The phrase was coined by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner in reference to the opulent displays of wealth. The US saw rapid growth in personal wealth with no income tax and the growth of a millionaire class.
It was a phrase that was coined by Mark Twain/ Samuel Clemens. It meant that even though it looked to be an era of progress and reform, under the surface there were still major issues in American society that needed to be dealt with and had been brushed over with bribes or other means.
Gilded Age
The Realism Period is most closely related to the Gilded Age.
reconstrution
Some would say that although American society was advancing after the Civil War, in the period 1870-1900, that many problems were not resolved beneath the surface. Yes, the overall level of richness and power of the country was increasing for example, but so was the level of poverty -- and the struggle to find legal rights to defend the individual was often made difficult. Big companies and powerful writers and politicians could defend the 'American dream' (the golden part) even while others were suffering, losing their rights (such as blacks in the South) or being exploited in the workplace (what was underneath the gilding on the outside). Even though there was much corruption people were supposed to believe that with enough willpower and determination, anyone could be a success, even become wealthy, if they just tried to fit in. However, this was not really possible. Yet everyone was expected to 'buy' the story of the golden American dream anyway.Here is a little story to illustrate the idea.The Gilded Age is when things were not made with the best quality ever, at least for most people. They made it look real nice and like it was worth something. Gilded means painting on a thin layer of gold. So lets say that you got a watch in the Gilded Age. The watch would be amazing. It would look like gold and seem beautiful. But in reality the watch was cheap on the inside, tended to break, and the "gold" on the outside was just a thin layer of brass that soon rubbed off anyway. That is what the Gilded Age is. (Or imagine it as a thin layer of rich people living in the grand manner---the gold layer---and the big layer of truth beneath which was the middle class and poor who did not have those luxuries underneath the thin gilded layer.)
Gilded Age
1825-1865
ask your mom
I do not know but: * Daniel Boone was born in 1734. * George Washington was born 1732.
Mark Twain described the period of the late 1800s in America as a Gilded Age (not a Golden Age) because, like base metal made to look like gold, it's superficiali culture and beauty covered corruption and crudity.
Gilded Age
The Realism Period is most closely related to the Gilded Age.
The term "Gilded Age" was coined by author Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner in their book "The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today" published in 1873. It refers to the period in American history from the 1870s to the early 1900s characterized by rapid industrialization, wealth accumulation, and social issues masked by a thin layer of prosperity and progress.
An era, term, or an age.
Gilded Age
Gilded Age was the period that was roughly followed from the 1870s. The term gilded age was coined by the writers by the names of Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner.
The mughal period
Mark Twain coined the term "Gilded Age" to criticize the period of American history characterized by superficial glitter concealing widespread social problems and corruption. He used "gilded" to suggest a thin layer of gold covering something of lesser value, reflecting his belief that the era's prosperity was only superficial.