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A golden spike is driven into a railroad tie at Promontory Point, Utah, completing the transcontinental railroad. Built in just over three years by 20,000 workers, it had 1,775 miles of track. The railroad's promoters received 23 million acres of land and $64 million in loans as an incentive.
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John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937), founder of the Standard Oil Company, became one of the world’s wealthiest men and a major philanthropist.
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P.T. Barnum opens his three-ring circus, hailing it as the "Greatest Show on Earth."The classic three-ring American circus that we know today – a self-contained, fully choreographed live production presenting acrobatics, animal acts, spectacle productions and comic relief – was born out of a mid- eighteenth century English horse-riding exhibition and transplanted to American soil in the early 1790s.
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The Great Chicago Fire claims 250 lives and destroys 17,500 buildings.The Great Chicago Fire was a conflagration that burned from Sunday, October 8, to early Tuesday, October 10, 1871. The fire killed up to 300 people, destroyed roughly 3.3 square miles (9 km2) of Chicag
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Takes place in Chicago
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Congress passes the Chinese Exclusion Act, barring Chinese Chinese immigration for ten years.
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Congress passes the Pendleton Act, establishing a Civil Service Commission and filling government positions by a merit system, including competitive examinations.
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Took place in NY
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Construction begins in Chicago on the first building with a steel skeleton, William Jenney's ten-story Home Insurance Company
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Takes place in New York.
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The American Federation of Labor was founded, with Samuel Gompers as president. Membership was restricted to skilled craftsmen.
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requires railroads to charge reasonable rates and forbids them from from offering rate reductions to preferred customers.
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Twenty million immigrants passed through it before it was closed in 1954.
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Homestead Steelworks Henry Clay Frick, who managed Andrew Carnegie's steelworks at Homestead, Pa., cuts wages, precipitating a strike that begins June 26. In a pitched battle with Pinkerton guards, brought in to protect the plant, ten strikers and three Pinkertons are killed. Pennsylvania's governor then sent in the state militia to protect strikebreakers. The strike ended Nov. 20.
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Workers at the Pullman sleeping car plant in Chicago go on strike after the company cut wages without reducing rents in company-owned housing. On June 26, the American Railway Union begins to boycott trains carrying Pullman cars.
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William Jennings Bryan electrified the Democratic convention with his "Cross of Gold" speech and received the party's nomination, but was defeated Nov. 3 by Republican William McKinley.
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This deal makes Andrew Carnegie the richest man in the world at the time.