Chapter 9 Test Review.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
S EGREGATION AND S OCIAL T ENSIONS Chapter 12, Section 1.
Advertisements

Issues of the Gilded Age
Jeopardy PoliticsGuys & GalsThe Gov’t In Action The Poor Farmers Vocabulary Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final.
Chapter 9 & 10 Test Prep.
Chapter 7 Issues of the Gilded Age
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Segregation and Discrimination.
Chapter 11 Section 2 Unrest in Rural America
Issues of the Gilded Age
Political Issues of the Gilded Age. Political Machines Political Machines Organized group that controlled a political party in a city Organized group.
Chapter 16 The Gilded Age.
Issues of the Gilded Age Chapter 16
The Gilded Age "What is the chief end of man?--to get rich. In what way?--dishonestly if we can; honestly if we must." -- Mark Twain-1871.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 4 Issues of the Gilded Age Understand the segregation and social tensions that troubled the nation during.
The Gilded Age.
A,4A,4C  Jim Crow Laws  Poll tax  Literacy tests  Grandfather clause  Booker T. Washington  W.E.B. DuBois  Ida B. Wells  Las Gorras.
Changes in the South CHAPTER 11, SECTION 1. Industries in the South  After the Civil War, instead of shipping goods to the North for manufacturing, northern.
1 Issues of the Gilded Age. This chapter will explain the social and political issues of the Gilded Age. It will focus on segregation and the struggles.
Jeopardy Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy
Resistance and Repression Click the mouse button to display the information. After Reconstruction, most African Americans were sharecroppers, or landless.
Test Review. Jim Crow laws  legislation meant to segregate blacks and whites  grandfather clause says that if a person’s ancestors voted prior to 1866,
The Rise of Segregation
Gilded Age Terms 2 Gilded Age Politics Gilded.
Jeopardy WestGilded AgeMiscellaneousVocabulary Terms.
U.S. History Unit 2 Review. Gilded Age  Gild: To give false brilliance to.  The Gilded Age refers to an era of American history when the wealth created.
The Jim Crow Era. Following Reconstruction, the Southern states will seek to bypass the Civil War Amendments which guaranteed civil rights, and voting.
African-Americans During the Gilded Age.
Political and Economic Challenges
Segregation & Discrimination
Changes in the South Chapter 11, Section 1.
Politics and Economics in the New South
Chapter 5 Section 4.
Politics and Economics in the New South
Segregation and Discrimination
Segregation and Discrimination “The Gilded Age 1877 – 1900”
Issues of the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era
Politics and Reform.
October ??, 2016 Bell Work Objectives
6.5: The Rise of Segregation
Politics and Populism of the Gilded Age
Issues of the Gilded Age
Ch. 6 Sec. 1 Ch. 7 Sec. 1 The New South.
Issues of the Gilded Age Section 1: Segregation and Social Tensions
Issues of the Gilded Age Chapter 12
Gilded Age 6 - Race, Politics, and Populism
Unit 4: Industrialization of the United States (1865 – 1914)
Knights Charge 2/22 In one word, describe American politics during the Gilded Age. What was a political machine? Who ran the biggest one in New York? Who.
Segregation and Discrimination
Gilded Age Economics and Politics
Segregation and Social tensions
Gilded Age Issues Chapter 7.
The Gilded Age: troubles lurked despite good times
William Jennings Bryan Cross of Gold Speech
Gilded Age Economics and Politics
Chapter 16: Issues With The Gilded Age
Segregation and Discrimination in America
Populism and Segregation
What led to the rise of the Populist Party in the U.S.?
The Rise of Segregation
The Rise of Segregation
The Rise of Segregation
Reform Visions, Electoral Politics After Reconstruction:
Segregation and Discrimination
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
Type Topic in here! Created by Educational Technology Network
Gilded Age Economics and Politics
Chapter 7 Issues of the Gilded Age
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
Unit 1 Reconstruction Learning Goals Ch. 3.4/ 6.1/ 7.1.
Objectives Assess how whites created a segregated society in the South and how African Americans responded. Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 9 Test Review

Vocabulary Jim Crow laws legislation meant to segregate blacks and whites grandfather clause says that if a person’s ancestors voted prior to 1866, he did not have to pass a literacy test in order to vote poll tax tool used to prevent African Americans from voting by charging them money spoils system Giving jobs to people who support a political party regardless of qualifications (led to the assassination of Garfield)

People W.E.B. Du Bois Harvard graduate who criticized Booker T. Washington’s ideas Ida B. Wells schoolteacher, journalist, and anti-lynching activist Oliver H. Kelley founder of an organization that taught farmers new farming techniques William McKinley Republican winner of the 1896 presidential election William Jennings Bryan Democratic presidential candidate who supported “free silver”

Groups Las Gorras Blancas group of Mexican Americans who fought to protect land claims Farmers’ Alliances organizations that brought farmers together to form farm cooperatives

Questions Which African American leader said that African Americans need to build their own economies and “pull themselves up by their bootstraps”? Booker T. Washington For what did Susan B. Anthony get arrested? Voting in a New York election What was Thomas Nast’s occupation? Political cartoonist How did the spoils system make political parties more powerful? by filling important government positions with party supporters

Questions For what did white workers accuse Chinese workers on the West Coast? Stealing “white” jobs Why did Republicans favor high tariffs and the gold standard? They thought it would improve the American economy

Short Response Why does Mark Twain call the economic and social conditions depicted in his novel “an entirely ideal state of society”? Use the quote below and your script to answer the question.

Short Response Sample Mark Twain describes an ideal society in The Gilded Age but in reality, that type of society is only in people’s imaginations. For example, the excerpt says that “the poor are all simple-minded and contented” in the current society but, really, they are unhappy and working towards improving their lives. Groups such as the Farmer’s Alliance and labor unions represent the poor, working class and their goals are to improve income, working conditions and the overall standard of living for these people. Therefore, they are not simple nor content, which the elite of the Gilded Age pretend to believe, but instead they are tired of living poorly and unequally.