Early 20th CenturyTest: Chapters 24&25
Multiple Choice. Questions 1-39. Mark responses on the scan sheet provided.
Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
____ 1.In the 1920s, there was a revival of mob violence in South Carolina against African Americans. Ku Klux Klan members often attacked African Americans (or an entire African American family), often resulting in the death of the victims.
These racially motivated attacks were known as:
a. / anarchismb. / racial rebellions
c. / race baiting
d. / lynchings
____ 2.An active member of the Progressive Movement in the early 1900s would be most likely to favor which of the following laws?
a. / A law that aims to increase the value of public lands by allowing developers to build in the national forests.b. / A law that aims to attract businesses and factories to South Carolina by decreasing government regulation.
c. / A law that aims to increase the profits of restaurants by allowing them to distribute and sell alcohol.
d. / A law that aims to help the working class by creating a minimum wage and a shorter work week.
____ 3.One of the major issues of the Progressive Movement was the sale of alcoholic beverages. Which of the following views on the subject was held by most Progressives during the early 1900s?
a. / The government should not regulate the sale of alcoholic beverages.b. / There should not be a "minimum drinking age" because it promotes the illegal sale of alcoholic beverages on the blackmarket.
c. / It should be illegal to sell alcoholic beverages because it leads to violence and corruption.
d. / Only homemade alcoholic beverages (or "moonshine") should be sold to prevent "Big Business" from dominating the industry.
____ 4.In the 1920s, there was a revival of mob violence in South Carolina against African Americans. Ku Klux Klan members often attacked African Americans (or an entire African American family), often resulting in the death of the victims.
These racially motivated attacks were known as:
a. / anarchismb. / racial rebellions
c. / race baiting
d. / lynchings
____ 5.In 1906, Upton Sinclair's novel The Jungle exposed the unhealthy practices of the meatpacking industry at the time. The American public's reaction to the novel was so overwhelming that the federal government:
a. / passed the Pure Food and Drug Act.b. / forced bookstores to stop selling the novel.
c. / started importing meat products from Europe.
d. / required grocery stores to buy meat directly from a farm instead of from a factory.
____ 6.In 1904, Theodore Roosevelt delivered a famous speech in which he promised the American people a square deal. Which of the following describes the basic goal of his "square deal"?
a. / To help the American working man and limit the control of "Big Business."b. / To create more jobs by encouraging development in the national forests and woodlands across America.
c. / To stabilize the economy by having large businesses join together and create one single, more profitable company.
d. / To prevent the federal government from interfering with private business in America.
____ 7.Ratified in 1913, the 16th amendment to the Constitution helped the federal government raise money by taking a percentage of what every American citizen earned each year. This is commonly known as:
a. / value added taxb. / income tax
c. / capital gains tax
d. / property tax
____ 8.During the Great Depression, one person's struggles often contributed to the struggles of another. For example, which of the following best explains why a country store might suffer when local farmers lose their jobs?
a. / The unemployed farmers find other places to shop.b. / The unemployed farmers stop buying things, so the store stops making money.
c. / The unemployed farmers have too much time on their hands, so they begin sitting around the country store.
d. / The unemployed farmers get angry and shut the store down.
____ 9.Which of the following is NOT an explanation for the major population shifts in South Carolina during the late 19th and early 20th centuries?
a. / Small farmers moved from rural areas to growing towns to find work in the textile mills.b. / African Americans left the state to escape continued racial tensions.
c. / Many northerners came south to build winter homes in the milder climate of South Carolina.
d. / Prospectors traveled to South Carolina after hearing rumors of gold being discovered in the Blue Ridge Mountains.
____ 10.During World War I, many young men in South Carolina signed up to join the military.
However, their induction into the army revealed what alarming feature about South Carolinians at the time?
a. / A large portion of the volunteers were not born in South Carolina and could not speak English.b. / Nearly 50% of the volunteers could not read or write.
c. / Most of the volunteers were too obese to perform well on the physical fitness tests.
d. / The majority of the volunteers had been physically injured while working in the textile mills.
____ 11.Which of the following Presidents during the Progressive Era stated that we were fighting "to make the world safe for a democracy"?
a. / Calvin Coolidgeb. / Theodore Roosevelt
c. / Woodrow Wilson
d. / Franklin D. Roosevelt
____ 12.Which President of the early 20th century described his foreign policy strategy by saying, "Speak softly and carry a big stick"?
a. / Theodore Rooseveltb. / Franklin D. Roosevelt
c. / Woodrow Wilson
d. / Calvin Coolidge
____ 13.In 1886, Charleston, South Carolina, was struck by which of the following disasters?
a. / Hurricaneb. / Flood
c. / Epidemic
d. / Earthquake
____ 14.Which South Carolina governor of the early 20th century stirred up controversy by pardoning over 1,500 convicts?
a. / John Gary Evansb. / Richard Manning
c. / Benjamin Tillman
d. / Coleman Blease
____ 15.Thousands of Americans lost their jobs during the Great Depression. Which of the following best explains why being unemployed was so devastating during this time?
a. / Jobs helped Americans spend their time wisely.b. / Jobs helped Americans keep busy, which helped them keep their minds off of the Great Depression.
c. / Jobs helped Americans meet new people.
d. / Jobs helped Americans earn money to buy food, clothing, and shelter.
16.During World War I, over 65,000 South Carolinians enlisted in the military. Which of the following describes another way that the state played a major role in the war effort?
a. / South Carolina donated and sold land to the federal government for the construction of military bases.b. / South Carolina used the facilities at its many colleges to experiment with new technology needed to win the war.
c. / South Carolina used its industrial centers to produce the majority of the nation's military vehicles.
d. / South Carolina gave huge sums of money to the federal government to purchase better weapons.
17.In the early 1900s, South Carolina was governed by a number of Jim Crow laws. What was the purpose of these laws?
a. / To enforce segregation and restrict the rights of African Americans.b. / To encourage small farmers to find work at the textile mills.
c. / To protect freedom of speech.
d. / To assist the economy in the South.
18.During the Progressive Movement, journalists often used their newspapers to expose corruption, especially in the big cities. These journalists were known as:
a. / Mass Market Journalistsb. / Yellow Journalists
c. / Rabble-Rousers
d. / Muckrakers
19.Despite widespread poverty in South Carolina, the 1920s was also a time when literature and the arts flourished in the South. Many South Carolinians achieved national fame for their work (such as Julia Peterkin, who won the Pulitzer Prize).
This period is often referred to as:
a. / The "Lost Cause" Yearsb. / The Progressive Era
c. / The Southern Renaissance
d. / The Cultural Revolution
20.During the Progressive Movement, journalists often used their newspapers to expose corruption, especially in the big cities. These journalists were known as:
a. / Mass Market Journalistsb. / Yellow Journalists
c. / Rabble-Rousers
d. / Muckrakers
21.During the Progressive Movement, journalists often used their newspapers to expose corruption, especially in the big cities. These journalists were known as:
a. / Mass Market Journalistsb. / Yellow Journalists
c. / Rabble-Rousers
d. / Muckrakers
22.In order to improve education in South Carolina, the state legislature passed the "6-0-1 Law" in 1924. Which of the following describes how this law worked?
a. / The state agreed to provide a teacher with 6 weeks of vacation time for every 1 year that the teacher worked.b. / The state agreed to send 6 teachers to a school district every time the district built 1 new school.
c. / The state agreed to pay a teacher's salary for 6 months if the individual school district paid for 1 more month.
d. / The state agreed to build 1 new school every 6 years in each school district that performed to an acceptable standard.
23.In the early 1900s, this South Carolinian became a wealthy stock broker on Wall Street. He went on to become chairman of the War Industries Board under President Woodrow Wilson, and a financial advisor to President Franklin Roosevelt:
a. / Bernard Baruchb. / James F. Byrnes
c. / Robert Mills
d. / Richard Manning
24.Which of the following developments during the "Roaring Twenties" had the most impact on the people living near the beaches of South Carolina?
a. / The popularity of jazz music.b. / The laws of Prohibition.
c. / The growth of the tourism industry.
d. / The rise of professional sports.
25.One of the highlights of the Progressive Movement was the founding of the NAACP in 1909. The letters in this acronym stand for:
a. / National Administration for Agricultural Crop Preparationb. / National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
c. / National Alliance for Anticipating Common Problems
d. / Native Americans Achieving Collective Progress
26.Thousands of African Americans left South Carolina during the early 1900s. Which of the following is the most likely reason for this "outmigration"?
a. / Because African Americans wanted to escape racial tensions and find better job opportunities.b. / Because African Americans were making more money than ever, and could afford to live in other areas.
c. / Because African Americans were ashamed of their long history in South Carolina.
d. / Because African Americans were being recruited by other states to come and live.
27. One of the biggest blows to South Carolina's economy came from the boll weevil (a tiny beetle with a long snout). How did the boll weevil cause so much damage in South Carolina during the 1920s?
a. / The boll weevil carried diseases like smallpox and influenza.b. / The boll weevil destroyed thousands of buildings by feeding off of the wood used to build the walls and foundations.
c. / The boll weevil ruined entire textile mills by laying eggs in the machinery.
d. / The boll weevil destroyed most of the state's cotton crop.
28. When the Great Depression began, President Herbert Hoover did not take drastic measures because he hoped the nation would recover on its own. Hoover did, however, urge Congress to create which of the following programs to help save major banks and railroads?
a. / The New Dealb. / The Teapot Dome
c. / The Civilian Conservation Corps
d. / Reconstruction Finance Corporation
29. During World War I, many young men in South Carolina signed up to join the military. However, their induction into the army revealed what alarming feature about South Carolinians at the time?
a. / A large portion of the volunteers were not born in South Carolina and could not speak English.b. / Nearly 50% of the volunteers could not read or write.
c. / Most of the volunteers were too obese to perform well on the physical fitness tests.
d. / The majority of the volunteers had been physically injured while working in the textile mills.
30.Which of the following South Carolina women won a Pulitzer Prize in 1929 for the novel Scarlet Sister Mary, about African Americans living on a plantation?
a. / Julia Peterkinb. / Mary Boykin Chestnut
c. / Eliza Pinckney
d. / Mary McLeod Bethune
31.In the 1930s, the South Carolina State Highway Commission became controversial because it cost the people of the state a tremendous amount of money. What was the primary goal of the State Highway Commission during that time?
a. / To build paved highways capable of reaching most of the state's cities and towns.b. / To put up stoplights at dangerous intersections, thus reducing accidents.
c. / To create interstate highways that run from one side of the country to the other.
d. / To set-up highway patrol officers on most major highways and reduce speeding.
32.The 18th amendment to the Constitution focused on the sale of alcoholic beverages and was ratified in 1919. Which of the following was an unexpected result of the amendment?
a. / Increase in organized crimeb. / Decline in tax revenues
c. / Decline in unemployment
d. / Rise in unemployment
33.Most of the people living in rural areas of South Carolina during the Great Depression did not have access to modern conveniences (i.e. electricity, internal plumbing, tractors, etc.). Which of the following explains the reason for this?
a. / Most rural farmers in South Carolina were too poor to afford modern conveniences.b. / These conveniences made the cost of growing cotton too expensive.
c. / Most people in South Carolina did not know how to use these modern conveniences.
d. / People in South Carolina wanted to be different from the people living in the north.
34. Which of the following men was President of the United States when the stock market crashed in October 1929?
a. / Warren G. Hardingb. / Calvin Coolidge
c. / Franklin D. Roosevelt
d. / Herbert Hoover
35.After the Russian Revolution in 1917, many people in America began to fear that the Communist nation would target the capitalist system of the United States. This fear spread quickly and became known as the:
a. / Communist Manifestob. / Cold War
c. / Marxist Revolution
d. / Red Scare
36.During the Great Depression, over 90% of the residents in rural South Carolina did not have electricity. Which of the following items was fairly common at the time because it did not run on electricity?
a. / Computersb. / Automobiles
c. / Televisions
d. / Refrigerators
37. Which of the following was the focus of the famous Scopes Trial in Dayton, Tennessee, which took place in 1925?
a. / teaching of religion in public schoolsb. / breaking of prohibition laws
c. / teaching of communism in public schools
d. / teaching of evolution in public schools
38. In the early 1900s, more people started going to South Carolina's beaches because the state of South Carolina did which of the following?
a. / Offered low fare cruises along the coast.b. / Lowered gasoline prices in the area to attract visitors.
c. / Built new highways to the coast.
d. / Published up-to-date maps of the area.
39.Serving from 1915 to 1919, Richard Manning was one of the most progressive governors in South Carolina's history. As a Progressive, which of the following were parts of Manning's agenda?
a. / encouraging the growth of big business, supporting the management decisions of new factories, preventing labor unions from disrupting the economyb. / supporting Jim Crow laws, ending women's suffrage, protesting against Prohibition
c. / cutting taxes, ending government regulation, reducing the size of government
d. / raising minimum wage, improving the school system, building new highways
Matching begins on page 9.
Matching : Questions 40-60:Write answers on the answer sheet provided.
The Progressive Movement—match each description with the correct term below:
a. / A reform movement to end the influence of "Big Business" on governmentb. / A founder of the NAACP in 1906; wanted more rights for African Americans
c. / Theodore Roosevelt's domestic policy
d. / Organization to assist African Americans
e. / International organization formed to keep the peace after World War I
f. / Woodrow Wilson's domestic program
g. / Illegal to manufacture, sell, or consume alcoholic beverages
h. / Amendment that gave women the right to vote
i. / Amendment that provided for the direct election of U.S. senators
j. / Amendment that established income tax
k. / The government taking control of the monetary system in America
l. / Aid to help teach farmers modern techniques
m / Movement of African Americans to the North
n. / Food and Drug Administration
o. / Declaration that the United States had the right to intervene in Latin America
____ 40.W.E.B. DuBois
____ 41.Federal Reserve Act
____ 42.Seventeenth Amendment
____ 43.Progressivism
____ 44.Roosevelt Corollary
____ 45.Nineteenth Amendment
____ 46.New Freedom
____ 47.Square Deal
____ 48.Great Migration
____ 49.League of Nations
Matching continues on page 10
Early 20th Century—match each description with the correct term below:
a. / Founded by veterans to secure more benefits from the governmentb. / Fear of a Communist Revolution in America
c. / Scandal win which government officials took a bribe for leasing federal oil reserves
d. / A nickname for the 1920s
e. / Outlawed the making and selling of liquor
f. / Wrote Porgy, a novel that depicted African Americans living in South Carolina during the 1920s
g. / A mob killing
h. / A novel written by Harriet Beecher Stowe about muckrakers.
i. / Program designed to save major banks and railroads at the start of the Great Depression
j. / An industry that caters to vacationers
k. / Revival in Southern literature
l. / The worst economic crisis in American history
m. / Provided classes to teach adults basic skills
n. / Mary Chestnut experiences during the Civil War
o. / South Carolina agreed to pay six months of a teacher’s salary if the school district paid for an additional month
____ 50.18TH Amendment
____ 51.DuBose Heyward
____ 52.Reconstruction Finance Corporation
____ 53.Great Depression
____ 54.Tourism
____ 55.Teapot Dome
____ 56.American Legion
____ 57.Opportunity School
____ 58.Southern Literacy Renaissance
____ 59.Diary from Dixie
____ 60. Lynching
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