The Rise of Industrial Capitalism (College Board AP® US History): Exam Questions

5 mins5 questions
11 mark

“I asked Mr. Rockefeller how he came to conceive the idea of forming the Standard Oil Company … “We were not really the first to adopt the combination idea … The Western Union Telegraph people had begun to buy up two or three small telegraph lines and add them to their system. The Standard Oil Company was less the fruit of an idea than an outgrowth of necessity. The oil business was so demoralized that nearly every refinery was threatened with bankruptcy. Prices were below cost of production. Competition had been very keen, not to say cruel… Something had to be done if the industry was to be saved …I wrote our largest competitor asking if he would meet me at a certain time and place … We talked over the whole oil situation. He realized that heroic measures would be necessary to prevent general ruin. He then agreed to sell his property at a fair valuation and to come in with us. After that other properties were acquired in the same way." 

B.C. Forbes, Men Who Are Making America, 1917

The excerpt best reflects which of the following business models of the late nineteenth century?

  • The factory system.

  • Vertical integration.

  • Global distribution system (GDS).

  • Horizontal integration.

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21 mark

“I asked Mr. Rockefeller how he came to conceive the idea of forming the Standard Oil Company … “We were not really the first to adopt the combination idea … The Western Union Telegraph people had begun to buy up two or three small telegraph lines and add them to their system. The Standard Oil Company was less the fruit of an idea than an outgrowth of necessity. The oil business was so demoralized that nearly every refinery was threatened with bankruptcy. Prices were below cost of production. Competition had been very keen, not to say cruel… Something had to be done if the industry was to be saved …I wrote our largest competitor asking if he would meet me at a certain time and place … We talked over the whole oil situation. He realized that heroic measures would be necessary to prevent general ruin. He then agreed to sell his property at a fair valuation and to come in with us. After that other properties were acquired in the same way." 

B.C. Forbes, Men Who Are Making America, 1917

The business model expressed in the excerpt would have been supported by

  • Knights of Labor

  • Idna Minerva Tarbell

  • J Pierpont Morgan 

  • Theodore Roosevelt

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31 mark

“I asked Mr. Rockefeller how he came to conceive the idea of forming the Standard Oil Company … “We were not really the first to adopt the combination idea … The Western Union Telegraph people had begun to buy up two or three small telegraph lines and add them to their system. The Standard Oil Company was less the fruit of an idea than an outgrowth of necessity. The oil business was so demoralized that nearly every refinery was threatened with bankruptcy. Prices were below cost of production. Competition had been very keen, not to say cruel… Something had to be done if the industry was to be saved …I wrote our largest competitor asking if he would meet me at a certain time and place … We talked over the whole oil situation. He realized that heroic measures would be necessary to prevent general ruin. He then agreed to sell his property at a fair valuation and to come in with us. After that other properties were acquired in the same way." 

B.C. Forbes, Men Who Are Making America, 1917

Which event most directly contributed to the growth of multinational corporations abroad in the Gilded Age?

  • The Panic of 1893

  • The Pullman Strike, 1893

  • President Chester Arthur’s low tariff policies

  • Western expansion

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41 mark
Patent drawing of a man in trousers with riveted pockets, standing with one hand on his hip and the other holding a cane, patented in 1873.
A patent drawing for J.W. Davis’s Fastening Pocket-Openings blue-jeans, Records of the Patent and Trademark Office, National Archives, Record Group 241, 20th May 1873 

Which of the following industrial developments resulted in the success of the product shown in the image?

  • Mass production

  • The Bessemer process

  • Vertical integration

  • Installment payment plans 

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51 mark
Patent drawing of a man in trousers with riveted pockets, standing with one hand on his hip and the other holding a cane, patented in 1873.
A patent drawing for J.W. Davis’s Fastening Pocket-Openings blue-jeans, Records of the Patent and Trademark Office, National Archives, Record Group 241, 20th May 1873 

The product shown in the image most directly reflects which of the following production processes in the Gilded Age?

  • The “putting-out system”.

  • Commercial production. 

  • Industrial capitalism.

  • The “Lowell offering”.

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