👋 Welcome to the APUSH Unit 4 LEQ (The Market Revolution) Answers. Have your responses handy as you go through the rubrics to see how you did!
⏱ Remember, the AP US History exam has a mixture of free-response questions and allotted times. For these types of questions, there will be 1 LEQ, and you will be given 40 minutes to complete it. (This means you should give yourself 40 minutes to go through each practice LEQ.)
In your response you should do the following:
Respond to the prompt with a historically defensible thesis or claim that establishes a line of reasoning.
Describe the broader historical context relevant to the prompt.
Support an argument in response to the prompt using specific and relevant examples of evidence.
Use historical reasoning (e.g., comparison, causation, continuity or change over time) to frame or structure an argument that addresses the prompt.
Use evidence to corroborate, qualify, or modify an argument that addresses the prompt.
Evaluate the extent to which the market revolution marked a turning point in the lives of workers in the United States.
In the development of your argument, explain what changed and what stayed the same in the lives of workers within the time period of 1803 to 1848.
Adapted from College Board Scoring Guidelines
The market revolution marked a turning point in worker’s lives as more people entered factory work and machines began to replace workers; however, slaves still worked in the southern fields.
As a result of growing technology, farmers began to move to jobs in the cities and women were offered low paying factory work. However, women were still paid less than men in both periods.
As a result of assembly line technology, more people began to work factory jobs; however, long hours and low pay still existed.
The market revolution will encourage the building of factories and railroads. As a result, working on the railroad will be a new job opportunity; however a majority of Americans still worked in the fields.
Examples might include the following, with appropriate elaboration:
The American System
Eli Whitney’s interchangeable parts
End of the War of 1812 and weaknesses in America’s ability to wage war
New technologies (steam engine, reapers, telegraph)
Manifest Destiny
American System (Banks, Tariffs, Infrastructure)
Cotton Gin
Seneca Falls
📄 Additional Resources
(The rubric states examples so you must include more than 1 to receive the point!)
Examples include, but are not limited to:
Lowell
Steam Boat
Robert Fulton
Eli Whitney
Cult of Domesticity
Factory System
American System
Henry Clay
Erie Canal
Samuel Slater
Cyrus McCormick
Panic of 1819
Gang-System
Samuel Morse
Louisiana Purchase
Evidence must be used to support an argument in order to receive the second point. Response uses outside information to actually support an argument relevant to the topic of the prompt.
Ex: The market revolution marked a turning point in worker’s lives as more people entered factory work and machines began to replace workers; however, slaves still worked in the fields.
Due to the advancements of Cyrus McCormick’s reaper, less people were required to work in the fields. As a result, workers began to find jobs in factories like those in Lowell.
The response clearly accomplishes the goal of periodization and clearly demonstrates something that stayed the same regardless of the market revolution.
Examples might include:
Next, the response clearly shows what changed such as:
type of work (assembly line)
specific immigrant groups (like the Irish)
women working in factories
movement of factories near waterways, replacing the domestic system
The response must show what stayed the same and what changed to receive the point.
The response must explain, and cannot make a fleeting reference.
Examples might discuss:
The spread of slavery in the South due to the cotton gin and the addition of new territories demonstrating a complex analysis of the impact of westward expansion, the growth of technologies, and the growing demand for cotton.
Henry Clay’s American system and make descriptive comparisons to Hamilton’s vision of the United States.
The growth of new industries as a result of the technological advancements and in some cases the need for specialized mechanics to maintain and repair the machines.
The Cult of Domesticity and show evidence of young women challenging the prevalent social norms designated for women.
The Second Great Awakening and note the growing movement for labor reform for both women and children.
🧠 Want to continue reinforcing your knowledge of Unit 4? Check out Unit 4 Trivia, either as a document or
as a game.
⏭ Ready to move on to the next topic? Take a look at the collection of
Unit 5 Resources.
📚 Want to review multiple units? Check out all of the APUSH
SAQs,
LEQs, and
DBQs.
🤝 Got more questions? Want to help others studying the same topic? Jump into a room in
Hours!