1901 - 1910
1910 - 1920
1920 - 1928
Wall Street Crash (causes and consequences)
Great Depression (effects and recovery)
100

Define 'capitalism'

An economic system in which businesses are privately owned and operated for profit with limited government intervention.

100

Recall when America entered World War 1.

April 1917

100

List three changes to women's fashion during the 1920s.

Shorter hair, knee-length skirts, make up, loose fitting dresses, sheer hose

100

List important events that proceeded the Wall Street Crash.

Black Thursday Oct 24

Black Tuesday Oct 29

100

List three programs created as part of the New Deal.

AAA, CCC, WPA

200

Define 'laissez faire'.

Minimal government intervention in the market.
200

Describe the policy of 'isolationism'. 

Fear of foreign entanglements after World War 1. Believed interference would damage sovereignty. Did not want another war.
200

Describe the 'Red Scare'.

Fear of communism (anti-democracy) that rose in Europe after World War 1. Reflected immigration policy. 

200
Identify the name of President at the beginning of the Great Depression. 

Herbert Hoover

200

Describe the three aims of the New Deal.

Relief - immediate relief for those impacted.

Reform - long term change to prevent another collapse.

Recovery - restart the economy and struggling industries.

300

Outline Theodore Roosevelt's 'trust-busting' approach.

Anti-trusts. Sherman Anti--Trusts (1890) prosecuted major trusts. Square Deal to promote fairness. Opposed those who abused their power in business.

300

Compare America's pre and post WW1 industrial production.

1914: US produced 1/3 of global industrial output. Capitalist. Steel, oil, rail.

1917/18: industrial production increased 20%. Focused on military priorities. 1918 US produced more steel than France and Germany.

300

Explain the purpose of the Immigration Act of 1924. 

To skew the immigrant population to Western Europeans, penalising those from East Europe and Asia.

300

Explain the immediate impacts of the Wall Street Crash.

Rapid selling of stocks, savings disappeared, rapid rise in unemployment.
300

Explain Herbert Hoover's 'rugged individualism' approach. 

Laissez-faire, Social Darwinism in capitalism 

400

Analyse the reasons for 'progressivism'. 

Tackled economic inequalities, fixed systematic market failures, championing social justice.

400

Evaluate the effectiveness of the suffragette movement. 

19th Amendment ratified in 1920 (some women granted the right to vote).

Not all women supported e.g., black women. 

400

Assess the effectiveness of prohibition.

Increased illegal crime, did not help social cohesion. 
400

Evaluate the causes of the Great Depression.

Unstable banking system, companies over-estimated economy growth, buying on the margin, over production of goods, unequal wealth distribution. 

400

Analyse how World War 2 contributed to economy recovery.

Increased military production, export of arms.

500

Compare the leadership of two Presidents at regulating capitalism.

Theodore Roosevelt: regulated monopolies, assertive, Stewardship Theory, executive orders, Pure Food and Drug Act 

William Taft: regulated monopolies, more cautious, kept tariffs high

Woodrow Wilson: dismantled monopolies, most assertive, 'New Freedom', Underwood Tariff Act to reduce tariffs, Clayton Anti Trust Act

500

Analyse Wilson's change in foreign policy during World War 1.

Started neutral. "He keeps us out of war". Zimmermann Telegram (1917) from Germany to Mexico for an alliance. Entering WW1 to keep democracies alive. 

500
Analyse how Social Darwinism was prevalent during the 1920s.

KKK, government support limited

500

Justify why the Great Depression was inevitable. 

Dust Bowl, over-investment in shares.

500

Evaluate the effectiveness of Roosevelt's New Deal.

Increased employment and production, however, not everything was fixed.

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