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100

The movement of African Americans from the rural South to the urban North in the early 20th century, seeking better economic opportunities and escaping segregation.

Great Migration


100

A cultural, social, and artistic explosion centered in Harlem, New York, celebrating African American culture in the 1920s.

Harlem Renaissance

100

An organization founded to fight for civil rights and end racial discrimination.

NAACP

100

Illegal bars or clubs where alcohol was sold during Prohibition.

Speakeasies


100

Famous actor and filmmaker known for his silent film comedies, especially the character "The Tramp."

Charlie Chaplin


100

Influential jazz musician and trumpeter.

Louis Armstrong


100

Notorious gangster during Prohibition, involved in bootlegging and organized crime.

Al Capone

200

Conditions that drive people away from their homes (push) or attract them to new areas (pull), such as job opportunities or social conditions.

Push and Pull Factors

200

A cultural, social, and artistic explosion centered in Harlem, New York, celebrating African American culture in the 1920s.

Harlem Renaissance

200

An organization dedicated to defending and preserving individual rights and liberties.

ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union)


200

The law that provided for the enforcement of Prohibition.

Volstead Act


200

Native American athlete, considered one of the greatest all-around athletes in history.

Jim Thorpe

200

Journalist and activist who fought against lynching and racism.

Ida B. Wells

200

29th president of the U.S., associated with corruption scandals like Teapot Dome.

Warren Harding


300

A manufacturing process in which workers add parts to a product in a sequential manner, greatly speeding up production.

Assembly Line

300

Young women in the 1920s who challenged traditional norms by wearing short skirts, bobbing their hair, and embracing new freedoms.

Flappers

300

A Tennessee law that prohibited the teaching of evolution in public schools.

Butler Act

300

A group of corrupt politicians and officials close to President Harding.

Ohio Gang

300

Inventor and industrialist who revolutionized the automobile industry with the assembly line and the Model T.

Henry Ford


300

Leader of the UNIA, promoted black pride and economic independence.

Marcus Garvey

300

31st president of the U.S., president during the start of the Great Depression.

Herbert Hoover


400

The rapid manufacturing of large quantities of standardized products, often using assembly lines.

Mass Production


400

A policy favoring native-born inhabitants over immigrants, often leading to discrimination and restrictive immigration laws.

Nativism

400

The period (1920-1933) when the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages were illegal in the U.S.

Prohibition


400

A bribery scandal involving the secret leasing of federal oil reserves during Harding’s presidency.

Teapot Dome Scandal


400

Poet and leading figure of the Harlem Renaissance.

Langston Hughes


400

Politician and prosecutor in the Scopes Trial, opposing the teaching of evolution.

William Jennings Bryan


400

Secretary of the Interior involved in the Teapot Dome Scandal.


Albert Fall


500

Segregation that happens in practice or by custom, not by law.

De Facto Segregation

500


The fear of communism and radical leftist ideologies spreading in the U.S. after World War I.

Red Scare


500

The illegal production and distribution of alcohol during Prohibition.

Bootlegging

500

Investing in stocks or assets with the hope of making quick profits, often taking high risks.

Speculation


500

Writer and anthropologist who documented African American folklore and culture.

Zora Neale Hurston


500

Famous defense attorney who defended John Scopes in the Scopes Trial.

Clarence Darrow


500

30th president of the U.S., known for pro-business policies and limited government.

Calvin Coolidge

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