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Chapter 23 Study Guide: America and the Great War Chapter Twenty-three Main Themes 1. The gradual involvement of the United States in WWI, from leaning toward the Allies since the outbreak of hostilities to eventually being drawn into full participation in the war. 2. The decisive impact of American intervention on land and sea in tipping the balance of victory for the beleaguered Allied forces. 3. The war mobilization of the Wilson administration - how they financed the war, managed the economy, and encouraged public support of the war effort. 4. The idealistic aims and bitter defeats suffered by Woodrow Wilson internationalist foreign policy after World War I. 5. The profound economic, social, and racial significance of America's involvement in the Great War. A thorough study of Chapter Twenty-three should enable the student to understand: The background factors and the immediate sequence of events that caused the United States to declare war on Germany in 1917. The contributions of the American military to Allied victory in World War I. The extent of government control of the economy during World War I and the results of that control. The use of propaganda under George Creel and the CPI to further the WWI effort. The announced American objectives in fighting the war, Wilson's Fourteen Points. Woodrow Wilson's motives, successes, and failures at the Paris Peace Conference. The circumstances that led the United States to reject the Treaty of Versailles. The economic problems the United States faced immediately after the war. The reasons for the Red Scare and the upsurge of racial unrest that afflicted postwar America in 1919. * Triple Entente * Triple Alliance * Central Powers * Sarajevo * Archduke Franz Ferdinand * U-Boat * RMS Lusitania * Gore-McLemore Resolution (1916) * Sussex Pledge * Zimmermann Telegram * Jeannette Rankin (MT) * Selective Service Act (1917) * "War to End All Wars" * Doughboys * Liberty Bonds * War Industries Board * Bernard Baruch * War Labor Board * Billy Sunday * "Liberty Cabbage" * Ludlow Massacre * Great Migration * Women's Peace Party * George Creel * Committee on Public Information * War Revenue Act (1917) * Emma Goldman * Espionage Act (1917) * Sedition Act (1918) * Roger Baldwin * American Civil Liberties Union [ACLU] * Schenck v. U. S. (1919) * Abrams v. U. S. (1919) * Wilsonianism * "Big Four" * Article 10 * "War-Guilt" clause * League of Nations * Fourteen Points * "Irreconcilables" * "Reservationists" * self-determination * Boston Police Strike (1919) * Chicago Race Riots * Marcus Garvey * Universal Negro Improvement Association [UNIA] * Red Scare * A. Mitchell Palmer * John Reed * Palmer Raids * "Red Summer" * Great Flu Pandemic of 1918 * Sacco & Vanzetti Trial * Wilsonianism * "Big Four" * Article 10 * "War-Guilt" clause * League of Nations * Fourteen Points * "Irreconcilables" * "Reservationists" * self-determination * Boston Police Strike (1919) * Chicago Race Riots