Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
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 565334083 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 565334083 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 565334083 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 565334083 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 565334083 6 of 10 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 565334083 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 7 of 10 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 565334083 8 of 10 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 565334083 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 9 of 10 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 565334083 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 10 of 10