1920s
1920s +Great Depression
Great Depression + New Deal
World War 2
Cold War
500

Red Scare

Who: Socialists


What: fear of communism among Americans

When: Started 1917

Why: Brought on by the rise of the Soviet Union and socialists originally being opposed to the war

Impact: Led to the palmer raids by the attorney general's office targeting socialists  Deportation of Russian immigrants 

500

Flappers

Who: Women denying traditional gender roles, Often dressed in low skirts, short hair, and drank, smoke, in public 

When: 1920s

Where: Urban areas

Why: Flappers wanted to be seen as individuals that were more then just their gender

Significance: Changed how people though about gender roles 

500

Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)

Who: President Hoover

What: A government insurance program giving federal dollars to banks and railroads to ensure places stay open, Failed because their was not enough money put into it by the government and Hoover 

When: 1932

Where: big businesses across the United States

Why: Great Depression caused banks to be on the verge of closing because of their investments in the stock market

Significance: Shows that Hoover did try to fix the problems of the Great Depression but that he did too little to late 

500

Kelogg Briand Pact

Who: National community after WW1

What: A pact that outlaws war, Consequences for those that cause and go to war, Meant to shun people for going to war 

When: 1928

Why: Trying to keep war from being an immediate reaction to just any amount of problems 

Significance: Would be the basis for the UN charter 

500

Double V Campaign

Who: Franklin D. Roosevelt, Philip Randolph

What: 

Organization of a march on Washington demanding an end to the Jim Crow System, Roosevelt believes it would create division 

When: February 1942

Where: Washington DC

Why: Meant to make the war about victory over facism and segregation

Significance: Led to Roosevelt passing and executive order the end discrimination in war related work with government contracts 

500

Teapot Dome Scandal

Who: Secretary of State Albert Fall, Warren G Harding 

What: Albert Fall was taking bribes to allow oil companies to use army owned oil reserves 

When: 1921-1923 

Where: Teapot Dome Wyoming

Why: To serve his own interests 

Impact: Was the first example of a secretary being put in jail while in office 

500

Scopes Trial

Who: William Jennings Bryan who supported the state of Tennessee, John Scopes  ,Clarence Darle defended Scopes 

What: A fight over wether Darwinism or religious fundamentalism should be taught in public schools

When: July 1925

Where: Tenessee Supreme Court

Why: Scopes walked in to a classroom preaching about evolution, Was all part of a plan to bring the trial to the Supreme Court

Significance: Shows how people in a democracy interact majority rule vs the minority ideas 

500

Agricultural Adjustment Act

Who: FDR

What: Raising the price of farmers crops which allowed them to make a profit, Also limited supply by telling farmers to only use half of their field 

When: 1933

Where: Agricultural Farmers

Why: An attempt to recover the economy by boosting the economics of agriculture

Significance: Consumers often complained because of the raised price of food, Shows how FDRs New Deal was unpopular among some consumers because they could not afford food because they saw it as throwing away food 


500

Lend Lease

Who: U.S., Allies (Britain, France, Soviet Union)

What: Nations like Britain could borrow American goods and when they were done with those goods at a later date they can pay for them 

When: World War 2 (1939-1945) 

Where: to the allies

Why: 

A program which would allow the US to help the allies during the war, A way of not violating the neutrality acts because they are just borrowing the goods and not buying them 

significance: Shows that the United States was clearly siding with the Allies 

500

Rosie the Riveter

What: Rosie was a model of women working in the industrial work force during the war 

When: 1940s

Where: in propaganda and war posters

Why: to serve as a patriotic symbol representing women showing their strength during the war 

Significance: To some she was a controversial figure that challenged gender roles 

500

Ford Model T

Who: Henry Ford

What: Early automobile, wages high for workers and low for buyers cause of mass production

When: 1908-1930

Where: Across the United States

Why: Ford wanted to make cars available to his own workers

Significance: Proved to be unstainable as ford later had to lower wages as other car companies made cars that sold better 

500

Underconsumption 

Who: The American People

What: People not generally buying stuff before the Great Depression and thus companies did not get enough money to sustain a profit

When: Late 1920s

Why: Money in the United States was still widely held among the higher classes thus many people of the middle class and lower class were unable to afford products leading to a lack of sales

Significance: Shows that despite the thriving economy their were major problems that would eventually lead to the 1930s Great Depression 

500

Civilian conservation Core

Who: "Roosevelts Tree Army," Young men ages 18-25

What: The boys would live in a tent doing conservation work for the federal government, Payed 35 dollars per month with 25 going to their family back home 

When: founded 1933

Where: National Parks, State Parks, and reservations

Why: Giving young men a job to support their family and do works on public grounds 

Significance: Showed a widely successful and popular program of FDRs New Deal o Gave an alternative to working in private industry 

500

Battle of the Buldge

Who: German Army, Allied army

What: 

Germans amassing troops in one spot and breaking through the allied offense, Americans retreated but never broke the line fully 

When: December 1944

Where: Northeastern France

Why: trying to make a last ditch effort to break the allys offense

Significance: Delays the ally invasion from the West meaning that the Soviets reached Germany first eventually leading to the division of East and West Germany 

500

Containment

Who: Harry Truman, Soviet Union

What: Policy to not attack Soviet Union directly but instead keep them from spreading communism   

When: 1947 onwards

Where: In other countries attempting to stop the spread of communist ideas 

Why: Meant to stop the domino effect of communism which the United States saw as a problem 

Significance: Problems noted from both sides of the political system as the United States did not make distinctions between what ares were best to protect   

500

Tulsa Race Massacre 

Who
African Americans in Tulsa
 White people in Tulsa
 
What
Because of the initial incident white people burned black wall street to the ground

 When  May 1921

 Where Tulsa specifically in the greenwood district (black wall street)

 Why Extension of red summer

 Initial incident is when a black man bumped into a white woman on an elevator causing uproar 

Impact  It shows the aftereffects of what happened to African Americans after their return for war

500

Bonus Army

Who: Destitute World War 1 veterans, Douglas MacArthur tasked with clearing out the protesting veterans 

What: Veterans wanted their bonus that was promised to them in 1945 earlier, Marches in Washington D.C. at the capital and White House 

When: 1932

Where: Washington D.C.

Why: Veterans wanted their bonus’ earlier because of the lack of money they had during Great Depression of the 1930s

Significance: Shows just how desperate people were during the Great Depression o Cost Hoover Re-election 

500

Works Progress Administration 

Who: FDR

What: Relief organization for unemployed people to do a variety of things, 55 dollars a month, Built sidewalks, airports, schools, post offices, and other government buildings 

When: 1935-1943

Where: Across the United States

Why: Helped end the depression by dumping enough money in the economy so that consumers can buy goods again, Hiring unemployed people out of a job (hired 8 ½ million people) 

Significance: It was a successful and popular program among workers as it helped them get through the Great Depression 

500

Midway

Who: US Navy, Japanese Navy

What: 

The US setting a trap for the Japanese at the island of Midway, Was a losing battle till American bombers got lost and ended up finding the entire Japanese ships and planes rearming allowing them to take them out in one try 

When: June 1942

Where: Midway island in the Pacific

Why: to try to take out entire japanese fleet

Significance: Shows how fast the tide of war can change

500

Marshall Plan

Who: Named for Secretary of State Georg Marshall 

What: Idea of building up economies so they are not weakened to stop communism 

When: 1948

Where: foreign allies

Why: Realized that in strong economies that the chances of a communist revolution were low 

Significance: 12 billion dollars were spent by NATO as part of this plan , Did manage to keep the countries from becoming communist 

500

National Origins Act

Who: Immigrants 

What: An act that limited the number of immigrants that could enter the US based on where they were coming from, Based on 1890 numbers aka was targeted at bringing in Irish and German immigrants while keeping out eastern European immigrants 

When: passed 1924

Why: Meant to keep eastern and southern European immigrants out of the States

Significance: Kept immigrants of various types out of the country in heavy amounts until the 1960s 

500

Dust Bowl

Who: Farmers in Kansas and Oklahoma

What: Migration caused by farming failure in the American Southwest, Defined by large dust storms and tearing up of farmers fields 

When: 1930s

Where: Kansas and Oklahoma

Why: severe drought caused by excessive farming

Significance: Shows that the economy was not the only problem during the 1930s 

500

Office of Price Adminstration 

Who: Federal Government, FDR

What: Hiring companies to make products for the war effort , Controlling prices to ensure they do not go up when the war starts 

When: 1941

Where: industrial fields

Why: to ensure the economy was geared towards waging war

Significance: Manufacturing power of the United States and other allies is what contributed to there success during the war 


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