Constitution
Gilded Age/Progressive Era
America as a world power
1920s and the Great Depression
World War 2
100

19th Amendment

Women's Rights to Vote (Suffrage) 

100
Monopoly

owning all of an industry 

100

Yellow Journalism

newspapers that exaggerate the truth
100

Flappers

broke the traditional roles of women

100

Start of World War 2

Germany invades Poland

200

18th Amendment

Prohibition of Alcohol 

200

Urbanization

Developing cities

200

Dates of World War 1

1914-1918

200

Consumerism

New goods, increased buying of the goods

200

Victory Gardens

people grow their own food to benefit the war

300

17th Amendment

Direct Election of Senators

300
Railroads

allowed for quicker transportation

300

Reasons (2) the US entered World War 1

Sinking of the Lusitania (unrestricted submarine warfare) and the Zimmerman Telegram

300
Causes (2) of the Great Depression

Stock Market Crash, Excessive Use of Credit

300

Executive Order 9066

imprisonment of Japanese- Americans

400

16th Amendment

Income Tax

400
Antitrust Laws

Broke up monopolies

400

Name two wars that made America a world power

Spanish-American War, World War 1

400

New Deal

FDR's program to fix the Great Depression 

400

D-Day (Invasion of Normandy)

began to win and push back Germany

500

Branches of Government

Executive - president - enforces laws 

Legislative - congress- creates laws 

Judicial- supreme court- approves (judges, checks) laws

500

Assimilation 

To become like the dominant group

500

Name the 3 pieces of land we gained from the Spanish-American War

Guam, Philippines, Puerto Rico

500

Civilian Conservation Corp

Created environmental jobs

500

Turning Point in the Pacific Theater

Battle of Midway