American Imperialism
Spanish-American War
World War I - Military and Diplomacy
World War I - Homefront
The 1920s - Economy
The 1920s - Society and Culture
The Great Depression
The New Deal
100

America acquired this Pacific territory in 1898 after overthrowing their monarch, largely to better profit off their sugar plantations.

What is Hawaii?

100

Sensationalistic reporting that featured bold and lurid headlines of crime, disaster, and scandal. Papers printed exaggerated and false accounts of Spanish atrocities in Cuba.

What is Yellow Journalism? 

100

These were the two military alliances of World War I, consisting of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Turkey vs. France, Russia, Britain, and (later) the United States

What are the Central Powers and Triple Entente? 

100

This was triggered by the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia.  Americans were very paranoid and scared that Communism would overtake America.  

The Red Scare

100

This innovation became the most popular good in the 1920s, and drove growth in other American industries such as steel, oil, and rubber.

What are automobiles?

100

American culture in the 1920s was best described as this, a strong love of buying the newest products.

What is consumerism?

100

These shantytowns of the unemployed were named this to mock the president overseeing the Great Depression.

What are Hoovervilles?

100

The informal radio talks President FDR had with Americans during the Great Depression.

What are fireside chats?

200

Antiimperialists thought America should adhere to this, an idea present in George Washington's Farewell Address.

What is isolationism?

200

A United States ship that sunk in Havana, Cuba. Initially blamed on Spain, it was later ruled an accident.

What is the USS Maine?

200

This German policy mandated the sinking of any ship, military or otherwise, that entered into the warzone; this led to the sinking of many civilian ships, including the RMS Lusitania, angering the American public.

What is unrestricted submarine warfare?

200

The movement of approximately 6 million African Americans from the rural South to the urban north in the late 19th to mid 20th Centuries, trying to escape racial persecution and seek economic opportunity.

What is the Great Migration?

200

This innovation allowed workers to stand in one spot and do repetitive tasks over and over, increasing productivity.

What is the assembly line?

200

These women drove, smoked in public, drank, and wore dresses hemmed at the knee, representing women's liberation in the 1920s.

What are flappers?

200

This day is considered the beginning of the Great Depression, when the underlying

What is Black Tuesday?

200

The New Deal was meant to do these three things, commonly referred to as the "3 Rs."

What is relief for the unemployed, recovery for businesses, and reform of economic institutions?

300

Anti-imperialists believed in this, the idea that every people has a right to govern themselves.

What is self-determination?

300

The United States acquired these territories from Spain in the aftermath of the Spanish American War, as a result of the Treaty of Paris of 1898.

What are Puerto Rico, Cuba, Guam, and the Philippines


300

This treaty ended World War I, heavily punishing Germany and creating the League of Nations. The United States Senate refused to ratify this treaty, fearing that the League of Nations would drag America into foreign conflicts.

What is the Treaty of Versailles?

300

These two laws prohibited people from criticizing the war effort or the government, as well as encouraging others to avoid the draft, violating the spirit of the First Amendment.

What are the Espionage and Sedition Acts?

300

These new forms of entertainment created a more unified, national culture, while also highlighting regional differences within the country.

What is the radio and movies?

300

This group saw a resurgence in the 1920s, targeting Catholics, Jews, African-Americans, and immigrants, finding national appeal in a decade of nativism.

What is the Ku Klux Klan?

300

This practice saw people, banks, and businesses taking out loans to buy stocks, artificially inflating the stock market. When the stock market crashed, many of these institutions could no longer pay of their loans, leading to bankruptcy and economic collapse.

What is buying on the margin?

300

This New Deal Program gave retirement pensions to seniors, to ensure the elderly had a fixed income when they could not longer work. 

What is the Social Security Act?

400

Alfred Thayer Mahan argued this in his book, "The Influence of Sea Power Upon History."

What is the need for a strong navy and coaling (refueling) stations for that navy.

400

America under Theodore Roosevelt built this, in order to connect the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and connect the American empire.

What is the Panama Canal?

400

The discovery of this disclosed Germany's promise to help Mexico attack the US if the US declared war on Germany.

Zimmerman Telegram

400

This Supreme Court decision declared that the federal government could limit the First Amendment if their was a "clear and present danger" to the speech.

What is Schenk v. United States?

400

These new innovations transformed household life, particularly for women, who now found themselves with more free time.

What are vacuum cleaners, washing machines, refrigerators, etc?

400

The trial of a high school teacher in Tennessee for teaching the theory of evolution in violation of state law.  The teacher was found guilty and the trial was closely followed by the public.

The Scopes "Monkey" Trial

400

Hoover created this in an attempt to protect US factories from foreign competition.  This backfired though, because European nations stopped buying US goods.

Hawley-Smoot Tariff

400

The New Deal transformed the United States away from a laissez-faire capitalist society into this, where the government provides for some needs of its people and involves itself in the economy.

What is a limited welfare state?

500

Extreme nationalism or patriotism that lends itself to aggressive foreign policy and force to defend national interests.

What is jingoism?

500

These three polices dominated American foreign policy during the three Progressive Presidents: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson.

What are the Big Stick Diplomacy, Dollar Diplomacy, and Moral Diplomacy?

500

Wilson's plan for a post war world, including Freedom of the Seas, the Right to Self-Determination, and the League of Nations.

What are Wilson's 14 Points?

500

This event saw race riots erupt across American northern cities, largely as a result of African American migration there during the war.

What is the Red Summer?

500

Americans, buying things they could not afford, did this in order to fund their extravagant, consumerist lifestyles. 

What is buying on credit or taking out loans?

500

These were passed to reduce the number of "new" immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe, and were a response to increased nativism.

What is the Quota Act of 1921 and the National Origins Act?

500

These four things were the underlying weaknesses in the American economy, exacerbated by the Stock Market Crash and leading to the Great Depression.

What is buying on the margin? What is a weak international economy, overproduction, underproduction, and laisez-faire regulation?

500

Franklin Roosevelts plan to overcome efforts to judicially challenge the New Deal.

What is the Judicial Reorganization Act or court-packing scheme?