2. Have your students read Andrew Carnegie’s “Gospel of Wealth” article
(http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1889carnegie.asp). How compelling are his ideas more than
a century later? What ideas “aged” well? What ones are particularly dated?
3. Lead students in a discussion related to the acquisition of wealth in the Gilded Age. Be prepared to
expand on terms such as robber barons to the students before launching into conversation. Ask the
students the following questions:
• How did capitalists acquire wealth during the Gilded Age?
• Were the leading capitalists “robber barons” or something else?
4. Have your students read some of the news articles on the Haymarket Square affair of 1886. (The New
York Times provides free access to articles from that incident, and they can be found by doing a search
for “Haymarket Square” on the New York Times website. If you are at a school that provides electronic
5. Have your students take a tour of the 1893 Chicago Fair. There are several good websites related to
this event, including http://xroads.virginia.edu/~ma96/wce/official.html. What can the fair reveal
about the growth and advancement of the American economy? What are some of the most striking
features about America that were presented by the fair? In hindsight, what might it have revealed that
6. Ask your students to choose one of the major inventions of the era and present on how it helped to
change America. Possible options include the telephone, electricity, the light bulb, and the telegraph.