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U.S. History Top 100

U.S. History Top 100. What every student should know to pass the U.S. History EOC. Goal 5. Goal 5: Becoming an Industrial Society (1877-1900). The learner will describe innovations in technology and business practices and assess their impact on economic, political, and social life in America.

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U.S. History Top 100

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  1. U.S. History Top 100 What every student should know to pass the U.S. History EOC. Goal 5

  2. Goal 5: Becoming an Industrial Society (1877-1900) • The learner will describe innovations in technology and business practices and assess their impact on economic, political, and social life in America.

  3. Influence of Big Business • Larger pools of capital • Wider geographic span • Broader range of operations • Revised role of ownership • New methods of management

  4. Laissez-faire • A theory that the economy does better without government intervention in business.

  5. Credit Mobilier Scandal, 1872 • Union Pacific received a government contract to build the transcontinental railroad • It "hired" Credit Mobilier to do the actual construction, charging nearly twice the actual cost of the project. • The scheme was discovered and the company tried to bribe Congress with gifts of stock to stop the investigation. • This was the biggest bribery scandal in U.S. history, and led to greater public awareness of government corruption.

  6. Jane Addams’ Hull House, 1889 • Social reformer who worked to improve the lives of the working class. She founded Hull House in Chicago, the first private social welfare agency in the U.S., to assist the poor, combat juvenile delinquency and help immigrants learn to speak English.

  7. Social Darwinism • Applied Darwin's theory of natural selection and "survival of the fittest" to human society -- the poor are poor because they are not as fit to survive. Used as an argument against social reforms to help the poor.

  8. Gospel of Wealth, 1889 • Andrew Carnegie was an American millionaire and philanthropist who donated large sums of money for public works. His book argued that the wealthy have an obligation to give something back to society.

  9. Labor Practices • Collective Bargaining - Discussions held between workers and their employers over wages, hours, and conditions. • Labor Unions – organization of workers • Strikes – refusal to perform work until demands are met.

  10. Knights of Labor An American labor union originally established as a secret fraternal order and noted as the first union of all workers. It was founded in 1869. American Federation of Labor Began in 1886 with about 140,000 members; by 1917 it had 2.5 million members. It is a federation of different unions. Labor Unions

  11. Thomas Nast • Newspaper cartoonist who produced satirical cartoons, he invented "Uncle Sam" and came up with the elephant and the donkey for the political parties. He nearly brought down Boss Tweed.

  12. Jacob Riis • Early 1900's writer who exposed social and political evils in the U.S. Muckraker novel.

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