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Industrial Revolution
Progressives Important People
Main Ideas Key Terms Important Facts
Private businesses run most industries and
competition determines how much
goods cost.
A 100
What is capitalism?
Owning all businesses in a certain field.
A 200
What is horizontal integration?
Ownership of businesses involved in each step of a manufacturing process.
A 300
What is vertical integration?
Advances in transportation and
communication during the Second Industrial
Revolution.
A 400
What are the telephone, automobiles and airplanes?
Main difference between the Knights of Labor and American Federation of
Labor.
A 500
What is the AFL limited membership to skilled workers?
Group of reformers who worked to
improve society.
B 100
Who are the progressives?
Founder of the NAACP.
B 200
Who is W.E.B. Du Bois?
Aid organizations formed by immigrant
communities.
B 300
What are benevolent societies?
Main results of the progressive movement.
B 400
What are reduced power of political machines, better education, labor organizations, women's’ suffrage (19th Amendment), temperance (18th
Amendment), better working conditions, regulation of big business, and workers
compensation laws?
Outlawed the construction of dark and airless
tenements.
B 500
What is the New York State Tenement House Law?
President of the American Federation
of Labor (AFL).
C 100
Who is Samuel Gompers?
Leader of the Crusade against child labor
C 200
Who is Florence Kelley?
Leaders who controlled elections
through both legal and illegal methods.
C 300
Who are political bosses?
Built the first practical motorcar in
the U.S..
C 400
Who are Charles and J. Frank Duryea?
Designed Central Park and many other state and national parks
C 500
Who is Fredrick Law Olmsted?
Law prohibiting Chinese people from immigrating to the US for ten years.
D 100
What is the Chinese Exclusion Act?
Allowed Americans to directly elect U.S.
Senators.
D 200
What is the 17th Amendment?
Gave women in the U.S. the right to vote.
D 300
What is the 19th Amendment?
Passed in 1913 by Wilson to lower tariffs.
D 400
What is the Underwood Tariff Act of 1913?
D 500
Brought together women from many
different backgrounds in the fight against
alcohol.
What is the Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)?
Journalists who exposed the filth of
society.
E 100
Who are muckrakers?
Measure where voters can remove an elected
official from office before the end of the
term.
E 200
What is recall?
Gave voters the ability to propose new
laws.
E 300
What is initiative?
Allowed voters to approve or disapprove
legislation already proposed by state or local government.
E 400
What is referendum?
Program of reform to decrease the influence of
political machines.
E 500
What is the Wisconsin Idea?
Outlawed the production and sale of alcoholic beverages in
the United States.
F 100
What is the 18th Amendment?
View of society based on the theory of natural
selection.
F 200
What is Social Darwinism?
Made it illegal to create monopolies or trusts that restrained
trade.
F 300
What is the Sherman Antitrust Act?
Established a merit system under the control of the
Civil Service Examination.
F 400
What is the Pendleton Civil Service Act?
Organization started by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton whose focus was getting
the vote for women.
F 500
What is the National American Women Suffrage Association
(NAWSA)?
The Final Jeopardy Category is:
The Spirit of Reform
Please record your wager.
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These were how children were affected by the
movement for workplace reforms.
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Minimum wage legislation as well as laws to establish minimum age
requirements helped improve working conditions for children.
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