Facts and Details in U.S. Economic History from 1790 to 1898

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AP U.S. History › Facts and Details in U.S. Economic History from 1790 to 1898

Questions 1 - 10
1

The Whiskey Rebellion, or Whiskey Insurrection, which began in 1791 (under the presidency of George Washington), was an often violent protest by farmers against what?

Federal taxes

Whiskey purity laws

The drinking age

The anticipated prohibition against alcohol

Price fixing

Explanation

The Whiskey Rebellion was an oftenviolent protest by grain and corn farmers against Federal taxes levied on whiskey intended, primarily, to help pay for the nation's assumed war debt.

2

In 1890, the Western frontier was considered to no longer exist as a direct result of which of the following?

The US Census of 1890

The Wounded Knee Massacre

The Dawes Severalty Act

The Oklahoma Land Rush of 1889

The surrender of the last Apache tribes led by Geronimo

Explanation

The 1890 Census declared that frontier was fully settled and no longer existed as it found that there was no longer any clear line of advancing settlement. The Dawes Act, the 1889 Oklahoma land rush, and the surrender of Geronimo were events of the 1880s that each concerned specific areas of the frontier and did not by themselves lead directly to the 1890 declaration that the frontier was fully settled. The Wounded Knee Massacre occurred in December 1890, concerned a small specific area of the frontier, and did not have a major impact on settlement.

3

During the Civil War, what was the South's main source of income?

Cotton

Slaves

Whiskey

Molasses

Rum

Explanation

Cotton was the main source of income for the South during the Civil War. A major reason for Southern resistance to the abolition of slavery (aside from racism) was economic. Unpaid labor supported the Southern States most profitable economic activity.

4

Which of the following statements best summarizes the concept of vertical integration?

A corporation acquiring companies at every stage of the production process to streamline costs

A corporation acquiring companies which are direct competitors to dominate market share

A corporation creating products which are designed to become obsolete after a number of years

A corporation creating a streamlined process in manufacturing to reduce costs

None of these answers are correct.

Explanation

Vertical integration describes the process by which a company seeks to acquire every element of the production chain to keep costs down. The practice was innovated by Carnegie Steel in the 1880s, which not only owned steel mills, but iron ore mines, distribution systems, and sales operations. Vertical integration became a key to the rise of many monopolies during the Gilded Age and remains a favored corporate tactic today.

5

The Erie Canal connected __________.

the Hudson River in Albany and the Great Lakes at Lake Erie

New York City with Albany

New York City with Boston

New England's industrial centers with the Mississippi River Valley

New Orleans with plantations in Georgia and the Carolinas

Explanation

Shortly after the creation of the new country, New York was expanding but faced a geographical problem. Although blessed with a safe, natural harbor, getting supplies to ships at that harbor was difficult, as the Hudson River connected to no other major watersheds. New York Governor DeWitt Clinton helped remedy this by building a canal from the Hudson River to the Great Lakes, cutting across the length of the state. The canal allowed crops and resources from the Midwest to reach the Eastern seaboard through New York Harbor, and New York City quickly became the nation's largest metropolis.

6

On May 10th, 1869 in Promontory, Utah, the Union Pacific Railroad Company and Central Pacific Railroad Company met, thereby completing what famous engineering achievement?

The Transcontinental Railroad

The Northwestern Passage

The Central-Union Railroad

The American Railroad

The Promontory Line

Explanation

The Pacific Railroad Act of 1862 chartered the Union Pacific Railroad Company and the Central Pacific Railroad Company to construct a railroad linking the west with the established eastern railroads.

7

Who invented the cotton gin?

Eli Whitney

Robert Fulton

Samuel Morse

Elias Howe

John Deeres

Explanation

The cotton gin was invented in 1793 by Eli Whitney. The invention of the cotton gin was important for a number of economic and social reasons. Firstly, it enabled for mechanized removal of seeds from cotton, a process that had previously been extremely labor intensive. This change allowed for rapid growth of cotton plantations throughout the South and the growth of the Southern agricultural system. Secondly, as a result of being extremely profitable, it provided a massive boost to the slave trade. Previous cash crops had been slowly growing less profitable due to the intensity of work required to harvest; however, the cotton gin instantly transformed the production of cotton into a profitable venture. Many historians contend that, without the invention of the cotton gin, the social and economic growth of the South would have been radically different.

8

A Robber Baron of the nineteenth century might have done all of the following exploitive practices to achieve wealth EXCEPT:

Supported the workers' right to unionize

Paid very low wages

Created monopolies in order to raise prices

Exerted excessive, self-interested government influence

Obtained unyielding control over necessary resources of the nation

Explanation

A rich and powerful businessman of the 1800s, pejoratively named a Robber Baron, would not have supported the workers' right to unionize as this would have worked against his business interests.

9

Named after the luggage many of them tended to carry, these Northerners who moved to the South after the Civil War were viewed suspiciously as manipulative and opportunistic by the Southerners.

Carpetbaggers

Suitcasers

Trunkers

Yankee rucksackers

Yankeebaggers

Explanation

Named for their bags made from old carpets, these Northerners who moved South during the Reconstruction Era for generally financial purposes were derisively known as carpetbaggers.

10

The southern plantation system underwent a lot of changes, while still maintaining economic power, throughout much of its existence. Which of the following changes did not create a positive change on the plantations?

The introduction of the cotton gin.

Bacon's Rebellion.

Increased prices of tobacco.

Harsh slave codes.

The mercantilist system of the colonies.

Explanation

The success of Bacon's Rebellion, in 1676, allowed for the change from indentured servants to slaves as the first major migration of indentured servants became free. The rebellion looted plantations and took over the government for a short period of time, but later led to the increase of African slaves.

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