This country controlled land that Serbia believed it owned.
Who is Austria-Hungary?
4 million men were drafted into this.
What is the U.S. Military?
Allied leaders met here to write the peace treaty.
What is Versailles, France?
Henry Ford invented this process that made it possible to sell cars cheaply.
What is the Assembly Line?
Babe Ruth played 15 seasons for this baseball team.
Who are the New York Yankees?
This began when Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated.
What is WWI?
Central Powers surrendered on this date.
What is November 11th?
The treaty stated Germany must give land to these three countries.
Who are Poland, France, and Denmark?
This is a message used to make a certain political cause or point of view the point of view of the public.
What is Propaganda?
This person was assassinated by a Serbian spy.
Who was Archduke Franz Ferdinand?
These are the Allies.
Who are Serbia, Russia, France, Belgium, Great Britain, and Italy?
November 11th is now known as this day.
What is Veteran's Day?
Germany was required to pay this amount in reparations.
What is $33 billion?
The 19th amendment gave who the right to vote?
What is women?
She was the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean alone.
Who was Amelia Earhart?
These are the Central Powers.
Who are Austria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman-Empire, and Bulgaria?
This was the U.S. President during WWI.
Who was Woodrow Wilson?
Germany had to do this to their military.
What is disarm them?
This was a cultural movement among African Americans that started in New York City where artists and writers expressed their talents.
What is the Harlem Renaissance?
This African American was known for his writing and poetry during the Harlem Renaissance.
Who was Langston Hughes?
German U-boats sank this ship.
What was the Lusitania?
The U.S. became an ally of these 2 countries during WWI.
Who are Great Britain and France?
Germany had to accept this.
What is blame for WWI?
Henry Ford produced an automobile named this.
What is the Model T?
This famous pilot traveled from New York to Paris in a single-one engine airplane named the "Spirit of St. Louis".
Who was Charles Lindberg?