Download Chapter 12,13, 14 Study Guide

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Political spectrum wikipedia , lookup

Communism wikipedia , lookup

State (polity) wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
United States History I Review Chp 12, 13, 14
Name___________________________
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
H.
I.
J.
K.
L.
M.
N.
O.
P.
Q.
R.
S.
T.
U.
Ku Klux Klan
Charles Evans Hughes
Warren G. Harding
Kellogg-Briand Pact
Albert B. Fall
Teapot Dome
Al Capone
National Origins Act
Anarchy
Installment plan
Urban sprawl
John L. Lewis
Sacco & Vanzetti
A. Mitchell Palmer
Communism
C. Coolidge
Fordney-McCumber Tariff
Isolationism
Quota System
Modern advertising
Dawes Plan
V.
W.
X.
Y.
Z.
AA.
BB.
CC.
DD.
EE.
FF.
GG.
HH.
II.
JJ.
KK.
LL.
MM.
NN.
OO.
Normalcy
<1%
African Americans
Automobile
Black Tuesday
Bonus Army
Boulder Dam
Buying on Margin
Carrying mail
Charitable organizations
Communism
Compensation for WWI wartime
service of $500
Did not restrict immigration enough
Direct Relief
Disgust for Hoover
Emergency Quota Act
Fear of communism
Foreclosure
Harlem Renaissance
Hoover
PP. Imperialism
QQ. Installment plan
RR. Lenin
SS. Mexico
TT. More crops grown than sold
UU. National Origins Act
VV. Nativism
WW. Need immediate assistance, can’t
wait for “trickle down”
XX. Non-federal gov insurance &
protection
YY. Scopes
ZZ. Slogans
AAA. Stock investors
BBB. Superficial prosperity
CCC. Tariffs
DDD. The Spirit of St. Louis
EEE. Threat of political radicals
FFF. Women ‘s Christian Temperance
union
1. 64 nations signed this, basically renouncing war as an instrument of national policy. There
was no way to enforce this pact, because it made no provision for the use of military or
economic force against any nation that violated it.
2. Allowed people to buy goods over an extended period of time without having to put up much
money at the time of purchase and helped to create a false sense of prosperity
3. As Attorney General, I sent government agents out on a series of illegal raids to hunt down
suspected radicals.
4. As president of the United Mine Workers, he led the miners on a strike that eventually resulted
in a significant wage increase.
5. As the governor of Massachusetts, he opposed the strikers and called out the National Guard
to restore order during the Boston Police Strike.
6. Created greater demand for consumer goods by Increasing sales & profits while turning luxury
items into necessities
7. Established maximum number of people who could enter the U.S. from each foreign country. –
discriminated against people from eastern & southern Europe
8. Harding promoted this desire by Americans following WWI.
9. His popularity with the American public fell when his warnings of a plot to overthrow the
government were proven wrong.
10. His secret leasing of oil-rich public lands to private oil companies resulted in the Teapot Dome
Scandal.
11. National policy of avoiding political or economic entanglements with other countries.
12. The popularity of the automobile in the 1920s resulted in this because people were no longer
tied to the city centers.
13. The United States adopted this to protect businesses from foreign competition making it
difficult for Britain and France to sell goods and repay debts to the United States.
14. Their popularity fell when several of their members were exposed as common and violent
criminals.
15. Their popularity increased partly as a result of the practice of Kleagling
16. This group used anticommunism as an excuse to harass ethnic & religious minorities.
17. This international agreement rejected war as an instrument of national policy.
18. This legislation limited the total number of immigrants to be admitted to the United States in
any single year to 150,000.
1
United States History I Review Chp 12, 13, 14
19. This political philosophy’s call for international revolution helped to fuel the fires of the Red
Scare in the United States.
20. This radical opposition to any and all forms of government led many with similar beliefs to be
harassed, arrested, & deported during the Red Scare.
21. This scandal involved the secret leasing of oil-rich lands owned by the public or the
government or the U.S. to private oil companies.
22. This was the primary cause for what some referred to as the “superficial prosperity” of the
1920s.
23. Through this, U.S. banks loaned Germany $2.5 billion so that they could pay reparations to Britain & France.
24. Victims of the Red Scare by being arrested, tried, and convicted of a crime where their guilt was never fully established.
25. Human impacts of the GD: List 5
26. A literary & artistic movement celebrating African-American culture:
27. According to Nativists, the Emergency Quota Act of 1921:
28. Act that established the maximum number of people who could enter the U.S. from each foreign country:
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
Appearance of being wealthy, when in debt:
At the beginning of the GD, who primarily ran the soup kitchens & bread lines:
Cash payments or food provided by the government to the poor:
Catch phrases used by advertisers:
Credit allowing buyer to “Pay for product over time”:
Due to the call by the Third Communist International membership numbers in the communist party in the U.S.
35. Effects of Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act: (list 4)
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
First director of FBI:
Goal of the Bonus Army:
He challenged the law that forbade the teaching of evolution:
Head of United Mine Workers:
Hoovervilles, Hoover blankets, and Hoover flags represent:
Human Effects of Great Depression: List 3
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
International disarmament treaty:
Law that raised U.S. tariffs almost 60%:
Leader of Russian Bolshevik revolution:
Loosing property because the payments can no longer be afforded:
Major problem of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation:
One of Hoover’s first projects to help the nation’s economic troubles:
Paying a small percentage of a stock’s price as a down payment & borrowing the rest. OK as long as prices continued to rise & you make a
profit, but if declined, no way to pay off loan:
Plan where U.S. government paid U.S. banks debts owed by Allies in WWI:
Political theory that calls for worldwide revolution:
Reason bank failures occurred during GD:
Reduced the total number of persons to be admitted in any 1 year to 150,000:
Result of commuters due to the automobile:
Suspicion of foreign-born people:
The day the “bottom” fell out of the market:
The first airplane to fly non-stop across the Atlantic Ocean:
The first practical use of airplanes during peace was for.
The most important influence on urban sprawl was the:
The policy of extending a nation’s authority over other countries by economic, political, or military means:
60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
The primary group that approved of prohibition:
The public reacted negatively to organized labor during the 1920s largely because of:
The reason the FBI was originally created:
These people were usually excluded from union membership:
These rose dramatically in the early 1920s.
This revolution in Russia established what form of government:
Three causes of the Dust Bowl: List 3
67. Three long-term causes of the Great Depression: List 3
68. Three reasons indicating the “boom” of the 20s wasn’t going to last: List 3
69. Three reasons young women led social revolution in the 1920s: List 3
2
United States History I Review Chp 12, 13, 14
70. Three results of the mass production of the automobile: List 3
71. Three technological advancements that change the way Americans lived: List 3
72. Unemployed WWI vets & families who marched on Washington, D.C to demand payment of $500 bonus they had been promised for military
service:
73. What Herbert Hoover did to fight the GD: (list 3)
74.
75.
76.
77.
Which country was not affected by the immigration policies of the 1920s?
Who was most dramatically affected by Black Tuesday:
Whose campaign speech slogan was a “return to normalcy”
Why did the price of farm crops go down in the 1920s:
3