26
Progressivism (ch 9)
pp. 306-312
1) Progressive Movement— (Ex.) A reform movement of the late 1800s and early 1900s which tried to promote social and economic reform, as well as create a more moral society, economic reform.
2) Social Gospel
3) Florence Kelley
4) Prohibition
5) WCTU
6) Frances Willard
7) Anti-Saloon League
8) Eugene Debs
9) Muckrakers
10) City Commission
11) Council-Manager
12) Robert LaFollette
13) Muller v. Oregon
14) Initiative
15) Referendum
16) Recall
17) 16th Amendment
18) 17th Amendment
19) 18th Amendment
20) 19th Amendment
pp. 313-316 (There are more terms in this section but I kept it short)
1) Vassar College
2) National Association of Colored Women (NACW)
3) Suffrage
4) National American Woman Suffrage Association
5) The Anthony Amendment (1878)
pp. 317-327
1) “Bully Pulpit”
2) Square Deal
3) 1902 Coal Strike (importance of)
4) “Good” trusts vs. “Bad” trusts
5) Sherman Antitrust Act
6) Interstate Commerce Act
7) Elkins & Hepburn Act (be very general)
8) Upton Sinclair
9) Meat Inspection Act
10) Pure Food and Drug Act
11) John Muir
12) Newlands Act
13) Booker T. Washington
14) W.E.B. DuBois
15) NAACP
pp. 328-337
1) William Jennings Bryan
2) Payne-Aldrich Tariff
3) Joseph “Uncle Joe” Cannon
4) “Old Guard”
5) Bull Moose Party
6) Taft/Roosevelt Split
7) Wilson’s New Freedom
8) Eugene Debs
9) Clayton Antitrust Act
10) Federal Trade Act
11) Underwood Tariff
12) Federal Reserve Act
13) NAWSA
14) Carrie Chapman Catt
15) Emmeline Pankhurst
American History Study Guide
Directions: For each term in this packet, you should provide a definition or explanation of the term. It is important to explain the term in its historical context. In other words, you should be able to explain the significance of each term.
Imperialism (ch 10)
pp. 342-351
1) Imperialism
2) Alfred T. Mahan
3) Queen Liliuokalani
4) Sanford B. Dole
5) Jose’ Marti’
6) Valeriano Weyler
7) Yellow journalism
8) William Randolph Hearst
9) Joseph Pulitzer
10) The de Lome letter
11) U.S.S. Maine
12) George Dewey
13) Rough Riders
14) San Juan Hill
15) “a splendid little war”
16) Treaty of Paris
pp. 352-358
1) “Yankee Peril”
2) Insular Cases
3) Teller Amendment
4) Platt Amendment
5) Leonard Wood
6) Protectorate
7) Guantanamo Bay
8) Emilio Aguinaldo
9) Thomasites
10) “Sick man of Asia”
11) John Hay
12) Open Door
13) Boxer Rebellion
pp. 359-365
1) Russo-Japanese War
2) Treaty of Portsmouth
3) Great White Fleet
4) Hay-Pauncefote Treaty
5) Panama Canal (some details of building and treaty)
6) Roosevelt Corollary
7) Big Stick Policy
8) Dollar Diplomacy
9) Missionary (Moral) Diplomacy
10) Porfirio Diaz
11) Victoriano Huerta
12) Venustiano Carranza
13) Emiliano Zapata
14) Pancho Villa
15) John J. Pershing
American History Study Guide
Directions: For each term in this packet, you should provide a definition or explanation of the term. It is important to explain the term in its historical context. In other words, you should be able to explain the significance of each term.
World War I (chapter 11)
pp. 372-380
1) *The Great War
2) *Pan-Slavism
3) militarism
4) Triple Entente (Allied Powers)
5) Triple Alliance (Central powers)
6) “Powder Keg of Europe”
7) Archduke Francis Ferdinand
8) Sarajevo
9) Black Hand
10) Gavrilo Princip
11) *ultimatum
12) mobilization
13) “no man’s land”
14) trench warfare
15) “the bully of Europe”
16) U-boats
17) Lusitania
18) Sussex Pledge
19) “He Kept Us Out of War”
20) Charles Evans Hughes
21) Zimmermann Note
22) “Make the world safe for democracy”
pp. 382-387
1) Selective Service Act of 1917
2) 369th Infantry Regiment
3) convoy system
4) American Expeditionary Force (AEF)
5) conscientious objector
6) Big Bertha
7) zeppelin
8) mechanized warfare
9) Captain Eddie Rickenbacker
pp. 388-395
1) War Industries Board (WIB)
2) Bernard Baruch
3) Fuel Administration
4) National War Labor Board
5) *Total War
6) Food Administration
7) Herbert Hoover
8) “Victory Gardens”
9) “Victory Loan” drive
10) Committee on Public Information/George Creel
11) Four Minute Men
12) Espionage and Sedition Acts
13) Schenk vs. The United States
14) Great Migration
15) *Pandemic of 1918
pp. 398-403
1) Fourteen Points
2) League of Nations
3) *Collective Security
4) The Big Three
5) Treaty of Versailles
6) Reparations
7) War-guilt clause
8) *“Peace Without Victory”
9) Henry Cabot Lodge
10) Lodge Reservations
11) Mandates
American History Study Guide
Directions: For each term in this packet, you should provide a definition or explanation of the term. It is important to explain the term in its historical context. In other words, you should be able to explain the significance of each term.
1920s (chapter 12)
pp. 412-418
1) Bolsheviks
2) Red Scare
3) A Mitchell Palmer
4) International Workers of the World
5) Palmer Raids
6) Anarchists
7) Sacco & Vanzetti
8) Quota Acts of 1921 & 1924
9) Calvin Coolidge
10) John L. Lewis
pp. 419-421
1) Warren G. Harding
2) “normalcy”
3) James Cox
4) Fordney-McCumber Tariff
5) Dawes Plan
6) Andrew Mellon
7) Ohio Gang
8) Harry Daugherty
9) Teapot Dome Scandal
10) Albert Fall
pp. 422-429
1) urban sprawl
2) “Tin Lizzie”
3) Henry Ford
4) The “Big Three”
5) installment plan
1920s (chapter 13)
pp. 434-439
1) Volstead Act
2) 18th Amendment
3) 21st Amendment
4) speakeasies
5) bootleggers
6) Al Capone
7) fundamentalism
8) Billy Sunday
9) Aimee Semple McPherson
10) ACLU
11) John T. Scopes
12) Clarence Darrow
13) William Jennings Bryan
pp. 440-445
1) flapper
2) double standard
3) Equal Rights Amendment (1923) [see p. 779-780]
pp. 446-451
1) Sultan of Swat
2) “Rube” Foster
3) Gertrude Ederle
4) Charles Lindbergh
5) Helen Wills
6) The Jazz Singer
7) Steamboat Willie
8) Eugene O’Neill
9) George Gershwin
10) Georgia O’Keefe
11) Sinclair Lewis
12) F. Scott Fitzgerald
13) The Algonquin Round Table
14) Gertrude Stein
15) The Lost Generation
16) John Dos Passos
17) Ernest Hemingway
pp. 452-457
1) James Weldon Johnson
2) W.E.B. DuBois
3) Marcus Garvey
4) Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA)
5) Black Star Line
6) Harlem Renaissance
7) Alain Locke
8) Claude McKay
9) Langston Hughes
10) Zora Neale Hurston
11) Shuffle Along
12) Paul Robeson
13) Louis Armstrong
14) Duke Ellington
15) Cab Calloway
16) Bessie Smith
Great Depression (Chapter 14)
1) Alfred E. Smith—
2) The Election of 1928—
3) Bull Market—
4) Bear Market—
5) Overspeculation—
6) Buying on margin—
7) Black Tuesday—
8) Great Depression—
9) Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)—
10) Hawley-Smoot Tariff—
11) Shantytowns—
12) Route 66—
13) Okies—
14) Dust Bowl—
15) Direct Relief—
16) Hoover’s Philosophy of Government—
17) Hoovervilles—
18) Glass-Steagall Banking Act—
19) Federal Home Loan Bank Act—
20) Reconstruction Finance Corporation—
21) Bonus Army--
New Deal (Chapter 15)
1) New Deal
2) First Hundred Days
3) Relief, Recovery, Reform
4) “Fireside Chats”
5) “Brain Trust”
6) “Make-Work”
7) Conservative Critics/Liberal Critics (main ideas of each group)
8) American Liberty League
9) Father Coughlin
10) Francis Townsend
11) Huey Long (Share Our Wealth)
12) Court Packing Bill
13) Roosevelt Coalition
14) Deficit Spending (“Priming the Pump”)
Between the Wars (Chapter 16)
pp. 528-535
1) Joseph Stalin
2) Five-Year Plan
3) Totalitarianism
4) Fascism
5) Communism
6) Nazism
7) Benito Mussolini
8) Il Duce
9) Adolf Hitler
10) Der Fuhrer
11) Mein Kampf
12) Aryan race
13) Lebensraum
14) Third Reich
15) Manchuria
16) Rhineland
17) Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis
18) Nye Committee
19) Good Neighbor Policy
20) Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act
21) Neutrality Acts
22) Quarantine Speech
pp. 536-541
1) Anschluss
2) Sudetenland
3) Neville Chamberlain
4) Edouard Daladier
5) Munich Pact
6) appeasement
7) Winston Churchill
8) nonaggression pact
9) September 1, 1939
10) blitzkrieg
11) Phony War (sitzkrieg)
12) Maginot Line
13) Charles de Gaulle
14) Free French
15) Vichy France
16) Marshall Henri Petain
17) Battle of Britain
18) Luftwaffe
19) RAF
pp. 542-549
1) Holocaust
2) anti-Semitism
3) Nuremberg Laws
4) Kristallnacht
5) Final Solution
6) genocide
7) master race
8) untermenschen
9) concentration camps (be familiar with the six death camps)
pp. 550-557
1) “Cash and Carry”
2) Tripartite Pact
3) Destroyer Deal
4) Selective Service Act (1940)
5) Wendell Willkie
6) “Arsenal of Democracy”
7) Lend-Lease Act
8) U-boats
9) Atlantic Charter
10) Allies
11) “shoot on sight”
12) Greer/Pink Star/Kearny/Reuben James (what were all of these?)
13) Hideki Tojo
14) December 7, 1941
World War II (Chapter 17)
pp. 562-577 (two sections)
1) GI
2) George Marshall
3) WAAC
4) A. Philip Randolph
5) OSRD
6) OPA
7) WPB
8) rationing
1) Europe First
2) Battle of the Atlantic
3) Battle of Stalingrad
4) Siege of Leningrad
5) Dwight D. Eisenhower
6) Battle of El Alamein
7) Operation Torch
8) German Erwin Rommel
9) “soft underbelly”
10) D-Day
11) June 6, 1944
12) George Patton
13) Battle of the Bulge
14) Eva Braun
15) V-E Day
pp. 578-587
1) Douglas MacArthur
2) Doolittle Raid
3) Admiral Nimitz
4) Battle of the Coral Sea
5) Battle of Midway
6) island hopping
7) Guadalcanal
8) kamikaze
9) Battle of Leyte Gulf
10) Iwo Jima
11) Okinawa
12) Manhattan Project
13) J. Robert Oppenheimer
14) Leo Szilard
15) Enola Gay
16) Little Boy
17) Hiroshima
18) Fat Man
19) Nagasaki
20) Yalta Conference
21) UN
22) Nuremberg Trials
pp. 590-597
1) GI Bill of Rights
2) James Farmer
3) Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
4) “zoot-suit” riots
5) Japanese American Citizens League
6) EO 9066
7) Korematsu v. U.S.
8) Issei
9) Nissei
Chapter 18 (Cold War)
pp. 602-608
1. Potsdam Conference
2. Satellite nations
3. George Kennan
4. containment
5. “iron curtain”
6. Cold War
7. Truman Doctrine
8. Marshall Plan
9. Berlin Blockade & Airlift
10. NATO
pp. 609-615
1. Chiang Kai-Shek
2. Mao Zedong
3. The Long March
4. Formosa (Taiwan)
5. 38th parallel
6. Syngman Rhee
7. Seoul
8. Kim Il Sung
9. Pyongyang
10. Douglas MacArthur
11. Inchon
12. Zhou Enlai
13. Yalu River
14. Omar Bradley
15. MacArthur-Truman Feud
pp. 616-621
1. “subversive” organizations
2. Loyalty Review Board
3. HUAC
4. The Hollywood Ten
5. “Are you now or have you ever been…”
6. blacklist
7. McCarran Internal Security Bill
8. Alger Hiss
9. Richard Nixon
10. Whittaker Chambers
11.Klaus Fuchs
12.Ethel & Julius Rosenberg
13.Senator Joseph McCarthy
14.McCarthyism
15.Wheeling Speech
16.Army-McCarthy Hearings
pp. 622-627
1. H-bomb
2. J. Robert Oppenheimer
3. John Foster Dulles
4. brinkmanship
5. CIA
6. covert actions
7. Mohammed Mossadegh
8. Shah of Iran
9.Warsaw Pact
10.Geneva Summit
11.Gamal Abdel Nasser
12.Eisenhower Doctrine
13.Nikita Khrushchev
14.Hungary (1956)
15.Sputnik
16.U-2 Incident
17.Francis Gary Powers
Chapter 19
pp. 634-640
1.GI Bill of Rights
2.Levittown
3.“the affluent society”
4.“Had enough?”
5.80th Congress
6.Taft-Hartley Act
7.Commission on Civil Rights
8.Dixiecrats
9. Strom Thurmond (1948 election)
10.Henry Wallace (1948 election)
11.Thomas Dewey (1948 election)
12.Fair Deal
13.Adlai Stevenson (1952/56 election)
14. “Checkers Speech”
15.“dynamic conservatism” (Modern Republicanism)
16. Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
pp. 641-649
1. conglomerate
2. franchise
3. Ray Kroc
4. “company people”
5. The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit
6. baby boom
7. Dr. Jonas Salk
8. Dr. Benjamin Spock
9. Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care
10. Betty Friedan (The Feminine Mystique)
11.The Interstate Highway Act
12. automania
13. consumerism
14. planned obsolescence
15. The Diner’s Club
pp. 652-657 (there are many terms in this section which will be covered in presentations)
1. Federal Communications Commission
2. *television stereotyping” (provide examples)
3. Smell-O-Vision
4. beat movement
5. beatniks
6. American Bandstand
pp. 820-823
1. “white flight”
2. Michael Harrington
3. The Other America
4. urban renewal
5. urban removal
6. braceros
7. Operation Wetback
8. Longoria Incident
9. Unity League of California
10. Indian Reorganization Act of 1934
11. National Congress of American Indians
12.termination policy
13.Bureau of Indian Affairs
Chapter 20 Terms
pp. 670-678 (Kennedy Administration)
1. Richard Nixon (again)
2. Kennedy-Nixon Debate
3. “Kennedy Mystique”
4. Camelot
5. flexible response
6. Green Berets
7. Fidel Castro
8. Bay of Pigs Incident
9. Cuban Missile Crisis
10. Berlin Crisis/Berlin Wall
11. Hot line
12. Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
pp. 679-683 (Kennedy Administration)
1. New Frontier
2. Peace Corps
3. Alliance for Progress
4. Yuri Gagarin
5. The Other America
6. Lee Harvey Oswald
7. Jack Ruby
8. Warren Commission
pp. 686-695 (Johnson Administration)
1. “LBJ Treatment”
2. Civil Rights Act of 1964
3. Economic Opportunity Act
4. VISTA
5. Head Start
6. Community Action Program
7. Barry Goldwater
8. Great Society
9. Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
10. Medicare
11. Medicaid
12. Robert Weaver
13. Immigration Act of 1965
14. Silent Spring
15. Unsafe at Any Speed
16. Warren Court
17. reapportionment
18. Baker v. Carr
19. Mapp v. Ohio
20. Gideon v. Wainwright
21. Escobedo v. Illinois
22. Miranda v. Arizona
Chapter 21—The Civil Rights Movement
Reading 21.1 (Taking on Segregation)
1. Plessy v. Ferguson
2. Jim Crow Laws
3. NAACP
4. Thurgood Marshall
5. Morgan v. Virginia
6. Sweatt v. Painter
7. Brown v. Board
8. Earl Warren
9. Brown II (2nd Brown ruling)
10. “Southern Manifesto”
11. Orval Faubus
12. “Little Rock Nine”
13. Civil Rights Act of 1957
14. Rosa Parks
15. Emmett Till
16. SCLC
17. SNCC
18. CORE
19. Greensboro sit-in (sit-in movement)
Reading 21.2 (The Triumphs of a Crusade)
1. Freedom Riders
2. “Bull” Connor
3. James Meredith
4. Birmingham
5. “children’s crusade”
6. Medgar Evers
7. Byron de la Beckwith
8. March on Washington
9. Sixteenth Street Baptist Church
10. Civil Rights Act of 1964
11. Freedom Summer
12. Robert Moses
13. Mickey Schwerner, Andrew Goodman, James Chaney
14. MFDP
15. Fannie Lou Hamer
16. Selma March
17. “Bloody Sunday