These are the three amendments that came out of the Reconstruction era.
What are the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments?
The Second Treaty of Reciprocity gave the US exclusive control of Pearl Harbor for military purposes in this territory.
What is Hawaii?
This ideology was born out of white southerners wanting African Americans to "know their place," leading to racial separation.
What is segregation?
Economic opportunity and the idea of racial tolerance and better treatment are examples of these factors that led African Americans to move North.
What are pull factors?
In response to "communist conspiracies," these saw federal agents to raid the offices of labor organizations—where about 5000 suspects were taken into custody without warrants. Many of them were deported, some were released, and others were jailed without trials.
What were Palmer Raids?
These were the four common types of labor in the New South.
What was tenant farming, sharecropping, crop lien system, and convict labor?
These were the five major reasons for expansion.
This was passed by many southern states that exempted from the new requirements (poll tax, literacy and constitution tests) anyone whose grandfather could vote before the Civil War.
The South being the location of their enslavement, poor economic opportunities, and oppressive Social circumstances are examples of these factors that led African Americans to move North.
What are push factors?
This plan not only dealt with territorial issues but offered principles on which a long-term peace could be built.
What were Wilson's Fourteen Points?
This was the New South Creed.
What was the southern states attempting to achieve salvation through economic uplift?
These court cases ruled that the Constitution did not really apply to these new colonies, including the Philippines and Puerto Rico.
What were the Insular Cases?
This film embodied the cultural ideas of the New South and almost single-handedly rejuvenated the KKK.
What is Birth of A Nation?
This Chicago newspaper focused on bringing black southerners North and refused to use terms like “black” to describe African Americans, instead using “the Race” to define their audience.
What is The Defender?
This was President Wilson's idea that the U.S. had a responsibility to spread democratic ideals to other nations but that it must be done without direct domination.
What is "moral imperialism?"
These are the three most common barriers to voting for African Americans in the New South.
What were literacy tests, poll taxes, and grandfather clauses?
This republican became president on a platform of expansion and exceptionalism, that the US should have world power status and should use its influence in places like Cuba.
Who was William McKinley?
This movement encouraged the remembrance of the Old South and the defense of it during the Civil War
What was The Lost Cause?
This form of racial violence survived reconstruction and became a tragic mainstay in the New South and Jim Crow South.
What is lynching?
This group helped the Justice Department by spying on their neighbors and were eventually associated with intimidation tactics and with illegally detaining people believed to be anarchists or radicals.
What was the American Protective League?
These were the three solutions to the problems of the New South.
What was changing priorities, diversifying the economy, and emphasizing national similarities?
This policy called for equal commercial opportunity within spheres of influencea and stood up against outside interference with China’s tariff controls.
What was the Open Door Policy?
This court case established the ideology of "separate but equal."
What was Plessy v. Ferguson?
This man was a leading black intellectual and co-founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
Who was W.E.B DuBois?
These two acts of Congress gave the postmaster general the right to withhold any mail that was “subversive” and made it illegal to openly say or print statements that were critical against the government or the war.
What where the Espionage Act (1917) and the Sedition Act (1918)?