Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3+4
Unit 5
Unit 6
100

What was the Industrial Revolution, and how did it change production in the U.S.?

It was a shift from hand-made goods to machine production, leading to factories, urban growth, and mass production.

100

What does “progressive” mean in this historical context?

Seeking reform to fix problems caused by industrialization and corruption. (righting wrongs)

100

What is imperialism?

When a stronger nation controls weaker nations economically, politically, or militarily.

100

What is the Business Cycle?

The regular pattern of economic growth and decline—boom, peak, recession, recovery.

100

How did the Treaty of Versailles contribute to WWII?

It punished Germany harshly, creating resentment and economic hardship.

200

What’s the difference between a primary and a secondary source?

Primary = original document or object; Secondary = interpretation or analysis of a primary source.

200

Name 3 things that muckrackers exposed

Meat industry

lynching

Tenemant Housing

Political corruption (boss tweed)

200

What caused the Spanish-American War?

Explosion of the USS Maine, Yellow Journalism, and Cuban independence movement.

200

What were the causes of the Dust Bowl?

Drought, over-farming, and soil erosion.

200

What are the main traits of fascism?

Dictatorship, nationalism, militarism, and suppression of opposition.

300

Who were the “Robber Barons” and what industries did they control?

Carnegie (steel), Rockefeller (oil), Ford (automobiles).

300

What were the four pillars of the Progressive Movement?

Social reform, political reform, economic reform, and moral reform.

300

What event started WWI in 1914?

The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand.

300

What was Hoover’s philosophy for solving the Depression?

“Rugged Individualism” — people should solve problems without government help.

300

How did the attack on Pearl Harbor affect the U.S.?

It led the U.S. to officially enter WWII.

400

What were working conditions like for factory workers?

Long hours, low pay, unsafe environments, child labor, few rights.

400

What were the main strategies of women’s suffrage groups?

Protests, hunger strikes, lobbying, and public marches.

400

Who were the Allied and Central Powers?

Allies: Britain, France, Russia, U.S.

Central: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire.

400

What was the Bonus Army?

WWI veterans demanding early payment; Hoover sent the army to remove them.

400

What were internment camps?

Camps where Japanese Americans were forcibly relocated during WWII.

500

What is collective bargaining and why is it important?

It’s negotiation between workers and employers; it improved wages and conditions through unions.

500

What did Plessy v. Ferguson decide?

Separate but equal

500

Why did the U.S. enter WWI?

Sinking of Lusitania, Zimmerman Telegram, and protecting democracy.

500

What did the Social Security Act do?

Created pensions for the elderly, unemployed, and disabled.

500

Why did President Truman drop the atomic bombs?

To force Japan’s surrender and save American lives