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Industrial Revolution

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Answer
Social Darwinism   persons best suited to existing living conditions  
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Capitalism   economic system where businesses are privately owned by individuals or stock holders and their goal is to make a profit for the owners  
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Stocks   part ownership in a business which leads to sharing in part of the company’s profits  
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Corporation   Businesses that sell portions of ownership called stock shares, company is then owned by stock holders  
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Monopoly   one company that controls an entire industry often called trusts  
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Vertical Integration   controlling every aspect of production from the resources to the selling of the product  
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Cornelius Vanderbilt   controlled the railroad industry from New York to Chicago  
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John D. Rockefeller   Started Standard Oil and controlled the oil industry by becoming the first trust, controlling and buying up many small oil companies  
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Andrew Carnegie   Controlled the steel industry  
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JP Morgan   was a finance capitalist meaning he was a banker who gained riches through investing in stocks and bonds, will eventually buy Carnegie Steel  
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Sherman Anti-Trust Act   A law that made it illegal to create monopolies or trusts  
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Unions   groups of workers who come together to promote a cause using methods such as strikes to force employers to give into their demands  
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Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire 1911   killed 146 workers because owners locked emergency exits to prevent workers from leaving early during regular hours, trapping them during the fire. This would spread awareness of the terrible conditions industrial workers were faced with  
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Railroad Strike of 1877   Government will send federal troops to stop railroad workers from violently protesting the 10% decrease in their wages  
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Pullman Strike   Run by Eugene Debs, factory begins boycotting and striking their reduction in pay federal government sends in troops ending the strike and setting a precedence that factory owners can appeal to the courts and government to end strikes  
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Theodore Roosevelt   progressive president who stands up for the workers and begins a campaign to “bust trusts” breaking up monopolies as well as passing meat inspection act  
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Second Industrial Revolution   A period of rapid growth in US manufacturing in the late 1800’s  
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Bessemer process   A way to manufacture steel quickly and cheaply  
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Patents   Exclusive rights to make or sell inventions.  
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Horizontal integration   When a company acquires or merges with another company within the same industry that sells a similar product or provides a similar service.  
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Trust   a combination of firms or corporations formed by a legal agreement  
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Knights of Labor   First national labor union founded in the 1870’s  
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American Federation of Labor   Organized individual national unions  
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Collective bargaining   Workers acting together in negotiating with management.  
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Haymarket Riot   protest the killings of striking workers  
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Homestead Strike   Union members protested buying new machinery  
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Pullman strike   stopped traffic on many railroad lines  
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Created by: 123mrsl
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