WWI Alliances
WWI Diplomacy
Roaring 20s
People
Industry
100

The four M.A.I.N. causes of WWI

Militarism, Alliances, Imperialism, Nationalism

100

Germany promised not to sink merchant vessels without warning.

Sussex Pledge

100

Group of people who saw the most social change during the Roaring Twenties.

Women

100

First pilot to make a solo, nonstop transatlantic flight.

Charles A. Lindbergh

100

This invention created a shared culture among Americans of all types. For example, people heard the same ads and bought the same products.

The radio.

200

Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire.

The Central Powers

200

About 1,200 passengers were killed, including 128 Americans when Germany torpedoed this British passenger liner.

The Lusitania

200

People who snuck alcohol were called:

Bootleggers

200

First female pilot to make a solo, nonstop transatlantic flight.

Amelia Earhart

200

The number of products a worker or machine can produce.

Productivity.

300

Britain, France, Serbia, Russia, Belgium, Italy, Japan, United States.

The Allied Powers

300

How did WWI affect the U.S. economy?

The United States became the world’s leading economic power.

300

Illegal bars used during Prohibition.

Speakeasies

300

Harlem Renaissance writer who wrote about defiance, black pride, and hope? You read his poem “I, Too” in class.

Langston Hughes

300

Businesses that made the materials and parts for the cars, such as glass, steel, and rubber. Also automobile repair shops, gas stations, and motels and restaurants.

Spinoff industries

400

Cause of WWI that has to do with nations competing for colonies.

Imperialism

400

The Treaty of Versailles ended World War I. It affected Germany in these three ways.

It forced Germany to assume full blame for the war, shrank their military, and imposed huge reparations (payments for war damage) that their war-battered economy could not afford.

400

Outlawed the manufacture, transport, and sale of alcohol in 1919.

Eighteenth Amendment

400

Famous actress, singer, and dancer. She moved to France and had a successful career performing in Europe, where audiences tended to be more accepting of black performers than white Americans.

Josephine Baker

400

Henry Ford pioneered this industry method that transformed manufacturing by increasing productivity and making cars for affordable. The car would pass through many workstations on a conveyor belt as workers at each station performed specific yet simple tasks.

Assembly line

500
  • 128 Americans on the Lusitania
  • Germany's violation of the Sussex Pledge
  • Zimmerman Note
  • Germany's sinking of 3 American merchant ships

Reasons the U.S. joined WWI

500

Open diplomacy, freedom of the seas, reduction of arms, self-determination for nations, and establishment of a League of Nations.

President Wilson's Fourteen Points

500

Define flapper.

Young women who defied traditional ideas of appropriate dress and behavior. They cut their hair, raised their hemlines, wore makeup, smoked cigarettes, drank alcohol, danced in nightclubs, and promoted a lifestyle of independence and freedom.

500

First African American woman to hold a pilot license.

Bessie Coleman

500

Giving workers extra benefits like retirement pensions and recreation programs to promote worker satisfaction and loyalty. They wanted to keep workers out of unions and avoid higher pay demands.

Welfare capitalism

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