a. Even skilled workers faced limited economic opportunities.
b. An economically successful, but politically weak, middle class of black doctors and lawyers developed.
c. The return of the practice of apprenticeships made many free blacks effective slaves to their employers.
d. Free blacks comprised the majority of factory workers in Philadelphia and Baltimore.
e. Populations of free blacks in the East plummeted as many migrated west to secure free government land.
93. Which of the following meets the ideals embodied by the “cult of domesticity”?
a. two widows living together to help support one another
b. an unmarried female factory worker
c. an independent woman writer
d. a female minister
e. a wife who was submissive to her husband in all important decisions
94. Which statement is true about the mid–nineteenth-century phenomenon known as the “cult of domesticity”?
a. The household gained prominence as the center of economic production, and women, as a result, exercised
more economic power than ever before.
b. The ideal middle-class home became a porous, semi-public sphere, merged with the competitive tensions of
the market economy.
c. Birth rates increased among middle–class women, who embraced their new role as rulers of the household.
d. Women were no longer expected to embody submission, frailty, or sexual innocence.
e. While men moved freely between public and private spheres, women were expected to remain within the
private domestic realm.
95. What came to be redefined as a personal moral quality associated more and more closely with women?
a. freedom
b. liberty
c. virtue
d. family