Roaring 20's
Immigration & Civil Liberties
Great Depression & New Deal
WWII & Homefront
Early Cold War
Cold War Conflicts & End of Cold War
Civil Rights Movement
100

This economic trend encouraged Americans to buy more products like cars and radios during the 1920s.

What is consumerism?

100

These raids targeted suspected communists and radicals after World War I.

What are the Palmer Raids?

100

Buying stocks with borrowed money is known as this.

What is buying on margin?

100

The attack on this location brought the U.S. into World War II.

What is Pearl Harbor?

100

This U.S. policy promised aid to countries resisting communism.

What is the Truman Doctrine?

100

The belief that countries would fall to communism one after another was called this.

What is the Domino Theory?

100

This Supreme Court case ended legal segregation in public schools.

What is Brown v. Board of Education?

200

This amendment started Prohibition in the United States.

What is the 18th Amendment?

200

Sacco and Vanzetti were controversial because many believed they were convicted due to this.

What are anti-immigrant and anti-anarchist prejudices?

200

These radio broadcasts helped FDR communicate directly with Americans.

What are Fireside Chats?

200

Executive Order 9066 led to.... 

the internment of Japanese Americans.

200

This event involved the Soviet Union blocking access to West Berlin in 1948.

What is the Berlin Blockade?

200

This 13-day crisis in 1962 nearly caused nuclear war.

What is the Cuban Missile Crisis?

200

This teenager’s murder helped spark greater support for the Civil Rights Movement.

Who was Emmett Till?

300

This trial highlighted the conflict between evolutionism and fundamentalism in the 1920s.

What is the Scopes Monkey Trial?

300

This movement saw millions of African Americans leave the rural South and move to northern cities like Chicago and Detroit in search of jobs and better opportunities during the 1900s.

The Great Migration

300

FDR’s New Deal focused on these “Three R’s.”

What are Relief, Recovery, and Reform?

300

Germany was led by this dictator during WWII.

Who was Adolf Hitler?

300

These lists prevented suspected communists from getting jobs in entertainment and government.

What are blacklists?

300

This surprise 1968 attack weakened American support for the Vietnam War.

What is the Tet Offensive?

300

These nine students integrated Central High School in Arkansas in 1957.

Who were the Little Rock Nine?

400

How did the goals of the 1920s Ku Klux Klan differ from those of the original Klan during Reconstruction?

The 1920s Klan expanded its targets to include Catholics, Jews, and immigrants

400

Immigration quota laws of the 1920s were designed mainly to:

Favor immigrants from Northern and Western Europe while restricting immigration from others (Asia, Esatern Europe, etc.)

400

Why did the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act worsen the effects of the Great Depression internationally?

High tariffs reduced international trade as other nations responded with tariffs of their own

400

This program allowed the U.S. to send war materials to Allied nations before officially entering WWII.

What is the Lend-Lease Act?

400

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed for allegedly doing this.

What is spying for the Soviet Union?

400

These two reforms by Mikhail Gorbachev helped lead to the end of the Cold War.

What are Glasnost and Perestroika?

400

This 1963 event featured Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.

What is the March on Washington?

500

Name TWO unintended consequences of Prohibition.

Organized crime grew, bootlegging increased, speakeasies became popular, corruption increased, etc.

500

This Harlem Renaissance song by Billie Holiday protested lynching in America.

What is “Strange Fruit”? 

500

Name THREE causes of the Great Depression.

Speculation, buying on margin, uneven distribution of income, living on credit, failing industries, Hoover’s response

500

Give ONE argument for and ONE argument against dropping the atomic bomb on Japan.

For: quickly ended war/saved American lives. Against: massive civilian casualties/start of nuclear age, etc.

500

Why was Eastern Europe considered strategically important during the early Cold War period?

It acted as a buffer zone between Soviet and Western influence

500

Explain two reasons why the Soviet Union collapsed.

Economic problems, political unrest, arms race costs, Gorbachev’s reforms, nationalist movements, etc.

500

Explain how the Selma March helped lead to the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

The violence was televised and received national attention increasing public support