Foreign Affairs and Progressive Movement(19/20)
Roaring Twenties & the Jazz Age (21)
The Economic Market Crash (22)
A New War (23)
Imperialism
100

As a result of victory during the Spanish American War, the United States acquired the territories of all except...
A Puerto Rico

B Cuba

C Guam

D The Philippines 

B. Cuba.

100

Henry Ford revolutionized the automobile industry by....

A Implementing horizontal integration

B Implementing vertical integration

C utilizing the assembly line

D eliminating competition

c. using assembly lines

100

During the Great Depression, the voting pattern of African  American voteers shifted to
A the Republican Party
B the Democratic Party
C the Populist Party
D the Communist Party

B Democratic Party

100

By late October of 1941, the United States was unofficially at war with

Japan

Italy

Germany

 Russia.

Germany

100

The 1898 conflict that resulted in the United States gaining Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines was the

A. Russo‑Japanese War

 B.  Philippine‑American War

 C. Spanish‑American War

 D. Boxer Rebellion

Spanish-American War

200

The United States acquired Hawaii by

A purchasing it from Japan

B engaging in years of blooding conflict with the locals

C influence of yellow journalism

D the sinking of the U.S.S.R Maine

C. the influence of yellow journalism

200

 

The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s supported all of the following EXCEPT

A. restricting immigration through national‑origin quotas

 B. enforcing traditional Protestant moral values 

C. promoting white supremacy and nativism

 D. supporting equal rights and political participation for minority groups

 

D. supporting equal rights and political participation for minority groups

200

Arguably the best-known description of the plight of Okies in California was:


A. John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath

B. Carey McWilliams' Factories in the Fields

C. F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby

D. John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men

A. John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath

200

Defense industries finally ended their hiring discrimination policies against African Americans after

 race riots in Detroit

A. Philip Randolph's threat of a march

a huge march of African Americans in Washington, D.C.

 NAACP members meeting with FDR.

A. Philip Randolph's threat of a march

200

The Open Door Policy was created to

A. Divide China into exclusive European spheres of influence

 B. Prevent Japan from trading with the United States

 C. Force China to adopt Western political systems

D. Ensure equal trading rights for all nations in China 

Ensure equal trading rights for all nations in China

300

The American Expeditionary Forces most impressive victory came at...
A Somme

B Verdun

C Chateau-Thierry

D Ypres

C. Chateau-Thierry

300

The Harlem Renaissance featured all of the following EXCEPT

A. poetry and literature

 B. jazz music

 C. themes of black hardships

 D. segregation

D. segregation

300

Dr. Francis Townsend called for the federal government to:


1. Nationalize the banks

2. Guarantee each family an income

3. Provide $200 to every person at least 60 years old

4. Provide subsidies for landowners

Provide $200 to every person at least 60 years old.

300

In order to defeat Japan, the United States:

1. Immediately attacked Tokyo

2. Employed a system of island hopping

3. Immediately recaptured the Philippines

4. Immediately recaptured Hong Kong

Employed a system of island hopping

300

The Anti‑Imperialist League opposed U.S. expansion mainly because they believed it

A. Strengthened American democracy 

B. Violated principles of self‑government and consent of the governed 

C. Was necessary for national survival 

D. Would increase trade opportunities

Violated principles of self‑government and consent of the governed

400

In order to rid of the progressive Theodore Roosevelt from the New York governorship, Republican party leaders

A campaigned against him in 1900

B moved for a recall in New York

C nominated him as vice presidential canidate for William Hickey

D held a mob to get him removed from office

C. combinated him as vice presidental candidate for William McKinley

400

Which of the following best explains why the 1920s became known as the “Jazz Age”?

A. The federal government funded nationwide music education programs that promoted jazz in public schools

 B. The spread of radio and phonograph technology helped popularize African American musical styles across the nation

 C. Jazz musicians received widespread political support from major national leaders 

D. Jazz music replaced all other genres as the dominant form of entertainment in rural America


B. The spread of radio and phonograph technology helped popularize African American musical styles across the nation

400

When World War I began in Europe, the United States reluctantly:

A. Declared war on Germany

B. Declared war on Japan

C opted for neutrality

D. Signed the Munich Pact

C opted for neutrality

400

Which of the following best explains how the U.S. government mobilized the economy for World War II?

A. By relying solely on private industry to voluntarily increase production

 B. By creating federal agencies that directed industrial output and controlled raw materials

 C. By refusing to regulate wages or prices during wartime 

D. By limiting women’s participation in industrial labor to preserve traditional roles

B. By creating federal agencies that directed industrial output and controlled raw materials

400

The U.S. annexed Hawaii in 1898 after

A. A peaceful vote by Hawaiian citizens 

B. American sugar planters overthrew the Hawaiian monarchy

C. Britain transferred control of the islands 

D. Japan surrendered its claim to the islands

American sugar planters overthrew the Hawaiian monarchy

500

This is no figure of speech. The honest citizens of Philadelphia have no more rights at the polls than the Negroes down South. Nor do they fight very hard for this basic privilege. You can arouse their Republican ire by talking about the black Republican votes lost in the Southern States by white Democratic intimidation, but if you remind the average Philadelphian that he is in the same position, he will look startled, then say, “That’s so, that’s literally true, only I never thought of it in just that way.” And it is literally true. The machine controls the whole process of voting, and practices fraud at every stage. The assessor’s list is the voting list, and the assessor is the machine’s man. . . .The assessor pads the list with the names of dead dogs, children, and non-existent persons. One newspaper printed the picture of a dog, another that of a little four-year-old Negro boy, down on such a list. A ring orator in a speech resenting sneers at his ward as “low down” reminded his hearers that that was the ward of Independence Hall, and, naming the signers of the Declaration of Independence, he closed his highest flight of eloquence with the statement that “these men, the fathers of American liberty, voted down here once. And,” he added, with a catching grin, “they vote here yet.” Rudolph Blankenburg, a persistent fighter for the right and the use of the right to vote (and, by the way, an immigrant), sent out just before one election a registered letter to each voter on the rolls of a certain selected division. Sixty-three per cent were returned marked “not at,” “removed, “deceased,” etc. From one four-story house where forty-four voters were addressed, eighteen letters came back undelivered; from another of forty-eight voters, came back forty-one letters; from another sixty-one out of sixty-two; from another forty-four out of forty-seven. Six houses in one division were assessed at one hundred and seventy-two voters, more than the votes cast in the previous election in any one of two hundred entire divisions. The repeating is done boldly, for the machine controls the election officers, often choosing them from among the fraudulent names; and when no one appears to serve, assigning the heeler [local political party worker] ready for the expected vacancy. The police are forbidden by law to stand within thirty feet of the polls, but they are at the box and they are there to see that the machine’s orders are obeyed and that repeaters whom they help to furnish are permitted to vote without “intimidation” on the names they, the police, have supplied

Steffens compares Philadelphia residents to disenfranchised black voters in the South because
A  they have to pay toll taxes
B they have to take literacy tests
C the machines control their votes
D they're subject to Klan intimidation

C. the machines control their votes

500

The Scopes Trial dealt with the issue of
A lynching of blacks in the South
B teaching of evolution in Tennessee
C Scandal of the Harding Administration

D Italian anarchy

B teaching of evolution in Tennessee

500

The phrase "on the margin" referred to:


1. The people that were on the economic fringe of society

2. The practice of taking out loans to buy shares of stock

3. The state of the economy

4. The practice of loaning cash without collateral

The practice of taking out loans to buy shares of stock

500

Which development most directly contributed to the Allied victory in Europe?

A. The U.S. decision to focus all military resources on the Pacific first 

B. The Soviet Union’s successful defense and counterattack on the Eastern Front 

C. Britain’s refusal to participate in the D‑Day invasion 

D. Germany’s ability to maintain supply lines despite Allied bombing

B. The Soviet Union’s successful defense and counterattack on the Eastern Front

500

The Platt Amendment is best described as a policy that

A. Guaranteed full Cuban independence with no U.S. involvement

 B. Allowed the U.S. to intervene in Cuban affairs despite promising independence 

C. Required Cuba to join the League of Nations

 D. Forced Cuba to become a U.S. territory

Allowed the US to intervene in Cuban affairs despite promising independence