Gilded Age
Progressive Era
Imperialism/ WWI
1920s
Great Depression
100

The most notorious political machine, Tammany Hall, was controlled by what New York City politician through patronage and graft.

William "Boss" Tweed

100

Term for investigative journalists who exposed social and political corruption.

Muckrakers

100

This style of static, fortified fighting dominated the Western Front and contributed to high casualty rates from machine guns

trench warfare

100

The name given to young women in the 1920s who challenged social norms by cutting their hair, wearing short skirts, and engaging in new behaviors.

Flappers

100

This is the date the Stock Market crashed.

October 29, 1929

200

This piece of legislation was the government's way to encourage westward expansion. It gave 160 acres that had to be settled for 5 years.

Homestead Act

200

The three political reforms that allowed citizens to propose new laws, vote on proposed laws, and remove elected officials from office.

Initiative, Referendum, and Recall

200

Hearst and Pulitzer used this style of writing to sell newspapers to garner support for the Spanish American War.

Yellow Journalism

200

This system allowed customers to buy products like cars and radios by making small monthly payments, leading to increased consumer debt.

Installment Buying or Credit

200

These shantytowns, built by the homeless outside of cities, became symbolic of the economic desperation and were mockingly named after the President.

Hoovervilles

300

This agrarian political movement of the late 19th century demanded the free coinage of silver and government regulation of railroads.

Populist Party or People’s Party

300

This person was the founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and wanted change now.

W.E.B. Dubois

300

The Spanish American War made the U.S. a world power after we acquired territories from Spain. What are they?

Guam, Puerto Rico, and paid Spain $20 mil for the Philippines

300

The period of African American cultural explosion centered in New York that featured writers like Langston Hughes and musicians like Louis Armstrong.

Harlem Renaissance

300

This President believed that the economic crisis could be solved using the New Deal programs which made the government accountable to its people.

Franklin D. Roosevelt

400

These immigrants were discriminated against because they were culturally different and accused of "stealing" jobs. Where are they from?

Southern and Eastern Europe/ China

400

The name Theodore Roosevelt gave to his domestic program, which focused on the "Three C's": conservation of natural resources, control of corporations, and consumer protection.

Square Deal

400

This group was created by the Treaty of Versailles and introduced by Wilson's 14 points. It will be unsuccessful due to the United States not joining.

League of Nations

400

The central argument of this controversial court case was a shift in views over religion and evolutionary teachings.

Scopes Monkey Trial

400

This New Deal agency created a vast number of public works, like roads, bridges, and public buildings, to put unemployed people back to work it cost the government $10 billion.

Works Progress Administration (WPA)

500

The economic philosophy, dominant during this era, that advocated for minimal government regulation of business and was often used to justify great wealth.

Laissez-Faire

500

This pioneering reformer founded the settlement house in Chicago, which provided job training, education, and social services for the urban poor and immigrants.

Jane Addams

500

This man was drafted and won the Medal of Honor for Bravery after his heroic actions in the Battle of Argonne Forest.

Alvin York

500

This scandal ended with the first cabinet member being sent to jail for illegally leasing navy oil.

Teapot Dome Scandal

500

The Dust Bowl led to a large increase in the number of migrant workers moving from the Great Plains to California. What two reasons caused this issue?

Poor farming techniques and drought

M
e
n
u