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Terms in this set (48)Which subculture emerged in American cities in the late nineteenth century and offered a dramatic challenge to Victorian ideals? C. How did the
citizens of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, try to bring innovative reforms to their city around the turn of the nineteenth century? C. Congress passed the Mann Act in 1910 to achieve what purpose? B. How did Henry Huntington expand the suburban ideal in southern California in the early twentieth century? B. How did the city of Chicago address its sewage problem around the turn of the century? B. What did Florence Kelley hope to achieve through her leadership of the National Consumers' League (NCL)? A. Why did big cities in the United
States become sites of manufacturing as well as finance and trade after the Civil War? D. What
did the New York Tammany ward boss George Washington Plunkitt mean by "honest graft"? C. What was the purpose of the phenomenon that took shape in the United States in the late nineteenth century and came to be known as
progressivism? D. To what does the term "private city" refer in
historians' discussions of urban life in the United States in the late nineteenth century? C. The dominance of private development in U.S.
cities and the preference for business solutions to city needs are expressed in what concept? B. Why were skyscrapers an impetus to urban development? D. How did reform-minded businessman Tom Johnson recapture the political support of Cleveland's working class in the early twentieth century? A. What allowed engineers and planners in the second half of the nineteenth century to develop a new urban geography in the United States? D. What
accounted for the popularity of ragtime music in the United States in the 1890s? D. By 1900, city reformers worked on altering urban landscapes as part of a movement given what name? B. How did the development of outlying suburbs in the middle and late nineteenth century change the social structure of cities? A. Why did New York State undertake serious workplace safety reforms after the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911? A. To which political party did the
American reform mayors of the early twentieth century belong? B. Which institution of progressivism offered a laboratory to experiment with solving social problems? A. How did the early-twentieth-century campaign against prostitution affect prostitutes in many Americans cities at the time? C. Why did audiences enjoy the vaudeville, an urban entertainment that emerged in the 1880s and 1890s? A. Which of the
following helped found symphony orchestras and opera companies in late-nineteenth-century American cities? A. Why were women more vulnerable than men in the new system of dating that emerged in American cities around the turn of the nineteenth century? D. What was significant about the formation of the Women's Trade Union League (WTUL) in the early twentieth century? A. Which statement assesses the early-twentieth-century crusade against prostitution in the United States? B. What impact did city politics have on immigrant communities in the United States in the late nineteenth century? B. Why was the reform effort aimed at wiping out urban prostitution in the early twentieth century shortsighted? A. Why did journalist Upton Sinclair write his 1904 novel The Jungle? A. What
was the ultimate basis for the cohesion of urban political machines? C What prompted urban reform movements in the 1890s? B. Why was Margaret Sanger indicted for publishing her newspaper column "What Every Girl Should Know" in the 1910s? C. Which statement assesses the consequences of the Triangle fire in New York City in 1911? B. The social geography of the suburbs in the late nineteenth century was in large part determined by which of the following factors? B. After running their Chicago settlement house for a few years, what did Jane Addams
and her colleagues believe the working-class people they served needed? B. A week after the Triangle fire, the Rabbi Stephen S. Wise made this statement at a memorial service for the victims: "This was not an inevitable disaster which man could neither foresee nor control. We might have foreseen it, and some of us did; we might have controlled it, but we chose not to do so. . . . It is not a question of enforcement of law nor of inadequacy of law. We have the wrong kind of laws and the wrong kind of enforcement. Before insisting upon inspection and enforcement, let us lift up the industrial standards so as to make conditions worth inspecting, and, if inspected, certain to afford security to workers." What did New York State do in response to the public outrage expressed here over the Triangle fire tragedy? B. Working separately
in the 1880s and 1890s, researcher Helen Campbell and photographer Jacob Riis both sought to call attention to what problem? D. In what way was the power of city governments limited? B. What distinguished the new "vertical aesthetic" of the Chicago school in the late nineteenth century? C. Which of the following statements assesses the impact of New York's Tenement House Law of 1901 on the 44,000 tenements that existed at the time? B. Why were audiences at the Metropolitan Opera in New York shocked by an opera presented there in 1907? D. What was the key to the successful building of skyscrapers in American cities in the late nineteenth century? B. Why did music publishing agents spend so much time in urban beer gardens and dance halls in the United States after the 1890s? C. Which statement describes living conditions in New York City's Eleventh Ward at the turn of the nineteenth century? D. Why did most black men and women who migrated to the large cities of the North between 1880 and 1917 end up working in the service sector? A. What was America's
best-known amusement park around 1900? A. What was the relationship of Italian immigrants' mutual aid societies and Chinese Americans' tongs? B. How did adoption of steam power change manufacturing in the middle and late nineteenth century? C. Recommended textbook solutions
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What was the purpose of the phenomenon that took shape in the United States in the late nineteenth century and came to be known as progressivism?What was the purpose of the phenomenon that took shape in the United States in the late nineteenth century and came to be known as progressivism? Progressivism was an overlapping set of movements united by their common desire to combat the ills of industrialization and urbanization.
What prompted urban reform movements in the 1890s?What prompted urban reform movements in the 1890s? Widespread suffering from the depression of that decade.
How did reform minded businessman Tom Johnson recapture the political support of Cleveland's working class in the early twentieth century?How did reform-minded businessman Tom Johnson recapture the political support of Cleveland's working class in the early twentieth century? He advocated public ownership of city utilities. What city was struck by a violent hurricane in 1900, leading to a major reform of its city government structure?
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