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AP United States History Exam Review
Key Names, Events and Terms
Section 1: Exploration, Discovery, and Settlement (1492 - 1700)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
Native Americans; land bridge
Amerigo Vespucci
Conquistadores
Virginia company; Jamestown
Royal colony
Separatists
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Virginia House of Burgesses
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
Protestant Reformation
Papal line of demarcation
Encomienda system
Captain John Smith
Puritans
Pilgrims
John Winthrop
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
Christopher Columbus
Treaty of Tordesillas (1494)
Joint Stock Company
John Rolfe; Pocahontas
Plymouth Colony
Mayflower Compact
Great Migration
Section 2: The Thirteen Colonies and the British Empire (1650- 1750)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
Corporate colonies
Chesapeake colonies
Sir William Berkeley
headright system
Providence
Rhode Island
New Hampshire
Chief Metacom; King Phillip's War
New York, New Jersey, Penn.
Holy experiment
Mercantilism
Sir Edmund Andros
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
Proprietary colonies
George Calvert, Lord Baltimore
Bacon's rebellion
slavery
Anne Hutchinson
Fundamental orders of CT. (1639)
Halfway covenant
Restoration colonies
Quakers
Georgia
Navigation Acts
Triangular Trade; middle passage
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
Royal colonies
Act of Toleration (1649)
Indentured servant
Roger Williams
antinomianism
Connecticut
New England Confederation
the Carolinas
William Penn
James Oglethorpe
Dominion of New England
Slave trade
Section 3: Colonial Society in the Eighteenth Century
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
Immigration
Religious toleration
colonial families
Great Awakening
Ben Franklins
professions: religious, medicine, law
colonial governors
county government
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
English Cultural Domination
Hereditary aristocracy
subsistence farming
Jonathan Edwards
Poor Richard's Almanack
John Peter Zenger; libel case
colonial legislatures
limited democracy
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
Self-Government
social mobility
established churches
George Whitefield
sectarian; non sectarian
Andrew Hamilton
town meetings
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
Edward Braddock
Salutary Neglect
Pontiac's Rebellion (1763)
Quartering Act (1765)
Stamp Act Congress
Townshend Acts (1767)
James Otis
Crispus Attucks
Tea Act (1773)
Coercive Acts (1774)
Deism
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Section 4: Imperial Wars and Colonial Protests (1754 - 1774)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
French and Indian War
Albany Plan of Union (1754)
Whigs
Proclamation of 1763
Stamp Act (1765)
Sons and Daughters of Liberty
Writs of Assistance
Massachusetts Circular Letter
Committees of Correspondence
Boston Tea Party (1773)
Quebec Acts (1774)
Rationalism
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2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
George Washington
Peace of Paris (1763)
Parliament
Sugar Act (1764)
Patrick Henry
Declaratory Act (1766)
Samuel Adams
Boston Massacre (1770)
Gaspee Incident
Intolerable Acts
enlightenment
John Locke
1 of 10
Section 5: The American Revolution and Confederation (1774-1787)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
1st Continental Congress (1774)
John Adams
John Jay
Declaration of Rights and Grievances
Minutemen
2nd Continental Congress (1775)
Declaration of Independence
Loyalists (Tories)
Battle of Saratoga
Articles of Confederation
Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Deborah Sampson
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
Patrick Henry
George Washington
Suffolk Resolves
Paul Revere
Lexington & Concord
Olive Branch Petition
Thomas Jefferson
Valley Forge
Battle of Yorktown
Unicameral legislature
Shays’ Rebellion
Abigail Adams
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
Samuel Adams
John Dickinson
Economic sanctions
William Dawes
Battle of Bunker Hill
Thomas Pain: Common Sense
Patriots
Continentals
Treaty of Paris (1783)
Land Ordinance of 1785
Molly Pitcher
Section 6: The Constitution and the New Republic (1787 – 1800)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
43.
46.
Annapolis Convention
James Madison
John Dickinson
New Jersey Plan
Senate
electoral college system
The Federalist Papers
Congress
Edmund Randolph
Supreme Court
Tariffs: excise taxes
Pinckney Treaty
Federalist Era
Washington’s farewell address
John Adams’ Presidency
Kentucky and Virginia resolutions
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
44.
47.
Constitutional Convention
Alexander Hamilton
Checks and balances
Great Compromise (CT. Plan)
3/5ths compromise
Federalists
Bill of Rights
Cabinet
Judiciary Act (1789)
National Debt
Proclamation of Neutrality (1793)
Battle of Fallen Timbers
Democratic-Republicans
“Permanent Alliances”
XYZ Affair
Revolution of 1800
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
45.
48.
Framers of the Constitution
Gouverneur Morris
Virginia Plan
House of Representatives
Commercial compromise
Anti-Federalists
legislative branch
Henry Knox
Federal Courts
National Bank
Jay Treaty
Whiskey Rebellion
Political Parties
Two-Term tradition
Alien and Sedition Acts
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
Strict Interpretation
Judicial Review
Barbary pirates
Embargo Act (1807)
Tecumseh; prophet
War Hawks
War of 1812
Oliver Hazard Perry
Andrew Jackson
Hartford convention (1814)
Section 7: The Age of Jefferson (1800 – 1816)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
Thomas Jefferson
Lewis and Clark
Marbury v. Madison
impressments
James Madison
William Henry Harrison
Henry Clay
“Old Ironsides”
Francis Scott Key
Battle of New Orleans
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2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
Louisiana Purchase
John Marshall
Aaron Burr
Chesapeake-Leopard affair
Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810)
Battle of Tippecanoe
John C. Calhoun
Battle of Lake Erie
The Star-Spangled Banner
Treaty of Ghent (1814)
2 of 10
Section 8: Nationalism and Economic Development
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
Era of Good Feelings
Nationalism: cultural & economic
Second Bank of the U.S.
Fletch v. Peck
implied powers
Rush – Bagot Agreement (1817)
Monroe Doctrine (1823)
Erie Canal
Eli Whitney: interchangeable parts
Specialization
Market revolution
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
Sectionalism
Tariff of 1816
Panic of 1819
McCulloch v. Maryland
Tallmadge Amendment
Andrew Jackson
Lancaster Turnpike
Robert Fulton: steamboats
Lowell System: textile mills
Unions
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
James Monroe
Clay’s American system
John Marshall
Gibbons v. Odgen
Missouri Compromise (1820)
Florida Purchase treaty (1819)
National Road
Railroads
industrialization
Cotton gin
Section 9: Sectionalism
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
Sectionalism
Unions
John Deere
Germans
Nativists
“Peculiar institution”
free African Americans
the Frontier
white settlers
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
Daniel Webster
Urban life
New cities
Old Northwest
American Party (Know-Nothing)
Nat Turner
Planters; poor whites, mountain men
Native American removal
environmental damage
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
Industrial Revolution
Cyrpus McCormick
Irish immigrants
Immigration
King Cotton
Slave codes
the West
Great plains
Section 10: The Age of Jackson (1824 – 1844)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
Common man
“King Caucus”
Workingmen’s party
“Corrupt Bargain”
Andrew Jackson
Role of the president
Worchester vs. Georgia
nullification crisis
Bank of the United States
Roger Taney
Panic of 1837
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2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
universal male suffrage
popular election of president
Spoils system
Henry Clay
popular campaigning
Indian Removal Act (1830)
trail of tears
John C. Calhoun
Nicholas Biddle
Pet Banks
Martin Van Buren
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
party nominating conventions
Anti-Masonic party
John Quincy Adams
Tariff of Abominations
Revolution of 1828
Cherokee Nation v. Georgia
states’ rights
Proclamation to People of S.C.
two-party system: Dems and Whigs
Specie Circular
Log cabin and hard cider campaign
3 of 10
Section 11: Society, Culture, and Reform (1820 – 1860)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
43.
46.
49.
52.
55.
58.
61.
64.
Antebellum period
revivalism; revival meetings
Joseph Smith; Brigham Young
transcendentalists
“On Civil Disobedience”
Theodore Parker
Robert Owen: new harmony
Charles Fourier: phalanxes
William S. Mount
Hudson River School
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Washingtonians
Dorothea Dix
penitentiaries
McGuffey Readers
Letter on the Condition of Women
and the Equality of the sexes
Seneca Falls Convention (1848)
American Antislavery Society
The Liberator
Harriet Tubman
William Still
Nat Turner
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
44.
47.
Second Great Awakening
millennialism
New Zion
Ralph Waldo Emerson
feminists
utopian communities
Joseph Henry Noyes
Horace Greeley
Thomas Cole
Washington Irving
Temperance
WCTU
Thomas Gallaudet
Horace Mann
women’s right’s movement
Lucretia Mott
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
45.
48.
Timothy Dwight
Mormon Church
Romantic movements
Henry David Thoreau: Walden
Margaret Fuller
Shakers
Oneida Community
George Caleb Bingham
Frederick Church
James Fenimore Cooper
American Temperance society
asylum movement
Samuel Gridley Howe
public school movement
Sarah Grimke, Angelina Grimke
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
50.
53.
56.
59.
62.
65.
Susan B. Anthony
Abolitionism
Liberty Party
David Ruggles
David Walker
American Peace Society
51.
54.
57.
60.
63.
66.
American Colonization Society
William Lloyd Garrison
Frederick Douglas: The North Star
Sojourner Truth
Henry Highland Garnet
Sylvester Graham
Section 12: Territorial and Economic Expansion (1830 – 1860)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
Manifest destiny
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
John Tyler
Oregon territory
Rio Grande: Nueces River
Stephen Kearney
California: Bear Flag Republic
Wilmot Proviso
Walker Expedition
Great American Desert
Overland trails
farming frontier
Elias Howe
foreign commerce: exports
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
Texas
Sam Houston
Aroostook War
Fifty-Four Forty or Fight
Mexican War (1846-1847)
Winfield Scott
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848)
Franklin Pierce
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty (1850)
Mountain men
mining frontiers
urban frontier
Samuel F.B. Morse
Matthew C. Perry; Japan
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
Stephen Austin
Alamo
Webster-Ashburton Treaty
James K. Polk
Zachary Taylor
John C. Fremont
Mexican Cession
Ostend Manifesto (1852)
Gadsden Purchase (1853)
Far West
Gold rush: Silver rush
industrial technology
railroads: federal land grants
Panic of 1857
Section 13: The Union in Peril (1848 – 1861)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
free-soil movement; Free-Soil Party
popular sovereignty
Zachary Taylor
Milliard Fillmore
Harriet Tubman
Franklin Pierce
John C. Fremont
John Brown: Pottawatomie massacre
Dred Scott v. Sandford
Lincoln – Douglas debates
Harpers Ferry Raid
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2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
conscience Whigs
Lewis Cass
Compromise of 1850
Fugitive slave law
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854)
James Buchanan
Sumner-Brooks incident
Roger Taney
house-divided speech
Election of 1860
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
barnburners
Henry Clay
Stephen A. Douglas
Underground Railroad
Impending Crisis of the South
Know-Nothing party
Bleeding Kansas
Lecompton Constitution
Abraham Lincoln
Freeport Doctrine
Crittenden Compromise
4 of 10
Section 14: The Civil War (1861 – 1865)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
Fort Sumter
insurrection
Jefferson Davis
Thomas (Stonewall) Jackson
George McClellan
Fredericksburg
Shiloh
Alabama
Emancipation Proclamation
Vicksburg
Appomattox Court House
Ex Parte Milligan
Morrill Tariff Act (1861)
Pacific Railway Act (1862)
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
executive power
border states
Alexander H. Stephens
Winfield Scott
Robert E. Lee
Monitor and Merrimac
David Farragut
laird rams
13th Amendment
Sherman’s March
John Wilkes Booth
Draft Riots
Homestead Act (1862)
second American Revolution
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
habeas corpus
Confederate States of America
Bull Run
Anaconda Plan
Antietam
Ulysses S. Grant
Trent Affair
Confiscation acts
Gettysburg
election of 1864
Copperheads
greenbacks
Morrill Land Grant Act (1862)
Proclamation of Amnesty and
Reconstruction
Freedmen’s Bureau
Radical Republicans
Benjamin Wade
equal protection laws
Tenure of Office Act (1867)
15th Amendment
carpetbaggers
sharecropping
Jay Gould
Thomas Nast
Panic of 1837
Ku Klux Klan
Rutherford B. Hayes
3.
Wade-Davis Bill
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
Black Codes
Charles Sumner
Civil Rights Act of 1866
due process of law
Edwin Stanton
Civil Rights Act of 1875
Blanche K. Bruce
spoilsmen
Credit Mobilier
Liberal Republicans
Greenbacks
Force Acts (1870, 1871)
Samuel J. Tilden
Section 15: Reconstruction (1863 – 1877)
1.
Presidential Reconstruction
2.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
43.
Andrew Johnson
congressional Reconstruction
Thaddeus Stephens
14th Amendment
Reconstruction Acts (1867)
impeachment
scalawags
Hiram Revels
patronage
William (Boss) Tweed; Tweed Ring
Horace Greeley
redeemers
Amnesty Act of 1872
Compromise of 1877
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
Section 16: The Last West and the New South (1865 – 1900)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)
barbed wire
Oklahoma territory
Indian wars
George Custer; Little Big Horn
A Century of Dishonor
Ghost Dance movement
New South
Tuskegee Institute
segregation laws
Jim Crow laws
Henry Turner
National Grange movement
Wabash v. Illinois
565334083
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
cattle drives
farming frontier
Frederick Jackson Turner
Sitting Bull
Chief Joseph
assimilationists
Wounded Knee
crop lien system
Farmers' Southern Alliance
Civil Rights Cases of 1883
grandfather clause
Ida B. Wells
cooperatives
Interstate Commerce Act (1886)
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
cowboys; vaqueros
Great Plains
reservations
Crazy Horse
Helen Hunt Jackson
Dawes Act (1887)
Indian Reorganization Act (1934)
George Washington Carver
Colored Farmers' National Alliance
Plessy v. Ferguson
poll taxes, literacy tests
Booker T. Washington
Munn v. Illinois
farmers' alliances
5 of 10
Section 17: The Rise of Industrial America (1865 – 1900)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
43.
46.
Cornelius Vanderbilt
transcontinental railroads
watered stock; pools
J.P. Morgan
Bessemer Process
U.S. Steel
horizontal integration
Adam Smith
Russell Conwell
Alexander Graham Bell
George Westinghouse
concentration of wealth
white-collar workers
National Labor Union
American Federation of Labor
Pullman Strike (1894)
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
44.
47.
New York Central Railroad
Central and Union Pacific Railroad
rebates
interlocking directorates
Andrew Carnegie
John D. Rockefeller
Sherman Antitrust Act (1890)
social Darwinism
Samuel F.B. Morse
telephone
consumer goods
Horatio Alger
middle class
Knight of Labor
Samuel Gompers
Eugene V. Debs
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
45.
federal land grants
Jay Gould
Panic of 1893
William Vanderbilt
vertical integration
Standard Oil Trust
laissez-faire capitalism
gospel of wealth
transatlantic cable
Thomas A. Edison
Sears, Roebuck
upward mobility
railroad strike of 1877
Haymarket bombing (1886)
Homestead Strike (1892)
Section 18: The Growth of Cities and American Culture (1865 – 1900)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
old vs. new immigrants
urbanization
ethnic neighborhoods
suburbs
party boss
Jane Addams
Mary Baker Eddy
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
43.
Frances E. Willard
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Mark Twain
Thomas Eakins
Chicago School
Jelly Roll Morton
William Randolph Hearst
melting pot
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
44.
Ellis Island
mass transportation
ghettos
Federic Law Olmsted
Progress and Poverty
Social Gospel movement
National American Women's
Suffrage Association
Carry A. Nation
Clarence Darrow
Jack London
Ashcan School
Frank Lloyd Wright
jazz
Barnum and Bailey
cultural diversity
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
American Protective Association
skyscrapers
tenements
political machine
settlement houses
Salvation Army
Women's Christian Temperance
Movement
Anthony Comstock
W.E.B. Du Bois
Winslow Homer
Louis Sullivan
John Phillip Sousa
Joseph Pulitzer
Buffalo Bill; Annie Oakley
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
Roscoe Conkling
Mugwumps
Chester A. Arthur
Pendleton Act
Benjamin Harrison
McKinley Tariff (1890)
Panic of 1893
Section 19: National Politics in the Gilded Age (1877 – 1900)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
Gilded Age
Stalwarts
Rutherford B. Hayes
Thomas Reid
Greenback Party
billion-dollar Congress
Sherman Silver Purchase Act
(1890)
22. gold drain
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
solid South
Halfbreeds
James Garfield
Grover Cleveland
Bland-Allison Act (1878)
veterans' pensions
Populist (People's) party
23. Coxey's Army
24. William Jennings Bryan, "Cross of
Gold"
25. William McKinley
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Section 20: Foreign Policy (1865 – 1914)
1.
William Seward
2.
Alaska purchase (1867)
3.
4.
Pan-American Conference
(1889)
Cuba
De Lome Letter
Philippines
Hawaii; Liliuokalani
Anti-Imperialist League
John Hay
xenophobia
Hay-Pauncefote Treaty (1901)
great white fleet
Nicaragua
Woodrow Wilson
Jones Act (1916)
5.
James Blaine
6.
The Influence of Sea Power Upon
History
Richard Olney
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
yellow journalism
USS Maine
Theodore Roosevelt
Puerto Rico; Guam
insular cases
spheres of influence
Boxer Rebellion
Panama Canal
William Howard Taft
Henry Cabot Lodge
New Freedom
Expeditionary force
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
Spanish-American War
Teller Amendment
Rough Riders
Philippine annexation
Platt Amendment (1901)
Open Door policy
big-stick policy
Roosevelt Corollary
dollar diplomacy
Lodge Corollary
moral diplomacy
John J. (Blackjack) Pershing
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
Section 21: The Progressive Era (1901 – 1918)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
43.
Progressive Movement
scientific management
direct primary
initiative, referendum; recall
Samuel M. Jones
Teddy Roosevelt's Square Deal
Elkins Act (1903)
Pure Food and Drug Act (1906)
William Howard Taft
Bull Moose Party
Federal Reserve Act (1914)
Federal Trade Commission
Niagara Movement
Carrie Chapman Catt
National Woman's Party
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
44.
pragmatism
muckrakers
Robert La Folette
social welfare
Charles Evans Hughes
anthracite coal miners' strike (1902)
Hepburn Act (1906)
Meat Inspection Act (1906)
16th Amendment
New Nationalism
Federal Reserve Board
Federal Farm Loan Act (1916)
NAACP
Alice Paul
19th Amendment
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
45.
Frederick W. Taylor
Jacob Riis
17th Amendment
municipal reform
Hiram Johnson
Trust-busting
Upton Sinclair; The Jungle
conservation
Socialist Party of America
New Freedom
Clayton Antitrust Act (1914)
urban migration
National Urban League
Lucy Burns
League of Women Voters
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
Lusitania
propaganda
mobilization
Espionage Act (1917)
Selective Service Act
Fourteen points
League of Nations
irreconcilables
strikes; race riots
Section 22: World War I (1914 – 1918)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
neutrality
Allied powers
preparedness
George Creel
Sedition Act (1918)
Bolsheviks
Treaty of Versailles
Henry Cabot Lodge
Red Scare
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2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
submarine warfare
Central Powers
Zimmermann telegram
war agencies
Schenck v. US
American Expeditionary Force
Big Four
reservationists
Palmer Raids
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Section 23: A New Era: The 1920s
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
Warren Harding
Calvin Coolidge
Henry Ford
jazz age
Margaret Sanger
Gertrude Stein
Sinclair Lewis
Edward Hopper
Langston Hughes
Bessie Smith
Prohibition; Volstead Act
(1919)
34. Sacco and Vanzetti
37. Washington Naval Conference
(1921)
40. reparations
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
Fordney-McCumber Tariff Act (1922)
Herbert Hoover
assembly line
consumerism; cars, radio, movies
modernism
Lost Generation
Ezra Pound
Georgia O'Keeffe
Duke Ellington
Scopes Trial
organized crime
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
35. KKK
38. Kellogg-Briand Treaty (1928)
Teapot Dome
Alfred E. Smith
open shop
Charles Lindberg
fundamentalism
F. Scott Fitzgerald
T.S. Eliot
Harlem Renaissance
Louis Armstrong
Clarence Darrow
immigration quota laws
(1921, 1924)
36. disarmament
39. war debts
41. Dawes Plan (1924)
42.
Section 24: The Great Depression and the New Deal (1929 – 1939)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
Great Depression
Herbert Hoover
Reconstruction Finance Corp.
Eleanor Roosevelt
relief, recover, reform
bank holidays
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Tennessee Valley Authority
Securities and Exchange
Commission
28. Works Progress Administration
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
Black Tuesday (Oct. 29, 1929)
Hawley-Smoot Tariff (1930)
bonus march (1932)
20th Amendment
Brain Trust
repeal of Prohibition
Public Works Administration
National Recovery Administration
Federal Housing Administration
31. Huey Long
29. National Labor Relations
(Wagner) Act (1935)
32. court packing plan
34. John L. Lewis
35. sit-down strike
37. new Democratic coalition
40. dust bowl; Okies
38. John Maynard Keynes
41. John Steinbeck, The Grapes of
Wrath
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
buying on margin
Farm Board
Franklin D. Roosevelt
New Deal
1st Hundred days
fireside chats
Civilian Conservation Corps
Schechter vs. U.S.
second New Deal
30. Social Security Act (1935)
33. Congress of Industrial
Organizations
36. Fair Labor Standards Act
(1938)
39. depression mentality
42. Fair Employment Practices
Committee
43. A. Phillip Randolph
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Section 25: Diplomacy and World War II (1929 – 1945)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40.
43.
Manchuria
London Economic Conference (1933)
Cordell Hull
Adolph Hitler
neutrality acts
appeasement
quarantine speech
Wendell Willkie
Atlantic Charter
Korematsu vs. U.S.
Dwight Eisenhower
Holocaust
Douglas MacArthur
atomic bomb
United Nations
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
41.
Stimson Doctrine
Recognition of USSR
fascism
Axis Powers
Francisco Franco
Sudetenland
Cash and carry
four freedoms speech
Pearl Harbor
Harry S. Truman
D-Day
Battle of Midway
Manhattan Project
Hiroshima; Nagasaki
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
42.
good-neighbor policy
Tydings-McDuffie Act
Benito Mussolini
Nye Committee
America First Committee
Munich Conference
destroyer for bases deal
Lend-Lease Act (1941)
Office of Price Administration
Battle of the Atlantic
Battle of the Bulge
Chester Nimitz
J. Robert Oppenheimer
Yalta
Section 26: Truman and the Cold War (1945 – 1952)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
GI Bill
Harry Truman
inflation; strikes
Progressive Party
J. Strom Thurmond
Cold War
Dean Acheson
Marshall Plan
National Security Act (1947)
38th parallel
31. House Un-American Activities
Committee
34. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
baby boom
Employment Act of 1946
22nd Amendment
Henry Wallace
Thomas Dewey
Communist satellites
containment policy
Berlin Airlift
NSC-68
Smith Act (1940)
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
32. Alger Hiss
suburban growth
Council of Economic Advisors
Taft-Hartley Act (1947)
Dixiecrats
Fair Deal
Iron Curtain
Truman policy
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Korean War; U.N policy action
McCarran International Security Act
(1950)
33. Whittaker Chambers
35. Joseph McCarthy
36.
Section 27: The Eisenhower Years (1952 -1960)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
Dwight Eisenhower
John Foster Dulles
Third World
Ho Chi Minh
Suez canal crisis (1956)
Nikita Krushchev
Warsaw Pact
U-2 incident
civil rights
desegregation
Little rock 9
Martin Luther King Jr.
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference
40. Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee
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2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
Richard Nixon
Brinkmanship
Iran
Vietnam
Eisenhower doctrine
peaceful coexistence
Sputnik
Fidel Castro
Jackie Robinson
Brown vs. Board of Ed
Rosa Parks
civil rights acts of 1957, 1960
nonviolent movement
41. consumer culture
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
Highway Act (1956)
massive retaliation
Geneva Conference
domino theory
OPEC
Hungarian revolt
NASA
military-industrial complex
NAACP
Earl Warren
Montgomery bus boycott
Civil Rights Commission
sit-in movement
42. Beatniks
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Section 28: Promises and Turmoil: The 1960s
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
25.
28.
31.
34.
John F. Kennedy
Peace Corps
Bay of Pigs
flexible response
Lyndon Johnson
Barry Goldwater
Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission
March on Washington
Stokely Carmichael
Gideon vs. Wainwright
"one man, one vote"
women's movement
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
Jacqueline Kennedy
Alliance for Progress
Berlin Wall
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
Great Society
Medicare; Medicaid
24th Amendment
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
Malcolm X
Black Panthers
Miranda v. Arizona
counterculture
Betty Friedan, The Feminine
Mystique
38. Equal Rights Amendment
41. Tet offensive
44. George Wallace
24.
27.
30.
33.
36.
23.
26.
29.
32.
35.
37. Equal Pay Act (1963)
40. Tonkin Gulf Resolution
43. Robert Kennedy
New Frontier
Trade Expansion Act (1962)
Cuban Missile crisis (1962)
Warren Commission
War on Poverty
Civil Rights Act of 1964
Voting Rights Act of 1965
Congress of Racial Equality
Watts riots
Baker v. Carr
sexual revolution
National Organization for
Women
39. Vietnam War
42. hawks and doves
45. Hubert Humphrey
Section 29: Limits of a Superpower (1969 – 1980)
1.
4.
7.
10.
13.
Richard Nixon
Nixon Doctrine
detente
stagflation
Watergate; articles of
Impeachment
16. OPEC oil embargo
19. Panama Canal treaty (1978)
22. Iran hostage crisis
2.
5.
8.
11.
14.
Henry Kissinger
Kent State
SALT
southern strategy
United States v. Nixon
25. Hispanic Americans
26. American Indian Movement
28. gay liberation movement
31. Environmental Protection Agency
29. Earth day (1970)
32. Clean Water Act (1972)
17. Gerald Ford
20. Camp David Accords (1978)
23. Immigration Act (1965)
3.
6.
9.
12.
15.
Vietnamization
Pentagon Papers
New Federalism
George McGovern
War Powers Act (1973)
18. Jimmy Carter
21. Anwar Sadat; Menachem Begin
24. Immigration Reform and Control
Act (1986)
27. Indian Self-Determination Act
(1975)
30. Clean Air Act (1970)
33. Environmental Superfund
Section 30: The Conservative Resurgence (1980 – Present)
1.
4.
conservative movement
reverse discrimination
2.
5.
7.
10.
13.
16.
19.
22.
Reaganomics
"evil empire"
Mikhail Gorbachev
End of the cold war
Saddam Hussein
Americans with
Disabilities Act (1990)
Oklahoma City bombing
Madeleine Albright
Bush v. Gore
campaign-finance reform
al Qaeda; Osama bin Laden
25.
28.
31.
34.
37.
40. Iraq: WMDs
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3.
6.
Roe v. Wade
Ronald Reagan
8.
11.
14.
17.
20.
23.
Political Action Committees (PACs)
Regents of University of California v.
Bakke
Sandra Day O'Conner
Strategic Defense Initiative
glasnost, perestroika
Boris Yeltsin
Persian Gulf War (1991)
Bill Clinton; Al Gore
9.
12.
15.
18.
21.
24.
William Rehnquist
Iran-contra affair
George H. Bush; Dan Quayle
Panama Invasion (1989)
Operation Desert Storm
NAFTA
26.
29.
32.
35.
38.
e-commerce
World Trade Organization
education reform; No Child Left Behind
war on terrorism
"Axis of evil"
27.
30.
33.
36.
39.
41. Colin Powell
Clinton impeachment
George W. Bush; Dick Cheney
corporate corruption
September 11, 2001
Department of Homeland
Security
42. Operation Iraqi Freedom
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