Imperialism
Causes of WWI
WWI
1920's
Mystery
100

This idea, applied to nations and races, suggested that stronger countries would naturally dominate weaker ones, justifying U.S. expansion overseas.

What is Social Darwinism?

100

The U.S. entered World War I for reasons such as unrestricted submarine warfare and this intercepted German message.

What is the Zimmerman Telegram?

100

This type of warfare, characterized by soldiers fighting from long, dug-out positions, defined much of the Western Front.

What is trench warfare?

100

This movement in the 1920s celebrated African American culture through music, art, and literature.

What is the Harlem Renaissance?

100

This belief justified U.S. expansion westward across the continent.

What is Manifest Destiny?

200

This canal, completed under Roosevelt, connected the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and strengthened U.S. influence in Latin America.

What is the Panama Canal? 

200

This event killed over 1,000 passengers and American outrage over it helped shift public opinion toward war.

What is the Sinking of the Lusitania? 

200

This set of points was President Wilson’s plan for postwar peace.

What are Wilson's Fourteen Points?

200

This movement saw millions of African Americans leave the South for jobs in Northern cities during and after World War I.

What is the Great Migration?

200

This conflict between Britain and France in the 1750s set the stage for colonial resentment over taxes.

What is the French and Indian War?

300

President Theodore Roosevelt’s foreign policy was best reflected by this extension of U.S. influence in the Western Hemisphere.

What is the Monroe Doctrine (Roosevelt Corollary)?

300

During the war, the U.S. government encouraged support through this type of media to influence public opinion.

What is propaganda?

300

After World War I, the U.S. changed its foreign policy by doing this instead of taking a leading role in global affairs.

What is isolationism?

300

The 1920s saw this type of law banning alcohol, later repealed because it encouraged crime.

What is Prohibition (18th Amendment)?

300

This Supreme Court decision established judicial review, giving the Court power to declare laws unconstitutional.

What is Marbury v. Madison?

400

This war between the U.S. and Spain began after the explosion of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor.

What is the Spanish American War?

400

During WWI, the U.S. government encouraged citizens to buy these to help finance the war effort.

What are war bonds?

400

After World War I, Congress rejected joining this international organization because they feared it would drag the U.S. into future conflicts.

What is the League of Nations?

400

Automobiles and mass production helped create this type of culture shared across the nation.

What is mass or consumer culture (consumerism)?

400

This compromise at the Constitutional Convention solved the debate over representation in Congress by creating a bicameral legislature with one house based on population and one with equal representation.

What is the Great Compromise?

500

This U.S. policy in China aimed to ensure all nations had equal access to trade and limit other nations’ exclusive control.

What is Open Door Policy?

500

This act(s) limited criticism of the war and showed tension between civil liberties and national security.

What are the Espionage and/or Sedition Acts?

500

One of Woodrow Wilson’s post–World War I goals was to prevent future wars by ending what according to international agreements.

What is secret alliances?

500

This trial highlighted the conflict between modern science and traditional beliefs.

What is the Scopes Monkey Trial?

500

This 1620 agreement established the principle of self-government for the Plymouth Colony.

What is the Mayflower Compact?