<p> Note-Taking Guide Chapter 19, Section 4</p><p>1. Read Chapter 19, Section 4 pgs.572-575. 2. Define the following vocabulary: sweatshop, trade union, collective bargaining, strikebreaker, injunction 3. Describe the kinds of dangers common to these workers of the late 1800s: steel workers, coal miners, textile workers. 4. Where did garment workers toil? Describe their working conditions. 5. By 1900 how many women worked in industry? 6. How did women’s salaries differ from men’s salaries? 7. How did child-labor laws try to improve working conditions for child factory workers? 8. How were the Knights of Labor different from most other unions? 9. What was the AFL, and whom did it represent? 10. What is collective bargaining? 11. What union took action after the 1911 fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company factory? 12. How did unions respond when companies fired workers and lowered wages? 13. What did companies do to replace strikers during the 1877 railroad strike? 14. What caused the Haymarket Riot of 1866? 15. How did steel plant managers respond to the Homestead Strike of 1892? 16. How did Pullman and railroad owners stop the union from “obstructing the railways and holding up the mails”?</p><p>Note-Taking Guide Chapter 19, Section 3</p><p>1. Read Chapter 19, Section 4 pgs.572-575. 2. Define the following vocabulary: sweatshop, trade union, collective bargaining, strikebreaker, injunction 3. Describe the kinds of dangers common to these workers of the late 1800s: steel workers, coal miners, textile workers. 4. Where did garment workers toil? Describe their working conditions. 5. By 1900 how many women worked in industry? 6. How did women’s salaries differ from men’s salaries? 7. How did child-labor laws try to improve working conditions for child factory workers? 8. How were the Knights of Labor different from most other unions? 9. What was the AFL, and whom did it represent? 10. What is collective bargaining? 11. What union took action after the 1911 fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company factory? 12. How did unions respond when companies fired workers and lowered wages? 13. What did companies do to replace strikers during the 1877 railroad strike? 14. What caused the Haymarket Riot of 1866? 15. How did steel plant managers respond to the Homestead Strike of 1892? 16. How did Pullman and railroad owners stop the union from “obstructing the railways and holding up the mails”?</p>
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