Civil War and Reconstruction
Westward Expansion & Gilded Age
WWI & 1920s
Great Depression & New Deal
WWII
Cold War Foreign Policy
Cold War Crises
Civil Rights & 1960s
100

An 1862 law offering 160 acres of free land for farming.

Homestead Act

100

A mass production method used for manufacturing high-quality steel

Bessemer Process

100

Along with Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare, the interception of this communication served as the primary catalyst that pushed the U.S. into active engagement in WWI.

Zimmermann Telegram

100

This specific economic imbalance drove the Great Depression because everyday consumers could not afford to buy the massive amount of overproduced factory goods.

gap between productivity and wages

100

This battle is identified as the definitive turning point of the war in the Pacific theater.

Midway

100

Developed under the Truman administration, this policy was explicitly designed to stop communism from spreading further to new nations without necessarily reversing it where it already existed.

Containment Policy

100

A physical "Iron Curtain" constructed to physically separate the city of Berlin.

Berlin Wall

100

In this landmark 1896 case, the Supreme Court officially established the legal doctrine of "separate but equal".

Plessy v. Ferguson

200

This 1863 directive shifted the purpose of the Civil War specifically to "abolishing slavery" and successfully prevented European nations from providing aid to the South.

Emancipation Proclamation

200

An 1887 act aimed at assimilating Native Americans.

Dawes Act

200

This wartime legislation made it a federal crime to speak, write, or publish anything deemed "disloyal" about the United States government.

Sedition Act of 1918

200

This 1930 tariff completely backfired, resulting in an international "trade war" that effectively halted global commerce.

Hawley-Smoot Tariff of 1930

200

The core strategic significance of this June 6, 1944 invasion was that it successfully opened a "Second Front" in Western Europe to liberate occupied France.

D-Day

200

This early Cold War strategy consisted of a massive recovery package to help rebuild Western Europe.

Marshall Plan

200

This CIA-backed invasion of Cuba was explicitly intended to topple communist leader Fidel Castro.

Bay of Pigs

200

The 1954 Supreme Court case that overturned previous doctrine by stating that "separate but equal" facilities were inherently unequal and unconstitutional.

Brown v. Board of Education

300

This constitutional amendment granted citizenship and "equal protection under the laws".

14th Amendment

300

The specific innovation most responsible for ending the open range in the American West.

barbed wire fencing

300

The landmark Supreme Court case where it was ruled that an individual's free speech could be legally limited if it created a "clear and present danger".

Schenck v. United States

300

This New Deal legislation constructed a permanent federal social safety net specifically to support the elderly, the disabled, and the unemployed.

Social Security Act of 1935

300

he successful testing of the atomic bomb during this event gave President Truman the confidence to take a much "tougher" diplomatic tone with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin.

Trinity Test

300

Rather than relying on conventional ground troops, Eisenhower's Cold War strategy relied heavily on nuclear weapons and air power to threaten this.

Massive retaliation 

300

This dangerous nuclear standoff was resolved when the Soviet Union agreed to remove their missiles from the island of Cuba.

Cuban Missile Crisis

300

This landmark legislation heavily impacted American society by legally ending "De Jure" segregation in public accommodations and the workplace.

Civil Rights Act of 1964

400

This political agreement resulted in the removal of federal troops from the South, which officially brought the Reconstruction era to an end.

Compromise of 1877

400

This historical term refers to a period characterized by immense wealth on the surface hiding deep underlying social problems.

Gilded Age

400

This term describes 1920s authors and writers who felt profoundly disillusioned following the mass slaughter of World War I.

Lost Generation

400

This term describes a transformed style of governance where the federal government acts as an active arbiter between competing interest groups, such as farmers and labor unions.

Broker State

400

This event ended America's isolationist tendencies.

Pearl Harbor

400

This geopolitical theory suggested that if a single nation in Southeast Asia fell under communist control, all of its neighboring nations would inevitably follow.

Domino Theory

400

A 1968 surprise military attack that convinced a large portion of the American public that the Vietnam War was ultimately unwinnable, creating a severe domestic "credibility gap".

Tet Offensive

400

Federal power expanded to its highest 20th-century point under this domestic agenda of Lyndon B. Johnson, utilizing aggressive legislative mandates to target and eradicate poverty and systemic injustice.

Great Society

500

This term refers to racial separation mandated by specific laws (such as Jim Crow), which left African Americans unprotected following the collapse of Reconstruction.

De Jure Segregation

500

This leader advocated for African American equality primarily through achieving economic self-reliance and receiving vocational education.

Booker T. Washington

500

The risky financial practice of purchasing stocks with 10% cash and borrowing the rest.

buying on margin

500

The Gilded Age serves as the baseline period of minimal federal intervention, defined by this strict approach to the economy.

laissez-faire

500

This post-war legislation provided returning military veterans with mortgages and college tuition.

GI Bill

500

This resolution gave LBJ a military "blank check" for force in Vietnam, leading to heavy intervention.

Gulf of Tonkin Resolution

500

This political term represented a growing conservative backlash of citizens who felt completely exhausted by the protest, counterculture, and social chaos of the late 1960s.

Silent Majority

500

This grassroots civil rights organization was formed specifically to give young people a voice in the movement.

SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee)