment, which was designed to protect the rights of
ex-slaves, so as to | back 25 D |
front 26 The ___ Amendment was especially helpful to giant corporations when
defending themselves against regulation by state governments. | back 26 B |
front 27 The Sherman Anti-Trust Act was at first primarily used to curb the
power of | back 27 D |
front 28 During the age of industrialization, the South | back 28 E |
front 29 The South's major attraction for potential investors was | back 29 D |
front 30 In the late nineteenth century, tax benefits and cheap, nonunion
labor attracted manufacturing to the "new South." | back 30 A |
front 31 Many Southerners saw employment in the textile mills as | back 31 E |
front 32 One of the greatest changes that industrialization brought about in
the lives of workers was | back 32 B |
front 33 The group most affected by the new industrial age was | back 33 C |
front 34 To provide workers with job security, reformers wanted to introduce
all of the following except | back 34 C |
front 35 The image of the "Gibson Girl" represented | back 35 D |
front 36 Most women workers of the 1890s worked for | back 36 C |
front 37 Which one of the following is least like the other three? | back 37 A |
front 38 Generally, the Supreme Court in the late nineteenth century
interpreted the Constitution in such a way as to favor | back 38 B |
front 39 Match each labor organization below with the correct
description. | back 39 E |
front 40 In its efforts on behalf of workers, the National labor Union
won | back 40 A |
front 41 One group barred from membership in the Knights of Labor was | back 41 B |
front 42 The Knights of Labor believed that conflict between capital and labor
would disappear when | back 42 E |
front 43 The Knights of Labor believed that republican traditions and
institutions | back 43 B |
front 44 One of the major reasons the Knights of Labor failed was its | back 44 E |
front 45 The most effective and most enduring labor union of the post-Civil
War period was the | back 45 C |
front 46 By 1900, American attitudes toward labor began to change as the
public came to recognize the right of workers to bargain collectively
and strike. Nevertheless, | back 46 C |
front 47 By 1900, organized labor in America | back 47 D |
front 48 Some people who found fault with the captains of industry argued that
these men | back 48 B |
front 49 Historians critical of the captains of industry and capitalism
concede that | back 49 E |
front 50 All of the following were important factors in post-Civil War
industrial | back 50 D |