World Politics
Sports Heroes
Crime and Punishment
Silver Screen
Literature
100

Created in 1920, this idea of Woodrow Wilson encouraged countries to talk out their problems rather than use violence.

Bonus 250 - After WWI, most Americans wanted to go back to the idea of staying out of world affairs, which is known as:

Bonus 500 - Which U.S. President gave us this advice in his famous Farewell Address?

League of Nations

Bonus 250 - Isolationism

Bonus 500 - George Washington

100

The baseball star of the New York Yankees during the 1920s. He hit 714 home runs in his career, including 60 in 1927 which remained the record for 34 years.

Babe Ruth

100

The establishments which illegally sold alcohol when it was banned within the U.S.

Speakeasies

100

The silent movie star of the 1910s and 1920s that became best known for his role as a tramp or hobo.

Charlie Chaplin

100

Written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, this book coined the term "Jazz Age" and symbolized the 1920s through its music, people, dreams, and booming economy.

The Great Gatsby

200

The group led by Vladimir Lenin that overthrew Czar Nicholas II and the Russian government in 1917 during WWI.

Bonus 500 - Government created by Vladimir Lenin in Russia beginning in 1917.  The purpose was for government to control all businesses AND resources to make them shared and equal for everyone.

Bonus 1000 - Lenin renamed Russia this when he took over:

The Bolsheviks

Bonus 500 - Communism

Bonus 1000 - Soviet Union

200

The grandfather of Seabiscuit, this horse won 20 out of 21 races during the years of 1919 to 1920.

Man o' War

200

The process of producing and selling illegal goods, especially alcohol.

Bootlegging

200

The city which is the center of the film industry.

Hollywood, Califronia

200

The book written by Ernest Hemmingway that talks about the Great War from the view of an American who is an ambulance driver in the Italian Army.

A Farwell to Arms

300

The controversial court case which resulted from a high school teacher, in Tennessee, teaching evolution at a public school.

Scopes Monkey Trial

300

This "The Galloping Ghost" was known as the best football player of the 1920s.

Bonus 500 - The famous heavyweight boxing champion from 1919 to 1926.

Red Grange

Bonus 500 - Jack Dempsey

300

The American gangster that controlled organized crime and politics in Chicago during the 1920s. He was the leader of the illegal alcohol business during prohibition.

Al "Scarface" Capone

300

The first movies with sound.

Talkies

300

The writers who often criticized American society in the 1920s were known as the:

The Lost Generation

400

The court case which found that freedom of speech can be limited in "clear and present dangers."

Schenck v. United States (1919)

400

The first woman to swim across the English Channel, swimming from France to England in 14 hours and 30 minutes.

Gertrude Ederle

400

Taking place in 1929, a group of gangsters dressed as police officers killed seven people affiliated with Bugs Moran's Gang. It eventually led to prohibition's retraction through the 21st Amendment.

St. Valentine's Day Massacre

400

The German Shepherd that starred in the 1920s until 1932 when he died.

Rin Tin Tin

400

The African American section of New York City made famous in the 1920s for its growing number of writers and artists that lived there.

Harlem

500

The agreement signed by the U.S. and 14 other nations in 1928 to outlaw war.

Kellogg Briand Pact

500

Known for his ability on the green, he won a "Grand Slam" in 1930 after winning all four major golf tournaments.

Bonus 500 - Famous American tennis player who was ranked #1 in the world in tennis during the first half of the 1920s.

Bobby Jones

Bonus 500 - Bill Tilden

500

The law which set fines and punishments for anyone who disobeyed prohibition.

Volstead Act

500

The first feature length film to feature sound.

The Jazz Singer

500

African American writer of poetry, plays, and novels in the 1920s that used slang and jazz rhythms. 

Langston Hughes