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AP History Midterm Review
After Reconstruction - World War II
199
History
11th Grade
01/20/2008

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Cards

Term
Great American Desert
Definition
the area between the Mississippi River and Pacific Coast prior to 1880.
Term
mining frontier
Definition
gold rush in CA, etc. After a discovery of gold, placer mining was first. Then deep-shaft mining by the wealthy. Boomtown would spring up, then become ghost towns. Many miners foreign-born; discrimination. debate over gold/silver-backed currency, environmental scars.
Term
Comstock Lode
Definition
Nevada. Produced $340 million in gold, responsible for Nevada entering the union.
Term
Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)
Definition
prohibited immigration to US by Chinese laborers; first law to restrict immigration on race/nationality.
Term
cattle drives
Definition
cattles driven from Texas to Canada by vaqueros
Term
cowboys/vaqueros
Definition
drove cattle. Most were black or Mexican. Dangerous work, received about $1/day
Term
barbed wire
Definition
helped close down cattle frontier when homesteaders used it to block off property.
Term
farming frontier
Definition
people were drawn west due to Homestead Act, promotions of railroads and land spectators
Term
Oklahoma Territory
Definition
once set aside for Native Americans but opened for settlement in 1889
Term
Frederick Jackson Turner's frontier thesis
Definition
closing of frontier would cause America to follow strict class divisions, people couldn't have a fresh start anymore. He said before, the frontier stood for independence and individualism.
Term
Native American Reservations
Definition
in 1851, govt. began assigning Native Americans to reservations. Most Plains tribes ignored the boundaries.
Term
Indian Wars
Definition
US vs. Plains tribes. Sand Creek Massacre of Cheyenne women and children. Sioux War.
Term
Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse
Definition
led the second Sioux War, destroyed Custer @ Little Big Horn.
Term
George Custer at Little Big Horn
Definition
Army was destroyed by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse
Term
Chief Joseph
Definition
tried to lead a band of Nez Perce into Canada but failed and had to surrender
Term
A Century of Dishonor
Definition
written by Helen Hunt Jackson, talked about injustices done to Native Americans.
Term
assimilationists
Definition
wanted to assimilate Native Americans, emphasized education and conversion to Christianity.
Term
Dawes Severalty Act (1887)
Definition
designed to break up tribal organizations, which people felt kept Native Americans from becoming law-abiding citizens. Divided tribal lands into plots of 160 acres or less. Land was often sold to whites.
Term
Ghost Dance movement (1890)
Definition
religious movement to resist white domination and drive them from their ancestral lands. Sitting Bull killed. US also killed 200 at Wounded Knee.
Term
Wounded Knee
Definition
US gunned down 200+ men, women, and children supressing the Ghost Dance movement.
Term
Indian Reorganization Act (1934)
Definition
promoted reestablishment of tribal organization and culture.
Term
Henry Cabot Lodge
Definition

a Massachusetts Republican senator.

was a reservationist regarding the Treaty of Versailles/League of Nations, direct contract to Woodrow Wilson.

Term
irreconcilables
Definition

would not agree with US membership in the League of Nations no matter what.

A dozen Republican senators.

Term
reservationists
Definition

led by Senator Lodge. Would agree with the League of Nations is certain reservations were added to the covenant clause.

Term

Red Scare

Definition
anti-communist hysteria. Fueled by growing fears of socialism (from the communist takeover of Russia) and labor unrest at home.
Term
Palmer Raids
Definition
Palmer established a special commission to investigate radicals after a series of unexplained bombings. Mass arrests of anarchists, Socialists, and labor agitators. Many sspects were foreign-born and were deported. Scare faded quickly, Palmer lost credibility after he predicted huge riots that never occured.
Term
Emma Goldman
Definition
an outspoken radical who was deported during the Palmer raids
Term
strikes and race riots during late 1910s/early 1920s
Definition

series of strikes caused people not to trust unions. shipyard strike in Seattle. Boston police strike. U.S. Steel Corporation strike.

African Americans moving North caused racial tension. Riots erupted in East St. Louis and Chicago.

Term

Warren Harding

Definition

Republican, campaign phrase: "A return to normalcy"

-Harding made a few good choices but some bad ones too, scandals similar to Ulysses S. Grant's. (Teapot Dome)

Term
Fordney McCumber Tariff Act of 1922
Definition

increase in tariff rates, signed into law by Harding

Term
Bureau of the Budget
Definition
all government expenditures placed in a single budget for Congress to vote on
Term
Calvin Coolidge
Definition

Harding's Republican vice president, later became President.

-Believed in limited government Vetoed a lot of bills, even though passed by the Republican majority.

Term
Herbert Hoover
Definition

Republican, ran against Al Smith.

won by a landslide

was later blamed for the Great Depression

Term
business prosperity, Henry Ford, open shop, assembly line, welfare capitalism
Definition

-prosperity went from 1922-1928

-Henry Ford manufactured automobiles using the assembly line.

-open shop: keeping jobs open to nonunion workers

-welfare capitalism: offering employees improved benefits so they wouldn't want to organize unions

Term

jazz age (1920s)

Definition

jazz was brought north by African American musicians

new and modern

Term
consumerism (1920s)
Definition

cars, refrigerators, radios, vacuum cleaners, washing machines, etc.

-people could buy goods on credit.

Term
Charles Lindbergh
Definition
flew across the Atlantic
Term
Margaret Sanger
Definition
advocate of women's rights and birth control
Term
modernism
Definition

took historical and critical view of certain passages in the Bible

-believed they could accept Darwin's theory of evolution without abandoning religion

Term
fundamentalism
Definition

every word in the Bible must be accepted as literally true

-believed in creationism

Term
revivalists; Billy Sunday; Aimee Semple McPherson
Definition
preached fundamentalist messages using the radio
Term
Lost Generation
Definition

-phrase coined by Gertrude Stein

-writers include F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemmingway, Eugene O'Neill, Sinclair Lewis, T.S. Eliotr

Term
Harlem Renaissance
Definition

many famous writers, actors, artists, and musicians lived there

-Langston Hughes, Claude McKay

-Jazz age: Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong

Term
Marcus Garvey
Definition
established a back-to-Africa movement
Term
Scopes trial
Definition

Scopes arrested for teaching the theory of evolution in a high school bio class

Clarence Darrow defended Scopes, William Jennings Bryan represented the fudamentalists

Term
Volstead Act of 1919
Definition
began Prohibition
Term
organized crime during the 1920s
Definition

people defied the 18th amendment (Prohibition)

-Gangs gained a lot from the bootlegging trade

Term
Sacco and Vanzetti
Definition
Italian immigrants who were convicted of robbery and murder. Liberals said that they were convicted only because they were poor immigrants and anarchists. Were executed in 1927.
Term
disarmament
Definition

-Washington Conference of 1921. Resulted in the 5 Power Treaty and The Four Power Treaty and the Nine Power Treaty.

-ratios with regards to warships, respecting territory in the Pacific, respecting Open Door Policy in China

Term
Kellog-Briand Treaty of 1928
Definition
renounced the aggresive use of force to achieve national ends. Was ineffective because it permitted defensive wars and failed to provide for taking action against violators of the agreement
Term
Dawes Plan
Definition
established cycle of payments flowing for US to Germany to Allies.
Term
causes of the Great Depression
Definition
uneven distribution of income, stock market speculation, excessive use of credit, overproduction of consumer goods, weak farm economy, government polices, and global economic problems
Term
Hawley-Smoot Tariff of 1930
Definition

highest tariffs in history

-31% - 49%

-European countries then set their own high tariffs and it ended up hurting trade for all nations

Term
Federal Farm Board
Definition

-Hoover

-authorized to stablize prices by temporarily holding surplus grain and cotton in storage

-to modest to handle continued overproduction of farm goods

Term
Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)
Definition
-emergency loans to key businesses such as railroads and banks, thought was that benefits would "trickle down" to smaller companies
-Hoover
Term
Bonus army
Definition

-WWI vets demanded their pension early.

-Congress failed to pass bill, violence with police.

-Hoover ordered the use of tear gas to break up the veteran's encampment. Hoover regarded as heartless and uncaring

Term

20th Amendment

Definition

-lame duck amendment

shorted the time between election and inauguration

Term
The 3 R's of the New Deal
Definition

1. Relief for people out of work

2. Recovery for businesses and the economy

3. Reform of American economic institutions

Term
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
Definition
guaranteed individual bank deposits up to $5,000
Term
Public Works Administration (PWA)
Definition
-directed by Harold Ickes, alloted money to state and local governments for building roads, dams, bridges, source of thousands of jobs
Term
Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
Definition
emplyed young men on federal lands and paid their families a small monthly sum
Term
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
Definition
hired people to build dams and operate electric power plants, then sold electricity to residents of the region at a low rate
Term
National Recovery Administration (NRA)
Definition

set codes for wages, hours of work, levels of production, and prices of finished goods

-gave workers ability to bargain collectively.

-Declared unconstitutional by Schechter v. US

Term
Securities and Exchange Commission
Definition
regulate the stock market and place strict limits of speculative practices
Term
Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
Definition

insured bank loans for building new houses and repairing old ones

-gave construction industry and homeowners a boost

Term
Works Progress Administration (WPA)
Definition

employed 3.4 million

-included national youth administration

Term
Wagner Act (aka National Labor Relations Act of 1935)
Definition

replaced unconstitutional National Industrial Recovery Act.

-workers right to join a union and bargain collectively.

-outlawed labor practices that were unfair

Term
Committee of Industrial Organizations (CIO)
Definition

leader was John L. Lewis

broke away from the American Federation of Labor

Term
Fair Labor Standards Act
Definition
minimum wage, maximum workweek, child-labor restrictions
Term
Manchuria
Definition

Japenese aggression, established a puppet government

-League of Nations did nothing but condemn Japan, Japan left League of Nations

Term
Stimson Doctrine
Definition
US would honor treaty obligations under the 9 Power Treaty and refuse to recognize the legitimacy of an Manchukuo like govt established
Term
good neighbor policy (World War II-era)
Definition

towards Latin America

dollar diplomacy no longer made sense, wanted protection in defending region from potential danger

Pan-American conferences

Term
Tydings McDuffie Act of 1934
Definition
Phillipines would become free
Term

fascism

Definition

idea that people should glorify their own nation and race through an aggressive show of force

Mussolini (Italy)

Hitler (Germany)

Nationlists in Japan

Term
cash and carry policy
Definition

belligerent could buy arms if they used cash and their own ships

strongly favored Britain

Term
New South
Definition
came after Reconstruction, vision included a self-sufficient Southern econonmy built on modern capitalistic views, industrial growth, and improved transporation
Term
crop-lien system
Definition
farmers borrowed supplies from local merchants with a lien, or mortgage, to be paid back when the crop was harvested. Made farmers become almost like slaves
Term
George Washington Carver
Definition
promoted growing of peanuts, soybeans, and sweet potatoes
-worked at the Tuskegee Institute
Term
Farmers' Southern Alliance/Colored Farmers' National Alliance
Definition
wanted political reforms to solve farmers' economic problems
Term
Civil Rights Cases of 1883
Definition
Supreme Court ruled that Congress couldn't legislate against racial discrimination practiced by private businesses and citizens
Term
Plessy vs. Ferguson
Definition
"separate but equal"
Term
grandfather clause, poll taxes, literacy tests
Definition
ways to keep African-Americans from voting
Term
Henry Turner
Definition
formed the International Migration Society in 1894 to help African blacks to emigrate to Africa
Term
Ida B. Wells
Definition
editor of the Memphis Free Speech, a black newspaper. Worked against lynching and Jim Crow Laws
Term
Booker T. Washington
Definition
established the Tuskegee Institute
Term
National Grange Movement
Definition
tried to fight against the middlemen, trusts, and railroads
-established cooperatives run by farmers to save costs associated with middlemen
- successfully passed laws but were later struck down by the Supreme Court
Term
Munn vs. Illinois
Definition
Supreme Court upheld the right of the state to regulate businesses of a public nature, such as railroads
Term
Wabash vs. Illinois
Definition
individual states could not regulated interstate commerce.
-struct down the Granger laws
Term
Interstate Commerce Act (1888)
Definition
had the power to investigate and prosecute pools, rebates, and discriminatory practices
-helped railroads more than farmers; lost many of its first court cases.
Term
farmers' alliances
Definition
popular in the 1890s, led to the Ocala platform
Term
Ocala Platfrom
Definition
farmers
1. direct election of us senators
2. lower tariff rates
3. graduated income tax
4. new banking system regulated by federal govt.
Term
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Definition
earned millions from the steamboat business, used his money to merge local railroads into the New York Central Railroad in 1867.
Term
trunk lines
Definition
a main railroad route between two cities. Smaller branches connected the trunk lines with outlying towns
Term
federal land grants
Definition
federal government provided railroad companies with land grands and loans out West. It was distributed in a checkerboard pattern.
Term
transcontinental railroad
Definition
the task was split between the Union Pacific and the Central Pacific railroad companies. The Union Pacific was made up mostly of Irish immigrants and war veterans, the Central Pacific was made up of Chinese. They came together at Promotory Point, Utah.
Term
railroad pools
Definition
competing railroad companoies secretly agreed to fix rates and share traffic
Term
Panic of 1893
Definition
forced a quarter of all railroads into bankruptcy
Term
second Industrial Revolution
Definition
came after the Civil War, growth of steel, petroleum, and electric power industries
Term
Bessemer Process
Definition
a process for making high-quality steel
Term
Andrew Carnegie
Definition
made a fortune manufacturing steel, used a business strategy called vertical integration
Term
vertical integration
Definition
a company controls every aspect of the manufacturing process, from the raw materials to the finished product
Term
John D. Rockefeller
Definition
made a fortune with his company, Standard Oil Trust. It used horizontal integration
Term
horizontal integration
Definition
former competitors brought together under a single umbrella
Term
antitrust movement and the Sherman Anti-Trust Act
Definition
People feared the trust's unchecked power and resented the growing influence of the newly rich.
The Sherman AntiTrust Act prohibited trusts. It was vaugely worded and the Supreme Court ruled that it only applied to commerce, not manufacturing
Term
United States vs. E.C. Knight Co.
Definition
ruled that Sherman Anti-Trust Act could only be applied to commerce, not manufacturing
Term
laissez-faire
Definition
The belief that government should not regulate business, it should be governed by supply and demand
Term
Gospel of Wealth
Definition
Rockefeller said he was successful because of his Protestant work ethic.
-everyone had a duty to become rich
Term
Horatio Alger myth
Definition
Horatio Alger was a fictional self-made man. People like him rarely existed in real life
Term
tactics for defeating unions
Definition
1. lockouts
2. blacklists
3. yellow-dog contracts (workers had to agree not to join a union as a condition of employment)
4. private guards and state militia
5. court injunctions
Term
Great Railroad Strike of 1877
Definition
Railroad workers went on strike, shut down 2/3 of country's railroad tracks. Hayes used federal troops to end violence, 100 killed
Term
Haymarket Bombing of 1886
Definition
during a meeting at Haymarket Square in Chicago, someone threw a bomb as police attempted to break up the meeting. The bomb thrower was never found, but 8 anarchists were tried and 7 sentenced to death. Caused many Americans to think that labor unions were radical and violent
Term
American Federation of Labor (AFL)
Definition
concentrated on attaining practical economic goals. Wanted higher wages and improved working conditions. By 1901, it was the country's largest union.
Term
In re Debs
Definition
Supreme Court approved the use of court injunctions against strikes.
Term
"old" immigrants vs "new" immigrants
Definition
beginning in 1890s, immigrants began to come from different places such as Italy, Greece, Poland, Russia, etc. and were poor and poorly educated. They were mostly Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, or Jewish. The old immigrants had been mostly Protestant, more educated, and wealthier
Term
Boss and Machine politics
Definition
political parties in cities came under the control of groups of powerful politicans called machines. Each machine had a boss. The most well-known machine was Tammany Hall in New York. They would help the underpriveledged somewhat but were also very greedy and stole millions of dollars of money.
Term
The Social Gospel
Definition
the importance of applying Christian principles to social problems
Term
Seneca Falls
Definition
started the women's suffrage movement. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony later founded the National American Women's Suffrage Association
Term
the Gilded Age (1877-1900)
Definition
-expression Gilded Age comes from Mark Twain, who used it to refer to the superficial glitter of new wealth being prominently displayed during the time.
-politics is generally mostly show with little substance. None of the presidents served two consecutive terms and politicans mostly ignored problems coming from the growth of industries and cities.
Term
solid South
Definition
until the mid 20th century, the South voted Democrat
Term
Stalwarts, Halfbreeds, and Mugwumps
Definition
during the Gilded Age
-Roscoe Conkling led the Stalwarts, James G. Blaine led the Halfbreeds. There was competiiton between the two groups for patronage jobs, it became a more important issue than anything else. Republicans who didn't take sides were called Mugwumps
Term
Rutherford B. Hayes
Definition
won election of 1876 after Compromise of '77.
-ended Reconstruction by withdrawing federal troops from the South
-trid to reestablish honest government and tried to fight against efforst to restrict Chinese immigration.
-A Gilded Age president
Term
James Garfield
Definition
-A Gilded Age president
-won a very close vote against Democrat Winfield Hancock in 1880.
-Picked Halfbreeds for most offices, much to the dismay of the Stalwarts.
-Was shot by a disgrunted Stalwart and Chester A. Arthur became president
Term
Chester A. Arthur
Definition
-became president when Garfield was murdered.
-distanced himself from the Stalwarts, tried to reform civil service, approved development of modern US navy, and questioned the high protective tariff
-was denied renomination for president in 1884
Term
The election of 1884
Definition
Blaine (Republicans) vs. Cleveland (Democrats)
-first Democrat to be elected president since Buchanan in '56
Term
Grover Cleveland
Definition
-won election of 1884
-Democrat
-implemented a new civil service system
-signed Interstate Commerce Act and the Dawes Severalty Act into law.
Term
Pendleton Act of 1881
Definition
Set up the Civil Service Commision, which created a system by which applicants for classified federal jobs wold be selected on the basis of their scores on an exam, not by party patronage.
Term
Greenback Party
Definition
-wanted soft/easy money (money not backed up by gold)
-14 members elected to Congress, but movement died out when the hard times of the 1870s ended.
Term
Crime of 1873 and the Bland-Allison Act
Definition
Congress stopped the coining of silver in the 1879s, critics called it the crime of 1873.
-Bland-Allison Act was a compromise law that allowed limited coinage of silver at a 16 to 1 ratio. Farmers, debtors, and miners wanted unlimed coinage of silver and weren't satisfied.
Term
Benjamin Harrison
Definition
Republican who campaigned for high tariffs and won the election of 1888.
-lost the popular vote but won the elctoral vote.
Term
billion-dollar Congress
Definition
During Harrison's presidency, Congress passed the first billion dollar budget. It included.
1. McKinley Tariff act - tariffs of 48%
2. increases in pensions to Civil War vets.
3. Sherman AntiTrust Act
4. Sherman Silver Purchase Act - increased coinage of silver.
Term
Populist (People's) Party
Definition
-determined to do something about the economic power of trusts and bankers.
1. direct popular eletion of US senators.
2. enacting state laws by voters through referendums and ballot iniatives.
3. unlimited coinage of silver
4. graduated income tax
5. ownership of railroads by the US government
6. telegraph and telephone systems owned by government
7. loans and federal warehouses for farmers so they could stabalize prices.
8. eight-hour workday for industrial workers
These goals were called the Omaha Platform
-most supporters from rural America
Term
Panic of 1893
Definition
stock market crashed because of overspeculation, railroads went into bankruptcy because of overbuilding.
-lasted almost 4 years
-President Cleveland delt with crisis by championing the gold standard and adopting a hands-off policy
Term
William Jennings Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech
Definition
made Bryan the Democratic nominee for president for the election of 1896, but he lost to McKinley
Term
William McKinley
Definition
won the election of 1896 against Democratic William Jennings Bryan.
-enacted a higher tariff
-made gold the official standard of US currency.
-during Spanish-American War he helped US become a world power.
Term
William Seward
Definition
served as secretary of state for many presidents
-purchased Alaska, was called "Seward's Icebox"
-gained rights to build a canal in Nicaragua
Term
"New imperialism"
Definition
US intensified foreign involvement because we needed
a) worldwide markets for surpluses
b) sources of raw materials for manufacturing
Term
Pan-American Conference (1889)
Definition
organized by Benjamin Harrison's secretary of state, Blaine. Western Hemisphere countries created a permanent organization for international cooperation on trade
Term
causes of the Spanish-American war
Definition
1. jingoism
2. Cuban revolt
3. yellow journalism
4. De Lome letter
5. sinking of the USS Maine
6. McKinley's war message
Term
jingoism
Definition
an intense form of nationalism calling for an aggressive foreign policy
-a cause of the spanish-american war
Term
yellow journalism
Definition
sensationalizing of news stories
-used in the Donner Party and the Spanish-American war
Term
Dupey De Lome letter
Definition
-one of the causes of the Spanish-American War
-was highly critical of McKinley; leaked to the press
Term
the sinking of the USS Maine
Definition
-one of the causes of the Spanish-American War
-It is still unknown who caused in sinking - Spanish, Cubans, or boiler explosion?
Term
Teller Amendment
Definition
part of Congress's declaration of the Spanish-American War
-declared that US had no intention of taking political control of Cuba and that once peace was restored Cubans would control their own government
Term
the Philipines in the Spanish-American War
Definition
-first shots fired here
- Philipines were controlled by Spain
- US overtook Manila
Term
Rough Riders
Definition
-led by Teddy Roosevelt
-regiment of volunteers
-charged up San Juan Hill in Cuba during the Spanish-American War
Term
annexation of Hawaii
Definition
McKinley asked for annexation in 1898, close to Philipines during Spanish-American War
Term
peace treaty ending Spanish-American War
Definition
1. recognition of Cuban independence
2. US aquisition of Puerto Rico and Guam
3. US acquisition of Philipines after paying Spain $20 million
Term
Emilio Aguinaldo
Definition
-Filipino who fought alongside US during Spanish-American War
-upset that US was taking over the country and led guerilla fighters. Many died on both sides
Term
Insular Cases 1901-1903
Definition
Supreme Court ruled that constitutional rights did not automatically extend to territorial possessions like Puerto Rico and Guam
Term
Platt Amendment (1901)
Definition
1. Cuba could never sign a treaty with a foreign power that would impair its independence
2. Cuba couldn't build up excessive public debt
3. US could intervene in Cuba's affairs to keep law and order
4. US could maintain naval bases in Cuba, most importantly Guantanamo Bay
Term
Open Door Policy
Definition
John Hay, McKinley's secretary of state, established policy.
-All nations had equal trading rights in China instead of spheres of infleunce
Term
Boxer Rebellion
Definition
xenophobia was on the rise in China, a group of Chinese nationalists murdered Christian missionaries. US came to China and crushed the rebellion, forced China to pay huge indemnities.
Term
Roosevelt's Big Stick policy
Definition
"speak softly and carry a big stick"
-wanted to build the reputation of the US as a world power.
Term
Hay-Pauncefote Treaty (1901)
Definition
-any canal built in Central America was supposed to be jointly US/British. In this treaty, the British agreed to abrogate their earlier treaty and US could dig without British involvement
Term
Panama Canal
Definition
-built between 1904-1914
-many lost their lives digging.
Term
Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
Definition
-instead of Europe intervening in Latin American affairs, the US would intervene instead
Term
Root-Takahira Agreement (1908)
Definition
Between US/Japan
1. mutual respect for Pacific possessions
2. support for Open Door Policy in China
Term
William Howard Taft
Definition
-succeded Roosevelt
-dollar diplomacy (tried to promote US trade by supporting American enterprises abroad)
-trustbuster
Term
Lodge Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
Definition
non-European powers excluded from owning territory in the Western Hempisphere
Term
Woodrow Wilson
Definition
-suceeded Taft as president
-tried to right wrongs of Roosevelt and Taft, gave rights to Filipinos and Puerto Ricans.
Term
Tampico incident
Definition
Wilson supported a group of revelutionaries fighting against dictator Huerta in Mexico. Some US went to Tampico and were arrested. Huerta refused to apologize, Wilson ordered navy to occupy Vera Cruz. War seemed imminent until ABC powers (Argentina, Brazil, Chile) agreed to mediate the dispute
Term
Pancho Villa and the US Expeditionary Force)
Definition
Pancho Villa led raids across US border and murdered several people. Wilson ordered General Pershing to enter Mexico to look for Villa. Couldn't find him, Wilson had to withdraw troops due to growing fear of involvement in WWI.
Term
moral diplomacy
Definition
Woodrow Wilson and his Sec. of State, William Jennings Bryan, wanted to show that the US respected other nation's rights and would support the spread of democracy
Term
The Progressive Movement (1901-1918)
Definition
-presidents from this era are Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson
-wanted to improve lives in the industrial age
-wanted to build on existing society, make moderate political changes and social improvement through government action.
-goals were limiting power of big business, improving democracy for all people, and strengthening social justice.
Term
pragmatism
Definition
-Progressive reformers adopted this philosophy
-said that people should take a pragmatic, or practical, approach to morals, ideals, and knowledge
Term
Frederick W. Taylor and scientific management
Definition
-Taylor discovered ways of organzing people in the most efficient manner in a factory
-Progressives wanted to apply the same idea to government; they thought it could be more efficient if placed in the hands of experts and scientific managers instead of political bosses.
Term
muckrakers
Definition
-Progressive era
-Writers writing about underhanded schemes in politics
-Magazines and books were both popular
-Example: How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis
-popularity declined after 1910: difficult to top sensationalism of last story, businesses more concerned about their public image, and advertisers didn't like it
Term
How The Other Half Lives
Definition
-One of the first photojournalism books, written by Jacob Riis
-a muckraking novel.
Term
Henry Demarest Lloyd
Definition
One of the first muckrakers, wrote about practices of the Standard Oil Company and of the railroads
Term
Ida Tarbell, Lincoln Steffens, Theodore Dreiser
Definition
famous muckrakers
Term
Australian ballot
Definition
-ballots printed by the state and voters marked their choices in private
-a Progressive-era reform
Term
direct primaries
Definition
-method of nominating party candidates
-A Progressive reform
-not 100% successful because political bosses still got elected sometimes.
Term
The Seventeenth Amendment
Definition
-direct election of US senators
-a Progressive reform
Term
ballot iniatives and referendums
Definition
-ways for people to have more say in government
-Progressive-era reforms
Term
social welfare
Definition
-Progressive-era reform
-settlement houses (Jane Addams)
-better schools, juvenile courts, liberalized divorce laws, safety regulations for tenements and factories, parole system, limits on the death penalty
Term
muncipal reform
Definition
Progressive-era
-Toledo mayor Samuel M. "Golden Rule" Jones and another Ohioan, Tom L. Johnson, worked for free kindergarten, night schools, public playgrounds, tax reform, and lesser trolley fares
Term
Theodore Roosevelt's Square Deal
Definition
-favored neither business or labor
-tried to mediate a dispute between coal miners and owners. Owners refused to compromise so Roosevelt threatened to take over the mines with federal troops. Owners finally agreed to accept the findings of a special commission, which gave the workers a wage increase but no union
Term
trust-busting
Definition
-T. Roosevelt was the first president to enforce the Sherman Antitrust Act, broke up the Northern Securities Company (a railroad trust)
Term
Elkins Act (1903) and the Hepburn Act (1906)
Definition
-Elkins Act gave interstate commerce commision power to stop railroads from granting rebates to favored customers
-Hepburn Act said ICC could fix "just and reasonable" rates for railroads
Term
The Jungle
Definition
-written by Upton Sinclair
-a muckraking book about the Chicago meatpacking industry
-Led to Pure Food and Drug AAct and the Meat Inspection Act
Term
Pure Food and Drug Act (1906)
Definition
forbade the manufacture, sale, and transporation of adulterated or mislabeled food and drugs
Term
Meat Inspection Act (1906)
Definition
provided that federal inspectors visit meatpacking plants to ensure that they met minimum standards of sanitation
Term
Roosevelt and conservation
Definition
Roosevelt wanted to conserve natural resources
-set aside 150 million acres of land that could not be sold
-Newlands Reclamation Act: provided money from sale of western land for irrigation projects
-established the National Conservation Commission
Term
Mann-Elkins Act of 1910
Definition
-Gave the ICC power to supend new railroad rates and oversee telephone, telegraph, and cable companies.
Term
Sixteenth Amendment
Definition
authorized an income tax
Term
Payne-Aldrich Tariff (1909)
Definition
-Taft signed, angered Progressives who accused him of joining the conservative wing of the Republicans
Term
the Social Party and Eugene V. Debs
Definition
-called for more radical reforms than the Progressives
-led by Eugene V. Debs
-reached peak in 1912 when Debs won 6% of popular vote for president
Term
Bull Moose Party
Definition
-nickname given to Progressive party because Roosevelt was "As strong as a bull moose"
-Election of 1912
Term
Election of 1912
Definition
Woodrow Wilson won because the Republican party was split into two factions led by Roosevelt and Taft
Term
Underwood Tariff (1913)
Definition
-Wilson argued for it
-First reduction in tariff prices in 50 years
Term
Federal Reserve Act (1914)
Definition
-passed during Wilson's presidency
-created 12 distinct banks supervised by a Federal Reserve Board
Term
Clayton Antitrust Act (1914)
Definition
strengthened the Sherman Antitrust Act
-passed during Wilson's presidency
-contained a clause exempting unions from being prosecuted as trusts
Term
Federal Trade Commission
Definition
-Wilson's presidency
-could investigate "unfair trade practice" in every industry except banking and transporation
Term
Wilson's New Freedom program
Definition
-two major pieces of legislation were the Clayton Antitrust Act and the Federal Trade Commission
Term
Federal Farm Loan Act
Definition
-Wilson's presidency
-provided farm loans at low interest rates
Term
W.E.B. u Bois
Definition
-African-American leader who demanded civil rights. Direct contrast to Booker T. Washington's stress on economics
Term
Nineteenth Amendment (1920)
Definition
-Women recieved the right to vote
Term
Alice Paul
Definition
-formed the National Woman's party
-more militant than the National American Woman Suffrage Association
Term
Carrie Chapman Catt and the National American Woman Suffrage Association
Definition
-tried to get women's vote at the state level before moving to the national level
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