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APUSH Chapter 30 Flashcards

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321981146What is "Peace Without Victory"Woodrow Wilson delivered this quote in an address where he restated America's commitment to neutral rights and that only a "peace without victory" would withstand.0
321981147Unlimited submarine warfareGermnay's war lords announced on Jan. 31, 1917 that they would wage unrestricted submarine warfare and sink all ships (Incuding American) in the war zone.1
321981148Arthur ZimmermanGerman foreign secretary that secretly proposed a German-Mexican alliance, with promise to Mexico of taking back Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. His proposal was uncovered and made American angry.2
321981149What events led Woodrow Wilson to ask Congress to declare war?The Germans started sinking American U-boats and then a Russian revolution toppled tsars, so that America could join the Allies without having to be on the same side as the Russians.3
321981150Jeannette RankinShe was the first congresswoman, and she voted against Wilson's war resolution.4
321981151Name Wilson's twin war aims How did these set American apart from the other combatants?To make thw world safe for democracy and to prevent a hyper-destructive war. It gave America an idealism, because the other combatants were after territories or riches.5
321981152Wilson's Fourteen PointsThis was a speech Wilson gave to Congress on Jan. 8,1918 to keep America confident, inspire the Allies to keep fighting. These are the first 5 points: a proposal to abolish secret treaties, a freedom of the seas, a removal of economic barriers, a reduction of armament burdens, and an adjustent of colonial claims.6
321981153Committee on Public InformationThis was formed to get Americans and the Allies mentally ready for the war effort.7
321981154George CreelHe was a young, outspoken journalist that was the head of the "Committee on Pubic Information". His job was to "sell" Americans on Wilson's war aims. He had over 150,000 workers who spread American propaganda at home and abroad.8
321981155Four-minute MenThese were Creel employees, 75,000 men, that were sent out to deliver patriotic speeches all across America.9
321981156The HunThe nickname for "Germans" used by the Creel organization. The evil Hun was portrayed in movies seen by the American audiences.10
321981157Over ThereA song written by George M. Cohan. "The Yanks are coming" was part of the chorus and it inspired patriotic loyalty in the fight against the Germans.11
321981158How were Americans motivated to help in the war effort?They became passionate about defending democracy for America and the world.12
321981159Liberty CabbageAmerican caught up in the war fervor, started hating all things German. German Americans were treated with prejudice. German music, booksand classes were restricted. Names were changed for German food...sauerkraut was now called "Liberty cabbage" and hamburger called "libery steak".13
321981160Espionage Act/Sedition ActThese laws made any critcism of American government a crime that could be punished. These were a direct result of America's fears about German-Americans and anti- war Americans.14
321981162Eugene V. DebsHe was a Kingpin Socialist that was sentenced to ten years in federal prison under the Espionage Act.15
321981163William D. HaywoodHe was the IWW (Industrial Workers of the World) leader that was also sentenced to prison under the Espionage Act.16
321981164How was loyalty forced during World War ?If you voiced any opposition to the American war effort, you could be convicted and sent to prison.17
322081726Bernard BaruchHead of the short-lived War Industriesa board.18
322081727War Industries BoardIt was formed to bring some order and some economic control to the war industries.19
322081728Why was it difficult to mobilize industry for the war effort?Americans were not fully prepared, there was ignorance of how to build weapons and machinery for a war effort, and states did not want economic control by the federal govt.20
322081729"Work or Fight"This was a rule by the War Dept. to draft any unemployed male.21
322081730National War Labor BoardThis was formed to head off any labor disputes, such as strikes, that might hamper the war effort. It was headed by former president Taft.22
322081731WobbliesTerm referred to members of the IWW (International Workers of the World). The IWW did not support the war effort and partcipated in sabotaging work efforts in may war industries.23
322081732How did the war affect the labor movement?It stiffled the labor movement and led to violnet and bloody confrontations24
322081733NAWSANational American Woman Suffrage Association. This group supported Wilson's war efforts, and felt that women should take part in the war effort to earn a role in shaping peace.25
32208173419th AmendmentThis amendment gave women the right to vote.26
322081735Women's BureauA pert of the Dept. of Labor that was established after the war to protect women in the workplace.27
322081736How did the war affect women?It gave we workforce and women a chance to enter the ier workforce and redefine their traditional roles.28
322081737Food AdministrationThe was a government agency led by Herbert Hoover to ensure food for the US soldiers and Allies.29
322081738Herbert HooverHe was the leader of the Food Administration. He was a Quaker-humanitarian who had experience with food drives.30
322081739Meatless TuesdaysHoover asked for Ameicans to voluntarily give up meat on Tuesdays and wheat on Mondays to have extra food to export for the war effort. His efforts paid off because food exports to the Allies tripled.31
322081740Eighteenth AmendmentIt prohibited all alcoholic drinks. This ban was spurred on because many brewers were German and Americans were embracing self-denial for the war effort.32
322081741Heatless MondaysThe Fuel Administration tried to copy Hoover's Food Administration by asking Americans to save fuel with "Heatless Mondays", "Lightless nights", and "gasless Sundays."33
322081742Liberty BondsThese were offered by the Treasurey Dept. to American to invest in the war effort.34
322081743Did government become too intrusive in people's lives during the war?Give examples to support your answer.Yes, the government called for voluntary measures but the war propaganda was so strong that people were pressured into conforming.35
322081744Was the government's effort to raise an army fair and effective?The government let soldiers have a say in desicions but also started work-out sessions to stay in shape.36
322081745How were American troops used in Russia?American troops were used to fight with the Russians so that Russian ammunitions wouldn't fall into German hands.37
322081746Marshal FochHe was the French commander that lead the Allied forces in the Spring of 1918. His motto "To make war is to attack".38
322081747John J. PershingWas the General in charge of the American army and lead the last Allied assault that involved several million men,39
322081748Meuse-Argonne OffensiveThis was the battle that Pershings men fought from Sept. 26th to Nov. 11, 1918. This was the largest battle so far in American history. The objective was to cut off the German railroad lines that were carrying food to the German soldiers.40
322081749Alvin YorkHe was a soldier from Tennessee that was from an anti-war religious sect. He single handedly killed 20 Germans and captured 132 more.41
322081750Describe the effect of the American troops on the fighting?The Americans provided thousands of young fresh, patriotic soldiers to fight in the war.42
322081751ArmisticeThis was the surrendering of Germany and the laying down of arms. It happened at eleven o'clock on the eleventh day of the eleventh month in 1918.43
322081752What role did America play in bringing Germany to surrender?America made Germany think that the US had unlimited reserves of soldiers to help the Allies conitue fighting against them.44
322081753Henry Cabot LodgeHe was a political foe of Wilsons. Wilson declined to take Republican Senator Lodge with him to the Paris conference. This greatly angered republicans. He eventually fought to amend the Treaty of Versaille with fourteen formal reservations to it.45
322081754What political mistakes hurt Wilson in the months following the armistice?Wilson broke his promise of "Politics Adjourned" by backing Democrats in the congressional elections.46
322081755Vittorio OrlandoHe was the Premier of Italy and was on of the "Big Four" along with Wilson, George, and Clemenceau.47
322081756David Llyod GeorgeHe was the Prime Minister of Britain and one of the "Big Four" creating the Treaty of Versailles.48
322081757George ClemenceauHe was the Premier of France and one of the"Big Four".49
322081758League of NationsThis was Wilsons ideal of a world parliament, that would oversee the colonization efforts after the war of the conquered territories.50
322081759How did Wilson's desire for the League of Nations affect his bargaining at the peace conference?He bargained with the idea that the Allies would not take the conquered colonies, but the league of Nations would appoint countries to be "trustees" of these territories.51
322081760William BorahA Senator from Idaho who was part of the Irreconcilables. Boriah and Johnson went around the country following Wilson and denouced his Treaty efforts and had crowds calling for Wilson's impeachment.52
322081761Hiram JohnsonA Senator from California who was part of the Irreconcilables also called the "Battalion of Death".53
322081762IrreconcilablesThis was the term referring to a group of militant, isolationist senators that did not support Wilson and did not approve of the League of Nations.54
322081763What compromises did Wilson make at the peace conference?Wilson agreed to the "Security Treaty" which promised France that both America and Britain would come to its aid if Germany attacked, Wilson angered the Italians by giving a valuable seaport to Yugoslavia instead of Italy, Wilson angered China, by bowing to Japanese pressure and giving Japan temporary ownership of China's Shandong Peninsula.55
322081764Treaty of VersaillesThis was supposed to be based on Wilson's 14 points, but only about four of Wilson's original principles were included. The treaty was supposed to be a Peace treaty, but it was compromise of lesser evils among the Allies.56
322081765For what reasons did Wilson compromise his 14 points?He compromised to save his League of Nations and to keep Imperialism in check in Europe.57
322081766Why was the treaty criticized back in America?Isolationists criticized it beacuse they did not want to be "entangled" with foreign countries. Some Americans were upset because it either wasn't harsh enough on Germany or wasn't favorable enough to their native lands.58
322081767What was the purpose and result of Wilson's trip around the country when he returned to America?He wanted to rally support for his League of Nations.59
322081768Why was the treaty finally rejected?It was deadlocked and Wilson had hatred for Lodg and refused to let it pass.60
322081769Warren HardingA Reublican Senator from Ohio who became president an ended any opportunity for Wilson's League of Nations to survive.61
322081770James M. CoxThe Democrat nominee who ran and lost against Warren Harding.62
322081771NormalcyPeople wanted a president the direct opposite of Wilson, and they got a third-rate one.63
322081772What did the results of the 1920 election indicate?The the country was more intersted in isloating themselves than in world peace.64
322081773How much should the US be blamed for the Treaty of Versailles?It was the country that spearheaded the treaty and abandonded it.65
322081774RealismA belief that it is hopeless to change anything in the international world through politics.66
322081775IdealismThe idea that the world can be a better place with the use of intelligence and willpower.67
322081776WilsonianismIt contained three principles: the end of American isolationism, the U.S must share its own ideals and principles with the international community, and the U.S could steer the world away from rivalry and warfare and bring a union of compromise between countries of the world.68
322081777To what extent was Wilson realistic when he called for a world of cooperation, equality and justice among nations?Wilson was realistic when he realized that the striving of cooperation, equality, and justice amog nations was the only thing that would prevent future wars.69

herbert hoover and the great depression Flashcards

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2223702967investas americans began accumulating wealth, many were encourage to _____ their surplus capital in the stockmarket0
2223710896farmersthe distress of these people was brought about by overproduction and a declining world market1
2223723092thirtywhen the market crashed in 1929, american investors lost how many billions of dollars2
2223733322droughtin the summer of 1930, this plagued america and destroyed crops and livestock on farms in eighteen states3
2223740394sixteenwithin a week of "black friday" how many million shares of stock were dumped or sold on the market4
2223756575businesswhen herbert hoover became president in march 1929 ______ was booming. The motto of the day was, "spend your way to prosperity"5
2223762245trainsmany unemployed men rode the brake rods on _____ as their choice of transportation while looking for work6
2223766397Smithin the election of 1928, herbert hoover defeated this democratic candidate by carrying forty of the 48 states7
2223773169rocknein 1931 this great football coach was killed in a plane crash. his players at notre dame idolized him and his opponents respected him8
2223779155marginbuying stocks on ______ meant purchasing corporate shares on credit with a small cash down payment9
2223783394bulla _____ market refers to high and rising prices on the stock market10
2223786312Iowaherbert hoover was born in this state11
2223787826povertyin his acceptance speech, president hoover remarked, "we are nearer to the final triumph over ______ than ever before in the history of any land"12
2223795250beara ____ market refers to low and falling prices on the stock market13
2223801373speculationthe great depression of 1929 was the result of many causes including the _____ of investors in the stock market14
2223806718temporarywhen the market crashed president hoover indicated that it was a ____ panic and that american business conditions were sound15
2223811474moratoriumpresident hoover tried to prevent the total financial collapse of germany by declaring a postponment of war debts. What was it called16
2223813590prohibitionthis was the major political issue of the 1928 presidential campaign17
2223820675tariffssome economists believed these were a factor for contributing to the depression because they prevented foreign countries from selling their products in the united states, which was necessary to purchase american goods18
2223823242twelveby 1932 the depression had caused over _____ million american workers to lose their jobs19
2223827100dawespresident hoover appointed this man as the chairman of the reconstruction finance corporation20

President Herbert Hoover's Response to GD Flashcards

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2923091630HoovervilleDepression shantytowns, named after the president whom many blamed for their financial distress0
2923094229Bonus ArmyGroup of WWI vets. that marched to D.C. in 1932 to demand the immediate payment of their goverment war bonuses in cash1
2923096989Volunteerismthe practice of offering your time and services to others without payment2
2923119317Prosperitywealth, success3
2923121277PrecedentAn example to be followed by others in the future4

Campbell-Biology-Concepts-&-Connections-8th-Edition-Chapter-4-Turk Flashcards

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3873404862light microscopeAn optical instrument with lenses that refract (bend) visible light to magnify images and project them into a viewer's eye or onto photographic film.0
3873404863magnificationThe increase in an object's image size compared with its actual size.1
3873404864resolutionThe ability to distinguish two nearby objects as separate.2
3873404865cell theoryThe theory that all living things are composed of cells and that all cells come from other cells.3
3873404866electron microscopeA microscope that uses magnets to focus an electron beam through, or onto the surface of, a specimen. Achieves a hundredfold greater resolution than a light microscope.4
3873404867scanning electron microscopeA microscope that uses an electron beam to study the surface details of a cell or other specimens.5
3873404868transmission electron microscopeA microscope that uses an electron beam to study the internal structure of thinly sectioned specimens.6
3873404869prokaryotic cellA type of cell lacking a membrane-enclosed nucleus and other membrane-enclosed organelles; found only in the domains Bacteria and Archaea.7
3873404870eukaryotic cellA type of cell that has a membrane-enclosed nucleus and membrane-enclosed organelles. All organisms except bacteria and archaea are composed of these types of cells.8
3873404871cytosolThe semifluid portion of the cytoplasm.9
3873404872chromosomeA gene-carrying structure found in the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell and most visible during mitosis and meiosis; also, the main gene-carrying structure of a prokaryotic cell. Consists of one very long DNA molecule and associated proteins.10
3873404873ribosomeA cell structure consisting of RNA and protein organized into two subunits and functioning as the site of protein synthesis in the cytoplasm. In eukaryotic cells, the subunits are assembled in the nucleolus.11
3873404874cytoplasmThe contents of a eukaryotic cell between the plasma membrane and the nucleus; consists of a semifluid medium and organelles; can also refer to the interior of a prokaryotic cell.12
3873404875nucleoidA non-membrane-bounded region in a prokaryotic cell where the DNA is concentrated.13
3873404876flagellumA long cellular appendage specialized for locomotion.14
3873404877capsuleJellylike outer coating of many prokaryotes.15
3873404878cell wallA protective layer external to the plasma membrane in plant cells, bacteria, fungi, and some protists; protects the cell and helps maintain its shape.16
3873404879plasma membraneThe membrane at the boundary of every cell that acts as a selective barrier to the passage of ions and molecules into and out of the cell; consists of a phospholipid bilayer with embedded proteins.17
3873404880fimbriaeAttachment structures on the surface of some prokaryotes.18
3873404881organelleA membrane-enclosed structure with a specialized function within a cell.19
3873404882cellular metabolismAll the chemical activities of a cell.20
3873404883nucleusThe organelle of a eukaryotic cell that contains the genetic material in the form of chromosomes, made of chromatin.21
3873404884chromatinThe complex of DNA and proteins that makes up eukaryotic chromosomes; often used to refer to the diffuse, very extended form taken by chromosomes when a cell is not dividing.22
3873404885nuclear envelopeA double membrane that enclosed the nucleus, perforated with pores that regulate traffic with the cytoplasm.23
3873404886nucleolusA structure within the nucleus where ribosomal RNA is made and assembled with proteins imported from the cytoplasm to make ribosomal subunits.24
3873404887endomembrane systemA network of membranes inside and surrounding a eukaryotic cell, related either through direct physical contact or by the transfer of membranous vesicles.25
3873404888vesicleA sac made of membrane in the cytoplasm of a eukaryotic cell.26
3873404889endoplasmic reticulumAn extensive membranous network in a eukaryotic cell, continuous with the outer nuclear membrane and composed of ribosome-studded (rough) and ribosome-free )smooth) regions.27
3873404890smooth endoplasmic reticulumThat portion of the endoplasmic reticulum that lacks ribosomes.28
3873404891rough endoplasmic reticulumThat portion of the endoplasmic reticulum with ribosomes attached that make membrane proteins and secretory proteins.29
3873404892golgi apparatusAn organelle in eukaryotic cells consisting of stacks of membranous sacs that modify, store, and ship products of the endoplasmic reticulum.30
3873404893lysosomeA digestive organelle in eukaryotic cells; contains hydrolytic enzymes that digest engulfed food or damaged organelles.31
3873404894vacuoleA membrane-enclosed sac that is part of the endomembrane system of a eukaryotic cell and has diverse functions in different kinds of cells.32
3873404895central vacuoleIn a plant cell, a large membranous sac with diverse roles in growth and the storage of chemicals and wastes.33
3873404896peroxisomeAn organelle containing enzymes that transfer hydrogen atoms from various substrates to oxygen, producing and then degrading hydrogen peroxide.34
3873404897mitochondrionAn organelle in eukaryotic cells where cellular respiration occurs. Enclosed by two membranes, it is where most of the cell's ATP is made.35
3873404898mitochondrial matrixThe compartment of the mitochondrion enclosed by the inner membrane and containing enzymes and substrate for the citric acid cycle.36
3873404899cristaeAn infolding of the inner mitochondrial membrane.37
3873404900chloroplastAn organelle found in plants and algae that absorbs sunlight and uses it to drive the synthesis of organic compounds(sugars) from carbon dioxide and water.38
3873404901stromaThe dense fluid within the chloroplast that surrounds the thylakoid membrane and is involved in the synthesis of organic molecules from carbon dioxide and water. Sugars are made here by the enzymes of the Calvin cycle.39
3873404902thylakoidA flattened membranous sac inside a chloroplast. Their membranes contain chlorophyll and the molecular complexes of the light reactions of photosynthesis.40
3873404903granumA stack of membrane-bounded thylakoids in a chloroplast. The sites where light energy is trapped by chlorophyll and converted to chemical energy during the light reactions of photosynthesis.41
3873404904endosymbiont theoryThe theory that mitochondria and chloroplasts originated as prokaryotic cells engulfed by an ancestral eukaryotic cell. The engulfed cell and its host cell then evolved into a single organism.42
3873404905cytoskeletonA network of protein fibers in the cytoplasm of a eukaryotic cell; includes microfilaments, intermediate filaments, and microtubules.43
3873404906microtubuleThe thickest of the three main kinds of fibers making up the cytoskeleton of a eukaryotic cell; a hollow tube made of globular proteins called tubulins; found in cilia and flagella.44
3873404907centrosomeA structure found in animal cells from which microtubules originate and that is important during cell division. Has two centrioles.45
3873404908intermediate filamentAn intermediate-sized protein fiber that is one of the three main kinds of fibers making up the cytoskeleton of eukaryotic cells. Rope-like and made of fibrous proteins.46
3873404909microfilamentThe thinnest of the three main kinds of protein fibers making up the cytoskeleton of a eukaryotic cell; a solid, helical rod composed of the globular protein actin.47
3873413547What makes peptide bonds?ribosomes use dehydration synthesis to attach amino acids48
38734184074 life processes in eukaryotic cellsManufacturing Breakdown of molecules Energy processing Structural support, movement, and communication49

American Pageant Chapter 26 Terms Flashcards

For APUSH Students using the American Pageant 14th Edition Textbook.
I did not define the terms - a friend did. I just put the words in quizlet form.

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1792328278Great WestFrom Texas to Canada. Was Still relatively untamed, wild, and full of Indians, bison, and wildlife. Scarcely populated by a few Mormons and Mexicans0
1792328279Reservation SystemThe system that allotted land with designated boundaries to Native American tribes in the west, beginning in the 1850's and ending with the Dawes Severalty Act of 1887. Within these reservations, most land was used communally, rather than owned individually. The US Gov't encouraged and sometimes violently coerced Native Americans to stay on the reservation at all times.1
1792328280Battle of Little Big Horn1876. A particularly violent example of the warfare between whites and Native Americans in the late 19th century, also known as "Custer's Last Stand." June 25-26, 1876, combined forces of 2K+ Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho Indians defeated and killed more than 250 US soldiers, including Col George Custer. The battle came as the US gov't tried to compel Native Americans to remain on the reservations and Native Americans tried to defend territory from white gold-seekers. This Indian advantage did not last, however, as the union of these Indian fighters proved tenuous and US Army soon exacted retribution2
1792328281Battle of Wounded Knee1890. A battle between the US Army and the Dakota Sioux, in which several hundred Native Americans and 29 US soldiers died. Was more like slaughter, as the Natives were mostly unarmed and were surrendering. Tensions erupted violently over 2 major issues: the Sioux practice of the "Ghost Practice" which the US gov't had outlawed, and the dispute over whether Sioux reservation land would be broken up b/c of the Dawes Act. This slaughter was the last act of violence against Native Americans, and women and children were killed too.3
1792328282Dawes Severalty Act1887. An act that broke up Indian reservations and distributed land to individual households. Leftover land was sold for money to fund US gov't efforts to "civilize" Native Americans reservations before the Act, 90 million acres were sold to non-Native buyers. Eliminated tribes as legal entities, and made them family farms4
1792328283Mining IndustryAfter gold and silver strikes in CO, Nev, and other W territories in the second half of the 19th century, fortune seekers by the thousands rushed to the W to dig. These metals were essential to US industrial growth and were also sold into world markets. After surface metals were removed, people sought ways to extract ore from underground, leading to the development of heavy mining machinery. This, in turn, led to the consolidation of the mining industry, because only big companies could afford to buy and build necessary machines.5
1792328284Homestead Act1862. A federal law that gave settlers 160 acres of land for about $30 if they lived on it for 5 years and improved it by, for instance, building a house on it. The act helped make land accessible to hundreds of thousands of westward moving settlers, but many people also found disappointment when their land was infertile or they saw speculators grabbing up the best land. This act assumed that public land should be administered in such a way as to promote frontier settlement. Most people just ended up going back to the city because they could not farm.6
1792328285Mechanization of AgricultureThe development of engine-driven machines, like the combine, which helped to dramatically increase the productivity in the 1870's-80's. This process contributed to the consolidation of agricultural business that drove family farms out of business.7
1792328286PopulistsOfficially known as the People's party, these people represented Westerners and Southerners who believed that US economic policy inappropriately favored Eastern businessmen instead of the Nation's farmers. Their proposals included nationalizing communication and transportation (especially railroads), creating a graduated income tax, and the unlimited coinage of silver.8
1792328287Pullman StrikeAn 1894 strike by RR workers upset by drastic wage cuts (1/3 of previous wages). The strike was led by socialist Eugene Debs but not supported by the American Federation of Labor. Eventually Pres Grover Cleveland intervened and federal troops forced an end to the strike on the basis that the strike was preventing the transit of US Mail. The strike highlighted divisions within labor and the gov'ts new willingness to use armed forces to combat work stoppages. Workers overturned cars and paralyzed railroads from Chicago to the Pacific. The AF of L denied connection as the AF of L supported decency in their protests. The Government intervention revealed an apparent alliance to big business rather than to the workers.9
1792328288Fourth Party SystemA term scholars have used to describe Nat'l politics from 1896-1932 when Republicans had a tight grip on the White House and issues like industrial regulation and labor concerns became paramount, replacing older concerns like civil service reform and monetary policy10
1792328289Gold Standard ActA 1900 act that guaranteed that paper currency would be redeemed freely in gold, putting an end to the already dying "free silver" campaign11
1792328290Buffalo SoldiersCalled by the Indians, they were 1/5 of all US Army personnel on the frontier who were African American. The Army was segregated, and these soldiers made up the 10th Calvary. They saw the most action in the West12
1792328291Hunchback CowsCoined by the Spanish, they were then tens of millions of buffalo that blackened the W prairies when white Americans first arrived.13
1792328292SportsmenPeople who killed bison who when they were lurching on RR trains, they'd lean out the windows and blaze away at the animals to satisfy their luster of slaughter.14
1792328293Indian Reorganization ActIt partially reversed the individualistic approach and tried to restore the tribal basis of Indian life. B/c of this, the Indian population grew from 243K in 1934 to 1.5mil in 2000. Called the New India Deal15
1792385204Fifty NinersPoured into Nevada in 1859 after the fabulous Comstock Lode had been uncovered. The "Kings of the Comstock" from 1860-90 mined a fantastic amount of gold and silver, $340mil. Nevada was then RR to the Union in 1864 to provide more electoral votes for Lincoln.16
1792385205Pike PeakersThey rushed West to take on the gold in the Rockies17
1792385206Ghost TownsSuch as Virginia City, Nevada, they silhouetted in the desert. They began with a boom and ended with a whimper.18
1792385207Beef BaronsLike the Swifts and Armours, the highly industrialized meatpacking business took off. Situated in Chicago and KS City, they sent goods East in refrigerated cars.19
1796088395Silver SenatorsRepresented people of the acreage states of the W as they used disproportionate influence to promote the interest of silver miners.20
1801635844Long DriveTexas cowboys drove herds from 1-10K over unfenced and unpeopled plains until they reached a RR terminal. They passed through cow towns like Dodge City, Cheyenne, and Ogallala (Neb).21
1801635845SodbustersThey poured west onto the prairies as these areas lacked trees for lumber and fuel as they built homes from sod they dug from the ground and burned corncobs for warmth.22
1801635846Dry FarmingThis took root on the plains as they adapted to the arid western environment but over time this type of farming created a pulverized surface soil that contributed to the Dust Bowl.23
1801635847Carlisle Indian SchoolA school in PA funded by the gov't in 1879 where Native Americans children separated from their tribes learned English and white value and customs. "Kill the Indian and Save the Man" was the motto. Many Native American parents would never see their children again after agreeing to send their kid here.24
1801635848Northern Pacific RailroadBuilt by James Hill, without government subsidies. It helped to develop the agriculture in the West.25
1801635849Great American DesertNorthern Pacific Railroad helped develop the agricultural West. Thought the land was sterile but it wasn't. A lot of people moved here for farming because wheat prices were high, so they could sell them for profit.26
1801635850Turner ThesisAlso known as the Frontier thesis, the argument made by historian Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893 that American democracy was formed by the declining American Frontier, and that the frontier represented the unique American character. Not completely true as: 1. American Democracy was fostered by our democratic heritage from England and by the demands of workers and reformers to have a greater voice in the government. 2.England developed a democratic government without the existence of a frontier 3. The South Western frontier developed neither a strong democratic tradition or a strong sense of nationalism. 4. The frontier did not serve as a safety valve for immigrants. They did not have the skills or equipment to farm or ranch on the frontier. The majority who became Homesteaders returned to the cities. 5. The expansion of the frontier was primarily a result of eastern demand for raw materials and food. 6. Despite the frontier, 19th century America was never fully economically independent from Europe. There was a great need for European markets for agricultural goods and capital needed for investment. However, Most historians agree that western expansion, agriculture, urbanization, and industrialization have all greatly contributed to help shape modern America and shape the American character.27
180163585189ersA nickname referring to the citizens who settled in Oklahoma at the time of the land rushes of 1889. Since frequently these settlers moved into the area prematurely, they caused Oklahomans in general to be called "Sooners."28
1801635852Safety Valve TheoryThe spurious theory that stated when hard times came, the unemployed who cluttered the city pavements merely moved west, farmed, and prospered.29
1801635853Mail Order CatalogsCompanies such as Aaron Montgomery Ward catalogue or Sears, which shipped products to people all across the country. Allowed people to shop without actually going to a store or whatever.30
1858870553The GrangeIt was organized in 1867 and led by Oliver H Kelley, a shrewd and energetic MN farmer who worked as a DC clerk. He wanted to enhance the farmer's lives through education, social, and fraternal activities. By 1875 it claimed over 800K members in the Mid W and S. They met in red schoolhouses. They started supporting individual improvement but then supported improvement of all the farmers. They created cooperatively owned stores, grain elevators, and warehouses. They then went into politics and succeeded in IL, WI, and MN. They strove to regulate RR rates and storage fees. Lawyers fought the badly designed Granger Laws. The Grangers decreased after the Wabash Case. This movement then formed the Greenback Labor Party.31
1858870554Greenback Labor PartyAttracted farmers, and in 1878, the Greenback Laborites polled over a million votes and elected 14 members of Congress. In 1880, the Greenbackers ran General James B. Weaver, a Civil War general, but he polled 3% of the popular vote.32
1858870555Cross of Gold SpeechWilliam Jennings Bryan's speech that supported the coinage of silver. It caused him to win the Democratic Convention the next day. He supported unlimited coinage of silver at 1/16 rather than 1/32 of gold.33
1858870556Dingley Tariff BillAlmost as soon as McKinley took office, the tariff issue, which had played second fiddle to silver in the Election of 1896, quickly forced itself to the forefront of debate. The current Wilson-Gorman law was not raising enough revenue to cover the annual Treasury deficits, and the Republican trusts thought that they had purchased the right to additional tariff protection by their lush contributions to Hanna's war chest. In due course the Dingley Tariff Bill was jammed through the House in 1897, under the pounding gavel of the re-throned "Czar" Reed. The proposed new rates were high, but not high enough to satisfy the paunchy lobbyists, who once again descended upon the Senate. Over 850 amendments were tacked onto the overburdened bill. The resulting piece of patchwork finally established the average rates at 46.5 percent, substantially higher than the Democratic Wilson-Gorman Act of 1894 and in some categories even higher than the McKinley Act of 1890.34
1858870557Frederick Jackson TurnerIn 1893 he wrote the most influential essays about American History, "The Significance of the Frontier in American History." He wrote how the frontier was more than a place as it was a state of mind and a symbol of opportunity. He also argued that the Frontier was the foundation of the American democratic character. He wrote that "American History had been in large degree the history of the colonization of the Great West" as the US was finally almost finished settling the west, which started when Columbus first came to America.35
1858870558Jacob S. CoxeyA wealthy OH quarry owner who set out for DC 1894 with few supporters and newspaper reporters. His platform included a demand that the gov't relieve unemployment by an inflationary public works program, supported by the Treasury. His "Commonweal Army" of Coxeyites followed Legal Tender Coxey who rode in a carriage with his wife and infant son. Him and his "lieutenants" were arrested for walking on the grass.36
1858870559William McKinleyThis Republican candidate defeated William Jennings Bryan in the 1896 presidential election. As a supporter of big business, he pushed for high protective tariffs. Under his leadership, the U.S. became an imperial world power. An anarchist assassinated him in 1901.37
1858870560Marcus Alonzo HannaThe driving force behind McKinley's rise to the presidency, Hanna was a former businessman who raised money and devised strategy for McKinley's winning bid for the White House in 1896. His greatest power, which killed Bryan in his campaigns, was fear and intimidation. He was an outstanding fundraiser and used other prominent politicians to speak for McKinley, who was not such a strong speaker. He essentially founded negative ads, and used them to beat Bryan.38
1858933038William Jennings Bryan36 yr. old, Nebraska "Boy Orator of the Platte" who with a peninsular jaw and raven-black hair, confidently stepped and quieted a platform of 15K people. This speech was the Cross of Gold speech, which supported silver. He had an organ like voice. The Populists supported them. Bryan weakened in the campaign b/c of his fear of Hanna. He lost 271 (7,102,246-6,492,559) 176. Bryan won down S and out W. Many factory workers unwillingly voted for McKinley to protect their jobs.39
1858933039JM ChivingtonSand Creek, CO 1864, this Col's militia massacred in cold blood 400 Indians who thought they had been promised immunity. Women were shot praying for mercy, children's brains were dashed out, and braves were tortured, scalped, and mutilated.40
1858933040William J Fetterman1866 a Sioux War party attempted to block Bozeman Trail construction to Montana goldfields were ambushed by this man's command of 81 soldiers and civilians in WY's Bighorn Mtns. Indians did not leave 1 survivor as they mutilated all the corpses. One trooper's face was spitted w/ 105 arrows. This massacre was second in notoriety only to Custer's Last Stand.41
1858933041George Armstrong CusterBuckskin clad boy general of the Civil War was demoted to colonel and turned into an Indian fighter. He wrote that the annihilation of Fetterman "awakened a bitter feeling toward the savage perpetrators." The ferocious cycle warfare intensified. He was annihilated after he ambitiously attacks Crazy Horse in the Battle of Little Big Horn.42
1858933042GeronimoHe led the Apache in AZ as he hated whites. They were pursued into MX by federal troops using the sun-graphing heliograph. They were convinced to surrender as their women were taken to FL. They however became successful OK farmers. He became the last Native American to surrender.43
1858933043John Wesley PowellA one-armed geologist and explorer of CO's R Grand Canyon as he was director of US Geological Survey. He believed land passed the 100th meridian was hard to grow agriculture as there was minimal rain. People who ignored him and farmed in the planes quickly went bankrupt. The Great American Desert was soon blossomed with greatly funded irrigation systems.44
1858933044Joseph F Glidden1874, he invented the barbed wire which closed up prairies starting ranches as it solved the problem of building fences on the treeless prairies.45
1858933045Marshall James HickokA fabulous gunman who killed only in self defense or in the line of duty and was fatally shot in the back in 1876 while playing poker. He kept peace in Abilene, KS.46
1858933046Chief JosephLeader of Nez Perce Indians. They went from NE OR when US authorities tried herding them into a reservation. He finally surrendered w/ 700 Indians after a tortuous 1700-mile trek across the Continental Divide to Canada. He hoped to rendezvous with Sitting Bull who took refuge N of the border after the Battle of Little Big Horn. Joe and the Nez were betrayed into believing they'd be taken to their ancestral grounds of Idaho but were instead taken to a KS reservation where 40% died from disease. The remaining ones were led to Idaho. He was a brilliant strategist, but used his skills to avoid confrontation. While he fled, he took everyone, including elderly, women, and children.47
1858933047Helen Hunt JacksonWrote "A century of dishonor" it was a chronicled record of government ruthlessness with Indians. "Romona" was a love story about Indians. This increased sympathy for Indians.48
1858933048James WeaverPopulists candidate in the Election of 1892. He gathered a 1 million votes, mostly from the West (farmers). This number was uncommon and rather large for a third party.49
1858933049Ignatius DonnellyA Populist from MN who was elected 3 times to Congress.50
1858933050Mary Elizabeth LeaseThe queen of the populists as she was tall, athletic, and known as "Kansas Pythoness" as she demanded KS should raise less corn and more hell. Her and KS angered the E as the E could not civilize KS showing that complaint was rural America's #1 crop.51
1858933051Eugene DebsA labor leader who organized the American Railway Union of 150K members. He caused the Pullman Strike and was arrested and sentenced to 6 months imprisonment for contempt of court b/c he defied a federal court injunction to cease striking. In prison he read much radical literature as he was leader of the Socialist movement in America after leaving prison.52
1858933052Richard OlneyUS Attorney General who was an ultraconservative and ex-RR attorney who urged the dispatch of federal troops to take on the Pullman Strike b/c it was interfering with the transit of US mail. Pres. Cleveland supported him and said "If it takes the entire army and navy to deliver a postal card in Chicago, that card will be delivered."53
1858933053Will Hope HarveyHe wrote the popular pamphlet titled Coin's Financial School in 1894 as it supported free coinage of silver. Populists supported it. He showed a golden ogre beheading a beautiful silver maiden. He overwhelmed bankers and economic professors with his brilliant arguments for silver.54
1859673750Comstock LodeAbundance of Gold found in Nevada that attracted who came to be known as the 59ers55

Chapter 21 America and the Great War Flashcards

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3394714573civilized vs. uncivilized nations*civilized -->predominantly white and Anglo-Saxon or Teutonic, had the right and duty to intervene in the affairs of a "backward" nation to preserve order and stability *uncivilized-->generally nonwhite, Latin, or Slavic *Economic development as well as race had an impact on whether civilized or uncivilized0
33947235411904 Japanese aggressionstaged a surprise attack on the Russian fleet at Port Arthur in southern Manchuria (province of China controlled by Russia and Japan)1
3394733047the Nobel Peace prizeRoosevelt won in 1906 for his work in ending the Russo-Japanese War2
3394744799Great White Fleetsixteen battleships of the new American navy sent on an unprecedented journey around the world that included a call on Japan to make sure Japan recognized the U.S.'s power3
3394759874Spacial sphere of influenceLatin America4
3394764071Venezuela crisis1902, the financially troubled government of Venezuela began to renege on debts to European bankers. Naval forces of Britain, Italy, and Germany blockaded the Venezuelan coast in response. Then German ships began to bombard a Venezuelan port amid rumors that Germany planned to establish a permanent base in the region. Roosevelt used the threat of American naval power to pressure the German navy to withdraw.5
3394802367Roosevelt Corollary1904, the U.S. had the right not only to oppose European intervention in the Western Hemisphere but also to intervene in the domestic affairs of its neighbors if those neighbors proved unable to maintain order and national sovereignty on their own (according to Roosevelt), to the Monroe Doctrine6
3394830749Dominican Republic crisisfirst opportunity to us Roosevelt Corollary, a revolution had toppled the Dominican Republic's corrupt and bankrupt government in 1903, but the new regime proved no better able to make good on the country's $22 million in debts to European nations. Roosevelt established, in effect, an American receivership, assuming control of Dominican customs and distributing 45 percent of the revenues to the Dominicans and the rest to foreign creditors. This arrangement lasted, in one form or another, for more than three decades.7
3394828686Platt Amendentgave the United States the right to prevent any other foreign power from intruding into the new nation8
3394832792Nicaragua vs. Colombia CanalPanama Canal in Colombia over Nicaragua9
3394835460Hay-Herren Treaty and Columbian legislatureHerren signed an agreement giving the United States perpetual rights to a six-mile-wide "canal zone" across Colombia. The outraged Colombian senate refused to ratify it. Colombia then sent a new representative to Washington with instructions to demand a higher payment from the Americans plus a share of the payment to the French.10
3394836629USS Nashville and to "maintain order"Their presence prevented Colombian forces from suppressing the rebellion, and three days later Roosevelt recognized Panama as an independent nation, work on the canal continued11
3394838230Philander C. KnoxTaft's secretary of state, worked aggressively to extend American investments into less developed regions. Critics called his policies "Dollar Diplomacy."12
3394839451Dollar Diplomacyextend American investments into less developed regions. Critics called his policies "Dollar Diplomacy."13
3394840180Nicaragua crisis (2)When a revolution broke out in Nicaragua in 1909, the administration quickly sided with the insurgents (who had been inspired to revolt by an American mining company) and sent troops into the country to seize the customs houses. As soon as peace was restored, Knox encouraged American bankers to offer substantial loans to the new government, thus increasing Washington's financial leverage over the country. When the new pro-American government faced an insurrection less than two years later, Taft again landed troops in Nicaragua, this time to protect the existing regime. The troops remained there for more than a decade.14
3394842329Dominican Republic, Haiti, Danish West Indes, Nicaragua againHaving already seized control of the finances of the Dominican Republic in 1905, the United States established a military government there in 1916. The military occupation lasted eight years. In neighboring Haiti, Wilson landed marines in 1915 to quell a revolution, in the course of which a mob had murdered an unpopular president. American military forces remained in the country until 1934, and American officers drafted the new Haitian constitution adopted in 1918. When Wilson began to fear that the Danish West Indies might be about to fall into the hands of Germany, he bought the colony from Denmark and renamed it the Virgin Islands. Concerned about the possibility of European influence in Nicaragua, he signed a treaty with that country's government ensuring that no other nation would build a canal there and winning for the United States the right to intervene in Nicaragua to protect American interests.15
3394842941Porfirio Diazunder the friendly auspices of this corrupt dictator, American businessmen had been establishing an enormous economic presence in Mexico16
3394843783Francisco MaderoIn 1910, however, Díaz had been overthrown by the popular leader, seemed hostile to American businesses in Mexico17
3394844741Victoriano HuertaThe United States quietly encouraged a reactionary general, Victoriano Huerta, to depose Madero early in 1913, and the Taft administration, in its last weeks in office, prepared to recognize the new Huerta regime and welcome back a receptive environment for American investments in Mexico. Before it could do so, however, the new government murdered Madero, shortly before Woodrow Wilson took office in Washington. The new president instantly announced that he would never recognize Huerta's "government of butchers."18
3394846697Constitutionalists and Venustiano CarranzaWilson hoped that simply by refusing to recognize Huerta he could help topple the regime and bring to power the opposing Constitutionalists, led by Venustiano Carranza. But when Huerta, with the support of American business interests, established a full military dictatorship in October 1913, the president became more assertive.19
3394849967U.S.S Dolphin and TampicoIn April 1914, an officer in Huerta's army briefly arrested several American sailors from the USS Dolphin who had gone ashore in Tampico, on Mexico's east coast. The men were immediately released, but the American admiral-unsatisfied with the apology he received-demanded that the Huerta forces fire a twenty-one-gun salute to the American flag as a public display of penance. The Mexicans refused. Wilson used the trivial incident as a pretext for seizing the Mexican port of Veracruz.20
3394849968VeracruzWilson had envisioned a bloodless action, but in a clash with Mexican troops in Veracruz, the Americans killed 126 Mexican soldiers and suffered 19 casualties of their own. Now at the brink of war, Wilson began to look for a way out. His show of force, however, had helped strengthen the position of the Carranza faction, which captured Mexico City in August and forced Huerta to flee the country. At last, it seemed, the crisis might be over.21
3394850605Pancho VillaCarranza's erstwhile lieutenant, who was now leading a rebel army of his own22
3394851583January, March 1916When Villa's military position deteriorated, however, Wilson abandoned him and finally, in October 1915, granted preliminary recognition to the Carranza government. Villa, angry at what he considered an American betrayal, retaliated in January 1916 by shooting sixteen American mining engineers in northern Mexico. Two months later, he led his soldiers (or "bandits," as the United States called them) across the border into Columbus, New Mexico, where they killed seventeen more Americans.23
3394852917General John J. Pershinglead an American expeditionary force across the Mexican border in pursuit of Villa24
3396896831Triple EntenteBritain, France, and Russia25
3396898657Triple AllianceGermany, Austro-Hungarian empire, and Italy26
33968986582 biggest powersEngland and Germany27
3396900015June 28, 1914Ferdinand was assassinated28
3396900016July-August of 1914War raged through most of Europe29
3396902436"impartial in thoughts as well as deed"Wilson called fellow citizens to remain this30
3396902437American sympathizingSome with Germany, others with Britain like Wilson31
3396904176economic non-neutralityThe U.S. because of neutrality should be able to trade with both, but because of the blockade Britain set up against Germany, it would be difficult while staying neutral32
3396905104LusitaniaGerman sub sank this British ship causing many British deaths, a act of piracy according to Roosevelt33
3396905105Sussex PledgeWilson demanded Germany to not do sub warfare, central powers continue commitment to neutral rights, 1916 announcement/act allies forming ships to sink subs caused Germany to fire on such vessels---> France unarmed sussex. U.S. again demanded Germany to not, Germany relented34
3396906726Wilson flip-floppingAt first sided with pacifists but as tensions with Germany grew he became a preparedness advocate35
3396909031"he kept us out of war"1916 slogan for Wilsons reelection, Hughes supported by TR-->Wilson did nothing to discourage savings that H was more likely to lead to war---> nation proud to fight36
3396910248Wilson speech to congress in 1917progressive idea, needed something to justify american intervention and unite public opinions, post war plan-->maintain peace through permanent league of nation, peace w/o victory37
3396911399Germany-January 1917launched assaults on enemy lines in France, began unrestricted sub warfare against Britain and US ships --> hoped allied defenses would collapse before US intervention38
3396912455Zimmerman telegramhelped build sentiment (US) for war, B gave Wilson telegram intercepted from G minister Zim to Mx saying that Mx should ally w/ G to regain their lost provinces39
3396912456Russian Revolutiontoppled czarist regime/monarchy--> repub., how US can ally themselves and not have a dirty conscience40
3396986977April 2, 1917wilson asked congress for declaration of war after G torpedoed 3 US ships41
3404698377British ships and American convoys1/4 ships never returned, fleet of america destroyers aided the B navy in assault of G subs42
3404700830Bolshevik RevolutionNovember 1917, after, new gov't led by VI Lenin negotiated a hasty and costly peace w/ the central pwrs, freeing additional G troops to fight on the W front43
3404700831TRin favor of voluntary recruitment, wilson rejected, old traditions of war now obselete44
3404701859Newton D. Bakersecretary of war, national draft45
3404701860Champ Clarkhouse speaker, "there is precious little difference between a conscript and a convict"46
3404704643Selective Service ActBaker won passage of this in mid may (3 million to army, 2 million and joined various branches voluntarily:AEF)47
3404704644Shirkersthose who evaded drafts48
3404706002AEF + Diversitywomen and African Americans49
3404709823Women's motor corpsauxiliary roles in hospitals and offices50
3411869389African American rolesmarines wouldnt accept them51
3411869390IQ testaptitude test for military, only reflected education52
3411871971General John A PershingAEF joined Allied forces under him53
3411873380American troop experiencetrench warfare, low morale54
3411874821Chateau-ThierryJune 1918, American forces there assisted F in repelling G55
3411874822Rheims6 weeks after Chateau-Thierry, helped turn away another assault56
3411876983Argonne ForestSept 26, large assault against G here, 7 weeks long, pushed G back to border and cut supply line57
3411876984ArmistaceG wanted it58
3411879303November 11, 1918accepted G armistice, great war closed59
3411880710New forms of tech warfaremachine guns, mobile weapons, faster guns, chemical weapons, planes and battleships used, trench warfare now necessary60
3411880711Caualties> B 1m > F 1.7m > G 2m > A-HE 1.5m > I 460k > R 1.7m > US 112k61
3411949198financing the war-U.S. government had spent $32 billion for expenses directly related to the conflict -launched a major drive to solicit loans from the American people by selling "Liberty Bonds" to the public. By 1920, the sale of bonds, to both individuals and institutions, accompanied by elaborate patriotic appeals, had produced $23 billion. -new taxes were bringing in an additional sum of nearly $10 billion-some from levies on the "excess profits" of corporations, much from new, steeply graduated income and inheritance taxes that ultimately rose as high as 70 percent in some brackets.62
3411954938Council of National Defense/Civilian Advisory Commisson-composed of members of Wilson's cabinet (CND) -set up local defense councils in every state and locality (CAC) -economic mobilization, according to this first plan, was to rest on a dispersal of power to local communities63
3411954939war boardsadministrative structure that slowly emerged from such proposals was dominated by a series of "war boards," one to oversee the railroads, one to supervise fuel supplies (largely coal), another to handle food (a board that helped elevate to prominence the brilliant young engineer and business executive Herbert Hoover). The boards generally succeeded in meeting essential war needs without paralyzing the domestic economy.64
3411957452WIB-agency created in July 1917 to coordinate government purchases of military supplies -casually organized at first, it stumbled badly until March 1918, when Wilson restructured it and placed it under the control of the Wall Street financier Bernard Baruch. From then on, the board wielded powers greater (in theory at least) than any other government agency had ever possessed. Baruch decided which factories would convert to the production of which war materials and set prices for the goods they produced. When materials were scarce, Baruch decided to whom they should go. When corporations were competing for government contracts, he chose among them. He was, it seemed, providing the centralized regulation of the economy that some progressives had long urged. -plagued by mismanagement and inefficiency. Its apparent success rested in large part on the sheer extent of American resources and productive capacities. Nor was the WIB in any real sense an example of state control of the economy.65
3411957453dollar-a-year menBaruch viewed himself as the partner of business; and within the WIB, businessmen themselves-the so-called dollar-a-year men, who took paid leave from their corporate jobs and worked for the government for a token salary-supervised the affairs of the private economy. Baruch ensured that manufacturers who coordinated their efforts with his goals would be exempt from antitrust laws. He helped major industries earn enormous profits from their efforts.66
3411959891National War Labor Board-established in April 1918 to resolve labor disputes, pressured industry to grant important concessions to workers: an eight-hour day, the maintenance of minimal living standards, equal pay for women doing equal work, recognition of the right of unions to organize and bargain collectively. -in return, it insisted that workers forgo all strikes and that employers not engage in lockouts.67
3411959892Ludlow Massacrein 1914, workers (mostly Italians, Greeks, and Slavs) walked out of coal mines owned by John D. Rockefeller. Joined by their wives and daughters, they continued the strike even after they had been evicted from company housing and had moved into hastily erected tents. The state militia was called into the town to protect the mines, but in fact (as was often the case), it actually worked to help employers defeat the strikers.68
3411962098Lafayette Theatrewas the first New York theater to desegregate, in as early as 1912. African American theatergoers could sit in the orchestra section rather than just in the balcony as was the practice in other New York theaters.69
3411962099Great Migration-migration of hundreds of thousands of African Americans from the rural South into northern industrial cities -"push" and a "pull." -push was the poverty, indebtedness, racism, and violence many black men and women experienced in the South -pull was the prospect of factory jobs in the urban North and the opportunity to live in communities where blacks could enjoy more freedom and autonomy70
3411962100Race riotsAs the black communities expanded, they inevitably began to rub up against white neighborhoods, with occasionally violent results. In East St. Louis, Illinois, a white mob attacked a black neighborhood on July 2, 1917, burned down many houses, and shot the residents of some of them as they fled. As many as forty African Americans died.71
3411967968Women in Industry Board-to oversee the movement of these women into the jobs left behind by men -after the war, the board became the Women's Bureau, a permanent agency dedicated to protecting the interests of women in the workforce.72
3411970058peace movement before 1917had many constituencies: German Americans, Irish Americans, religious pacifists (Quakers, Mennonites, and others), intellectuals and groups on the left such as the Socialist Party and the Industrial Workers of the World, all of whom considered the war a meaningless battle among capitalist nations for commercial supremacy-an opinion many others, in America and Europe, later came to share.73
3411970059Carrie Chapman Cattleader of the fight for woman suffrage, helped create the Woman's Peace Party, with a small but active membership74
3411971630NAWSAlargest women's organization, supported the war and, more than that, presented itself as a patriotic organization dedicated to advancing the war effort. Its membership grew dramatically as a result.75
3411971631Popularity of WW1-not as popular among the American people as World War II would be -most of the country supported the intervention once it began. -outbursts of fervent patriotism, floods of voluntary enlistments in the military, and greatly increased displays of patriotism. -Women joined their local Red Cross in an effort to contribute to the war effort. -Children raised money for war bonds in their schools. -Churches included prayers for the president and the troops in their services. -gave a large boost to the wave of religious revivalism that had been growing for a decade before 1917; revivalism, in turn, became a source of support for the war.76
3411973204CPI-most conspicuous government effort to rally public support was a vast propaganda campaign orchestrated by this -directed by the Denver journalist George Creel, who spoke openly of the importance of achieving social unity -upervised the distribution of tons of pro-war literature (etc)77
3411974553the Espionage Act of 1917-gave the government new tools with which to respond to reports -created stiff penalties for spying, sabotage, or obstruction of the war effort (crimes that were often broadly defined); and it empowered the Post Office Department to ban "seditious" material from the mails78
3411978601The Sabotage Act Na the Sedition ActThese bills expanded the meaning of the Espionage Act to make illegal any public expression of opposition to the war; in practice, it allowed officials to prosecute anyone who criticized the president or the government.79
3411980630Anti capitalist and anti war groups-frequent targets of the new legislation -Socialist Party and the Industrial Workers of the World80
3411980679Eugene V Debsthe humane leader of the Socialist Party and an opponent of the war, was sentenced to ten years in prison in 1918. Only a pardon by President Warren G. Harding ultimately won his release in 1921.81
3411982769Big Bill Haywood-energetically prosecuted -only by fleeing to the Soviet Union did Haywood avoid long imprisonment82
3411985065Vigilante mobs and citizens' groups-sprang up to "discipline" those who dared challenge the war -to mobilize "respectable" members of their communities to root out disloyalty83
3411985066American Protective Leagueenlisted the services of 250,000 people, who served as "agents"-prying into the activities and thoughts of their neighbors, opening mail, tapping telephones, and in general attempting to impose unity of opinion on their communities84
3411988498patriotic organizations-Attorney General Thomas W. Gregory, a particularly avid supporter of repressing dissent, described the league and similar organizations approvingly as this (APL) -other vigilante organizations-the National Security League, the Boy Spies of America, the American Defense Society-performed much the same function85
3411989882100% Americanism-the director of the National Security League described the origins of the anti-immigrant sentiment, which was producing growing support for what many citizens were now calling this86
3411989883Anti German Americans-campaign to purge society of all things German quickly gathered speed -Sauerkraut was renamed "liberty cabbage." Frankfurters became "liberty sausage." -performances of German music were frequently banned -german books were removed from the shelves of libraries -courses in the German language were removed from school curricula; the California Board of Education called it "a language that disseminates the ideals of autocracy, brutality, and hatred." -routinely fired from jobs in war industries, lest they "sabotage" important tasks, sometimes fired from war-unrelated reasons87
34412989253 parts of the 14 points-war aims had 14 district positions -Wilton's proposals contained 8 specific recommendations for adjusting post war boundaries and for establishing new nations to replace the defunct Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires ---> reflected his belief in the right of all ppls to self determination -5 general principles to govern international conduct in the future: freedom of the seas, open covenants instead of secret treasuries, reductions in armaments,free trade, impartial mediation of colonial claims -proposal for a League of Nations that would help implement these new principles and territorial adjustments and resolve future controversies88
3441298926Problem with self determination*he provided no formula for deciding how to implement the "national self-determination" he promised for subjugated peoples *he said little about economic rivalries and their effect on international relations, even though such economic tensions had been in large part responsible for the war89
3441298927Wilson and lenin*Lenin had issued his own statement of war aims, strikingly similar to Wilson's *Wilson also realized that Lenin was now a competitor in the effort to lead the postwar order ---> he announced the Fourteen Points in part to ensure that the world looked to the United States, not Russia, for guidance90
3441298928Ally vs associateWilson refused to make the United States their "ally" but had kept his distance as an "associate" of his European partners, keeping American military forces separate from the Allied armies they were joining91
3441298929British and French (on Germany)*stored up an enormous reserve of bitterness toward Germany ---> in no mood for a benign and generous peace *British prime minister, David Lloyd George, insisted for a time that the German kaiser be captured and executed. *He and Georges Clemenceau, president of France, remained determined to the end to gain something from the struggle to compensate them for the catastrophe they had suffered.92
3441298930Wilson and congress*he unwisely appealed to the American voters to support his peace plans by electing Democrats to Congress in the November elections. *a Republican victory would be "interpreted on the other side of the water as a repudiation of my leadership." *days later, the Republicans captured majorities in both houses --> domestic economic troubles, more than international issues, had been the most important factor in the voting; but because of the president's ill-timed appeal, the results damaged his ability to claim broad popular support for his peace plans.93
3441298931The big fourDavid Lloyd George representing Great Britain; Georges Clemenceau representing France; Vittorio Orlando, the prime minister of Italy; and Wilson, who hoped to dominate them all94
3441298932White Russians*new Bolshevik government was still fighting "White" counterrevolutionaries *Americans soon became involved, at least indirectly, in assisting the White Russians (the anti-Bolsheviks) in their fight against the new regime95
3441298933In Paris Wilson didn't get...*unable to win approval of many of the broad principles he had espoused: freedom of the seas, which the British refused even to discuss; free trade; "open covenants openly arrived at" (the Paris negotiations themselves were often conducted in secret). *he was forced to accept a transfer of German colonies in the Pacific to Japan; the British had promised them in exchange for Japanese assistance in the war. *Wilson's pledge of "national self-determination" for all peoples suffered numerous assaults. Economic and strategic demands were constantly coming into conflict with the principle of cultural nationalism.96
3441298934Reparations*president opposed demanding compensation from the defeated Central Powers *other Allied leaders were insistent, and slowly Wilson gave way and accepted the principle of reparations, the specific sum to be set later by a commission *that figure, established in 1921, was $56 billion, supposedly to pay for damages to civilians and for military pensions. Continued negotiations over the next decade scaled the sum back considerably. In the end, Germany paid only $9 billion, which was still more than its crippled economy could afford *he reparations, combined with other territorial and economic penalties, constituted an effort to keep Germany weak for the indefinite future. Never again, the Allied leaders believed, should the Germans be allowed to become powerful enough to threaten the peace of Europe.97
3441298935In Paris Wilson got...*he secured approval of a plan to place many former colonies and imperial possessions (among them Palestine) in "trusteeship" under the League of Nations-the so-called mandate system. *he blocked a French proposal to break up western Germany into a group of smaller states. *he helped design the creation of two new nations: Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia, which were welded together out of, among other territories, pieces of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire. Each nation contained an uneasy collection of ethnic groups that had frequently battled one another in the past.98
3441298936League of nations*permanent international organization to oversee world affairs and prevent future wars *January 25, 1919, the Allies voted to accept the "covenant" of the League of Nations; and with that, Wilson believed, the peace treaty was transformed from a disappointment into a success. *provided for an assembly of nations that would meet regularly to debate means of resolving disputes and protecting the peace. Authority to implement League decisions would rest with a nine-member executive council; the United States would be one of five permanent members of the council, along with Britain, France, Italy, and Japan. (The covenant left many questions unanswered, most notably how the League would enforce its decisions. Wilson, however, was confident that once established, the new organization would find suitable answers.)99
3441298937Revisions to the league*after a brief trip to Washington in February 1919, during which he listened to harsh objections to the treaty from members of the Senate and others, he returned to Europe and insisted on several modifications in the covenant to satisfy his critics. *the revisions ensured that the United States would not be obliged to accept a League mandate to oversee a territory and that the League would not challenge the Monroe Doctrine. (but the changes were not enough to mollify his opponents, and Wilson refused to go further)100
3446056175Treaty of VersaillesJuly 10, 1919101
3441298938Irreconcilablessome senators-the fourteen so-called irreconcilables, many of them western isolationists-opposed the agreement on principle102
3441298939Wilson ordeal*Wilson embarked on a grueling, cross-country speaking tour to arouse public support for the treaty (in a little more than three weeks, he traveled over 8,000 miles by train, speaking as often as four times a day, resting hardly at all) *after speaking at Pueblo, Colorado, on September 25, he collapsed with severe headaches. Canceling the rest of his itinerary, he rushed back to Washington, D.C., where, a few days later, he suffered a major stroke. For two weeks he was close to death; for six weeks more, he was so seriously ill that he could conduct virtually no public business. His wife and his doctor formed an almost impenetrable barrier around him, shielding him from any official pressures that might impede his recovery, preventing the public from receiving any accurate information about the gravity of his condition.103
3441298940Senate voteWhen the Senate Foreign Relations Committee finally sent the treaty to the full Senate for ratification, recommending nearly fifty amendments and reservations, Wilson refused to consider any of them. When the full Senate voted in November to accept fourteen of the reservations, Wilson gave stern directions to his Democratic allies: they must vote only for a treaty with no changes whatsoever; any other version must be defeated. On November 19, 1919, forty-two Democrats, following the president's instructions, joined with the thirteen Republican "irreconcilables" to reject the amended treaty. When the Senate voted on the original version without any reservations, thirty-eight senators, all but one Democrats, voted to approve it; fifty-five senators (some Democrats among them) voted no.104
3441298941Lingering effects of the war*american economy experienced a severe postwar recession. And much of middle-class America responded to demands for change with a fearful, conservative hostility. The aftermath of war brought not the age of liberal reform that progressives had predicted, but a period of repression and reaction. *Citizens of Washington, D.C., on the day after the armistice, found it impossible to place long-distance telephone calls: the lines were jammed with officials of the war agencies canceling government contracts. The fighting had ended sooner than anyone had anticipated, and without warning, without planning, the nation was launched into the difficult task of economic reconversion. ***at first, the wartime boom continued. But the postwar prosperity rested largely on the lingering effects of the war (government deficit spending continued for some months after the armistice) and on sudden, temporary demands (a booming market for scarce consumer goods at home and a strong market for American products in the war-ravaged nations of Europe). This brief postwar boom was accompanied, however, by raging inflation, a result in part of the rapid abandonment of wartime price controls. Through most of 1919 and 1920, prices rose at an average of more than 15 percent a year.105
3441298942Postwar recession*late in 1920, the economic bubble burst, as many of the temporary forces that had created it disappeared and as inflation began killing the market for consumer goods. *Between 1920 and 1921, the gross national product (GNP) declined nearly 10 percent; 100,000 businesses went bankrupt; 453,000 farmers lost their land; nearly 5 million Americans lost their jobs. *in this unpromising economic environment, leaders of organized labor set out to consolidate the advances they had made in the war, which now seemed in danger of being lost. *the raging inflation of 1919 wiped out the modest wage gains workers had achieved during the war; many laborers worried about job security as hundreds of thousands of veterans returned to the workforce; arduous working conditions-such as the twelve-hour workday in the steel industry-continued to be a source of discontent.106
3441298943Unions roleEmployers aggravated the resentment by using the end of the war (and the end of government controls) to rescind benefits they had been forced to give workers in 1917 and 1918-most notably recognition of unions.107
3441298944Seattle, Washington*January, a walkout by shipyard workers in Seattle, Washington, evolved into a general strike that brought the entire city almost to a standstill. *the mayor requested and received the assistance of U.S. Marines to keep the city running, and eventually the strike failed.108
3441298945Boston*september, there was a strike by the Boston police force, which was responding to layoffs and wage cuts by demanding recognition of its union --> Boston erupted in violence and looting. *efforts by local businessmen, veterans, and college students to patrol the streets proved ineffective; and finally Governor Calvin Coolidge called in the National Guard to restore order. *boston officials dismissed the entire police force and hired a new one.109
3441298946Steelworkers*September 1919, the greatest strike in American history began, when 350,000 steelworkers in several eastern and midwestern cities walked off the job, demanding an eight-hour workday and recognition of their union. *violence coming from employers, who hired armed guards to disperse picket lines and escort strikebreakers into factories. *it climaxed in a riot in Gary, Indiana, in which eighteen strikers were killed. Steel executives managed to keep most plants running with nonunion labor, and public opinion was so hostile to the strikers that the AFL-having at first endorsed the strike-soon timidly repudiated it. *by January, the strike had collapsed. It was a setback from which organized labor would not recover for more than a decade.110
3441298947African Americans*400,000 black men who had served in the armed forces during the war came home in 1919 and marched down the main streets of the industrial cities with other returning troops. *(in New York and other cities), they marched again through the streets of black neighborhoods such as Harlem, led by jazz bands, cheered by thousands of African Americans, worshiped as heroes. *The black soldiers were an inspiration to thousands of urban African Americans, a sign, they thought, that a new age had come, that the glory of black heroism in the war would make it impossible for white society ever again to treat African Americans as less than equal citizens. W. E. B. Du Bois, watching the African American soldiers returning home, conveyed his hopes for a new life for them.111
344129894815th regimentthe all-black Fifteenth Army Regiment marches up Fifth Avenue in New York City in 1917, shortly after the United States entered World War I. They are en route to an army training camp in New York State before traveling to the front in Europe. Less than two years later, many of these same men marched through Harlem on their return from the war, and again down Fifth Avenue, before cheering crowds-convinced, wrongly, that their service in the war would win them important new freedoms at home (picture in book)112
3441298949Racial violence*in the South, there was a sudden increase in lynchings: more than seventy blacks, some of them war veterans, died at the hands of white mobs in 1919 alone. *in the North, black factory workers faced widespread layoffs as returning white veterans displaced them from their jobs. African American veterans found no significant new opportunities for advancement. Rural black migrants to northern cities encountered white communities unfamiliar with and generally hostile to them; and as whites became convinced that black workers with lower wage demands were hurting them economically, animosity grew rapidly.113
3441298950Chicago race riots*in Chicago, a black teenager swimming in Lake Michigan on a hot July day happened to drift toward a white beach. Whites on shore allegedly stoned him unconscious; he sank and drowned. Angry blacks gathered in crowds and marched into white neighborhoods to retaliate; whites formed even larger crowds and roamed into black neighborhoods shooting, stabbing, and beating passersby, destroying homes and properties. For more than a week, Chicago was virtually at war. In the end, 38 people died-15 whites and 23 blacks-and 537 were injured; over 1,000 people were left homeless.114
3441298951Marcus Garvey*Jamaican, began to attract a wide American following-mostly among poor urban blacks-with an ideology of black nationalism. Garvey encouraged African Americans to take pride in their own achievements and to develop an awareness of their African heritage-to reject assimilation into white society and develop pride in what Garvey argued was their own superior race and culture. His United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) launched a chain of black-owned grocery stores and pressed for the creation of other black businesses. Eventually, Garvey began urging his supporters to leave America and "return" to Africa, where they could create a new society of their own. *In the 1920s, the Garvey movement experienced explosive growth for a time; and the UNIA became notable for its mass rallies and parades, for the opulent uniforms of its members, and for the growth of its enterprises. *It began to decline, however, after Garvey was indicted in 1923 on charges of business fraud. He was deported to Jamaica two years later. But the allure of black nationalism, which he helped make visible to millions of African Americans, survived in black culture long after Garvey himself was gone.115
3441298952Red scareThe bombings crystallized what was already a growing determination among many middle-class Americans (and some government officials) to fight back against radicalism-a determination steeled by the repressive atmosphere of the war years. This antiradicalism accompanied, and reinforced, the already strong commitment among old-stock Protestants to the idea of "100 percent Americanism." And it produced what became known as the Red Scare.116
3441298953A Mitchell Palmerthe greatest contribution to the Red Scare came from the federal government. On New Year's Day, 1920, Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer and his ambitious assistant, J. Edgar Hoover, orchestrated a series of raids on alleged radical centers throughout the country and arrested more than 6,000 people.117
3441298954Palmer raids*intended to uncover large caches of weapons and explosives; they discovered only three pistols. *most of those arrested were ultimately released, but about 500 who were not American citizens were summarily deported.118
3441298955Sacco and Vanzetti*in May 1920, two Italian immigrants, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, were charged with the murder of a paymaster in Braintree, Massachusetts. The evidence against them was questionable; but because both men were confessed anarchists, they faced a widespread public presumption of guilt. *they were convicted in a trial of extraordinary injudiciousness, before an openly prejudiced judge, Webster Thayer, and were sentenced to death. Over the next several years, public support for Sacco and Vanzetti grew to formidable proportions. But all requests for a new trial or a pardon were denied. *on August 23, 1927, amid widespread protests around the world, Sacco and Vanzetti, still proclaiming their innocence, died in the electric chair. Theirs was a cause that a generation of Americans never forgot.119
3441298956Defense and civil liberties*discredited the Red Scare & helped give new force of the Bill of Rights *heavy-handed actions of the federal government after the war created a powerful backlash. It destroyed the career of A. Mitchell Palmer. It almost nipped in the bud the ascent of J. Edgar Hoover. It damaged the Democratic Party. *it led to an organization committed to protecting civil liberties: the National Civil Liberties Bureau, launched in 1917, which in 1920 was renamed the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which remains a prominent institution today. *at the same time, members of the Supreme Court-most notably Justices Oliver Wendell Holmes and Louis Brandeis-gradually moved toward a strong position of defense of unpopular speech. The clash of "fighting faiths," Holmes wrote in a dissent in 1920, was best resolved "by free trade in ideas-that the best test of truth is ... the competition of the market." *this and other dissents eventually became law as other justices committed themselves to a robust defense of speech, however unpopular.120
344129895719th amendmentOn August 26, 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment, guaranteeing women the right to vote, became part of the Constitution121
3441298958Shepherd Towner maternity and Infacy act*members of Congress-concerned that women would vote as a bloc on the basis of women's issues-passed the Sheppard-Towner Maternity and Infancy Act in 1921, one of the first pieces of federal welfare legislation that provided funds for supporting the health of women and infants.122
3441298959Cable act*concern about the women's vote also appeared to create support for the 1922 Cable Act, which granted women the rights of U.S. citizenship independent of their husbands' status, and for the proposed (but never ratified) 1924 constitutional amendment to outlaw child labor.123
3441298960Candidates in the 1920 electionWoodrow Wilson wanted the campaign to be a referendum on the League of Nations, and the Democratic candidates, Ohio governor James M. Cox and Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt, tried to keep Wilson's ideals alive. The Republican presidential nominee, however, offered a different vision. He was Warren Gamaliel Harding, an obscure Ohio senator whom party leaders had chosen as their nominee confident that he would do their bidding once in office.124
3441298961Return to normalcyHarding offered few ideals, only a vague promise of a return, as he later phrased it, to "normalcy." He won in a landslide. The Republican ticket received 61 percent of the popular vote and carried every state outside the South. The party made major gains in Congress as well. Woodrow Wilson, who had tried and failed to create a postwar order based on democratic ideals, stood repudiated. Early in 1921, he retired to a house on S Street in Washington, where he lived quietly until his death in 1924. In the meantime, for most Americans, a new era had begun.125

The Great War - America and the War in Europe Flashcards

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307606747assassination of Franz FerdinandWhat was the immediate cause of World War I?0
307606748Gavrilo PrincipWho was the man that assassinated Franz Ferdinand and consequently started World War I?1
307606749Bosnia was annexed by AH in 1908Why was Serbia mad at Austro-Hungary (AH)?2
307606750heavy casualities, new weapons, modern warfare, trench warfare, destruction of propertyWhat were some of the vast consequences of World War I and the reason it was called "the Great War"? **3
307606751Bolshevik Revolution (Nov 1917)What was the name of the Communist Revolution that occured in Russia and was led by Lenin? *4
307606752Germany, Austria-Hingary, Ottoman Empire, BulgariaWhich countries were part of the Central Powers?5
307606753Great Britain, France, Italy, Russia, Japan, U.S.What were the most important countries that were part of the Allied Powers? **6
30760675429How many countries were part of the Allied Powers overall?7
307606755August 1914When did President Wilson declare America's neutrality in World War I? *8
307606756mediate conflict, enjoy lucrative trade, conflict in Europe wouldn't affect USWhat were the main reasons Wilson wanted the U.S. to remain neutral? **9
307606757freedom of the seasWhat was the right that the British and Germans violated when they tried to block each others ports in August of 1914?10
307606758unrestrictive submarine warfare (Feb 1915)What type of modern warfare did Germany engage in that violated the freedom of the seas and America's neutrality? *11
307606759Lusitania (May 1915)What was the name of the British passenger ship sunk by the Germans submarines which greatly angered the Americans? *12
307606760U-boatsWhat was the name for the type of submarined used by the Germans for their unrestrictive submarine warfare?13
307606761Sussex (Sep 1915)What was the French ship sunk by the Germans even after they had promised they would no longer sink merchant or passenger ships? *14
307606762Sussex PledgeWhat was the agreement between the US and Germany when they finally made an iron-clad pledge to stop their unrestrictive submarine policy?15
307606763Colonel Edward HouseWho was the delegate that President Wilson sent to visit the European capitals to try and bring peace for the war?16
307606764Charles Evans HughesWho was the republican candidate that Wilson defeated in the election of 1916?17
307606765Progressivism, Peace, Preparedness, and ProsperityWhat were the "4 P's" that Wilson used in his campaign slogan?18
307606766Peace without victory (Jan 1917)What did President Wilson urge from Germany and Europe as a final attempt to end the war? *19
307606767resumed unrestricted submarine warfare (Feb 1917)What was Germany's response to Wilson's final attempt to bring peace in the war? **20
307606768breaks all diplomatic relations with GermanyWhat did President Wilson do in response to Germany violating the Sussex Pledge and resuming their unrestricted submarine warfare? **21
307606769Zimmerman Note (Feb 1917), Arthur ZimmermanWhat was the telegraph sent from Germany to the German ambassador in Mexico promising to return their lost land if Mexico allied with Germany? What was the name of the German foreign minister who sent the telegraph? *22
307606770Germans sink many American ships like they said they would in the Zimmerman Note (March 1917)What action led to Wilson declaring war on Germany? ** (hint: already a lot of tension from the Zimmerman Note)23
307606771Germany has thrust war upon the United States (April 1917)What did Wilson say to convince Congress to declare war on Germany? **24
307606772convoysWhat were the groups of merchant and troops ships that traveled in small groups and were protected by warships in order to avoid attacks from German subs?25
307606773Selective Service Act of 1917What act created a draft for the army after the US realized they didn't have enough soldiers prepared? (hint: chosen by randomly picking birthdays)26
307606774Czar Nicholas II overthrown (Mar 1917)Which occurrence in Russia led to the beginning of the Bolshevik/Communist Revolution? *27
307606775Vladimir LeninWho was the leader of the Communist Revolution?28
307606776cease fire (Dec 1917), peace treaty signed (March 1918)What were the two significant occurrences that ended Russia's involvement in World War I?29
307606777General John J. PershingWho was the general who led the American Expeditionary Force in the war?30
307606778American Expeditionary ForceWhat was the group of American soldiers who came to fight in Europe and was led by General John J. Pershing?31
30760677993rd Infantry DivisionWhat was the group of African American soldiers who were segregated from the rest of the army and helped fight for the French?32
307606780Germans lead attack on Paris but US fights back (March-June 1918)What was the final attack of World War I? **33
307606781Armistice (November 11, 1918)What was the name for the day that World War I officially ended? *34

APUSH Ch. 21 America and the Great War (1903-1927) Flashcards

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377058646Great White FleetPresident Theodore Roosevelt sent the navy around the world as a show of power in the early 1900s0
377058647Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe DoctrineStated the United States would intervene in conflicts between European countries and Latin American countries. An example of increased US participation in international affairs in the early 1900s1
377058648Panama CanalConsidered essential to maintaining and promoting US economic and military power, completed in 1914, it was one of Roosevelt's most significant foreign policy accomplishments.2
377058649Dollar DiplomacyPresident Taft's policy of linking American business interests to diplomatic interests abroad.3
377058650The Great WarAnother name for WWI, President Wilson believed that it was the "war to end all wars."4
377058651Archduke Francis FerdinandHis assassination in Sarajevo precipitated Austria-Hungary's declaration of war against Serbia. This caused the Central Powers (including Germany and Austria-Hungary) and the Allies of World War I (countries allied with Serbia or Serbia's allies) to declare war on each other, starting World War I. The "spark" that started WWI5
377058652Lusitania1915 British passenger ocean liner by a German U boat, claiming over 1,000 lives--some of whom were Americans. The attack influenced the decision by the US to enter WWI in 19176
377058653Election of 1916Hughes v. Wilson--Issues: Wilson ran for reelection for the Democrats on the call that he had kept the United States out of the war. Charles Evans Hughes was the Republican candidate who attacked the inefficiency of the Democratic Party. Wilson won the election, so was able to continue his idealistic policies.7
377058654Sussex Ultimatumfollowing a German attack on a French passenger liner in 1916 that killed four Americans, President Wilson issued this statement warning Germany to stop submarine warfare or the US would break all diplomatic relations with the country. Germany responded with the SUSSEX PLEDGE promising to sink no more ships without prior warning.8
377058655Zimmerman Telegramwas a 1917 diplomatic proposal from the German Empire for Mexico to join the Central Powers, in the event of the United States entering World War I on the side of the Entente Powers. The proposal was intercepted and decoded by British intelligence. Revelation of the contents outraged American public opinion and helped generate support for the United States declaration of war on Germany in April of that year.9
377058656American Expeditionary ForceAbout 2 million Americans went to France as members of this under General John J. Pershing. Included the regular army, the National Guard, and the new larger force of volunteers and draftees and they served as individuals.10
377058657Russian (Communist) RevolutionThe overthrow of Tsar Nikolas II by the Bolshevik-led revolution in October 1917; lead by Vladimir Lenin. They pledged to destroy capitalism. It instituted dramatic change in social structure, paving way for USSR. This caused great fear among middle- and upper-class Americans. Socialists and anarchists in the US had been persecuted throughout the war and their problems intensified as fears over communism rose.11
377058658Chateau-ThierryAmerican troops, numbering fewer than 30,000, were thrown right in the teeth of the German advance; first significant engagement of American troops in a European war12
377058661Liberty BondsA war bond that was sold in the United States to support the allied cause in World War I. Subscribing to the bonds became a symbol of patriotic duty in the United States and introduced the idea of financial securities to many citizens for the first time.13
377058662Bernard BaruchJewish man who was head of the War Industries board in WWI. He was responsible for the production of supplies for the war. Was the first Jewish man in a position of great responsibility in the government.14
377058663War Industries BoardThis board, headed by Bernard Baruch, sought to control production, wages, and price of manufactured goods while the U.S. was mobilizing for war.15
377058664Lever Food and Fuel Control ActAugust 1917: measure that gave Wilson the power to regulate production and consumption of food and fuels during wartime. Some of his administrationargued for price controls and rationing; instead Wilson instituted voluntary controls.16
377058665Great MigrationMigration of large numbers of American blacks to Midwestern and Eastern industrial cities that began during WWI ad continued throughout the 1920s . Additional workers were needed in the North because of the war and during the 1920s because of the immigration restrictions; blacks were willing to leave the South because of continued lynching there and the fact that their economic situation was not improving.17
377058667Trench warfareA bloody form of war that consisted of two opposing forces digging holes in the ground or "trenches" to provide shelter from enemy gunfire. Heavy Artillery would be able to shoot through trenches and infantry would race across "no man's land" or the land between the two frontal trenches. Gas was also used to fill the trenches and kill all within them.18
377058670Committee on Public InformationMassive propaganda machine; it was headed by George Creel. The purpose of this committee was to mobilize people's minds for war, both in America and abroad. Tried to get the entire U.S. public to support U.S. involvement in WWI. Creel's organization, employed some 150,000 workers at home and oversees. He proved that words were indeed weapons.19
377058671National Security LeagueOrganization founded in 1914 that preached patriotism and preparation for war; 8in 1915 th successfully lobbied government officials to set up camps to prepare men for military life and combat. The patriotism of this group became more strident as the war progressed; in 1917 they lobbied Congress to greatly limit migration into the country; insisting on a literacy test for all new immigrants.20
377058672Selective Service ActThis 1917 act, which President Wilson helped pass because of the difficult task of raising an army for the war, authorized the conscription of American males into military service. Within months of its passage, the army had enough men to relieve and allied forces overseas.21
377058673Espionage Act 1917This act was intended to prosecute German spies in America and any antiwar Americans who might be aiding Germany. It to curbed the right to free speech during wartime. The Supreme Courtupheld this act by stating that Congress could limit the right of free speech if it represented a "clear and present danger" that would bring about "evils" that the government was seeking to stop.22
377058675Sedition Act 1918extended the Espionage Act of 1917 to cover a broader range of offenses, notably speech and the expression of opinion that cast the government or the war effort in a negative light or interfered with the sale of government bonds. It forbade the use of "disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language" about the United States government, its flag, or its armed forces or that caused others to view the American government or its institutions with contempt. Those convicted under the act generally received sentences of imprisonment for 5 to 20 years. Over 1000 were convicted under the law.23
377058676Schenck v. United StatesIn this pivotal case, the Supreme Court, with Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes writing the majority opinion, upheld the Espionage Act by stating that Congress could limit the right of free speech if it represented a "clear and present danger" that would bring about "evils" that the government was seeking to stop. In sum, civil liberties CAN be limited for the sake of national security.24
377058677The Big FourPolitical leaders who met in Paris in 1919 to draft the Treaty of Versailles at the end of WWI; Georges Clemenceau, Prime Minister of France; David Lloyd George, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom; Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States; and Vittorio Orlando, Prime Minister of Italy. Major disagreements emerged as the European leaders wanted harsh terms for Germany and Wilson hoped for leniency.25
377058681Fourteen PointsWilson's plan for peace was called the Fourteen Points, as it had fourteen goals or conditions. Europeans didn't agree with the plan, which favored a war without a victor, and Europe wanted to severely punish Germany. The plan was designed to prevent further diplomatic problems from starting another war. Some of the major parts of the plan was an end to secrecy and secret alliances, freedom of the seas, free trade, and a limit on arms, as well as peaceful settlements of disputes over colonies. Wilson also supported self-determination and a league of nations.26
377058682League of NationsThis group was called for in President Wilson's Fourteen Points. Although he was determined to see this group formed, the other European leaders were interested in exacting revenge and gaining reparations from Germany. This proved to make Wilson's job difficult--he had to compromise in order t see his ideas become a reality. One of the first was that conquered territories would not become the property of the conquering nation, but would rather be under the trusteeship of this group.27
377058683Article X...28
377058684Moral DiplomacyThis policy came from President Wilson's belief that imperialism was immoral and that American democracy was superior. He thought it was his duty to spread that ideal to protect nations under threat of totalitarianism. As a result, Wilson invaded Nicarague and the Dominican Republic and purchased the Virgin Islands. Wilson also intervened in the Mexican Revolution to capture the revolutionary Panco Villa after he had killed Americans in the towns of Santa Ysabel, Mexico, and Clolumbus, New Mexico.29
377058685Treaty of VersaillesThe treaty imposed on Germany by France, Great Britain, the United States, and other Allied Powers after World War I. It demanded that Germany dismantle its military and give up some lands to Poland. It was resented by many Germans.30
377058686ReparationsAs part of the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was ordered to pay fines to the Allies to repay the costs of the war. Opposed by the US, it quickly led to a severe depression in Germany.31
377058687Henry Cabot LodgeBest known for his positions on Meek policy, especially his battle with President Woodrow Wilson in 1919 over the Treaty of Versailles. Lodge demanded Congressional control of declarations of war; Wilson refused and the United States Senate never ratified the Treaty nor joined the League of Nations.32
377058688IrreconcilablesThis was one camp of those who were opposed to the ratification of the Versailles Treaty. Ths group, led by Senators Hiram Johnson and William Borah, refused to ratify the Versailles Treaty in any way.33
377058689ReservationistsThis was one camp of those who were opposed to the ratification of the Versailled Treaty. Republican Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and this group would only agree to leave the League of Nations and international acceptance of the Monroe Doctrine were added to the League's Covenant.34
377058690"100% Americanism"The American Protective League received money from the government to spy on their neighbors and impose the union of opinion on their communities; Germans were the most heavily repressed groups.35
377058691The Red ScareThis situation arose when a series of bombings occured, one of which was in the neighborhood of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer. When the bombings were attributed to anarchists, Palmer immediately ordered the roundng up of suspected anarchists, socialists, aliens (usually Russian), and agitators. During this, some 6,000 people were arrested in a two-month period, and 500 were deported on "Soviet Arks" that sent the passengers back to Europe.36
3770586921919 Steel StrikeAs price inflation threatened to eclipse wage gains, and over 6,000 strikes broke out during the war, the greatest occurring in 1919, when 250,000 steelworkers walked off the job. In that strike, the steel owners brought in 30,000 African-Americans to break the strike, and in the end, the strike collapsed, hurting the labor cause for more than a decade37
377058693Boston Police StrikeRiots and looting soon erupted in the city, forcing the governor of Massachusetts, Calvin Coolidge, to send in the National Guard. When the strikers tried to return to work, the police commissioner refused to accept them. He fired the strikers and hired a new police force instead. Depite protests, Coolidge agreed the men should be fired. He declared, "There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, anytime." Coolidge's response brought him to national attention and earned him widespread public support. It also convinced the Republicans to make Coolidge their vice presidential candidate in the 1920 election.38
377058695Red SummerIn 1919 a wave of race riots swept across the US, Race riots erupted in several cities in both the North and South. The three most violent episodes happened in Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Elaine, Arkansas. These were part of a series of 20 or more riots occurring in the U.S. where African Americans were the victims of physical attacks39
377058696Marcus GarveyAfrican American leader during the 1920s who founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association. He called for black nationalism--urging African Americans to take pride in their heritage and develop their own institutions in an effort to reject assimilation. He was deported to Jamaica in 1927.40
377058697Palmer RaidsA 1920 operation coordinated by Attorney General Mitchel Palmer in which federal marshals raided the homes of suspected radicals and the headquarters of radical organization in 32 cities.41
377058698Sacco and VanzettiItalian radicals who became symbols of the Red Scare of the 1920s; arrested (1920), tried and executed (1927) for a robbery/murder, they were believed by many to have been innocent but convicted because of their immigrant status and radical political beliefs. An example of the widespread nativism in the US during the 1920s42
377058699Nineteenth AmendmentGave women the right to vote.43

Chapter 7: The Progressive Era Flashcards

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2564506186ProgressivesFavoring or advocating progress, change, improvement, or reform, as opposed to wishing to maintain things as they are, especially in political matters.0
2564508586Social Gospel MovementA reform movement led by Protestant ministers who used religious doctrine to demand better housing and living conditions for the urban poor.1
2564508587Salvation ArmyA Christian denominational church and an international charitable organization structured in a quasi-military fashion.2
2564509715Temperance MovementA social movement against the consumption of alcoholic beverages.3
2564510706ConsumersA person who purchases goods and services for personal use.4
2564510707MuckrakersBright young reporters at the turn of the 20th century who won this unfavorable moniker from Theodore Roosevelt, but boosted the circulations of their magazines by writing exposés of widespread corruption in American society.5
2564512067Ida TarbellAn American teacher, author, and journalist. One of the leading muckrakers. She is known for her pioneering investigative reporting that led to the breakup of the Standard Oil Company's monopoly.6
2564512068Upton SinclairHe was a writer of novels of social protest and political tracts; he is best known for his 1906 expose of the meatpacking industry, "The Jungle."7
2564515682Jacob RiisA Danish American social reformer, muckraking journalist and social documentary photographer. He is known for using his photographic and journalistic talents to help the poor by publishing his book "How the other half lives."8
2564515683Settlement HouseMostly run by middle-class native-born women, they were found in immigrant neighborhoods provided housing, food, education, child care, cultural activities, and social connections for new arrivals to the US. Many women, both native-born and immigrant, developed life-long passions for social activism. Jane Addams's Hull House in Chicago was the most prominent.9
2564516975Jane AddamsShe a pioneer settlement social worker,public philosopher, sociologist, author, and leader in women's suffrage and world peace. She was one of the most prominent reformers of the Progressive Era. She helped turn the US to issues of concern to mothers, such as the needs of children, public health, and world peace.10
2564516976National Woman Suffrage AssociationNWSA American organization, founded in New York City, that was created by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. An organization founded in 1890 to demand the vote for women11
2564517874Municipal ReformChanges in city governments made to encourage greater efficiency, honesty, and responsiveness.12
2564517876Political MachinesA political machine is a political organization in which an authoritative boss or small group commands the support of a corps of supporters and businesses (usually campaign workers), who receive rewards for their efforts.13
2564519126City managerAn official appointed as the administrative manager of a city, in a council-manager form of city government.14
2564519127Robert La FolletteU.S. leader of the Progressive Movement, who as governor of Wisconsin and U.S. senator was noted for his support of reform legislation. He was the unsuccessful presidential candidate of the Progressive party in 1924, winning almost five million votes, or about one-sixth of the total cast.15
2564520326Secret BallotA voting method in which a voter's choices in an election are anonymous.16
2564520327InitiativeA progressive reform measure allowing voters to petition to have a law placed on the general ballot.17
2564521684ReferendumA progressive reform procedure allowing voters to place a bill or on the ballot for final approval, even after being passed by legislature.18
2564523444RecallA progressive ballot procedure allowing voters to remove elected officials from office.19
2564523445Direct PrimaryA primary in which members of a party nominate its candidates by direct vote.20
256452344617th AmendmentEstablished that senators were to be elected directly. This law was intended to create a more democratic, fair society.21
2564524376Women's SuffrageThe right of women to vote and to stand for electoral office.22
2564524377Child LaborRefers to the employment of children in any work that deprives children of their childhood, interferes with their ability to attend regular school, and is deemed harmful.23
2564526017Susan B. AnthonyAn American social reformer and feminist who played a pivotal role in the women's suffrage movement.24
2564526018Alice PaulAn American suffragist, feminist, and women's rights activist, and the main leader and strategist of the 1910s campaign for the 19th Amendment.25
2564526019Theodore RooseveltHe unexpectedly became the 26th president of the United States in September 1901, after the assassination of William McKinley. Young and physically robust, he brought a new energy to the White House, and won a second term on his own merits in 1904. Roosevelt confronted the bitter struggle between management and labor head-on and became known as the great "trust buster" for his strenuous efforts to break up industrial combinations under the Sherman Antitrust Act. He was also a dedicated conservationist, setting aside some 200 million acres for national forests, reserves and wildlife refuges during his presidency. In the foreign policy arena, Roosevelt won a Nobel Peace Prize for his negotiations to end the Russo-Japanese War and spearheaded the beginning of construction on the Panama Canal. He returned to politics in 1912, mounting a failed run for president at the head of a new Progressive Party.26
2564527715Government RegulationA law that controls the way that a business can operate, or all of these laws considered together: Voters want some government regulation to prevent these financial disasters from happening27
2564528559Square DealIt was Theodore Roosevelt's domestic program: conservation of natural resources, control of corporations, and consumer protection. These three demands are often referred to as the "three C's."28
2564528560Coal Strike of 1902Was a strike by the United Mine Workers of America in the anthracite coal fields of eastern Pennsylvania. Miners were on strike asking for higher wages, shorter workdays and the recognition of their union. The strike threatened to shut down the winter fuel supply to all major cities. President Theodore Roosevelt became involved and set up a fact-finding commission that suspended the strike. The strike never resumed, as the miners received a 10% wage increase and reduced workdays from ten to nine hours; the owners got a higher price for coal, and did not recognize the trade union as a bargaining agent. It was the first labor episode in which the federal government intervened as a neutral arbitrator.29
2564528561Meat Inspection ActA law passed by Congress to subject meat shipped over state lines to federal inspection.30
2564529592Pure Food and Drug ActA law passed by Congress to inspect and regulate the labeling of all foods and pharmaceuticals intended for human consumption.31
2564532123William Howard Taft27th President of the United States, he was progressive in his polices, and later the tenth Chief Justice of the United States. He is the only person to have served in both of these offices.32
256453347716th AmendmentAllows the Congress to levy an income tax without apportioning it among the states or basing it on the U.S. Census.33
2564533478Woodrow Wilson28th U.S. president, served in office from 1913 to 1921 and led America through World War I. An advocate for democracy and world peace, He is often ranked by historians as one of the nation's greatest presidents. Once in office, he pursued an ambitious agenda of progressive reform that included the establishment of the Federal Reserve and Federal Trade Commission. He tried to keep the United States neutral during World War I but ultimately called on Congress to declare war on Germany in 1917. After the war, he helped negotiate a peace treaty that included a plan for the League of Nations. Although the Senate rejected U.S. membership in the League.34
2564540297Graduated Income TaxA progressive tax system, failure to index the brackets to inflation will result in effective tax increase, as inflation in wages will increase individual income and move individuals into higher tax brackets with higher percentage rate.35
2564540298Federal Reserve ActAn act establishing twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks and a Federal Reserve Board, appointed by the president, to regulate banking and create stability on a national scale in the volatile banking secto36
2564540299Clayton Antitrust ActLaw extending the anti-trust protections of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and exempting labor unions and agricultural organizations from antimonopoly constraints.37
2564541590Federal Trade CommissionA banner accomplishment of Woodrow Wilson's administration, this law empowered a standing, presidentially appointed commission to investigate illegal business practices in interstate commerce like unlawful competition false advertising, and mislabeling of goods.38
2564547172EvergladesA natural region of tropical wetlands in the southern portion of the U.S. state of Florida.39
2564547173Governor BrowardA river pilot and captain before becoming a politician. He was elected as the 19th Governor of the state of Florida from 1905 to 1909. He was best known for his major project to drain the Everglades to recover land for agricultural cultivation.40

World War I: The Great War Flashcards

These terms are a mix of Key Content and Social Studies terms that will help students review chapters 22-24 of the TCI: History Alive Curriculm

Terms : Hide Images
1113439016Central PowersOne of two alliances during World War I which featured nations like Germany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire.0
1113439017Allied PowersOne of two alliances during World War I which featured nations like France, Great Britain and Russia.1
1113439018nationalisma strong feeling of pride in and loyalty to a nation or ethnic group2
1113439019militarisma policy of glorifying military power and values which led to a huge build up of arms prior to World War I3
1113439020belligerentwarring4
1113439021stalematedeadlock5
1113439022U-boatunterseeboot or undersea boat; the German Navy's first submarine.6
1113439023LusitaniaA British liner which was sunk on May 7, 1915 which resulted in the deaths of 128 Americans and created tension between Germany and the US.7
1113439024unrestricted submarine warfareDuring World War I, a German military policy of staging submarine attacks on Allied and neutral nations' unarmed ocean liners without advance warning8
1113439025Sussex pledge(1916) Germany's pledge to the US to spare all lives in future U-boat attacks on merchant ships.9
1113439026preparedness movementBeginning in 1915, before U.S. entry into World War I, a movement led by former president Theodore Roosevelt that called on the government to increase U.S. military strength and convince Americans of the need for U.S. involvement in the war.10
1113439027propagandaInformation or rumors spread by a group or government to promote its cause or ideas or to damage an opposing cause or idea. The information is meant to persuade others to adopt the view.11
1113439028Zimmerman noteDuring World War I, a coded telegram that German foreign minister sent to the German minister in Mexico proposing that if the United States entered the war, Mexico and Germany should become allies; it helped influence the United States to declare war on Germany five weeks later.12
1113439029Selective Service Act (1917)a law passed by Congress in 1917 to create a national draft, requiring all men ages 21-30 to register for military service.13
1113439030American Expeditionary Force (AEF)in World War I, the first U.S. military force to be deployed to France nicknamed the "doughboys"14
1113439031Infantrysoldiers who fight on foot15
1113439032369th Regimentin World War I, an African American regiment of the U.S. Army nicknamed the "Hell Fighters" who earned France's highest military honors for active combat.16
1113439033combatantssoldiers physically fighting the war.17
1113439034howitzersa type of cannon known for its large size18
1113439035machine gunrapid firing weapon, the first truly automatic gun. first introduced during World War I19
1113439036chemical weaponsweapons which utilize toxic agents such as poison gas to kill or harm large groups of people. One of the deadliest types used during World War I was mustard gas.20
1113439037battleshipthe largest and most heavily armored type of warship21
1113439038convoya group of vessels or vehicles that travel together, often under the protection of an armed escort22
1113439039Meuse-Argonne Offensivein World War I, the final Allied offensive that brought about the end of the war23
1113439040mobilizeto organize people or resources for action, such as war24
1113439041pacifistspeople who for political, moral, or religious reasons oppose all forms of war.25
1113439042Women's Peace Partyformed at a 1915 Washington D.C. conference by women like Jane Addams who believed that progressive social reforms would help eliminate the economic causes of war.26
1113439043conscientious objectorssomeone who opposes war for religious or moral reasons and therefore refuses to serve in the armed forces.27
1113439044Committee on Public Information (CPI)a government propaganda agency created to help "sell" US involvement in World War I to the American public.28
1113439045Four Minute Menmen in cities and towns recruited by CPI officials to make short, four minute speeches at various civic and social places.29
1113439046Bonda certificate issued by a government or company that promises to pay back the money borrowed at a fixed rate of interest on a specific date.30
1113439047Liberty bondsa government-issued bond sold during World War I to raise money for the Allied war effort31
1113439048War Industries Board (WIB)a government agency created to coordinate the work of government agencies and industry groups to make sure supplies and equipment were delivered to the military.32
1113439049Great Migration (1916-1918)beginning during World War I, the mass movement of millions of African Americans from the rural South to cities in the North and Midwest in order to take jobs in industry33
1113439050espionagethe use of spying to gather information34
1113439051Espionage Act of 1917a law passed by Congress in 1917 to make it illegal to spy, interfere with government foreign policy, or resist the military draft35
1113439052seditionbehavior that promotes rebellion or civil disorder against the government36
1113439053Sedition Act of 1918a law passed by Congress in 1918 to make it illegal to say anything disloyal, profane, or abusive about the government or the war effort37
1113439054Wobbliesa nickname for members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), an anticapitalist labor organization founded in 190538
1113439055Schenck v. United Statesa case involving the Espionage Act, Charles Schenck, a socialist, was charged with distributing leaflets to recent draftees urging them to resist the draft. The Supreme Court ruled against Schenck calling his actions a "clear and present danger."39
1113439056symbolic speechconduct that conveys a message without spoken words40
1113439057armamenta weapon or piece of equipment used in war41
1113439058Big Fournickname for leaders of the four victorious nations- US. President Woodrow Wilson, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, and Italian Prime Minister Vittorio Orlando42
1113439059collective securitya system in which a group of countries commit to jointly dealing with a nation that threatens the peace/security of any one of the countries.43
1113439060Fourteen Pointsat the end of WWI, a 14 part plan for peace presented by President Wilson to Congress on 1/8/191844
1113439061freedom of the seasthe principle that merchant ships have a right to travel freely and unthreatened in international waters in times of peace and war.45
1113439062internationalistat the close of WWI, one the democratic senators who strongly supported the Treaty of Versailles46
1113439063irreconcilableat the close of WWI, 1 of 16 Republican senators who opposed the Treaty of Versailles47
1113439064League of Nationsan international organization established by the Allied powers at the close of WWI to promote international peace and security48
1113439065mandatesthe former colonies given over by the League of Nations to France and Britain to administer49
1113439066partisanshiprivalry between political parties based on strong disagreement about political principles50
1113439067reparationa payment demanded of a nation defeated in war by a victorious nation.51
1113439068reservationistRepublican senators who agreed to approve the Treaty of Versailles if changes were made to it52
1113439069territorial integritya diplomatic principle in which nations respect one another's borders and do not try to gain one another's territory by force53
1113439070Treaty of Versaillesa peace treaty signed the Allied powers and Germany at the Paris peace conference at the Palace of Versailles.54
1113439071war-guilt clausea clause in the Treaty of Versailles that held Germany responsible for WWI and required the payment of reparations to the Allied nations.55

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