All SAT II US History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
What was the most significant consequence of the invention of the cotton gin?
Before the invention of the cotton gin, cotton was notoriously difficult to profitably produce. Cotton is encased in a hard shell - extracting it and removing excess material was a time consuming and costly process. The cotton gin, by mechanizing the process, dramatically increased the amount of cotton that a plantation owner could produce and made the cash crop extremely profitable again. However, in order to process the cotton it first needed to be picked - which called for an influx of a massive number of forced laborers (slaves). More than one of the answers presented here are true, however the key component is "most significant". The massive importation of slaves to harvest cotton probably prolonged the death of slavery by several years in the South and has ramifications for the economic, social and political make-up of America to this day.
Example Question #2 : U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
The Pony Express, a mail delivery service reliant upon horseback mail-carriers, served the west of the United States from Missouri to California for roughly a year-and-a-half, from 1860 to 1861. It was the quickest means of communication in the West until the establishment of what?
The Transcontinental Railroad
The automobile
The interstate highway system
The telegraph
The telephone
The telegraph
It was the establishment of the telegraph that rendered the Pony Express obsolete.
Example Question #3 : U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
The California Gold Rush of 1849 was enabled by which of the following?
New, quicker methods of overland transportation
New markets for gold in Europe and the large eastern cities of America
The annexation of California by the United States by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
The removal of the gold standard
The opening of the Panama Canal
The annexation of California by the United States by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
Gold was found at Sutter’s Mill in Northern California in January of 1848, weeks before the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo made California an American territory. The ever present desire for gold led people to endure brutal travel either overland in stagecoaches or wagon trains, or by sailing to Panama and crossing the Isthmus by foot.
Example Question #4 : U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
Which inventor and industrialist first mass-produced the revolver, the weapon credited with helping to tame the Wild West?
Samuel Colt
Daniel B. Wesson
Oliver Winchester
Rollin White
Horace Smith
Samuel Colt
Samuel Colt, of Colt 45 fame, is the inventor credited with mass-producing the revolver for the first time.
Example Question #5 : U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
What was one of the significant causes of the Panic of 1873?
The failure of President Ulysses S. Grant to cut business taxes
Decoupling of the monetary supply from the gold standard
An inability of former Confederate states to pay back debts from the Civil War
The failure of international trade with European powers
Bank failures due to rampant speculation over railroads
Bank failures due to rampant speculation over railroads
The Panic of 1873 was one of the worst world wide economic depressions until the Great Depression occurred in 1929. The Panic began after widespread railroad speculation in the post Civil War era overstretched financial resources throughout the country. After the failure of a handful of railroads, banks themselves failed causing widespread unemployment, inflation, and bank runs. The depression would last until 1879, covering all of Ulysses S. Grant's second term in office.
Example Question #6 : U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
The cotton gin allowed the plantation system in the South to __________.
turn from an industrial economy to an agricultural economy
change away from a slave dominated economy
turn from an agricultural economy to an industrial economy
expand greatly due to increased productivity
collapse under its own weight
expand greatly due to increased productivity
The cotton gin (short for engine) was invented by the Connecticut born Eli Whitney in 1793, and quickly the model spread throughout Southern plantations. The cotton gin was able to separate the cotton fibers from the seeds extremely quickly and efficiently, and allowed the production of cotton to increase exponentially. This meant that Southern plantation owners also increased their importation and trade of slaves, leading to a boom in the Southern slave population.
Example Question #7 : U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
A Robber Baron of the nineteenth century might have done all of the following exploitive practices to achieve wealth EXCEPT:
Paid very low wages
Exerted excessive, self-interested government influence
Supported the workers' right to unionize
Created monopolies in order to raise prices
Obtained unyielding control over necessary resources of the nation
Supported the workers' right to unionize
A rich and powerful businessman of the 1800s, pejoratively named a Robber Baron, would not have supported the workers' right to unionize as this would have worked against his business interests.
Example Question #8 : U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
The Whiskey Rebellion, or Whiskey Insurrection, which began in 1791 (under the presidency of George Washington), was an often violent protest by farmers against what?
Price fixing
Federal taxes
The anticipated prohibition against alcohol
Whiskey purity laws
The drinking age
Federal taxes
The Whiskey Rebellion was an oftenviolent protest by grain and corn farmers against Federal taxes levied on whiskey intended, primarily, to help pay for the nation's assumed war debt.
Example Question #3 : Facts And Details In U.S. Economic History From 1790 To 1898
The Homestead Acts .
Displaced Native American communities from territories in the western United States to make room for white settlers
Placed a cap on the number of Northerners who could move to the South in an attempt to placate disillusioned Southern land owners
Offered one-hundred and sixty acres of land to anyone who would commit to living on and working the land for a period not less than five years
Granted to every freed slave the right to forty acres and a mule to help get them started
Established protected Native American territories that could not be legally occupied by white settlers
Offered one-hundred and sixty acres of land to anyone who would commit to living on and working the land for a period not less than five years
The Homestead Acts, first passed during the Civil War, offered free land grants to anyone who had not previously “taken up arms against the Union.” The land offered generally, although not always, amounted to roughly one-hundred and sixty acres. Between the period of 1862 and 1934, the Federal government granted 1.6 million homesteads to American families (roughly ten-percent of United States land was appropriated) and it was a big motivational factor behind the consistent westward expansion of the American people in that time period. The Homestead Acts were officially repealed in the 1970s.
Example Question #2 : U.S. Economic History
The southern plantation system underwent a lot of changes, while still maintaining economic power, throughout much of its existence. Which of the following changes did not create a positive change on the plantations?
Harsh slave codes.
The introduction of the cotton gin.
Bacon's Rebellion.
The mercantilist system of the colonies.
Increased prices of tobacco.
Bacon's Rebellion.
The success of Bacon's Rebellion, in 1676, allowed for the change from indentured servants to slaves as the first major migration of indentured servants became free. The rebellion looted plantations and took over the government for a short period of time, but later led to the increase of African slaves.