Unit 6.1-6.3
Unit 6.4-6.6
Unit 6.7-6.10
Unit 7.1-7.3
Unit 7.4
100

A railroad linking the east and the west coasts of North America

Transcontinental Railroad 

100

A legislative term applied to late nineteenth-century industrialists and capitalists who became very rich by dominating large industries

Robber Barons

100

The head of the local political machine

Political Boss

100

Philosophy that holds that truth can be discovered only through experience and that the value of ideas should be measured by their practical consequences.

Pragmatism

100

British passenger liner struck by German submarine torpedoes off the coast of Ireland on May 15, 1915

Lusitania

200

African American cavalrymen who fought in the west against American Indians

Buffalo Soldiers

200

Business Monopolies formed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries through mergers and consolidation that inhibited competition and controlled the market.

Trust

200

Religious movement that advocated the application of Christian teachings to social and economic problems.

Social Gospel

200

Supporters of voting rights for women

Suffragists 

200

The core principles President Woodrow Wilson saw as the basis for lasting peace, including freedom of the seas, open diplomacy, The establishment of the League of Nations, and the right to self-determination.

Fourteen Points

300

1887 Act that ended federal recognition of tribal sovereignty and divided American Indian land into 160-acre parcels to be distributed to American Indian heads of households

Dawes Act

300

1890 Act outlawing monopolies that prevented free competition in interstate commerce.

Sherman Antitrust Act

300
Term created by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner to describe the late Nineteenth Century.
Gilded Age
300

Organization founded in 1874 to campaign for a ban on the sale and consumption of alcohol

Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)

300

October 29, 1929 crash of the US Stock market

Black Tuesday

400

Followers of Joseph Smith and Brigham Young who migrated to Utah to escape religious persecution; also known as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints

Mormons

400

A company of private investigators and security guards sometimes used by corporations to break up strikes and labor disputes, most famously at the Homestead strike of 1892.

Pinkertons

400

French for "let things alone"

Laissez-faire

400

Theodore Roosevelts plan to provide economic and political stability to the nation by guaranteeing the rights of everyday workers and protecting business interests

Square Deal

400

Landmark 1935 act that created retirement pensions for most Americans, as well as unemployment insurance.

Social Security Act

500

Late Nineteenth-Century statutes that established legally defined racial segregation in the South.

Jim Crow

500

The belief that foreigners pose a serious danger to the nation's society and culture.

Nativist

500

Regional organizations formed in the nineteenth century to advance the interests of farmers

Farmers' Alliance

500

Aggressive foreign diplomacy backed by the threat of force

"Big Stick" diplomacy

500

Series of riots in 1943 in Los Angeles, California, sparked by white hostility toward Mexican American teenagers who dressed in suits with long jackets with padded shoulders and baggy pants tapered at the bottom.

Zoot Suit Riots

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