<p>Preface</p> <p>Acknowledgments</p> <p>About the Authors</p> <p>Community and Diversity</p> <p> </p> <p>CHAPTER 17 RECONSTRUCTION 1863—1877</p> <p>AMERICAN COMMUNITIES Hale County, Alabama: From Slavery to Freedom in a Black Belt Community</p> <p>The Politics of Reconstruction</p> <p>The Meaning of Freedom</p> <p>SEEING HISTORY Changing Images of Reconstruction</p> <p>Southern Politics and Society</p> <p>COMMUNITIES IN CONFLICT The Ku Klux Klan in Alabama</p> <p>Reconstructing the North</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Chronology</p> <p>Review Questions</p> <p>Recommended Readings</p> <p>MyHistoryLab Connections</p> <p> </p> <p>CHAPTER 18 CONQUEST AND SURVIVAL: The Trans-Mississippi West 1860—1900</p> <p>AMERICAN COMMUNITIES The Oklahoma Land Rush</p> <p>Indian Peoples Under Siege</p> <p>The Internal Empire </p> <p>The Open Range </p> <p>SEEING HISTORY The Legendary Cowboy: Nat Love, Deadwood Dick </p> <p>Farming Communities on The Plains </p> <p>The World’s Breadbasket </p> <p>The Western Landscape </p> <p>The Transformation of Indian Societies </p> <p>COMMUNITIES IN CONFLICT The Carlisle Indian Industrial School</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Chronology</p> <p>Review Questions</p> <p>Recommended Readings</p> <p>MyHistoryLab Connections</p> <p> </p> <p>CHAPTER 19 PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION IN THE GILDED AGE 1865—1900</p> <p>AMERICAN COMMUNITIES Haymarket Square, Chicago, May 4, 1886</p> <p>The Rise of Industry, the Triumph of Business </p> <p>SEEING HISTORY The Standard Oil Company</p> <p>Labor in the Age of Big Business </p> <p>COMMUNITIES IN CONFLICT Regulating the Conditions and Limiting the Hours of Labor in the State of Illinois</p> <p>The New South</p> <p>The Industrial City </p> <p>The Rise of Consumer Society </p> <p>Cultures in Conflict, Culture in Common </p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Chronology</p> <p>Review Questions</p> <p>Recommended Readings</p> <p>MyHistoryLab Connections</p> <p> </p> <p>CHAPTER 20 DEMOCRACY AND EMPIRE 1870—1900</p> <p>AMERICAN COMMUNITIES The Annexation of Hawai’i</p> <p>Toward a National Governing Class </p> <p>Farmers and Workers Organize their Communities </p> <p>The Crisis of the 1890s </p> <p>Politics of Reform, Politics of Order</p> <p>The Path to Imperialism </p> <p>SEEING HISTORY The White Man’s Burden</p> <p>Onto a Global Stage </p> <p>COMMUNITIES IN CONFLICT Two Sides of Anti-Imperialism</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Chronology</p> <p>Review Questions</p> <p>Recommended Readings</p> <p>MyHistoryLab Connections</p> <p> </p> <p>CHAPTER 21 URBAN AMERICA AND THE PROGRESSIVE ERA 1900—1917</p> <p>AMERICAN COMMUNITIES The Henry Street Settlement House: Women Settlement House Workers Create a Community of Reform</p> <p>The Origins of Progressivism </p> <p>SEEING HISTORY Photographing Poverty in the Slums of New York</p> <p>Progressive Politics in Cities and States </p> <p>Social Control and Its Limits </p> <p>COMMUNITIES IN CONFLICT Debating Prohibition in Progressive-Era Ohio</p> <p>Challenges to Progressivism </p> <p>Women’s Movements and Black Activism </p> <p>National Progressivism </p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Chronology</p> <p>Review Questions</p> <p>Recommended Readings</p> <p>MyHistoryLab Connections</p> <p> </p> <p>CHAPTER 22 A GLOBAL POWER: The United States in the Era of the Great War 1901—1920</p> <p>AMERICAN COMMUNITIES The American Expeditionary Force in France</p> <p>Becoming a World Power </p> <p>The Great War </p> <p>American Mobilization </p> <p>SEEING HISTORY Selling War</p> <p>Over Here </p> <p>Repression and Reaction </p> <p>COMMUNITIES IN CONFLICT Race Riot in Tulsa </p> <p>An Uneasy Peace </p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Chronology</p> <p>Review Questions</p> <p>Recommended Readings</p> <p>MyHistoryLab Connections</p> <p> </p> <p>CHAPTER 2</p>