Expansion and Migration
America in the World
Politics and Power
Struggle for Equality
Random
100

After the Spanish-American War, this treaty forced Spain to give Puerto Rico and Guam to the U.S. (8.1).

Treaty of Paris.

100

This spoken address warned Americans about involving themselves in foreign affairs (3.4).

Washington's Farewell Address.

100

Calvin Coolidge, Hebert Hoover, and Warren G. Harding all exercised this type of economic system (9.1).

Laissez-faire economics.

100

This is what A. Philip Randolph fought for in 1941, which was eventually signed into action by FDR (9.6).

Equal military pay for African American soldiers.

100

When President Abraham Lincoln arrested secessionists in Maryland, he denied them this judicial order (6.1).

Habeas Corpus.

200

These were the first Europeans in North America, but they did not last (1.3).

Vikings.

200

Secretary of State John Hay sent this letter to ask for the U.S. to have equal trading power in China (8.2).

Open Door Letter.

200

These people (i.e Vanderbilt, Carnegie, etc) controlled economics and the government in the Gilded Age (7.2).

Industrialists.

200

This era was known for expanding voting to poor, white males aka "Universal White Male Suffrage" (4.3).

The Era of the Common Man.

200

The Spanish Influenza started in this U.S. State and wiped out ~25-50 million people worldwide (8.5).

Kansas.

300

America forced Mexico to sign this treaty, which forced Mexico to give up half their land to the US (5.1). 

Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.

300

This demographic of citizens was most heavily impacted by the Stamp Act of 1765 as it put an additional tax on printed goods (2.2).

City Folk/Upper Class Individuals.
300

The three articles written by George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and more established these branches of government and their systematic powers (3.2).

Legislative Branch, Executive Branch, and Judicial Branch.

300
This famous court case, in the South, stated the facilities could be separate as long as they were offered to everyone (6.5).
Plessy vs. Ferguson.
300

William Jennings Bryan was a prosecutor in this famous trial (9.1). 

The Scopes "Monkey" Trial.

400

This document was written in an attempt to purchase Cuba from Spain for $100 million, but Spain ultimately said "No" (5.2).

The Ostend Manifesto.

400

In 1867, the U.S. purchased this territory from Russia for $7.2 million and expanded territories that were previously unconnected (8.1). 

Alaska

400

This compromise proposed by Henry Clay consisted of 4 parts that declared that CA would become a free state, the Fugitive Slave would be passed, NM will be divided with UT, and Slave Trade ended in D.C. (5.2).

The Compromise of 1850.

400

This was the first woman attempted to run for president in 1872 from the Equal Rights Party (8.3).

Victoria Woodhull.

400

Before the Temperance Reform, the average American drank this amount of hard liquor a year (4.5).

5 Gallons.

500

This act granted 160 acres of land for FREE in order to expand influence westward (7.3).

The Homestead Act.

500

This organization was founded by Woodrow Wilson after World War I to bring more worldwide unification (8.5). 

The League of Nations.

500

Chester Arthur, President Garfield's Vice President, passed this act to ensure that federal workers were hired based on merit, not connections from the Spoils System (7.6).

The Pendleton Civil Service Act

500

From 1877 to 1954, this era occurred which disenfranchised African Americans and was most prevalent in rural areas (6.4).

The Jim Crow Era.

500

In 1790, this highway was the first ever highway created in the U.S. (4.6).

Pennsylvania Turnpike.

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