This 1862 law encouraged settlers to move west by providing 160 acres of free land.
What is the Homestead Act?
This business practice involves buying out competitors in the same industry.
What is horizontal integration?
She founded Hull House and worked to help immigrants in Chicago.
Who is Jane Addams?
This war in 1898 resulted in the U.S. gaining territories like Puerto Rico and Guam.
What is the Spanish-American War?
His assassination in 1914 sparked the start of WWI.
Who was Archduke Franz Ferdinand?
This amendment started Prohibition.
What is the 18th Amendment?
This agency makes bank deposits safer by insuring them up to a certain amount.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
This photograph entitled "Migrant Mother" which came to represent the hardships of the Great Depression was taken by what famous photographer?
Dorothea Lange
FDR used these friendly evening radio addresses to reassure Americans.
Fireside Chats
This 1896 case upheld “separate but equal.”
Plessy v. Ferguson
This belief held that the U.S. was destined to expand across the continent.
What is Manifest Destiny?
This business strategy involves controlling all steps of production from raw materials to sales.
What is vertical integration?
This 1913 law created the nation’s banking system and controls the money supply.
What is the Federal Reserve Act?
This naval officer wrote The Influence of Sea Power upon History and pushed for a stronger navy.
Who was Alfred T. Mahan?
This telegram from Germany encouraged Mexico to attack the U.S. during WWI.
What is the Zimmerman Telegram?
These fashionable young women challenged traditional norms with dress and behavior.
Who were flappers?
This is the biggest legacy of the New Deal.
The U.S. government taking a larger role in people's lives.
The nickname for shanty towns and tent villages filled with people who had lost their homes or jobs during the Great Depression.
Hoovervilles
This philosophy guided conservative Presidents' approach to the economy through the 1920s, emphasizing limited federal intervention.
Laissez-faire
This group wanted to restrict immigration out of fear and prejudice.
Nativists
This 1887 law attempted to force Native Americans to assimilate by breaking up tribal lands and ending their tradition of communal living.
What is the Dawes Act?
This powerful financier helped bail out the U.S. economy and controlled major corporations.
J.P. Morgan
This type of journalist exposed problems in society, such as Ida B. Wells with The Red Record.
Muckraker
The United States supported a revolution in Panama at the turn of the 20th century in order to
secure the right to build a canal through Central America.
This Supreme Court case ruled that free speech could be limited during wartime.
What is Schenck v. United States?
This cultural movement celebrated African American music, art, and literature.
What is the Harlem Renaissance?
This New Deal program provided jobs building dams and power plants in the South.
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
What aspect of the Great Depression is illustrated by this political cartoon?
Bank failures
Taft’s policy of influencing Latin America through economic investment rather than military force.
Dollar Diplomacy
This woman reshaped the role of First Lady, held her own press conferences and radio addresses, spoke up for civil rights, and advocated for expanded roles for women in the workplace.
Eleanor Roosevelt
This boarding school in Pennsylvania aimed to erase Native culture by forcing cultural assimilation.
Carlisle Indian School
This organization was the first major labor union and accepted skilled and unskilled workers.
What is the Knights of Labor?
This 1906 law was passed partly due to Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle.
Meat Inspection Act
This policy stated that the U.S. had the right to intervene in Latin America to maintain stability.
What is the Roosevelt Corollary?
Wilson’s plan for peace after WWI included the League of Nations.
What are the Fourteen Points?
This trial highlighted the conflict between science and religion in the 1920s.
What was the Scopes “Monkey” Trial?
This massive jobs program built roads, bridges, parks, and public buildings.
Works Progress Administration (WPA)
This October 1929 collapse of stock prices as investors rushed to sell off shares caused stock prices to drop dramatically.
Stock Market Crash
FDR’s New Deal was influenced by the ideas of this British economist who believed in government deficit spending to stimulate recovery.
John Maynard Keynes (Keynesian Economics)
This civil rights leader called for vocational training and gradual equality.
Booker T Washington
These organizations offered jobs, housing assistance, and favors in return for votes.
Political machines
Banks and the wealthy opposed this aspect of the Populist Party platform because it would cause economic inflation.
Bimetalism
This law strengthened antitrust regulations and protected labor unions from being considered illegal.
What is the Clayton Antitrust Act?
This 1900 foreign policy encouraged open and equal trade in China and opposed spheres of influence.
Open Door Policy
These 1918 laws made it illegal to criticize the government or war effort.
What is the Espionage and Sedition Acts?
This other nickname for the decade came from the new popular form of music that took over clubs and radios.
What is the Jazz Age?
His "Share Our Wealth" program criticized FDR for not doing enough to help the poor.
Who was Huey Long?
During the early 1930s, this occurred when fearful depositors rushed to withdraw their money, causing many banks to collapse.
Bank runs
What is the modern equivalent of FDR's "Fireside Chats?
Presidential press conferences
This African American leader demanded immediate political and social equality.
WEB Dubois
This invention transformed the cattle industry by effectively fencing off land from competitors and ending open-range cattle drives.
Barbed wire
This invention made steel cheaper and helped build railroads and skyscrapers.
Bessemer process
These violent confrontations—Haymarket, Homestead, Pullman, Great Railroad—challenged labor relations in the late 1800s.
What are major labor strikes?
"There are those who believe that, if you only legislate to make the well-to-do prosperous, their prosperity will leak through on those below. The Democratic idea, however, has been that if you legislate to make the masses prosperous, their prosperity will find its way up through every class which rests upon them." - William Jennings Bryan, 1896.
Which policy did William Jennings Bryan promote using arguments such as the one in the quotation?
Bimetalism and opposition to the Gold Standard
This term describes pride and loyalty to one’s nation, contributing to WWI.
Nationalism
This New Deal program provided benefits for retired people and the unemployed and was funded through a payroll tax.
Social Security Administration (SSA)
The photograph below shows a condition of the 1930s caused by what two factors?
Drought and overfarming
This president was elected in 1932 and promised “bold, persistent experimentation.”
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
This major goal of the Progressive women's movement was achieved in 1920.
Suffrage
This image is "Spirit of the Frontier," a painting by John Gast from 1872. It shows American settlers moving west with the aid of technology and the protection of the goddess Columbia. In it, American Indians were presented as…
Obstacles to American progress.
These wealthy industrialists were criticized for ruthless business practices and huge fortunes.
Robber Barons
Prior to the 1930s, the vast majority of immigrants to the United States came from
Europe
Roosevelt’s approach, “Speak softly and carry a big stick,” relied on this.
Strong navy (Great White Fleet)
This 1915 sinking began turning American opinion against Germany.
Lusitania
The ultimate purpose of the New Deal was to
End the Great Depression
What group is Clifford Burke describing in this quote?
"It didn't mean too much to him, The Great American Depression, as you call it. There was no such thing. The best he could be is a janitor or a porter or a shoeshine boy."
African Americans
“Speak softly and carry a big stick” described this president’s foreign policy style.
Who was Theodore Roosevelt?
This ideology argued the wealthy had a duty to use their money for the good of society.
Gospel of Wealth
From 1865–1900, this expanding transportation network fueled industrial growth.
Railroads
This business practice aims to dominate an entire industry by eliminating competition, often leading to higher prices and less consumer choice.
Monopolies
Which laws were introduced with an aim to reduce and eliminate the activity shown in this photograph?
compulsory education laws
"The annexation of Hawaii will benefit none but the sugar king of that island, and his benefits will be bought and presented to him by the American people. Let Hawaii remain an independent republic. The United States should not begin the policy of reaching across the waves to grasp new territory." - Omaha World Herald in Public Opinion (24 June 1897)
This writer most likely rejected which U.S. approach to foreign policy?
Imperialism
This cause of World War I involved nations building up large, powerful armies and navies.
Militarism
This program paid farmers to reduce production to raise crop prices.
Agricultural Adjustment Act/Administration (AAA)
This photograph depicts a program created by what famous mobster?
Al Capone (Scarface)
Theodore Roosevelt's domestic program that focused on consumer protection, corporate regulation, and conservation.
What is the Square Deal?
This law banned immigration from China in 1882.
Chinese Exclusion Act