Transcontinental Railroad
Steel
Electricity
This was essential to industrial and urban growth as it was more flexible and reliable than water or stream. It transformed the process of manufacturing and transportation and played a crucial role in the advancement of technology.
Petroleum
Oil became essential for powering transportation and manufacturing, leading to its classification as a strategic resource for national economies.
Internal Combustion Engine
Significantly increased industrial productivity by powering machines that operated more efficiently than previous steam-powered alternatives. Factories could run continuously with higher output rates, which led to reduced production costs.
Bessemer Converter
A method invented by Henry Bessemer in 1856 to produce steel by blowing air into molten iron, which oxidizes it and removes carbon and other impurities, resulting in cheap, high-quality steel.
Social Darwinism
Horizontal Monopoly
Vertical Monopoly
Andrew Carnegie
A Scottish-born American industrialist and philanthropist who founded the Carnegie Steel Company in 1892. By 1901, his company dominated the American steel industry.
Gospel of Wealth
Standard Oil
Homestead Strike
Knights of Labor
A prominent labor organization in the United States during the late 19th century that aimed to unite all workers, regardless of skill level, gender, or race, to promote social and economic reforms.
American Federation of Labor
A national federation of labor unions in the United States founded by Samuel Gompers in 1886. It focused on securing better wages, working conditions, and hours for white, male, skilled workers while promoting collective bargaining as a primary strategy.
Pullman Strike
Socialism
“Indian wars”- Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Plains Indians
A series of conflicts between Native Americans and the United States over land and resources in the Great Plains. Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse were prominent leaders of the Sioux people and key figures in the Great Sioux War (1876-1877).
Evolutionary Socialism
A parliamentary route, which would deliver a long-term, radical transformation gradually through legal and peaceful means, via the state.
Dawes Act
Carlisle Boarding School
Wounded Knee Massacre
A massacre on December 29, 1890, where the US Army killed nearly 300 Lakota people, including women and children, at Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota. It marked the end of the Indian Wars.
Imperialism
The practice of a powerful nation or empire extending its political, economic, cultural, or military influence over other, often weaker, nations or territories.
How did Imperialism derive from the Second Industrial Revolution?
The Gilded Age’s rapid industrialization created a need for new markets and resources overseas, which fueled the desire for territorial expansion.