8285351902 | 31 Jan 1917 - German declaration | Said they'd *sink all ships* in warzone (pulled strings form Sussex, a luxury the could no longer afford) | 0 | |
8285351903 | Wilson _________ with Germany but refused to __________ unless ___________ started it | broke diplomatic relations — move closer to war — Germany | 1 | |
8285351904 | Armed American merchant ships | - *Wilson* asked Congress for it - *MW* senators tried to *stop it* - Attempt to stop showed *strength* of American *isolationism* | 2 | |
8285351905 | Zimmerman note | *Arthur Zimmerman*, on 1 March 1917, infuriated Americans, especially *westerners*, when he had secretly proposed a *German-Mexican alliance*, tempting anti-Yankee *Mexico* with promises of *recovering TX, NM, and AZ* | 3 | |
8285351906 | "Overt" acts in the Atlantic | German *U-boats* sank four unarmed American merchant *vessels* in the first two weeks of March | 4 | |
8285351907 | Causes of the declaration of war | - *Russia* had a *revolution* ending tsars -> America involved with the Allies - *British harassment* of American commerce and *German killing* of civilians | 5 | |
8285351908 | 2 Apr 1917 - Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war | - Myth later developed that they were brought into war because of the businessmen desperate to protect their profits and loans - Weapons merchants and financiers already thriving | 6 | |
8285351909 | Wilson's involvement in the war | - *Fearful* for the American people - Put his *leadership skills* to the test - *Respectful of American traditions* but broke one of the most sacred ones by going into war | 7 | |
8285351910 | Why would Americans not want to go to war? | - *Isolationism* for 1+ century - Bountiful *profits* gained through neutrality since 1914 - No fewer than 6 senators and 50 reps had voted against the war resolution | 8 | |
8285351911 | Jeannette Rankin | From Montana, was the first congresswoman (against war resolution) | 9 | |
8285351912 | Wilsonian idealism | - The goal being "*to make the world safe for democracy"* -> *America* sought only to shape an *international order* in which *democracy* could flourish without fear of autocrats and militarists, *not conquest* - Wilson strongly believed in these principles as well - No other appeal could have successfully converted the American people otherwise | 10 | |
8285351913 | ________ became recognized as the moral leader of the _______ cause | Wilson — Allied | 11 | |
8285351914 | Fourteen Points Address (definition) | 8 Jan 1918 - Primary purpose was to keep peace and prevent another world war — actually *inspired Allies* to make mightier efforts and demoralized enemy govts by holding out alluring promises to *minorities* | 12 | |
8285351915 | First 5 points of the Fourteen Points Address *and* who they appealed to | 1) *Abolish secret treaties* — pleased *liberals* of all countries 2) *Freedom* of the *seas* — appealed to the *Germans* and *Americans* who distrusted British sea power 3) *Removal* of *economic barriers* among nations — long goal of *liberal nationalists* everywhere (opposite of Embargo?) 4) *Reduction* of *armament* burdens — gratifying to *taxpayers* in all countries 5) *Adjustment* of *colonial claims* in the interests of *native peoples* and *colonizers* — reassuring to *anti-imperialists* (helped delegitimize the old empires and opened the road to eventual *national independence* for millions of subjects | 13 | |
8285351916 | Other points of the FPA | - *Self-determination* to the *oppressed* (Poles) - 14th point foreshadowed *League of Nations* | 14 | |
8285351917 | Issues with the FPA | - Some *Allies didn't like* it - Devout *Republicans* grumbled | 15 | |
8285351918 | Cause of the Committee on Public Information | *Mobilizing people's minds for war* in America and abroad | 16 | |
8285351919 | Committee on Public Information | - Headed by *George Creel* - Government office during WWI, dedicated to winning *everyday Americans' support* for the *war* effort. Regularly distributed *pro-war propaganda* and set out an army of *"four-minute men"* to rally crowds and deliver *"patriotic pep"* - Different types of propaganda — books, posters, pamphlets, etc. | 17 | |
8285351920 | The Kaiser, the Beast of Berlin *and* To Hell with the Kaiser | revealed the kaiser at his worst, made more hatred towards Germans | 18 | |
8285351921 | How did George Creel typify American war mobilization? | He relied more on *aroused passion* and *voluntary compliance* than formal laws | 19 | |
8285351922 | German Americans | - 8 million, proved to be *loyal* to the US - Some *tarred, feathered, and beaten*; one German socialist was even lynched (and diarrhea epidemics were blamed on them too!) | 20 | |
8285351923 | German hatred and things done against German culture/people | - Orchestras didn't present German-composed music - German books removed from library shelves - German classes canceled in HS and colleges - Beer, sauerkraut, and hamburger became "suspects" | 21 | |
8285351924 | Espionage Act | *Prohibited interference* with the *draft* and other acts of *national disloyalty*. Created a climate with the Sedition Act unfriendly to civil liberties | 22 | |
8285351925 | Sedition Act of 1918 | Law which *punished* people for *aiding the enemy* or *refusing military duty* during WWI | 23 | |
8285351926 | The Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918 reflected: | current fears about Germans and anti-war Americans (especially *Socialists* and people in the *IWW*) | 24 | |
8285351927 | Socialists and Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) persecuted | - Eugene V. Debs — convicted under Espionage Act and sentenced to ten years - William D. ("Big Bill") Haywood and 90 associates (IWW) convicted - Any *criticism* of the *government* could be *censored* and *punished* | 25 | |
8285351928 | Schenck v. United States | SC affirmed their legality, arguing that *freedom of speech* could be *revoked* when such a speech posed a *"clear and present danger"* to the nation | 26 | |
8285351929 | T/F: Wilson prepared for war measures far in advance | False, he only belatedly backed measures for war | 27 | |
8285351930 | Council of National Defense | Appointed by Wilson, study problems of economic mobilization | 28 | |
8285351931 | Shipbuilding program | (Capture belligerents' war-disputed foreign trade as to anticipate American's possible entry into the war) endorsed increase army | 29 | |
8285351932 | Obstacles for economic mobilization | - *Ignorance* -> No one knew how much steel or explosive powder the country was able to produce - *Old ideas* (traditional fears of big government efforts to conduct economy from DC) -> States' rights Democrats and business people | 30 | |
8285351933 | War Industries Board | - Led by *Bernard Baruch* appointed by *Wilson* - Set a precedent for the fed govt to take a *central role* in *economic planning* and in moments of *crisis* - After armistice, Americans returned to laissez-faire and weak central govt — Great Depression of 1930s, policymakers would look at agencies like these for *models* -- Definition: Coordinated *industrial production* during WWI, setting production *quotas*, *allocating* raw materials, and pushing companies to increase efficiency and eliminate waste. Industrial production increased 20% during war | 31 | |
8285351934 | "Labor Will Win the War" | Made many Americans work to victory | 32 | |
8285351935 | "Work or fight" | (1918) Threatened any unemployed male with being immediately drafted | 33 | |
8285351936 | National War Labor Board | (Taft) Exercised itself to prevent labor *disputes* that might *hamper* the *war* effort. Pursued employers to grant *concessions to labor* (high wages and 8-hour day) *Didn't* give a government *guarantee* of the right to *organize* into unions | 34 | |
8285351937 | The ______ supported the war | AFL | 35 | |
8285351938 | Industrial Workers of the World | - Did not support the war, known as "Wobblies" -- Def: Radical organization that sought to build *"one big union"* and advocated *industrial sabotage* in defense of that goal. Appealed to *migratory workers* in agriculture and lumbering and to *miners* (suffered from poor working conditions) | 36 | |
8285351939 | Mainstream labor's loyalty — how was it rewarded? | AFL doubled its membership, and *real wages* (after adjusting for inflation) had *risen* more than 20% over pre-war levels | 37 | |
8285351940 | Labor grievances | - *No* right to *organize* yet - Wartime *inflation* threatened to *lower wage gains* - Not even *patriotism* and Wilsonian *idealism* could defuse labor disputes | 38 | |
8285351941 | Great Steel Strike of 1919 | - 250k+ steelworkers went on strike to get the *right to organize* and *bargain* - Steel companies resisted, hired 30k *Af-Am strikebreakers * - Bitter confrontations left more than a dozen workers dead, steel strike collapsed, setback *crippled union movement* for more than a decade | 39 | |
8285351942 | Af-Am workers | - 1919 strikebreakers were a fraction of the S blacks *drawn to N* in wartime — foreshadowed large trek that would grow into a large movement - Appearance of them sparked *interracial violence* | 40 | |
8285351943 | East St. Louis riots | Outbreak of *labor* and *race* violence that lead to 9 whites and 40 blacks dead | 41 | |
8285351944 | Chicago riot | - *Racial tension* from growing *black population expanding* into white working-class neighborhoods and being *strikebreakers* in meatpacking plants - July 1919 on a beach, reign of terror went for two weeks - Killed 15 whites and 23 blacks | 42 | |
8285351945 | Women working (again) | Female workers went into *factories* and *fields* to *take jobs* occupied by *men* who left for *war* | 43 | |
8285351946 | How did war split feminism? | - Many were *pacifists* (America and women in war effort) -> *National Woman's Party* by *Alice Paul*: protested Wilson with marches and hunger strikes - NAWSA supported it: argued that women must *take part* in the *war effort* to earn a role in *shaping the peace*. Fight for democracy *abroad* would *benefit* it *domestically* | 44 | |
8285351947 | Suffrage fight | - Wilson endorsed woman suffrage as *"a vitally necessary war measure"* — impressed by women's work - 1917 - NY, MI, OK, and SD (NY first, others followed) gave women suffrage - 1918 - GB, Austria, Hungary, and Germany — women suffrage | 45 | |
8285351948 | Nineteenth Amendment | 1920 - gave all women the right to vote | 46 | |
8285351949 | Economic negatives of war | - Most *women workers gave up* their *war jobs* - Congress supported *role of women* in the *house* | 47 | |
8285351950 | Sheppard-Towner Maternity Act of 1921 | - Provided *federally financed instruction* in *maternal* and *infant* health care - Act also expanded the *power* of *fed govt* in family welfare | 48 | |
8285351951 | Reforms even after the 19th Amendment | Wanted *more laws* to *protect women* in the workplace and *prohibit child labor* | 49 | |
8285351952 | WWI efforts foreshadowed: | when women's wage-labor and political power would reshape the American way of life | 50 | |
8285351953 | Characteristics of the war economy | - *Mobilization* relied on *patriotism and law* - *Voluntary* organization - *Safe distance* and government powers in the US - Government took *greater command* of the nation's *resources* to secure an Allied victory | 51 | |
8285351954 | Food Administration | - Led by *Herbert C. Hoover*, America had to *feed itself* and its *allies* - *Didn't like compulsory* things, wanted *voluntary* - *Didn't issue ration cards* — used *propaganda* "Meatless Tuesdays" and "Wheatless Wednesdays" | 52 | |
8285351955 | Prohibition | - Congress restricted the use of foodstuffs for alcohol — discipline from war helped advance temperance - Leading *brewers* were also *German* (anti-German) - *18th Amendment* (1919) Prohibited all alcoholic drinks | 53 | |
8285351956 | Hoover's approach was a success. Explain the consequences/effects of it | - *Farm production increased* by ¼, food exports to Allies tripled - *Imitated* by other agencies (Fuel Administration) - Treasury Department sponsored *parades* (Victory Loan) — $21 billion (⅔ cost of war) | 54 | |
8285351957 | Bonds | People used pressure to convince reluctant investors (often roughly handled) | 55 | |
8285351958 | Effect of voluntary means of mobilizing the economy | - *Expanded* the *federal government* in *size and power* - *War Industries Board* issued production quotas, allocated raw materials, and set prices for government purchases - *Fed. government* took over *RRs* in late 1917 (traffic) - Daylight savings time | 56 | |
8285351959 | American force in France | - April and May 1917 - European allies said they'd need a large *American army raised*, or the whole *western front would collapse* (would ship war materials and loans) - *Wilson* reluctantly went to *conscription* | ![]() | 57 |
8285351960 | Selective Service Act of 1917 | *Required registration* of all males between 18-45 — *no purchasing exemption* or hiring a substitute (excluded men in shipbuilding). Met protest in Congress | 58 | |
8285351961 | Effect of the SSA | Worked effectively, no shedding of blood — did have 337k "slackers" and 4k excused | 59 | |
8285351962 | Army size and characteristics | - 4 million men, *women admitted* for the *first time* - *Af-Ams segregated* and under white officers -> Racism — *authorities hesitated* to *train black men* for combat, and most assigned to "construction battalions" or unloading ships - *Supposed to* get 6 months of *training* in the US and 2 months overseas — highly needed and most *didn't get any* | 60 | |
8285351963 | Russia's collapse | - *Bolsheviks withdrew* from the war in early 1918 - Made hundreds of thousands of Germans go against France | 61 | |
8285351964 | German calculations | - Counted on *destroying Britain* 6 months after declaration of *unlimited U-boats* - Inability of *Americans* to transport their army (shipping shortages) | 62 | |
8285351965 | American doughboys | - Went in France, used as *replacements for Allied armies* and deployed in *quiet sectors* with British and French - French women! - Suffered from *disease* | 63 | |
8285351966 | American operations not in France | - Belgium, Italy, and Russia - *Archangel*: Hoped to keep *stores of weapons* from *falling* into *German* hands when *Russia stopped fighting*, Allied invasion of N. Russia - *Siberia*: Prevent* Japan *from getting a stranglehold on Siberia, *rescue Czechoslovak troops*, and get *military supplies* from Russia - Both were *bloody* | 64 | |
8285351967 | German drive on the Western front | - 500k troops - Allied troops united under *French marshal Foch* | 65 | |
8285351968 | Château-Thierry | (1918) The *first significant engagement* of *American troops* in WWI and in any European war. To weary French soldiers, the *American doughboys* were an image of fresh and gleaming youth. It was now clear that America > Russia | 66 | |
8285351969 | Second Battle of the Marne | - German force ←→ American men in Foch counteroffensive - Marked *beginning of German withdrawal* never reversed | 67 | |
8285351970 | Battle of Saint-Mihiel | Nine American divisions on 12 Sept 1918 joined four French divisions to *push Germans* from the *St. Mihiel salient*, a German dagger in France's flank | 68 | |
8285351971 | General John J. ("Black Jack") Pershing | Americans wanted a separate army, so he was assigned an 85 mile front | 69 | |
8285351972 | Meure-Argonne offensive | (26 Sept to 11 Nov 1918) - *Pershing* led American troops in this effort to *cut the German railroad lines* supplying the western front. It was one of the *few major battles* that *Americans* participated in during the entire war and was still underway when the war ended - *Alvin C. York* became a hero when he single-handedly killed 20 Germans and captured 132 more - Running *low on supplies*, *allies deserting* them though - *Propaganda* came along too (Wilsonian promises) | 70 | |
8285351973 | German surrender | Wanted peace with Wilson — Wilson said the *kaiser* must be *thrown overboard* -> Kaiser *fled to Holland* | 71 | |
8285351974 | America at German surrender | - *Rejoiced* - Costs: 9 million soldiers, 20 million wounded, 30 million from influenza from 1918-1919 — 550k Americans from the flu | 72 | |
8285351975 | US' main contributions to the ultimate victory | - *Foodstuffs, munitions*, credits, *oil*, and *manpower* — *not battlefield victories* - The *prospect* of endless US troops, *not* the *performance*, demoralized Germans | 73 | |
8285351976 | How did Pershing depend more on Allies than they depended on him? | - Army purchased more of its supplies from Europe than it shipped from the US (aircraft, artillery, etc.) - British and French transported majority of doughboys to Europe | 74 | |
8285351977 | Expectations of Wilson — why? | Became a *moral leader* with the prestige of victory and economic resources | 75 | |
8285351978 | Peace at Paris | - *Wilson broke* the *truce* by personally appealing for a *Democratic victory* in the congressional elections of Nov 1918 - *Backfired* when voters returned narrow *Republican majority* to Congress - Went to *Paris* as a diminished *leader* | 76 | |
8285351979 | Wilson's decision to go in person to Paris brought issues — why? | - Looked like an ostentatious *grandstanding* - Wilson *ignored Senate* in assembling his peace delegation and *neglected* to include a *single Republican* senator in his official party | 77 | |
8285351980 | Henry Cabot Lodge vs Wilson | Hated each other | 78 | |
8285351981 | Welcoming of Wilson by different countries | - Welcomed by the French, English, and Italians - *Statesman* of France and Italy afraid he would *incite* an *overthrow* | 79 | |
8285351982 | Paris Conference | - *"The Big Four"* — Wilson, Premier Vittorio Orlando, Prime Minister David Lloyd George, and Premier Georges Clemenceau ("the Tiger" and "organizer of victory") - *Speed* was urgent (anarchy and communism) | 80 | |
8285351983 | League of Nations | - A world *organization* of *national governments* proposed by *Wilson* and established by the *Treaty of Versailles* in 1919. Despite emotional appeals by Wilson, *isolationists' objections* to the League created the *major obstacle* to American *signing* of the Treaty of Versailles - *Victors* would *not take possession* of the conquered *territory* but would receive it as *trustees* of the LoN | 81 | |
8285351984 | Senate storms over the LoN | - *Republican* senators saw the League as *useless* or over-potent - Composed of *irreconcilables* | 82 | |
8285351985 | Irreconcilables | Led by Senators *William Borah* of Idaho and *Hiram Johnson* of California, this was a hard-core group of *militant isolationists* who *opposed the LoN* after WWI. Their efforts played an important part in *preventing American participation* in the international organization | 83 | |
8285351986 | Saar Valley and Rhineland | - French wanted it (Saar = coal) - *Wilsonian opposition*, *compromise* would make Saar under LoN, and a treaty after 15 years by pop. vote would decide its fate - France got the *Security Treaty* - Pact rejected by US Senate | 84 | |
8285351987 | Security Treaty | After the *French* had to give up the Saar Valley, this treaty stated that Britain and America were pledged to *come to its aid* in the event of another German invasion | 85 | |
8285351988 | Fiume (seaport) in Italy | Wilson insisted it goes to Yugoslavia (upset Italians) | 86 | |
8285351989 | Shandong Peninsula and German Islands in the Pacific | - *Japan* got the *German islands*, but *Wilson* opposed control of *Shandong* (violated self-determination) - Japanese threatened to walk out -> Wilson *compromised* (get Shandong later -> Upset the Chinese | 87 | |
8285351990 | Treaty of Versailles | *Concluded WWI* — secured *peace* but imposed *sharp terms* on *Germany* and created a *territorial mandate* system to manage former colonies of the world powers. To Wilson's discontent, it *incorporated very few* of his original *14 Points*, although it did *include the LoN* that Wilson had long sought. *Isolationists* in the US, deeply opposed to the LoN, led the *opposition* to the treaty, which was *never ratified* by the *Senate* | 88 | |
8285351991 | The Allies were often sanctioned by: | secret treaties | 89 | |
8285351992 | Effects of the Treaty of Versailles | - *Wilson* now a *fallen idol* condemned by *liberals* and *imperialists* alike - *Liberation* of millions of *minority peoples* (Poles) from dynasties - Turned out to be fairer because he had gone to Paris | 90 | |
8285351993 | In the early times of the Treaty, opposition was: | not major | 91 | |
8285351994 | Senator Lodge and his actions towards the Treaty | - Wanted to *Americanize* it to that the *Republicans* could claim political credit for the changes - Read the 264-page treaty aloud in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and allowed people to *share* their *grievances* | 92 | |
8285351995 | Presidential tour | - Sept 1919 began — Wilson - *MW* received Wilson *"lukewarmly"* due to German American influence. Borah and Johnson (later) came and influenced crowds to "Impeach him!" - *Rocky Mtns and Pacific Coast* — elected him in 1916 election, *openly welcomed him* - *Pueblo, Colorado* — cried pleading for LoN as real hope of preventing future wars → *collapsed* from physical and nervous exhaustion - *Stroke*, did not meet with his cabinet for more than 7 months | 93 | |
8285351996 | Lodge's fourteen formal reservations | Came up with it to the treaty, which *reserved* the rights of the US under the *Monroe Doctrine* and *Constitution* to protect American *sovereignty* | 94 | |
8285351997 | Article X of the LoN | Morally bound US to aid any member victimized by external aggression -> Congress wanted war-declaring power | 95 | |
8285351998 | Lodge reservations in Senate | - *Wilson* asked *Democrats* to *vote against* the treaty - *Rejected* (with irreconcilables) 55-39 - *No simple majority* could be agreed upon - Treaty *failed* to get *⅔ majority* (but did get simple majority) and was thus *not passed* | 96 | |
8285351999 | Who defeated the Treaty? | - *Lodge-Wilson* personal feud, traditionalism, *isolationism*, disillusionment, and partisanship - Wilson asked for all or nothing and got nothing | 97 | |
8285352000 | Solemn referendum | Wilson's *belief* that the presidential *election* of 1920 should constitute a direct *popular vote* on the *League of Nations* | 98 | |
8285352001 | Republican "platform" (1920) | - Old Guard and bull moosers (TR died in 1919) - *Teeter-totter* rather than a platform — appeal to *pro-League* and *anti-League* - Elected *Warren G. Harding* | 99 | |
8285352002 | Room 404 of the Hotel Blackstone | Group of Senate bosses decided on Harding and Governor Calvin ("Silent Cal" Coolidge") | 100 | |
8285352003 | Democrat convention/platform | - Governor *James M. Cox* and *Franking D. Roosevelt* - Wanted to make the campaign a *referendum* on the *League* - *Harding* made *contradictory statements* - *Pro-League* and *anti-League Republicans* said it would *advance their cause* and he would work for an *Association of Nations* (not League) | 101 | |
8285352004 | Election of 1920 | - Newly *enfranchised women* — 7 million votes more for Harding - The people wanted *"normalcy"* (no idealism, do-goodism, no moral overstrain, and no self-sacrifice) - *Republican isolationists* turned Harding's victory into a death blow for the League | 102 | |
8285352005 | Would the League have prevented WWII? | - Yes - would have made a "UN" before the UN - No - Allies seemed to be blamed but accused the US | 103 | |
8285352006 | Senate spurning the Security Treaty with France | - *French* built up strong *military force* for fear of Germans - Germany rearmed illegally - *Uncertainty and suspicion* that led to hitler | 104 | |
8285352007 | Faults of the US in WWI | - Would have behooved the US to assume its war-born *responsibilities* and embraced the *role of a global leader* - Should have used its *strength* to *shape events* - Instead led to another world war... | 105 |
AP US History Chapter 30 Flashcards
Primary tabs
Need Help?
We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.
For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.
If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.
Need Notes?
While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!