Westward Expansion
Industrialization/Urbanization
Progressive Era
WWI
20s and 30s
100

This was why the Great Plains ended up being carved up into smaller reservations (within which Native Americans were forced to live).

Settlers wanted the land on the Great Plains.

100

This is a description of Pullman, Illinois around The Turn of the Century.

This was a town constructed around George Pullman's railcar business.  It was meant to house (and some would say) control his workforce.

100

This was the name of President Roosevelt's plan to help the American people.

President Theodore Roosevelt

100

These were the four MAIN long-term causes of WWI

Militarism

Alliances

Imperialism

Nationalism

100

This was the date for the Stock Market Crash that was a signal of the start of the Great Depression

October 29, 1929

200

This is an explanation why most of the land from the Dawes Act and Homestead Act wasn't settled by individual farmers.

Businesses ended up buying most of the land.

200

This is the name of the Act that gave the federal government the authority and opportunity to regulate railroads and businesses that worked in multiple states.

Interstate Commerce Act

200

This is the Progressive President that merged together a lot of the reforms of the President who came before him (and, who also just simply wanted to be a Supreme Court Judge).

William Howard Taft

200

He was the President for the United States during World War I.

Woodrow Wilson

200

This was an impact of the Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act

It harmed international trade and made the effects of the Great Depression worse.

300

This is a description of the Grange and what they wanted.

This is a group that originally existed as a social outlet for farmers (and a format for educating one another on farming practices) but quickly turned into a political group that pushed for Populist ideas. 

300

This is the difference between Patronage and Graft.

Patronage is giving government jobs to people who are friends instead of people who are qualified.

Graft is illegally using a person's position of power for their own personal gain.

300

These are descriptions of both the Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act

Meat Inspection - cleanliness and inspections for Meat Packing Industry

Pure Food and Drug Act - Truth in labeling (no outlandish claims), contents of food or medicine must be listed

300

This was the name of the law that required men to register to be drafted for service in World War I.

The Selective Service Act.

300

This is what the 18th Amendment and the 19th Amendment each did

18th - Prohibition

19th - Women's Suffrage

400

This is the definition of both the Homestead Act and the Dawes Act (as well as a description as to why they are similar and different).

The Homestead Act gave 160 acres of land free to anyone willing to settle out West, develop the land and live there a set amount of time.

The Dawes Act was meant to give the Native Americans land to farm (80 acres or 160 acres).  The land came from carving up reservations.

The Homestead Act was available to anyone and the Dawes Act was an Assimilation policy that tried to get Native Americans to adopt farming practices.

400

This is a description of (and difference between) Angel Island and Ellis Island.

They were both immigration stations around the Turn of the Century.


Angel Island was in California (very strict standards, worse conditions, mainly dealt with immigrants from Asia).


Ellis Island was in New York and had better conditions.  Ellis Island dealt more with immigrants from Europe.

400

These are two famous Muckrackers and what they did

Upton Sinclair - The Jungle, meatpacking

Ida B. Wells - Exposing lynching

Ida Turnball - Exposed Standard Oil

400

This was the reason why the United States ended up entering World War I AND this was the United States' policy before being compelled to enter.

Unrestricted Submarine Warfare and the Zimmerman Telegram


The United States was committed to neutrality and isolationism.

400

These are three reasons why it was difficult to enforce Prohibition.

Not enough money budgeted/not enough officials

People would bribe officials

Speakeasies and Bootleggers were popular and profitable (people were committed to drinking!)

Al Capone - organized crime made it easy to break the laws

500

These are all the parts of "STAR 16" (or, at least five things the Populists wanted).

Direct election of senators

Progressive Income Tax

Australian (secret) ballot

Regulations for Railroads

16:1 Ration of silver to gold (bimetallism)

OR, better working conditions and hours

OR, regulation of the banks

500

These are three details about specific things Political Machines did around the turn of the century.

Boss Tweed/Tammany Hall - NYC Courthouse scandal

Give immigrants jobs and services in exchange for votes

Give businesses permits and privileges in exchange for kickbacks

Help get people elected in exchange for favorable treatment

500

These are the four goals of the Progressive Era and one example for each goal

Protecting Social Welfare - Child Labor, Settlement Houses, etc.

Promoting Moral Improvement - Prohibition, Child Labor...

Creating Economic Reform - Labor laws - hours, safety, child labor, regulations for businesses and monopolies, Meat Inspection Act, Pure Food and Drug Act

Fostering Efficiency - Assembly Line, Taylorism, Scientific Experts, Brandeis Briefs

500

These are three things that the Treaty of Versailles did

Established the peace agreement after WWI

Created nine new nations

Broke up empires

Required Germany to admit to all the guilt

Required Germany to pay reparations

Stripped countries of their colonies

Gave Alsace Lorraine back to France

Established the League of Nations

500

These are four famous people from the Roaring Twenties and what they did

Babe Ruth - Home Runs

Amelia Earhart - first female to fly solo across teh Atlantic

Charles Lindbergh - first person to fly solo across Atlantic

F. Scott Fitzgerald - Author, Jazz Age

Bessie Smith - Singer

Lewis Sinclair - Author

Langston Hughes - Poet

Louis Armstrong - Trumpet Player

ETC.