Chapters 5-9
Terms
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- movement that supported science and technology, based on Protestant moral beliefs and supported by farmers, laborers, industrialists, and merchants
- progressivism
- journalists' nickname from Roosevelt
- muckrakers
- names of 3 magazines that were popular in the muckraker movement
- McClures, Collier's, Cosmopolitan
- Author of The Octopus, a s 1901 novel about Southern Pacific railroads and their treatment of sheep ranchers
- Frank Norris
- Author of Shame of Cities, which complained about the bankers anf corporations that bought their own laws in big cities
- Lincoln Steffens
- Author of the Jungle (1906), which unearthed the injustices in Chicago's meat-packing industry
- Sinclair Lewis
- Political party/movement that wanted society to control government, factories, and farmland; antagonized capitalism, preached class welfare, and made Americans fear it after the Russian Revolution
- socialism
- leader of the Socialist Party of America
- Eugene Debs
- Author of Women & Economics; advocated child care centers and common dining facilities in the workplace
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman
- two famous birth control advocates
- Mary Ware Dennett and Margaret Sanger
- Company that contained a fire in 1911 that killed 146 workers
- Triangle Shirtwaist Company
- PA native who helped write Illinois factory inspection laws
- Florence Kelley
- court case in which Florence Kelley secured a ten-hour work-day maximum
- Muller vs. Oregan
- Nation American WOmen's Suffrage Association leader
- Carrie Chapman Catt
- National Women's Party leader
- Alice Paul
- Black activist who called blacks to accept low status and look for economic power
- Booker T. Washington
- Black acitivst who attended the Niagra Falls movement to demand full civil rights and an end to segregation
- W.E.B. du Bois
- white progressive also present at Niagra Falls, who helped to create the NAACP
- Jane Adams
- Ohio manufacturer and mayor who made major reforms
- Samuel "Golden Rule" Jones
-
system of government in which five commissioners are chosen from their respective fields (i.e., police, fire, public works, etc.)
city where it was first used -
Commission system
Galveston, TX -
system of government in which voters elect a council and the council elects a manager
city where it was first used -
City-manager plan
Staunton, VA - system of governmenti n which the voters elect several officials who share responsibilities
- mayor-council plan
- Wisconsin governor who institutes direct primary, initiative, rfeendum, Legislative Reference Bureau, recall
- Robert La Follette
- governor of California who instituted direct primary, initiative, referendum, recall, a non-partisan ballot, and cross-filing; tried to stop aliens from owning California land in 1913
- Hiram Johnson
- "laboratory of democracy"
- Wisconsin
- act that banned impure and mislabeled foods
- Pure Food and Drug Act
- act passed in 1906 that required safe meat to be sold
- Meat INspection Act
- 1st federal regulatory agency, created to set railroad rates
- Interstate Commerce Commission
- architect from CHicago who coined the terms "form follows function", "organic simplicity", and "prairie style"; worked in Unity Temple (oak Park, IL)
- Frank Lloyd Wright
- 1st president to cultive personal popularity
- Theodore Roosevelt
- act that outlawed monopolies, used by teh Attorney General against teh North Securities Company
- Sherman Antitrust Act
- act that forbade rebates
- Elkins Act
- act that gave the Interstate Commerce COmmission the power to set maximum railroad rates
- Hepburn Act
- Leader and Group involved in the COal Strike of 1902
- United Mine Workers of America, John Mitchell
- company that played workers against each other, refused to recognize the union
- J.P. Morgan trust
- system in which a party's candidates are chosen by the voters instead of by party members at a convention
- direct primary
- reform that allowed voters to introduce laws through petitions and to enact laws directly by a popular vote
- initiative
- reform that allowed citizens to approve or reject a proposed law or put forth a new one
- referendum
- reform that allowed voters to remove an official from office
- recall
- term for Roosevelt's act of breaking monopolies through law suits
- trustbusting
- method of settling disgreements between employers and workers through a legally binding decision by an impartial person or group
- arbitration
- group during the western water rights battle that promoted mining, logging, and grazing on federal lands
- conservationists
- group during the western water rights battle that advocated the protection of scenic places and the creation of parks and reserves
- preservationalists
- the restoration to productivity of dry lands by irrigation
- reclamation
- two main figures in the advocation of reservoirs to store runoff and rain for irrigation
- John Wesley Powell, Frederick Haynes Newell
- Roosevelt's advisor on natural resources (conservationist)
- Gifford Pinchot
- founder of the Sierra Club (reservationist)
- John Muir
- Location that San Franciscan conservationists wanted to flood for the city water supply, which caused a huge conflict with the preservationists
- Hetch-Hetchy Valley
- Winner of the 1908 presidential election who alienated conservationists
- William Howard Taft
-
Secretary of the Interior under Taft who favored state or private control of Western development
(Pinchot disagreed, and Taft fired Pinchot) - Richard A. Ballinger
-
Party created by the Republican split
(nicknamed the "Bull Moose" party) - Progressive Party
- Winner of the 1912 Presidential election on the platform of "New Freedom"
- Woodrow Wilson
- two taxes passed during the early 1900s
-
Payne-Aldrich Tariff
Underwood Tariff - act creating 12 districts, each with its own federal reserve bank; all national banks were required to become members
- Federal Reserve Act
- act that ended unfair business competition in interstate commerce
- Federal Trade Commission Act
- act that freed unions from antitrust actions and barred interlocking directorates
- Clayton Antitrust Act
- laws making an employer pay a worker who is injured or sontracts a disease because of his or her job
- workmen's compensation
- state in which workmen's compensation became most popular
- New Jersey
- Wilson's record of reform proved uneven in whose favor?
- Southern Democrats (against blacks)
- people who wanted more land for America
- expansionists
- Nickname for the $7.2 million purchase of Alaska (before they discovered that it was birmming with oil)
- Seward's Folly
- policy that guided U.S. action in Latin America, stating that Americans are not to be considered subjects for future European colonization; in return, the U.S. would not interfere in Europe's internall affairs (obivously, this was not going to happen)
- Monroe Doctrine
- President of Mexico who expelled Archuduke Maxmilian during the Mexican War
- Benito Juarez
- Who opened Japanese ports to America?
- Matthw Perry
- Protestant who wrote "our country" and encouraged foreign missions
- Josiah Strong
- Hawaiian queen who refused to let the missionaries take over
- Liluokalani
- policy of extending rule of one country over another
- imperialism
- policy that allowed all countries in West AFrica to trade on equal terms
- Open Door Policy
- wrote Open Letter to Belgium after the U.S. wound up supporting a brutal regime in the Congo to get the Open Door Policy
- George Washington Williams
- Author of "The Influence of Sea Power" to encourage a better navy
- Alfred Thayer Mahan
- Secretary of the Navy
- Benjamin Tracy
- Leader of exiles in Cuba that gained American support for Cuban independence
- Jose Marti
- Spanish general sent to Cuba in 1896
- General Valeriano Weyler
- herding of the civilian population into fortified towns
- reconcentration
- writer for the "world" who used large headlines and sensational stories, exaggerating the terrors in Cuba
- Joseph Pulitzer
- writer for the "Journal" who said, "you furnish pictures and I'll furnish the war"
- William Randolph Hearst
- title for exaggerated journalism
- Yellow Journalism
- Winner of the 1900 presidenital election
- McKinley
- letter from the Spanish minister to the Spanish embassy of the U.S., criticizing the president; it was published by Cuban rebels
- De Lome Letter
- U.S. naval ship destroyed in the Havanna Harbor
- Maine
- pledged that the U.S. wouldn't annex Cuba once the island was free
- Teller Ammendment
- Date that Spain declared war
- April 24, 1898
- Hong Kong naval commander who blew the heck out of Manila Bay
- George Dewey
- Teddy Roosevelt's cowboy buddies, who fought in Cuba without horses but still succeeded immensely
- Rough Riders
- treaty in which the U.S. got Puerto Rico, Guam, and sold teh Philippines
- Treaty of Paris
- city where the Rough Riders successfully attacked
- Santiago
- Senator from Massachussetts who supported an American empire
- Henry Cabot Lodge
- senator from Indiana who supported Philippine annexation
- Albert Beveridge
- Democratic presidenital candidate who opposed annexation of the Philippines, along with Andrew Carnegie and Mark Twain
- William Jennings Bryan
- founder of the Republican Party who opposed annexation of the Philippines
- George Hoar
- declared that Cuba could not make a treay with a foreign power, and that the U.S. could intervene with political affairs and naval bases
- Platt Amendment
- U.S. base in Cuba that's still around today
- Guantanamo Bay
- act making Puerto Ricans citizens of Puerto Rico but not of the U.S.
- Foraker Act
- supreme court case in which possessed lands of the U.S. were not granted the same rights as the states
- Insular cases
- act granting Puerto Ricans an upper house of legislature
- Jones Act
- Year in which PR became a self-governing commonwealth
- 1952
- rebel who established a provisional governmenti n the Philippines and fought for independence
- Emilio Aguinaldo
- name for Aguinaldo's attempts (costs: 3 years, 4000 American lives, and $170)
- Philippine Insurrection
- areas where European powers enjoyed special trade rights
- spheres of influence
- secretary of state who established the open door policy, but Europe didn't care
- John Hay
- secret society that tried to expel missionaries from China
- Boxer Rebellion
- repayment for damage or loss- the U.S. required it of China after the Boxer Rebellion, eventually returning some of it
- indemnity
- response to discrimination, and act that barred Chinese immigration to Hawaii, the Philippines, and Cuba
- Chinese Exclusion Act
- northern, coal-rich region of China sought by Japan and Russia
- Manchuria
- the first Asian victory over a European power; gave Japan some serious political power
- Russo-Japanese War
- U.S. warship was had problems getting home after the Spanish-American War
- Oregon
- French Colombia attempted to dig a canal here, but failed
- Isthmus of Panama
- John Hay got permission from Britain to build a canal in this agreement
- Hay-Pauncefote Treaty
- strip of Panamanian territory ten miles wide that the U.S. wanted to build its grand canal
- Canal Zone
- Treaty that gave the U.S. control of the Canal Zone
- Hay-Banau-Varilla Treaty
- U.S. Army Surgeon who led the campaign to rid the swamps of the Anopheles mosquito (malaria) and the Aedes mosquito (yellow fever)
- William Gorgas
- U.S. purchase from Denmark that fortified the Canal Zone
- Virgin Islands
- Roosevelt's addition to the Monroe Doctrine: "chronic wrongdoing, or an impotence which results in a general loosening of the ties of civilized society, may in America, as elsewhere, ultimately require intervention by some civilized nation"
- Roosevelt corollary
- nickname for the U.S. loans to many small countries, eventually acquiring plantations, markets, railroads, and banks in Central America
- Dollar diplomacy
- dictator of Mexico who supported foreign investment, of which the U.S. had taken advantage
- Porifirio Diaz
- U.S.-educated leader who was killed in 1913
- Francisco Madero
- self-declared president of MExico
- Victoriano Huerta
- Port seized by Wilson that caused Huerta's regime to collapse
- Veracruz
- successor of Huerta who faced revolts all over the place
- Venustiano Carranza
- revolutionary who tried to topple Carranza and killed 17 in New Mexico
- Pancho Villa
- American general who... uh... *punished* Pancho Villa
- John Pershing
- people who believed that all wars should be outlawed
- pacifists
- Swedish discoverer of dynamite who established an international peace prize
- Alfred Nobel
- French region taken by Germany during the Franco-Prussian war that both nations still really liked in the early 1900s
- Alsace-Lorraine
- Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy (WWI)
- Triple Alliance
- Great Britain, France, Russia (WWI)
- Triple Entente
- Another name for the Triple Alliance
- Central Powers
- Another name for the Triple Entente
- Allies
- intense feeling of patriotism or the desire for national independence
- nationalism
- region of the Ottoman Empire that revolted frequently (Greece, Serbia, Montenegro, Romania, Bulgaria)
- Balkan Peninsula
- Austrian heir to the throne who was assassinated by a Slavic nationalist in 1914
- Archduke Franz Ferdinand
- Countries on which Germany declared war after the assassination of Franz Ferdinand
- Russia, France, Belgium, and eventually Great Britain, Japan, and a couple little ones
- Turkish repression of Armenians who helped the Russians
- Armenian Massacre
- British ocean liner sunk by a German torpedo in 1915
- Lusitania
- Germany's promise not to sink passenger or merchant ships (1916)
- Sussex Pledge
- Note asking Mexico to enter World War I ; it was intercepted; outraged Americans
- Zimmerman note
- Progressive republican senator who voted against war
- George Norris
- First female house member, also voting against the war
- Jeannette Rankin
- minority socialist party in Russia led by VLadimir Lenin
- Bolsheviks
- sector in France led by Alvin York that was a huge Allied success
- Meuse-Argonne
- When was the armistice ending the was signed??
- 11th day, 11th month, 11th hour, 1918
- Committee created early in World War I to weild power over the economy
- War Industries Board
- Head of the War Industries Board
- Bernard Baruch
- Food administrator and future president
- Herbert Hoover
- employed a power-driven conveyor that carried each element of a product past workers
- assembly line
- the first mass movement of black southerners to northern and western cities
- Great Migration
- weekly Chicago black newspaper that contributed to migration
- the Defender
- nationalist group formed in 1910 to aid the adjustment of African Americans to cities
- Urban League
- factory city that was home to a race riot and discrimination against blacks
- East St. Louis
- Wilson's list of war aims, designed to seize the initiative from the Bolsheviks
- Fourteen Points
- the right of an ethnic group to determine what form of government it should have, without reference to the wishes of any other nations
- self-determination
- payments made by a defeated country to compensate for war damages
- reparations
- committee created to correct the injustices of the WWI peace treaty
- League of Nations
- Mineral-rich region that Germany surrendered to France
- Saar Valley
- territory or colony taken from defeated nations and placed under the control of the victors
- mandate
- head of the senate committee on foreign relations
- Henry Cabot Lodge
- Author of "The Promise of American Life"
- Herbet Croly
- Treaty that ended WWI
- Versailles
- Women's peace organization led by Jane Adams
- Women's Internaitonal League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF)
- Location of a huge WILPF meeting
- Zurich, Switzerland
- policy in which a nation avoids both political alliances and economic relationships with other nations
- isolationism
- Head of the United Mine Workers during the 1919 strike
- John Lewis
- U.S. Attorney General who secured a court order claiming that the strike was illegal
- A. Mitchell Palmer
- companies introduced pernsions, cafeterias, paid vacations, profit-sharing plans, and other company-sponsored programs through this policy
- welfare capitalism
- the idea of a communist takeover of the government
- red scare
- Chief of the General Intelligence Division of the Justice Department and future director of the FBI
- J. Edgar Hoover
- organization formed by Palmer's enemies to challenge the constitutionality of laws that violated the Bill of Rights
- American Civil Liberties Union
- low-rent urban hispanic communities
- barrios
- court case convicting two questionably guilty Italian immigrants of murder
- Sacco-Vanzetti case
- neighborhood in NEw York City that attracted many black southern immigrants
- Harlem
- segregated slum with overcrowding, housing shortages, and rising rents
- ghetto
-
Jamaican immigrant who founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association and called for black solidarity
Sold tickets back to Africa for the Black Star Line Steamship company, but never took anyone to Africa - Marcus Garvey
- Discriminating organization of whites who supported violence in the midwest and south
- Ku Klux Klan (KKK)
- Constitutional amendment that banned the sale, transportation, etc. of alcohol
- 18th amendment (Prohibition)
- legislation that provided exceptions to teh 18th amendment
- Volstead ACt
- head of Chicago's enormous crime syndicate
- Al Capone
- belief in a literal interpretation of the Bible
- Fundamentalism
- trial that exposed the intolerance common in the United States, refuting the teaching of evolution in public schools
- Scopes Trial
- Prosecuting attorney in the Scopes Trial
- Clarence Darrow
- Defense attorney in the Scopes Trial
- William Jennings Bryant
- Senator from Ohio who became a really boring president in 1920
- Warren G. Harding
- Secretary of the Interior who leased government-owned properties to private business interests
- Albert Fall
- The most famous of the scandals during Harding's administration, involving Fall and the oil-rich areas in Wyoming
- Teapot Dome Scandal
- Man who took office after Harding's sudden death and did "hosue cleaning" of the administration
- Calvin Coolidge
- Democratic candidate for the 1924 election who was largely unknown and a compromise between the supporters and attackers of the KKK
- John Davis
- Democratic candidate for the 1928 election, New York governor who represented urban America
- Al Smith
- amendment giving women the right to vote
- 19th amendment
- engineer who was hailed as the champion of mass production
- Frederick Taylor
- business approach that focused on efficiency and speed
- scientific management
- self-taught Michigan mechanic who symbolized the new methods of mass production in the 1920s
- Henry Ford
- city that became the center of the automobile industry
- Detroit, Michigan
- payment plan in which a customer made an initial down payment and then spread the balance out over several months
- installment plan
- New York Yankee home run king
- Babe Ruth
- woman who swam the English Channel in record time
- Gertrude Ederle
- sensational newspapers that emerged during the 1920s
- tabloid
- first person to fly nonstop across the Atlantic Ocean
- Charles Lindbergh
- Central California's moviemaking city (hmm, I wonder)
- Hollywood
- Popular film star clown
- Charlie Chaplin
- The first "talkie"
- The Jazz Singer
- African American actor who became a huge success
- Paul Robeson
- symbol of a revolution in morals
- flapper
- psychologist who was largely misinterpreted by flappers and others of the 1920s
- Sigmund Freud
- WOman who led the battle for birth control
- Margaret Sanger
- famous music hall and its location
-
Grand Ole Opry
Nashville, TN - Four famous Lost Generation authors and what they wrote
-
F. Scott Fitzgerald (The Great Gatsby, Tender is the Night, This Side of Paradise)
Ernest Hemingway: The Sun Also Rises
Sinclair Lewis: Main Street, Babbit, Arrowsmith, Elmer Gantry
William Faulkner: The Sound and the Fury - Poet who wrote The Waste Lan and The Hollow Men
- T.S. Elliot
- Two famous Lost Generation artists
-
Georgia O'Keefe
Edward Hopper - black cultural movement
- Harlem Renaissance
- Black poet who... was important
- Langston Hughes
- City famous for its jazz music
- New Orleans
- Two famous black jazz musicians
-
Louis Armstrong
Duke Ellington - Two female black jazz singers
-
Bessie Smith
Ma Rainey - senators who refused to agree with the Versailles Treaty
- irreconcilables
- economist who served as the international sectretary-treasurer of the WILPF
- Emily Greene-Balch
- legislation that helped the U.S. build an army for World War I
- Selective Service ACt