Empire State of Mind
Progress and Problems
Over There, Over Here
Roaring Twenties, Nervous Nation
Depression Survival Guide
✨🎉
Final Jeopardy
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100

This was one major reason the U.S. pursued overseas expansion: gaining new markets and this type of military strength.

Strategic naval power

100

This was the main goal of the Progressive Era: using government action to address problems caused by industrialization and this major trend.

Urban growth

100

Early in WWI, strong U.S. ties to the Allies in this area made true neutrality difficult.

Trade and the economy

100

Americans elected Warren G. Harding to office after years of war, instability and reform looking to return to this

Normalcy 

100

This describes making more goods than people can afford to buy/use, which helped weaken the economy before the Depression.

Overproduction

200

This war helped the U.S. gain overseas influence and territories, increasing its global power.

Spanish-American War

200

These journalists exposed corruption and social problems to build support for reform laws.

Muckrakers

200

This German policy threatened ships and civilians and pushed the U.S. closer to entering WWI.

Unrestricted submarine warfare

200

This postwar fear of radicals led to raids and crackdowns on suspected communists and labor activists.

The Red Scare

200

Buying stocks “on margin” was risky because investors were using this to purchase stocks.

Borrowed money

300

After defeating Spain the US acquired this territory and some began to question if the US was spreading democracy or building an empire

Philippines

300

These reforms made government more accountable to voters by giving citizens more direct power (direct democracy).

Initiative, referendum, and recall

300

This message raised fears of threats closer to home and helped build support for war.

The Zimmermann Telegram

300

This group formed to defend civil liberties after crackdowns on speech and dissent.

The ACLU

300

These events made the Depression worse by collapsing banks, wiping out savings, and cutting off loans.

Bank runs

300

These WWI laws limited civil liberties by punishing certain speech and opposition during wartime.

Espionage and Sedition Acts

400

This project strengthened U.S. trade and military power by allowing faster movement of ships between the Atlantic and Pacific.

The Panama Canal

400

DAILY DOUBLE

This Progressive program supported trust-busting, consumer protection, and conservation as part of a stronger federal role.

Theodore Roosevelt’s Square Deal

400

This Supreme Court case showed that speech could be limited during wartime if the government argued there was a serious public danger.

Schenck v. United States

400

This national ban was hard to enforce and helped speakeasies and organized crime grow.

Prohibition

400

This environmental disaster was caused by drought and harmful farming practices, leading to crop failure and mass migration.

The Dust Bowl

500

This policy justified U.S. intervention in Latin America to protect U.S. interests and keep European powers out.

The Roosevelt Corollary

500

This Progressive-era debate compared protecting wilderness from development versus “wise use” of resources.

John Muir vs Gifford Pinchot

500

DAILY DOUBLE

Many Americans opposed joining this postwar organization because they feared being pulled into future wars.

The League of Nations

500

This 1920s trend helped set the stage for the Great Depression by encouraging risky investing, often with borrowed money.

Stock market speculation

500

This tariff is often viewed as worsening the Great Depression because other countries retaliated and global trade fell.

The Smoot-Hawley Tariff

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