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SLANG: Unit 2
Gilded Age: Politics and Expansion
Question | Answer |
---|---|
Pendleton Act | 1883 legislation that attempted to replace the “spoils system” with a “merit system,” by creating the Civil Service Commission. People seeking government jobs would now have to pass a test to receive the job, based on merit. |
Tammany Hall | New York democratic party/political machine; gained notoriety for corrupt practices; political machines came to power because of the rapid growth of cities, machines traded services to city dwellers for votes at the polls |
Boss Tweed | corrupt party boss of Tammany Hall |
Thomas Nast | most famous political cartoonist of the Gilded Age; known for his scathing editorials against the infamous Boss Tweed |
Segregation | the separation of races in the United States. |
W.E.B. Du Bois | African American civil rights activist of the late 19th c and early 20th c; demanded immediate rights and equal access for the “talented tenth” of African American Youth; cofounder of NAACP |
Booker T. Washington | early African American civil rights leader; established Tuskegee Institute; known for his “Atlanta Compromise” of 1895 |
Atlanta Compromise | speech given by Booker T. Washington that outlined his ideas concerning African American self |
Disfranchise | taking away the right to vote |
Literacy Test | unfair tests administered to people in the South, to disfranchise black citizens |
Poll Tax | voting tax used to keep black people from voting |
Jim Crow Era | name adopted from a slavery era play; during this time period, the law enforced segregation of African Americans from whites |
Plessy v. Ferguson | 1896 Supreme Court decision allowing for “separate but equal” facilities |
Central Pacific | the railroad company based on the West Coast that helped build the transcontinental railroad; starting point was Sacramento, California |
Union Pacific | the railroad company that began building of the transcontinental railroad from its eastern starting point in Omaha, Nebraska |
Land Grants | land subsidies granted to railroad companies to encourage construction of rail lines to the West |
Pacific Railway Act | 1862 legislation to encourage the construction of a transcontinental railroad, connecting the West to industries in the Northeast (Union Pacific and Central Pacific RR) |
Oklahoma Land Rush | 1889; former Indian lands; opened up for settlement, resulting in a race to lay claim for a homestead (Boomers and Sooners) |
Rural | agricultural, farming regions with little population density |
The Grange | aka: The National Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry; founded by Oliver Kelley; promoted education and socialization of farmers |
Farmers’ Alliances | political organization created to help fight railroad abuses and to lower interest rates |
Jacob Coxey | 1894; along with other unemployed people led a march on Washington, D. C., to support enactment of laws that would create public works projects |
Populists | political party created in the 1890s that supported reform and represented the views of farmers |
Dry Farming | farming technique that became necessary in the Great Plains due to lack of rain |
Inflation | economic situation in which goods and services are more expensive, therefore causing a decline in the value of money; loss of purchasing power |
Deflation | a decline in general price levels, often caused by a reduction in the supply of money or credit |
Dawes Severalty Act | 1887 legislation passed as an attempt to assimilate the Indians by dividing reservations into individual pieces of land, breaking up the tribes |
A Century of Dishonor | written by Helen Hunt Jackson in 1881 to expose the atrocities the United States committed against Native Americans in the 19th century |
The Turner (Frontier) Thesis | 1893, The Significance of the Frontier in American History argued the closing of the Frontier had ended an era in American history |
Miners | in the mid 19th century, groups of miners searching for precious metal (gold and silver) began the surge into the West, beginning the boom |
“Cross of Gold” Speech | famous speech given by William Jennings Bryan; in support of bimetallism, Bryan spoke of the gold standard as a burden (like the cross) |
William J. Bryan | Election of 1896; partly because of the popularity of his speeches, he received the nomination of the Democrats and Populists |
Sharecropping | a landowner allows a tenant to use the land in return for a share of the crop produced on the land; primary occupation of African Americans in the New South |
Exodusters | the African Americans migrating to the Great Plains states (i.e.: Kansas & Oklahoma) in 1879 to escape conditions in the South |
Bimetallism | the usage of both silver and gold as currency; Republicans believed in a money system based on the single gold standard, while the Democrats (and Populists) believed in bimetallism |
Greenbacks | paper currency (money) |
Assimilation | absorbing of a weaker/smaller culture by a stronger/dominant culture |
Atrocities | horrible and vengeful acts carried upon the weak or helpless |
Annuities | government issued payments to Native Americans living on reservations |
Nez Perce | Indian tribe led by Chief Joseph; ordered onto a reservation in Idaho in 1877, they fled instead; after giving up they were removed to a reservation in Oklahoma |
Wounded Knee | 1890 U.S. cavalry slaughter of Native Americans marking the end of the Indian Wars on the Great Plains |
Munn v. Illinois | 1877 Supreme Court decision allowing state governments to regulate railroad rates |
Wabash v. Illinois | the Supreme Court ruled in 1886 that only the federal government could regulate interstate commerce, leading to the creation of the Interstate Commerce Commission. |
Interstate Commerce Act | 1887 legislation passed to oversee fair and just railway rates, prohibit rebates, and end discriminatory practices; created the Interstate Commerce Commission to investigate and oversee railroad activities |
Chisholm Trail | the major long drive route north from Texas to Abilene, Kansas, where cowboys drove herds of cattle to the railroads to be shipped back East for huge profits. |
Range | vast areas of grassland owned by the government where cattle could graze |