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The Enduring Vision, Fifth Edition
Paul S. Boyer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Clifford E. Clark, Jr., Carleton College
et al.
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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