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The Great Depression (1920-1940)
Key People & Terms
36
History
12th Grade
07/12/2010

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Term
Calvin Coolidge
Definition
A conservative from Massachusetts who became the thirtieth U.S. president upon the death of Warren G. Harding in 1923. In 1924, he was elected president in his own right, but in 1928 he declined an offer to run again. Like both his predecessor, Harding, and his successor, Herbert Hoover, his policy was to sweep away the remnants of progressive legislation and reward big business instead.
Term
Warren G. Harding
Definition
The twenty-ninth U.S. president, whose election in 1920 brought about a decade of conservatism and benefits for big business. His isolationist stance also stifled former president Woodrow Wilson’s hopes to have the United States join the League of Nations. Under him, Congress passed the Esch-Cummins Transportation Act and the Fordney-McCumber Tariff, and the United States signed the Five-Power Naval Treaty, the Four-Power Treaty, and the Nine-Power Treaty for disarmament and the maintenance of the status quo in East Asia. His term was marred by scandal, most notably the 1923 Teapot Dome scandal, but he died that same year, however, before he was fully implicated.
Term
Herbert Hoover
Definition
A former engineer and millionaire who became the thirty-first U.S. president in 1928. Although he had a reputation as a humanitarian for his relief efforts in World War I, he proved completely unprepared for the task of guiding the nation out of the Great Depression. After the stock market crash of 1929, he encouraged Americans not to panic and promised there would be no recession. He refused to act on a federal level, taking the laissez-faire stance that it was not the government’s job to interfere with the economy, even after millions of Americans lost their jobs and homes.
Term
John Maynard Keynes
Definition
A British economist in the early twentieth century who believed that deficit spending during recessions and depressions could revive national economies. These theories went untested until Franklin Delano Roosevelt applied them in the New Deal to bring the United States out of the Great Depression. The success of the New Deal converted Democrats to ________-minded policy makers for the next several decades.
Term
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Definition
A distant cousin of former president Theodore Roosevelt who served as governor of New York before becoming the thirty-second U.S. president in 1933. Roosevelt’s main goal was to end the Great Depression. His New Deal programs and policies focused on immediate relief, long-term recovery, and reform in order to revive the economy. Despite the fact that he was usually wheelchair-bound (he was stricken with polio as a child), his optimism and charm did much to convince Americans that they had “nothing to fear but fear itself.” After the depression, Roosevelt successfully led the United States through World War II, was reelected to an unprecedented fourth term in office, and died while still in office on April 12, 1945.
Term
Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)
Definition
An administration created by Congress in 1933 to help destitute farmers. The __________ reset prices for agricultural commodities at their high, pre–World War I prices and paid farmers subsidies to cut production.
Term
“Bonus Army”
Definition
A group of 20,000 disgruntled World War I veterans who marched on Washington, D.C., in 1932 to cash in on the army bonuses Congress promised to pay them by 1945. When Congress refused, they set up a large shantytown in the middle of the capital. Herbert Hoover eventually ordered federal troops to forcibly remove the veterans in what became known as the “Battle of Anacostia Flats. Hoover’s actions to squelch the “army” proved to be a fatal political error and convinced many Americans to vote for Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the election later that year.
Term
Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
Definition
Body created by Congress in 1933 to put millions of young men to work on conservation projects throughout the United States. __________ workers reforested timberlands, fought forest fires, built public roads, and maintained public parks. This was one of the most popular relief and recovery programs of the New Deal.
Term
Crash of 1929
Definition
The massive crash of the U.S. stock market on “Black Tuesday, October 29th. The crash occurred after American investors dumped more than 16 million shares in one day. Within two months, more than $60 billion had been lost. The crash was the primary catalyst for the Great Depression.
Term
Dawes Plan
Definition
A plan created by Calvin Coolidge’s vice president, Charles _______, to save the European economy and enrich the United States by adjusting the payment of Germany’s war reparations from World War I. The plan called for private American banks to loan Germany the money to pay off the billions of dollars in reparations owed to France and Britain. The English and French would then use the money to pay off war debts owed to the U.S. government. The scheme worked until the Crash of 1929 , when American banks no longer wanted to loan Germany money.
Term
Eighteenth Amendment
Definition
A constitutional amendment, ratified in 1919, that banned the consumption, sale, and manufacture of alcohol. Congress supplemented the amendment with the Volstead Act, which created the Prohibition Bureau. Prohibition remained in effect for fourteen years, until it was repealed in 1933 by the ratification of the Twenty-First Amendment.
Term
Emergency Banking Relief Act
Definition
A bill passed by Congress in March 1933 to give President Franklin Delano Roosevelt power to regulate the banking system and foreign exchange. Congress passed the act, which was the first piece of New Deal legislation, after Roosevelt declared a national banking holiday.
Term
Emergency Quota Act
Definition
An act passed in 1921 to establish national yearly ________ for immigration. The act limited the total number of immigrants admitted annually from each country to 3 percent of the number of persons from that country living in the United States in 1910. When this act failed to stem the influx of southern and eastern Europeans, it was repealed and replaced by the even more restrictive Immigration Act of 1924 .
Term
Fair Labor Standards Act
Definition
A bill passed in 1938 to establish a national minimum wage and a forty-hour workweek for workers employed by companies conducting interstate commerce, and was one of the last pieces of Second New Deal legislation.
Term
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
Definition
A corporation created as a result of the 1933 Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act to protect individual savings accounts. The ____________ eliminated fly-by-night banks that had plagued the South and West for over a century and restored public confidence in the banking system. This was one of the main New Deal programs designed to reform the financial sector of the economy.
Term
Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA)
Definition
An administration that Roosevelt and Congress created during the First Hundred Days to provide immediate economic relief. Unlike Herbert Hoover’s Reconstruction Finance Corporation, ________ distributed grants—not loans—to state governments and individuals.
Term
Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act
Definition
An act passed in 1933 to bar U.S. banks from underwriting stocks and bonds. The act also created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation  (FDIC). Unlike the Emergency Banking Relief Act, the __________________ was aimed at providing long-term reform.
Term
Hatch Act
Definition
An act passed by the conservative Congress in 1939 to curb the Democrats’ ability to control elections with federal handouts. The law forbade most public servants from participating in political campaigns and prohibited Americans who received federal handouts from contributing to political campaigns. Moreover, the law blocked the use of federal funds in reelection campaigns.
Term
Immigration Act of 1924
Definition
A ______ bill that reduced the national immigration quota for each foreign country from 3 percent of the number of persons from that country living in the United States in 1910 to 2 percent of the number of persons from that country living in the United States in 1890. Because so few immigrants from southern and eastern Europe had come to the United States before 1900, the act effectively barred immigration from Italy, Poland, and the Balkans.
Term
Indian Reorganization Act
Definition
An act passed in 1934 to permit Native American tribal councils to own land. The act reversed the 1887 Dawes Severalty Act, and although it was only a partial success, it did alter federal government relations with America’s Native American tribes.
Term
Nineteenth Amendment
Definition
A constitutional amendment ratified in 1920 to grant women the right to vote. Not surprisingly, the number of voters in the presidential election later that year nearly doubled compared to the numbers from the election of 1916.
Term
Public Works Administration (PWA)
Definition
A government administration that Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Congress formed in 1933 to create new jobs, improve the nation’s infrastructure, and provide unemployment relief. Part of the First New Deal, the _____________ was very similar to the Works Progress Administration of the Second New Deal.
Term
Red Scare
Definition
The period immediately after the Russian Revolution of 1917 in which Americans feared that a similar Communist revolution might happen on U.S. soil. In 1919 and 1920, Americans became panicked and paranoid, convinced that communists were hiding and conspiring everywhere in the country. Hundreds of American Communist Party and Socialist Party members were arrested. Also, union members, who would strike and seek the right to collectively bargain with their employers, were seen as especially suspicious. As a result, unions began to shrink in number, because many labor organizers were arrested. Even those Americans who criticized the government were sometimes thrown in prison.
Term
“Roosevelt Recession”
Definition
A 1937 ____________ caused by ____________ decision to cut back on deficit spending before the Great Depression was really over. It put millions of Americans back on the streets and contributed to the American people’s loss of confidence in the president and his New Deal policy.
Term
Sacco-Vanzetti Trial
Definition
The 1921 trial of Italian immigrants Niccola _______and Bartolomeo _______, both self-proclaimed atheists and anarchists, who were accused of murder, found guilty, and executed, largely because of their ethnicity and Communist leanings. Although historians have concluded that the men probably did in fact commit the murder, their conviction had little to do with hard evidence and more to do with the anti-immigrant and antisocialist sentiments of the day.
Term
Schechter v. United States
Definition
A 1935 case in which the conservative Supreme Court ruled that the National Recovery Act was unconstitutional on the grounds that the federal government had no business controlling intrastate commerce (or commerce that happens within a state’s boundaries). The ruling, along with the ruling in Butler v. United States the following year, prompted President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to devise his ill-fated court-packing scheme.
Term
Scopes Monkey Trial
Definition
An infamous 1925 trial that dramatically played out the debate between Christian fundamentalism and Charles Darwin’s theories of evolution and natural selection. In the trial, a high school biology teacher, John T. ________, was accused of flouting a Tennessee ban on the teaching of evolution. Although he technically lost the case, fundamentalists came away looking ridiculous, especially after confusing and contradictory answers given by former politician and “Bible expert” William Jennings Bryan.
Term
Second Agricultural Adjustment Administration
Definition
A body created in 1938 that paid subsidies to farmers to cut farm acreage in order to curb overproduction. Congress created this after the Supreme Court declared the First Administration unconstitutional
Term
Smoot-Hawley Tariff
Definition
A tariff passed by Congress and Herbert Hoover in 1930 that raised the tax on foreign goods to nearly 60 percen which crippled the American and international economies at a time when the world badly needed trade—not trade protection—to pull out of the widespread economic depression that was rapidly unfolding into the Great Depression.
Term
Social Security Act
Definition
A 1935 act that established pensions for the elderly, handicapped, and unemployed. It completely changed the way Americans thought about work and proved to be one of the most significant pieces of legislation in the Second New Deal.
Term
Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act
Definition
A bill passed by Congress in 1936 (as part of the Second New Deal) that paid farmers subsidies to grow fewer crops in order to curb overproduction. The act also gave farmers extra subsidies to plant crops that would put nutrients back in the soil, in lieu of nutrient-depleting crops such as wheat.
Term
Teapot Dome Scandal
Definition
A scandal during Warren G. Harding’s presidency in which the secretaries of the interior and the navy took large bribes to let a private company drill oil on federal lands near the town of _________, Wyoming. Harding himself was implicated in the scheme but died before any charges could be filed. The scandal was the most famous of the many that surfaced during Harding’s term.
Term
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
Definition
A government agency specifically created to help the _______________, which was one of the poorest regions of the United States during and prior to the Great Depression. The agency worked to modernize the region and reduce unemployment by hiring local workers to construct dams and hydroelectric power plants.
Term
Twenty-First Amendment
Definition
A constitutional amendment ratified in 1933 to repeal the Eighteenth Amendment, which had initiated Prohibition.
Term
Wagner Act
Definition
A 1935 act of Congress that legalized labor unions’ right to organize and bargain collectively. Also known as the National Labor Relations Act, the passage of the act was a momentous day for American laborers and initiated a series of strikes throughout the country. The act also helped the Congress of Industrial Organizations to form in 1935.
Term
Works Progress Administration (WPA)
Definition
A government administration created in 1935 to hire over 10 million American men to construct public works projects such as roads, bridges, and public buildings. It was one of the most significant programs created during the Second New Deal, and helped provide immediate relief for many Americans during the Great Depression.
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