Combo of 20-42
National Labor Union
1866 - established by William Sylvis - wanted 8hr work days, banking reform, and an end to conviction labor - attempt to unite all laborers
"Ohio Idea"
1867 - Senator George H. Pendleton proposed an idea that Civil War bonds be redeemed with greenbacks. It was not adopted.
resumption
1879 - Congress said that greenbacks were redeemable for gold, but no one wanted to redeem them for face gold value. Because paper money was much more convenient than gold, they remained in circulation; helped get America out of recession
Wabash case
1886 Supreme Court case that decreed that individual states had no power to regulate interstate commerce
Pullman Strike
1894 - nonviolent strike (brought down the railway system in most of the West) at the Pullman Palace Car Co. over wages - Prez. Cleveland shut it down because it was interfering with mail delivery
William F. Cody
"Buffalo Bill"; most popular of the Wild-West shows; the troupe included Indians, live buffalo, and marksmen
Horatio Alger
"Holy Horatio"; born a Puritan and interested in New York newsboys; formula: virtue, honesty, and industry are rewarded by success, wealth and honor (survival of the purest - nonsmokers, nondrinkers, nonswearers, and nonliars)
Henry J. Kaiser
"Sir Launchalot"; famous for his speedy shipbuilding; one ship was built in 14 days
big-stick diplomacy
"Speak softly and carry a big stick,"; International negotiations backed by the threat of force
Thomas J Jackson
"Stonewall" Jackson who earned his name and fame from holding his troops steady at Bull Run, but was shot by a Confederate sniper at Chancellorsville on accident.
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
"Wobblies"; started to make all America one big union; radical; included unskilled workers and foreign-born workers; did not support the war; had terrible working conditions (if they protested they could be beaten, arrested, or run out of town)
"ABC" policy
"anybody but Carter"; spread by democrats and republicans
Erwin Rommel
"desert fox"; german officer in battle of El Alamein
Glasnost
"openness"; introduced free speech and political liberty to the Soviet Union
Détente
"relaxed tension" with the two communist powers: Russia and China
Perestroika
"restructuring"; meant to renew the Soviet economy by adopting free-market policies
Theodore Dreiser
"social novelist"; from Indiana; wrote Sister Carrie (poor working girl in Chicago and New York, becomes mistress, elopes with someone else, makes an acting career)
Works Progress Administration
$11 billion was spent on building public facilities, wanted to curb unemployment and improve the nation's infrastructure
Hay-Pauncefote Treaty
(1901) that gave the U.S. the okay to go solo.
Granger laws
(GC) , Grangers state legislatures in 1874 passed law fixing maximum rates for freight shipments. The railroads responded by appealing to the Supreme Court to declare these laws unconstitutional
Oliver H. Kelley
(GC), considered the "Father" of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry (more commonly known as "The Grange"). a fraternal organization for American farmers that encouraged farm families to band together for their common economic and political good.
Indian Territory
(Oklahoma) where the 5 Civilized Indian Tribes were sent by Andrew Jackson
injunction
(law) a judicial remedy issued in order to prohibit a party from doing or continuing to do a certain activity
Battle at Fort Sumter
-Union General- Anderson -Confederate General- Beauregard Island fort at the mouth of Charleston Harbor in South Carolina. Southerners opened fire on the fort on April 12th, 1861, kicking off the Civil War with a bang. The fort was forced to surrender, due to it's low level of supplies, and the fact that it's cannons weren't pointed at the Southern forts (why point cannons at your own forts?). In response to this, Lincoln called for a naval blockade of the South and issued a "call to arms" for people to join the military. These actions caused Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee to secede.
Battle of Antietam
-Union General: George McClellan -Confederate General: Robert E. Lee -Location: Antietam Creek near Sharpsburg, Maryland -Southern goals: invade all the way to Pennsylvania, to get European powers to support them, boost morale, get the fighting away from Virginia in time for the harvest -Northern goals: don't lose (just came out of being beaten at Bull Run) -Union won which kept Europe out from supporting the South, McClellan gets fired (had the chance to wipe out a large amount of the Confederate Army but didn't take it), North lost more men due to McClellan's non-aggressiveness
Battle of Bull Run
-Union General: Robert Patterson and Irvin McDowell -Confederate General: Beauregard and Stonewall -Union plan was to march to Richmond and take the confederate capital, quickly ending the war -Confederates ended up holding off the north and won the battle -North lost because they were too cautious and were split up by the southern army, Jackson held his own against the north even though he was outnumbered. -McDowell retreated, south mistakenly didn't pursue them, even though they could have captured the northern army -set the tone for the rest of the war to be long, hard, and bloody
Battle of Vicksburg
-Union General: Ulysses S. Grant -Confederate General: Pemberton -Location: Warren County, Mississippi -Northern goal: cut the South in half down the Mississippi River and control it , finishing off the "Anaconda Plan" -The North won, the "Anaconda Plan" was finished, and Grant got recognition as the best general in the Union
Battle of Gettysburg
-bloodiest battle in the Civil War -Union General: Meade -Confederate General: Robert E. Lee (sub-generals: Ewell, Longstreet, and A.P. Hill) -Southern plan was to get the high ground between Washington D.C. and the Union Army, force the Union to charge them, then shoot down at them while they're out in the open, then go to Lincoln and try to negotiate a peace treaty -Union ended up with the high ground -Pickett's Charge: Pickett (South) is sent with about 15,000 on a suicide charge at the front of the Union lines in hope to break them, lots of Confederates died -North won, and the South wouldn't take the offensive again for the rest of the war
Alabama
-warship built by Britain and sold to the Confederacy, violating Britain's neutrality law. Technically it wasn't armed when they built it, and the South put guns on it but still, it's bad. Charles Sumner and William Seward were mad at this and went to Britain demanding $2 billion or Canada. Eventually, they settled on $15.5 million, with America paying $1 million back due to it's illegal blockade of English trading in the Caribbean. Decided cash over annexing Canada due to America's debt from fighting the Civil War.
Fourteen Points
1) abolish secret treaties 2) freedom of seas 3) removal of economic barriers among nations 4) reduction of military weapons and equipment 5) adjustment of colonial claims in the interests of native people and the colonizers
Civil Rights Act of 1964
1. banned the use of different voter registration standards for blacks and whites 2. prohibited discrimination in public places 3. allowed federal funds to be withheld to places that practiced discrimination 4. banned discrimination of any kinds by employers and unions
Great White Fleet
16 American battleships, painted white, sent around the world to display American naval power.
Coxey's Army
March to DC for better working conditions.
United Negro Improvement Association
Marcus Garvey, relocate blacks to native homeland, sponsored black enterprises to try and keep black's money in their hands, usually failed
Open Door notes
Message delivered by John Hay in the summer of 1899 to the nations of the world, begging them to respect Chinese rights and influence in the spirit of fair competition.
William J. Simmons
Methodist preacher who revived the KKK in 1915
braceros
Mexican workers who legally came over the border to work on farms out west; wanted to stay after the war but we didn't want them here
John W. Davis
1924 Democratic candidate, lost to Coolidge (republican conservative)
Robert LaFollette
1924 Progressive candidate, lost to Coolidge (republican conservative)
Dust Bowl
1933 drought that caused soil to be loose and easily picked up by the wind resulting in immense dust storms
House Committee on Un-American Activities
1938-1975: an investigative committee of the United States House of Representatives, when abolished functions went to House of Judiciary Committee, anti-communist investigations not directly linked to Joseph McCarthy.
Joseph McCarthy
1950s; Wisconsin senator claimed to have list of communists in American gov't, but no credible evidence; took advantage of fears of communism post WWII to become incredibly influential; "McCarthyism" was the fearful accusation of any dissenters of being communists
Border States
Missouri, Maryland, Kentucky, Delaware (and WV seceded from the seceders) Held a majority of south's population and industry, held slaves but remained (mostly) loyal to the north
Rutherford B. Hayes
19th president of the United States, was famous for being part of the Hayes-Tilden election in which electoral votes were contested in 4 states, most corrupt election in US history
Frances Perkins
1st female cabinet member as secretary of labor
The Birth of a Nation
1st full length movie by Griffith, about civil war/reconstruction, glorified KKK, stunned viewers w/ battle scenes
Sheppard-Towner Act
1st major federal welfare for women/children's health
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
1st nuclear weapons agreement
Charles Lindbergh
1st to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, represented the anti-Jazz age b/c he actually accomplished something & everyone else was just getting drunk
Jeanette Rankin
1st woman to serve in either house of Congress (she was in the House)
Immigration Quota Act
2% of groups U.S. population in 1890 could enter America, new immigrant out, old immigrants in, no Japanese immigrants, Canadians/Latin Americans not included in this
James A. Garfield
20th President: 1881, Republican, Greenback Labor Party, Republican - protective tariff, Democrats - revenue tariff, shot by Julius Guiteau (mental unstable, thought unfair spoils system)
Grover Cleveland
22nd and 24th president, Democrat, Honest and hardworking, as Rep, fought corruption. As President, vetoed hundreds of wasteful bills, achieved the Interstate Commerce Commission and civil service reform, violent suppression of strikes
Draft Riots
25% of people in New York City were Irish and German immigrants, and these people hated African Americans, as they competed with them for the same low-paying jobs. Then, the draft came, and these people were mad that they were being forced to fight for the freedom of these people that they hated. Some immigrants were fresh off the boat and didn't even know what the Civil War was about.
Theodore Roosevelt
26th President of the United States, hero of the Spanish-American War; Panama Canal was built during his administration; said 'Speak softly but carry a big stick' (1858-1919)
James Meredith
29 year old air force veteran who tried to apply for classes at the University of Mississippi; the University wouldn't let him register so JFK sent down 400 federal marshals and 3000 troops to enroll him in one class
Leyte Gulf battles
3 battles between Japan and U.S. where Japan tried to destroy our supply lines; U.S. won all three
Watergate Scandal
5 men were caught trying to bug the Democratic party's headquarters; Nixon also forged documents to make the Democrats look bad, used the International Revenue Service to harass innocent citizens named on the White House's "enemy list", burglarized the office of the psychiatrist who treated the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers, and had the CIA and FBI cover up their tracks
London Economic Conference
66 nations met in 1933 to discuss and combat international depression; tried to establish an exchange rate
pool
A 'pool' is an informal agreement between a group of people or leaders of a company to keep their prices high and to keep competition low. The Interstate Commerce Act in 1887 made railroads publicly publish their prices and it outlawed the pool.
Jacob Riis
A Muckraker, this man is famous for using photography to document the incredibly poor conditions of many impoverished communities in the early 20th century. Wrote "How the Other Half Lives".
Thaddeus Stevens
A Republican leader and one of the most powerful members of the United States House of Representatives. He was chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee,and a witty, sarcastic speaker and flamboyant party leader who dominated the House from 1861 until his death and wrote much of the financial legislation that paid for the American Civil War.
Ex Parte Milligan
A United States Supreme Court case that ruled that the application of military tribunals to citizens when civilian courts are still operating is unconstitutional.
The Jungle (1906)
A book written by Upton Sinclair that exposed the horrendous and downright gross conditions of the food-packaging industry of the time
grandfather clause
A clause in registration laws allowing people who do not meet registration requirements to vote if they or their ancestors had voted before 1867.
Nye Committee
A committee established to investigate the "merchants of death"
Cold War
A conflict that was between the US and the Soviet Union. The nations never directly confronted eachother on the battlefield but deadly threats went on for years.
Colored Farmers National Allinace
More than 1 million southern black farmers organized and shared complaints with poor white farmers. By 1890 membership numbered more than 250,000. The history of racial division in the South, made it hard for white and black farmers to work together in the same organization
Ghost Dance
A cult that tried to call the spirits of past warriors to inspire the young braves to fight. It was crushed at the Battle of Wounded Knee after spreading to the Dakota Sioux. The Ghost Dance led to the Dawes Severalty Act of 1887. This act tried to reform Indian tribes and turn them into "white" citizens. It did little good.
"swing around the circle"
A disastrous speaking campaign undertaken by U.S. President Andrew Johnson August 27 - September 15, 1866, in which he tried to gain support for his mild Reconstruction policies and for his preferred candidates (mostly Democrats) in the forthcoming midterm Congressional election. The tour received its nickname due to the route that the campaign took.
Haymarket riot
A dynamite bomb threw when Chicago police broke forth to a protest of workers, 1886 - Downfall of the Knights; 8 anarchist bombed while protest occurs, 1 suicide, 4 sentanced to death 3 long terms, let go by Altgeld
Lincoln Steffens
A famous Muckraker, this man published "The Shame of the Cities" in "McClure's" Magazine, an article exposing corrupt alliances between corporations and local governments
Ida Tarbell
A famous Muckraker, this woman published a devastating but factual exposé about the Standard Oil Company
Civil Rights Act
A federal law in the United States declaring that everyone born in the U.S. and not subject to any foreign power is a citizen, without regard to race, color, or previous condition of slavery or involuntary servitude.
Henry Wallace
A former Democratic who ran on the New Progressive Party due to his disagreement on Truman's policy with the Soviets. He caused the Democratic party to split even more during the election season.
Mugwumps
A group of renegade Republicans who supported 1884 Democratic presidential nominee Grover Cleveland instead of their party's nominee, James G. Blaine.
Battle of Wounded Knee
A group of white Christian reformist tried to bring Christian beliefs on to the Indians. Fearing the Ghost Dance American troops were called to go with the reformist. While camped outside of an Indian reservation a gun was fired and the troops stormed the reservation killing Indian men women and children.
My Lai Massacre
My Lai was sheltering 250 Viet Cong's so U.S. soldiers came in to clear out the village; found women, children, men instead of soldiers; Lieutenant Calley was in charge & said round everybody up & kill them
Thurgood Marshall
NAACP's leader of their Legal Defense Fund
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire (1911)
A horrific incident involving a fire that erupted in a locked factory, killing dozens. This case had the effect of increasing government regulation of factory safety conditions.
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
NAACP; founded by W.E.B. Du Bois in order to achieve complete equality for blacks
Warsaw Pact
NATO but for communist countries
US v. Northern Security Company (1904)
A legal case that resulted in the dissolution of the trust between the Union Pacific and Northern Pacific Railroads. Also led to the dissolution of the company from which the case gets its name.
"radical" regimes
A loose faction of American politicians within the Republican Party from about 1854 until the end of Reconstruction in 1877. They were opposed during the war by moderates and after the war by self described "conservatives" in the South and "Liberals" in the North.
"Exodusters"
Name given to African Americans who fled the Southern United States for Kansas in 1879 and 1880 because of racial oppression and rumors of the re-institution of slavery.
10 percent plan
A model for reinstatement of Southern states that decreed that a state could be reintegrated into the Union when 10 percent of the 1860 vote count from that state had taken an oath of allegiance to the U.S. and pledged to abide by emancipation.
Gilded Age
A name for the late 1800s, coined by Mark Twain to describe the tremendous increase in wealth caused by the industrial age and the ostentatious lifestyles it allowed the very rich. The great industrial success of the U.S. and the fabulous lifestyles of the wealthy hid the many social problems of the time, including a high poverty rate, a high crime rate, and corruption in the government.
Henry Kissinger
National Security Adviser who announced that North Korea is willing to work on the settlement
scalawags
A native white Southerner who collaborated with the occupying forces during Reconstruction, often for personal gain.
carpetbaggers
A northerner who went to the South after the Civil War and became active in Republican politics, especially. so as to profiteer from the unsettled social and political conditions of the area during Reconstruction.
Marshall Plan
A plan that the US came up with to revive war-torn economies of Europe. This plan offered $13 billion in aid to western and Southern Europe.
NSC-68
National Securtiy Council memo #68 US "strive for victory" in cold war, pressed for offensive and a gross increase ($37 bil) in defense spending, determined US foreign policy for the next 20-30 yrs
Redeemers
A political coalition in the Southern United States during the Reconstruction era, who sought to oust the Republican coalition of freedmen, carpetbaggers and scalawags. They were the southern wing of the Bourbon Democrats, who were the conservative, pro-business wing of the Democratic Party.
Andrew Johnson
A political leader of the nineteenth century. He was elected vice president in 1864 and became president when Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in 1865. Heis one of two presidents to have been impeached; the House of Representatives charged him with illegally dismissing a government official. The Senate tried him, and he was acquitted by only one vote.
Roscoe Conkling
A politician from New York who served both as a member of the United States House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate. He was the leader of the Stalwart faction of the Republican Party. Was highly against civil service reforms, it was thought that the killing of Garfield was done in Conkling's behest.
Jane Addams
A prominent progressivist woman, notable for her establishment of the Hull House in Chicago. She was a strong promoter for the advancement of women's rights and the reduction of child labor.
Union Pacific Railroad
A railroad that started in Omaha, and it connected with the Central Pacific Railroad in Promentary Point, UTAH
Central Pacific Railroad
A railroad that started in Sacramento , and connected with the Union Pacific Railroad in Promentary Point, UTAH
John Muir
A rather eccentric man who is notable for his push for conservationism on a national level.
Ku Klux Klan
A secret organization in the southern U.S., active for several years after the Civil War, which aimed to suppress the newly acquired powers of blacks and to oppose carpetbaggers from the North, and which was responsible for many lawless and violent proceedings.
national parks
A series of public reserves, established for conservationist purposes.
Lochner v. New York (1905)
A setback for progressivists, it was ruled in this case that a law enforcing a 10-hour work day for bakers was unconstitutional.
Maine
A ship stationed near Cuba which exploded on February 15, 1898. The explosion was blamed on the Spanish, and provided a reason for starting the Spanish-American War. Evidence to the contrary was ignored in the rush to War
Cross of Gold speech
A speech that supported bimetallism by William Jennings Bryan that was delivered at the Democratic National Convention in 1896. This speech swept the Democrats off their feet and as a result, Bryan was on the fifth ballot.
Manchurian Railway crisis
A staged event involving railroads that was used by Japan as a pretext for invading Chinese Manchuria.
Anthracite Coal Strike (1902)
A strike organized by the United Mine Workers of America that took place in Pennsylvania. Notable for Roosevelt's forcing of the coal corporations to cooperate with the strikers.
mestizo
Native American + Spanish/European = mestizo
Roosevelt Panic of 1907
A sudden economic downturn which was blamed on the president's reckless economic policies.
Nez Perce
Native American Tribe that will flee capture from U.S. Troops, who almost make it to Canada.
Sharecropping
A system of farming that developed in the South after the Civil War, when landowners, many of whom had formerly held slaves, lacked the cash to pay wages to farm laborers, many of whom were former slaves. The system called for dividing the crop into three shares — one for the landowner, one for the worker, and one for whoever provided seeds, fertilizer, and farm equipment.
Wisconsin model
A system that describes an individual's social mobility.
"fourth party system"
A term used to describe national 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 policy
Hitler
Nazi dictator of Germany
Woman's Christian Temperance Union
A woman's organization devoted to the prohibition movement.
closed shop
A working establishment where only people belonging to the union are hired. It was done by the unions to protect their workers from cheap labor.
Helen Hunt Jackson
A writer. Author of the 1881 book A Century of Dishonor. The book exposed the U.S. governments many broken promises to the Native Americans. For example the government wanted Native Americans to assimilate, i.e. give up their beliefs and ways of life, that way to become part of the white culture.
"Great Society"
New Dealish economic and welfare measures to transform the American way of life; poverty relief, education aid, healthcare, voting rights, conservations, urban renewal, economic development
Teller Amendment
Act of Congress in 1898 that stated that when the United States had rid Cuba of Spanish rule, Cuba would be granted its freedom. It prevented Cuba from turning hostile towards the U.S.
Force Acts
Acts passed to promote African American voting and mainly aimed at limiting the activities of the Ku Klux Klan. Through the acts, actions committed with the intent to influence voters, prevent them from voting, or conspiring to deprive them of civil rights, including life, were made federal offenses. Thus the federal government had the power to prosecute the offenses, including calling federal juries to hear the cases.
Buffalo Soldiers
African-American soldiers that formed one-fifth of the frontier soldiers after the Civil War, nicknamed for the resemblance between their hair and the buffaloes'.
Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty
Agreement in 1903 Agreement that gave the United States unending sovereignty over a 10 mile wide canal across the Isthmus of Panama
Thomas Nast
Newspaper cartoonist who produced satirical cartoons, he invented "Uncle Sam" and came up with the elephant and the donkey for the political parties. He nearly brought down Boss Tweed.
"contra" rebels
Nicaraguan rebels who fought against the anti-U.S. government
Sandinistas
Nicaraguan revolutionaries
Thirteenth Ammendment
Amendment that abolished slavery in the United States, was preceded by the Emancipation Proclamation
Nicholas Cutinha
American GI; machine gunner & his company started combat mission by Gia Dinh (north of Saigon); company attacked; single-handedly kept the enemy at bay
Sitting Bull
American Indian medicine man, chief, and political leader of his tribe at the time of the Custer massacre during the Sioux War
General Douglas MacArthur
American general who commanded attacks against the Japanese that would move north from Australia, through New Guinea, and eventually to the Philippines
Panay
American gunboat that Japan bombed and sank in Chinese waters; killed 2 Americans and injured 30; Japan apologized immediately and paid America so we let it go
Nguyen Cao Ky
American instructed Vietnamese officer
"Saturday Night Massacre"
Nixon fired his prosecution and his attorney general and deputy attorney general because they wouldn't agree with firing the prosecutor
Spiro Agnew
Nixon's VP used to attack the anti-war supporters; later forced to resign because he received money from Maryland contracters
"silent majority"
Americans who still supported the war effort
Theodore Dreiser
Among the more prominent "social novelists", this man is famous for writing "Sister Carrie"
Shanghai Communiqué
Nixon's meeting with China where they agreed to "normalize" their relationship
Vietnamization
Nixon's policy to take 540,000 troops out of Vietnam and start to help South Vietnam by giving them money, weapons, training, and advice to fight their own war
Henry A. Kissinger
Nixon's security adviser (secretary of state in his second election) who met with Vietnam officers to discuss peace arrangements; "peace is at hand"
Nixon's Farewell Adress
Nixon's speech before he resigned; he admitted he did bad things but said he always thought what he was doing was for the best of the country
"Checkers speech"
Nixon's speech where he denied he had done anything wrong
James Gibbons
An American Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Richmond from 1872 to 1877, and as Archbishop of Baltimore from 1877 until his death in 1921. Gibbons was elevated to the cardinalate in 1886, the second American to receive that distinction.
Horace Greeley
An American newspaper editor and founder of the Republican party. His New York Tribune was America's most influential newspaper 1840-1870. Greeley used it to promote the Whig and Republican parties, as well as antislavery and a host of reforms.
Alexander Stephens
An American politician from Georgia. He was Vice President of the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War. He also served as a U.S. Representative from Georgia (both before the Civil War and after Reconstruction) and as the 50th Governor of Georgia from 1882 until his death in 1883.
Meat Inspection Act (1906)
An act passed which allowed the Federal Government to inspect and ensure the quality of meat products in the United States.
Morril Tariff Act
An act that superseded the low tariff of 1857 by increasing the existing duties about 5-10 percent, boosting them to about the moderate level of the Walker Tariff of 1846. These rates were soon pushed sharply upwards by the necessities of war.
Pure Food and Drug Inspection Act (1906)
An act which called for the regulation of consumer products to prevent false advertising.
Newlands Reclamation Act (1902)
An act which took federal funds that were collected from national land sales and put them to use funding large-scale irrigation projects.
Desert Land Act (1877)
An act which was passed to encourage the development of agriculture in the more arid locations of the Western United States.
Freedmen's Bureau
An agency of the War Department set up in 1865 to assist freed slaves in obtaining relief, land, Jobs, fair treatment, and education.
Gentlemen's Agreement
An agreement with Japan where Japan agreed to limit immigration, and Roosevelt agreed to discuss with the San Francisco School Board that segregation of Japanese children in school would be stopped. The agreement prevented a war that would have been caused by California, who was in Japan's eyes, oppressing their children.
Fourteenth Ammendment
An amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1868, defining national citizenship and forbidding the states to restrict the basic rights of citizens or other persons.
Fifteenth Ammendment
An amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1870, prohibiting the restriction of voting rights "on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude."
"Bloody Shirt"
An expression used as a vote getting stratagem by the Republicans during the election of 1876 to offset charges of corruption by blaming the Civil War on the Democrats.
Trail of Tears
Andrew Jackson - moving a ton of Indians in the Indian Removal Act, a bunch of them died
Comstock Law
Anthony Comstock wanted to stop all moral threat. he collected dirty pictures and pills/powders he said abortionists used.
Gettysburg Address
November 19, 1863 Abe Lincoln was not the key speaker and was not popular at the time because he had lost so many men used this message to unite the north by talking about the Declaration of Independence not the Constitution "KEEP THE UNION TOGETHER" "gov of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the Earth" People in the north started to think about just ending the war Lincoln said "they will not die in vain" we have to finish this war or all these men will die in vain and without cause
Kennedy's assassination
November 22, 1963 → JFK is in Texas for re election campaign; Arrived in Dallas, Texas airport greeted by Texas Gov. Connally & his wife; Parade route had been released to the public beforehand; They turn the corner by Texas School Book Depository & man shoots from 6th story window; Connelly & JFK were shot → JFK died; Went to Parkland Memorial Hospital & JFK was announced dead at 1pm; Lyndon Johnson was new pres.
Black Codes
Any code of law that defined and especially limited the rights of former slaves after the Civil War.
Geronimo
Apache chieftain who raided the white settlers in the Southwest as resistance to being confined to a reservation
Chester A. Arthur
Appointed customs collector for the port of New York - corrupt and implemented a heavy spoils system. He was chosen as Garfield's running mate. Garfield won but was shot, so Arthur became the 21st president.
Assassination of Lincoln
April 14th, 1865 American Cousin Ford's Theatre -Herold and Booth burned out of barn 12 days later -secret service created, presidents exact plans aren't released anymore -Sic Semper Tyrannis -George Atzerodt wassupposed to kill VP Johnson he chickened out he was executed -Lewis Powell was supposed to kill sec of state, Seward impersonated as doctor and went through the servant, body guard and his son slashed his face and throat but Seward survived -Michael O'Laughten supposed to kill Ulysses Grant but Grant was visiting his son in NJ, he was supposed to be at ford's theater. he was still convicted -Samuel Mudd helped Booth after hurt -Samuel Arnold was tied to kidnapping plot, the original plot was to kidnap Lincoln and take him to Richmond to bargain but it changed to killing because lost the war -John Suratt brought all these people and plans together and wasn't executed -Mary Suratt had helped Booth enter the theater she had the house where they planned all of this
Orval Faubus
Arkansas Governor; said he couldn't keep order if he had to enforce integration; He put Arkansas National Guard in front of Central High School in Little Rock & told them to turn away the 9 black kids that were supposed to go to school there
John Ashcroft
Attorney general; pushed for the USA Patriot Act
Black Monday
October 19, 1987; the stock market crashed 508 points; biggest single day drop in history
Maximilian
Austrian born "Emperor" of Mexico, put in power by Napoleon III his cousin
Schenk v. US (1919)
Background: In 1917 the Espionage Act was passed as the US entered into WW1. This made it so that someone could be arrested if they were doing something against the US war efforts, or in support of an enemy nation. In 1919, Schenck, a member of the Socialist party, began distributing pamphlets to soldiers who were inducted into the military by the Daft, urging them to not go out to war. During the trial, Schenck focused his defense off of the First Amendment, saying that he had a right to freedom of speech. Decision: The Court unanimously decided that Schenck was guilty, saying that his actions provided a "clear and present danger" to the people of the US.
Weeks v. US (1914)
Background: Police entered the home of Fremont Weeks and seized papers which were used to convict him of transporting lottery tickets through the mail. This was done without a search warrant. Weeks took action against the police and petitioned for the return of his private possessions. Decision: The Court held that the seizure of items from Weeks' residence directly violated his constitutional rights. The Court also held that the government's refusal to return Weeks' possessions violated the Fourth Amendment. To allow private documents to be seized and then held as evidence against citizens would have meant that the protection of the Fourth Amendment declaring the right to be secure against such searches and seizures would be of no value whatsoever. Exclusionary Rule: Evidence seized in violation of a defendant's constitutional rights is inadmissible in court.
West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette(1943)
Background: The West Virginia Board of Education required that the flag salute be part of the program of activities in all public schools. All teachers and students were required to honor the Flag; refusal to salute was treated as "insubordination" and was punishable by expulsion and charges of delinquency. Decision: The Court decided that compelling public schoolchildren to salute the flag was unconstitutional. The Court found that such a salute was a means of communicating ideas and could be regarded as "compulsory unification of opinion", in violation of thee 1st Ame
Powell v. Alabama (1932)
Background: A fight erupted in a train car between a group of white men and black men. Upon arriving in Scottsboro, Alabama, the incident was reported to the sheriff. Additionally, two white women claimed they were sexually assaulted by members of the group. All nine black men were arrested and charged with rape. At their trial, two out-of-town lawyers were appointed to represent the "Scottsboro boys", and were not allowed time to meet with their clients. All were found guilty and 8/9 were sentenced to death. The Scottsboro boys sued on the grounds that they had inaqequate legal counsel, while Alabama claimed that the right to legal counsel as stated in the 6th Amendment applies only to federal courts. Decision: The Court overturned the convictions of the boys and ordered that a new trial be held. Under the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment, the Court ruled, anybody facing the death penalty had the right to legal representation, and that the 6th amendment applied to state courts as well as federal Courts.
Dred Scott (1857)
Background: Dred Scott was a slave whose owners took him across the Missouri Compromise line to live in a free state. He sued his owner for his freedom. Decison: In a majority opinion written by Justice Tanney, the Court decided that the Constitution was written by and for white people, and only applied to white people. Thus, slaves were to be considered property, rather than people, could not sue in a court of law (rendering Scott's case null). Implications: Slave owners could take their slaves into any state or territory, regardless of it's "free" or "slave" status. The MI Compromise was unconstitutional.
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
Background: Homer Plessy, a black man, was arrested for sitting in a "white" car on a train. He sued, claiming that Louisiana's segregation laws violated the 13th and 14th amendments. Decision: The Court ruled that segregation was constitutional, given that facilities for blacks and whites were "separate but equal".
Korematsu v. US (1944)
Background: In 1942, FDR issued Executive Order 9066, banning all persons of Japanese ancestry from areas deemed to be "critical to national security". This area included the entire West Coast. Japanese people living in this area were to be sent to internment camps for the duration of the war. Fred Korematsu was arrested and convicted after refusing to leave his home in CA. Decision: Court ruled that "pressing public necessity" justifies the suspension of the civil rights of a specific race of people, in favor of U.S.
Marbury V. Madison (1803)
Background: In his final days of office, John Adams appointed a large number of judges in order to secure Federalist power in D.C. after his presidential defeat. James Madison, Jefferson's new Secretary of State, was ordered not to deliver the signed papers which would make their appointment official. Marbury, one of the appointees, sued Jefferson. Decision: The Court ruled that the appointment of the judges was unconstitutional. Important because this was the first case that created the power of judicial review for the SCOTUS. Judicial Review: the power of the SCOTUS to interpret the Constitution and render acts of Congress constitutional or unconstitutional.
Gitlow v. New York (1825)
Background: Jonathan Gitlow, a socialist, was arrrested in NY for distributing his "Left Wing Manifesto" under the Criminal Anarchy Act. His book advocated for the violent overthrow of the government. Gitlow sued the state on the grounds that his literature did not actually lead anybody to commit violent acts against the government. Decision: The Court ruled in favor of NY, and postulated that free speech under the 1st amendment can be limited in times of "clear and present danger".
Ex-Parte Milligan (1866)
Background: Lambdin Milligan of Indiana was arrested for conspiring to storm a Union military base. His plan was to liberate the POWs there and lead a raid on the federal weapons arsenal. He was tried in a military court and sentenced to death. Decision: Court rules that civilians could not be tried in military tribunals during peacetime, given that civilian courts were in working order.
McCulloch V. Maryland (1819)
Background: The Bank of the United States was a private finance corporation which served as a repository for federal funds. It had an agreement wherein it loaned money to the federal gov. instead of paying taxes. The state legislature of Maryland passed a tax on the Bank. Decision: The Court ruled in favor of the Bank, stating that no state could tax a federally incorporated institution. Also, the Court upheld the Necessary and Proper Clause in Article I of the Constituion.
Gibbons V. Ogden (1824)
Background: The state of New York had granted Aaron Ogden the rights to all steamboat shipping on the Hudson River. When Ogden found out that a rival steamboat operator, Thomas Gibbons, had been using this route, he filed an injunction. The NY Supreme Court ruled that Ogden had exclusive rights to the waterway; Ogden then appealed the decision to SCOTUS. Decision: The Supreme Court ruled that NY's deal with Ogden violated the Commerce Act of 1793, and that Congress alone (not states) could regulate interstate trade and navigation.
Bacon's Rebellion
Bacon vs. Berkeley - Virginia - Berkley was helping out the Indians and the colonists didn't like that so they rebelled, took over Jamestown. Bacon died and the rebellion died with him,
Abu Ghraib
Baghdad prison where prisoners were being mistreated
Ballinger-Pinchot Affair
Ballinger said lands in Wyoming, Alaska, Montana would be open for development, Pinchot disagreed, Taft fired Pinchot, unpopular decision
J. Pierpont Morgan
Banker who buys out Carnegie Steel and renames it to U.S. Steel. Was a philanthropist in a way; he gave all the money needed for WWI and was payed back. Was one of the "Robber barons"
J.P. Morgan
Banker who buys out Carnegie Steel and renames it to U.S. Steel. Was a philanthropist in a way; he gave all the money needed for WWI and was payed back. Was one of the "Robber barons"
Billy Graham
Baptist preacher and televangelist
Indentured Servants
Basically slaves. Rich people would pay to take poor people to America sand the Poor people
Little Big Horn
Battle in which Colonel George A. Custer and the Seventh Cavalry were defeated by the Sioux and Cheyennes under Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse in Montana in 1876.
Harry S. Truman
Became president when FDR died; gave the order to drop the atomic bomb
Shakers
Believed in celibacy, no sex, no reproduction . Go ask your parents for more info.
anarchists
Believers in the concept of a government-free world.
Poor Richard's Almanac
Ben Franklin's first literary work that included weather predictions and appealed to colonists during the time
Hillary Clinton
Bill Clinton's wife; head of a task force to redesign the medical-service industry; first female senator of New York
Black Teusday
October 29, 1929; the day when the market crashed and millions of stocks were sold
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Built the New York Central Railroad System
Colin Powell
Bush's Secretary of State
Colin Powell
Bush's Secretary of State that warned him about invading Iraq
Condoleezza Rice
Bush's national security advisor
The Bay of Pigs Invasion
CIA trained the Cubans in Guatemala to start Cuban revolt; completely failed; An airstrike failed to take out Cuba's air force; Cuban troops were more prepared then the trained rebels; Kennedy's advisers told him to use American planes to provide cover to the rebels, but he accepted defeat
Montgomery Bus Boycott
Called for blacks to stop using the bus system until the company changed segregation policies
Pol Pot
Cambodian dictator who killed over 2 million people
Second Wave of Immigrants
Came from Southern and Eastern Europe, countries like Italy and Ireland, note most immigrants flocked to Roman Catholicism.
First Wave of Immigrants
Came from the Northern and Western parts of Europe such as Ireland and Germany.
Andrew Young
Carter's UN ambassador
Muller v. Oregon (1908)
Case that upheld protective legislation on the grounds of women's supposed physical weakness
Father Coughlin
Catholic Priest that had radio show discussing social justice (about Great Depression), pro-FDR then anti-New Deal, silenced by higher up clergy
William Rahnquist
Chief Justice during Clinton's impeachment trial
Earl Warren
Chief Justice; tried to get Congress to address the issues; people tried to impeach him
Salvador Allende
Chile's elected Marxist president; CIA worked to undermine him and his presidency; died during an army attack against him
Boxer Rebellion
Chinese revolt against foreigners in China, put down by British forces
China
Clinton denounced Bush not cutting off economic sanctions with them after the protest that killed lots of civilians but later he realized we needed their trade and passed a China trade bill
Somalia
Clinton sent the military there to keep the peace, but rebels killed over a dozen Americans; he reinforced the troops at first, but quietly removed them
Democratic Leadership Council
Clinton's program that pointed the democratic party away from its traditional beliefs of anti-business, doves, champion-of-the-underdog, pro-growth, strong defense, and anti-crime policies
Madeline Albright
Clinton's second term secretary of state
Rough Riders
Colorful voluntary group of soldiers led by Teddy Roosevelt.
George Dewey
Commodore during the Spanish-American War who captured the Philippines and Guam. Followed Roosevelt's order to attack Spanish forces in the Philippines when war was declared; completely destroyed the Spanish fleet stationed at Manila Bay. His victory shed light on the adjusted purpose of war with Spain, from just freeing Cuba to stripping Spain of all of its colonies.
Foraker Act
Congress accorded the Puerto Ricans a limited degree of popular gov't and in 1917, granted then US citizenship. Worked wonders in education, sanitation, transportation, + more
insular cases
Constitution didn't have full authority of how to deal with islands (Puerto Ricans & Cubans subject to American rule, but didn't have all rights)
Kellogg-Briand Pact
Coolidge's secretary of state, Kellogg, won the Nobel Peace Prize for having 62 nations sign this to outlaw war
Engel v. Vitale
Court ruled that religious prayer in public schools was unconstitutional b/c of first amendment
Dawes Plan
Dawes came up with a plan for Germany/Britain/France to pay off their debt, U.S. loaned money to Germany, Germany makes payments to Britain/France then they pay it back to the U.S., it never worked
Woodrow Wilson
Democrat candidate in 1912 election, progressive and had support from William Jennings Bryan
Arsene Pujo
Democrat chair of the House committee, concluded that the "money monster" was rooted in the banking system (The National Banking System had faults/was corrupt)
1916 Election
Democrat: Wilson (current president); won because "He kept us out of war" (he leads U.S. into war 5 months later) Republican: Hughes
1912 Election
Democrat: Wilson; won because the Republicans split Bull Moose Party (Progressive Party): Roosevelt Republican: Taft (current president) Socialist: Debs
Alfred E. Smith
Democratic candidate in 1928, Irish/Catholic/drinker, not popular, ran against Hoover & lost
Election of 2000
Democratic nomination: Al Gore Democratic VP: Joseph Lieberman Republican nomination: George W. Bush Republican VP: Dick Cheney Green Party: Ralph Nader Lieberman was the first Jew nominated to a national ticket on a major party Gore was trying to attach himself to the Clinton prosperity but distance himself from the scandal Cheney was former secretary of defense under Bush Sr. Bush promised the surplus would go to tax cuts, school vouchers, reliance on "faith based" institutions to serve the poor, and social security reforms Gore wanted more modest tax cuts targeted at the middle and lower class and to use the surplus to pay off the national debt, increase social security, and expand medicare
Election of 1992
Democratic nomination: Bill Clinton Clinton's VP: Al Gore Republican nomination: George H.W. Bush Bush's VP: Danforth Quayle Third party independent: Ross Perot Clinton promised to stimulate the economy, reform the welfare system, and overhaul the health-care system Bush said the Cold War ended under his presidency and he led the leadership role in the Persian Gulf Perot focused on the deficit problem
Election of 1972
Democratic nomination: George McGovern Republican nomination: Nixon McGovern promised to get all American troops out of Vietnam within 90 days; good for antiwar and minority people, but alienated the working-class backbone of his party Nixon waved a bloody shirt in a sense that he bragged that he wound down the Vietnam war
Election of 1960
Democratic nomination: JFK Republican nomination: Richard Nixon JFK won because lots of the stuff was televised and he looked better than Nixon and that was appealing to the people
Election of 1964
Democratic nomination: LBJ Republican nomination: Barry Goldwater Goldwater did not believe in civil rights and thought the military should choose when to use nuclear weapons; he attacked federal income tax, social security program, TVA, civil rights legislation, nuclear test-ban, and Great Society
Election of 1964
Democratic nomination: LBJ Republican nomination: Barry Goldwater Goldwater opposed civil rights, thought military commanders should decide when to use nuclear weapons
Election of 1988
Democratic nomination: Michael Dukakis Republican nomination: George W.H. Bush Democrats firstly nominated Gary Hart but he was dropped because of sexual misconduct, then they nominated Jesse Jackson, the first black presidential candidate, but he didn't make it Bush believed in tax cuts, strong defense policies, tough on crime, opposed abortion, and economic expansion
boll weevils
Democrats that supported Reagan
Department of Commerce and Labor
Department established by Roosevelt to deal with domestic economic affairs. Later split into two departments for better management.
William Jennings Bryan
Dominant democratic seaker and author of the "Cross of Gold" speech. He runs for president multiple times but never succeeds.
James J. Hill
Driving force of the Gr. Northern Railway , Became a Shipping Agent For Winnipeg Merchants Nicknamed the "Empire Builder"
"policy of boldness"
Dulles wanted Eisenhower to regulate the army and navy (decrease) and build up an air fleet of super bombers (SAC) with nuclear bombs
Whiskey Ring
During the Grant administration, a group of officials were importing whiskey and using their offices to avoid paying the taxes on it, cheating the treasury out of millions of dollars.
Dutch Contributions During Colonial Times
Dutch East India company. Trade.
Democratic nomination riot
Once Robert Kennedy was shot, Democrats stormed to the Democratic convention to get a new candidate they liked; they were not let in and started rioting; the new Democrat nomination was pro-war, leaving them no anti-war possibilities
The Man Without A Country
Edward Everett Hale's fictional account of a treasonous soldiers journeys in exile. Book was widely read in the North, greater devotation to the union.
Leland Stanford
One of the "Big Four" tycoons who became president of the Central Pacific Railroad and later went on to become governor of California.
Gamal Abdul Nasser
Egypt's president; wanted to build a dam in the Nile, but didn't have enough money; offered to have it owned by stockholders (britain and france)
Collis P. Huntington
One of the Big Four with Leland Stanford, he was involved in both railroads and shipping. He founded Newport News Shipping, the largest privately owned shipyard in the United States.
Cotton Gin
Eli Whitney- used to separate cotton from its seeds making it easier to make into fabrics, helped the the start of the textile industry
Philippe Bunau-Varilla
Engineer who got the price of the canal holdings dropped from $109 to $40 million
agencies made to protect the environment
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA), Clean Air Act of 1970, and the Endangered Species Act
Congressional Committee on the Conduct of War
Established by Congress during the Civil War to oversee military affairs. Largely under control of radical republicans, the committee agitated for a more vigorous war effort & actively pressed Lincoln on the issue of emancipation.
Sierra Club (est. 1892)
Established in the late 19th century, this conservationist club was devoted to the preservation of nature's beauty.
Interstate Commerce Act
Established the ICC (Interstate Commerce Commission) - monitors the business operation of carriers transporting goods and people between states - created to regulate railroad prices
Marcus Garvey
Established the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) to build up black self-respect and economic power by encouraging them to buy shares of small black-owned businesses
J. Edgar Hoover
FBI director
Atlantic Charter
FDR and Winston Churchill met on a warship where they discussed common problems, like Japan; drafted ideas for post-war time - opposed imperialistic annexations, no territorial changes, gave people the rights to choose their own government, disarmament, and a new League of Nations
"bombshell message"
FDR called the London Economic Conference and scolded them for trying to create an exchange rate; the countries were shocked and this ended the conference
Court-packing Plan
FDR wanted six more judges onto the Supreme Court, made a lot of people mad because it would stunt the power of the supreme court and make FDR a dictator
Hundred Days
FDR's first hundred days in office were full of bills passed into laws, called "Alphabet Soup" b/c they were all acronyms (TVA, CCC, WPA)
New Deal
FDR's plan to fight the Great Depression
Yalta Conference
FDR, Churchill and Stalin met at Yalta. Russia agreed to declare war on Japan after the surrender of Germany and in return FDR and Churchill promised the USSR concession in Manchuria and the territories that it had lost in the Russo-Japanese War
Teheran conference
FDR, Churchill, and Stalin met and decided on a simultaneous assault on France from the Soviets from the east and and Allied assault from the west
Thorstein Veblen
Famous sociologist/economist. Wrote "The Theory of the Leisure Class".
Benito Mussilini
Fascist leader of Italy
Pendleton Act
Federal legislation which created a system in which federal employees were chosen on the basis of competitive examinations, therefore making merit, or ability, the reason for hiring people to fill federal positions
Thomas Edison
One of the most prolific inventors in U.S. history. He invented the phonograph, light bulb, electric battery, mimeograph and moving picture.
Apache
Fierce tribes hailing from Arizona and New Mexico, they were considered to be the most difficult Indians to subdue. Led by Geronimo, whose eyes blazed hatred of the whites, they were pursued into Mexico by federal troops using the sun-flashing heliograph, a communication device, which impressed the Indians as "big medicine." Scattered remnants of the warriors were finally persuaded to surrender after the their women had been exiled to Florida. They ultimately became successful farmers in Oklahoma, where they raised stock instead of raiding settlements
Jim Fisk
One of the two millionaire partners, who were notorius in the financial world. He provided the brass while the undersized and cunning Gould provided the brains.
Comstock Lode
First discovered in 1858 by Henry Comstock, some of the most plentiful and valuable silver was found here, causing many Californians to migrate here, and settle Nevada.
Burning of Richmond
Only 100 mi from Dc Each side wanted to take each other's capital Sheridan broke through Confederate army and took Richmond Confederates retreated the gov started burning gov docs so union couldn't found out Everyone was trying to leave the city so a lot of looting going on and drinking People in Richmond were glad the Union came because the confederates burned all of their stuff
James Buchanan Duke
Formed the American Tabacco Company, controlled 90% of the cigarette market
Philip Armour
Founder of the American meat-packing industry. Targeted in Upton Sinclair's muckraker novel The Jungle due to the absence of federal inspections resulting in tainted meat and eventually the passing of the Federal Meat Inspection Act of 1906.
Reconstruction Act
Four statutes that were created for Reconstruction: Creation of five military districts in the seceded states not including Tennessee, which had ratified the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and was readmitted to the Union, required congressional approval for new state constitutions (which were required for Confederate states to rejoin the Union), confederate states must give voting rights to all men and all former Confederate states must ratify the 14th Amendment.
Rhineland and Saar Valley
France demanded it from germany because it had lots of coal; made people angry so they said the Saar would remain under the LoN of 15 years and then it would be determined what to do with it by popular vote
Napolean III
French leader who decided he was going to take over Mexico, thinking that because the United States was involved in the Civil War, they wouldn't be able to enforce the Monroe Doctrine, which kept European nations out of conquering American lands
Adlai E. Stevenson
Gaining the support of Truman who did not want to run again, this man of Illinois was the clear choice to be the democratic candidate in 1952. Unable to produce a war record like Eisenhower, he was solidly defeated everywhere but the deep south, gaining only 89 electoral votes
stock watering
Originally referring to cattle, term for the practice of railroad promoters exaggerationg the profitability of stocks in excess of its actual value
"protection money"
Gangsters were forced to pay so they wouldn't be killed, harmed, or have their property destroyed
Long Drive
General Term for the herding of cattle from the grassy plains to the railroad terminals of Kansas, Nebraska, and Wyoming
reconcentration
General Valeriano Weyler y Nicolau understood very quickly that the key to a Spanish victory over the insurgents was to strip the guerrillas of their abilities to live off the land and camouflage themselves in groups of civilians.
George B. McClellan
General who was given command of the Army of the Potomac. A brilliant, thirty-four year old West Pointer. He was a superb organizer and drillmaster, and he injected splendid morale into the Army of the Potomac. He consistently believed that the enemy outnumbered him. He was overcautious and he addressed the president in an arrogant tone. He fought against General Robert E. Lee in the Seven Days' Battle.
Shay's Rebellion
George Washington - small scale revolution, showed how weak the Articles of Confederation were and that the US needed a stronger central gov't
Herman Talmadge
Georgia governor; said that his state would not tolerate desegregation
25th Amendment
Gerald Ford replaced Agnew as the VP
Lusitania
German U-boat attack on British cruise ship that killed 128 Americans, made citizens call for war
"enigma" codes
German codes that said where the U-boats were; codes broken by British code-breakes
"wolf pack"
German submarine strategy; traveled in groups
El Alamein
Germans were trying to take the Suez Canal; Allies attacked them and drove them back to Tunisia; turned the tide of the war against Germany
Sussex Pledge
Germany gave the U.S. this pledge saying their U-boats wouldn't attack without warning, retracted this when they realized that defeats the purpose of a surprise attack
Battle of the Bulge
Germany had a secret army that attacked Allies in the Ardennes Forest; they were going for the Allied Belgian port at Antwerp; Allies were pushed back but once supplies arrived, Allies won
Central Powers
Germany, Austria-Hungary, Turkey
moderate republicans
Group of Republicans that agreed with Lincoln that the Southern states should be re-admitted into the Union as simply as possible
radical republicans
Group of Republicans that believed the South needed to atone more painfully for its sins
Paxton Boys Rebellion
Group of Scots-Irish men in Pennsylvania along the Susquehanna River who rebelled against Indians after the French and Indian war and killed a bunch of Indians
Delgado v. Bastrop ISD
Gus Garcia lawsuit in Texas; made segregation of Mex-Amer children in Texas illegal
John Wilkes Booth
Guy who shot Abraham Lincoln
Fordney-McCumber Tariff
Harding and Coolidge increased the tariff to 38.5% (and could up to 50%) to protect the U.S. from cheap European goods but this meant Britain couldn't pay back the WWI debt
Harry M. Daugherty
Harding's attorney general, crooked small-town lawyer. sold pardons and liquor permits scandal
Charles R. Forbes
Harding's chief of the Veterans Bureau, stole $200 million while building veterans hospitals, spent 2 years in jail
Herbert Hoover
Harding's secretary of commerce, later becomes president in 1928, "Rugged Individualism"
Albert B. Fall
Harding's secretary of interior, schemer/anti-conversationalist, later involved in the Teapot Dome scandal
Charles Evans Hughes
Harding's secretary of state, suggested a ratio of ships at 5:5:3 (U.S. to Britain to Japan) at the Washington Conference
Andrew Mellon
Harding's secretary of treasury
Uncle Tom's Cabin
Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel that exposed the inhumanity of slavery. Led to Civil War. Its the negroes fault.
Samuel Tilden
Hayes' opponent in the 1876 presidential race, he was the Democratic nominee who had gained fame for putting Boss Tweed behind bars. He collected 184 of the necessary 185 electoral votes.
Dean Acheson
He was Secretary of State under Harry Truman. It is said that he was more responsible for the Marshall Plan and the Truman Doctrine than those that the two were named for.
Richard M. Nixon
He was a committee member of the House of Representatives, Committee on Un-American Activities (to investigate "subversion"). He tried to catch Alger Hiss who was accused of being a communist agent in the 1930's. This brought Nixon to the attention of the American public. In 1956 he was Eisenhower's Vice-President.
James B. Weaver
He was a general during the Civil War. He was chosen as the presidential candidate of the Populist party. He was a Granger with an apt for public speaking. He only ended up getting three percent of the popular votes which is really a large number for a third party candidate.
William Graham Sumner
He was an advocate of Social Darwinism claiming that the rich were a result of natural selection and benefits society. He, like many others promoted the belief of Social Darwinism which justified the rich being rich, and poor being poor.
Yasir Arafat
PLO leader who met with Yitzhak Rabin and agreed on self-rule for the Palestinians in Israel
Thomas Dewey
He was the Governor of New York (1943-1955) and the unsuccessful Republican candidate for the U.S. Presidency in 1944 and 1948. As a leader of the liberal faction of the Republican party he fought the conservative faction led by Senator Robert A. Taft, and played a major role in nominating Dwight D. Eisenhower for the presidency in 1952.
John Muir
Helped Roosevelt with conservation because he was a well known spokesperson for Mother Nature
Gifford Pinchot
Helped Roosevelt with conservation because he was the head of the Division of Forest; said public lands in Wyoming, Alaska, Montana would NOT be open for development (conserved)
"Richardsonian"
Henry H. Richardson; born in Louisiana and educated at Harvard and Paris; architect, distinctive, ornamental style; style called Richardsonian; high vaulted arches; Marshall Fields in Chicago
"trickle-down" philosophy
Hoover's idea that putting money into the railroads, banks, and rural credit corporations would restore financial health, and unemployment would be received on the bottom; congress put $2.25 billion into these prjects
"code talkers"
Indians who used their native languages to communicate for the Allies during war time; could not be interpreted by Germans or Japanese; Comanches and Navajo indians mainly
Reinhold Niebuhr
Influential liberal protestant clergyman who crusaded against what he percieved as the drift away from Christian foundations for over five decades after WWI.He was vehemently against fascism, communism, and pacifism, and divided the world into "children of light" and "children of darkness."
Marcus Alonzo Hanna
Iron tycoon from Ohio who helped to elect McKinley with his strong endorsement, "I love McKinley". Served as kingmaker and campaign manager, trying to make the focus of the election the tariff.
Elijah Muhammad
Islam preacher who inspired Malcom X
Taliban
Islamic fundamentalist that ruled Afghanistan
6-day War
Israel attacked Egypt; by the end, Israel occupied many new territories
Wagner Act (AKA the National Labor Relations Act)
It guaranteed the right of unions to organize and to collectively bargain with management
Social Security Act
It set up a payment plan for old age, the handicapped, delinquent children, and other dependents. The payments were funded by taxes placed on workers and employers, then given to the groups above. Socialistic...
Sacco and Vanzetti case
Italian immigrants accused of murder, based less on evidence and more on strikes against them (Italian, atheist, anarchist, draft dodgers), they were tried, convicted, executed = face of red scare
Fiume
Italian port shared with Yugoslavs; wilson said that it should go to the yugoslavs and that made italians angry
United States Steel
J. P. Morgan and the attorney Elbert H. Gary founded U.S. Steel in 1901 by combining the Andrew Carnegie's Carnegie Steel Company with Gary's Federal Steel Company and William Henry "Judge" Moore's National Steel Company for $492 million. At one time, U.S. Steel was the largest steel producer and largest corporation in the world. U.S. Steel maintained the labor policies of Andrew Carnegie, which called for low wages and opposition to unionization. The Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers union that represented workers at the Homestead, Pennsylvania plant was, for many years, broken after a violent strike in 1892. Limited clashed over contract negotiations in what has become known as The Homestead Strike.
U.S. Steel
JFK and U.S. steel agreed to a noninflationary wage agreement; they almost immediately broke their promise and raised prices; Kennedy yelled at them and they backed down, but he lost support from big business
tax cut bill
JFK reduced taxes and gave that money to big businesses to get their support back after the U.S. Steel issue
Jack Ruby
JFK's "avenger" who shot Oswald on TV
Robert Kennedy
JFK's brother who was appointed as attorney general; later ran for the presidency and was shot; made many changes to the FBI
"déterite"
JFK's policy to coexist peacefully with Russia
Emancipation Proclamation
January 1, 1863 Right after Battle of Antietam He picked right after this battle because south was backing off. Europe would now support north and not south. It freed Slaves in the Confederacy but did not completely abolish slavery motivated Union soldiers by making it a war over slavery Weakened southern labor force blacks would rebel and join union army Leads 13th amendment
Shandong Penninsula
Japan had control of this penn. in china and some german islands; they agreed on giving back the peninsula eventually but keeping it for now; made china angry
Battle of Midway
Japan tried to take Midway Island where they could attack Pearl Harbor or the U.S.; U.S. destroyed four of their naval carriers, forcing them to surrender
"kamikazes"
Japanese suicide pilots
"suicide cliff"
Japanese that survived the "Great Marinas Turkey Shoot" jumped off a cliff
Haiti
Jean-Bertrand Aristide was run out of power by a military coup; Clinton sent 20,000 troops to return him to the presidency; he was run out of power again in 2004
Harper's Ferry
John Brown slave rebellion, though the slaves would help him revolt once freed, they didn't and rebellion was put down
Open Door Policy
John Hay- The US trying to force Chinese to trade with everyone, resulted in the Boxer Rebellion
Congress of industrial Organizations
John L. Lewis, head of the United Mine Workers, organized it, admitted the unskilled
William Seward
Johnson's Secretary of State who engineered the purchase of Alaska from Russia.
Great Society
Johnson's term to describe his goals, series of major legislative initiatives that continued through his second term; Major poverty relief, education aid, healthcare, voting rights, conservations, urban renewal, economic development
yellow journalism
Journalism that exploits, distorts or exaggerates the news to create sensations and attract readers
Henry Demarest Lloyd
Journalist who was notable for, pre-1900, attacking the Standard Oil Company with his book "Wealth Against Commonwealth"
Benny Goodman
King of Swing, his big band made jazz popular with white audiences (he was white); first mixed race jazz group
Wiliam F. Cody
Known better by his stage name Buffalo Bill, he was an American soldier, bison hunter and showman. He was born in the Iowa Territory ,now the American state of Iowa, near Le Claire. He was one of the most colorful figures of the Old West, and mostly famous for the shows he organized with cowboy themes. He received the Medal of Honor
Watts Riot
L.A., August 11, 1965- police pulled over a black man for drunk driving, crowds gathered- suspect started to resist officer, officer panicked, took out and used riot baton; Set off 6 days of riots-national guard had to come; a thousand people were injured with 34 dead; violence spread to other cities
escalation
LBJ and his advisers thought that using this tactic by increasing their attack force steadily would make them back down; in reality North Vietnam matched all of their attacks with matching intensity
Big Four
LBJ's four major legislative Great Society goals: aid to education, medical care for the elderly and indignant, immigration reform, and new voting rights bill
Hudson River School
Landscape, Nature painters school.
38th Parallel
Latitudinal line that divided North and South Korea at approximatly the midpoint of the peninsula
Chief Jospeh
Leader of Nez Perce. Fled with his tribe to Canada instead of reservations. However, US troops came and fought and brought them back down to reservations
Eugene V. Debs
Leader of the American Railway Union, he voted to aid workers in the Pullman strike. He was jailed for six months for disobeying a court order after the strike was over.
Emilio Aguinaldo
Leader of the Filipino independence movement against Spain (1895-1898). He proclaimed the independence of the Philippines in 1899, but his movement was crushed and he was captured by the United States Army in 1901.
John L. Lewis
Leader of the of a bunch of unskilled workers moving to effective Unions under the National Labor Relations Board
Terence Powderly
Led the Knights of Labor, a skilled and unskilled union, wanted equal pay for equal work, an 8hr work day and to end child labor
Surrender at Appomattox Courthouse
Lee vs Grant Lee knew he was going to lose so the best choice was to surrender Southerners wouldn't be held on trial for treason let them keep their horses and sidearms he gave food rations to the south and south army These 2 guys had a mutual respect for each other there was no hatred for each other
Andrew Johnson
Lincoln's second term VP, he was a war democrat put on the ticket to get votes
Huey Long
Louisiana senator (critic of depression), said to take $5,000 from rich people and give it to poor families, assassinated b/c they thought he would turn into dictator
Manila Bay
MacArthur captured it in the Philippines
Iran conflict
Pahlevi was overthrown Iranians conquered the U.S. embassy in Iran and took its members hostage and demanded the exiled shah back who fled to America for medical treatment Iran stopped producing oil OPEC raised oil prices USSR went into Afghanistan to get involved in Iran Carter put an embargo on grain and technology going to Russia and said they should boycott the Moscow Olympics Carter proposed Rapid Deployment Force Ended SALT II treaty Carter sent a group of commandos to rescue the hostages, but due to an equipment mishap, they had to desert the mission; on the way back, 2 aircrafts crashed, killed 8 commandos
Yitzhak Rabin
Palestine's leader who met with Yasir Arafat and agreed on self-rule for the Palestinians in Israel
Manuel Noriega
Panama's dictator; Bush sent troops into Panama to capture him
hard/sound money
Paper money backed by gold; extremely important during late 1860's and early 1870's (Panic of 1873). Creditors wanted disappearance of greenbacks
Liberal Republicans
Party formed in 1872 (split from the ranks of the Republican Party) which argued that the Reconstruction task was complete and should be set aside. Significantly dampered further Reconstructionist efforts.
Dawes Severalty Act
Passed by Congress in 1887. Its purpose was to Americanize the Native Americans. The act broke up the reservations, gave some of the land to Native Americans. The government was to sell the remainder to white settlers and use the income from that sale for Native Americans to buy farm equipment. But by 1932 white settlers had taken 2/3 of reservation territory, and Native Americans received no money from the sale of the reservations.
Dingley Tariff bill
Passed in 1897, the highest protective tariff in U.S. history with an average duty of 57%. It replaced the Wilson - Gorman Tariff, and was replaced by the Payne - Aldrich Tariff in 1909. It was pushed through by big Northern industries and businesses.
National Security Act
Passed in 1947 in response to perceived threats from the Soviet Union after WWII. It established the Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and National Security Council.
Oral Roberts
Pentecostal Holiness preachers and televangelist
Corazon Aquino
Philippine rebel who overthrew Fernando Marcos, the dictator; supported by the U.S.
contraction
Policy which decreased the amount of money per capital in circulation between 1870 and 1880
Liberty League
Political Party during FDR's presidency didn't like the "socialist" direction the New Deal was taking America.
Greenback Labor Party
Political party devoted to improving the lives of laborers and raising inflation, reaching its high point in 1878 when it polled over a million votes and elected fourteen members of Congress.
Warren Commission
Pres. Johnson ordered President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy
Dollar Diplomacy
President Taft's policy of using economic interests as an inconspicuous way to bind other nations to the US
Truman Doctrine
President Truman's policy of providing economic and military aid to any country threatened by communism or totalitarian ideology
Theodore Roosevelt
President of the United States from 1901-1909, this man with a mythic reputation was notable for his corollary of the Monroe Doctrine and for being the first real progressivist president.
Winston Churchill
Prime Minister of Britain
Wade-Davis Bill
Program proposed for the Reconstruction of the South written by two Radical Republicans, Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio and Representative Henry Winter Davis of Maryland. In contrast to President Abraham Lincoln's more lenient Ten Percent Plan, the bill made re-admittance to the Union for former Confederate states contingent on a majority in each Southern state to take the Ironclad oath to the effect they had never in the past supported the Confederacy.
Robert La Follette
Progressive Republican Governor of Wisconsin, this man wrested control from the corporations and gave it back to the people
initiative
Progressive proposal to allow voters to bypass state legislatures and propose legislation themselves
The Fundamentals
Religious traditionalists wrote 12 pamphlets that started Fundamentalism
Election of 1956
Rep nom: Eisenhower Dem nom: Stevenson Ike won easily
Thomas Reed
Republican Speaker of the House in 1888, he gained a reputation for an iron grip over Congress and kept Democrats in line.
Alfred M. Landon
Republican candidate for president in the 1936 election. Governor of Kansas. He was a moderate, accepting some new deal plans, but was against the Social Security Act, thought it was socialistic
Charles Evans Hughes
Republican candidate in 1916 election, changed his position depending on the audience
William Howard Taft
Republican candidate in the 1908 election, was endorsed by Roosevelt, was slightly progressive; Ran again in 1912 against Roosevelt and won
Billion-Dollar Congress
Republican congress of 1890. passed record # of significant laws that helped shape later policies and asserted authority of federal govt., gave pensions to Civil War veterans, increased government silver purchases, and passed McKinley Tariff Act of 1890
Election of 2004
Republican nomination: Bush Republican VP: Cheney Democratic nomination: John Kerry Democratic VP: John Edwards Kerry was a Vietnam War hero who turned against the war Kerry's war record was questioned during the campaign; portrayed as inconsistent on issues, including the Iraq War High voter turnout gave Bush a sizeable popular vote but a narrower electoral victory
Election of 1952
Republican nomination: Eisenhower Democratic nomination: Adlai E. Stevenson Eisenhower's VP is Richard Nixon, gets into a scandal early on; however, he was a rough and tumble guy; said the government cultivated corruption, didn't do enough in Korea, and were not tough enough with communism
Election of 1976
Republican nomination: Gerald Ford Democratic nomination: James Earl Carter Gerald Ford was campaigning against the Nixon scandal and people didn't like how he pardoned Nixon Carter was a dark horse; "I'll never lie to you"
Election of 1968
Republican nomination: Richard Nixon (VP: Spiro T. Agnew) Democratic nomination: Hubert Humphrey Independent nomination: George Wallace (VP: Curtis LeMay) Robert Nixon was supposed to be the Dem nomination but he was shot to death by an Arab Wallace was super racist and said blacks should be "put in their place"; gained support from the deep south
Election of 1996
Republican nomination: Robert Dole Dole's VP: Pat Choate Democratic nomination: Bill Clinton Clinton's VP: Al Gore Third party independent: Ross Perot Robert Dole was a boring WWII veteran
election of 1980
Republican nomination: Ronald Reagan Democratic nomination: Jimmy Carter Independent: John Anderson Edward Kennedy also battled for the democratic nomination but a young women drowned when a Kennedy car went off a bridge and he lost popularity Reagan won easily because Carter was not popular at all
election of 1984
Republican nomination: Ronald Reagan Democratic nomination: Walter Mondale Democratic VP: Geraldine Ferraro, first female running for major political office Mondale was Carter's VP so no one trusted him or liked him
election of 1944
Republican nomination: Thomas E. Dewey; relentless prosecution of the war and creation of a new international organization Democratic nomination: FDR; VP fought for between Henry Wallace and Harry Truman; Truman won FDR won because wanted someone experienced for the war
Election of 1940
Republican nomination: Wendell L. Willkie; used to be a democrat but switched parties; opposed to the inconsistency of New Dealism, said FDR was a dictator, liberal, and said the New Deal was too extravagant and inefficient Democratic nomination: FDR; wanted to retire but thought if a war was coming, the U.S. needed someone experienced Willkie agreed with FDR's interventionism but not his tactics; they both promised to stay our of war and strengthen our defense
Stalwart
Republicans in the 1870s who supported Ulysses Grant and Roscoe Conkling; they accepted machine politics and the spoils system and were challenged by other Republicans called Half-Breeds, who supported civil service reform.
Sherman Silver Purchase Act
Required the government to purchase an additional 4.5 million ounces of silver bullion each month for use as currency.
Fulton J. Sheen
Roman Catholic preacher and televangelist
Newlands Act
Roosevelt passed this to irrigate the west with projects like Roosevelt's Dam and resovoirs
Yosemite National Park
Roosevelt said this land should be "multiple-use resource management", dammed up the Hetchy Hetch Gorge
Roosevelt Corollary
Roosevelt's 1904 extension of the Monroe Doctrine, stating that the United States has the right to protect its economic interests in South And Central America by using military force
William Howard Taft
Roosevelt's handpicked successor. Taft was a Republican lawyer from Ohio and was associated with the "Old Guard" or very conservative politicians. He favored protective tariffss and trust regulation.
New Nationalism
Roosevelt's progressive political philosophy in the 1912 election
Russo-Japanese War
Russia and Japan were fighting over Korea, Manchuria, etc. Began in 1904, but neither side could gain a clear advantage and win. Both sent reps to Portsmouth, NH where T.Roosevelt mediated Treaty of New Hampshire in 1905. TR won the nobel peace prize for his efforts, the 1st pres. to do so.
Allies
Russia, France, England, Australia
Columbia University
SDS tried to get them to cut ties with military research, and African American group tried to halt construction of a gym
Robert Moses
SNCC leader, Harvard grad, inspired people with his humility and soft-spoken voice
Iraq crisis
Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait goals: get oil to pay for their war with Iran, get rid of Israel, capture all the Persian Gulf we supplied Iraq with weapons during the Iraq-Iran war UN Security Council told him to get out of Kuwait (he didn't) economic embargo didn't work so Congress approved use of force "Operation Desert Strom" ended the conflict in 4 days
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, and Iran; all joined to control the oil
"Operation Desert Storm"
Schwarzkopf's tactic to attack Iraq firstly through air raids and then suffocate them from the ground with lots of troops
Richard Ballinger
Secretary of Interior, said public lands in Wyoming, Alaska, Montana would be open for development
Richard Onlney
Secretary of State under Cleveland, he was authorized by the President to deliver a message to London that the British were ignoring the Monroe Doctrine in their attempt to dominate Venezuela.
William H. Seward
Secretary of State who was responsible for purchasing Alaskan Territory from Russia in 1867. By purchasing Alaska, he expanded the territory of the country at a reasonable price.
Dean Acheson
Secretary of State; accused of knowingly appointing 205 communists into U.S. government positions
Cordell Hull
Secretary of State; made the Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act
John Foster Dulles
Secretary of State; promised to "roll back" communistic gains; created "policy of boldness"
Edwin M Stanton
Secretary of War, not best buds with Lincoln because he wanted direct control over Union armies
Salmon P Chase
Secretary of treasury. Congressional Committee on the Conduct of War—1861 Radical Republicans resent expansion of presidential power & desire emancipation
Nelson W. Aldrich
Senator; added increases to the lower tariff bill; Payne-Aldrich Bill broke Taft's campaign promise & split the Republican Party
muckrakers
Sensationalist journalists in the 20th century who used their public influence to reveal corporate corruption
Nuremberg Trials
Series of trials in 1945 conducted by an International Military Tribunal in which former Nazi leaders were charged with crimes against peace, crimes against humanity, and war crimes
Hull House
Settlement house founded by Jane Addams
Gold Standard Act
Signed by McKinley in 1900 and stated that all paper money must be backed only by gold. This meant that the government had to hold large gold reserves in case people wanted to trade in their money. Also eliminated silver coins in circulation.
The Jungle
Sinclair's book that made congress pass the Meat Inspection Act
Serbia
Slobodan Milosevic unleashed ethnic cleansing against Albania; the NATO forces air-raided Serbia until Milosevic agreed to accept the NATO peacekeeping force in Albania
Eugene V. Debs
Socialist Party candidate in the 1908 election
Eugene V. Debs
Socialist party, got 6% of the popular vote in the 1912 election, it was a sign of the times
States that Seceded
South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, Texas, Virginia, Arkansas, Mississippi, North Carolina Tennessee.
Yuri Gagarin
Soviet's first person in space
Sputnik (I and II)
Soviets launched first satellite into space; Sputnik II had a dog on it
Valeriano Weyler
Spanish General in Cuba who herded many civilians into barbed-wire reconcentration camps so they could not help the insurrectos. Called "Butcher Weyler" because hundreds of thousands of people died in his concentration camps
Dupuy de Lome
Spanish minister, in Washington, he wrote a letter where he called President McKinley weak and bitter. The letter was stolen and delivered to Hearst, who played it up using yellow journalism.
People's Party (populists)
Started as Farmer's Alliance, farmers came together and became organized, translated into Populists. Wanted to unite farmers of south/west/poor blacks and whites and industrial/factory workers
William Howard Taft
Successor of Roosevelt; Different views than Teddy, but still a progressivist; Passed Sixteenth Amendment
Fundamentalism
Supported traditional beliefs about Jesus; Said that the Bible was from God so it cannot be inaccurate; Took the Bible very literally and said every story actually took place
Coxey's Army
Supporters of Ohio populist Jacob Coxey who in 1894 marched on Washington, demanded that the government create jobs for the unemployed; although this group had no effect whatsoever on policy, it did demonstrate the social and economic impact of the Panic of 1893.
Muller v. Oregon
Supreme Court Case that resulted in laws protecting women workers
Lochmen v. New York
Supreme Court Case upheld a ten hour law for factory workers
U.S. vs. Wong Kim
Supreme Court ruled in favor of Chinese born Americans, felt that they could not strip them of citizenship because of 14th Amendment
Arab/ Israel conflict
Syrians and Egyptians made a surprise attack on Israel to get their territory back from the six-day war; U.S. airlifted military supplies to Israel and then negotiated a cease-fire
crop-lien system
System that allowed farmers to get more credit. They used harvested crops to pay back their loans.
New Nationalism
TR's plan, leave good trusts alone/control bad ones, pushed for female suffrage/social programs
dollar diplomacy
Taft passed this, Americans invested in foreign countries to make money, invested in Far East/Latin America and made the U.S. strong/made money
Payne-Aldrich Tariff (1913)
Tariff passed by the Taft Administration whose purpose was to lower tariffs, a goal that it miserably failed to achieve.
John T. Scopes
Tennessee banned teaching evolution in public schools, he taught evolution which started to Scopes Monkey Trial
Adlai Stevenson
The Democratic candidate who ran against Eisenhower in 1952. His intellectual speeches earned him and his supporters the term "eggheads". Lost to Eisenhower.
Alain Locke
The New Negro - celebrated the blossoming of African American culture
Peninsula Campaign
The Peninsula Campaign was the Union's grand plan for victory early on in the war. The basis of this plan was to capture Richmond so as to stop the war as early as possible. McClellan's invasion of Virginia failed cuz he's stewpid and too cautious.
Charles Sumner
The Republican idealist who pushed for black suffrage during Reconstruction as a principle of black freedom and racial equality
Sioux Wars
The Sioux Wars lasted from 1876-1877. These were spectacular clashes between the Sioux Indians and white men. They were spurred by gold-greedy miners rushing into Sioux land. The white men were breaking their treaty with the Indians. The Sioux Indians were led by Sitting Bull and they were pushed by Custer's forces. Custer led these forces until he was killed at the battle at Little Bighorn. Many of the Indian were finally forced into Canada, where they were forced by starvation to surrender.
Plessy v. Ferguson
The Supreme Court case that upheld a Louisiana segregation law on the theory that as long as the accommodations between the racially segregated facilities were equal, the equal protection clause was not violated. The Court's ruling effectively established the constitutionality of racial segregation and the notion of "separate but equal."
Roosevelt coalition
The Time Period between '32 and the 60's where the democratic party was the majority
Operation Wetback
The U.S. sent over 1 million Mexicans back to Mexico after the bracero program
Union Party
The Union party included all of the Republicans and the war Democrats. It excluded the copperheads and peace Democrats. It was formed out of fear of the republican party losing control. It was responsible for nominating Lincoln
Panama Canal
The United States built the Panama Canal to have a quicker passage to the Pacific from the Atlantic and vice versa. It cost $400,000,000 to build. Columbians would not let Americans build the canal, but then with the assistance of the United States a Panamanian Revolution occurred. The new ruling people allowed the United States to build the canal.
Taft-Hartley Act
The act declared the closed shop illegal and permitted the union shop only after a vote of a majority of the employees. It also forbade jurisdictional strikes and secondary boycotts. Other aspects of the legislation included the right of employers to be exempted from bargaining with unions unless they wished to. The act forbade unions from contributing to political campaigns and required union leaders to affirm they were not supporters of the Communist Party. This aspect of the act was upheld by the Supreme Court on 8th May, 1950.
National Banking Act
The banking system was used to create the sale of government bonds and to establish a uniform bank note currency
Manifest Destiny
The belief that America was destined to spread from sea to shining sea.
pacifism
The belief that peace is always the best answer to a given situation.
Louis Brandeis
The first Jewish man to be appointed to the Supreme Court, this man is notable for his earlier influence in the case Muller v. Oregon and for writing "Other People's Money and How the Bankers Use It".
Harvard College
The first college in the united states
"16 to 1"
The idea held by those who supported the Gold Standard. It was based on the idea that 16 oz. of Silver should equal 1 oz. of Gold as far as value although the real value was about 32:1. This was still a rallying cry of a majority of the Democratic Party.
martial law
The imposition of military rule above or in place of civil authority during times of war and emergency
US Steel
The largest steel company of the US, created by J.P. Morgan by merging Andrew Carnegie's Carnegie Steel and several other steel companies together; at the time, the largest corporation in existence.
New South
The rise of a South after the Civil War which would no longer be dependent on now-outlawed slave labor or predominantly upon the raising of cotton, but rather a South which was also industrialized and part of a modern national economy
Red Summer
The summer of 1919; called this because of all the blood shed over racial turmoil in Omaha, Tulsa, D.C., and especially Chicago
Jim Crow
The system of racial segregation in the South that was created in the late nineteenth century following the end of slavery. Were written in the 1880s and 1890s mandated segregation in public facilities.
safety-valve theory
The theory is that when hard times came, the unemployment who cluttered the city pavements merely moved west, took up farming and prospered.
William McKinley
The twenty-fifth President of the United States, and the last veteran of the Civil War to be elected. By the 1880s, this Ohio native was a nationally known Republican leader; his signature issue was high tariffs on imports as a formula for prosperity, as typified by his Tariff of 1890. As the Republican candidate in the 1896 presidential election, he upheld the gold standard, and promoted pluralism among ethnic groups.
Boston Tea Party
There was a tax on tea that Americans didn't like. We dumped a bunch
Orville and Wilbur Wright
These brothers were bicycle mechanics from Dayton, Ohio who built and flew the first plane at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina on December 17, 1903. flew the first airplane for 12 seconds over a distance of 120 feet at Kitty Hawk, N.C.
William Jennings Bryan
This Democratic candidate ran for president most famously in 1896 (and again in 1900). His goal of "free silver" (unlimited coinage of silver) won him the support of the Populist Party. Though a gifted orator, he lost the election to Republican William McKinley. He ran again for president and lost in 1900. Later he opposed America's imperialist actions, and in the 1920s, he made his mark as a leader of the fundamentalist cause and prosecuting attorney in the Scopes Monkey Trial.
William KcKinley
This 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. He was assassinated by an anarchist in 1901.
Fitzgerald
This Side of Paradise - some people say this invented the flapper era, The Great Gatsby - focused on wealthy, sophisticated Americans
17th Amendment (1913)
This amendment allowed for the direct election of senators
Platt Amendment
This amendment to the new Cuban constitution authorized U.S. intervention in Cuba to protect its interests. Cuba pledged not to make treates with other countries that might compromise its independence, and it granted naval bases to the United States, most notable being Guantanamo Bay.
National Grange
This organization better known as the Grange, was organized in 1867 by Oliver H. Kelley; its objective was to enhance the lives of isolated farmers through social, educational, and fraternal activities; the Grangers gradually raised their goals from individual self-improvement to the farmer's collective plight
gospel of wealth
This was a book written by Carnegie that described the responsibility of the rich to be philanthropists. This softened the harshness of Social Darwinism as well as promoted the idea of philanthropy.
Common Sense
Thomas Paine- pamphlet written by Paine to get colonists involved in the cause for Revolution
conservationists
Those who believe that the preservation of forests and other such places is of utmost importance.
Pony Express
Took place during the Transportation / Communication revolution. Mail delivery service that was quickly outdated by the telegraph
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty
Treaty with Britain (1850) said the U.S. couldn't control the isthmus route alone.
Fair Deal
Truman's extension of the New Deal that increased min wage, expanded Social Security, and constructed low-income housing
Security Treaty
U.S. and Britain agreed to help if Germany invaded again
Big Two
U.S. and Britain; two superpowers of WWII
Raymond A. Spruance
U.S. carrier officer
Ruben James
U.S. destroyer that lost over 100 American lives when it was sunk by Iceland
Greer
U.S. destroyer, shot at by German U-boats; U.S. declared a shoot-on-site policy (which is exactly what Hitler was trying to avoid)
Dwight D. Eisenhower
U.S. general and later president of the U.S.
Norman Schwarzkopf
U.S. general during the Iraq crisis
UN Monitoring, Verification, and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC)
U.S. group that inspected Iraq's weapons
Geneva Conference
U.S. imposed peace on Laos in 1962
Charles Francis Adams
U.S. minister to England during the Civil War who kept the pressure on the British government to pay for destroyed shipping.
Chester Nimitz
U.S. naval commander; helped win battle of midway
International Energy Agency
U.S. oil organization to counter OPEC
Populist (People's) Party
U.S. political party formed in 1892 representing mainly farmers, favoring free coinage of silver and government control of railroads and other monopolies, formed in 1892, the populist party was created by farmers' alliances. The peoples' party supported the abolition of national banks and the government ownership of railroads
"Good Neighbor Policy"
U.S. removed military from Nicaragua and Haiti
Cuban Missile Crisis
U.S. spy plane found missiles on Cuba; Kennedy decides in response to the missiles that the United States would do a "quarantine" (not called a blockade b/c = an act of war) around Cuba and demanded that Khrushchev dismantle the missiles; Krushy demanded at first that that in return for the removal of the Cuban missiles, that the US remove the quarantine and not invade Cuba; Krushy the next day after the first demand, demanded that the US remove the missiles from Turkey in exchange for the removal of the ones in Cuba
Cuban Missile Crisis
U.S. spy ships spotted silos in Cuba that were going to hold Soviet nuclear missiles; we put a naval "quarantine" on them; they removed the missiles in turn for an agreement to not attack Cuba and to end the quarantine (and later the removal of our missiles in Turkey)
"Atlantic Community"
U.S. wanted to be economically and militarily united to European nations
Iran-Contra deals
U.S. would sell Iran weapons if they would help us get back American hostages, then, we would use the money from the weapons to give to the contra rebels
Vietnam cease-fire
U.S.: agreed to take their troops out and got 520 prisoners of war back North Vietnam: kept 145,000 troops in South Vietnam (really just a disguised American retreat)
George Pickett
US army officer who became a general in the confederate states army during the american civil war. he is best remembered for his participation in the futile and bloody assault at the battle of Gettysburg that bears his name, Pickett's charge.
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIW)
USSR's fifteen republics all loosely confederated under this
Election of 1864
Union Party= Lincoln (War democrats and republican party) platform: Finish the war with the same guy Lincoln gains support from soldiers Lincoln ends up winning HUGE Andrew Johnson as VP for border states tide of the war changes War was almost over saw he gained support Peace Democrats=Maclellan platform: this party obviously wanted peace, but Maclellan didn't he wanted war people who were tired of fighting the war "Old Abe removed McClellan, McClellan removed Abe"
William T Sherman
Union army general whose march to sea caused destruction to the south. led march to destroy all supplies and resoures, beginning of total warfare. He set out from Chattanooga TN on a campaign of deliberate destruction that went across the state of Georgia into SC and then into NC He destroyed everything the enemy might use to survive The march broke the will of the South to fight
Oliver O Howard
Union general known as the "Christian general" because he tried to base his policy decisions on his deep religious piety. He was given charge of the Freedmen's Bureau in 1865, with the mission of integrating the freed slaves into Southern society and politics during the second phase of the Reconstruction Era.
Trent Affair
Union warship stopped a British ship on way to England and arrested 2 Confederate diplomats-James Mason and John Slidell Britain prepared for war against US-sent troops to Canada Lincoln decided to release Confederates because he did not want to fight a two front war He said Captain of Union Ship acted without orders
Chinese Exclusion Act
United States federal law passed on May 6, 1882, following revisions made in 1880 to the Burlingame Treaty of 1868. Those revisions allowed the U.S. to suspend immigration, and Congress subsequently acted quickly to implement the suspension of Chinese immigration, a ban that was intended to last 10 years.
Jay Gould
United States financier who gained control of the Erie Canal and who caused a financial panic in 1869 when he attempted to corner the gold market (1836-1892)
Douglas MacArthur
United States general who served as chief of staff and commanded Allied forces in the South Pacific during World War II
George A. Custer
United States general who was killed along with all his command by the Sioux at the battle of Little Bighorn
Frederick Jackson Turner
United States historian who stressed the role of the western frontier in American history (1861-1951)
Andrew Carnegie
United States industrialist and philanthropist who endowed education and public libraries and research trusts (1835-1919)
Alexander Graham Bell
United States inventor (born in Scotland) of the telephone (1847-1922)
Samuel Gompers
United States labor leader (born in England) who was president of the American Federation of Labor from 1886 to 1924 (1850-1924)
University of California at Berkeley
University said the students couldn't pass out civil rights leaflets They said their right to free speech was being challenged Police came to arrest one of the leaders & the students surrounded the police car so it couldn't move Board stepped in → said that the leaders of the group were responsible and filed charges against some of them Many students were arrested, some went on strike
Eugene V. Debs
Very influential pro-labor man; Led the Pullman Railroad Strike; Much-later he, under the banner of the Socialist Party, ran for the presidency -- while locked in prison.
Dr. Hector Garcia
WWII vet who organized a group that would protect the rights of Latino veterans = the American G.I. Forum
Felix Longoria
WWII veteran; funeral home reused to bury him
election of 1920
Warren Harding - rep. candidate (opposite of wilson) Calvin Coolidge - rep. vp nomination James M. Cox - dem. candidate (strongly supported league) Franklin D. Roosevelt - dem. vp nomination Harding wins because his platform "Return to Normalcy" appeased many americans and he appealed to both pro and anti leaguers
John D. Rockefeller
Was an American industrialist and philanthropist. Revolutionized the petroleum industry and defined the structure of modern philanthropy
John P. Altgeld
Was the governor of the U.S. state of Illinois from 1893 until 1897. He was the first Democratic governor of that state since the 1850s. A leading figure of the Progressive Era movement, he improved workplace safety and child labor laws, pardoned three of the men convicted of the Haymarket Riot, and, for a time, resisted calls to break up the Pullman strike with force.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
Watchdog administrative agency that required stock markets to operate more cleanly, less like a casino more like a supermarket
Jay Cooke
Wealthy New York financier whose bank collapse in 1873 set off an economic depression
Dixiecrats
Were conservative southern Democrats who objected to President Truman's strong push for civil-rights legislation. Southern Democrats who broke from the party in 1948 over the issue of civil rights and ran a presidential ticket as the States' Rights Democrats.
pork-barrel bills
When congress votes for an unnecessary building project so that a member can get more district popularity
Millerites
William Miller - Believed that Jesus' second coming would happen in 1843, obviously that didn't happen so that lost a little bit of credibility
"solemn referendum"
Wilson's belief that the 1920 elections should contain a direct vote by the people on the LoN
New Freedom
Wilson's plan, made up of liberal and progressive policies, supported small businesses, wanted to bust all trusts
Underwood Tariff Bill
Wilson, reduced tariff rates on imports and started a graduates income tax
Federal Trade Commission Act
Wilson, set up a position appointed by the president to investigate trusts, goal was to stop unfair trade practices
Federal Reserve Act
Wilson, this law made the Federal Reserve Board which oversaw 12 regional federal banks and the board could issue paper money (regulation)
Century of Dishonor
Written by Helen Hunt Jackson. Basically the Uncle Tom's Cabin of Native Americans
Alfred Thayer Mahan
Wrote The Influence of Sea Power upon History, which argued that control of the sea was the key to world dominance;it stimulated the naval race among the great powers.
George W. Norris
Zealous Senator from Nebraska, who had the vision of the Tennessee Valley Authority
"yellow peril"
[aka Yellow Terror] color metaphor for race that originated in late-19th with immigration of Chinese laborers. term refers to skin color of East Asians and the belief that mass immigration of Asians threatened white wages and standards of living
"Air Force One"
a "707" made specially for the president
Allen Ginsberg
a "beat" poet who voiced the opinions against authority and the "establishment"
Emmett Till
a 14 year old black kid who was lynched for leering at a white woman
Winfield S. Hancock
a Civil War general who appealed to the South due to his fair treatment of it during Reconstruction and a veteran who had been wounded at Gettysburg, and thus appealed to veterans. he was chosen by the Democrats
spheres of influence
a European nation controlled a coastal city and its surrounding area. The European nation held exclusive trade rights for that city and area (for example, Britain's control of Hong Kong).
Solidarity movement
a Polish union that got rid of communism in Poland; followed by getting rid of communism in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, and Romania
James G. Blaine
a U.S. Representative, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, U.S. Senator from Maine, two-time United States Secretary of State, and champion of the Half-Breeds. He was a dominant Republican leader of the post Civil War period, obtaining the 1884 Republican nomination, but lost to Democrat Grover Cleveland
Kearney
a U.S. destroyer that had 11 men killed by a U-boat
Oliver Hill
a Virginian lawyer who was also a very successful civil rights lawyer; he and his team won $50 million in higher pay and better educational facilities for black students and teachers
Mississippi troubles
a black and two whites were beaten to death and buried and 21 people were arrested; white judges would not convict them
Medgar Evers
a black civil rights activist who was shot
UN Security Council
a body of 5 great powers (which can veto resolutions) and 10 rotating member states, which makes decisions about international peace and security including the dispatch of UN peacekeeping forces
Black Power
a call to unite, to recognize their heritage, to build a sense of community... to begin to define their own goals, to lead their own organizations and support those organizations
Council of National Defense
a civilian council created by Wilson for people to study problems of economic mobilization
Jackson State Uniersity
a confrontation between students and police left 2 students dead and 11 wounded
trust
a consortium of independent organizations formed to limit competition by controlling the production and distribution of a product or service
Charleston
a dance with jazz full of kicks and pivots- also characterized the wildness of the times
"Mississippi Freedom Democratic party"
a democratic party for the rights of blacks that was denied its seat at the national Democratic convention
American Federation of Labor
a federation of North American labor unions that merged with the Congress of Industrial Organizations in 1955 -- The AFL of the AFL- CIO...
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire
a fire broke out inside a factory, and due to locked doors and safety violations, 146 workers died
Khmer Rogue
a force of communists in Cambodia led by Pol Pot
Containment Doctrine
a foreign policy strategy advocated by George Kennan that called for the United States to isolate the Soviet Union, "contain" its advances, and resist its encroachments by peaceful means if possible, but by force if necessary .
"teach-ins"
a form of strike used by campus students
Atomic Energy Commission
a former executive agency (from 1946 to 1974) that was responsible for research into atomic energy and its peacetime uses in the United States
Grand Army of the Republic (GAR)
a fraternal organization composed of veterans of the Union Army who had served in the American Civil War
Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)
a government lending bank and was given half a billion dollars designed to provide relief to insurance companies, banks, agricultural organization, railroads, and hard-pressed local governments; no individual loans
Lost Generation
a group of people who were disconnected from their country & its values
Credit Moblilier
a joint-stock company organized in 1863 and reorganized in 1867 to build the Union Pacific Railroad. It was involved in a scandal in 1872 in which high government officials were accused of accepting bribes.
Mohammed Reza Pahlevi
a kind of "dictator" put in place by the U.S. in Iran
William Hope Harvey
a lawyer, author, and politician who backed the idea of use of silver; that idea later incorporated itself into the People's Party and Democratic Party; he also founded the Liberty Party; Liberty Party's presidential candidate in 1932
"Million Mom March"
a march on Washington to show support for new anti-gun measures
Camp David
a meeting between Khrushchev and Eisenhower where the talked about evacuating Berlin
Black Panthers
a militant, violent black rights group
"New Isolationism"
a mood of caution and restraint in regards to foreign affairs
Bowling for Columbine
a movie made by Michael Moore that supported gun control
Kennedy Round
a name for his tariff negotiations to promote American-European trade; Geneva conference
"pink collar ghetto"
a name for the women who worked in the service, secretary, clerical fields
"counter culture"
a name for the young, rebellious youth of the 70s
Salvation Army
a new denomination of religion that came from England; gave out free soup
Gifford Pinchot
a notable conservationist who headed the federal Division of Forestry.
Hydrogen Bomb
a nuclear weapon that releases atomic energy by union of light (hydrogen) nuclei at high temperatures to form helium
talented tenth
a phrase made popular by Du Bois in an article published in The Negro Problem in 1903. In the essay, Du Bois issues an argument for the higher education of African Americans.
company town
a place where practically all stores and housing are owned by the one company that is the only employer. The company provides infrastructure (housing, stores, transportation, sewage and water) to enable workers to move there and live.
imperialism
a policy of extending a country's power and influence through diplomacy or military force.
plutocracy
a political system governed by the wealthy people
Malcom X
a preacher for black rights (and an Muslim); inspired by Elijah Muhammad
League Covenant
a promise to make the LoN a part of the final treaty
Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies
a propaganda group that appealed to interventionists by appealing for direct assistance to the British and to isolationists by appealing for direct assistance to democracy
rebate
a refund of some fraction of the amount paid
"To Secure These Rights"
a report written by Truman when he found out about the military veteran lynchings; wrote to end segregation in federal civil service and equality in armed forces; congress resisted and Ike didn't really care about racial issues so nothing really happened
"sexual revolution"
a revolution of young people who wanted sexual liberties; introduced the pill
Littleton, Colorado
a school shooting at Columbine High School by two students killed 12 other students and a teacher
Jim Crow Laws
a set of laws followed by blacks which governed all aspects of their lies and controlled where they could go, where they could eat, their education, etc.; kept them economically inferior and politically powerless
Inter-American Conference
a special conference attended by FDR in Buenos Aries to get other Latin American countries to like the U.S.
Kenneth Starr
a special prosecutor that was hired to investigate Clinton's scandals
Waco, Texas
a standoff between federal agents and Branch Davidson fundamentalists ended in the destroying of he Branch Davidson's compound and many of their deaths, including women and children
trust-busting
a term that referred to President Theodore Roosevelt's policy of prosecuting monopolies, or "trusts," that violated federal antitrust law.
weathermen
a terrorist group of Americans inside the U.S.
"sit in" policy
a type of strike performed by blacks where they would refuse to move until they got service; used in restaurants, transportation, employment, housing, and voting
David G Farragut
a union admiral remembered for running a blockade of torpedoes while taking mobile As Grant pushes toward the Mississippi River, a Union fleet of about 40 ships approached the river's mouth in Louisiana This commander seized New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Natchez
Teamsters
a union that used gangsterism, fraud, and brass-knuckle tactics to get what they want
Alliance for Progress
a vast cooperative effort to satisfy the basic needs for people in North, Central, and South America for homes, work, land, health, and schools; pledged $20 billion over 10 years to promote economic development and social reform = prevent revolts
megalopolis
a very large urban complex (usually involving several cities and towns)
Moscow-Washington "hotline"
a way of communicating in case of crisis
Jack Kerouac
a writer who voiced the opinions against authority and the "establishment"
24th Amendment
abolished the poll tax in federal elections
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965
abolished the quota system; doubled the number of immigrants allowed into America, but set limits on how many are allowed from the Western Hemisphere; it also said close relations to Americans didn't count toward the total number of immigrants allowed
vertical integration
absorption into a single firm of several firms involved in all aspects of a product's manufacture from raw materials to distribution
horizontal integration
absorption into a single firm of several firms involved in the same level of production and sharing resources at that level
"don't ask, don't tell" policy
accepted gays and lesbians in the armed forces by did not acknowledge their presence
Anita Hill
accused Clarence Thomas of sexual assault
O.J. Simpson
accused of murder and looked guilty but was acquitted, most likely because some police involved had been known to be racist
John Dean III
accused top White House officials of obstructing justice by covering up the Watergate scandal
Arnold Schwarzneggar
actor elected governor of California
Lillian Gish
actress who specialized as a delicate heronie
Equal Pay Act
added to Fair Labor Standards Act; employees doing same work in the same place had to be payed the same
James G. Blaine
advocated the "Big Sister" policy toward Latin America. The idea was to get Latin American countries behind the leadership of the U.S. To that end, he led the Pan-American Conference in Washington D.C.
"Battle of Anacosta Flats"
after BEF riots, two people were killed, so Hoover ordered that the "Bonus Army" evacuate unwanted guests; he hired General MacArthur to make sure this happens; used bayonets and tear gas; a few rioters were injured and their shanty was burned
"phony war"
after the invasion of France; no one involved in the war did anything; broken when USSR invaded Finland
ABC-1 agreement
agreement in which America promised to go after Germany first in the war, even though we wanted to get back at Japan after Pearl Harbor
Tripartite Pact
agreement that brought Japan into the Axis Powers
Compromise of 1877
agreement that ended the disputed election of 1876 between Rutherford Hayes and Samuel Tilden; under its terms, the South accepted Hayes's election. In return, the North agreed to remove the last troops from the South, support southern railroads, and accept a southerner into the Cabinet. The Compromise of 1877 is generally considered to mark the end of Reconstruction.
"third basket"
agreements signed by the Soviet Union guaranteeing more liberal exchanges of idea, people, and information between East and West and protected basic human rights
Berlin Airlift
airlift in 1948 that supplied food and fuel to citizens of west Berlin when the Russians closed off land access to Berlin
Reaganomics
aka "supply side" economics; included tax reforms that cut individual tax rates, federal estate taxes, and created new tax-free savings plans for small investors
Special Forces
aka Green Berets; elite antiguerilla military
National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders
aka Kerner Commission; led by former Illinois governor Otto Kerner; determined that violence was due to smoldering anger of inner-city ghettos
Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI)
aka Star Wars; called for orbiting battle stations in space that could fire laser beams or other concentrated energy to vaporize intercontinental missles
Lee Harvey Oswald
alleged assassin of JFK
Elkins Act
allowed for heavy fines to be imposed on railroads that gave rebates and on shippers that accepted them; passed in 1903
William F. Halsey
almost lost one of the Leyte Gulf battles when he was decoyed away by a Japanese feint
Bland-Allison Act
an 1878 law passed over the veto of President Rutherford B. Hayes requiring the U.S. treasury to buy a certain amount of silver and put it into circulation as silver dollars. The goal was to subsidize the silver industry in the Mountain states and inflate prices.
Sherman Act
an 1890 law that banned the formation of trusts and monopolies in the United States
Russel Conwell
an American Baptist minister, orator, philanthropist, lawyer, and writer. He is best remembered as the founder and first president of Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as the Pastor of The Baptist Temple, and for his inspirational lecture, Acres of Diamonds.
George F. Kennan
an American advisor, diplomat, political scientist, and historian, best known as "the father of containment" and as a key figure in the emergence of the Cold War. He later wrote standard histories of the relations between Russia and the Western powers.
Edward Everett Hale
an American clergyman and author who wrote numerous newspaper articles, historical essays, sermons, short stories, and novels. Writer of "The Man Without A Country"
Ulysses S. Grant
an American general and the eighteenth President of the United States (1869-1877). He achieved international fame as the leading Union general in the American Civil War.
Herbert Spencer
an English philosopher, biologist, anthropologist, sociologist, and prominent classical liberal political theorist of the Victorian era. Spencer developed an all-embracing conception of evolution before Darwin
Watts
an LA black ghetto; blacks were enraged by police brutality and they looted and burned their own neighborhood of a week; killed 3 whites and 31 blacks and over 1000 injured
Mettachine Society
an advocate of gay rights and sexual tolerance
Treaty of Paris
an agreement made in 1898 that involved Spain relinquishing nearly all of the remaining Spanish Empire, especially Cuba, and ceding Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines to the United States.
Philippine insurrection
an armed conflict between a group of Filipino revolutionaries and the United States which arose from the struggle of the First Philippine Republic to gain independence following annexation by the United States
Grange
an association formed by farmers in the last 1800s to make life better for farmers by sharing information about crops, prices, and supplies, Social and educational organization through which farmers attempted to combat the power of the railroads in the late 19th century.
Tet Offensive
an attack by North Vietnam on South Vietnam on 27 South Vietnam cities simultaneously
Frank Conrad
an engineer who helped with the start of broadcasting programs in Pittsburgh
Oklahoma City
an explosion destroyed a federal building, killing 168 people in retaliation for the Waco incident
Iron Curtain
an impenetrable barrier to communication or information especially as imposed by rigid censorship and secrecy, the divide between east and west Europe (communism and democracy)
Bessemer process
an industrial process for making steel using a Bessemer converter to blast air through through molten iron and thus burning the excess carbon and impurities
"Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion"
an insult made against NY Irish-Americans by a republican clergyman in the 1884 election. Blaine's failure to repudiate this statement lost him NY and contributed to his defeat by Grover Cleveland.
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
an international organization created in 1949 by the North Atlantic Treaty for purposes of collective security
Whitewater Land Corporation
an investment deal Clinton was involved with before he was president; led to the hiring of a special prosecutor to look into his affairs
Aimee Semple McPherson
another famous Fundamentalist preacher; She was very theatrical presenter; Build the Angelus Temple in LA; Called "Sister Aimee"; She spoke with the use of the radio to reach almost all of her followers
Zora Neale Hurston
anthropologist, gained fame with her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God
Al Qaeda
anti-american terrorist group
American Protective Association
antiforeign organization; urged voting against Roman Catholic candidates for office and sponsored publication of lustful fantasies about runaway nuns
Sedition Act of 1918
any treacherous act or draft-dodging was illegal
Gerald Nye
appointed to investigate the "merchants of death"
17th Amendment
approved in 1913; established the direct election of U.S. Senators
evolution
argued that higher forms of life had evolved from lower forms of life via random mutation and survival-of-the-fittest; proposed by Charles Darwin;saying things that happened during an organism's life could be the surviving factor (not necessarily genetic mutation). By the 1920's, Darwin's view was largely accepted by scientists.
Duke Ellington
arranger, composer, and band leader
Charles J. Guiteau
assassinated President James to make civil service reform a reality. He shot Garfield because he believed that the Republican Party had not fulfilled its promise to give him a government job.
John J. Pershing
assigned to an 85 mile stretch north up to French border to lead American army
trade associations
association of people/companies in a particular business organized to promote their common interests
Free Speech movement
at the University of California at Berkeley, a protest broke out against established authority
Title VII
attached to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibited sexual discrimination
Sinclair Lewis
attacked American society with savage irony in his books
Iwo Jima
attacked by Japan, but U.S. fought them off
Upton Sinclair
author of The Jungle that inspired pro-consumer federal laws regulating meat, food, and drugs
National Defense and Education Act (NDEA)
authorized $887 million in loans to students in college and started science and language course improvements
Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act
authorized the federal government to seize and operate tied-up industries; also made strikes against government-operated industries a criminal offense; Washington ended up taking over coal mines and the railroads for a short period
Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act
authorized the president to make treaties with other countries in which both lower their tariffs by as much as 50%; made pacts with 21 countries
GI's
average soldier; "government issue"
INF Treaty
banned all intermediate-range nuclear force missiles in Europe; signed at the third summit meeting
Limited Test Ban Treaty
banned nuclear testing above the ground
Civil Rights Act of 1964
banned racial discrimination in most private facilities open to the public (theaters, hospitals, restaurants, etc.), strengthened the government's power to end segregation in schools, and started the EEOC
Babe Ruth
baseball player
naval "quarantine"
basically a blockade, but not an act of war
Tonken Gulf Resolution
basically handed LBJ a blank check to use more force in Southeast Asia
Battle of Britain
battle in which Germany tried to make air strikes against Britain a month before a planned attack; Britain's Royal Air Force held them off and led to Hitler postponing the invasion
D-Day
battle in which the Allies attacked Germany on Normandy beach
Okinawa
battle where America took the island from Japan
"Great Marinas Turkey Shoot"
battle where Japan attacked the Marina islands; U.S. used "Hellcat" fighter planes and new technology to take out hundreds of Japanese aircrafts and more carriers; Japan was never able to recover from such loses
Stalingrad
battle where the Russians defeated Germany; turning point for the Soviets
Second Battle of the Marne
battle where the germans were pushed out of France and ultimately ended their winning streak
Calvin Coolidge
became pres. in 1923 when Harding died of illness, he was traditional/old-timey for the 20s, even more pro-business that Harding
Barbara Jordan
became the first black to be elected to the Texas state senate since Reconstruction
Mary Elizabeth Lease
became well known during the early 1890's for her actions as a speaker for the populist party. She was a tall, strong woman who made numerous and memorable speeches on behalf of the downtrodden farmer. She denounced the money-grubbing government and encouraged farmers to speak their discontent with the economic situation.
new morality
began to take place in the form of higher divorce rates, increased birth control, and more open sex talk. These changes had largely been prompted by the increased independence of women that their own jobs provided.
Good Neighbor Policy
being nice to Latin American countries; we removed our military from many Latin American countries; we were afraid that with a war looming in the future if we weren't nice to them, they may rally themselves with Germany and attack the U.S.
Victoria Woodhull
believed in free love; divorcee, occasional stockbroker, feminist propagandist; with her sister she published Woodhull and Claflin's Weekly; journal charged that Henry Ward Beecher (famous preacher of the time) that he was having an adulterous affair
neoconservatives
believed in free-market capitalism liberated from the government; were very anti-soviet, questioned liberal welfare programs and affirmative action policies, and called for the reassertion of traditional and individualistic values
Fundamentalists
believed in literal reading of the Bible in schools, Scopes Monkey Trial
Emmett Till
black 14-year-old killed for whistling at white woman
"Freedom Summer"
black and white civil rights advocates held a voting registration drive
Martin Luther King Jr.
black civil rights supporter; spokesperson for the protest movement
Paul Laurence Dunbar
black writer; poet; wrote Lyrics of Lowly Life; brought a new kind of realism
The Origin of Species
book written by Charles Darwin that talked about natural selection and explained his theories
Community Service Organizations & Asociacion Nacional Mexico-Americana
both worked for improvements for Mexican Americans
doughboys
boys who went into the war without hardly knowing how to do anything; had very little training
Bernard Montgomery
british general in battle of El Alamein
"Zoot-Suit" Riots
broke out in Los Angeles; American sailors attacked Mexicans and Mexican-Americans
Office of Price Administration
brought down wartime inflation through extensive regulations
Manhattan Project
building of the atomic bomb
capital goods
buildings, machinery, tools, and other goods that provide productive services over a period of time.
Strategic Air Command (SAC)
built up by Eisenhower to expand the passenger airline business
The Great Gatsby
by F. Scott Fitzgerald about the Jazz Age, ruined WWI vet., wife Zelda, period's glamour/senselessness
"Operation Rolling Thunder"
called for regular bombing attacks against North Vietnam
Child Labor Law
called to end child labor; didn't get passed
Chinese Immigrants in the West
came to california, first came because finding of gold, main railroad workers in the west
punji trap
camo pit filled w/ sharp stakes (sometimes poisonous)
internment camps
camps similar to concentration camps where we put Japanese immigrants or Japanese-Americans
Three P's
can be used to describe the 60s: protests against racism and Vietnam war, population bulge, and permanence of prosperity
Korematsu vs. U.S.
case in which the supreme court upheld the constitutionality of Japanese relocation into internment camps
Hopwood v. Texas
challenged university's affirmative action policies
"stoop laborers"
chicanos who worked in the fields in the west
Christian Science
church of christ; scientist; started by mary baker eddy; healing through prayer, not through medical treatment.
Voter Education Project
civil rights groups (like SNCC) started this program to register the South's blacks to vote
Economic Opportunity Act of 1964
combat several causes of poverty, including illiteracy and unemployment; Gave poor people a voice in defining housing, health, and education; It also provided $950 million for projects with education and training programs
AF of L-CIO
combined AF of L and CIO; expelled the teamsters from choosing leaders
George B Meade
commanded the union army of the potomac at gettysburg. Was replaced by Ulysses S. Grant. General who commanded the Northern armies, set up north & west of Gettysburg & sustained Confederate assault Confederates took control of the town but Northerners held the high ground on Cemetery Ridge, south of Gettysburg
General William Westmoreland
commander of U.S. army in vietnam requested more soldiers after Pleiku attack
International Business Machines (IBM)
computer giant and set the standards of the "high-tech" age
Munich Conference
conference between european powers and germany; they gave germany the sudetenland of czechoslovakia in hopes that they would stop taking over territories
Potsdam conference
conference where Truman, Stalin, and British leaders met to thee Japan to "surrender or be destroyed"
Office of Economic Opportunity
congress doubled their budget to $2 billion and gave them $1 billion to fight the war on poverty in Appalachia
Robert Bork
conservative who was denied a seat on the supreme court by the new Democratic majority senate
Berlin Wall
constructed in 1961 to keep out East Berliners from West Berlin; "Wall of Shame"
Old Guard
controlled Republican National Committee, viewed Taft as conservative candidate and Roosevelt encouraged his progressive supporters to leave the party
Julius and Ethel Rosenburg
convicted in 1951 of giving atomic bomb data found by American scientists to the Soviet Union; only Americans ever executed during peacetime for espionage
Planned Parenthood v. Casey
court ruled that states could put restrictions on access to abortions as long as there was no "undue burden" on the woman
Joseph R. McCarthy
crazy, popular anti-communist; accused Dean Acheson; over time, he accused more and more people; attacked the U.S. Army and took place in a 5-day televised hearing
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
created a free trade zone between Mexico, Canada, and the U.S.
Salk
created a vaccine for polio; secretary of health saw it as "socialized medicine"
Jerry Falwell
created the Moral Majority
Department of Homeland Security
created to protect America's borders and find terrorists
William Jennings Bryan
creation side of scopes monkey trial, bible expert/excellent speaker
Trade Expansion Act
cut tariffs up to 50% to promote trade with the Common Market countries
Welfare Reform Bill
cut welfare grants, required able-bodied welfare recipients to find jobs, and restricted welfare benefits for legal and illegal immigrants
Britain's big four leader
david lloyd george
Havana Conference of 1940
decided that the U.S. and New World countries would uphold the Monroe Doctrine
Port Huron Statement
declaration of principles and goals of the SDS (written by Tom Hayden)
Schechter case
declared the National Recovery Act unconstitutional (businesses hate running any other way than what would be best for them)
Franklin D. Roosevelt
democratic candidate in 1932 election against Hoover, had the people's touch, appealed to the common man, won by a landslide
Macy's/Marshall Field's
department stores that attracted urban middle class-shoppers and provided working-class jobs (many for women); consumerism and showed class division
Sinclair Lewis
depicted small-town America in "Main Street" and 20's materialism/consumerism in "Babbitt"
Maya Ying Lin
designed the Vietnam war memorial
La-drum-Griffin Act
designed to hold labor leaders responsible for financials and bullying tactics; also prohibited "secondary boycotts" and certain picketing
National Endowments for the Arts and the Humanities
designed to lift the level of American cultural life
Multiple Independently Targeted Reentry Vehicles (MIRVs)
designed to overcome any defense by "saturating" it with warheads, several to a rocket
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
developed for space exploration
Big Four
developed of the world's largest, most powerful nations: U.S., Britain, France, Italy
Joseph Stalin
dictator of the USSR
doves
did not support war
J. Robert Oppenheimer
director of the Manhattan Project and later of the Atomic Energy Commission
W.E.B. Du Bois
disagreed with Booker T. Washinton; earned a Ph. D. at Harvard (the first blackish person to do so); demanded complete equality for blacks, both socially and economically; helped found the NAACP; demanded that the talented tenth of the black community be given full as well as immediate access to the mainstream of American life; died as a self-exile in Africa
17th parallel
divided vietnam into two pieces; north: communist south: democratic
conscription
draft; all american men had to insert their names to serve in the military
Half-Breed
during the presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes (1877-1881), a moderate Republican party faction led by Senator James Blaine that favored some reforms of the civil service system and a restrained policy toward the defeated South. They were half loyal to Grant and half committed to reform the spoils system
Keynesianism
economics says that it's healthy for governments to engage in "deficit spending" (spending more money than they take in).
Norman Podhovetz
editor of Commentary magazine; neoconservative
Irving Kristol
editor of The Public Interest; neoconservative
Tom Watson
elected to the U.S Congress, became known as a champion of Georgia's farmers, and he sponsored and pushed through a law providing for RFD-rural free delivery
termination
eliminate reservations & assimilate Native Americans into mainstream U.S. life
Women's Bureau
emerged from the Dept. of Labor; many women gave up their jobs after the war so it didn't do much for a while
"asymmetrical warfare"
employing traditional warfare and innovative intelligence gathering, economic reprisals, infiltration of organizations, and assassinations
Seventh Pan-American Conferece
enacted the Good Neighbor Policy
Helsinki accords
ended still existent WWI struggles by drawing out the border between Poland and Eastern countries
recall
essentially a form of impeachment; the name for giving voters the ability to remove from office disloyal or incompetent officials
Marbury v. Madison
established judicial review
Mapp v. OH
established rule that evidence illegally obtained can't be used in trials
Human Genome Project
established the DNA sequencing of 30,000 human genes; Bush limited their funding because of religious reasons
Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC)
established to enforce no discrimination for blacks in defensive industries
Rwanda
ethnic violence killed over 500,000 people
Clarence Darrow
evolution side of scopes monkey trial, expert trial lawyer
Booker T. Washington
ex-slave; worked hard to go to school; became the head of a normal and industrial school at Tuskegee, Alabama in a really crappy shack; taught useful trades (in order to gain self-respect and economic security); believed that one should make themselves useful in order to go against white supremacy
"modernization theory"
explains global inequality in terms of technological and cultural differences between nations; said that Asia, Africa, and Latin America could become industrial and democratic in they copy the U.S.
Copperheads
extreme Peace Democrats (named after rattlesnakes), were strongly anti-war, hated Lincoln, and fought against the Draft
jingoism
extreme patriotism, especially in the form of aggressive or warlike foreign policy
Billy Sunday
famous Fundamentalist preacher; He preached about the evils of alcohol; held more than 300 religious revival meetings
Jack London
famous for nature writing; wrote Call of the Wild and The Iron Heel
Bob Dylan
famous singer whose songs were for civil rights and his powerful song "Blowin in the Wind" was performed at the march
Louis Armstrong
famous trumpet player
red scare
fear of communism fueled by the Russian Revolution, Eugene Debs following, strikes, and mail bombs
Pleiku
february Viet Cong attack that killed 8 americans & wounded 126
Peace Corps
fed. program established to send volunteers to help developing nations around the world; ex: teachers, health workers, and technicians
"unfunded mandates"
federal laws that imposed new obligations on state and local governments without providing new revenues
Dust Bowl
fertile topsoil blew away (OK, KA, TX) caused by drought, wind, dry-farming, people had to move west to Cali. in search of farm jobs
Gus Garcia
filed a similar lawsuit to the Mendez case but in Texas
Alan Shepard
first American in space
Robert C. Weaver
first black cabinet secretary who headed HUB
L. Douglas Wilde
first black governor of Viriginia
Shirley Chisholm
first black woman elected into Congress/House of Representatives (Democrat)
Carol Moseley-Braun
first black woman in the Senate
Carol-Mosley Braun
first black woman in the senate
Jeannette Rankin
first congresswoman from Montana
Janet Reno
first female Attorney General
John Glenn
first guy to orbit the earth (did it 3 times)
The Jazz Age
first movie with sound ("talkie")
teach-in
first one took place at the University of Michigan in March 1965; 50-60 professors taught a special night session in which issues concerning the war could be aired, thousands of people attended
"707"
first passenger jet made by Boeing Company
Charles Lindbergh
first person to fly across the atlantic ocean in the plane the Spirit of St. Louis
Neil Armstrong
first person to walk on the moon
Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)
first proposed in 1923, said that men and women should be equal in everything and it was approved by Congress in 1972 but never got passed
Amelia Earhart
first woman to fly across the atlantic
Poor People's Campaign
focused effort by MLK to attack economic injustice
Jim Thorpe
football player; won decathlon and pentathlon in olympics
Portsmouth Conference
formally ended the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05. The negotiations took place in August in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and were brokered in part by U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt.
Moral Majority
formed by Jerry Falwell; spoke out against sexual permissiveness, abortion, feminism, and gay rights
James B. Weaver
former Civil War general who ran for president with the Greenback Party (1880) and the Populist Party (1892).
Florence Kelley
former member of the Hull House; was Illinois' first factory inspector - worked for laws safeguarding the rights of women and children in factories
Merrimack/ Monitor
fought between the two 'ironclads' the Merrimack (South) and the Monitor (North) by the entrance to Chesapeake Bay, as the Merrimack attempted to sink Union ships and break their blockade; ended in standstill, both just left; but North basically won because the Merrimack wasn't successful in sinking any Northern blockade ships
Thurgood Marshall
fought for equal schools in Sweatt v. Painter
Florence Kelly
fought for welfare of women, children, blacks and consumers; moved to Henry Street Settlement ; served 30 years as a general secretary of the National Consumer League
James Farmer
founded Congress of Racial Equality
Congress of Racial Equality
founded by pacifists in 1942; bring about change through peaceful confrontation; leader James Farmer
Clara Barton
founder of the American Red Cross, was a nurse on the battlefield for the Union
Frances Willard
founder of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union; fought against the widespread usage of alcohol
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
gave $1.3 billion in aid to states based on the number of children in low-income homes
19th Amendment
gave all women the right to vote; passed in 1920 after many states had given women suffrage already
Education Bill
gave educational aid to students (did not say schools so as to avoid the topic of religion)
"patients' bill of rights"
gave patients certain rights against medical providers and the right to sue
Madicaid
gave right (insurance) to impoverished people
Medicare
gave rights (hospital and insurance) to old people
Tydings-McDuffie Act of 1934
gave the Philippines thier independence after a 12 year period of economic and political control; also agreed to get rid of army bases but did not agree to naval bases; 12 year period was to set economic boundaries on them to basically use it against them if they got out of line
France's big four leader
geoges clemenceau
"slush fund"
getting money from political people who want you to win
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT)
goal of freezing number of long-range nuclear missiles for 5 years
Pure Food and Drug Act
goal was to ensure proper labeling and prevent tampering
Grain Stabilization Corporation/ Cotton Stabilization Corporation
goals were to buy up surplus and keep prices high; it didn't work because they bought up too much surplus
Fuel Administration
got americans to save fuel by "heatless mondays", "lightless nights", and "gasless sundays"
Voting Rights Act of 1965
got rid of any tests required to register for voting
Miriam A. Ferguson
governor from Texas
Nellie Tayloe Ross
governor from Wyoming
Hiram Johnson
governor of California; pulled the Southern Pacific Railroad out from influencing politics
Robert La Follete
governor of Wisconsin; progressive; fought to bring power from corrupt corporations and to the people
Henry Adams
grandson of John Adams, wrote a history of the early U.S. and The Education of Henry Adams, his best known.
Nation of Islam
group led by Elijah Muhammad
"Rapid Deployment Force"
group of American draftees who could respond to suddenly developing crises; the draft would include both men and women
Veterans of Future Wars (VFW)
group of Princeton students that tried to get bonuses to be paid to them while they were still alive
Brain Trust
group of academic advisers FDR gathered to help him develop an economic plan in the 1932 election, their plans/programs became the backbone of the New Deal
Women's Christian Temperance Union
group of women that fought for temperance
Screen Actors Guild
group who banished accused communist actors from getting jobs; Reagan was president
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
group who fought for equality for blacks; threatened to march on Washington for equal job and military opportunities for blacks
Jane Addams
had a college education; used her talents to teach and do volunteer work, Hull house (American settlement home); condemned war and poverty; won Nobel Peace Prize in 1931
Federal Farm Board
had half a billion dollars to lend to farmers seeking to buy, sell, and store agriculture surplus; created the Grain Stabilization Corporation and the Cotton Stabilization Corporation
progressive education
hands-on learning, learning by doing, education for life, Dewey's idea
Association of nations
harding's promise in election of 1920; promised for A league, but not THE league
Carter's Farewell Address
he said he tried to scale down the nuclear arms race, promote human rights, and protect the environment
A. Mitchell Palmer
he vowed to round up the reds to stop the bombs, arrested 6,000 and deported some
Henry Cisneros
head of Housing and Urban Development under Clinton
Robert S. McNamara
head of the Defense Department from being president of Ford Motor Company
Richard Daley
head of the Democratic convention; would not let protesters in; set up a barbed wire fence
J. William Fulbright
head of the foreign relations committee warned the President not to start the Bay of Pigs Invasion, but he went along with it anyway
J. Edgar Hoover
headed Bureau of Investigation
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUB)
headed by Robert C. Weaver
National War Labor Board
headed by Taft; worked to end labor disputes that might effect the war effort
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
headed by William Fulbright; televised anti-war hearings and people realized them were lied to about the causes and "winability" of the war
Harold Ickes
headed the Public Works Administration, secretary of the interior
William Fulbright
headed the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
George Washington Goethals
headed up construction of the panama canal—a modern marvel when completed in 1914. It'd cost $400 million to construct.
Area redevelopment
helped areas w/ long time unemployment
George Kennan
helped draft U.S. foreign policy opposed involvement in Vietnam; Said the war wasn't strategically important to U.S. & we shouldn't be solving other nations problems
settlement house
helped immigrants get accustomed to life in a new place; center of women's activism and social reform (ex. lobbied for antisweat shop law)
United Farm Workers Orginizing Committee (UFWOC)
helped to get better conditions for Chicano "stoop laborers"
Agent Orange
herbicide they dropped on dense jungle to kill the leaves/undergrowth & expose the soldiers
Jackson State College
highway patrol killed two students during a riot
Branch Rickey
hired Jackie Robinson onto the Brooklyn Dodgers team
"Solidarity"
huge Polish labor union that was suppressed by the communist martial-law regime
multipluralism
idea of promoting and celebrating ethnic and racial diversities
Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, and 1937
if the president proclaimed the existence of war, certain restrictions would automatically be put into place; for example, no Americans could sail on a belligerent ship, sell or transport munitions to a belligerent ship, or make loans to a belligerent ship
Speakeasies
illegal bars that were operated during prohibition
new immigration
immigrants came from southern and eastern Europe—Poland, Italy, Slovakia, Croatia. They largely came from nations with little democratic traditions. They were usually Catholic, uneducated, and were generally penniless.
NYC Draft Riots
immigrants in NY opposed the draft so they rioted, hate for blacks, fight for the independence of labor competition, didn't like that rich could buy out of draft, straight from boat into war
"Brady Bill"
imposed background checks for gun control; named after James Brady who was wounded and disabled when President Reagan was shot
Project Head Start
improved the educational performance of underprivileged youth
Proposition 209
in California; prohibited affirmative action preferences in government and higher education
Haymarket Riot
in Chicago, labor protest turns into a riot when a protester throws a bomb at police, give labor union a bad rap, anarchist threw bomb
Harry Hopkins
in charge of the Federal Relief Administration, had $3 billion to give to the states, took people's money in taxes to give to another person to buy his vote
Mary McLeod Bethune
in charge of the Office of Minority Affairs, she was the highest ranking black in FDR's administration
Bernard Baruch
in charge of the war industries board
totalitarianism
individual is nothing, government is everything
Martin Luther King Jr.
influenced by Mohdas Gandhi; fought for black equality; started the SCLC
trustbuster
informal name given to T. Roosevelt and W. H. Taft for their devotion to dissolving corrupt, monopolistic trusts.
Hemingway
introduced Stein's term in his novel The Sun Also Rises
Diner's Club
introduced the first plastic credit card
War Labor Board
introduced wage-ceilings; people started rioting and striking through walk outs; government introduced the Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act
Guglielmo Marconi
invented a means of wireless communication using radio waves in 1896
Stokely Charmichael
involved in protest and actively involved in the SNCC
Burton Wheeler
isolationist senator who disliked the lend-lease act
Charles Lindbergh
isolationist speaker of the America First Committee
Food Administration
its job was to get food to America and its Allies; "wheatless wednesdays" and "meatless tuesdays"; very very effective
Jelly Role Morton
jazz pianist from NOLA, encouraged group improvisation- modern sound.
napalm
jelly like substance splattered/burned when dropped from airplanes, stuck to people's bodies & seared off their flesh
Ida Tarbell
journalist who wrote an article exposing the dark dealings of Standard Oil
Henry George
journalist-author; didn't have much formal school but had much idealism and human kindness; wrote Progress and Poverty; said that the pressure of growing population on a fixed suplly of land pushed up property values and gave unearned profits on owners of land; a one time, 100 % tax on those profits would get rid of unfair inequalities and stimulate economic growth
Jack Ruby
killed Oswald to avenge Kennedy's death
Sierra Club
kind of like Boy Scouts, goal is conservation
re-education camps
labor camps led by communist regimes
land grant
land designated by the federal government for building schools, roads, or railroads
Bonanza farms
large farms that came to dominate agricultural life in much of the West in the late 1800s; instead of plots farmed by yeoman farmers, large amounts of machinery were used, and workers were hired laborers, often performing only specific tasks(similar to work in a factory).
Hanford, Washington
largest nuclear power plant
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
lead by Yasit Arafat; formed in 1964 with the purpose of creating a homeland for Palestinians in Israel
General Douglas MacArthur
lead the "Battle of Anacosta Flats"; used military force to break up the BEF riots
Herbert Hoover
lead the food administration
Ghandhi
leader in India that peacefully lead India to be independent from the UK
Osama bin Laden
leader of Al Qaeda
Fulgencio Batista
leader of Cuba; taken out in a revolt
Anwar Sadat
leader of Egypt who met with Menachem Begin at Camp David; agreed to respect Israel's borders
Kaiser Wilhehm II
leader of Germany, military autocrat, easy for "freedom loving" Americans to dislike & want to side with the Allies
Saddam Hussein
leader of Iraq
Menachem Begin
leader of Israel who met with Anwar Sadat at Camp David; agreed to withdraw troops from the territory gained in 1967 war
Ho Chi Minh
leader of North Vietnam
Boris Yeltsin
leader of Russia; attacked Gorbachev and the USSR; became leader of Russia after USSR was disbanded
Stokely Charmichael
leader of SNCC, preached "Black Power"
Ho Chi Minh
leader of Vietnam; asked Wilson in Paris to support self-determination in southeast Asia; during the Cold War he became increasingly communist
Ngo Dinh Diem
leader of south Vietnam
A.C. McAuliffe
leader of the 101 Airborne Division; refused to surrender at battle of bulge
Dwight Eisenhower
leader of the Allied forces in Europe then was elected to be Pres. of the USA
A. Phillip Randolph
leader of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
Medgar Evers
leader of the NAACP (& recruited members and organized voter-registration drives), was shot by Byron de la Beckwith (who was set free in 1964, but later convicted) → in Birmingham
Leonid Brezhnev
leader of the Soviet Union who met with Carter to sign SALT II
Bao Dai
leader of the french republic of Vietnam
James Weldon Johnson
leading writer of the Harlem group, executive secretary for NAACP, wrote God's Trombones
Francisco Franco
led a spanish rebellion against the government with the help of Hitler and Mussolini
George Creel
led committee on public information
George S. Patton
led many highly successful lunges across France
National Women's Party
led marches and hunger strikes; did not support the war or women's participation in it
Fidel Castro
led rebellion in Cuba to overthrow Batista; started selling American property, land, and goods; U.S. boycotted their sugar; they started trading with Russia so we put an economic embargo on them
William D. Haywood (Big Bill)
led the IWW; convicted under the espionage act
Yasir Arafat
led the PLO
Cesar Chavez
led the UFWOC
Jo Ann Robinson
led the Women's Political Council; she was the one who said that they should do a bus boycott
"rule of reason"
legal doctrine used to interpret the Sherman Antitrust Act
Roe v. Wade
legalized abortion
Sixteenth Amendment
legalized income tax, Underwood Tariff Bill laid out the rules
Gulf of Tonkin resolution
let the president "take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the forces of the US and to prevent further aggression"
nonproducers
liquor dealers, professional gamblers, lawyers, bankers, and stockbrokers. viewed as by the knights of labor
"Old Right"
lived in the south or the west and were suspicious of federal power
B-52
long-range strategic bomber; came from the design of the SAC's
Horatio Seymore
lost election against Grant; didn't accept redemption of greenback money for maximum value and lost Democratic support
26th Amendment
lowered voting age to 18
China trade bill
made China a full-fledged trade partner of the U.S.
Chautauqua movement
made education available to adults
Espionage Act of 1917
made it illegal for a person to mail or print anything anti-american or promoting the enemy
Boeing Company
made the passenger jet "707"
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
made to assist the indigent aged, blind, and disabled
"Alcan" highway
made to defend Alaska against Japan in case of an attack
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
made to eliminate discrimination in job hiring
Bureau of Investigation
made to fight organized crime
Neutrality Act of 1939
made to help lift the arms embargo; it started that European democracies can buy American goods on a "cash and carry" basis
Alliance for Progress
made to help the poor in Latin American countries by helping them out economically to essentially quiet the talks of communism; considered the Marshall plan for Latin America
Civil Rights Commission
made to investigate violations of civil rights and gave authority to the federal government to protect their voting rights
Committee on Public Information
made to sell America on the war and sell the world on Wilson's war aims; led by journalist George Creel; used posters, art, leaflets, pamphlets, propaganda booklets, novels, songs, etc.
first conscription act
made to train 1.2 million troops and 800,000 reserves each year
boondoggling
made up jobs, critics saw this as leaning-on-a-shovel and collecting taxpayer money
Middle America
mainstream Americans started voting Republican during the chaos of the democrats
Family Leave Bill
mandated job protection for mothers and fathers who needed time off work for family related reasons
America fever
many immigrants came to America because it was seen as a land of opportunities - political/religious freedom, economic opportunites, abundance of industrial jobs
Generation Gap
many of the youth of this generation were not satisfied with the values of their parents
Women's Stride for Equality
march on the 50th anniversary of women's suffrage
Bataan Death March
march where surviving American troops in the Philippines were marched to a Japanese concentration camp; many died on the march
BEF riots
marched on Washington and set up a giant Hooverville, which was so unsanitary it caused health risks to the citizens; they provoked congress with force after the bill narrowly failed, Hoover gave about 6000 a return fare, the rest refused to leave, leading to the "Battle of Anacosta Flats"
Hawley-Smoot Tariff of 1930
meant to be a simple protective measure, but went through the senate, full of lobbyists, and had around 1000 amendments added; highest protect tariffs in peacetime history; raised tariffs from 38.5% to 60%; made other countries mad because they had reasonable tariffs; plunged all nations into further into depression and made America more economically isolated
League of Nations
meant to contain an assembly of seats of all nations and a council controlled by the great powers
Kyoto Treaty
meant to limit greenhouse gas emissions, advocating new oil exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and allowed the VP to make administration energy policy with representatives of several giant oil companies
Washington Conference
meeting between major world powers (not Bolshevik Russia), purpose was disarmament of the countries, kept U.S./Britain from getting far East possessions, made the Four Power Treaty
summit meetings
meetings between Reagan and Gorbachev where they discussed the Soviet's ownership of INFs
Alvin C. York
member of an antiwar religious sect; single-handedly killed 20 germans and captured 132 others
New Left
members believed that problems such as poverty & racism called for radical changes
Equal Rights Amendment
men & women should be completely equal in everything ; didn't get passed
Selective Service Act of 1951
men ages 18-26 could be drafted
"summit conference"
met in New York with the UN Assembly and called for complete disarmament
"2nd summit conference"
met in Paris and couldn't really get it together; a U.S. plane was shot down in Russia; Eisenhower took responsibility and that basically ended the meeting
chicanos
mexican-americans
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
militant organization for black rights
MIAs
missing in action
George Gershwin
mixed jazz elements into more familiar-sounding music, a mixture of jazz and symphony
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
monitored global nuclear activites
March on Washington
more than 200,000 people came from all over the country to show support for the civil rights bill that Kennedy was passing; led by Phillip A. Randolph; MLK gave his "I have a Dream" speech
National Recovery Act
most complex New Deal program, wanted to help the industry, labor, and the unemployed, set up max. hours/min. wage (fair competition), labor unions had right to organize/bargain, no child labor or yellow dog contracts
Al Capone
most famous gangster, from Chicago, was in organized crime for liquor distribution, was jailed for tax evasion in Alcatraz
land-grant colleges
most of the land given from the Morrill Act became these types of schools; usually state universities
Civilian Conservation Corps
most popular New Deal program, young men hired to work in national parks, provided experience, adventure, and money
Michael Moore
movie maker who made the documentary Bowling for Columbine
Rebel Without a Cuase
movie starring James Dean; portrayed the frustrations of young people
"fragging"
murdering someone with fragmentation grenades; American soldiers in Vietnam would kill their commanders in this way
Butternut Region
name for the area consisting of Illinois, Ohio, and Indiana; were at first skeptical of why the Civil War needed to take place, but remained in the Union by Lincoln saying that the war wasn't over slavery, but was about preserving the Union
"merchants of death"
name given to businesses that were blamed with causing the war for monetary gains; they wanted to protect their investments in Britain and France
Charles W. Eliot
named president of Harvard. Symbolically, he changed Harvard's motto from Christo et Ecclesiae (for Christ and Church) to Veritas (Truth).
Battle of Coral Sea
naval battle fought between Japan and America; U.S. won; first battle to be fought only by carrier-based aircrafts
Faith
new american, concrete ship
Henry Cabot Lodge
new chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations; Wilson did not bring him to Europe to work out the treaty, even though he probably should have gone
Agusto Pinochet
new dictator of Chile after Allende died; supported by the U.S.
"New Look"
new foreign policy that condemned mere containment of communism
Religious Right
new group of conservative evangelical Christians
Mikhail Gorbachev
new soviet leader; introduced glasnost and perestroika
Nikita Khrushchev
new soviet premier
"silent service"
nickname for American submarine and destroyed about 50% of Japan's merchant ships
Johnny Reb
nickname for Confederate soldiers
"New Frontier"
nickname for JFK's proposals to improve the economy, assist the poor, and speed up the space program
"Russia's Vietnam"
nickname for Russia's resistance in Afganistan
Billy Yank
nickname for Union soldiers
"movement conservatives"
nickname for the Moral Majority
"Southern Manifesto"
nickname for the ruling of Brown v. Board of Education; The Declaration of Constitutional Principles was a document written in February and March 1956, in the United States Congress, in opposition to racial integration of public places
Clarence Thomas
nominated African American to the Supreme Court; against affirmative action; his nomination was opposed by organized labor, NAACP, and NOW; was accused of sexual assault but still won the Supreme Court seat; second African American on the Supreme Court
Nazi-Soviet Pact
non-aggression agreement signed by the USSR and Germany; led to germany being able to wage war on Poland and other western democracies without fearing a stab in the back from Russia
Clement L Vallandigham
notorious Copperhead, was a Congressman from Ohio and would denounce the Civil War in Congress and mocked Lincoln, was sentenced for treason and thrown across the line to the Confederacy ("if you like them, join them"), where he was taken as a prisoner of war, this story inspired Edward Everett Hale to write The Man Without A Country
Ku Klux Klan
now they don't like Catholic, Jewish, pacifist, communist, internationalism, revolutionist, bootlegger, gambling, adultery, birth control; basically Pro-White Anglo-Saxon protestant
Anti-Imperialist League
objected to the annexation of the Philippines and the building of an American empire. Idealism, self-interest, racism, constitutionalism, and other reasons motivated them, but they failed to make their case; the Philippines were annexed in 1900
Roth v. U.S.
obscene materials had no redeeming social importance
Meuse-Argonne
offensive strategy used by Americans; goal was to cut German railroad lines feeding to the western front
Workingmen's Compensation Act
offered help to federal civil service employees during time of disability
Federal Farm Loan Act
offered low interest loans to farmers
Agricultural Adjustment Act
offered low interest loans to farmers, paid farmers not to farm which reduced supply (artificial scarcity), declared unconstitutional in 1936
Sooner State
oklahoma; thousands of "sooners" illegally went into oklahoma and US military evicted them; oklahoma was opened on april 22, 1889
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
once a forefront of antipoverty and antiwar; later became an underground terrorist group
"hundred-hour war"
once the UN came into Iraq, they took out all Iraq forces in four days
Department of Transportation
one of the Great Society programs
Elizabeth Eckford
one of the kids denied entry into Central High School
Claude McKay
one of the leading poets, Harlem Shadows, voice of protest against the sufferings of African Americans in white society
Al Capone
one of the most infamous, rich bootleggers
conscientious objectors
opposed fighting on moral or religious grounds
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
organization that fought for Palestinian freedom
Farmer's Alliance
organization that united farmers at the statewide and regional level; policy goals of this organization included more readily available farm credits and federal regulation of the railroads.
Norris-La Guardia Anti-Injunction Act of 1932
outlawed "yellow dog" contracts and forbade federal courts to issue warnings or orders to restrain strikes, boycotts, and peaceful picketing
24th Amendment
outlawed poll tax
"Declaration of Constitutional Principles"
over 100 southern congressional representatives signed it to say that they opposed the decision in Brown v. Board of Education and they pledged unyielding resistance to desegregation
Causes of the Great Depression
overproduction, overspeculation, people wanting more stuff, credit, labor-saving machines, depression abroad, no international trade, drought in Mississippi Valley
William R. Hearst
owned "Dailey Mirror" tabloid
Georgia O'Keeffe
painter who painted natural objects like flowers, animal bones, and landscapes
Edward Hopper & Rockwell Kent
painters who showed the nation's rougher side through paintings from cities to coal mines, from streets to the barrooms
soft/cheap money
paper money which is not connected to a treasury or gold supply, favored by debtors so their debts could be payed off for lose, when issued caused depreciation
Anne Moody
part of NAACP, sit-ins; jailed and told to never return home; determined to make South a better place for African Americans
Title IX
part of the Education amendment that prohibited sex discrimination in federally assisted educational programs or activites
Racketeering
partaking in illegal activities (i.e. drugs, gambling, prostitution, drinking, etc.)
Morrill Act
passed in 1862; gave a generous grant of public land to states for education
Hepburn Act
passed in 1906; Interstate Commerce Commission was expanded; could now nullify existing rates and stipulate maximum rates
24th Amendment
passed in 1964: eliminated the poll tax as a voting requirement
The War Powers Act
passed over Nixon's veto and required the president to tell Congress withing 48 hours after committing troops to a foreign conflict or "substantially" enlarging American forces in a foreign country
Volstead Act
passed to carry out the 18th Amendment, popular in South and West, bank savings increased and absences form work went down
Geneva accords
peace agreement that split Vietnam
Paris peace talks
peace negotiations between North Vietnam, South Vietnam, U.S., and Viet Cong
march in Birmigham, AL
peaceful marchers were protesting; they were poked with electric cattle prods, attacked by police dogs, and shot with high pressure fire hoses; JFK called this a "moral issue" and promised to fix it
"creeping socialism"
people believed that New Deal policies were becoming socialist
"Hooverblankets"
people had to use newspaper to keep warm
Freedom Riders
people who fought for desegregation
Gold Bugs
people who insisted that U.S. currency be backed only with gold; talked about during cross of gold speech
"doves"
people who opposed the war
"televangelists"
people who preached about their religions on TV: Billy Graham, Oral Roberts, Fulton Sheen
"hawks"
people who supported the war
nativism
people who were against foreigners
"white collar"
people who worked in offices and industries
"blue collar"
people who worked with their hands
"draft-dodgers"
people who would buy their way out of the draft or hire replacements; outlawed by new conscription
"meatleggers"
people who would steal and sell wartime, rationed meat, butter, or other rationed goods
Henry Ford
perfected the assembly line, mass production applied to other industries, lowering costs, and starting mass corruption
USA Patriot Act
permitted telephone and e-mail surveillance and authorized detention and deportation of suspected terrorists
Hugh Thompson
pilot of helicopter, said to fire at U.S. soldiers if they didn't stop killing people (said this to Lawrence Colburn his door gunner)
"soft underbelly"
plan in which the Allies would attack North Africa and then put pressure on Italy by conquering Sicily
Countee Cullen
poet, best known for his collection of poems called Color
Langston Hughes
poet, short story writer, journalist, and playwright - spoke about the joys/difficulties of being human, being America, and being black
Emily Dickinson
poet; poetry wasn't published when she was alive (only two were and those were without her consent); wrote over a thousand short lyrics on scarps of paper
nativist
policy of favoring native inhabitants as opposed to immigrants
"one-China"
policy where U.S. lessened its dependence on Taiwan
"Ohio Gang"
politicians/industry leaders close with Harding, appointed to high office, part of the scandals
deferment
postponed a college student's call to serve
Carrie Chapman Catt
pragmatic and businesslike reformer for women's rights; stressed that women should be allowed to vote because they were responsible for health of the family and education of the kids
"Black Power"
preached by Charmichael; some took it to mean exercising their economic and political rights and to become integrated into American life; others thought they should all get afros and change their names to more African identites
preservationism
preserving something, Roosevelt liked this
Warren G. Harding
president in 1920, not smart, gullible, doesn't have vigor of strong leader, pro-business
Charles de Gualle
president of France; vetoed British application for the Common Market membership; he thought the British joining would just allow the U.S. to get more involved in European affairs; he was the one who ordered NATO out of Vietnam in 1966
Jean-Bertrand Aristide
president of Haiti; run out of power twice
Slobodan Milosevic
president of Serbia who attacked Albania
landmine
pressure of footstep would set off explosive set in the ground
Johnson Debt Default Act
prevented debt-dodging nations from borrowing any more money from the U.S.
Lee Harvey Oswald
prime suspect for Kennedy's assassination; former marine and supporter of Fidel Castro
POWs
prisoners of war
National Rifle Association
pro-gun association that battled with Clinton over the need for tougher gun control laws
Jack Dempsey
professional boxer
Department of Energy
program created by Carter; maintained national energy policy of the U.S.
18th Amendment
prohibited all alcoholic drinks
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
prohibited discrimination against Americans with physical or mental disibilities
Eisenhower Doctrine
promised economic and military aid to the Middle East countries threatened by communism
"New Frontier"
promised to revitalize the economy and reform education, health care, and civil rights
Margaret Sanger
promoted birth control for women
Frederick W. Taylor
promoted efficiency in production, workers became more effective due to stop watch technique
Common Market
promoted free trade for European countries
World Trade Organization (WTO)
promoted international trade
"Rosie the Riveter"
propaganda that inspired women to get and hold jobs
"open skies"
proposed by Eisenhower to the Soviet Union; proposed mutual inspection program for both countries; Khrushchev rejected it
"flexible response"
proposed by McNamara; developing lots of military options that could be used based on the gravity of each situation
Seattle
protesters gathered to riot against the economic "globalization" during a WTO meeting
Homestead Act
provided a settler with 160 acres of land if he promised to live and work for it at least five years, about 500,000 families took advantage of it
Sheppard-Towner Maternity Act of 1921
provided federally financed instruction and maternal and infant health care
Medicare
provides hospital & low-cost medical insurance to most Americans age 65 and older
Medicaid
provides low-cost health insurance coverage to poor Americans of any age who cannot afford their own private health insurance
mandate
public endorsement; JFK did not have strong endorsement because it was such a close election
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
published Women and Economics, a classic of feminism. She shunned traditional femininity, said there were no real differences between men and women, and called for group nurseries and kitchens to free up women.
Betty Friedan
published the Feminine Mystique
pure and simple unionism
purposed by Samuel Gompers, president of the AFL; he proposed that argued that "the trade unions pure and simple are the natural organizations of the wage workers to secure their present and practical improvement and to achieve their final emancipation."
No Child Left Behind Act
put sanctions on schools that did not meet federal performance standards
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services
put serious restrictions on abortion
The Affluent Society
questioned the relation between the public's good and wealth; called for private spending to match social spending
John McCain
rain for the Republican nomination in 2000 and campaigned for finance reform
McKinley Tariff
raised tariffs to the highest level they had ever been. Big business favored these tariffs because they protected U.S. businesses from foreign competition.
Newt Gingrich
ran for Congress and he ran on a policy of getting rid of deficits and reductions in welfare programs
"prime rate"
rate of interest banks charge; raised to an outrageous 20% in the early 1980s
Reagan Recession
recession during Reagan's presidency; some say it was caused by Reaganomics and others say it was caused by the shift to the free market
Trade Expansion Act
reduce protectionism & encourage free trade
water projects bill
reformed the distribution of federal water in the West; put the interests of environment ahead of agriculture
Progressive Party
refused to die out in 1924 so they nominated LaFollette, endorsed by the A of L and socialists, got 5 million votes
Rosa Parks
refused to give up her seat on a white bus; prompted Montgomery Bus boycott
Orval Faubus
refused to let 9 black kids into school so Eisenhower had military escort them to school (b/c it was a direct challenge to federal authority)
Thoreau
refused to pay taxes because was against the war with Mexico in 1846
Operation Rolling Thunder
relentless bombing campaign that Johnson passed, went on for 3 years
the "three R's"
relief (for the right now: shelter/food), recovery (year or so to get out of depression), reform (ensure it wouldn't happen again)
Election of 1960
rep nom: nixon (VP Henry Cabot Lodge) dem nom: john f. kennedy he was catholic and so lots of people didn't trust him, southerners didn't like him; got support from Catholics, blacks, and workers Kennedy wins
Warren E. Burger
replaced Earl Warren as Chief Justice; Roe v. Wade happened under his court
Immigration Act of 1965
replaced previous quotas with a 20,000 immigrant limit per year from countries outside western hemisphere
Jacob Riis
reporter for the New York Sun who shocked the world with 'How the Other Half Lives', which exposed the miserable lives of the denizens of New York slums
McCarran Act
required all communist organizations to register with the government and to provide lists of members
Philadelphia Plan
required construction-trade unions to establish "goals and timetables" for hiring black apprentices; had to hire a certain quota of minorities
Welfare Reform Bill of 1996
restricted access to social services and required able-bodied welfare recipients to find jobs
Hepburn Act (1906)
restricted railroad "free passes" and expanded the Interstate Commerce Commission to include in its powers the prosecution of express companies, sleeping-car companies, and pipelines. For the first time gave the ICC that ability to nullify existing rates and set maximum rates.
transistor
revolutionized computers
the Rough Rider
roosevelt's election nickname
Sweatt v. Painter
ruled that black and white schools were not equal
Milliken v. Bradely
ruled that desegregating schools could not require students to move across school district lines
New York Times v. Sullivan
ruled that public figures could sue for libel (defaming them or their reputation) only if they did it for "malice" precedent: opened the doors for free criticism of the public actions or private lives of politicians or other officials
Brown v. Board of Education
ruled that segregation in schools was "inherently unequal" and so unconstitutional; ended "separate but equal" decided in Plessy v. Ferguson
Reynolds v. Sims
ruled that state legislators would have to be reappointed according to human population
Griggs v. Duke
ruled that you cannot use intelligence tests or other devices to prevent minorities or women from getting jobs
Hull House
run by Jane Addams; American settlement home; located in a poor area but gave help to the poor in English; child-care, adjustment to big-city life, cultural activities
Gratz v. Bollinger
said accepting a specific number of minority students was unconstitutional
Boynton v. Virginia
said bus station waiting rooms and restaurants for interstate travellers couldn't be segregated
Randolph Bourne
said ethnic groups should interact with each other to create a trans-continental america
Allan Bakke
said he was denied entry into University of California into their medical program because of an admissions program that favored minorities; decided that preferences of admissions could not be given to anyone, majority or minority, but also said racial factors could be taken into consideration when dealing with their overall admission policy
Grutter v. Bollinger
said it's okay to use a more flexible, individually based minority admissions procedure
Commonwealth v. Hunt
said labor unions were legal
Dred Scott Decision
said slaves were property, the 5th amendment said the gov could not limit where you could take your property, there was no such thing as free states anymore, Scott sued for freedom, was in a free state for many years, lost the case
Baker v. Carr
said state legislative districts had to be divided on the basis of "one man = one vote" (all votes carried the same weight) to prevent parties from drawing unfair district lines
Reynolds v. Sims
said state legislative districts not based on "one man, one vote" were in violation of equal protection clause in 14th amendment
Schenck v. United States
said that freedom of speech could be revoked when the nation is in clear and present danger
Gertrude Stein
said that he and the other writers were all a Lost Generation
The Lonely Crowd
said that post war Americans were all conformists
Stimson doctrine
said that the U.S. would not recognize territories achieved by force
Nixon Doctrine
said that we would honor out existing defense commitments, but in the future Asians would have to fight their own wars without American help
The Feminine Mystique
said that women should not be stuck to be housewives; written by Betty Friedan
"dynamic conservatism"
said to be liberal to people and conservative in government
La Follette Seamen's Act
sailors guaranteed good treatment/wages, leads to shipping rates shooting up
conservation
saving natural resources, Roosevelt was all for it
S&L
savings and loan institutions; they got damaged because of falling oil prices
Modernists
saw God as old chum, didn't believe man was born a sinner/in need of forgiveness
Judicial Review
saying the supreme court has the power to decide whether or not a law is consitutional
Donna Shalala
secretary of Health and Human Services under Clinton
John Hay
secretary of state; Created the Open Door Note
Andrew Mellon
secretary of treasury, low tax policy helped encourage economic growth
de jure segregation
segregation by law
de facto segregation
segregation by social conditions like pverty
Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA)
sent volunteers to help people in poor communities
Plessy v. Ferguson
separate but equal, discrimination is okay
Berlin Wall
separated communist and noncommunist Berlin
"tight money"
set in place during the Reagan Recession by the Federal Reserve Board on Carter's watch; instituted higher interest and restricted access to credit in an attempt to lower inflation and prevent recession
Jacob S. Coxey
set out for Washington in 1894 with a demand that the government relieve unemployment by an inflationary public works program
Glass-Steagall Act
set up Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, insured people's money in the bank up to $5,000
Chief Justice Warren
set up an investigation to find out what really happened, but they never really found out
Air Pollution Control Office
set up in Los Angeles to protect the air
Agricultural Marketing Act
set up the Federal Farm Board
Cecil B. Demille
set up the first studio in Holleywood, CA; made romantic comedies and epics
Mohammed Reza Pahlevi
shah of Iran put in place with the help of the CIA; overthrown by Muslim fundamentalists who resented his plan to westernize Iran
"Hooervilles"
shantytowns where the homeless lived
"scud"
short range ballistic missiles used by Iraq against military and civilians in Saudi Arabia and Israel
Deficit-Reduction Bill
shrank the deficit to its lowest point in over 10 years
START II accord
signed by Bush and Yeltsin; committed both sides to reducing their long-range nuclear arsenals by two thirds within 10 years
Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty
signed by U.S. and Russia where they agreed to not try nuclear explosions in the atmosphere
Charlie Chaplin
silent comedy star; portrayed "little tramp"
Great Garbo
silent film star
"southern strategy"
since Nixon was a minority president, he appointed conservative Supreme Court judges, passed civil rights legislation, and opposed school busing to get southern votes
Public Works Administration
sought to build up public works/infrastructure, started the Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River
"sunbelt"
southern states (Florida to California); many black people migrated from these states to northern states
Vostock
spacecraft that carried Yuri Gagarin
"Quarantine Speech"
speech by FDR after Japan attacked China; called for economic embargos on agressors
Interstate Highway Act of 1956
spend $27 billion to build 42,000 miles of highway; helped trucking, automobile, oil, and travel industries; hurt railroads and caused problems with air quality and energy consumption
F. Scott Fitzgerald
spokesmen for Jazz Age, described the period's glamour/senselessness in "The Great Gatsby"
Treasury Department
sponsored parades for the Liberty Loan drives and Victory Loan campaign
"New Right"
sprouted from evangelical Christian groups like the Moral Majority; they were involved in politics, denounced abortion, pornography, homosexuality, feminism, and affirmative action, and believed in prayer in schools and penalties for criminals
"victory gardens"
sprung up everywhere from backyards to vacant lots; grew vegetables to feed America during war
exchange rate
stabilizing each nation's currency so it would be able to be exchanged; key for starting up international trade again
sit-ins
started at Jack Spratt Coffee House in Chicago; lead to a lot of students spending time in jail
Freedom Riders
started by CORE in DC in 1961; designed to test whether or not southern states would obey the Supreme Court's ruling
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
started by MLK Jr. with the goal of mobilizing the power of the black chuches
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
started by MLK and other clergymen; nonviolent protest; shifted focus of civil rights movement to the South
American Legion
started by Teddy Roosevelt in Paris, veterans got together to get wages lost while at war/veteran benefits, they eventually got to Adjusted Compensation Act
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
started by civil rights activists
Jan Scruggs
started funding for a Vietnam war memorial
paperbacks
started in 1940s, sales exceeded hardbacks in 1960 and today makes up about 60% of the market
War on Poverty
started programs to help the poor
War Department
started slogan "work or fight"; threatened unemployed males of being drafted; discouraged strikes
Civil Rights Act
started the Civil Rights Commission
Alice Paul
started the national women's party
War Industries Board
started to organize the economy; disbanded within days after the armistice
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
started when 4 black students refused to move until the were served at a white restaurant; each day they came back with more and more people; they used sit-ins to force equal treatment of blacks; thought the SCLC was too stately and the NAACP was to legal about it
parity
state of being equal especially regarding status or pay, what the blacks wanted
Wabash Case
states can't regulate railroads or interstate trade
Dartmouth College Case
states have to respect the contracts of citizens
"Goddess of Democracy"
statue erected in China modeled after the Statue of Liberty to show their appreciation for democracy
Black Star Line
steamship company that Garvey hired to take followers back to Africa, but corruption and mismanagement occured
War Production Board
stopped unnecessary manufacturing and focused on raw materials and transportation
island hopping
strategy used by the U.S. in the Pacific in which the skipped past some heavily-armed islands and captured islands around it and set up airfields on them to bomb the enemy base
Elkins Act (1903)
strengthened the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 by imposing heavy fines on railroads offering rebates and on the shippers accepting them
Helms-Burton Act
strengthened the economic embargo on Cuba
Griswold v. CT
struck down CT law prohibiting use of birth control
League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
struggles to get equality for Hispanics
Kent State University
students rioted and the National Guard come in and killed 4 students and wounded many others
Kent State University
students who were against the war found out we were invading Cambodia and they protested, breaking windows and tearing down the Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) building; The national guard got called in and when students started throwing rocks at them, they started throwing tear gas at them. After a while, they retreated to a hill and started firing down on the students
Oliver Brown
sued the Topeka, Kansas Board of Education for not letting his 8 year old daughter Linda to attend a white school; Brown v. Board of Education
Gonzalo & Felicia Mendez
sued their school for discrimination → federal district court ruled this unconstitutional
Bootlegging
suppliers of alcohol
Ho Chi Minh Trail
supply route through Laos & cambodia that they passed supplies/troops through
initiative
supported by progressives; argued that voters could directly propose legislation themselves; so as to avoid the corrupt state legislatures
recall
supported by progressives; would allow the voters to remove elected officials, especially those who had been bribed by bosses or lobbyists
referendum
supported by progressives; would place laws on the ballot for final approving by the people
National American Women's Suffrage Association (NAWSA)
supported the war; supported women's suffrage
hawks
supported war
Muscle Shoals Bill
supposed to build a dam in the Tennessee River but Hoover vetoed it because he thought the government selling electricity in competition with big business was socialistic
Foch
supreme French marshal; "to make war is to attack"
Sandra Day O'Connor
supreme court judge appointed by Reagan; first woman in a high court position
Tet Offensive
surprise attacks on major cities/towns/military bases in south vietnam
Miranda v. AZ
suspect must be given rights before questioning
Gideon v. Wainwright
suspects that can't afford a lawyer have the right to free legal aid
Gertrude Ederle
swimmer; won olympics in freestyle; first woman to swim across the english channel
Dorothy West
tackled the dual themes of being black and being a woman
filibuster
tactic where the senators prevent a vote by refusing to stop talking
Proposition 13
tax revolt in California; they cut property taxes and government sevices
Hazel Wightmas
tennis player
Muckrakers
term by President Roosevelt to describe journalists whose goals were to dig up dirt on major corporations, and expose their dark dealings; spent lots of cash fact-checking articles
"McCarthyism"
term for unfair and ruthless charges against an opponent
9/11
terrorist attack on the Twin Towers of New York's World Trade Center; a third plane flew into the Pentagon, killing 198 people; a fourth plane was forced by passengers to crash into a field
Coin's Financial School
the 1894 pamphlet that used fiction and over-simplification to promote the cause for free silver
"energy crisis"
the Arab countries put an oil embargo on any countries that supported Israel
Bay of Pigs Invasion
the CIA trained anticommunist rebels to crush the Castro regime; failed miserably because U.S. refused to help besides for the training of the rebels
Chechnya incident
the Chechnyan minority in Russia revolted for their independence, Yeltsin sent in federal troops to break up the protest
Boxer Rebellion
the Chinese rose up to oust/kill foreigners who controlled their cities. 200 foreigners and thousands of Chinese Christians were killed.
"Cointelpro"
the FBI's counterintelligence program; the FBI was encouraged to fight the peace movements
Fernando Marcos
the Philippine dictator overthrown by Corazon Aquino
Reed v. Reed and Frontiero v. Richardson
the Supreme Court challenged sex discrimination in legislation and employment
United States v. Wheeler
the Supreme Court decided that Indian tribes possessed a "unique and limited" sovereignty subject to the will of Congress but not individual states
Bosnia
the U.S. committed U.S. troops to a NATO peacekeeping group; they stayed in Bosnia because they were the only ones that could keep peace and prevent new hostilites
Escobedo v. IL
the accused have to have access to an attorney during questioning
"Civil Disobedience"
the active, professed refusal to obey certain laws, demands, and commands of a government, or of an occupying international power
"We Shall Overcome"
the anthem of the civil rights movement → not only a symbol for the movement but a source of pride and determination
black nationalism
the belief in the separate identity and racial unity of the african american community
fragmentation bombs
the bombs threw pieces of their thick metal casings in all directions when they exploded
interlocking directorate
the consolidation of rival enterprises, to ensure harmony officers of a banking syndicate were placed on boards of these rivals
Tweed Ring
the corrupt part of Tammany Hall in New York City, that Samuel J. Tilden, the reform governor of New York had been instrumental in overthrowing.
"cash and carry"
the country buys it and has to come here and pick it up after paying for it in cash
Ward's Cove Packing v. Antonia and Martin v. Wilks
the court made it more difficult to prove an employer had practiced racial discrimination in hiring and made it easier for white males to argue they had been discriminated against
"rights revolution"
the massive amount of acts passed to help many differend groups of people; helped Americans but hurt the government financially
Black Panthers
the militant political party, the black panthers, were founded in 1961 by Bobby Seale and Huey Newton; goals: blacks lead their own communities and fed. gov. to rebuild nation's ghettos
Eleanor Roosevelt
the most political involved first lady up to that time
"unconditional surrender"
the nation would have to agree to everything put forth by the Allies; some people criticized it by saying that it forced the enemy to fight until their last man
populism
the political doctrine that supports the rights and powers of the common people in their struggle with the privileged elite
referendum
the proposed system of placing to-be-passed laws on ballots, allowing the people to vote on them
self-determination
the right of a people to assert its own national identity or form of government with outside influence
Square Deal
the stated policy of President Theodore Roosevelt, originally promising fairness in all dealings with labor and management and later extended to include other groups.
"Bretton Woods"
the system of currency that functioned over a quarter of a century after WWII before Nixon took the U.S. off the gold standard and devalued the money because of inflation
Weathermen
the terrorist group that came from the SDS
pragmatism
the thought that the truth of an idea should be tested by practical consequence
Benjamin Harrison
the twenty-third President of the United States, serving one term from 1889 to 1893. He had previously served as a senator from Indiana. His administration is best known for a series of legislation including the McKinley Tariff and federal spending that reached one billion dollars. Democrats attacked the "Billion Dollar Congress" and defeated the GOP in the 1890 mid-term elections, as well as defeating Harrison's bid for reelection in 1892. He is to date the only president from Indiana.
Fords Theater
theater at which Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth, while watching Our American Cousin
saturation bombing
these planes could drop thousands of tons of explosives over large areas during an air raid
Yugoslavia
they broke out in "ethnic cleansing" campaigns to get rid of minorities in the country
"massive retaliation"
threatening nuclear warfare as response to enemy aggression
"Crime of '73"
through the coinage act of 1873, the US ended the minting of silver dollars and placed the country on the gold standard. this was attacked by those who supported an inflationary monetary policy, particularly farmers and believed in the unlimited coinage of silver
Nelson Mandela
thrown into prison for trying to overthrow the government; once he was released he became president of South Africa
Lend-lease Act
to prevent another post-war depression, FDR said that the countries could just use American arms and return them when they're done; "blank check bill"
"Pentagon Papers"
top secret Pentagon study about the mistakes and deceptions made by LBJ and JFK that provoked the Gulf of Tonkin incident; published in the New York Times
Gulf of Tonkin Incident
torpedo boats attacked the us destroyers 30 miles from north vietnam
SALT II
treaty between U.S. and USSR limiting the levels of lethal strategic weapons; never passed because of the Iran conflict
Treaty of Versailles
treaty that ended WWI; aimed more at punishing Germany
Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty
treaty with USSR and U.S. that limited each nation to two clusters of defensive missiles and several arms reduction negotiations
McNary-Haugen Bill
tried to keep the price of farm goods high by the government buying surplus and selling it to other nations, Coolidge vetoed it twice
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
tried to slow illegal immigration by penalizing employers that had undocumented workers and granted amnesty to many of those already here
grenades
triggered by concealed trip wires
Lair rams
two confederate warships with iron sides and large caliber guns being built in Britain Could break though Union blockade Minister Adams warned if they were given to Confederacy that Union would go to war with Britain
Robin Moor
unarmed merchant ship that the germans sank after declaring that they would sink all ships
affirmative action
under LBJ it meant to protect individuals against discrimination under Nixon it meant to protect the privileges of certain groups
"militias"
underground societies of violent citizens who were suspicious of the government
James R. Hoffa
unioner convicted of jury tampering and sent to jail; teamster
Dwight Lyman Moody
urban revivalist; once a shoe salesman; spoke to audiences about forgiveness
guerilla warfare
used by the filipinos; killed over 4000 americans;
cloture
used to limit or end debate and call for a vote
"double mountain" of deficit
used to talk about the U.S.'s federal and international deficit
H.L. Mencken
used wit/biting criticism to jab at almost every aspect of society in his "American Monthly" (also known as "people don't want freedom, they want safety" guy)
"gunboat diplomacy"
using military tactics to get what you want
unrestricted warfare
using submarines to sink all ships in the war zone; declared by Germany in 1917
Pan-American Conference
various meetings between representatives of some or all of the independent states of the Western Hemisphere (Canada usually excluded). Between 1826 and 1889, several meetings between American states were held to discuss problems of common defense and juridical matters.
Al Jolson
vaudeville performer in The Jazz Age
School District of Abington Township v. Schempt
very similar to Engel v. Vitale; tried to make a prayer for students; said it was unconsititutional
"Bonus Expeditionary Force" (BEF)
veterans tried to get the government to give them their bonuses now that weren't due until 1945; had around 20,000 members
V-J Day
victory in Japan Day; day when Japan surrendered and the war was officially over
Malcolm X
viewed white society as oppressive and preached black separation and self help
Italy's big four leader
vittorio orlando
Ernest Hemingway
voice of the "Lost Generation", based his books on his own life, empty/hollow lives of young adults, wrote "The Sun Also Rises" and "A Farewell to Arms"
Rough Riders
volunteer soldiers led by Theodore Roosevelt during the Spanish-American War
JFK on civil rights
voted for civil rights measures; during his presidency, he moved very slowly on those rights because he didn't want to anger southern Democratic senators whose votes he needed on other issues; Civil Rights momentum picked up as violence spread
Warren Court
wanted to safeguard the rights of individuals against the gov.'s power
Clayton Act
wanted to strengthen the Sherman Antitrust Act, forbade price discrimination and interlocking directorates, said labor unions are trusts and strikes are legal
America First Committee
wanted to use our resources to defend America; most effective speaker was Charles Lindbergh
James Jeffords
was a Republican senator so upset by Bush's displays that he became a Democrat
Federal Housing Authority
was set up to offer low interest home loans. it got people in homes and put people to work building them.
Vietnamization
was to remove American troops and replace them with South Vietnamese soldiers
James Meredith
wasn't allowed to attend Ole Miss; Kennedy fixed the problem by sending in federal marshals
Destroyer Deal
we gave britain 50 destroyers from WWI and they gave us 8 defensive base sites from Newfoundland to South America
Teapot Dome
when oil was discovered in Wyoming, Fall had put the land under his power to accept bribes for oil drilling rights from Sinclair and Dohemy, Fall was in jail for a year
cultural pluralism
when smaller groups within larger society maintain their unique cultural identities
Sarajevo
where Franz Ferdinand (the Austrian heir-to-the-throne) was assassinated, had a domino effect leading Europe into war
Fort Dien Bien Phu
where Vietnam defeated the french
"reverse discrimination"
where minorities used to be discriminated against, now there is legislation in place to protect them from it
social gospel
where the church take on social issues; science of society and that socialism would be the logical outcome of Christianity
Paris Conference
where the countries involved in WWI met to talk out the treaty
silent majority
which were people who supported the war effort (usually law-abiding middle class)
"Redeemers"
white Democrats who used their political power to oppress the Black community
Monica Lewinsky
white house intern that Clinton had an affair with
Phyllis Schlafly
women who led the campaign to stop the ERA
WAAC
women's army
SPARS
women's coast guard
WAVES
women's navy
NAACP
won a victory when the Supreme court ruled that the "white primary" was unconstitutional; undermined the fact that the southern Democrats party was a white person's club
U.S.'s big four leader
woodrow wilson
William James
worked for 35 years on the Harvard faculty; used writings to influence many people; wrote Principles of Psychology -- helped establish the modern discipline of behavioral psychology; The Will to Believe & Varieties of Religious Experience - explored philosophy and psychology of religion; Pragmatism (Most famous work) - described America's greatest contribution to the history of philosophy
White Flight
working and middle-class white people move away from racial-minority suburbs or inner-city neighborhoods to white suburbs and exurbs
Rosa Parks
wouldn't give up her seat on a white bus
Eugene O'Neil
wove dark poetic strategies out of the material of everyday life, showed that American stage could be just a good as European stage
Zimmerman note
written by Arthur Zimmerman, german foreign secretary, who made a secret alliance with Mexico; promised to help them retrieve Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona if they basically distract us from joining the war
An American Dilemma
written by Gunner Myrdal; criticized how we supported "liberty, equality, and humanitarianism" even though we discriminate against blacks
Progress and Poverty
written by Henry George; undertook to solve the association of poverty with progress; came up with the idea of the graduated income tax—the more you make, the greater percent you pay in taxes.
The Other America
written by Michael Harrington; said federal gov. should have used more funds to fight poverty
The Other America
written by Michael Harrington; showed that 20% of Americans (and 40% of the black population) suffered from poverty; this book brought support for LBJ's Great Society programs
Silent Spring
written by Rachel Carson; exposed the poisonous effects of pesticides
The Stages of Economic Growth
written by Walt Whitman Rostow; showed how we got from traditional society to "the age of high mass-consumption"
Louis D. Brandeis
wrote "Other People's Money and How the Bankers Use It", made people want to reform a corrupt banking system
Upton Sinclair
wrote "The Jungle" about the meat packaging industry's horrible conditions and wanted to reveal the plight of the workers
Bruce Barton
wrote "The Man Nobody Knows", he was an ad master and said Jesus was best advertiser ever and other marketers followed his steps
Herbert Coley
wrote "The Promise of American Life", inspired TR's New Nationalism plan and agreed with TR's views
Thorstein Vebler
wrote 'The Theory of the Leisure Class', which talked about the rich as "predatory wealth", and said that the rich were more focused on making money then making useful goods
Henry Demarest Lloyd
wrote 'Wealth Against Commonwealth', a book which criticized the Standard Oil Company
Gunner Myrdal
wrote An American Dilemma
Rachel Carson
wrote Silent Spring
Henry L. Stimston
wrote Stimston doctrine
Mark Twain
wrote The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, The Innocents Abroad, and The Gilded Age; hardly had any formal schooling in Missouri; real name Samuel Langhorne Clemens; also wrote The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn; captured frontier realism and humor with American dialect
Michael Harrington
wrote The Other America
Michael Harrington
wrote The Other America about the lives of the poor & how even though there were a ton of rich people, ⅕ of the nation was below the poverty line
Walt Whitman Rostow
wrote The Stages of Economic Growth
Lincoln Steffens
wrote a series of articles titled 'The Shame of the Cities', which revealed the corrupt alliances between big business and city government
William Faulkner
wrote hauntingly about southern experience, confused readers w/ choppy stream of consciousness writing technique, wrote "The Sound and the Fury"
Sigmund Freud
wrote psychological theories about sex/violence, said sexual repression led to many ills so sexual gratification was needed
John Kenneth Galbraith
wrote the Affluent Society
Ralph Ellison
wrote the Invisible Man
David Riesman
wrote the Lonely Crowd
Sloan Wilson
wrote the Man in the Gray Flannel Suit; talked about conformity
William H. Whyte Jr.
wrote the Organization Man; talked about conformity
James Baldwin
wrote the book The Fire Next Time which talked about how generations of hate had set blacks apart but made them stronger
Montgomery Bus Boycott
year-long agreement of blacks not to use buses because of Rosa Parks
McCullough v. Maryland
you can't sue the gov. or tax the national bank
"yuppies"
young, urban professionals that came out of the recession
Peace Corps
youth volunteers who helped underdeveloped countries