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Multiple Choice
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1
Dreams of a "New South" centered on a vision for
A)industrial development.
B)racial harmony.
C)recovering the virtues of antebellum southern culture.
D)political reform to break the power of conservative elites.
2
The chapter introduction tells the story of the "Exodusters" to make the point that
A)religious imagery was important in the lonely lives of rural folk in the late nineteenth century.
B)hopes for the future in the South and West confronted realities of "colonial" economies built on exploited lands and peoples.
C)while the South suffered from floods and worn-out soil, westerners suffered from locust infestations and the Dust Bowl.
D)both the South and the Midwest lost population as blacks and whites alike joined the "Boomer" land rushes in the far West.
3
What is NOT true about the post-Civil War southern economy?
A)The South's economy was poor, decentralized, and rural.
B)Cotton remained the dominant southern product, despite falling prices.
C)Despite dreams of a "New South," industry never took hold in the South before 1900.
D)A capital shortage made tenant farms the prevailing pattern in southern agriculture.
4
All of the following were reasons sharecroppers could not move up the "agricultural ladder" EXCEPT
A)a ruinous system of credit.
B)a need to grow cash crops rather than foodstuffs.
C)the control of processing costs by landlords.
D)the failure of new fertilizers.
5
Wages in southern industries remained low because
A)of the historic low wage pattern in agriculture.
B)unions had no success in organizing key industries.
C)of the close relationship between mill owners and workers.
D)extremely low wage scales for black workers offset the decent wages whites earned.
6
The lumber industry actually left the South poorer because
A)northerners and foreigners acquired vast tracts of forest at artificially low prices.
B)timber was sold as raw material rather than as more lucrative finished products.
C)loggers and millers put down few roots in southern communities.
D)All these answers are correct.
7
Southern poverty persisted for all of the following reasons EXCEPT
A)the South's late start in industrializing its economy.
B)a lack of northern capital in the region.
C)a lack of spending on education.
D)the isolation of the labor force.
8
To what does the term "Jim Crow" refer?
A)a process by which freed slaves established new communities in Kansas
B)a Supreme Court case that declared that legalized segregation was constitutional
C)a system of legalized separation of blacks as socially inferior
D)a technique used by the Ku Klux Klan to intimidate rural African Americans in the South so they would not try to vote
9
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
A)extended protection to blacks under the Fifteenth Amendment.
B)established the concept of "separate but equal."
C)banned discrimination from interstate commerce.
D)upheld legislation curbing the power of monopolies.
10
Which of the following was NOT true of cowboys during this period?
A)Many of them were Confederate war veterans.
B)They borrowed many of their clothing styles from Mexican Tejanos and Californios.
C)They included a significant percentage of black freedmen.
D)They dramatically improved upon the herding techniques they learned from Mexican ranchers.
11
General Custer's expedition into the Black Hills of South Dakota
A)was undertaken to enforce an earlier treaty between the United States and the Sioux.
B)spread rumors of gold to encourage whites to migrate to the region.
C)confronted the Indians with the full force of the Seventh Cavalry.
D)routed the Indian troops at the Battle of Wounded Knee.
12
The Dawes Severalty Act of 1887 proved destructive because it
A)prevented Indians from selling tribal lands.
B)attacked the communal structure of tribal life.
C)required different tribes to live together on the same reservation.
D)ignored the demands of sympathetic white reformers for a new Indian policy.
13
When Anglo cattle ranchers forced Hispanos off lands near Las Vegas, Las Gorras Blancas (White Caps)
A)banded with the Ricos, the Spanish elite, to protect their property.
B)sued the cattle ranchers in state courts, but lost.
C)burned Anglo fences, haystacks, barns, and houses.
D)burned railroad ties until the Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad agreed to raise the wages it paid its Hispano workers.
14
Western booms followed what typical pattern?
A)Initially, settlers showed respect for the environment; later, immigrants practiced ruthless exploitation.
B)Initially, there was accommodation with Indians; ultimately, a war of extermination was pursued.
C)Initially, homesteaders sought new farmlands; eventually, the cattle barons displaced the farmers.
D)Initially, individuals rushed in for quick profits; then, corporations moved in with hired labor.
15
The cattle boom on the Great Plains ended in part because
A)many ranchers preferred raising sheep.
B)too few people were willing to risk investment.
C)severe weather conditions and overgrazing wiped out many ranchers.
D)new breeds of cattle made ranching less profitable.
16
Buffalo Bill Cody
A)wrote a series of novels promoting his exploits.
B)took an Indian girl off a reservation and made her famous as Annie Oakley.
C)reenacted many frontier events, but never Custer's last stand.
D)promoted a popular image of the Wild West that became accepted around the world.







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