Imperialism
Progressive Era
America and the Great War/The "New Era"
The Great Depression/ The New Deal
The Global Crisis/America in a World at War
100

established the requirement for some federal jobs to be filled through competitive written exams, rather than patronage

Pendleton Act

100

 the head of the National Women’s Party, who advocated for a constitutional amendment granting women’s suffrage

Alice Paul

100

The use diplomacy backed by the threat of military force to keep order and expand American influence without constant warfare.

Big Stick Diplomacy

100

 A 1928 agreement between the US and other nations to renounce war as a tool of national policy

Kellogg Briand Pact

100

What were the names of the code breaking program that broke Japanese and German codes

Magic and Ultra

200

 the administrative body responsible for administering the ban on discrimination in rates between long and short hauls, mandatory public schedules, and “fair and just” interstate rail rates

 Interstate Commerce Commission

200

a reform that enabled voters, rather than party bosses, to select candidates

Direct Primary 
200

 Gaining trust of many South American countries so that the U.S. could manipulate them later on

Dollar Diplomacy

200

U.S. promised not to intervene militarily in Latin America

Good Neighbor Policy

200

Method of communication used by the US during the war that the Japanese could not break 

Navajo code talkers

300

an enterprise set up by the Grangers to offer affordable goods to farmers, part of a broader effort to curb monopolistic practices 

Montgomery Ward & Co.

300

a figurehead of the era who turned Wisconsin into a laboratory of progressive reform

Robert LaFollette

300

the first national radio network, established in 1927

National Broadcasting Co.

300

1938 meeting between European leaders which allowed Hitler to take part of Czechoslovakia

Munich Conference

300

What were the two strategies used by the Americans in order to constrain the Japanese?

Island Hopping, returning to the Philippines

400

 the congressman from Nebraska who defended free silver in his “Cross of Gold” speech and became the youngest person aligned with a major party to run for president

William Jennings Bryan 

400

Roosevelt’s response to Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, which helped eliminate many diseases

Meat Inspection Act

400

 a pamphlet authored by defenders of the traditional faith, who demanded literal interpretation of the Bible and opposed Darwin

The Fundamentals

400

 Japan attacked US naval base in this place, resulting in the US declaring war on Japan, thus entering WWII

Pearl Harbor

400

Secret program to build atomic bomb, led by US scientists

Manhattan Project

500

 a weak international organization created in Washington D.C., in October 1889, by delegates of 19 nations, to promote cooperation across the Western hemisphere 

Pan American Union

500

 the first legislation to restrict child labor by prohibiting shipment of goods by minors across state lines, ultimately ruled unconstitutional

Keating-Owen Act (1916)

500

jobs dominated by women, generally in healthcare and service

pink collar jobs 

500

Passed in 1930s to avoid involvement in war, intended to prevent a repeat of WWI involvement

Neutrality Acts 

500

Places where the US bombed Japan

Hiroshima and Nagasaki

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