Title: This is Jeopardy!
1This is Jeopardy!
Lets Play!
2Jeopardy (Round 1)
Terms
Civil War
Inventors Inventions
Civil War Battles
The North South
100
100
100
100
100
200
200
200
200
200
300
300
300
300
300
400
400
400
400
400
500
500
500
500
500
3Jeopardy (Round 2)
Industrialization, Immigration Cities
First Industrial Revolution
Sectionalism
Progressives
Reconstruction
200
200
200
200
200
400
400
400
400
400
600
600
600
600
600
800
800
800
800
800
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
4Final Jeopardy
List the two natural resources that spurred the
First Industrial Revolution. One led to the
development of new tools and factory machinery.
The other helped produce energy in the form of
steam. In addition, List the two principle
refining process products of the Second
Industrial Revolution, which altered
manufacturing, transportation, and everyday life.
51st Industrial Revolution Coal Iron Ore 2nd
Industrial Revolution Steel Oil
6Civil War (100)
Number of men who died during the Civil War?
7620,000
8Civil War (200)
Years in which the Civil War took place
91861-1865
10Civil War (300)
This conflict sparked the Battle of Fort Sumter
11Property rights to the fort
12Civil War (400)
This event was the trigger for South Carolina's
secession
13Abraham Lincoln's election
14Civil War (500)
Place where negotiations to end the Civil War
took place?
15Appomattox Court House, VA
16Inventors (100)
- Inventor of the Cotton Gin, which removed cotton
seeds faster.
17Eli Whitney
18Inventors (200)
This inventors reaping machine made grain
production faster and more efficient.
19Cyrus McCormick
20Inventors (300)
This innovator created a textile factory, which
provided a centralized place for the cloth-making
process to be done.
21Francis Lowell
22Inventors (400)
He is known as the father of modern steelmaking.
23Sir Henry Bessemer
24Inventors (500)
A pioneer of communications technology this
innovator and his team at Menlo Park developed
more than 1,000-patented inventions.
25Thomas Edison
26Civil War Battles (100)
The Confederate reaction to the first Battle of
Bull Run
27They hoped the win would encourage foreign
nations to ally with them.
28Civil War Battles (200)
This Civil War battle is still the bloodiest day
in American history.
29Antietam
30Daily Double
31Civil War Battles (300)
This event is considered the main turning point
of the Civil War.
32Gettysburg
33Civil War Battles (400)
The reason why U.S. troops attacked at Bull Run.
34They wanted to capture the Confederate capital of
Richmond.
35Civil War Battles (500)
General Grant planned for a war of attrition. The
Union would keep on fighting until the
Confederacy ran out of these three things.
36Men Supplies Will to Fight
37The North South (100)
The Capital of the Union during the Civil War.
38Washington, D.C.
39The North South (200)
Capital of the Confederacy during the Civil War.
40Richmond, Virginia
41The North South (300)
Two of the North's disadvantages during the Civil
War
42A shortage of experienced and skilled military
commanders A divided population that did not
fully support the war
43The North South (400)
Two of the South's disadvantages during the Civil
War
44A smaller population than the North A smaller
industrial base than the North
45Daily Double!!!
46The North South (500)
President of the Union and President of the
Confederacy.
47Abraham Lincoln (Union) Jefferson Davis
(Confederacy)
48Terms (100)
Term used to view industrialists as ingenious and
industrious leaders who transformed the American
economy with their business skills. They were
praised for their skills as well as for their
philanthropy (charity).
49Captain of Industry
50Terms (200)
Term used to view certain industrialists as cruel
and ruthless businessmen who would stop at
nothing to achieve great wealth. They were
accused of exploiting workers and forcing
horrible working conditions and unfair labor
practices upon the laborer.
51Robber Baron
52Terms (300)
Idea that political authority belongs to the
federal government
53Popular Sovereignty
54Terms (400)
A person who organizes and runs a new business
55Entrepreneur
56Terms (500)
Movement of people out of the country (farms) and
into the city
57Rural-to-urban migration
58Progressives (200)
This author wrote a novel called The Jungle
exposing the lack of safety and sanitation for
workers in the Meat Packing industry. His book
brought attention to the lack of safety for
employees in meat packing plants.
59Upton Sinclair
60Progressives (400)
This person felt workers needed unions and new
laws were needed to help working people. He
fought for laws that would limit the workday to
eight hours. In 1886, this person helped start
the American Federation of Labor (AFL).
61Samuel Gompers
62Progressives (600)
This photographer went into factories and took
photos to show how terrible it was for children
to be factory workers. These images helped
inspire support for child labor laws and
compulsory education.
63Lewis Hine
64Daily Double
65Progressives (800)
This person started a settlement house to provide
services for poor people in the community. The
settlement house was called the Hull House and it
offered opportunities such as English classes,
childcare, and work training to community
residents.
66Jane Addams
67Progressives (1000)
This person was a strong crusader for
conservation controlling how America's natural
resources were used. He also pushed for Federal
laws that would make businesses and companies
obey laws regarding the use of natural resources.
68Theodore Roosevelt
69Reconstruction (200)
10 of voters had to swear an oath of allegiance
for a Southern state to set up a new government.
70Lincoln's Ten Percent Plan
71Reconstruction (400)
A law that attempted to restrict the rights of
African Americans
72Black Code
73Reconstruction (600)
Prohibited slavery in the United States and its
territories
7413th Amendment
75Reconstruction (800)
Dates for Reconstruction
761865-1877
77Reconstruction (1000)
Agency established by Congress in 1865 to help
Southerns left homeless and hungry after the
Civil War.
78Freedmens Bureau
79Sectionalism (200)
The act of placing the interests of your region
ahead of the nation
80Sectionalism
81Sectionalism (400)
Opened Missouri to slavery
82Missouri Compromise
83Sectionalism (600)
Repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and
allowed settlers in those territories to
determine if they would allow slavery within
their boundaries.
84KansasNebraska Act of 1854
85Sectionalism (800)
U.S. Supreme Court case that ruled a slave is not
a U.S. citizen but rather the property of his
master.
86Dred Scott v. Sandford
87Sectionalism (1000)
Destination of slaves traveling on the
Underground Railroad.
88Canada
89First Industrial Revolution (200)
The Industrial Revolution began here.
90Great Britain
91First Industrial Revolution (400)
Materials supplied in the Cottage Industry to be
carded and spun
92Cotton Wool
93First Industrial Revolution (600)
Two natural resources that spurred the First
Industrial Revolution
94Coal Iron Ore
95First Industrial Revolution (800)
Two reasons why England was the center of the
Industrial Revolution
96Geography Climate, Natural Resources
Separation from the European Continent Government
International Trade Allowed Population
allowed to Relocate Roads Canals Social
Factors Less Rigid Society Colonial Empire
Supplied Raw Materials Provided Markets for
Goods Advantages in Industrializing First No
competition, Monopoly on technology
97First Industrial Revolution (1000)
Three main types of transportation that increased
during the Industrial Revolution period
98Waterways Roads Railroads
99Industrialization, Immigration Cities (200)
The two immigration centers in the United States
in the late 1880s.
100Ellis Island, New York Harbor Angel Island, San
Francisco Bay
101Industrialization, Immigration Cities (400)
A law enacted to STOP monopolies and trusts that
restrained trade.
102Sherman Antitrust Act
103Industrialization, Immigration Cities (600)
A theory adapted by Hebert Spencer from Charles
Darwins Theory of Evolution, which argues that
society progresses through competition with the
fittest rising to positions of wealth and power.
104Social Darwinism
105Daily Double!!!!!
106Industrialization, Immigration Cities (800)
They saw immigrants as a threat because they were
too different to fit into American society and
since they were willing to work cheaply, they
lowered wages for all and stole native-born
American jobs.
107Nativist
108Industrialization, Immigration Cities (1000)
Two reasons why many immigrants came to the
United States.
109Search of opportunity and a better life , as well
as, to escape poverty, religious persecution, and
political persecution.
110I hope you study.