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How Did The Age Change During The Gilded Age

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Gilded Age Shortly after the Civil War, in 1865, the United States experienced unprecedented growth and prosperity through an era known as the Gilded Age. Although it is a time where some of the wealthiest men have ever lived and the financial exploits were dramatically extreme, it was also an era of abject poverty and inequality as millions of European immigrants came from their impoverished it came at the expense of many people, such as the Native Americans, urban workers, and farmers. Their experiences were similar by the horrible living conditions they were forced into, the unionization formed within each other, being left out on the prosperity the rest of the population was in on, and let us not forget the fact that they were all ignored by the government when asking for reforms; the differences in their experiences was the way they tried to solve their problems, the aspects of what they depended on for living, the enormous loss of family and land, competing against huge industrializations, and the different diseases and weathers they faced due to their surrounding environment. The Native Americans had the worse times during the Gilded Age; they were stripped from 138 million acres of land to 52 million acres, after the Dawes Act, which promoted the idea of assimilation in order for land use and property. In 1879, Chief Joseph gives a speech in Washington D.C., about how his ancestors were forced to live on a reservation ruled by the government; when asking for

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