OnRamps
US
History
Spring
Midterm
10%
plan
-
ANSa
plan
put
in
place
by
Lincoln
in
1863,
saying
that
the
southern
states
cannot
be
joined
back
in
unless
10%
of
the
1860
vote
take
an
oath
of
allegiance
to
the
Union
13th
Amendment
(1865)
-
ANSwas
the
main
end
to
slavery
(abolished
it)
14th
Amendment
(1868)
-
ANSstates
all
people
born
in
the
country
are
citizens
regardless
of
it
parents
are
not
15th
Amendment
(1870)
-
ANSanyone
can
vote
even
if
you
are
white,
black,
or
another
race
black
codes
-
ANSLaws
passed
by
southern
states
in
1865-1866
in
attempt
to
restrict
the
rights
and
freedom
of
African
Americans,
and
saying
they
need
to
work
for
low
wages
(debt)
Ku
Klux
Klan
(KKK)
-
ANSA
white
supremacist
group
started
in
1865
that
intended
hate
towards
other
races,
specifically
African
Americans
Radical
Reconstruction
-
ANSIt
restored
the
US
to
an
unified
nation,
new
loyalty
to
government,
new
amendments
(13,
14,
15),
blacks
were
entitled
same
rights
as
everyone
else
Thaddeus
Stevens
-
ANSA
member
of
the
US
HOR
from
PA
and
served
as
a
radical
republican
leader
"Cross
of
Gold"
-
ANSWas
a
speech
spoke
by
William
Jennings
Bryan,
a
former
rep
from
NE
Dawes
Act
-
ANSauthorized
the
President
of
the
United
States
to
survey
Native
American
tribal
land
and
divide
it
into
pieces
for
individual
Native
Americans
in
1887
Earl
Weaver
-
ANSbaseball
player
Frederick
Jackson
Turner
-
ANSAn
american
historian
that
was
best
known
for
his
"frontier
thesis"
Homestead
Act
-
ANSSeveral
laws
where
someone
could
gain
ownership
of
government
land
or
public
domain
Omaha
Platform
and
the
Ocala
Demands
-
ANSIn
1892
Farmers
alliance
founded
the
people's
party,
and
the
ocala
demands
were
incorporated
into
the
party's
Omaha
platform
Populist
Party
-
ANSAn
agrarian
based
political
movement
that
became
a
party
in
which
was
preceded
by
the
Farmers
alliance
founded
in
1891 William
Jennings
Bryan
-
ANSBecame
Nebraska
congressman
in
1890,
in
1896
he
was
at
the
Democratic
convention
with
his
"Cross
of
Gold"
speech
Andrew
Carnegie
-
ANSA
steel
tycoon,
when
working
on
the
railroad,
he
began
to
make
investments
(especially
in
the
oil
industry)
and
his
business
eventually
became
known
as
the
Carnegie
Steel
Company
Columbian
Exchange
-
ANSThe
Chicago
World's
Fair
in
1893
to
celebrate
the
400th
anniversary
of
Christopher
Columbus's
arrival
to
the
new
world
in
1492
Cornelius
Vanderbilt
-
ANSA
shipping
and
railroad
tycoon
who
was
a
self
made
millionaire
in
the
19th
century,
who
became
one
of
the
richest
men
in
America
Gustavus
Swift
-
ANSThe
inventor
of
refrigerated
railroad
cars
Henry
Frick
-
ANSThe
developer
of
the
coke
and
steel
business
in
which
competed
with
the
Carnegie
Steel
Company,
his
labor
practices
helped
lead
the
homestead
strike
Jay
Gould
-
ANSAn
american
railroad
executive,
financer,
and
speculator
and
was
one
of
the
worst
robber
barons
of
the
19th
century
J.P.
Morgan
-
ANSAn
american
financier
and
banker
who
established
J.P.
Morgan
&
Company
in
1895
John
Rockefeller
-
ANSBuilt
his
1st
oil
refinery
in
1870
that
was
incorporated
into
the
Standard
Oil
Company,
by
1882
he
had
a
near
monopoly
of
the
oil
business
Henry
George
-
ANSA
land
reformer
and
economist
who
proposed
a
single
tax
that
the
state
tax
away
all
economic
rent
and
the
income
from
the
use
of
bare
land
but
not
from
improvements
Imperialism
-
ANSA
state
government
that
was
extending
its
power
to
other
territories
Karl
Marx/Socialism
-
ANSIt
is
the
phase
of
economic
development
and
a
set
of
social
relations
that
supersede
capitalism
in
historical
materialism
Nativism
-
ANSThe
policy
of
protecting
the
interests
of
native-born
inhabitants
against
those
of
immigrants
Social
Darwinism
-
ANSThe
theory
that
individuals,
groups,
and
people
are
exposed
to
the
same
laws
of
natural
selection
as
plants
and
animals,
later
it
was
used
to
justify
political,
imperialism,
and
racism
and
to
discourage
intervention
and
reform
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller Ashley96. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $9.99. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.