Identifications
Chapter 20:
Politics and Expansion in an Industrializing Age, 1877-1900
After reading Chapter 20, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each of the following:
laissez-faire doctrine
Rutherford B. Hayes
greenbacks and the Greenback party
Carl Schurz, E. L. Godkin and civil service reform
Pendleton Civil Service Act
Grover Cleveland
Mugwumps
the Grange and the Granger laws
Wabash v. Illinois, 1886
Interstate Commerce Act, 1887
Southern, Northwestern, and National Colored Farmers' alliances
Tom Watson, Mary E. Lease, and the Populist party
James B. Weaver
poll tax, literacy test, and grandfather clause
Plessy v. Ferguson
Booker T. Washington
Jacob Coxey
free silver
William Jennings Bryan
William McKinley
Alfred T. Mahan, The Influence of Sea Power upon History
Josian Strong, Our Country
Social Darwinism
Henry Cabot Lodge, John Hay, Theodore Roosevelt
Liliuokalani
William Randolph Hearst, the Journal, and yellow journalism
Joseph Pulitzer and the World
Teller Amendment versus Platt Amendment
Emilio Aguinaldo
Anti-Imperialist League
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