16. What criticism did Henry Demarest Lloyd leverage against Rockefeller’s Standard Oil in Wealth against Commonwealth (1892)?
a. Rockefeller’s oil corporation was excessively competitive.
b. Standard Oil was overcharging end consumers of their products.
c. Standard Oil was employing more foreigners than Americans.
d. Rockefeller’s corporation was violating regulations at the New York Stock Exchange.
e. Standard Oil was undermining fair competition in the marketplace.
17. What was the difference between skilled and semiskilled workers during the Gilded Age?
a. Skilled workers were less common, possessed technical skills, and enjoyed better wages depending on the industry.
b. Unskilled workers tended to have much more control over the production process than skilled workers did.
c. Skilled workers tended to live closer to the factories than semiskilled workers did and, thus, had worse conditions.
d. The designation of semiskilled workers referred only to child laborers, whereas skilled workers were any seasoned adults.
e. Skilled workers enjoyed rights, such as the eight-hour workday and paid vacations, that caused social divisions to become less
visible throughout the Gilded Age.
18. How were skilled workers able to secure new freedoms for themselves in rapidly expanding industries?
a. Their knowledge allowed them to control the production process and the training of apprentices.
b. They had the ability to advance to managerial positions and from there into the executive boardrooms of big industry.
c. They were able to market their skills by training young apprentices in exchange for high fees.
d. Their ownership and control over their shops and tools made their trades unattractive for industrial competition.
e. Skilled workers tended to be more radical and used strikes and violent uprisings to secure better wages.
19. Which of the following statements accurately describes the experiences of many semiskilled industrial workers in American
factories during the Gilded Age?
a. Working conditions were dangerous and unstable, and workers often lacked any type of protection.
b. By 1880 all semiskilled workers enjoyed the protection of labor unions and worked in organized and safe environments.
c. Although semiskilled workers were paid low wages, their working environments were modern and clean.
d. In general, the working class lacked the riches of the higher classes but rarely experienced poverty.