American History Study Guide: Chapters 2 and 3 Settling the West and Industrialization

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American History Study Guide: Chapters 2 and 3 Settling the West and Industrialization Modified True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. If it is false, change the identified word(s) to make the statement true. Directions In the blank, indicate whether the statement is true (T) or false (F). If false edit the statement to make it a true statement. 1. The Dawes Act succeeded in achieving its goals of assimilating Native Americans into American society as landowners and citizens. 2. In the 1860s, tensions began to rise between the Cheyenne and Arapaho peoples and the miners who had flocked to Colorado in search of gold and silver, leading to an incident called the Sand Creek Massacre. 3. After losing many of his people in a series of battles, Chief Joseph and the remaining Nez Perce under him were exiled to California in 1877. 4. The Indian Peace Commission plan was doomed to failure because the Native Americans were forced to sign the treaty. 5. Most Native American nations on the Great Plains had lived as nomads. 6. Supporters of laissez-faire believe the government should not interfere in the economy other than to protect private property rights and maintain peace. 7. The United States lacked the natural resources upon which industrialization in the 1800s depended, including water, timber, coal, iron, and copper. 8. Thomas Alva Edison stood as a symbol for the emerging age of technology with his invention of the telephone. 9. Machines could mass-produce shoes more cheaply and efficiently than local cobblers. 10. The growth of the population between 1860 and 1910 provided industrialists with a large workforce and also created greater demand for the consumer goods factories produced. 11. As industrialism brought more machines into the workplace, jobs became more complex and required more skills. 12. Most unions in the late 1800s excluded women. 13. In the late 1800s, large trade unions generally failed, but industrial unions prospered. 14. In the late 1800s, workers buying power generally decreased. 15. Some labor supporters were anarchists, who believed that society did not need any government. Multiple Choice Indicate the answer choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Early prospectors would extract shallow deposits of ore by a. hydraulic mining c. quartz mining b. placer mining d. tunnel mining 2. The Comstock Lode was a rich deposit of a. copper b. diamonds c. gold d. silver

3. Many of the first miners in the Colorado mountains did not find any minerals because a. mining companies had claimed them b. the areas were too hard to reach c. the minerals were buried too deep d. there were no minerals to find 4. Huge ranches that covered thousands of acres were called a. barrios c. lariats b. haciendas d. stampedes 5. Which of the following greatly spurred the settlement of Colorado, Arizona, and Montana? a. the arrival of large numbers of c. the growth of the cattle industry miners d. the presence of peaceful, orderly b. the availability of free land towns 6. Threshing machines were used for a. clearing homesteads b. harvesting wheat c. improving irrigation d. planting crops 7. Settlement of the Great Plains was promoted by the railroads and supported by a. cattle ranchers c. the mining industry b. the government d. plow manufacturers 8. Large landholders on the Great Plains were able to a. determine their own prices b. grow any crops they wanted c. invest in the tools they needed d. prevent droughts from happening 9. One approach to farming on the Great Plains was dry farming, in which farmers a. cooperated to build community irrigation ditches b. dug out depressions to create ponds for irrigation c. grew crops that could withstand long periods without rain d. planted seeds deep in the ground 10. The Homestead Act gave land to homesteaders if they for five years. a. cut down trees on it c. lived on it b. fenced it off d. planted crops on it 11. A serious toll was taken on Native Americans from the advancing American settlers, forced movement, and a. broken treaties c. immigration b. drought d. the Civil War 12. The Dawes Act attempted to help Native Americans by a. giving them land for farming b. reintroducing the buffalo to native lands c. returning them to their native lands d. sustaining their previous way of life 13. The army encouraged the killing of buffalo in order to a. force Native Americans onto reservations b. make way for new railroad lines c. protect crops d. starve Native Americans 14. What was the effect of the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934? a. A waiting period for citizenship was established b. Land was given to Native American households for farming c. Reservations were expanded in many states d. The previous policy of assimilation was reversed

15. The Dakota Sioux uprising occurred as a result of a. fear, caused by the continued loss of buffalo herds b. greed, caused by an outlawed Native American group c. jealousy, caused by anger at the presence of white settlers d. poverty, caused by annuities payments that were not received 16. Who began the first modern industrial research laboratory, resulting in many new inventions, including the battery and the motion picture? a. Alexander Graham Bell c. George Pullman b. Edwin Drake d. Thomas Alva Edison 17. Supporters of laissez-faire generally favor a. free trade b. government protections c. high prices d. tariffs 18. The first oil well was drilled near Titusville, Pennsylvania, by a. Alexander Graham Bell c. Elisha Otis b. Edwin Drake d. Thomas Alva Edison 19. Northern traditionally supported high tariffs to protect them from competition overseas. a. whigs c. stock brokers b. farmers d. entrepreneurs 20. One reason for the country s industrial success was its vast abundance of natural a. resources c. technology b. gross national product d. enterprise 21. The government offered each railroad company building the Transcontinental Railroad along it right-of-way. a. railroads c. land b. natural resources d. free housing 22. A shortage of workers in California forced the Central Pacific Railroad to hire about 10,000 workers from a. China c. Japan b. Ireland d. Mexico 23. To build their railroads, railroad companies raised most of the money they needed from a. hauling freight to market c. selling government land grants b. private investors d. subsidies from tax revenues 24. The two railroads that built the transcontinental railroad were the a. Southern Railway and Great Northern b. Southern Railway and Union Pacific c. Union Pacific and Central Pacific d. Union Pacific and Great Northern 25. To make rail service more reliable, in 1883 the American Railway Association a. divided the country into standardized time zones b. drew latitude and longitude lines for the country c. set a maximum number of cars that a train could pull d. set standards for materials used in the construction of railroad lines 26. A was a technique for breaking a union through which the company refused to allow workers onto their property. a. blacklist c. sit-down b. lockout d. strike

27. When a union called a strike, employers would often hire replacements, called a. blacklists c. strikebreakers b. lockouts d. troublemakers 28. Employers generally viewed unions as a. conspiracies that interfered with property rights b. groups that helped increase productivity c. organizations that were necessary for protecting workers d. secret societies planning to overthrow the government 29. The Knights of Labor suffered a steady decline in membership and influence due to lost strikes and a. its refusal to use arbitration c. the Haymarket Riot b. its support of Marxism d. the Homestead Strike 30. What did several railroads announce in July of 1877 that triggered the first nationwide labor protest? a. blacklists c. sixteen-hour workdays b. employee layoffs d. wage cuts Completion Enter the appropriate word(s) to complete the statement. 1. The Comstock strike turned the town of, Nevada, into a boomtown. 2. The rapidly growing communities that appeared at the site of mineral strikes were called. 3. The Texas was a breed of cattle descended from Spanish cattle that had been brought to Mexico two centuries earlier. 4. The open range referred to a vast area of grassland owned by. 5. Many became rich when the mines they created generated huge profits. Matching a. bonanza farms b. Stephen Long c. Wheat Belt d. dry farming e. homestead 1. a tract of public land available for settlement 2. often brought their owners big profits 3. productive farm area that began at the eastern edge of the Great Plains 4. explored the Great Plains in 1819 5. planting seeds deep in the ground where there was enough moisture for them to grow a. Leland Stanford b. James J. Hill c. Grenville Dodge d. Oakes Ames e. Jay Gould 6. implicated in the Crédit Mobilier scandal 7. made a fortune from the Central Pacific Railroad 8. notoriously corrupt railroad owner

9. built the Great Northern Railroad 10. chief engineer of the Union Pacific Railroad Short Answer 1. Which of the factors in the growth of industrialization in the United States was not influenced by government policies? We sat and looked and the lamp continued to burn and the longer it burned the more fascinated we were. None of us could go to bed and there was no sleep for over 40 hours; we sat and just watched it with anxiety growing into elation. Thomas Edison 2. DBQ Identify the emotions that Thomas Edison and his team of workers probably experienced as they watched the first lamp burn. 3. DBQ Study the chart and explain why steel production was flat between 1865 and 1875.

Men who continue hoarding great sums all their lives, the proper use of which for public ends would work good to the community, should be made to feel that the community... cannot thus be deprived of its proper share. By taxing estates heavily at death the state marks its condemnation of the selfish millionaire s unworthy life. Andrew Carnegie 4. DBQ According to the excerpt, what is Carnegie s justification for the state to tax a millionaire s estate at death? We want eight hours [i.e., an eight-hour workday] and nothing less. We have been accused of being selfish, and it has been said that we will want more; that last year we got an advance of ten cents and now we want more. We do want more. Samuel Gompers 5. According to the excerpt, how would you describe the two main things workers wanted? The Struggle to Organize Workers Date Event Outcome 1877 Great Railroad Strike After railroads announce wage cuts, the nationwide strike that follows involves 80,000 railroad workers. President Hayes orders the army to Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Chicago. Troops restore order, but more than 100 people are killed and millions of dollars of property is destroyed. 1886 Haymarket Riot 1894 Pullman Strike Seven police officers and four workers are killed in Chicago s Haymarket Square after a bomb goes off following a clash between strikers and police. A strike is called by the American Railway Union after the Pullman Company cuts wages. President Cleveland calls on federal troops to keep the railroads moving. A formal court order ends the strike. 6. DBQ According to the chart, how did the government react to disgruntled railroad employees in 1877? 7. Draw conclusions about how the expansion of railroads spurred America s industrial growth, changed the lives of Americans, and shaped the nation s future.