World War I
Red Scare
Citizenship
Great Migration
Harlem Renaissance
100
President Woodrow Wilson and the United States initially operated a policy of this, with a desire to stay out of European affairs. 

Neutrality

100

This attorney general led mass arrests of suspected radicals in 1919–1920.


Mitchell Palmer

100

TR demanded all Americans embrace this slogan, rejecting ethnic identities

"America for Americans"

100

This system of racial segregation enforced by law in the South was a primary push factor.

Jim Crow

100

This philosopher published 'The New Negro' in 1925, launching the Harlem Renaissance.

Alain Locke

200

During World War I, Germany used these to block shipping lanes and disrupt civilian sea traffic. A decision that pushed the U.S. closer to war.

Submarines or U-Boats

200

The fear of communism in America was most directly triggered by this overseas event.

The Bolshevik Revolution in Russia (1917)

200

The revived 1920s KKK targeted this broader range of groups beyond Black Americans.

Immigrants, Catholics and Jews

200

He argued Black Americans should support WWI to earn full citizenship rights.

W.E.B. DuBois

200

This music form spread Black cultural influence nationally through radio and phonograph.

Jazz

300

Germany tried to persuade this country to invade the United States, an attempt to preoccupy the U.S. in the Western Hemisphere. Bonus point if you remember the name of the man who sent the "Telegram."

Mexico - Zimmerman

300

This term describes the fear and hatred of foreigners that fueled the Red Scare.

Xenophobia

300

This 1917 law criminalized speech critical of the war or military recruitment.

The Espionage Act

300

This term describes segregation that exists in practice but not by law — as found in the North.

De facto segregation

300

Marcus Garvey's movement differed from DuBois in this key way.

Garvey advocated Black separatism / Back to Africa vs. DuBois' integration

400

Woodrow Wilson was a staunch supporter of this treaty, which would create this international organization. Despite his support, the U.S. Senate failed to ratify the treaty and joing.

Treaty of Versailles, League of Nations

400

Name TWO constitutional rights most threatened by the Palmer Raids.

4th Amendment (unreasonable search/seizure) + 5th Amendment (due process)

400

This Supreme Court case established the 'clear and present danger' test for limiting speech.

Schenck v. United States (1919)

400

Name ONE northern city where race riots broke out following the Great Migration.

Chicago OR Tulsa

400

What central contradiction did the Harlem Renaissance expose about Woodrow Wilson's democracy?

Wilson claimed to make the world safe for democracy while Black Americans were denied rights at home

M
e
n
u