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Homework answers / question archive / CHAPTER 19: POLITICAL STALEMATE AND RURAL REVOLT, 1865-1900   TRUE/FALSE        1

CHAPTER 19: POLITICAL STALEMATE AND RURAL REVOLT, 1865-1900   TRUE/FALSE        1

History

CHAPTER 19: POLITICAL STALEMATE AND RURAL REVOLT, 1865-1900

 

TRUE/FALSE

 

     1.   By 1920, more than half the U.S. population was urban.

 

 

     2.   The spread of mass transit was a major factor in the growth of the suburbs.

 

 

     3.   One major task in big cities was disposing of horse waste.

 

 

     4.   Politics in the late nineteenth century was dominated by a series of strong presidents.

 

 

     5.   Ellis Island was built by New York City primarily to handle an influx of immigrants.

 

     6.   The peak decade of immigration was the 1890s.

 

     7.   When first created, the ICC was too weak to regulate the railroads effectively.

 

     8.   In major cities, politics was often a form of public entertainment.

 

     9.   Saloons were the poor man’s social clubs during the late nineteenth century.

 

   10.   Tenement housing gave city dwellers substantially healthier and more comfortable living conditions.

 

   11.   Mugwumps tended to oppose civil service reform.

 

   12.   The Grange was the leading farm organization through the 1890s.

 

   13.   Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species put forward the theory of evolution.

 

 

   14.   Charles Darwin coined the phrase, “survival of the fittest.”

 

 

   15.   One of the biggest problems farmers faced was falling commodity prices, caused in part by overproduction.

 

MULTIPLE CHOICE

 

     1.   Why was the development of cast-iron and steel-frame construction techniques significant to the growth of cities?

a.

The growth of streetcars depended on such techniques.

b.

They were the primary engines of job growth.

c.

They allowed developers to erect high-rise buildings.

d.

They were invented by immigrant laborers.

e.

They demonstrated the value of female ingenuity.

 

 

     2.   Which region of the United States had the greatest proportion of urban dwellers?

a.

the Northeast

d.

the Far West

b.

the South

e.

the Great Plains

c.

the middle Atlantic

 

 

     3.   One of the reasons mass transit was significant to developing cities was because:

a.

it increased the reliance on horse-drawn transportation

b.

it allowed larger numbers of people to become commuters and live away from the central city

c.

it stifled the growth of the city by drawing jobs to the periphery

d.

it prevented parks from being built inside city limits

e.

it kept the population of women living in the city very low

 

     4.   By 1900, all of the following technologies had helped transform mass transit EXCEPT:

a.

subways

d.

gasoline-powered buses

b.

electric trolleys

e.

elevated trains

c.

cable cars

 

 

 

 

     5.   Tenement houses in New York City:

a.

were cramped, yet offered more privacy than apartments

b.

were urban, yet their courtyards offered children a sense of nature

c.

had higher mortality rates than among the general population

d.

were clean

e.

usually had two to three families in each building

 

     6.   William “Boss” Tweed controlled:

a.

the Populist party

d.

Kansas City

b.

Chicago’s South Side

e.

Tammany Hall

c.

the Greenback party

 

 

 

 

     7.   All of the following contributed to epidemics, disease, and high mortality rates in the growing cities EXCEPT:

a.

overflowing garbage

b.

untreated sewage

c.

contaminated water

d.

the banishment of animals to outside city limits

e.

overcrowding

 

     8.   What do cholera, typhoid, and yellow fever all have in common?

a.

They are all water-related diseases.

b.

They are all air-related diseases.

c.

They are all sexually transmitted diseases.

d.

They are all food-related diseases.

e.

They are all genetic disorders.

 

 

     9.   Which of the following would most likely have been a Gilded Age Democrat?

a.

a New England Protestant

d.

an African American

b.

a nativist

e.

a Union veteran

c.

an Irish immigrant

 

 

 

 

   10.   The public health officials and municipal engineers that tried to clean up the city and its public health dangers were called:

a.

garbage men

d.

sanitary reformers

b.

health care professionals

e.

cowboys

c.

missionaries

 

 

 

   11.   The Stalwarts:

a.

were led by Roscoe Conkling

b.

generally favored a lenient southern policy

c.

were a faction in the Democratic party

d.

were also known as the Half-Breeds

e.

had opposed Ulysses S. Grant

 

 

 

   12.   The Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act:

a.

provided for appointments only in the postal service

b.

was signed into law by James Garfield

c.

was vetoed as “an unconstitutional intrusion of government into the private sphere” by Benjamin Harrison

d.

set up the first racial quotas for government service jobs

e.

provided for appointment to a number of government jobs on the basis of competitive exams

 

 

   13.   The reason that Chester A. Arthur did not win a second term in 1884 is that:

a.

he was elected to the presidency with less than half of the popular vote

b.

he died in office

c.

he pledged to serve only one term after replacing the assassinated James Blaine

d.

he switched parties

e.

Republican party leaders were not pleased with his first-term record and did not nominate him to run for a second term

 

   14.   Ellis Island was located right outside the port of:

a.

Boston

d.

Philadelphia

b.

San Francisco

e.

Charleston

c.

New York City

 

 

 

 

   15.   After 1890, most immigrants were:

a.

from northern and western Europe

d.

from Mexico

b.

from southern and eastern Europe

e.

members of the professional class

c.

of Teutonic and Celtic origin

 

 

 

 

   16.   The American Protective Association:

a.

was a group of pharmaceutical companies that began a sanitation campaign in New York City

b.

was mainly an anti-Semitic organization operating in the Deep South

c.

was a secret organization whose members pledged never to employ or vote for a Roman Catholic

d.

campaigned for a stronger navy from its base in the Northeast

e.

consisted almost entirely of immigrants from southern and eastern Europe who favored liberal immigration policies

 

 

 

   17.   “Nativists” believed:

a.

immigration was a boon to the American economy

b.

American Indians were the preferred source of workers

c.

Chester Arthur was foreign-born and not a real U.S. citizen

d.

religion had no place in the public sphere

e.

immigrants were a threat to their jobs and way of life

 

 

   18.   During the campaign for the presidential election of 1884, many prominent Republican leaders and supporters left the party because:

a.

they would not vote for a woman as vice president

b.

the Mugwumps had gained power within the party

c.

letters were discovered linking candidate James G. Blaine to the railroads

d.

the party refused to take a firm stand on the tariff

e.

they would not vote for Grant to serve a third term

 

 

 

   19.   Mugwumps were centered in:

a.

the land grant colleges across the country

b.

the agricultural colleges of the South

c.

the Far West and major universities

d.

the Midwest and small colleges

e.

large cities and major universities in the Northeast

 

   20.   The exclusion of Chinese immigrants:

a.

came only after the exclusion of immigrants from southern and eastern Europe

b.

came only after the exclusion of immigrants from northern and western Europe

c.

was opposed by white workers in the Far West

d.

was supported by President Chester Arthur

e.

originally called for a ten-year term

 

 

   21.   Why was the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 significant in American immigration history?

a.

It sent all the Chinese immigrants in the United States back to China.

b.

It was the first federal law to restrict immigration on the basis of race and class.

c.

It was the first time Congress was unable to override a presidential veto of an immigration law.

d.

It denied citizenship to any Chinese born in the United States.

e.

It removed all restrictions from American immigration law.

 

 

   22.   Middle- and upper-class urban families spent much of their leisure time:

a.

together at home playing games or reading books

b.

in saloons

c.

attending vaudeville shows

d.

traveling out West

e.

helping poor people

 

   23.   Why was the Interstate Commerce Commission created?

a.

to expand American exports

b.

to regulate railroads

c.

to encourage increased imports of foreign goods

d.

to boost the dairy industry

e.

to clean up corruption in politics

 

 

 

   24.   Vaudeville shows were popular because:

a.

they included something to please every taste, social class, and type

b.

women and children were not permitted to attend them

c.

native-born Americans liked that immigrants were banned from them

d.

they were free

e.

they doubled as inexpensive daycare for the working poor

 

 

 

   25.   Around 1900, saloons did all of the following EXCEPT:

a.

offer mail services

b.

provide public restrooms for poor people

c.

serve alcohol

d.

provide refuges for the homeless

e.

serve as a great place for immigrant men to meet women

 

 

 

   26.   In the late nineteenth century, the least likely place you would find a woman spending her leisure time was at:

a.

the movies

d.

a public park

b.

a vaudeville show

e.

a dance hall

c.

a saloon

 

 

 

 

   27.   Benjamin Harrison lost the popular vote in the 1888 election. How was he able to win the presidency?

a.

Corruption by the political machines affected the outcome.

b.

His opponent died before he could take office.

c.

He ran in and won the 1892 election.

d.

He earned a majority of the electoral votes.

e.

The House of Representatives voted to overturn the election results.

 

 

   28.   Commodity prices during the Gilded Age declined in large part because of:

a.

rampant inflation

b.

overproduction and international competition in world markets

c.

free-silver policies

d.

low American tariff rates

e.

lazy farmers

 

 

 

   29.   The Supreme Court decision Munn v. Illinois was significant to understanding the power of government to regulate industry because:

a.

it denied the right of state and local governments to regulate industry essential to the public welfare

b.

it upheld the sweeping power of the federal government to regulate any industry in any fashion it saw fit

c.

it denied the federal government any power to regulate any industry

d.

it upheld the right of state and local governments to regulate industry essential to the public interest

e.

it decided that all government regulatory power over industry rested with city and town governments

 

 

 

   30.   What distinguished the Farmers’ Alliances from the Granger movement?

a.

The Grangers focused solely on social and recreational activities, while the Alliances focused solely on political action.

b.

The Grangers supported free-silver economic policies, while the Alliances supported the gold standard.

c.

The Grangers supported low tariffs, while the Alliances supported high tariffs.

d.

The Grange was a national organization that tended to attract more prosperous farmers, while the Alliances were grass roots organizations filled with struggling farmers.

e.

The Grangers were predominantly a wing of the Democratic party while the Alliances were predominantly a wing of the Republican party.

 

 

 

   31.   What was the purpose of the “subtreasury plan”?

a.

It promoted deflation by withdrawing silver certificates from circulation.

b.

It reestablished the gold standard.

c.

It reclaimed unused land from the railroads.

d.

It allowed farmers to secure low-interest government loans.

e.

It said that the national bank could pull supplemental cash from private banks.

 

 

 

   32.   Facing severe restrictions in their free time, married working women often:

a.

spent their days totally alone

b.

found fellowship with other women on the public streets while tending to other responsibilities

c.

divorced their husbands and abandoned their children

d.

ran for political office to change the laws that hurt them

e.

settled for having pets

 

 

 

   33.   Young, urban women eager for recreation frequented all of the following EXCEPT:

a.

dance halls

d.

picnic grounds

b.

theaters

e.

boxing matches

c.

amusement parks

 

 

 

 

   34.   Mary Elizabeth Lease:

a.

founded the Patrons of Husbandry (the Grange)

b.

was the presidential candidate of the Greenback party in 1892

c.

was a Kansas Alliance leader

d.

wrote the 1892 Omaha platform for the People’s party

e.

was the lone female leader in the Stalwart movement

 

 

 

   35.   During the presidential election of 1892, the Populist candidate James B. Weaver:

a.

campaigned against a “progressive” income tax

b.

discovered the cure for malaria

c.

won Colorado, Kansas, Nevada, and Idaho

d.

was elected vice president

e.

was the only presidential candidate to be raised in Iowa

 

 

 

   36.   One of the causes of the 1893 depression was failure of:

a.

the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad

b.

the stock market

c.

the commodity price index

d.

housing starts in 1891 and 1892

e.

President Cleveland to regulate the railroads

 

 

 

   37.   During the depression of 1893, unemployment hovered around:

a.

every industry, particularly construction

b.

twenty percent

c.

fifty percent

d.

as high as seventy-five percent in New York

e.

manufacturing jobs, but not the service sector

 

 

   38.   Following the 1893 depression, Coxey’s Army:

a.

demanded government jobs for the unemployed

b.

organized a massive protest march down Wall Street

c.

tried to overthrow the government

d.

carried Cleveland into the White House

e.

was led by a poor, broken farmer from Iowa

 

 

 

   39.   “You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold!” This statement was made by:

a.

William McKinley

d.

Thomas E. Watson

b.

William Jennings Bryan

e.

William Henry Harrison

c.

Grover Cleveland

 

 

 

 

   40.   During the 1896 campaign, William Jennings Bryan:

a.

promised to continue the policies of Grover Cleveland

b.

tried to de-emphasize his platform’s demand for free silver

c.

spoke and campaigned all over the country

d.

refused to mix politics and religion

e.

ran what journalists called a “front-porch campaign”

 

 

 

   41.   One of the main reasons McKinley defeated Bryan in the election of 1896 was that:

a.

Bryan could not win the support of rural America

b.

Bryan was a terrible orator who bored his audience with his speeches

c.

Bryan’s “front-porch campaign” alienated many voters

d.

Bryan got little support from factory workers in the cities

e.

the Populists refused to support his candidacy

 

 

   42.   Social Darwinism implied the need for:

a.

strong central government

b.

forced natural selection

c.

competition for dominance between different social groups

d.

hands off, laissez-faire government policy

e.

racial equality

 

 

 

   43.   Popular Science Monthly, founded in 1872, became the chief magazine for promoting:

a.

the Academy of American Science

d.

The Progressive party

b.

the Republican party

e.

social Darwinism

c.

The Greenback party

 

 

 

 

   44.   Herbert Spencer:

a.

coined the phrase “survival of the fittest”

b.

was the influential president of Harvard University

c.

invented the modern game of basketball

d.

was the first person to earn a PhD from an American university

e.

cowrote On the Origin of Species with Charles Darwin

 

 

 

   45.   “Equal rights to all, special privileges to none” was the slogan of the:

a.

Farmers’ Alliance

d.

Republicans

b.

Democrats

e.

Greenback party

c.

Southern Alliance

 

 

 

 

   46.   William Graham Sumner:

a.

wrote “The Gospel of Wealth,” a social Darwinist justification for accumulated wealth

b.

was one of the most outspoken opponents of Darwinism in America

c.

argued in his book Folkways that it was a mistake for the government to interfere with established customs

d.

wrote System of Synthetic Philosophy

e.

preached that the law of God and the laws of nature were one and the same

 

 

 

   47.   The main idea of reform Darwinism was that:

a.

humans, made in the image of God, should not be included among the animals when discussing Darwinism

b.

government should not interfere with business

c.

cooperation, not competition, would best promote progress

d.

man continued to evolve according to Darwin’s principles of natural selection

e.

for society to truly reform, any “imitation” of welfare must cease

 

 

 

   48.   Realists’ emphasis on closely observing everyday life grew out of:

a.

transcendentalism

d.

socialism

b.

reform Darwinism

e.

the scientific spirit

c.

social Darwinism

 

 

 

 

   49.   Why was Lester Frank Ward’s Dynamic Sociology considered a challenge to William Graham Sumner’s “social Darwinism”?

a.

Ward embraced “survival of the fittest,” while Sumner embraced “survival of the smartest.”

b.

Ward believed that humans had no control over their destiny, while Sumner argued the opposite.

c.

Ward denied the existence of evolution, while social Darwinism was based entirely on the scientific theory of evolution.

d.

Ward argued that cooperation among people better promoted progress, while Sumner believed in competition.

e.

Ward was a Democrat, and Sumner was a Republican.

 

 

 

MATCHING

 

Match each description with the item below.

a.

chief spokesperson for reform Darwinism

b.

wrote On the Origin of Species

c.

Republican leader of the “Half-Breeds”

d.

devised the subtreasury plan

e.

wrote Folkways

f.

Democratic presidential candidate in 1896

g.

vetoed the Chinese Exclusion Act before it was overridden by Congress

h.

led march on Washington, D.C., to demand that the federal government provide jobs for the unemployed

i.

founded the Grange

j.

McKinley’s campaign manager

 

 

     1.   William Jennings Bryan

 

     2.   Oliver H. Kelley

 

     3.   James G. Blaine

 

     4.   Chester Arthur

 

     5.   Jacob S. Coxey

 

     6.   Mark Hanna

 

     7.   William Graham Sumner

 

     8.   Charles Darwin

 

     9.   Charles W. Macune

 

   10.   Lester Frank Ward

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