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AMSCO AP US History Chapter 23 Flashcards

AMSCO United States History 2015 Edition, Chapter 23 The Modern Era of the 1920s

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9772830232Warren HardingIn November 1920, he was elected the 29th president of the United States. He was a Republican whose slogan was: "Return to Normalcy". His term was marked by scandals and corruption, although he was never implicated in any of the scandals. In August 1923, he died while traveling in the West. (p. 475-476)0
9772830233Charles Evans HughesA former presidential candidate and Supreme Court justice who was appointed secretary of state by President Warren G. Harding. (p. 476)1
9772830234Andrew MellonA Pittsburgh industrialist and millionaire who was appointed secretary of the treasury by President Harding in 1921 and served under Coolidge and Hoover. (p. 476)2
9772830235Harry DaughertyAttorney General under President Harding who accepted bribes for agreeing not to prosecute certain criminal suspects. (p. 476)3
9772830236Albert FallSecretary of the Interior during Harding's administration. He was convicted of accepting bribes for granting oil leases near Teapot Dome, Wyoming. (p. 476)4
9772830237Teapot DomeA government scandal involving a former United States Navy oil reserve in Wyoming that was secretly leased to a private oil company in 1921. (p. 476)5
9772830238Fordney-McCumber Tariff ActThis tariff passed in 1922, raised tariffs on foreign manufactured goods by 25 percent. It helped domestic manufacturers, but limited foreign trade, and was one cause of the Great Depression of 1929. (p. 476, 488)6
9772830239Bureau of the BudgetFormed in 1921, this bureau created procedures for all government expenditures to be placed in a single budget for Congress to annually review and vote on. (p. 476)7
9772830240Calvin CoolidgeAs vice president, he became president when Warren Harding died in August 1923. He won the presidential election of 1924, but declined to run in 1928. He was a Republican who believed in limited government. He summarized his presidency and his era with the phrase: "The business of America is business". (p. 477)8
9772830241Herbert HooverWhen Calvin Coolidge decide not to run for president in 1928, he was the Republican presidential nominee. He promised to extend "Coolidge Prosperity", and won the election. (p. 477)9
9772830242Alfred E. SmithHe was the Democratic presidential candidate in the 1928 presidential election. He was the former governor of New York and his opponent in the presidential race was Republican Herbert Hoover. As a Roman Catholic and opponent of Prohibition, he appealed to immigrant urban voters. (p. 477)10
9772830245scientific managementA system of industrial management created and promoted in the early twentieth century by Frederick W. Taylor. It emphasized time-and-motion studies to improve factory performance. (p. 478)11
9772830246Henry FordBy 1914, he had perfected a system for manufacturing automobiles using an assembly line. (p. 478)12
9772830247assembly lineIn a factory, an arrangement where a product is moved from worker to worker, with each person performing a single task in the making of the product. (p. 478)13
9772830248open shopA company with a labor agreement under which union membership cannot be required as a condition of employment. (p. 479)14
9772830249welfare capitalismAn approach to labor relations in which companies voluntarily offer their employees improved benefits and higher wages in order to reduce their interest in joining unions. (p. 479)15
9772830253jazz ageName for the 1920s, because of the popularity of jazz, a new type of American music that combined African rhythms, blues, and ragtime. (p. 480)16
9772830256HollywoodThe movie industry was centered here. The industry grew rapidly in the 1920s. Sound was introduced to movies in 1927. By 1929 over 80 million movie tickets were sold each week. (p. 480)17
9772830261Sigmund FreudAustrian psychiatrist who originated psychoanalysis. (p. 481)18
9772830263Margaret SangerShe founded American Birth Control League; which became Planned Parenthood in the 1940s. She advocated birth control awareness. (p. 481)19
9772830266Frederick Lewis AllenIn 1931, he wrote "Only Yesterday", a popular history book that portrayed the 1920s as a period of narrow-minded materialism. (p. 489)20
9772830267Only YesterdayA 1931 history book that portrayed the 1920s as a period of narrow-minded materialism in which the middle class abandoned Progressive reforms, embraced conservative Republican policies, and either supported or condoned nativism, racism, and fundamentalism. (p. 489)21
9772830268Gertrude SteinAmerican writer of experimental novels, poetry, essays, operas, and plays. She called the disillusioned writers of the 1920s, a "lost generation". (p. 481)22
9772830269Lost GenerationGroup of writers in 1920s, who shared the belief that they were lost in a greedy and materialistic world that lacked moral values. Many of them moved to Europe. (p. 481)23
9772830270F. Scott FitzgeraldA novelist and chronicler of the jazz age. His wife, Zelda and he were the "couple" of the decade. His novel, "The Great Gatsby" is considered a masterpiece about a gangster's pursuit of an unattainable rich girl. (p. 481)24
9772830271Ernest HemingwayOne of the most popular writers of the 1920s, he wrote "A Farewell to Arms". (p. 481)25
9772830272Sinclair LewisAmerican writer of the 1920s. He became the first American to receive a Nobel Prize in Literature. (p. 481)26
9772830273Ezra PoundExpatriate American poet and critic of the 1920s. (p. 481)27
9772830274T. S. EliotThomas Stearns Eliot was an essayist, publisher, playwright, literary and social critic, and one of the twentieth century's major poets. (p. 481)28
9772830275Eugene O'NeillAn American playwright of the 1920s. (p. 481)29
9772830276industrial designThe fusion of art and technology during the 1920s and 1930s created the new profession of industrial design. (p. 482)30
9772830277Art DecoThe 1920's modernistic art style that captured modernistic simplification of forms, while using machine age materials. (p. 482)31
9772830278Edward HopperA twentieth-century American painter, whose stark realistic paintings often convey a mood of solitude and isolation in common urban settings. (p. 482)32
9772830280Grant WoodAn American Regional artist who focused on rural scenes in Iowa. He is best known for his painting "American Gothic". (p. 482)33
9772830281George GershwinHe was the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants. He blended jazz and classical music to produce "Rhapsody in Blue" and folk opera "Porgy and Bess". (p. 482)34
9772830283Harlem RenaissanceThe largest African American community of almost 200,000 developed in the Harlem section of New York City. It became famous in the 1920s for its talented actors, artists, musicians, and writers. This term describes this period. (p. 483)35
9772830284Countee CullenA leading 1920s African American poet from Harlem. (p. 483)36
9772830285Langston HughesA leading 1920s African American poet from Harlem. (p. 483)37
9772830286James Weldon JohnsonA leading 1920s African American author from Harlem. (p. 483)38
9772830287Claude McKayA leading 1920s African American poet from Harlem. (p. 483)39
9772830288Duke EllingtonA leading 1920s African American jazz great from Harlem. (p. 483)40
9772830289Louis ArmstrongA leading 1920s African American jazz trumpeter from Harlem. (p. 483)41
9772830290Bessie SmithA leading 1920s African American blues singer from Harlem. (p. 483)42
9772830291Paul RobesonA leading 1920s African American singer from Harlem. (p. 483)43
9772830292Back to Africa movementEncouraged those of African descent to return to Africa. (p. 483)44
9772830293Marcus GarveyAfrican American leader during the 1920s who founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association and advocated mass migration of African Americans back to Africa. He was deported to Jamaica and his movement collapsed. (p. 483)45
9772830295modernismThey took a historical and critical view of certain Bible passages and believed that they could accept Darwin's theory of evolution without abandoning their religion. (p. 483)46
9772830296fundamentalismA Protestant Christian movement emphasizing the literal truth of the Bible and opposing religious modernism (p. 483)47
9772830297revivalistsLeading radio evangelists such as Billy Sunday and Aimee Semple McPherson preached a fundamentalist message. (p 484)48
9772830298Scopes trialA 1925 Tennessee court case in which Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan argued the issue of teaching evolution in public schools. (p. 484)49
9772830299Clarence DarrowA famed criminal defense lawyer, he defended John Scopes, a teacher who taught evolution in his Tennessee classroom. (p. 484)50
9772830300Volstead ActThe federal law of 1919 that established criminal penalties for manufacturing, transporting, or possessing alcohol. (p. 484)51
9772830303Al CaponeA famous Chicago gangster who fought for control of the lucrative bootlegging (liquor) trade. (p. 484)52
977283030421st AmendmentThe amendment which ended the prohibition of alcohol in the United States, it repealed the 18th amendment. (p. 485)53
9772830305quota laws of 1921 and 1924Laws passed to limit immigration. (p. 485)54
9772830306Sacco and Vanzetti CaseA criminal case of two Italian men who were convicted of murder in 1921. They were prosecuted because they were Italians, atheists, and anarchists. After 6 years of appeals they were executed in 1927. (p. 485)55
9772830307Ku Klux KlanA secret society created by white southerners in 1866. They used terror and violence to keep African Americans from exercising their civil rights. (p. 486)56
9772830308Birth of a NationA popular silent film, which portrayed the KKK during Reconstruction as heros. (p. 486)57
9772830311disarmamentRepublican presidents of the 1920s tried to promote peace and also to scale back defense expenditures by arranging disarmament treaties (reduction in military equipment). (p. 486)58
9772830312Washington ConferenceA 1921 conference that placed limits on naval powers, respect of territory in the Pacific, and continued the Open Door policy in China. (p. 487)59
9772830313Five-Power Naval TreatyA 1922 treaty resulting from the Washington Armaments Conference that limited to a specific ratio the carrier and battleship tonnage of each nation. The five countries involved were: United States, Great Britain, Japan, France, and Italy. (p. 487)60
9772830314Nine-Power China TreatyA 1922 treaty affirming the sovereignty and territorial integrity of China as previously stated in the Open Door Policy. (p. 487)61
9772830315Kellogg-Briand TreatyThis treaty of 1928 renounced the use of force to achieve national ends. It was signed by Frank Kellogg of the United States and Aristide Briand of France, and most other nations. The international agreement proved ineffective. (p. 487)62
9772830316Latin America policyIn 1927, the United States signed an agreement with Mexico protecting U.S. interests in Mexico. (p. 487)63
9772830318reparationsAs part of the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was ordered to pay $30 billion in reparations to the Allies. (p. 488)64
9772830319Dawes PlanA 1924 plan, created by Charles Dawes in which the United States banks would lend large sums to Germany. Germany would use the money to rebuild its economy and pay reparations to Great Britain and France. Then Great Britain and France would pay their war debts to the United States. After the 1929 stock market crash, the loans to Germany stopped. (p. 488)65

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