Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
United States History 1877-Present Presidents 1877 to Present _________President___________ 18. Ulysses S. Grant 19. Rutherford B. Hayes 20. James A. Garfield 21. Chester A. Arthur 22. Grover Cleveland 23. Benjamin Harrison 24. Grover Cleveland 25. William McKinley 26. Theodore Roosevelt 27. William Howard Taft 28. Woodrow Wilson 29. Warren G. Harding 30. Calvin Coolidge 31. Herbert Hoover 32. Franklin D. Roosevelt 33. Harry S. Truman 34. Dwight D. Eisenhower 35. John F. Kennedy 36. Lyndon B. Johnson 37. Richard Nixon 38. Gerald Ford 39. James (Jimmy) Carter 40. Ronald Reagan 41. George H. W. Bush 42. William Jefferson Clinton 43. George W. Bush Political Party (Republican) (Republican) (Republican) (Republican) (Democrat) (Republican) (Democrat) (Republican) (Republican) (Republican) (Democrat) (Republican) (Republican) (Republican) (Democrat) (Democrat) (Republican) (Democrat) (Democrat) (Republican) (Republican) (Democrat) (Republican) (Republican) (Democrat) (Republican) Term in Office__ 1869-1877 1877-1881 1881 1881-1885 1885-1889 1889-1893 1893-1897 1897-1901 1901-1909 1909-1913 1913-1921 1921-1923 1923-1929 1929-1933 1933-1945 1949-1953 1953-1961 1961-1963 1963-1969 1969-1974 1974-1977 1977-1981 1981-1989 1989-1993 1993-2000 2000-2008 MAJOR EVENTS THAT OCCURRED DURING EACH PRESIDENCY 1. Ulysses S. Grant (Republican) 1869-1877 Alexander Graham Bell invents the telephone Transcontinental Railroad Completed Opening of the West The Gilded Age occurred during his presidency. The Women’s Christian Temperance Union was started in 1873. This group publicized the connection between alcohol and family violence, unemployment, poverty and disease. 2. Rutherford B. Hayes 3. James A. Garfield 1877-1881 (Republican) 1881 Opening of the West The Gilded Age occurred during his presidency. The American Federation of Labor was created in 1881. 4. Chester A. Arthur (Republican) 1876 Presidential election was disputed—he was called “His Fraudulency.” Thomas Edison invents the light bulb/electric power Opening of the West The Gilded Age occurred during his presidency. John D. Rockafeller started the Standard Oil Trust in 1879. The American Federation of Labor was created in 1881. Great Railroad Strike of 1877-1st major strike. Workers were protesting a 10% wage cut. Bland Allison Act-1878 directed the US Treasury to purchase between $2 and $4 million dollars worth of silver each month to be coined into silver dollars. (Republican) 1881-1885 Opening of the West The Gilded Age occurred during his presidency. Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 was passed. The entry of Chinese laborers into the United States was prohibited for 10 years. By 1886, the Knights of Labor had over 700,000 members. The Immigration Act of 1882 was passed during his presidency. This prohibited the immigration of criminals, paupers, the insane or others likely to become public concern. Pendleton Act of 1883 was passed. This created the Civil Service Commission with three members appointed by the President. This started the use of competitive exams to determine the merit of individuals applying for government jobs. 5. Grover Cleveland (Democrat) 1885-1889 American Federation of Labor & Knights of Labor gained power. Opening of the West The Gilded Age occurred during his presidency. Haymarket Riot 1886-AFL and Knights of Labor were at a strike. A bomb was thrown into the crowd, several were killed and many wounded. The strike was for an 8-hour work-day. He was committed to improving the economy. Populist Party was a third party that arose during his presidency. Their issues were: 1) supported free and unlimited coinage of silver, 2) supported government ownership of railroads and telegraph lines, 3) graduated income tax, 4) direct election of senators, and 5) referendum, initiative and recall methods. Presidential Act of 1886-established the succession of the presidency if death or resignation occurred. The succession line fell on the executive departments. Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 was passed. This established a 5 person agency: The Interstate Commerce Commission which required railroads to publish their rates and to be reasonable and just. A new presidential cabinet position was added in 1887: Secretary of Agriculture. Sherman Anti-trust Act of 1890 was passed. This prohibited monopolies. It declared any business combination that restrained trade illegal. (corporations) This was not enforced by the courts. Panic of 1893: was an economic depression that included argricultural depression, decline in the U.S. Gold Reserve, and unsound railroad financing practices. A railroad in Philadelphia declared bankruptcy and the gold reserve dropped. Effects of this depression: banks closed, railroad strikes, unemployment, and violence. 20% of the labor force was out of work (average is 4 to 5% unemployment). This was the highest unemployment rates in American history at the time. Coxey’s Army 1893: A populist businessman, Jacob Coxey, of Ohio advocated a works program that would put the unemployed to work. Congress did not act on this program and an army of 500 unemployed workers went to Washington D.C. demanding $500 million in fiat money to provide jobs for the unemployed. The army was surrounded by police, Coxey was arrested and the protest failed. Anti-Saloon League was founded in 1893. This group pushed for a constitutional amendment that would prohibit the production and consumption of alcohol. In 1887 an agreement was renewed to make Pearl Harbor a naval base for the United States. . 6. Benjamin Harrison (Republican) 1889-1893 American Federation of Labor & Knights of Labor gained power. Wyoming 1st state to give women the right to vote. The Gilded Age occurred during his presidency. Silver Purchase Act of 1890. The United States Treasury purchased 4.5 million ounces of silver each month. This act was repealed. Homestead Strike (1892) one of the most violent strikes in the USA. Carnegie Steel announced pay cuts for unionized steel workers who were affiliated with the AFL. 7 lives were lost. Pan American Conference 1889-1890. 18 American (n & s) met in Washington D.C. to discuss the reduction of tariffs. 7. Grover Cleveland (Democrat) 1893-1897 Pullman Strike 1894 The Gilded Age Munn v. Illinois Pullman Strike—1894-Pullman Palace Car Company cut wages 25% and the workers went on strike. Plessy v. Ferguson 1896- separate but equal facilities was constitutional. Coxey’s Army 1894. 8. Benjamin Harrison (1889-1893) Grandson of President William Henry Harrison McKinley Tariff Act 1890 Sherman Silver Purchase Act 1890 Disability Pension Act 1890 Admission of 6 states 1889-1890 Pan-American Conference 1890 The National and Women’s Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was formed. This agency fought for the right for women to vote. 9. William McKinley (Republican) 1897-1901 The Gilded Age occurred during his presidency. He defeated William Jennings Bryan, democrat, in the election of 1896. The democrats and the populist received 47.7% of the votes. Spanish American War occurred during his presidency. “Splendid Little War of 1898”. Spain v. United States, U.S. Maine, yellow journalism. Events that led to the Spanish American War: de Lome letter, sinking of the Maine and yellow journalism. Effects of the war: Teller Amendment (made Cuba a protectorate of the United States), Guantanamo Base was established as a USA naval base in Cuba, Foraker Act 0f 1900 and Jones Act of 1917 made Puerto Rico an unincorporated territory of the United States, Roosevelt Corollary was started (made USA the international police), Hay-Bunau Varilla Treaty: Panama leased the Panama Canal to USA, and the united States acquired Guam as a colony. His presidency brought about tariff increases, the gold standard and economic betterment. He raised tariffs to 57%, the highest ever. The Gold Standard of 1900: The gold dollar of 25.8 grams became the standard unit of value. The gold reserve was established at $150,000,000 for redemption in paper currency. He was shot by Leon Czolgosz, an anarchists on September 6, 1901. He died and Theodore Roosevelt became President. He was shot in Buffalo, New York, while at a Pan-American Exposition. Populist Party started to fade. 10.Theodore Roosevelt (Republican) st He was the 1 Progressive President. 1901-1909 During the Spanish American War he was a Rough Rider and fought at San Juan Hill. He was also an imperialist who believed in Manifest Destiny. President during the Progressive Movement. He was a “Progressive President.” Progressive beliefs: 1) sought to end abuses in America-- such as monopolies, 2) believed in the advancement of the United States, 3) believed that institutions that were corrupt needed to be reformed, 4) government needed to be a key player in establishing order in society, 5) believed that the government needed to address problems in the nation, states, and communities, and 6) sought to give the people more political power. He called journalist “muckrakers”. He said that they raked the muck around his feet to report on. They were strong advocates of yellow journalism. Upton Sinclair’s –The Jungle is an example. This book addressed the horrors in the meat packing industry and as a result the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act was passed. Muckrakers brought about social change. City politics started with 5 commissioners that are each responsible for government within their territory or department. The commission hires a manager to manage the city government. Initiative was started—voters propose laws to the legislature. Referendum allows voters to collect signatures if they feel a law is bad. Upon the collection of signatures the issue is submitted to popular vote for repeal. The recall method was started. This allows voters to remove an elected individual before their term is complete. Direct Primaries were started. This method allows voters to select candidates running for major parties/ seeking political office. Teddy Roosevelt ruled against the railroads breaking up a trust in Northern Securities v. United States in 1902. This ruling earned him the title of “TrustBuster. “He created the department of Commerce and Labor in 1903. This agency created to regulate and enforce economic regulations. Muller v. Oregon 1908-A Supreme Court case that rule a working day for women was limited to 10 hours. Meat Inspection Act of 1906 was passed. All meat that was shipped was to be inspected to make sure that it was fit for human consumption. He was a conservation president. He started many state and national parks. He started the Forrest Reserve Act setting aside 150,000,000 acres for national parks. Newlands Reclamation Act set aside money to help irrigate land in western states. Inland Waterways Commission was an agency started by Roosevelt that studied the rivers and their soil to try to produce water power development. He also started the National Conservation Commission and held a White House Conference for our government officials to promote conservation. He was a outdoorsman and loved hunting. He advocated the building and completion of the Panama Canal. After the Pinchot-Ballinger Affair under the Taft administration the Republican Party was split. Roosevelt decided to run for a 3rd term in the Election of 1912. Woodrow Wilson was the Democrat, Taft ran as a Republican, Theodore Roosevelt ran as the Progressive candidate and Eugene Debs ran as a Socialist. The number of candidates led to the victory of Woodrow Wilson. At a political event Teddy Roosevelt was shot while giving a speech. He continued to give the speech with his hand on the wound. He later said it was nothing, that he “was as strong as a bull-moose.” Many people said he was the Bull-Moose Candidate. 11. William Howard Taft (Republican) He was the second Progressive President. Panama Canal was almost completed during his term as president. He defeated William Jennings Bryan for the presidency. The Pinchot-Ballinger Affair erupted during his presidency. The chief of the U.S. Forestry Service Gifford Pinchot accused Secretary of the Interior Richard Ballinger of allowing private interests to exploit coal mines and timber areas for personal profit. Ballinger had removed over 1million acres of forest land from a reserved list. Taft supported Ballinger and dismissed Pinchot for asking for a governmental investigation. This split the Republican party. He started Dollar Diplomacy following the Spanish American War. He established business interest overseas. His policy said substitute bodies with dollars. He meant send economic help and not troops. 12.Woodrow Wilson (Democrat) He was the last Progressive President. 1909-1913 1913-1921 He supported a policy called “New Freedom.” He wanted to eliminate monopolies. He was opposed to big businesses. Wilson wanted anti-trust reform, currency reform and income tax reform. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 was passed. This established a currency system that would respond to the needs of the economy. This act created 12 districts with a Federal Reserve bank in each district. The Federal Trade Commission Act was passed in 1914. This created a 5 member Federal Trade Commission to investigate the operations of corporations. Clayton Anti-Trust Act of 1914 was passed. This made more acts illegial for corporations. The Keating Owen Act of 1916 forbade the shipment of goods made by companies employing children under the age of 14 and by mines that employed children under the age of 16. Federal Farm Loan Act in 1916 created a Federal Farm Loan Board and 12 regional Farm Loan Banks that made loans to individuals at a very low interest rates. Smith-Hughes Act of 1917 encouraged high schools to offer vocational courses. The 16th Amendment (income tax), 17th Amendment (direct election of senators by the people), 18th Amendment (prohibiting alcohol) and the 19th Amendment (women’s suffrage) were passed during Wilson’s presidency. World War I ----(Central Powers v. Allies) Wilson declared the U.S.A. as a neutral nation. After the sinking of the Lusitania (British passenger liner that had 128 Americans who were killed). The interception of the Zimmerman Telegram pushed the USA into war. Even in neutrality the USA was a nation moving toward war. Under Wilson the National Defense Act of 1916 was passed which increased the regular army from 175,000 to 450,000. The merchant Marine Act was passed in 1916. This created a shipping board. The Selective Service Act of 1917 required all men between the ages of 21 and 30 to register for the army. To finance the war, Wilson used Liberty Bonds. The War Revenue Act of 1917 also established a graduated income tax. The Committee of Public Information was established to mobilize public opinion through all media. The War Industries Board developed new industries to support the war effort. The Fuel Administration was created to allocate resources that were scarce. The Food Administration also dealt with rationing of foods. The National War Labor Board was established to mediate disputes in agencies that were vital to the war effort. Espionage Act of 1917: made it illegal to place the government in “Clear & Present Danger”. A person could be fined $10,000 and 20 years of imprisonment. Schenck v. United States—Mr. Schenck mailed 16,000 letters to men that were drafted to go to war and urged them to not show up. He was tried for sedition and his case limited a persons 1st Amendment rights when an individual places the government in clear and present danger. This led to the Sedition Act of 1918. This said that it was illegal to interfere with the sale of liberty bonds or writing and speaking out against the government. Treaty of Versailles-ended World War I. This was signed in 1919. Woodrow Wilson drafted the 14 Point Plan that was incorporated into the treaty. The main 4 men at the Paris Peace Conference were: David Lyold George (Prime Minister to Great Britain), Georges Clemenceau (President of France), Vittorio Orlando (Prime Minister of Italy) and Woodrow Wilson (President of the United States). As a result of World War I, the league of Nations was formed in 1919. This was the first international peace keeping organization. The United States Congress did not ratify the Versailles Treaty and the United States failed to enter the league of Nations. 1916 Janette Rankin became the first woman in Congress representing Montana. She voted against going into World War I. She was an isolationist. 19th Amendment passed Passage of the 18th Amendment to the United States Constitution. This prohibited the manufacture, sell and transportation of alcohol in the United States. This started a period called Prohibition. Carrie Chapman Catt became president of the National and American Women Suffrage Association. They pushed for the 19th Amendment. In 1920 the 19th Amendment was passed. This was a federal amendment that granted women the right to vote. 13.Warren G. Harding 14.Calvin Coolidge 1921-1923 (Republican) 1923-1929 (Republican) 1929-1933 Declining economy Speculation Buying on margin Laissez-faire politics 15.Herbert Hoover (Republican) The Roaring Twenties Laissez Faire politics Laissez Faire Politics Great Depression Repeal of the 18th Amendment. 21st Amendment to the US Constitution ended Prohibition. 16.Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) New Deal ABC Agencies to employ the unemployed World War II Developing the Atomic Bomb World War II Conferences Dies while in office 1933-1945 17. Harry S. Truman Dropping of the Atomic Bomb End of World War II Start of Cold War Truman Doctrine Marshall Plan 1949-1953 (Democrat) Turkey, Greece, Iran—enforces Truman Doctrine Berlin Airlift Page 4 . 18.Dwight D. Eisenhower 19.John F. Kennedy (Democrat) 1961-1963 (Democrat) 1963-1969 (Republican) 1969-1974 (Republican) 1974-1977 Civil Rights Act of 1964 Voting Rights Act of 1965 Civil Rights Movement Vietnam War 21.Richard Nixon 1953-1961 Televised Presidential debates against Nixon New Frontier Cuban Missile Crisis Assassinated in November in Dallas, Texas by Lee Harvey Oswald. 20.Lyndon B. Johnson (Republican) Cold War Civil Rights Act of 1957 Republican Conservatism Korean War 1950’s Growing Economy Firing of General MacArthur Civil Rights Act of 1960 National Defense Education Act Brown v. Board of Education Montgomery Bus Boycott Jackie Robinson—integration major league baseball Little Rock Arkansas School Incident Kent State Killings Vietnam War Watergate Crisis 22.Gerald Ford Unelected President Pardoned Nixon Page 5 23.James (Jimmy) Carter Energy Crisis Inflation (Democrat) 1977-1981 24.Ronald Reagan (Republican) 1981-1989 Iran Contra Affair—ends Hostages released Desert Storm 25.George H. W. Bush (Republican) 1989-1993 26.William Jefferson Clinton (Democrat) 1993-2000 27. George W. Bush (Republican) 2000-2008 United States History Key Terms by Decade & Events 1. Expansion of American Industry (1850-1900) Productivity Transcontinental Railroad Telegraph Bessemer Process Mass Production Robber Barons Andrew Carnegie Social Darwinism Monopoly Cartel Trust Sherman Anti-Trust Act Consolidation Economies on scale Business Cycle Division of Labor Socialism Knights of Labor American Federation of Labor Collective bargaining Haymarket Riot Homestead Strike Pullman Strike Page 6 2. Looking to Westward Movement (1860-1900) Morril -Land Grant Homestead Act Exodusters Sitting Bull Massacre at Wounded Knee Sooners Bonanza farms Great Plains Bland-Allison Act Populists Progressive income Tax Turner’s Frontier Thesis reservations Battle of Little Bighorn boomers dry farming Long drive deflation Grange Interstate Commerce Act Populism Buffalo soldiers 3. The Gilded Age (1870-1915) Gilded Age Laissez Faire Blue laws Pendleton Civil Service Act Munn v. Illinois steerage Quarantine Chinese Exclusion Act Segregation Gentlemen’s Agreement Alien suburbs Ghetto Restrictive covenants Political Machines Graft Boss Tweed/Tweed Ring Nativism Prohibition Temperance Movement Social Gospel Movement Settlement House Jane Addams Lucretia Mott Elizabeth Cady Stanton Elizabeth Blackwell Clara Barton literacy Assimilation Philanthropists Booker T. Washington W.E. B. Du Bois Niagara Movement yellow journalism Ragtime poll tax Grandfather clause Jim Crow Laws Plessy v. Ferguson lynching NAACP Tweed Ring William Jennings Bryan Cross of Gold Speech Page 7 4. Becoming a World Power (1890-1913) Imperialism Nationalism Banana Republic Arbitration William Randolph Hearst Jingoism Spanish American War “Ä splendid little war” Spheres of Influence Open Door Policy Concession Roosevelt Corollary Panama Canal Dollar Diplomacy Anti-imperialists Causes of the Spanish American War Effects of the Spanish American War 5. The Progressive Movement (1890-1920) Municipal Injunctions Muckrakers Home rule Social Welfare Programs Florence Kelley Upton Sinclair The Jungle Initiative Referendum Recall Direct Primary Australian Ballot Sherman Anti-trust Act National Reclamation Act United States Forest Service Hepburn Act Pure Food and Drug Act Meat Inspection Act Department of Labor th 16 Amendment 17th Amendment National Park Service 18th Amendment Conservatism New Nationalism Clayton Anti-trust Act Federal reserve System Henry Davis Thoreau Civil Disobedience National Women’s Suffrage Association American Women’s Suffrage Association 19th Amendment 6. World War I Causes of World War I Effects of World War I Militarism U-Boat Zimmerman Note Selective Service Act Central Powers Allies Stalemate Sussex Pledge Russian Revolution American Expeditionary Force Page 8 Convoy Genocide Price controls Alvin York Liberty Bonds Rationing Daylight Savings time Vigilantes Self-determination Reparations Sedition 14 Point Plan League of Nations Versailles Treaty 7. The Roaring Twenties Red Scare Communism Palmer Raids Disarmament Teapot Dome Scandal Consumer Economy Assembly line 19th Amendment Charles Lindbergh Gertrude Ederle Mass media Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington Prohibition Al Capone Fundamentalism Clarence Darrow KKK Marcus Garvey 8. The Great Depression 1929-1933 Welfare capitalism Speculation Black Tuesday Business Cycles Hoovervilles Dorthea Lange The Grapes of Wrath Dust Bowl Hawley Smoot Tariff Franklin D. Roosevelt Russian Revolution Schenck v. United States Isolationism Quota Kellogg-Briand Pact Installment Plan Flapper Demographics Jack Dempsy Amelia Earhart Jazz Age Harlem Renaissance Lost Generation Speakeasies Bootlegging Scopes Trial William Jennings Bryan Scottsboro Boys Garvey Movement Buying on Margin Dow Jones Industrial Average Stock Market Crash Great Crash Dust Bowl John Steinbeck Dust Storms 21st Amendment Bonus Army Page 9 8. The New Deal 1933-1938 The New Deal Goals: Relief, Recovery & Reform ABC agencies: Works Progress Administration, Civilian Conservation Corps, Public Works Administration, etc. Tennessee Valley Authority Eleanor Roosevelt’s role Agricultural Adjustment Act Social Security Administration National Recovery Administration American Liberty League Nationalism National debt Coalition Sit-down strikes Fireside Chats 9. World War II 1939-1945 Causes of World War II Effects of World War II Totalitarian government Mussolini Allied Powers Blitzkrieg Battle of Britain Pearl Harbor Cash-n-carry policy The Battle of the Atlantic Invasion of Italy George Marshall D-Day Yalta Conference Battle of the Coral Sea Doo Little Raids Battle of Iwo Jima Kamikazes Dropping the bomb Nazis Kristallnacht War Refugee Board Office of War Mobilization Great Arsenal for Democracy War Bonds Office of War Information Rosie the Riveter Ethnic make-up of military A. Phillip Randolph Fascist Government Hitler Stalin Axis Powers Appeasement Sitzkrieg Japan’s empire Lend-Lease Act Atlantic Charter North Africa Campaign Battle of Stalingrad Carpet bombing Battle of the Bulge Bataan Death March Battle of Midway Battle of Guadalcanal Philippine Campaigns Manhattan Project The Holocaust Concentration camps Wannsee Conference Office of Price Administration Liberty Ships Wildcat strikes Deficit Spending Victory Garden Women’s role in the war Double V Campaign Internment Camps Page 10 10. The Cold War Differences at Yalta Conference 2 Superpowers after WWII Potsdam Conference Iron Curtain Stalin Harry Truman George Marshall Cold War Containment Policy Truman Doctrine Times that Containment was enforced Marshall Plan Berlin Airlift NATO Warsaw Pact Loyalty Program HUAC Hollywood Ten Blacklist Julius and Ethel Rosenberg McCarran Walter Act Korean War (dates) Causes of the war Effects of the war 38th parallel General Douglas MacArthur Senator Joseph McCarthy McCarthyism Domino Theory Arms Race Brinkmanship ICBMs Sputnik Per capita income Conglomerate Franchise Transistor radio Advances in Medicine Baby boom GI Bill Suburban Explosion Rock-n-Roll Taft-Hartley Act Election of 1948 Truman’s Fair Deal Dwight D. Eisenhower Modern Republicanism Checkers Speech National defense Education Act Jackie Robinson Elizabeth Eckford Little Rock Arkansas School Incident 10.The 1960’s John F. Kennedy’s Presidency Election of 1960 New Frontier Bay of Pigs Presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson Volunteers in Service to America Medicaid Housing and Urban Development Apportionment Berlin Wall Alliance for Progress Space Program Death of John Kennedy Cuban Missle Crisis Warren Commission Great Society Medicare Elementary and Secondary Education Act Miranda Rule Bomb Shelters Peace Corps Page 11 Kennedy’s involvement in Vietnam Johnson’s involvement in Vietnam New Left Doves Conscientious Objectors Sexual Revolution Drug Revolution Hawks Teach-ins Counterculture Woodstock 11..Vietnam War 1960-1975 Causes of the Vietnam War Effects of the Vietnam War Geneva Conference Vietcong Ho Chi Minh Trail Tet Offensive Saturation bombing My Lai Massacre Vietnamization How did America withdraw from Vietnam Vietnam Veterans Memorial Robert McNamara Ho Chi Minh Gulf of Tonkin Resolution Agent orange Napalm Pentagon Papers Paris Peace Talks 12.Civil Rights Movement Martin Luther King, Jr. Interracial Congress on Racial Equality Non-violent protest Anne Moody Malcolm X Albany Movement James Meredith Montgomery Bus Boycott March on Washington Civil Rights Act of 1964 Civil Rights Act of 1957 Black Nationalists De facto segregation Feminism Roe v. Wade Cesar Chavez United Farm Workers American Indian Movement NAACP National Urban League Southern Christian Leadership Conference Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee Freedom Rides Sit-in Ole Miss Integration Letters from a Birmingham Jail Rosa Parks I Have A Dream Speech Voting Rights Act of 1965 Civil Rights Act of 1960 Nation of Islam De Jure segregation National Organization for Women Equal Rights Amendment 1972 Page 12 Latino Movement Japanese American Citizens League Environmental Movement 13.Nixon’s Presidency Poor People’s Campaign Deficit Spending Silent majority 1st Moon Landing Détente Nuclear proliferation Spiro Agnew’s resignation Watergate Trial Impeachment Oil Crisis OPEC Kent State Henry Kissinger Relations with China Watergate Scandal CREEP Watergate Chronology 14. Gerald Ford’s Presidency How did Ford become president? Nixon’s Pardon Stagflation War Powers Act Economic Problems under Ford recession 14.Jimmy Carter’s Presidency Barbara Jordan Camp David Accords Recognition of China Deregulation Three Mile Island 1980 Election Shuttle Diplomacy Panama Canal Decision Iran Hostage Crisis Energy Crisis Affirmative Action 15.Ronald Reagan’s Presidency (1980-1992) Reagan’s Conservatism Televangelists Tax cuts Strategic Defense Initiative AIDS S & L Scandal INF Treaty Entitlements Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty New Right Coalition Supply-side Economics New Federalism 1984 Olympic games Sandra Day O’Conner Iran-Contra Affair The Cold War ends 1988 Election Persian Gulf War