Boom & Bust: 20s and 30s
WWII, Cold War, and 1950s
1960s
Civil Rights Movement
Rise of Conservatism
100

This new technology of the 1920s led to people listening to more music and entertainment at home.

radio

100

This senator accused hundreds of people in the State Department of being communist, starting mass hysteria in the Cold War

Joseph McCarthy

100

The two candidates in the presidential election of 1960 

JFK and Nixon

100
Generally accepted as the major leader of the non-violent civil rights movement for Black rights

Martin Luther King, Jr. 

100

the simultaneous onset of inflation and economic stagnation in the 1970s was known as: 

stagflation

200

This was a 1920s cultural, social, and artistic movement centered in Harlem, New York City. It was fueled by the Great Migration and gave rise to the "New Negro"—a concept that encouraged outspoken advocacy of dignity, racial pride, and the refusal to submit to Jim Crow segregation

Harlem Renaissance

200
America's effort to help rebuild Europe with supplies and money after WWII was called 

the Marshall Plan

200

This document, passed by Congress in 1964 after a naval incident, authorized the Vietnam War and was known as the "blank check" or "Grandma's nightshirt"

Tonkin Gulf Resolution

200

Originally proposed by JFK after the Birmingham protests and March on Washington, he died before it was passed by Congress. LBJ and Congress passed it in JFK's honor

Civil Rights Act of 1965

200

The Camp David Accords in 1978—named for this  president’s rural Maryland retreat, where thirteen days of secret negotiations were held—represented the first time an Arab state had recognized Israel, and the first time Israel promised Palestine self-government. It was a foreign policy victory for this president.

Jimmy Carter

300

Fear of foreign radicals in a time of nativism led to the executions of these two men, two Italian anarchists working in Braintree near Auntie Laney's house, in 1927.

Sacco and Vanzetti

300

Executive Order 9066 authorized the forced relocation and incarceration of over 120,000 _______________ people during WWII, including citizens, driven by war hysteria and racial prejudice

Japanese Americans

300

This was the turning point in 1968 when public opinion turned against the US involvement in Vietnam. It was a military victory, but a public relations disaster. 

Tet Offensive

300

He preferred non-violence if possible, but said it was the "ballot or the bullet" if necessary.

Malcolm X

300

This economic policy of Pres. Ronald Reagan's is rooted in the idea that tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations would stimulate investment, boost production, and ultimately benefit all levels of society.

trickle down, supply side, or Reaganomics 

400

This was the name of FDR's series of programs for addressing the Great Depression

New Deal

400

After WWII, the American policy towards communism was called ____________ and led to limited war, for example in Korea.

containment 

400

Lyndon Johnson's (LBJ) domestic program to address poverty, improve access to education and healthcare, etc. was known as 

The Great Society

400

These were other groups who were inspired by African American activism and who launched their own civil rights movements.

American Indian Movement, Red Power Movement, Women's Rights Movement for the Equal Rights Amendment and abortion rights, Gay Rights Movement (after Stonewall)

400

This agreement represented a defining shift in 1990s globalization. Signed by President Bill Clinton, the treaty eliminated trade barriers between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada

NAFTA

500

This was one of the major criticisms of Franklin D. Roosevelt's handling of the Great Depression

1. it made the federal government more powerful

2. it expanded executive (presidential) power

3. it didn't do enough to help those in poverty

500

The suburban landscape in the 1950s was characterized by lots of new home building to accommodate returning soldiers and new families during the baby boom. This man became famous for his housing developments of the era.

Bill Levitt

500

A harrowing thirteen-day confrontation in October 1962 when the United States and the Soviet Union hovered on the brink of nuclear war

Cuban Missile Crisis

500

This was a revolutionary, socialist, and Black nationalist organization founded in 1966 in Oakland, California, by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale to protect Black neighborhoods from police brutality

Black Panther Party

500

This was the name of Richard Nixon's strategy to gradually withdraw U.S. troops from Vietnam while equipping and training South Vietnamese forces to fight their own ground war. The policy aimed to achieve "peace with honor" but resulted in years of continued fighting and eventual communist victory

Vietnamization