Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

41
Labor / Gilded Age

Transcript of Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Page 1: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Labor / Gilded Age

Page 2: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 1.Blacklists

Page 3: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer One

• Blacklists was a list of troublemakers shared by employers. These union organizers were banned from working due to their beliefs.

Page 4: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 2.Collective bargaining

Police Arresting Strikers

Page 5: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Two

• Collective bargaining are negotiations between employees and Unions. The Union bargains for all the workers setting wages and working conditions.

Page 6: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 3.Samuel Gompers

Page 7: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Three

• Samuel Gompers was the President of the AFL. He sought to raise wages, establish shorter hours and take care of disabled workers.

Page 8: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 4.American Federation of Labor

Samuel Gompers

Page 9: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Four

• American Federation of Labor was a labor organization of skilled workers organized by trade. The AFL did not want woman, blacks or immigrants in their union.

Page 10: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 5.Henry Cabot Lodge

Page 11: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Five

• Henry Cabot Lodge was a US Senator who wanted to halt immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe. He was a Xenophobe.

Page 12: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 6.Chinese Immigration

Page 13: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Six

• Chinese immigration was mainly to California. In 1870 there were 70,000 Chinese in California alone. They came to work in the Gold Mines or to construct the Central Pacific Railroad.

Page 14: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 7.Jacob A.Riis

Page 15: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Seven

• Jacob A. Riis wrote a book about the evils of the slums in the city. It was an influential book and showed people the way people really lived in the ghettos.

Page 16: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 8.William M. Tweed

Page 17: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Eight

• William M. Tweed was the boss of Tammany Hall the Democratic machine in New York. As the leader of Tammany, he distributed graft and patronage.

Page 18: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 9.Political Machine

“Let Us Prey”

Page 19: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Nine

• Political Machine is a party organization that maintains power by controlling the votes of its members. Tammany Hall was a strong example of this in New York City.

Page 20: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 10.Thomas Nast

Page 21: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Ten

• Thomas Nast was a political cartoonist who ridiculed Tweed and other politicians. He was the most famous political cartoonist of his time.

Page 22: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 11.James Garfield

Page 23: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Eleven

• James Garfield was the President of the United States. He was assassinated by a disappointed job seeker. His death illustrated the corruption of the spoils system.

Page 24: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 12.Chester Arthur

Page 25: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Twelve

• Chester Arthur followed Garfield as President. Although a product of the spoils system, he initiated many reforms of civil service.

Page 26: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 13.Grover Cleveland

Page 27: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Thirteen

• Grover Cleveland was also a great reformer of the patronage system. He restored honor and dignity to the White House after years of corruption.

Page 28: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 14.Free-Traders

Page 29: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Fourteen

• Free-Traders generally opposed tariffs and wanted to see all barriers to trade removed. They believed in a “laissez faire” approach to business.

Page 30: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 15.Protectionists

Page 31: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Fifteen

• Protectionists favored high tariffs which helped some businesses while hurting the consumer as a whole. Many big businesses and labor Unions were seen as protectionist.

Page 32: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 16.Mark Twain

Page 33: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Sixteen

• Mark Twain was a popular author who wrote “The adventures of Huckleberry Finn”. He was known for his wry outlook on life and his wit.

Page 34: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 17.Stephen Crane

Page 35: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Seventeen

• Stephen Crane was an author known for his real life portrayals. His best known book was “Red Badge of Courage” which was about the Civil War.

Page 36: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 18.Joseph Pulitzer

Page 37: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Eighteen

• Joseph Pulitzer was an influential newspaper publisher who was known as the “father of yellow journalism”.

Page 38: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 19.Antebellum

Page 39: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Nineteen

• Antebellum was the period of time before the Civil war. This period became the background for many works of art during the Gilded Age as people looked back in nostalgia.

Page 40: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Identification (5 Points)

• 20.Yellow Journalism

William Randolph Hearst

Page 41: Labor / Gilded Age. Identification (5 Points) 1.Blacklists.

Answer Twenty

• Yellow Journalism was a type of reporting which featured a sensationalized way of presenting the news. Scandals were a mainstay of Yellow Journalism.