APUSH AP REVIEW 2
Andrew Mellon
"Greatest Treasury Secretary since Hamilton," imposed tax reductions from 1921-1926, reduced national debt by $10 billion
Benito Mussolini
"Il Duce", fascist leader of Italy, led the Black Shirts to march on Rome where he was established as dictator
1174. Kellogg-Briand Pact, 1928
"Pact of Paris" or "Treaty for the Renunciation of War," it made war illegal as a tool of national policy, allowing only defensive war. The Treaty was generally believed to be useless.
Korean War Leaders
"Police action" 1950-53 first proxy war North Korea- Kim il-sung South Korea- syngman Rhee
"Scarface" Al Capone
"Public Enemy Number One", initiated 6 years of gang warfare, sentenced to 11 years of federal penitentiary for income-tax evasion
W. C. Handy
"St. Louis Blues", saxophone instead of trumphet
Model T
"Tin Lizzie;" cheap, rugged, and reasonably reliable; sold successfully due to Fordism
Westmoreland quote
"We are fighting a war of attrition, the only alternative would a war of annilahation"
Ho Chi Minh
"bringer of Light" leader of communism in North Vietnam
Orville and Wilbur Wright
"the miracle at Kitty Hawk" in North Carolina, engineered a plane that stayed airborne for 12 seconds and 120 feet
Khrushchev's letters
#1 if you lift blockade we'll take down nuclear sites #2 demands that Kennedy dismantles missile base in turkey *u2 spy plane shot down over Cuba
New minimum wage
$1
George McClellan
- First Major General for Union in the Civil War - overly cautious attitude cost him from capturing Richmond, because he waited for reinforcements before striking -He was fired to be replaced by General Pope before being promoted to head general again. -He was later fired for not chasing after Robert E. Lee. - He also ran for president against Lincoln in the election of 1864.
San Francisco School Board Incident
- Racist schools segregated Chinese, Korean and Japanese students because of anti-oriental sentiment in California.
Executive Order 8802
- required employers in defense industries to make jobs available without discrimination
Fort Sumter
-1861, first battle between the confederacy and the Union -Where the Civil War essentially started. When the Union tried to resupply the fort and the South fired on the fort, the war was inevitable.
United States v. Morrison
-Commerce decision which held that parts of the Violence Against Women Act of 1994 were unconstitutional because they exceeded congressional power under the Commerce Clause and under section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution.
Weaknesses South
-Confederate constitution -Lacked $ -Needed european support -Had to create government and military from scratch
Advantages South
-Defensive war -Superior military leaders
Imperialism
-Europeans for years had been building empires by extending their economic and political control over various peoples -colonies are a source of raw materials and markets
German U-Boat Response
-Germany responds to British blockade by using subs -Any ship in British waters would be sunk.
Martin v. Hunter's lessee
-Judicial Review First case to establish the supremacy of the Supreme Court over the state in civil cases over federal law
Advantages North
-More people -Manufacturing -Larger and more efficient railroad system than south -Controlled navy and merchant marine -Mechanization -More money -Already established government
Results of Vietnam War
-North Vietnam must recognize the South Vietnamese government and acknowledge South Vietnam as a country -POW must be released
Militarism
-development of armed forces and their use as a tool of diplomacy -each nation wanted stronger forces than those of their potential enemies
Engel v. Vitale
-establishment clause The 1962 Supreme Court decision holding that state officials violated the First Amendment when they wrote a prayer to be recited by New York's schoolchildren.
Nationalism
-pride and devotion to interests and culture of one's own nation -leads to competitive and antagonistic rivalries among nations
Weaknesses North
-problems finding strong military leader
Zimmerman Note
-telegram intercepted from German Foreign minister to German ambassador in mexico -telegram proposed an alliance between Mexico and Germany -Americans were furious
Failures of Reconstruction
-waste and corruption. Many African Americans suffered under the corruption.
Mikhail Gorbachev
...
NATO
..., North Atlantic Treaty Organization; an alliance made to defend one another if they were attacked by any other country; US, England, France, Canada, Western European countries
outbreak of war
...declares war... A-H on Serbia Germany on Russia Germany on France later, GB on Germany (bc Belgium is invaded)
14th amendment
1) Citizenship for African Americans, 2) Repeal of 3/5 Compromise, 3) Denial of former confederate officials from holding national or state office, 4) Repudiate (reject) confederate debts
France's "To Do List"
1) pay insane war debt (DONE) 2) save country from economic collapse (DONE) 3) regain Alsace-Lorraine from Germany (NEED TO DO) 4) REVENGE (NEED TO DO)
Greatest tension in the Cold War
1. Khrushchev- Hungary not afraid to kill 2. Peaceful coexistence more like peaceful competition 3. America retaliates with McCarthyism
Executive Order 9066
127,000 Japanese, rounded up and taken to camps, 2/3rds of them US citizens, all property and assets taken away
Baker v. Carr
14th amendment - equal protection clause 1962 case that established the principle of one man, one vote. This decision created guidelines for drawing up congressional districts and guaranteed a more equitable system of representation to the citizens of each state
Regents of University of California v. Bakke
14th amendment - equal protection clause A 1978 Supreme Court decision holding that a state university could not admit less qualified individuals solely because of their race.
Civil Rights Cases, 109 U.S. 3
14th amendment - equal protection clause the Court held that the Civil Rights Act of 1875, was unconstitutional
Reynolds v. Sims
14th amendment - equal protection clause ruled that state legislature districts had to be roughly equal in population.
Craig v. Boren
14th amendment- equal protection clause the first case in which a majority of the United States Supreme Court determined that statutory or administrative sex classifications had to be subjected to an intermediate standard of judicial review.
Accomplishments of Reconstruction
15 African Americans were elected to the House of Representatives and to the Senate. The 15th Amendment was passed. The Union League was created. Overall education of both races increased.
Guinn v. United States
15th amendment declared the grandfather clauses in the Maryland and Oklahoma constitutions to be repugnant to the Fifteenth Amendment and therefore null and void.
Smith v. Allwright
15th amendment overturned the Democratic Party's use of all-white primaries in Texas, and other states where the party used the rule.
National Voting Rights Act of 1965
15th amendment prohibits states and local governments from imposing any "voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice, or procedure ... to deny or abridge the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color
Homestead Act 1862
160 acres would be given to any settler who would farm land for 5 years. There were 80 million acres given. Free Soilers were happy; however, South did not like this.
George Washington
1789-1997 No party Washington's Farewell Address
John Adams
1797-1801 Federalist Alien and Sedition Acts
Andrew Johnson
17th President of the United States, A Southerner form Tennessee, as V.P. when Lincoln was killed, he became president. He opposed radical Republicans who passed Reconstruction Acts over his veto. The first U.S. president to be impeached, he survived the Senate removal by only one vote. He was a very weak president.
Thomas Jefferson
1801-1809 Democratic-Republican Louisiana Purchase
James Madison
1809-1817 Democratic-Republican War of 1812
James Monroe
1817-1825 Democratic-Republican Monroe Doctrine
McCulloch v. Maryland
1819, Chief justice John Marshall limits of the US Constitution and of the authority of the federal and state govts. one side was opposed to establishment of a national bank and challenged the authority of federal govt to establish one. supreme court ruled that power of federal govt was supreme that of the states and the states couldn't interfere
Monroe Doctrine
1823 - Declared that Europe should not interfere in the affairs of the Western Hemisphere and that any attempt at interference by a European power would be seen as a threat to the U.S. It also declared that a New World colony which has gained independence may not be recolonized by Europe. (It was written at a time when many South American nations were gaining independence). Only England, in particular George Canning, supported the Monroe Doctrine. Mostly just a show of nationalism, the doctrine had no major impact until later in the 1800s.
John Quincy Adams
1825-1829 Democratic-Republican Corrupt Bargain
Andrew Jackson
1829-1837 Democratic Nullification Crisis
Nat Turner's Insurrection (Slave Revolt)
1831 - Slave uprising. A group of 60 slaves led by Nat Turner, who believed he was a divine instrument sent to free his people, killed almost 60 Whites in South Hampton, Virginia. This led to a sensational manhunt in which 100 Blacks were killed. As a result, slave states strengthened measures against slaves and became more united in their support of fugitive slave laws.
Martin Van Buren
1837-1841 Democratic Panic of 1837
William Harrison
1841-1841 Whig Shortest Presidency
John Tyler
1841-1845 Whig Annexation of Texas
James K. Polk
1845-1849 Democratic Mexican-American War
Zachary Taylor
1849-1850 Whig California Gold Rush
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty
1850 - Treaty between U.S. and Great Britain agreeing that neither country would try to obtain exclusive rights to a canal across the Isthmus of Panama. Abrogated by the U.S. in 1881.
Millard Fillmore
1850-1853 Whig Compromise of 1850
Franklin Pierce
1853-1857 Democratic Kansas-Nebraska Act
Kansas-Nebraska Act
1854 - This act repealed the Missouri Compromise and established a doctrine of congressional nonintervention in the territories. Popular sovereignty (vote of the people) would determine whether Kansas and Nebraska would be slave or free states
Lawrence, Kansas
1855 - Where the pro-slavery/anti-slavery war in Kansas began in earnest. Slavery men massacred dozens and burned down an abolitionist stronghold of Lawrence (Bleeding Kansas or Kansas Border War).
Sumner-Brooks Affair
1856 - Charles Sumner gave a two day speech on the Senate floor. He denounced the South for crimes against Kansas and singled out Senator Andrew Brooks of South Carolina for extra abuse. Brooks beat Sumner over the head with his cane, severely crippling him.
Sumner-Brooks Affair
1856 - Charles Sumner gave a two day speech on the Senate floor. He denounced the South for crimes against Kansas and singled out Senator Andrew Brooks of South Carolina for extra abuse. Brooks beat Sumner over the head with his cane, severely crippling him. Sumner was the first Republican martyr.
James Buchanan
1857-1861 Democratic Dred Scott v. Sandford
Dred Scott v. Sanford
1857; Supreme Court case that decided US Congress did not have the power to prohibit slavery in federal territories and slaves, as private property, could not be taken away without due process - basically slaves would remain slaves in non-slave states and slaves could not sue because they were not citizens
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
1858 Senate Debate, Lincoln forced Douglas to debate issue of slavery, Douglas supported pop-sovereignty, Lincoln asserted that slavery should not spread to territories, Lincoln emerged as strong Republican candidate
Harpers Ferry
1859 John Brown's scheme to invade the South with armed slaves, backed by sponsoring, northern abolitionists; seized the federal arsenal; Brown and remnants were caught by Robert E. Lee and the US Marines; Brown was hanged
Crittenden Compromise
1860 - attempt to prevent Civil War by Senator Crittenden - offered a Constitutional amendment recognizing slavery in the territories south of the 36º30' line, noninterference by Congress with existing slavery, and compensation to the owners of fugitive slaves - defeated by Republicans
Republican Party: 1860 platform, supporter, leaders
1860 platform: free soil principles, a protective tariff. Supporters: anti-slavery, business, agriculture
Abraham Lincoln
1861-1865 Republican Emancipation Proclamation
Siege of Vicksburg
1863, 6 week siege; Union army's blockade of Vicksburg, Mississippi, that led the city to surrender during the Civil War on July 4th.
Battle of Gettysburg
1863-most disastrous event of civil war and perhaps U.S. history. Over 50,000 soldiers from north and south lost their lives. After 5 years of fighting and thousands of lives lost, in 1865 Confederate commander Robert E. Lee, surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant, commander of the Union forces. Turning point of the war.
Wade-Davis Bill, veto,
1864 - Bill declared that the Reconstruction of the South was a legislative, not executive, matter. It was an attempt to weaken the power of the president. Lincoln vetoed it. Wade-Davis Manifesto said Lincoln was acting like a dictator by vetoing.
Freedmen's Bureau
1865 - Agency set up to aid former slaves in adjusting themselves to freedom. It furnished food and clothing to needy blacks and helped them get jobs.
Thirteenth Amendment
1865 - Freed all slaves, abolished slavery.
Andrew Johnson
1865-1869 Democratic Reconstruction Acts
Ex Parte Milligan
1866 - Supreme Court ruled that military trials of civilians were illegal unless the civil courts are inoperative or the region is under marshall law.
Tenure of Office Act
1866 - enacted by radical congress - forbade president from removing civil officers without senatorial consent - was to prevent Johnson from removing a radical republican from his cabinet
Secretary of State William Seward
1867 - An eager expansionist, he was the energetic supporter of the Alaskan purchase and negotiator of the deal often called "Seward's Folly" because Alaska was not fit for settlement or farming.
Reconstruction Acts
1867 - Pushed through congress over Johnson's veto, it gave radical Republicans complete military control over the South and divided the South into five military zones, each headed by a general with absolute power over his district.
Radical Reconstruction
1867, removed governments in states not ratifying 14th Amendment, made 5 military districts, state must write a new constitution, ratify 14th Amendment, and allow African Americans to vote
Ulysses S. Grant
1869-1877 Republican KKK Act
Texas v. White
1869-Argued that Texas had never seceded because there is no provision in the Constitution for a state to secede, thus Texas should still be a state and not have to undergo reconstruction. 10th Amendment.
Fifteenth Amendment
1870 constitutional amendment that guaranteed voting rights regardless of race or previous condition of servitude
Franco Prussian War
1871; French lost to Germany
Rutherford B. Hayes
1877-1881 Republican End of Reconstruction
James Garfield
1881-1881 Republican Bimetallism
Chester A. Arthur
1881-1885 Republican Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act
Grover Cleveland
1885-1889 Democratic Dawes Severalty Act
Benjamin Harrison
1889-1893 Republican Sherman Anti-Trust Act
Grover Cleveland 2
1893-1897 Democratic Plessy v. Ferguson
William McKinley
1897-1901 Republican Spanish-American War
Rough Riders, San Juan Hill
1898 - Theodore Roosevelt formed the Rough Riders (volunteers) to fight in the Spanish- American War in Cuba. They charged up San Juan Hill during the battle of Santiago. It made Roosevelt popular.
Boxer Rebellion
1900 - a secret Chinese society called the Boxers because their symbol was a fist revolted against foreigners in their midst and laid siege to foreign legislations in Beijing.
Hay-Pauncefote Treaty
1901 - Great Britain recognized U.S. Sphere of Influence over the Panama canal zone provided the canal itself remained neutral. U.S. given full control over construction and management of the canal.
Theodore Roosevelt
1901-1909 Republican Progressivism
Venezuelan Crisis
1902 - England, Germany and Italy had blockaded Venezuelan ports because Latin American countries failed to make payments on debts owed to foreign banks. U.S. invoked the Monroe Doctrine and pressured the European powers to back off.
Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty
1903 - U.S. guaranteed the independence of the newly-created Republic of Panama.
Goethals and Gorgas
1906 - Army colonels who supervised the construction of the Panama Canal.
"Colossus of the North"
1906 - Relations between U.S. and Canada including a reciprocal trade agreement. Tight relations made the U.S. and Canada a "Colossus."
Great White Fleet
1907-1909 - Roosevelt sent the Navy on a world tour to show the world the U.S. naval power. Also to pressure Japan into the "Gentlemen's Agreement."
Root-Takahira Agreement
1908 - Japan / U.S. agreement in which both nations agreed to respect each other's territories in the Pacific and to uphold the Open Door policy in China.
1183. London Naval Conference
1909 - International Naval Conference held in London to adopt an international code of conduct for naval warfare.
William H. Taft
1909-1913 Republican Dollar Diplomacy
1155. Henry Ford, the Model T, Alfred P. Sloan
1913 - Ford developed the mass-produced Model-T car, which sold at an affordable price. It pioneered the use of the assembly line. Also greatly increased his workers wages and instituted many modern concepts of regular work hours and job benefits. Sloan, an American industrialist, helped found project.
Woodrow Wilson
1913-1921 Democratic 14 Points
WWI Starts in Europe
1914
Lusitania is Sunk
1915
The Birth of a Nation
1915 black-and-white film; by D. W. Griffith; glorified the KKK during Reconstruction; defamed blacks & Northern carpetbaggers; 1st movie to play in White House; admired by Woodrow Wilson
USA enters WWI
1917
14 Points
1918
18th Amendment - Prohibition
1918
19th Amendment
1919
Treaty of Versailles
1919
1159. New Woman, Flappers
1920's - Women started wearing short skirts and bobbed hair, and had more sexual freedom. They began to abandon traditional female roles and take jobs usually reserved for men.
1164. Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey
1920's sports heros, Ruth set the baseball record of 60 home runs in one season and Dempsey was the heavyweight boxing champion.
Roaring 20s
1920-1929
Warren G. Harding
1921-1923 Republican Teapot Dome Scandal
1249. Adkins v. Children's Hospital
1923 - The hospital fired employees because it didn't want to pay them what was reqired by the minimum wage law for women and children.
Calvin Coolidge
1923-1929 Republican Roaring Twenties
Scopes Trial
1925
1250. Gitlow v. New York
1925 - Benjamin Gitlow was arrested for being a member of the Communist party. The New York court upheld the conviction.
1154. Scopes trial, Clarence Darrow, William Jennings Bryan
1925 - Prosecution of Dayton, Tennessee school teacher, John Scopes, for violation of the Butler Act, a Tennessee law forbidding public schools from teaching about evolution. Former Democratic presidential candidate, William Jennings Bryan, prosecuted the case, and the famous criminal attorney, Clarence Darrow, defended Scopes. Scopes was convicted and fined $100, but the trial started a shift of public opinion away from Fundamentalism.
Sacco and Vanzetti executed
1927
1157. The Jazz Singer
1927 - The first movie with sound, this "talkie" was about the life of famous jazz singer, Al Jolson.
The Jazz Singer
1927; 1st "talkie;" stars Al Jolson in blackface
1182. Clark Memorandum
1928 - Under Secretary of State Reuben Clark, 286 pages were added to the Roosevelt Corollary of 1904.
Stock Market Crash
1929
Herbert Hoover
1929-1933 Republican Great Depression
FDR Elected
1932
1180. Bonus Army
1932 - Facing the financial crisis of the Depression, WW I veterans tried to pressure Congress to pay them their retirement bonuses early. Congress considered a bill authorizing immediate assurance of $2.4 billion, but it was not approved. Angry veterans marched on Washington, D.C., and Hoover called in the army to get the veterans out of there.
1185. Manchuria, Hoover-Stimson Doctrine
1932 - Japan's seizure of Manchuria brought this pronouncement by Hoover's Secretary of State, Henry Stimson, that the U.S. would not recognize any changes to China's territory, nor any impairment of China's sovereignty.
First New Deal
1933
1206. Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA), Second AAA
1933 - The AAA offered contracts to farmers to reduce their output of designated products. It paid farmers for processing taxes on these products, and made loans to farmers who stored crops on their farms. The Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
1933-1945 Democratic New Deal
1214. Federal Housing Authorities (FHA)
1934 - Created by Congress to insure long-term, low-interest mortgages for home construction and repair.
1215. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
1934 - Created to supervise stock exchanges and to punish fraud in sercurities trading.
1219. Indian Reorganization Act
1934 - Restored tribal ownership of lands, recognized tribal constitutions and government, and provided loans for economic development.
Dust Bowl
1935
Second New Deal
1935
Social Security Act
1935
1233. Revenue Act
1935 - Increased income taxes on higher incomes and also increased inheritance, large gft, and capital gains taxes.
Nuremberg Laws
1935 laws defining the status of Jews and withdrawing citizenship from persons of non-German blood.
Wagner Act
1935; established National Labor Relations Board; protected the rights of most workers in the private sector to organize labor unions, to engage in collective bargaining, and to take part in strikes and other forms of concerted activity in support of their demands.
1207. Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act
1936 - The second AAA appropriated funds for soil conservation paymnets to farmers who would remove land from production.
1240. Literary Digest Poll
1936- An inaccurate poll taken on upcoming the presidential election. It over-represented the wealthy and thus erroneously predicted a Republican victory.
FDR's Court Packing Plan
1937
1247. Miller-Tydings Act
1937 - Amended anti-trust laws to allow agreements to resell products at fxed retail prices in situations involving sales of trademarked good to a company's retail dealers.
1246. Robinson-Patman Act
1937 - Amended federal anti-trust laws so as to outlaw "price discrimination," whereby companies create a monopolistic network of related suppliers and vendors who give each other more favorable prices than they do others.
Hideki Tojo
1937-1945; military leader who essentially runs Japan through WWII
1245. "Conservative Coalition" in Congress
1938 - Coalition of conservative Democrats and Republicans who united to curb further New Deal legistators. Motivated by fears of excessive federal spending and the exspansion of federal power.
1186. Mexico's nationalization of oil
1938 - Mexico nationalized oil fields along the Gulf of Mexico which had been owned by investors from the U.S., Britain, and the Netherlands because the companies refused to raise the wages of their Mexican employees.
WWII In Europe
1939 - 1945
1248. Hatch Act
1939 - Prohibited federal office holders from participating actively in political campaigns or soliciting or accepting contributions.
1227. Dust Bowl, Okies, John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath
1939 - Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath was about "Okies" from Oklahoma migrating from the Dust Bowl to California in the midst of the Depression.
Lend Lease Act
1940
Pearl Harbor
1941
1438. Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
1941-42 - Interracial until 1962, when it became predominately Black, after 1964, only Blacks were allowed to join. It concentrated on organizing votes for Black candidates and political causes, successful even in states like Mississippi and Alabama.
D-Day Invasion
1942
Japanese Internment
1942
Korematsu v. United States
1944 Supreme Court case where the Supreme Court upheld the order providing for the relocation of Japanese Americans. It was not until 1988 that Congress formally apologized and agreed to pay $20,000 to each survivor.
Battle of Leyte Gulf
1944 World War II naval battle between the United States and Japan. Largest naval engagement in history. Japanese navy was defeated.
Bretton Woods Conference (1944)
1944, (FDR) , The common name for the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference held in New Hampshire, 44 nations at war with the Axis powers met to create a world bank to stabilize international currency, increase investment in under-developed areas, and speed the economic recovery of Europe.
Serviceman's Readjustment Act (GI Bill) 1944
1944, Known as the GI bill, it provides Veterans of WWII with unemployment insurance and money for housing and college (All races)
Dropping of Atomic Bomb
1945
Potsdam Conference
1945
United Nations Formed
1945
Yalta Conference
1945
Yalta Conference
1945 Meeting with US president FDR, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and and Soviet Leader Stalin during WWII to plan for post-war
Harry Truman
1945-1953 Democratic Korean War
Years of the Cold War
1945-1989
Marshall Plan
1947
Truman Doctrine
1947
Mendez v. Westminster School District
1947 law suits from Californian fathers whose children had been placed in separate "Mexican" schools. The case didn't make it to the supreme court, but laid groundwork
Truman Doctrine
1947, President Truman's policy of providing economic and military aid to any country threatened by communism or totalitarian ideology, mainly helped Greece and Turkey
Everson v. Board of Education
1947; The Court ruled that the New Jersey law (allowing the state to pay for busing students to parochial shcools) was constitutional; the law benefited students rather than aided a religion directly.
Berlin Airlift
1948
McCarthy List of Spies
1950
McCarran Internal Security Act
1950 - Required Communists to register and prohibited them from working for the government. Truman described it as a long step toward totalitarianism. Was a response to the onset of the Korean war. Passed over Trumans Veto.
Korean War
1950-1953
Senator 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
Dennis v. United States
1951, made it illegal to advocate or teach the overthrow of the government by force or belong to an organization with this objective. (upheld the Smith Act of 1940)
Dwight D. Eisenhower
1953-1961 Republican Nuclear Diplomacy
Brown v. Board of Education
1954
1418. Brown v. The Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
1954 - The Supreme Court overruled Plessy v. Ferguson, declared that racially segregated facilities are inherently unequal and ordered all public schools desegregated.
1432. Brown v. The Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
1954 - The Supreme Court overruled Plessy v. Ferguson, declared that racially segregated facilities are inherently unequal and ordered all public schools desegregated.
When was first Hydrogen bomb created
1954, US
Brown v. Board of Education I
1954. Overturned Plessey v Ferguson- separate but equal rejected. Unanimous, most famous.
Montgomery Bus Boycott
1955
Brown v. Board of Education II
1955; declared that public school officials could use "all deliberate speed" to comlpy with the court's 1954 Brown ruling.
Little Rock 9
1957
Sputnik
1957
Eisenhower Doctrine
1957 - US would interne in Middle East if any government threatened by a communist takeover asked for help
1422. Little Rock, Arkansas Crisis
1957 - Governor Faubus sent the Arkansas National Guard to prevent nine Black students from entering Little Rock Central High School. Eisenhower sent in U.S. paratroopers to ensure the students could attend class.
1470. Domino Theory
1957 - It stated that if one country fell to Communism, it would undermine another and that one would fall, producing a domino effect.
1407. National Defense Education Act (NDEA Act)
1958 - This created a multi-million dollar loan fund for college students and granted money to states for upgrading curriculum in the sciences and foreign languages.
1402. Landrum-Griffin Act
1959 - Specially tailored to make labor officials responsible for the union's financial affairs, to prevent bully-boy tactics, ensure democratic voting practices within unions, outlaw secondary boycotts, and restrict picketing.
Bay of Pigs Fiasco
1961
Freedom Rides
1961
Berlin Wall goes up
1961 What created the tension? U2 spy incident. We are financing anti-communist side in Vietnam Details... Wall goes up overnight You could not get in or out of Berlin 45-60 3 million people cross border east-west Cold War symbol until 89
1498. Alliance for Progress
1961 - Formed by Kennedy to build up third-world nations to the point where they could manage themselves.
1489. Berlin Wall
1961 - The Soviet Union, under Nikita Khrushev, erected a wall between East and West Berlin to keep people from fleeing from the East, after Kennedy asked for an increase in defense funds to counter Soviet aggression.
John F. Kennedy
1961-1963 Democratic Cuban Missile Crisis
Cuban Missile Crisis
1962
Betty Friedan, Feminine Mystique
1963
JFK Assassination
1963
MLK March on Washington
1963
Lyndon B. Johnson
1963-1969 Democratic Civil Rights Act of 1964
Civil Rights Act
1964
Freedom Summer year
1964
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
1964
1452. Twenty-Fourth Amendment
1964 - It outlawed taxing voters, i.e. poll taxes, at presidential or congressional elections, as an effort to remove barriers to Black voters.
Barron v. Baltimore
the 1833 Supreme Court decision holding that the bill of rights restrained only the national government, not the states and cities.
Gitlow v. New York
the 1925 supreme court decision holding that freedoms of press and speech are "fundamental personal rights and liberties protected by the due process clause of the 14th amendment from impairment by the states" as well as by the federal government.
American Expeditionary Force
the American troops who went to help France and Great Britain win the war against Germany
1482. Miranda Decision, Escobedo Decision
1964 - Miranda held that a person arrested for a crime must be advised of his right to remain silent and to have an attorney before being questioned by the police. Escobedo held that an accused can reassert these rights at any time, even if he had previously agreed to talk to the police.
The Great Society
1964-65
1210. Civil Works Admnistration (CWA)
Hired unemployed workers to do make-shift jobs like sweeping streets. Sent men ages 18-24 to camps to work on flood control, soil conservation, and forest projects under the War Department. A small monthly payment was made to the family of each member.
Names of the 2 cities on which the atomic bombs were dropped
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Patton
His tanks "save" the 101st Airborne
Cesar Chavez
Hispanic political activist, help organize migrant farmers
Leader of North Vietnam
Ho Chi Minh
Supply trail the NV used, 2 countries it passed
Ho Chi Minh Trail, Laos and Cambodia
Atrocities
Horrible acts against innocent people, committed by the enemy
Pentagon
Houses the Department of Defense and several other government agencies in Washington
1160. Harlem Renaissance, Langston Hughes (1902-1967)
Hughes was a gifted writer who wrote humorous poems, stories, essays and poetry. Harlem was a center for black writers, musicians, and intellectuals.
Speech became a high point in CR
I have a Dream -MLK
Double V Campaign
Idea led by James G. Thompson during WW2, that African Americans were fighting two wars, one against the axis powers, and one against racial inequality at home
Eisenhower's farewell address
Ike voiced his concerns about the dangers of the military industrial which employed millions of Americans who had a financial stake in war-making. He said these policies could become a threat to peace
John Brown's Raid (Harper's Ferry)
In 1859, the militant abolitionist John Brown seized the US arsenal at Harper's Ferry. He planned to end slavery by massacring slave owners and freeing their slaves. He was captured and executed.
John Brown, Harper's Ferry Raid
In 1859, the militant abolitionist John Brown seized the US arsenal at Harper's Ferry. He planned to end slavery by massacring slave owners and freeing their slaves. He was captured and executed.
Alaska Purchase
In 1867 Secretary of State William Seward, signed a treaty with Russia that transferred Alaska to the United States for $7.2 million. However the American people were less than thrilled as they had become anti-expansionist.
1417. "Separate but Equal"
In 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson that separate but supposedly equal facilities for Blacks and Whites were legal.
Dominican Republic
In 1905, the U.S. imposed financial restrictions upon this Caribbean nation. Part of making sure Latin America traded with the U.S. and not Europe.
Gentlemen's Agreement
In 1907 Theodore Roosevelt arranged with Japan that Japan would voluntarily restrict the emmigration of its nationals to the U.S.
Archduke of Ferdinand
In 1914, he heired to the throne of Austria-Hungary and visited Sarajevo
Central Powers
In 1914, tripple alliance became known as the ____.
Spanish Civil War
In 1936 a rebellion erupted in Spain after a coalition of Republicans, Socialists, and Communists was elected. General Francisco Franco led the rebellion. The revolt quickly became a civil war. The Soviet Union provided arms and advisers to the government forces while Germany and Italy sent tanks, airplanes, and soldiers to help Franco.
Secretary of State John Hay, Open Door notes
September, 1899 - Hay sent imperialist nations a note asking them to offer assurance that they would respect the principle of equal trade opportunities, specifically in the China market.
Black Hand
Serbian nationalist group who wanted to separate Bosnia from Austria-Hungary to join Serbia
Sherman's March to the Sea, Vicksburg, Gettysburg, Antietam, Appomattox
Major Battle sites of the Civil War. Gettysburg: 90,000 soldiers under Meade vs. 76,000 under Lee, lasted three days and the North won. Vicksberg- besieged by Grant and surrendered after six months. Antietam- bloodiest one day and a much needed victory for Lincoln. Appomattox: Lee surrendered to Grant.
Civil Rights Act
1964; banned discrimination in public accomodations, prohibited discrimination in any federally assisted program, outlawed discrimination in most employment; enlarged federal powers to protect voting rights and to speed school desegregation; this and the voting rights act helped to give African-Americans equality on paper, and more federally-protected power so that social equality was a more realistic goal
Counterculture
alternative culture helped support several ongoing causes-including the cooperative movement, environmentalism, and the fight against restriction of lifestyle choices, HIPPIES
New York Times v. Sullivan
1964; established guidelines for determining whether public officials and public figures could win damage suits for libel. To do so, individuals must prove that the defamatory statements were made w/ "actual malice" and reckless disregard for the truth
Voting Rights Act
1965
Thomas A. Edison
among others, he started motion picture in 1890s, but it became immensely popular n the early 1900s
1197. Brain trust
Many of the advisers who helped Roosevelt during his presidential candidacy continued to aid him after he entered the White House. A newspaperman once described the group as "Roosevelt's Brain Trust." They were more influential than the Cabinet.
What happened to china? When and why is it a big deal?
Maos revolution 1949 1949 2nd communist world power
1194. "Bank Holiday"
March 11, 1933 - Roosevelt closed all banks and forbade the export of gold or redemption of currency in gold.
Bloody Sunday
March 1965, 600 marchers left Selma and state troopers attacked with tear gas and clbs
Wade- Davis Bill
an 1864 plan for Reconstruction that denied the right to vote or hold office for anyone who had fought for the Confederacy...Lincoln refused to sign this bill thinking it was too harsh.
Elizabeth Blackwell
first woman to receive a medical degree in US, promoted education for women in medicine
nickelodeons
five-cent theaters; first movie- The Great Train Robbery
Charles A. Lindbergh
flew solo from New York to Paris in 1927, popularized flying and boosted aviation industry
George F. Kennan
foreign policy advisor under Truman who was an expert in Soviet affairs and who came up with concept of containment
Community Services Organization (CSO)
formed in 1948 in L.A., included Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta
Ghetto
formerly the restricted quarter of many European cities in which Jews were required to live
1431. Sweatt v. Painter, 1950
Segregated law school in Texas was held to be an illegal violation of civil rights, leading to open enrollment.
Barry Goldwater
Senator of Arizona, the hero of militant conservatives, trigger happy, crazy extremist
examples of Jim Crow
Separate drinking fountains, different waiting rooks, could not eat in restaurants patronized by whites
Bruce Barton
founded advertisement, published The Man Nobody Knows (1925) - Christ was greatest adman of all time
National Woman's party
founded by Alice Paul in 1923; campaigned for an Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution
United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA)
founded by Marcus Garvey; promote resettlement of American blacks in their own "African homeland;" sponsored black stores and businesses
National Organization for Women
founded in 1966, backed an equal rights amendment that would explicitly guarantee women in the same legal rights as men
Nixon-Kennedy TV debates
four " debates" between Nixon and Kennedy during the 1960 presidential campaign in which the two candidates were pitted against each other in front of an estimated at 60 million or more through national TV. Nobody "won" the debates, but they once again demonstrated the importance of image over substance in the television age. Many viewers found Kennedy's glamour and vitality far more appealing than Nixon's tired and pallid appearance.
Fannie Lou Hamer
from the freedom democratic party, recalled earlier suspicions about LBJ.
war on two fronts
germany fought war on two fronts with russia and france - schlieffen plan was to get rid of france quickly and then take care of russia
Bolsheviks
led by Vladimir Lenin, it was the Russian communist party that took over the Russian government during WW1
Detente
lessening tensions with USSR
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
let Russia get out of WWI and made peace agreements between it and Germany - Russia had to give Germany large amounts of land
Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)
liberal organization that influenced Pres. Truman in his support for racial equality
Caporetto
location were Italians were positioned
Frederick Douglass
(1817-1895) American abolitionist and writer, he escaped slavery and became a leading African American spokesman and writer. He published his biography, The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, and founded the abolitionist newspaper, the North Star.
Rutherford B. Hayes
(1877-1881), "His Fraudulency". President as a result of the Compromise of 1877, he resumed gold payments, refused to expand currency, and didn't overhaul civil service as promised. Complained about treatment of blacks but did nothing to prevent it. He started an era of honesty. He played down the tariff issue. He resumed assumption of hold payments and vetoed bills to expand the currency. He was involved in the Customs House Dispute, where he dismissed Chester Arthur and Alonzo Cornell from their positions as officials of the Customs House when they refused to carry out civil service reform measures. He also passed the Band Allison Act.
Jiang Jieshi
(1887-1975) Leader of the Guomindang, or Nationalist Party in China. Fought to keep China from becoming communist, and to resist the Japanese during World War II. He lost control of China in 1949, and fled to Taiwan where he setup a rival government. Also known as Chang Kai Shek.
Mao Zedong
(1893-1976) Leader of the Communist Party in China that overthrew Jiang Jieshi and the Nationalists. Established China as the People's Republic of China and ruled from 1949 until 1976.
Mao Zedong
(1893-1976) Leader of the Communist Party in China that overthrew Jiang Jieshi and the Nationalists. Established China as the People's Republic of China and ruled from 1949 until 1976. - Truman "lost China to him
Spanish Civil War
(1936-1939) Know as the "Dress Rehersal for WWII" this war was republicans vs. nationalists resulting in a victory for the nationalists.
Lend Lease Act
(1941) Ended the cash-and-carry requirement of the Neutrality Act and permitted Britain to obtain all the U.S. arms it needed on credit.
Marshall Plan
(1948) massive transfer of aid money to help rebuild postwar Western Europe; was intended to bolster capitalist and democratic governments and prevent domestic communist groups from riding poverty and misery to power; the plan was first announced by Secretary of State George Marshall at Harvard's commencement in June 1947
Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States
(1964) Places of public accomodation had no "right" to select guests as they saw fit, free from governmental regulation because of the Commerce Clause.
colonias/barrios
low income, impoverished communities of Mexican Americans
William Calley
low ranking soldier who was the only one convicted
Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin
marked the finale of the Red Scare; dropped a bombshell on the nation in February of 1950: Communist Party members were active in shaping policy in the State Department; overreached by launching an investigation into subversive activity in the U.S. ArmySenate voted 67 to 22 to censure McCarthy for unbecoming conduct
Operation RANCHHAND
scorched SV's croplands and defoliated half its forests in an effort to eliminate the natural cover for enemy troops movement
Rosa Parks
seamstress and a secretary for the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP and is known as the "mother of the civil rights movement." In December of 1955, Parks refused to give up her seat on a segregated bus to a white rider. She was jailed and fined $14 for the offense. This led to Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Montgomery bus boycott.
Clark Clifford
secretary of defense, wanted the south vietnamese troops to assume more of a military burden
Eugene McCarthy
senator of MN, lead to revolt against Johnson. began campaigning against Humphrey with a peace platform
Robert Kennedy
senator of NY, anti war. JFK's younger brother, who might embrace King's new program on confronting economic equality at home, assassinated
George McGovern
senator of SD, an outspoken opponent of the Vietnam War but a lackluster campaigner, won the democratic nomination
The Marshall Plan
sent relief to devastated European countries and helped to make them less susceptible to communism; the plan required that foreign-aid dollars be spent on U.S. goods and services
Wilderness Act of 1964
set aside new areas, protecting them from development. Lady Bird Johnson, the president's wife championed a commission on natural beauty
Scopes Monkey Trial
show trial debate over whether schools should teach evolution or not; John T. Scopes- defendant, Clarence Darrow- defense attorney, William Jennings Bryan- prosecutor; theology vs biology
The Southern Manifesto
signed document by southern whites calling the Brown decision an abuse of power
Pottawatomie Creek
site at which John Brown hacked five proslaveryites to pieces
Scapegoat
someone punished for the errors of others
socialists
someone who believes that people as a whole rather than private individuals should own all property and share profits from all businesses - they opposed war because they argued that the war benefited factory owners but not workers
pacifists
someone who refuses to fight in any war because they think war is evil
isolationist
someone who wants the US to stay out of world affairs
"Subterranean Homesick Blues"
song by Bob Dylan rock and roll sound with electric guitar and drums, beginning of "finger pointing songs"
Dixiecrats
southern Democrats who opposed Truman's position on civil rights. They caused a split in the Democratic party.
U-2 incident; Francis Gary Powers
spy plane shot down over soviet union and its pilot was captured. we denied it and said it was weather plane but soviets showed us our captain and it was akward...auto define= awkward
Berlin Blockade/ Airlift
stalin set up a blockade (to cut off west germany from east germany) so the americans sent huge planes every minute containing food clothing water and ect
bull market
stock market characterized by rising prices; occurred prior to the Stock Market Crash of 1929
island hopping
strategy used by the US in the Pacific theater, moving from island to island and eventually invading Japan
Neutrality
supporting neither side of the war
Panic of 1857
Began with the failure of the Ohio Life Insurance Company and spread to the urban east. The depression affected the industrial east and the wheat belt more than the South
Berlin blockade1948-1949
Causes: different goals with Germany Stalin doesn't like the fact that they merge Marshall aid- substantial amount of money given to west Germany Common currency
New York Times v. United States
(1971) Overturned the Justice Department's order to restrict free press in the interests of national security (the Justice Department aimed to block publication of the so-called Pentagon Papers). The ruling firmly protected freedom of the press.
1916 Republican Candidate
Charles Evan Hughes
Employment Division v. Smith
(1990) - Peyote use for religious purposes not protected if states wish to make it illegal. [Specifically, the Court ruled that Oregon could deny unemployment benefits to someone dismissed from his job for smoking peyote during a religious ceremony. Peyote smoking was illegal and the state could refuse benefits to anyone who lost their job because of illegal activity.]
Public Works Administration
(FDR) , 1935 Created for both industrial recovery and for unemployment relief. Headed by the Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes, it aimed at long-range recovery and spent $4 billion on thousands of projects that included public buildings, highways, and parkways.
Civilian Conservation Corps
(FDR) 1933, , March 31, 1933; unemployment relief act; hired young men for reforestation programs, firefighting. flood control, spawn drainage, etc;
Yalta Conference
(FDR) 1945, want quick end to war "The Big Three" 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, Stalin broke promise on free elections and representative govt.
Panay incident
(FDR) Dec. 12, 1937, The Panay incident was when Japan bombed a American gunboat that was trying to help Americans overseas. This greatly strained U.S-Japanese relations and pushed the U.S further away from isolationism even though Japan apologized.
Truman Doctrine
(HT) , 1947, President Truman's policy of providing economic and military aid to any country threatened by communism or totalitarian ideology, mainly helped Greece and Turkey
Sputnik
First artificial Earth satellite, it was launched by Moscow in 1957 and sparked U.S. fears of Soviet dominance in technology and outer space. It led to the creation of NASA and the space race.
Napalm
Highly flammable chemical (jellied gasoline) dropped from US planes in firebombing attacks during the Vietnam War.
Nuremberg Trials
Highly publicized proceedings against former Nazi leaders for war crimes and crimes against humanity as part of the Allies denazification program in postwar Germany. The trials led to several executions and long prison sentences
Hinton Helper, The Impending Crisis of the South
Hinton Helper of North Carolina spoke for poor, non-slave-owning Whites in his 1857 book, which was a violent attack on slavery. It wasn't written with sympathy for Blacks, who Helper despised, but with a belief that the economic system of the South was bringing ruin on the small white farmers.
Emancipation Proclamation
September 22, 1862- Lincoln freed all slaves in the states that had seceded, after the Northern victory at the Battle of Antietam. Lincoln had no power to enforce the law.
Cuban Missile Crisis
(JFK) , , an international crisis in October 1962, the closest approach to nuclear war at any time between the U.S. and the USSR. When the U.S. discovered Soviet nuclear missiles on Cuba, President John F. Kennedy demanded their removal and announced a naval blockade of the island; the Soviet leader Khrushchev acceded to the U.S. demands a week later, on condition that US doesn't invade Cuba
Miranda v. Arizona
*5th amendment* 1966 Supreme Court decision that sets guidelines for police questioning of accused persons to protect them against self-incrimination and to protect their right to counsel.
Election of 1864
*Abraham Lincoln - National Union George B. McClellan - Democratic
Election of 1860
*Abraham Lincoln - Republican John C. Breckinridge - Southern Democratic John Bell - Constitutional Union Stephen A. Douglas - Northern Democratic
Election of 1832
*Andrew Jackson - Democratic Henry Clay - National Republican
Election of 1828
*Andrew Jackson - Democratic John Quincy Adams - National Republican
Election of 2008
*Barack Obama - Democratic John McCain - Republican
Election of 2012
*Barack Obama - Democratic Mitt Romney - Republican
Election of 1888
*Benjamin Harrison - Republican Grover Cleveland - Democratic
Election of 1996
*Bill Clinton - Democratic Bob Dole - Republican
Election of 1992
*Bill Clinton - Democratic George H.W. Bush - Republican
Election of 1924
*Calvin Coolidge - Republican John W. Davis - Democratic
Election of 1952
*Dwight D. Eisenhower - Republican Adlai Stevenson - Democratic
Election of 1956
*Dwight D. Eisenhower - Republican Adlai Stevenson - Democratic
Election of 1936
*Franklin D. Roosevelt - Democratic Alf Landon - Republican
Election of 1932
*Franklin D. Roosevelt - Democratic Herbert Hoover - Republican
Election of 1944
*Franklin D. Roosevelt - Democratic Thomas E. Dewey - Republican
Election of 1940
*Franklin D. Roosevelt - Democratic Wendell Wilkie - Republican
Election of 1852
*Franklin Pierce - Democratic Winfield Scott - Whig
Election of 1988
*George H.W. Bush - Republican Michael Dukakis - Democratic
Election of 2000
*George W. Bush - Republican Al Gore - Democratic
Election of 2004
*George W. Bush - Republican John Kerry - Democratic
Election of 1792
*George Washington - Federalist John Adams - Federalist
Election of 1788-89
*George Washington - No Party John Adams - Federalist
Election of 1892
*Grover Cleveland - Democratic Benjamin Harrison -Republican
Election of 1884
*Grover Cleveland - Democratic James G. Blaine - Republican
Election of 1948
*Harry S. Truman - Democratic Thomas E. Dewey - Republican
Election of 1928
*Herbert Hoover - Republican Al Smith - Democratic
Election of 1856
*James Buchanan - Democratic John C. Frelmont - Republican
Election of 1880
*James Garfield - Republican Winfield Scott Hancock - Democratic
Election of 1844
*James K. Polk - Democratic Henry Clay - Whig
Election of 1808
*James Madison - Democratic Republican Charles Pinckney - Federalist
Election of 1812
*James Madison - Democratic Republican Dewitt Clinton - Federalist
Election of 1820
*James Monroe - Democratic Republican John Quincy Adams - Independent
Election of 1816
*James Monroe - Democratic Republican Rufus King - Federalist
Election of 1976
*Jimmy Carter - Democratic Gerald Ford - Republican
Election of 1796
*John Adams - Federalist Thomas Jefferson - Democratic Republican
Election of 1960
*John F. Kennedy - Democratic Richard Nixon - Republican
Election of 1824
*John Quincy Adams - Democratic Republican Andrew Jackson - Democratic Republican William H. Crawford - Democratic Republican Henry Clay - Democratic Republican
Election of 1964
*Lyndon B. Johnson - Democratic Barry Goldwater - Republican
Election of 1836
*Martin Van Buren - Democratic William Henry Harrison - Whig
Election of 1972
*Richard Nixon - Republican George McGovern - Democratic
Election of 1968
*Richard Nixon - Republican Hubert Humphrey - Democratic George Wallace - American Independent
Election of 1980
*Ronald Reagan - Republican Jimmy Carter - Democratic
Election of 1984
*Ronald Reagan - Republican Walter Mondale - Democratic
Election of 1876
*Rutherford B. Hayes - Republican Samuel J. Tilden - Democratic
Election of 1904
*Theodore Roosevelt - Republican Alton Brooks Parker - Democratic
Election of 1804
*Thomas Jefferson - Democratic Republican Charles Pinckney - Federalist
Election of 1800
*Thomas Jefferson - Democratic Republican John Adams - Federalist
Election of 1872
*Ulysses S. Grant - Republican Horace Greeley - Liberal Republican
Election of 1868
*Ulysses S. Grant - Republican Horatio Seymour - Democratic
Election of 1920
*Warren G. Harding - Republican James M. Cox - Democratic
Election of 1840
*William Henry Harrison - Whig Martin Van Buren - Democratic
Election of 1908
*William Howard Taft - Republican William Jennings Bryan - Democratic
Election of 1896
*William McKinley - Republican William Jennings Bryan - Democratic
Election of 1900
*William McKinley - Republican William Jennings Bryan - Democratic
Election of 1916
*Woodrow Wilson - Democratic Charles Evan Hughes - Republican
Election of 1912
*Woodrow Wilson - Democratic Theodore Roosevelt - Progressive William Howard Taft - Republican
Election of 1848
*Zachery Taylor - Whig Lewis Cass - Democratic
Truman executive order
- Desegregate armed forces - Desegregate employment in federal agencies
Korematsu v. US (1944)
supreme court decision that upheld as constitutional the internment of >100,000 Japanese Americans in encampments during WWII (strengthened power of government)
genocide
systematic killing of a racial or cultural group
Living Room War
television reports that citizens could watch in their own homes
Mandates
territories administered by western powers
George W. Bush
2001-2009 Republican 9/11
Margaret Sanger
feminist, led birth control movement, control population of "undersirables"
the 24th ammendment
Amendment banning poll taxes, working with the Voting Rights Act to fully allow blacks to vote for the first time since Reconstruction
Electon of 1964
Lyndon B. Johnson, Democrat Barry Goldwater, Republican
Union States
ME, VT, NH, MA, RI, CT, NJ, NY, PA, DE, OH, IN, MI, IL, WI, IA, MN, KS, OR, CA, VA, KY, MO, MD
Free states
ME, VT, NH, MA, RI, CT, NJ, NY, PA, OH, IN, MI, IL, WI, IA, MN, KS, OR, CA
Ultimatum
final set of demands
Paul Whiteman
led an all-white jazz band
Griswold v. Connecticut
1965 decision that the Constitution implicitily guarantees citizens' right to privacy. A landmark case in which the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the Constitution protected a right to privacy. The case involved a Connecticut law that prohibited the use of contraceptives. By a vote of 7-2, the Supreme Court invalidated the law on the grounds that it violated the "right to marital privacy".
Miranda v. Arizona
1966
Troops stationed by 1966, 1967, 1968
1966- 380,000 1967- 485,000 1968- 536,000
Loving v. Virginia
1967; outlawed (9-0) 17 state laws prohibiting inter-racial marriage as a violation of the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause; 30 states once had such laws; Utah repealed in 1963, Arizona repealed in in 1962, and Nevada repealed in 1959. Thurgood Marshall nominated by LBJ as the first African American justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
MLK Assassination
1968
RFK Assassination
1968
Tet Offensive
1968
Eugene McCarthy
1968 Democratic candidate for President who ran to succeed incumbent Lyndon Baines Johnson on an anti-war platform.
1471. Tet Offensive
1968, during Tet, the Vietnam lunar new year - Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army raiding forces attacked provincial capitals throughout Vietnam, even seizing the U.S. embassy for a time. U.S. opinion began turning against the war.
Richard Nixon Presidency
1968-74
My Lai Massacre
1969
When does US and a man on moon?
1969
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District
1969 - The First Amendment, as applied through the Fourteenth, did not permit a public school to punish a student for wearing a black armband as an anti-war protest, absent any evidence that the rule was necessary to avoid substantial interference with school discipline or the rights of others.
Richard Nixon
1969-1964; Republican; Ended Vietnam War; Watergate scandal; First president to visit the Soviet Union in 1972; First president to resign
Richard Nixon
1969-1974 Republican Watergate Scandal
Kent State Massacre
1970
Pentagon Papers
1971; Nixon and McNamara's secret government documents published; revealed that the govt. had misinformed Americans about Vietnam; released by Washington Post by Dan Ellsberg
Nixon Visits China
1972
SALT Treaty and Detente
1972
Watergate Break-In
1972
OPEC Oil Embargo
1973
Roe v. Wade
1973
Paris Peace Accords
1973 peace agreement between the United States, South Vietnam, North Vietnam, and the Vietcong to withdraw US troops.
Buckley v. Valeo
1974 a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States upheld federal limits on campaign contributions and ruled that spending money to influence elections is a form of constitutionally protected free speech. The court also stated candidates can give unlimited amounts of money to their own campaigns.
Gerald Ford
1974-1977 Republican End of Vietnam War
Gerald Ford
1974-1977, Republican, first non elected president and VP, he pardoned Nixon
Jimmy Carter
1977-1981 Democratic Iran Hostage Crisis
Camp David Accords
1978; an agreement that said Israel would withdraw from lands gained in the Six-Day War (1967) and Israel's borders would be respected
Iranian Hostage Crisis
1979-1981
Ronald Reagan Presidency
1980-88
Ronald Reagan
1981-1989 Republican Reaganomics
Iran-Contra Affair
1987
Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier
1988 - Under the First Amendment, school officials can censor non-forum student newspapers when they can justify their decision by stating an educational purpose. However, this decision does not allow school officials to censor articles wantonly or based on personal opinion.
Berlin Wall Torn Down
1989
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services
1989 - Laws that imposed restrictions on the use of state funds, facilities and employees in performing, assisting with, or counseling on abortions are not contradictory to Roe v. Wade. Provisions requiring testing for viability after 20 weeks of pregnancy were constitutional, but those limiting abortions in the second trimester of pregnancy were unconstitutional.
George H.W. Bush
1989-1993 Republican Persian Gulf War
Persian Gulf War
1991
Bill Clinton
1993-2001 Democratic Don't Ask, Don't Tell
United States v. Lopez
1995 - The Commerce Clause of the Constitution does not give Congress the power to prohibit mere possession of a gun near a school, because gun possession by itself is not an economic activity that affects interstate commerce even indirectly.
Monitor & Marrimack
1st battle between two ironclads. Ended in a stalemate.
1st Battle Bull Run
1st major battle of the civil war also known as 1st mansassas by the south
District of Columbia v. Heller
2008 Court held that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with service in a militia, and to use that firearm for traditionally lawful purposes, such as self- defense within the home.
Barack Obama
2009-present(2017) Democratic Affordable Care Act
Woodrow Wilson
28th president of the United States
JFK
35th president (Democrat, 1961-63). Sent the Green Berets to South Vietnam
Montgomery Bus boycott how long? outcome?
381 days, Supreme court ruled bus desegregation unconstitutional
Watergate Burglary
5 men broke into campaign headquarters of DNC, wanted pics docs, demotocratic party strategy, bugged office phones, wanted to reelect Nixon
Sherman's march to Sea
60 mile swap in Georgia; Caused economic damage and psychological damage.
Somme River
60,000 British soldiers were killed/wounded in one day here
1971 % of blacks registered to vote
62%
Powell v. Alabama
6th amendment Powell was the first time the Court had reversed a state criminal conviction for a violation of a criminal procedural provision of the United States Bill of Rights.
Furman v. Georgia
8th Amendment Suspended the death penalty temporarily -needed a consistency in death penalty rulings
Henry J. Kaiser
A "miracle-man" shipbuilder, known for particularly fast construction of vessels
Gavril Princeps
A 19 year old serb that joined Unity of Death. He was determined to free Bosnia from Austria-Hungary rule.
Schenck v. United States
A 1919 decision upholding the conviction of a socialist who had urged young men to resist the draft during World War I. Justice Holmes declared that government can limit speech if the speech provokes a "clear and present danger" of substantive evils.
Battle of the Bulge
A 1944-1945 battle in which Allied forces turned back the last major German offensive of World War II.
Brinkmanship
A 1956 term used by Secretary of State John Dulles to describe a policy of risking war in order to protect national interests
Brinksmanship
A 1956 term used by Secretary of State John Dulles to describe a policy of risking war in order to protect national interests
School District of Abington Township, Pennsylvania v. Schempp
A 1963 Supreme Court decision holding that a Pennsylvania law requiring Bible reading in schools violated the establishment clause of the First Amendment.
Miller v. California
A 1973 Supreme Court decision that avoided defining obscenity by holding that community standards be used to determine whether material is obscene in terms of appealing to a "prurient interest" and being "patently offensive" and lacking in value.
Texas v. Johnson
A 1989 case in which the Supreme Court struck down a law banning the burning of the American flag on the grounds that such action was symbolic speech protected by the First Amendment.
Planned Parenthood v. Casey
A 1992 case in which the Supreme Court loosened its standard for evaluating restrictions on abortion from one of "strict scrutiny" of any restraints on a "fundamental right" to one of "undue burden" that permits considerably more regulation.
Adarand Constructors v. Pena
A 1995 Supreme Court decision holding that federal programs that classify people by race, even for an ostensibly benign purpose such as expanding opportunities for minorities, should be presumed to be unconstitutional., A Supreme Court ruling that states that federal programs that classify people based on race, even to help minorities, are unconstitutional.
1495. United Nations in the Congo, 1960
A Black uprising against the Belgian colonial government in the Congo became increasingly violent with White settlers being raped and butchered. The U.N. sent in troops to try to prevent civil war.
Dred Scott Decision
A Missouri slave sued for his freedom, claiming that his 4 year stay in the northern portion of the Louisiana Territory made free land by the Missouri Compromise had made him a free man. The U.S. Supreme Court decided he couldn't sue in a federal court because he was property, not a citizen.
Tennessee Valley Authority
A New Deal agency created to generate electric power and control floods in a seven-U.S.-state region around the Tennessee River Valley . It created many dams that provided electricity as well as jobs.
1442. March on Washington, 1963
August - 200,000 demonstrators converged on the Lincoln Memorial to hear Dr. King's speech and to celebrate Kennedy's support for the civil rights movement.
National Recovery Act
A New Deal legislation that focused on the employment of the unemployed and the regulation of unfair business ethics. The NIRA pumped cash into the economy to stimulate the job market and created codes that businesses were to follow to maintain the ideal of fair competition and created the NRA.
Harry Hopkins
A New York social worker who headed the Federal Emergency Relief Administration and Civil Works Administration. He helped grant over 3 billion dollars to the states wages for work projects, and granted thousands of jobs for jobless Americans.
Thaddeus Stevens
A Radical Republican who believed in harsh punishments for the South. Leader of the Radical Republicans in Congress.
Trent
A Union frigate stopped the Trent, a British steamer and abducted two Confederate ambassadors aboard it. It led to the Trent affair which almost brought the Union and UK to war before the North relented and returned the two Confederate diplomats
Battle of the Coral Sea
A battle between Japanese and American naval forces that stopped the Japanese advance on Australia.
Civil Rights Bill
A bill passed by Congress in March 1866 as a measure against the Black Codes to reinforce black rights to citizenship. It was vetoed by Johnson and was later passed as the 14th Amendment.
The Impending Crisis of the South
A book written by Hinton Helper. Helper hated both slavery and blacks and used this book to try to prove that non-slave owning whites were the ones who suffered the most from slavery. The non-aristocrat from N.C. had to go to the North to find a publisher that would publish his book.
Vietminh
A broad based Vietnamese nationalist coalition led by the communist Ho Chi Minh. Fought and defeated the French.
Total War
A channeling of a nation's entire resources into a war effort
Agent Orange
A chemical herbicide that U.S. forces sprayed extensively in order to kill vegetation in the Vietnamese jungle and expose Viet Cong hideouts. Agent Orange inflicted immense damage on Vietnam's natural environment and led to decades of unforeseen health problems among Vietnamese civilians and U.S. military forces.
Birth of the Republican Party
A coalition of the Free Soil Party, the Know-Nothing Party and renegade Whigs merged in 1854 to form the Republican Party, a liberal, anti-slavery party. The party's Presidential candidate, John C. Fremont, captured one-third of the popular vote in the 1856 election.
America First Committee
A committee organized by isolationists before WWII, who wished to spare American lives. They wanted to protect America before we went to war in another country. Charles A. Lindbergh (the aviator) was its most effective speaker.
Fourteenth Amendment
A constitutional amendment giving full rights of citizenship to all people born or naturalized in the United States, except for American Indians.
Laos
A country bordering Vietnam; part of the Ho Chi Minh trail ran through this country
Eisenhower Doctrine
A country could seek economic assistance from U.S.
Stalemate
A deadlock in which neither side is able to defeat the other
Scalawags
A derogatory term for Southerners who were working with the North to buy up land from desperate Southerners
scalawags
A derogatory term for Southerners who were working with the North to buy up land from desperate Southerners
Crittenden Compromise proposal
A desperate, last minute measure to prevent the Civil War, introduced by John Crittenden, Senator from Kentucky, in December 1860. The bill offered a Constitutional amendment recognizing slavery in the territories south of the 36.30' line, noninterference by Congress with existing slavery, and compensation to the owners of fugitive slaves. Republicans defeated it
Oliver Wendel Holmes, Jr.
A famous justice of the Supreme Court during the early 1900s. Called the "Great Dissenter" because he spoke out against the inposition of national regulations and standards, and supported the states' rights to experiment with social legislation.
Peace Corps
A federal agency created by President Kennedy in 1961 to promote voluntary service by Americans in foreign countries. This agency provides labor power to help developing countries improve their infrastructure, health care, educational systems, and other aspects of their societies. Part of Kennedy's New Frontier vision, the organization represented an effort by postwar liberals to promote American values and influence through productive exchanges across the world.
1201. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
A federal agency which insures bank deposits, created by the Glass-Strengall Banking Reform Act of 1933.
Totalitarianism
A form of government in which the ruler is an absolute dictator (not restricted by a constitution or laws or opposition etc.)
Impeachment
A formal document charging a public official with misconduct in office
Alger Hiss
A former State Department official who was accused of being a Communist spy and was convicted of perjury. The case was prosecuted by Richard Nixon.
Harriet Tubman (1821-1913)
A former escaped slave, she was one of the shrewdest conductors of the underground railroad, leading 300 slaves to freedom
"Copperheads"
A group of northern Democrats who opposed abolition and sympathized with the South during the Civil War. Also known as Peace Democrats.
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
A joint resolution of the U.S. Congress passed on August 7, 1964 which gave U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson the power to send troops to Vietnam WITHOUT a formal declaration of war by Congress.
the draft
A law requiring all people of certain ages to serve in the military.
Charles Sumner
A leader of the Radical republicans along with Thaddeus Stevens. He was from Massachusetts and was in the senate. His two main goals were breaking the power of wealthy planters and ensuring that freedmen could vote
Frank Norris (1870-1902), The Octopus
A leader of the naturalism movement in literature, he believed that a novel should serve a moral purpose. Wrote The Octopus in 1901 about how railroads controlled the lives of a group of California farmers. A muckraker novel.
American Anti-Imperialist League
A league containing anti-imperialist groups; it was never strong due to differences on domestic issues. Isolationists.
14 Points
A list of terms for resolving this war and future wars
De Bow's Review
A magazine that strongly advocated the southern commercial and agricultural expansion. However, shows dependency of the South on the North: had to be printed in the North because the South had no adequate facilities, always ran ads for Northern companies, and never achieved the circulation of Northern magazines
Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
A member of the Grant administration, he was an able diplomat who peacefully settled conflicts with Great Britain through the Treaty of Washington.
Vietcong
A member of the communist guerrilla movement in Vietnam that fought the South Vietnamese government forces 1954-75 with the support of the North Vietnamese army and opposed the South Vietnamese and US forces in the Vietnam War
William Lloyd Garrison
A militant abolitionist, he became editor of the Boston publication, The Liberator, in 1831. Under his leadership, The Liberator gained national fame and notoriety due to his quotable and inflammatory language, attacking everything from slave holders to moderate abolitionists, and advocating northern secession.
The Liberator
A militantly abolitionist weekly, edited by William Lloyd Garrison from 1831 to 1865. Despite having a relatively small circulation, it achieved national notoriety due to Garrison's strong arguments.
Senator Stephen A. Douglas
A moderate, who introduced the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 and popularized the idea of popular sovereignty.
Lincoln Steffens (1866-1936), The Shame of the Cities
A muckraker novel concerning the poor living conditions in the cities.
David Graham Phillips, The Treason of the Senate
A muckraker novel, it publicized corruption in the Senate after doing research on government leaders.
Denmark Vesey
A mulatto who inspired a group of slaves to seize Charleston, South Carolina in 1822, but one of them betrayed him and he and his thirty-seven followers were hanged before the revolt started.
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNNC)
A nonviolent protest group founded by Ella Baker, mostly made up of college students who participated in sit-in demonstrations all over the country.
Manchuria
A northern industrial province in China, invaded by the Japanese in 1931. From here the Japanese would launch an invasion of mainland China beginning in 1937.
Carpetbaggers
A northerner who went to the South immediately after the Civil War; especially one who tried to gain political advantage or other advantages from the disorganized situation in southern states
Carpetbaggers
A northerner who went to the South immediately after the Civil War; especially one who tried to gain political advantage or other advantages from the disorganized situation in southern states;
Winston Churchill
A noted British statesman who led Britain throughout most of World War II and along with Roosevelt planned many allied campaigns. He predicted an iron curtain that would separate Communist Europe from the rest of the West.
Republican Party
A party formed that was against slavery and the Kansas-Nebraska Act. It was formed in 1854. Abe Lincoln was a republican president. They wanted Kansas to be admitted as a free state, and they were against popular sovereignty to decide on the issue of slavery.
10% plan
A plan by Abraham Lincoln that would help restore the South by allowing a southern state to rejoin the union if at least 10% of it's voters swore loyalty to the union and if slavery were abolished. The plan also gave amnesty to some southerners.
appeasement
A policy of making concessions to an aggressor in the hopes of avoiding war. Associated with Neville Chamberlain's policy of making concessions to Adolf Hitler.
detente
A policy of reducing Cold War tensions that was adopted by the United States during the presidency of Richard Nixon.
Neutrality
A policy of supporting neither side in a war
fascism
A political system headed by a dictator that calls for extreme nationalism and racism and no tolerance of opposition (Germany, Spain, Italy)
tenant farmers
A poor farmer who did not own land and had to live on and work the land of others, either for wages or a share of the crop they produced
lend-lease
A program under which the United States supplied U.K, USSR, China, France, and other allied nations with vast amounts of war meterial between 1941 and 1945 in return for, in the case of Britain, Military bases in New Foundland, Bermuda, and the British West Indies. It began in March 1941, nine months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. It was abruptly stopped by the Americans immediately after V-J day.
"Rosie the Riveter"
A propaganda character designed to increase production of female workers in the factories. It became a rallying symbol for women to do their part.
1445. H. Rap Brown
A proponent of Black Power, he succeeded Stokely Carmichael as head of SNCC. He was indicted by inciting riot and for arson.
1216. Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), Senator Norris
A public corporation headed by a 3-member board. The TVA built 20 dams, conducted demonstration projects for farmers, and engaged in reforestation to rehabilitate the area.
Black Panther Party
A radical organization founded by college students that modeled itself after Malcolm X. The group opposed the Vietnam War and focused on protecting blacks from police violence; they also ran free breakfast programs and sickle-cell anemia testing programs.
1414. To Secure these Rights
A report by the President's Committee on Civil Rights, it was given a year after the Committee was formed, and helped pave the way for the civil rights era. It recommended that the government start an anti-lynching campaign and ensure that Blacks got to vote.
Platt Amendment
A rider to the Army Appropriations Bill of 1901, it specified the conditions under which the U.S. could intervene in Cuba's internal affairs, and provided that Cuba could not make a treaty with another nation that might impair its independence. Its provisions where later incorporated into the Cuban Constitution.
Underground Railroad
A secret, shifting network which aided slaves escaping to the North and Canada, mainly after 1840
Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)
A self-educated slave who escaped in 1838, Douglas became the best-known abolitionist speaker. He edited an anti-slavery weekly, the North Star.
Nuremberg Trials
A series of court proceedings held in Nuremberg, Germany, after World War II, in which Nazi leaders were tried for aggression, violations of the rules of war, and crimes against humanity.
The Great Society
A series of programs created by President Johnson to make America a better place at home
Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858 during Illinois Senatorial campaign
A series of seven debates. The two argued the important issues of the day like popular sovereignty, the Lecompton Constitution and the Dred Scott decision. Douglas won the contested 1858 Illinois Senate seat but Lincoln's position in these debates helped him beat Douglas 2 years later in the 1860 presidential election
Gabriel Prosser (1775-1800)
A slave, he planned to revolt to make Virginia a state for Blacks. He organized about 1,000 slaves who met outside Richmond the night of August 30, 1800. They had planned to attack the city, but the roads leading to it were flooded. The attack was delayed and a slave owner found out about it. Twenty-five men were hanged, including Gabriel.
1451. Black Power
A slogan used to reflect solidarity and racial consciousness, used by Malcolm X. It meant that equality could not be given, but had to be seized by a powerful, organized Black community.
1494. Bay of Pigs, 1961
A small army of ant-Castro Cuban exiles were trained and financed by the U.S. in the hope their invasion would lead to a popular uprising to overthrow the Communist government. The invasion force landed at the Bay of Pigs in Southern Cuba, but received no popular support and were quickly wiped out by Castro's forces.
Tunnel rat
A soldier who is selected to go down a very narrow tunnel which leads to the underground tunnel system of the Viet Cong; No soldier wanted this job
Andrew Johnson (1808-1875)
A southerner from Tennessee, as VP when Lincoln was killed, he became president. He opposed radical republicans who passed Reconstruction Acts over his veto. The first US president to be impeached, but survived the removal by only a single vote. He was a very weak president.
1229. Elanor Roosevelt
A strong first lady who supported civil rights.
Thomas Dewey
A successful governor of New York, was the Republican candidate for president in 1944, when he lost to Roosevelt
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.
Unity or Death
A terrorist group
Dien Bien Phu
A town of northwest Vietnam near the Laos border. The French military base here fell to Vietminh troops on May 7, 1954, after a 56-day siege, leading to the end of France's involvement in Indochina.
Korea/38th parallel
A war fought to avoid communism that divided the country into the north (communist) and the south (democratic), split by a line of division
Vietnamization`
A war policy in Vietnam initiated by Nixon in June of 1969. This strategy called for dramatic reduction of U.S. troops followed by an increased injection of S. Vietnamese troops in their place. A considerable success, this plan allowed for a drop in troops to 24,000 by 1972. . This policy became the cornerstone of the so-called "Nixon Doctrine". As applied to Vietnam, it was labeled "Vietnamization".
Protectorate
A weak country under the control and protection of a stronger country. Puerto Rico, Cuba, etc. were protectorates of the U.S.
13th amendment
Abolished Slavery
Thirty-six, thirty line
According to the Missouri Compromise of 1820, slavery was forbidden in the Louisiana territory north of the 36.30'N latitude. This was nullified by the Kansas-Nebraska Act
Voting Rights Act of 1965
Act banning literacy tests and other devices that kept blacks from voting
Neutrality Act of 1935
Act that allowed nations at war to buy goods and arms in the United States if they paid cash and carried the merchandise on their own ships
Reciprocal Trade Agreement
Activated the low tariff policies of New Dealers, aimed at both relief, recover, reversed the traditional high protective tariff
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.
1238. Dr. Francis Townsend
Advanced the Old Age Revolving Pension Plan, which proposed that every retired person over 60 receive a pension of $200 a month (about twice the average week's salary). It required that the money be spent within the month.
Louis Armstrong and Eubie Blake
African American jazz artists in Harlem
Black muslims
African Americans who followed an "apocalyptic brand" of Islam, popular in northern cities
Buchanan and the Secession Crisis
After Lincoln was elected, but before he was inaugurated, seven Southern states seceded. Buchanan, the lame duck president, decided to leave the problem for Lincoln to take care of
Radical Republicans
After the Civil War, a group that believed the South should be harshly punished and thought that Lincoln was sometimes too compassionate towards the South.
Compromise of 1877
After the disputed Presidential Election of 1876, Congress declared Republican Rutherford B. Hayes the winner, but Republicans promised to withdraw remaining troops from Southern states & no longer attempt to reshape Southern states; marked the end of Reconstruction as Democrats regained control of the South
Pearl Harbor
After the surprise attack on this military base, the United States joined World War 2.
Armistice
Agreement to end fighting
Dogfights
Air battles between the pilots
"Buffer" zone countries
Albania Bulgaria Poland Hungary Romania Czechoslovakia East germany
15th amendment
All US male citizens have the right to vote.
Name for alliance of England, France, and later United States and Russia
Allied Powers
Potsdam Conference (1945)
Allied leaders Truman, Stalin and Churchill met in Germany to set up zones of control and to inform the Japanese that if they refused to surrender at once, they would face total destruction.
Operation Market Day
Allied offensive to liberate Holland and gain access to Germany. Not successful.
El Alamein
Allied victory in October 1942. Montgomery supported by U.S. tanks repelled Germans back into Tunisia. They halted German advance in North Africa.
Taft-Hartley Act (1947) "right to work laws"
Also called the Labor Management Relations Act. This act was Congress' response to the abuse of power. Outlawed closed shops; prohibited unions' unfair labor practices, and forced unions to bargain in good faith.
GI Bill of Rights
Also known as Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944 gave money to veterans to study in colleges, universities, gave medical treatment, loans to buy a house or farm or start a new business
Bleeding Kansas
Also known as the Kansas Border War. Following the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Ac, pro-slavery forces from Missouri, known as the Border Ruffians, crossed the border into Kansas and terrorized and murdered antislavery settlers. Antislavery sympathizers from Kansas carried out reprisal attacks, the most notorious of which was John Brown's 1856 attack on the settlement at Pottawatomie Creek. The war continued for four years before the antislavery forces won. The violence it generated helped precipitate the Civil War.
Containment
America's strategy against the Soviet Union based on ideas of George Kennan. The doctrine declared that the Soviet Union and communism were inherently expansionist and had to be stopped from spreading through both military and political pressure. It guided American foreign policy throughout most of the Cold War
William Westmoreland
American General who commanded American military operations in the Vietnam War at its peak "I see the light at the end of the tunnel"
Ngo Dinh Diem
American ally in South Vietnam from 1954 to 1963; his repressive regime caused the Communist Viet Cong to thrive in the South and required increasing American military aid to stop a Communist takeover. he was killed in a coup in 1963.
Tet Offensive
American efforts to suppress Vietcong, turning point of war
John Dewey (1859-1952): the school and society, "progressive education", "learning by doing"
American philosopher and educator, he led the philosophical movement called Pragmatism. Influenced by evolution, he believed that only reason and knowledge could be used to solve problems. Wanted educational reform
1161. James Weldon Johnson (1871-1938)
American poet and part of the Harlem Renaissance, he was influenced by jazz music.
Containment
American policy of resisting further expansion of communism around the world (Harry Truman- Truman Doctrine)
Woodrow Wilson
American president during World War 1
Henry Demarest Lloyd (1847-1903), Wealth Against Commonwealth
American writer, he won fame for revealing illegal business practices in the U.S. in the late 1800's. Said many corporations put their interest above the good of the workers. Muckraker novel.
Khrushchev succeeded Stalin
Americans thought it would thaw the Cold War He advocated a peaceful coexistence
Revenue Act of 1942
An Act created to cover the war's huge cost, this provided for only about $7 billion in increased revenue, and greatly broadened the tax structure by making everyone a taxpayer.
1485. Rachel Carson, Silent Spring
An American marine biologist wrote in 1962 about her suspicion that the pesticide DDT, by entering the food chain and eventually concentrating in higher animals, caused reproductive dysfunctions. In 1973, DDT was banned in the U.S. except for use in extreme health emergencies.
Jefferson Davis
An American statesman and politician who served as President of the Confederate States of America for its entire history from 1861 to 1865
1421. Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968)
An Atlanta-born Baptist minister, he earned a Ph.D. at Boston University. The leader of the Civil Rights Movement and President of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, he was assassinated outside his hotel room.
1434. Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968)
An Atlanta-born Baptist minister, he earned a Ph.D. at Boston University. The leader of the Civil Rights Movement and President of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, he was assassinated outside his hotel room.
Elijah Lovejoy (1802-1837)
An abolitionist and editor. The press he used was attacked four times and Lovejoy was killed defending it. His death was an example of violence against abolitionists.
John Wilkes Booth
An actor, planned with others for six months to abduct Lincoln at the start of the war, but they were foiled when Lincoln didn't arrive at the scheduled place. April 14, 1865, he shot Lincoln at Ford's Theatre and cried, "Sic Semper Tyrannis!" ("Thus always to tyrants!") When he jumped down onto the stage his spur caught in the American flag draped over the balcony and he fell and broke his leg. He escaped on a waiting horse and fled town. He was found several days later in a barn. He refused to come out; the barn was set on fire. Booth was shot, either by himself or a soldier.
Central Intelligence Agency; KGB
An agency created after World War II to coordinate American intelligence activities abroad. It became involved in intrigue, conspiracy, and meddling as well.
Warsaw Pact
An alliance between the Soviet Union and other Eastern European nations. This was in response to the NATO
Warsaw Pact
An alliance between the Soviet Union and other Eastern European nations. This was in response to the NATO. Them Communist Muh****ers
Commission
An amount paid to an employee based on a percentage of the employee's sales, OR an official document issued by a government and conferring on the recipient the rank of an officer in the armed forces
Congressman Clement L. Vallandigham
An anti-war Ohio Democrat who criticized Lincoln as a dictator, called him "King Abraham". He was arrested and exiled to the South. Went to Canada and would later become Gov. of Ohio.
1469. Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
An area that both militaries are required to stay out of in order to create a buffer between nations. In Vietnam, a five mile wide DMZ was established between the North and South along the 17th parallel.
Great Society
An array of federal programs designed to enrich and elevate our national life, building a country that was wealthy in mind and spirit.
"Fair Deal"
An economic extension of the New Deal proposed by Harry Truman that called for higher minimum wage, housing and full employment. It led only to the Housing Act of 1949 and the Social Security Act of 1950 due to opposition in congress.
Thorstien Velben, The Theory of the Leisure Class
An economist, he believed that society was always evolving, but not that the wealthiest members of society were the "fittest." Attacked the behavior of the wealthy. Muckraker novel.
United Nations
An international organization formed after WWII to promote international peace, security, and cooperation.
Tredegar Iron Works, Richmond, Virginia
An iron mill in Richmond. It was run by skilled slave labor and was among the best iron foundry in the nation. It kept the Confederacy alive until 1863 as its only supplier of cannons. It was also the major munitions supplier of the South and was directly responsible for the capitol of the Confederacy being moved to Richmond.
National Security Council - 68
An office created in 1947 to coordinate the president's foreign and military policy advisers. Its formal members are the president, vice president, secretary of state, and secretary of defense, and it is managed by the president's national security assistant.
Wendell Phillips
An orator and associate of Garrison, Phillips was an influential abolitionist lecturer.
The Grimke sisters
Angelina and Sarah Grimke wrote and lectured vigorously on reform causes such as prison reform, the temperance movement, and the abolitionist movement.
1487. Kennedy and the Steel Price Rollback
Angry at steel companies for cutting wages and increasing prices in the face of his low-inflation plan, Kennedy activated the federal government's anti-trust laws and the FBI. Awed, steel companies cut their prices back for a few days, then raised them again slowly and quietly. Kennedy "jawboned" the steel industry into overturning a price increase after having encouraged labor to lower its wage demands.
Oct. 22
Announce naval blockade
Temperance Movement
Anti-Saloon League, Women's Christian Temperance Union, motivation came from domestic violence and misuse of family income for alcohol, "Lips that touch alcohol shall not touch ours"
1476. Senator Fullbright
Anti-Vietnam War Senator from Arkansas, he was head of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. In 1966 and 1967, he held a series of hearings to air anti-war sentiments.
Jim Crow Laws
Any of the laws legalizing racial segregation of blacks and whites that were enacted in Southern states beginning in the 1880's and enforced through the 1950's.
1209. Federal emergency Relief Administation (FERA)
Appropriated $500 million for aid to the poor to be distributed by state and local government. Harry Hopkins was the leader of FERA.
Treaty of Paris
Approved by the Senate on February 6, 1898, it ended the Spanish-American War. The U.S. gained Guam, Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines.
Teller Amendment
April 1896 - U.S. declared Cuba free from Spain, but the Teller Amendment disclaimed any American intention to annex Cuba
Francis Ferdinand
Archduke of Austria-Hungary - heir to throne
French Indochina
Area of southeast Asia controlled by France during Imperialism. Includes Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam.
Drago Doctrine
Argentine jurist, Luis Drago, proposed that European countries could not use force to collect debts owed by countries in the Americas. They could not blockade South American ports. Adopted as part of the Hague Convention in 1907.
Julius & Ethel Rosenberg
Arrested in the Summer of 1950 and executed in 1953, they were convicted of conspiring to commit espionage by passing plans for the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union.
John Foster Dulles
As Secretary of State. he viewed the struggle against Communism as a classic conflict between good and evil. Believed in containment and the Eisenhower doctrine.
Secretary of War Stanton
As Secretary of War, Edwin M. Stanton acted as a spy for the radicals in cabinet meetings. President Johnson asked him to resign in 1867. The dismissal of Stanton let to the impeachment of Johnson because Johnson had broken the Tenure of Office Law.
Chief Justice Roger B. Taney
As chief justice, he wrote the important decision in the Dred Scott case, upholding police power of states and asserting the principle of social responsibility of private property. He was Southern and upheld the fugitive slave laws
1172. Reparations
As part of the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was ordered to pay fines to the Allies to repay the costs of the war. Opposed by the U.S., it quickly lead to a severe depression in Germany.
Gavrillo Princip
Assassinated Archduke, part of Black Hand, Serbian nationalist
J. W. Boothe
Assassinated Lincoln on April 14th, 1865; actor, 26.
Bull Run
At Bull Run, a creek, Confederate soldiers charged Union men who were en route to besiege Richmond. Union troops fled back to Washington. Confederates didn't realize their victory in time to follow up on it. First major battle of the Civil War - both sides were ill-prepared.
Reason for War
At the beginning of war, Lincoln said the reason for war was to preserve the union; however, after the Battle of Antietam, the reason for war changed to slavery.
1416. Korean War (1950-1953)
At the end of WW II, Korea had been divided into a northern sector occupied by the U.S.S.R. and a southern sector occupied by the U.S. who instituted a democratic government. On June 25, 1950, the North invaded the South. The United Nations created an international army, lead by the U.S. to fight for the South and China joined the war on the side of North Korea. This was the first time the United Nations had intervened militarily.
Hungarian Revolt 1956
Attempt by students and workers to liberalize the Communist regime and break off military alliance with the Soviet Union.
1461. Civil Rights Act, 1968
Attempted to provide Blacks with equal-opportunity housing.
1468. Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
August, 1964 - After the U.S. Navy ship Maddux reportedly was fired on, the U.S. Congress passed this resolution which gave the president power to send troops to Vietnam to protect against further North Vietnamese aggression.
Central Powers
Austria and Germany
Name for the alliance of Germany, Italy, and Japan
Axis Powers
1153. Billy Sunday (1863-1935)
Baseball player and preacher, his baseball background helped him become the most popular evangelist minister of the time. Part of the Fundamentalist revival of the 1920's.
Germany's attempt to defeat the British Royal Airforce and get Great Britain to surrender
Battle of Britain
Stalingrad
Battle where Soviet Union halted the Germans during harsh winter fighting in 1942
Nguyen Van Thieu
Became President of South Vietnam after Diem was executed
Blanche K. Bruce
Became a senator in 1874 -- the only black to be elected to a full term until Edward Brooke in 1966.
1243. Court-packing plan
Because the Supreme Court was striking down New Deal legislation, Roosevelt decided to curb the power of the Court by proposing a bill to allow the president to name a new federal judge for each who did not retire by age 70 and 1/2. At the time, 6 justices were over the age limit. Would have increased the number of justices from 9 to 15, giving FDR a majority of his own appointees on the court. The court-packing bill was not passed by Congress.
1244. Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes
Began to vote with the more liberal members in the liberal-dominated Supreme Court. In June a conservative justice retired and Roosevelt had an opportunity to make an appointment, shifting the Court's stance to support of New Deal legislation.
Return of the Panama Canal
Carter pledged to return the Panama Canal to Panama by the year 2000 and resume full diplomatic relations with China in 1979
Causes of the Cold War "bear"
Beliefs- communist vs. capitalist Events- neither side trusted each other Aims-goals-Stalin wanted huge reparations from Germany and a buffer of friendly states to protect the USSR from invasion again Resentment about history- the Soviet Union could not forget that in 1918 Britain and the usa had tried to destroy the Russian revolution. Stalin also though that they had not given him enough help in the Second World War
What went up in 1961
Berlin Wall
British commander in Northern Africa
Bernard Montgomery
Betty Friedan, Feminine Mystique
Best-selling book by feminist thinker. This work challenged women to move beyond the drudgery of suburban housewifery and helped launch what would become second-wave feminism.
Western Front
Between France + Germany
Eastern Front
Between Russia + Germany
no man's land
Between the opposing trenches
most segregated city
Birmingham, Alabama
1450. Angela Davis
Black Communist college professor affiliated with the Black Panthers, she was accused of having been involved in a murderous jail-break attempt by that organization.
Malcolm X
Black Muslim leader who focused on embracing black power rather than changing the minds of whites, and was more militant than the King-following activists.
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
Black church founded by Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Ralph Abernathy that became an integral part of the racial justice movement along with the NAACP
A. Phillip Randolph
Black leader of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, organized and almost led a march on Washington against employment inequality
1162. Marcus Garvey (1887-1940), Universal Negro Improvement Association
Black leader who advocated "black nationalism," and financial independence for Blacks, he started the "Back to Africa" movement. He believed Blacks would not get justice in mostly white nations.
Aryan
Blue eyes, blond hair, and a good stature
Adolf Hitler
Born in Austria, became a radical German nationalist during World War I. He became dictator of Germany in 1933. He led Europe into World War II.
Allies
Britain, France, Russia and eventually the U.S
Allies
Britain, Russia, and France
Sir David Lloyd George
British Prime Minister
Lusitania
British ship
Tobruk
British stronghold in Mediterranean Theater (North Africa).
Lusitania
British submarine that was bombed by German torpedoes
Zimmerman Note
Brits intercept note from Germans about bribing Mexico; Brits tell the united states about it and we begin to hate Germany
Panama Canal
Buit to make passage between Atlantic and Pacific oceans easier and faster.
Countries Stalin took over
Bulgaria, Czech, Hungary
Watergate
Burglars came into democratic headquarters installing listening tapes
Election of 1852: end of the Whig party
By this time the Whig party was so weakened that the Democrats swept Franklin Pierce into office by a huge margin. Eventually the Whigs became part of the new Republican party
Bay of Pigs
CIA plot in 1961 to over- throw Fidel Castro by training Cuban exiles to invade and supporting them with American air power. The mission failed and became a public relations disaster early in John F. Kennedy's presidency..
Compromise of 1850: provisions, impact
Called for the admission of California as a free state, organizing Utah and New Mexico without restrictions on slavery, adjustment of the Texas/New Mexico border, abolition of slave trade in District of Columbia, and tougher fugitive slave laws. Its passage was hailed as a solution to the threat of national division.
Concentration camp
Camp where political prisoners or prisoners of war are confined (usually under harsh conditions)
Sarajevo
Capital of Bosnia
Saigon
Captial of South Vietnam, capture of this city marks the conclusion of the civil war in 1975 - it is later re-named Ho Chi Minh City
Cuba
Caribbean Island ruled by Fulgencio Batista and then Fidel Castro; the Soviet Union kept missiles here causing increased tension during the Cold War.
1960
Castro and Khrushchev sign a trade agreement
1481. "Impeach Earl Warren"
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Earl Warren used the Court's authority to support civil rights and individual liberties. He authored Brown v. The Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas and Roe v. Wade decisions. His liberal attitudes led conservative groups to brand him a communist and lobby for his impeachment.
Northern part of this country was occupied by Japan in 1937
China
Jiang Jieshi
Chinese nationalist leader that was against Mao; supported by the US; loss to Mao, so he and his followers fled to Taiwan
Iron Curtain
Churchill coined this term as a division between the Western sphere of influence and the Soviet sphere of influence
The "Big Three"
Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin; leaders who met between 1943 and 1945 to coordinate attacks on Germany and Japan, and later to discuss plans for postwar Europe and settlement of Germany. After the war, their armies occupied Germany, each with a separate zone, although governed as a single economic unit.
Battle of Antietam
Civil War battle in which the North succeeded in halting Lee's Confederate forces in Maryland. Was the bloodiest battle of the war resulting in 25,000 casualties. Emancipation Proclamation came out of this war.
Pan-Slavism
Claiming all Slavic-People shared a common nationality
Senator Henry Clay's support for the passage of the Compromise of 1850 (1777-1852)
Clay helped heal the North/South rift by aiding passage of the Compromise of 1850, which served to delay the Civil War
Operation Overlord
Code name for the Allied invasion of Europe at Normandy on June 6, 1944; also known as D-Day
Manhattan Project
Code name for the U.S. effort during World War II to produce the atomic bomb. Much of the early research was done in New York City by refugee physicists in the United States.
Revanchism
Comes from revanche, the french word for revenge. Applies to a country who wants to recapture lost territories, etc.
Robert E. Lee
Commander of the Confederate Army
Chester Nimitz
Commander of the U.S. navy in the Pacific
David Farragut
Commander of the union navy, captured new orleans. led to the union control of the Mississippi River.
Eisenhower
Commanding General of the European Theater & D-Day
Fair Employment Practices Commision
Commission to enforce E.O. 8022, although it was not very effective
Presidential Committee on Civil Rights
Committee created by Pres. Truman on executive power to investigate and promote the civil rights cause
Commodore Perry and Japan
Commodore Matthew Perry went to Japan to open trade between it and the US. In 1853, his armed squadron anchored in Tokyo Bay, where the Japanese were so impressed that they signed the Treaty of Kanagania in 1854, which opened Japanese ports to American trade.
1449. Black Muslims
Common name for the Nation of Islam, a religion that encouraged separatism from White society. They claimed the "White Devil" was the chief source of evil in the world.
Senator Robert Taft
Commonly known as "Mr. Republican," he led the Republican party to reduce the size and the power of the federal government, to decrease taxes, to block Truman's liberal goals.
Domino theory
Communism will reign is one Asian country falls to it "Domino effect"
Russia (type of government)
Communist
Bolshevik
Communist Party of the Soviet Union; "red Russia"
Cuba
Communist leader Fidel Castro. 1959 Cuba becomes communist
Fidel Castro
Communist leader of Cuba
Warsaw Pact
Communist poweds
Civil Rights opponents charged with that racial integration was
Communistic
1178. Hawley-Smoot Tariff, 1930
Congressional compromise serving special interest, it raised duties on agricultural and manufactured imports. It may have contributed to the spread of the international depression.
Army-McCarthy hearings
Congressional hearings called by Senator Joseph McCarthy to accuse members of the army of communist ties. In this widely televised spec- tacle, McCarthy finally went too far for public approval. The hearings exposed the Senator's extremism and led to his eventual disgrace.
Interstate Highway Act
Congressional legislation that established the Interstate Commerce Commission, compelled railroads to publish standard rates, and prohibited rebates and pools. Railroads quickly became adept at using the Act to achieve their own ends, but the Act gave the government an important means to regulate big business.
Cotton versus Wheat
Cotton was a Southern cash crop and could be sold for large amounts of money. Wheat was mainly raised to feed farmers and their animals. The North grew most of the wheat in the newly settled Midwestern states.
Poland
Country Hitler and Stalin agreed to divide between them after they signed a nonagression pact with each other
Near v. Minnesota
Court ruling that rejected prior restraint on any publications
1423. Civil Rights Act, 1957
Created by the U.S. Commission of Civil Rights and the Civil Rights division of the Justice Department.
1179. Reconstruction Finance Corporation, RFC
Created in 1932 to make loans to banks, insurance companies, and railroads, it was intended to provide emergency funds to help businesses overcome the effects of the Depression. It was later used to finance wartime projects during WW II.
1208. Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
Created in April 1933. Within 4 months, 1300 CCC camps were in operation and 300,000 men between ages 18 and 25 worked for the reconstruction of cities. More than 2.5 million men lived and/or worked in CCC camps.
1199. Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act, 1933
Created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which insures the accounts of depositors of its member banks. It outlawed banks investing in the stock market.
1223. National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
Created to insure fairness in labor-managment relations and the mediate employers' desputes with unions.
Fidel Castro
Cuban dictator who caused a revolution and denounced the Yankee imperialists and began to expropriate valuable American properties in pursuing a land-distribution program. He also ordered further wholesale confiscations of Yankee property and in effect made his left-wing dictatorship an economic and military satellite of Moscow, to the Kremlin's delighted surprise
June 6, 1944
D Day land and sea invasion of Normandy. Largest amphibious landing to date.
Senator Daniel Webster's support for Compromise of 1850
Daniel Webster, a Northerner and opposed to slavery, spoke before Congress on March 7, 1850. During this speech, he envisioned that the legacy of the fugitive slave laws would be to divide the nation over the issue of slavery.
Jefferson Davis, Alexander Stephens
Davis was chosen as president of the Confederacy in 1861. Stephens was vice-president.
1455. De Facto, De Jure segregation
De Facto means "it is that way because it just is," and De Jure means that there are rules and laws behind it. In 1965, President Johnson said that getting rid of De Jure segregation was not enough.
Christmas Bombings
Dec, 1972 the heaviest bombardment in history, by B-52 planes pounded military and civilian targets in NV around clock
Pearl Harbor
December 7, 1941 - Surprise attack by the Japanese on the main U.S. Pacific Fleet harbored in Hawaii destroyed 18 U.S. ships and 200 aircraft. American losses were 3000, the U.S. declared war on Japan and Germany, entering World War II.
Teheran Conference
December, 1943 - A meeting between FDR, Churchill and Stalin in Iran to discuss coordination of military efforts against Germany, they repeated the pledge made in the earlier Moscow Conference to create the United Nations after the war's conclusion to help ensure international peace.
1433. Montgomery Bus Boycott
December, 1955 - In Montgomery, Alabama, Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat for a White man as required by city ordinance. It started the Civil Rights Movement and an almost nation-wide bus boycott lasting 11 months.
1420. Rosa Parks, Montgomery Bus Boycott
December, 1955 - In Montgomery, Alabama, she refused to give up her bus seat for a White man as required by city ordinance. It started the Civil Rights Movement and an almost nation-wide bus boycott lasting 11 months.
1426. West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 1942
Decided that a state can require student to salute the flag in school.
National Black Political Agenda
Declaration from the 1972 black political convention that called for national health insurance, community control of schools and elimination of the death penalty
four freedoms
Declared by President FDR; 1. Freedom of speech and expression; 2. Freedom of every person to worship in his own way; 3. Freedom from want; 4. Freedom from fear
Election 1960
Dem: JFK Rep: Richard Nixon Winner: JFK
Election 1948
Dem: Truman Rep: Thomas Dewey Progressive: Henry Wallace Winner: Truman
1239. Election of 1936: candidates, issues
Democrat - Franklin D. Roosevelt, Rebublican - Governor Alfred Landon, Union Party - William Lemke Issues were the New Deal (which Landon criticized as unconstitutional laws), a balanced budget, and low taxes. Roosevelt carried all states but Maine and Vermont.
Election of 1856: Republican Party, Know-Nothing Party
Democrat - James Buchanan (won by a narrow margin). Republican - John Fremont. Know-Nothing Party and Whig - Millard Fillmore. First election for the Republican Party. Know-Nothings opposed immigration and Catholic influence. They answered questions from outsiders about the party by saying "I know nothing".
1190. Election of 1932: candidates, issues
Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt, beat the Republican, Herbert Hoover, who was running for reelection. FDR promised relief for the unemployed, help for farmers, and a balanced budget.
Election of 1948
Democrat Truman wins "fair deal" Dewey republican predicted to win
Jimmy Carter
Democrat president who served 1977 to 1981; he capitalized on being a "Washington outsider," and therefore untainted by the supposed corruption of D.C.; was highly concerned for human rights
Election 1856
Democrats nominated Buchanan, Republicans nominated Fremont, and Know-Nothings chose Fillmore. Buchanan won due to his support of popular sovereignty
War Democrats
Democrats who supported the war and Lincoln. Examples include Andrew Johnson and Edwin Stanton.
Baby Boom
Demographic explosion from births to returning soldiers and others who had put off starting families during the war. This large generation of new Americans forced the expansion of many institutions such as schools and universities
Escalation in 1965
Deployment of American ground troops in Vietnam, Intensification of bombings on NV
Executive Order 9834
Designed to root out communist influence in government
Berlin blockade
Details: 11 months long All railroads and roads closed Dried eggs, potatoes. 4 hours of electricity May, 1949 Stalin reopened borders
Insular cases
Determined that inhabitants of U.S. territories had some, but not all, of the rights of U.S. citizens.
General Alfred von Schlieffen
Devised a strategy to avoid war on Germany's two fronts
Sectionalism
Different parts of the country developing unique and separate cultures (as the North, South, and West). This can lead to conflict.
1443. Medgar Evers
Director of the NAACP in Mississippi and a lawyer who defended accused Blacks, he was murdered in his driveway by a member of the Ku Klux Klan.
1205. Hugh Johnson
Director of the NRA.
Walter Reed
Discovered that the mosquito transmitted yellow fever and developed a cure. Yellow fever was the leading cause of death of American troops in the Spanish-American War.
Imperialism
Domination by one country of another country or region
Commander of UN forces in Korea
Douglas MacArthur
Confederate Constitution
Drafted 1861; similar to the Articles of Confederation; guaranteed sovereignty of the Confederate states & prohibited the Confederate Congress from enacting protective tariffs & from supporting internal improvements; specifically sanctioned slavery; president had 6-year terms; line-item veto
Chicago Burlington & Quincy Railway v. Chicago
Due Process Clause -14th amendment incorporated the takings clause of the 5th Amendment into the due process clause of the 14th Amendment by requiring states to provide just compensation for seizing private property.
War Production Board
During WWII, FDR established it to allocated scarce materials, limited or stopped the production of civilian goods, and distributed contracts among competing manufacturers
"Iron Curtain"
During the Cold War, the dividing line between Western Europe under democracies and the Soviet controlled regions of Eastern Europe under communism.
Beechers' Bibles
During the Kansas border war, the New England Emigrant Aid Society sent rifles at the instigation of fervid abolitionists like the preacher Henry Beecher. These rifles became known as "Beecher's Bibles".
Freeport Doctrine
During the Lincoln-Douglas debates, Douglas said in his Freeport Doctrine that Congress couldn't force a territory to become a slave state against its will. In other words, it allowed Douglas to balance popular sovereignty against the Dred Scott Case which seemed to indicate that all of USA had to be slave territory
Nixon Doctrine
During the Vietnam War, the Nixon Doctrine was created. It stated that the United States would honor its exisiting defense commitments, but in the future other countries would have to fight their own wars without support of American troops.
John Foster Dulles
Dwight Eisenhower's Secretary of State who believed in changing the containment strategy to one that more directly engaged the Soviet Union and attempted to roll back communist influence around the world
Presidents during the War
Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Nixon,
1187. Ambassador Morrow
Dwight Whitney Morrow served as the U.S. Ambassador to Mexico from 1927 to 1930, during the Mexican-American diplomatic crisis.
Election 1952 winner
Dwight. Eisenhower, Republican
Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives
Early 1900's writer who exposed social and political evils in the U.S. Muckraker novel.
3 Theaters of War
Eastern theater- east of Appalachian mountains Western theater- west of Appalachian mountains Transmississippi- land across (west) mississippi river
Edwin Stanton
Edwin Stanton was an attorney and politician during the nineteenth century, American Civil War era. Stanton was the Secretary of War during the Lincoln Administration and helped organize the North's assets and bring the Union to a victory. Edwin Stanton worked under Abraham Lincoln until Lincoln's assassination and then worked under Andrew Johnson. Because Stanton went against some of Johnson's policies, Johnson tried to get him out of office. When people heard that Andrew Johnson wanted to get rid of Stanton they impeached him.
1408. "Military-Industrial Complex"
Eisenhower first coined this phrase when he warned American against it in his last State of the Union Address. He feared that the combined lobbying efforts of the armed services and industries that contracted with the military would lead to excessive Congressional spending.
Aguinaldo, Philippine Insurrection
Emilio Aguinaldo (1869-1964) led a Filipino insurrection against the Spanish in 1896 and assisted the U.S. invasion. He served as leader of the provisional government but was removed by the U.S. because he wanted to make the Philippines independent before the U.S. felt it was ready for independence.
Hirohito
Emperor of Japan during WWII
Fugitive Slave Law
Enacted by Congress in 1793 and 1850, these laws provided for the return of escaped slaves to their owners. The North was lax about enforcing the 1793 law, which irritated the South to no end. The 1850 law was tougher and aimed at eliminating the underground railroad.
1410. Fair Employment Practices Committee
Enacted by executive order 8802 on June 25, 1941 to prohibit discrimination in the armed forces.
Election of 1876
Ended reconstruction because neither candidate had an electoral majority. Hayes was elected, and then ended reconstruction as he secretly promised. Rutherford Hayes v Tilden
Leader of the Afrika Korps troops in Northern Africa
Erwin Rommel
1488. Peace Corps., Vista
Established by Congress in September, 1961 under Kennedy, dedicated Americans volunteered to go to about 50 third-world countries and show the impoverished people how to improve their lives.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Established by the Civil Rights Act to enforce the ban on job descrimination
Significance a of Korean War
Established our involvement in the world Permanent military buildup We never declared war against North Korea We don't use the bomb
1176. Depression as an international event
Europe owed money. Germany had to pay, but did not have the money.
Emperor Maximillian in Mexico
European prince appointed by Napoleon III of France to lead the new government in Mexico. After the Civil War, the US invaded and he was executed, a demonstration of the Monroe Doctrine to European powers.
"King Cotton"
Expression used by Southern authors and orators before the Civil War to indicate the economic dominance of the Southern cotton industry, and that the North needed the South's cotton. In a speech to the Senate in 1858, James Hammond declared, "You daren't make war against cotton! ...Cotton is king!".
Who did Johnson want to emulate?
FDR
1231. Deficit spending
FDR's admnistration was based on this concept. It involved stimulating consumer buying power, business enterprise, and ultimately employment by pouring billions of dollars of federal money into the economy even if the government didn't have the funds, and had to borrow money.
Good Neighbor Policy
FDR's foreign policy of promoting better relations w/Latin America by using economic influence rater than military force in the region
Good Neighbor policy
FDR's foreign policy of promoting better relations w/Latin America by using economic influence rater than military force in the region
court packing scheme
FDR's plan to "pack" the Supreme Court with supporters to keep his New Deal programs from being declared unconstitutional
Executive Order 8802
FDR's response to A. Phillip Randolph's threat to lead a protest on Washington, prohibited racial discrimination in defense industries.
Yalta Conference (1945)
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
1975
Fall of Saigon, South Vietnam fell into Communism
John Brown
Fanatical abolitionist who killed five at Pottawatomie Creek, seized the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry in western Virginia, and was hanged and became a martyr.
Italy (type of government)
Fascism
Civil Rights Act (1964)
Federal law that banned racial discrimination in public facilities and strengthened the federal government's power to fight segregation in schools. Title VII of the act prohibited employers from discriminating based on race in their hiring practices, and empowered the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to regulate fair employment.
The Ottoman Turkey
Felt threatened by new nations on its borders
Ultimatum
Final set off demands
Slaughter house cases
First Supreme Court cases for the 14th amendment -amendment relatively new at the time -privileges and immunities clause
Monitor and the Merrimac
First engagement ever between two iron-clad naval vessels. The two ships battled in a portion of the Chesapeake Bay known as Hampton Roads for five hours on March 9th, 1862, ending in a draw. Monitor- Union. Merrimac-Confederacy. Historians use the name of the original ship Merrimac on whose hull the Southern ironclad was constructed, even though the official Confederate name for their ship was the CSS Virginia.
Tehran Conference
First major meeting between the Big Three (United States, Britain, Russia) at which they planned the 1944 assault on France and agreed to divide Germany into zones of occupation after the war
Aletta Jacobs
First women doctor in the Netherlands argued that if women had the right to vote, there would be no war.
1169. Five Powers Treaty, Four Powers Treaty, Nine Powers Treaty
Five Powers Treaty: Signed as part of the Washington Naval Conference, U.S., Great Britain, Japan, France, and Italy set a ten year suspension of construction of large ships and set quotas for the number of ships each country could build. Four Powers Treaty: U.S., Japan, Britain, and France agreed to respect each others possessions in the Pacific. Nine Powers Treaty: Reaffirmed the Open Door Policy in China.
1444. Adam Clayton Powell
Flamboyant Congressman from Harlem and chairman of the House and Labor Committee, he was elected to the House of Representatives in 1968, but removed from office for alleged misuse of funds.
Free Soil Party
Formed in 1847-1848, dedicated to opposing slavery in newly acquired territories such as Oregon and ceded Mexican territory.
1234. Liberty League
Formed in 1934 by conservatives to defend business interests and promote the open shop.
American GI Forum
Formed in 1948, protested poor treatment of Mexican American veterans/soldiers
Lincoln's ten percent plan
Former Confederate states would be readmitted to the Union if 10% of their citizens took a loyalty oath and the state agreed to ratify the 13th Amendment which outlawed slavery. Not put into effect because Lincoln was assassinated.
Alexander Stephens
Former vice president of the Confederacy, who claimed a seat in Congress during reconstruction under Johnson. Congress denied him and other Confederates seats in Congress
Senator John C. Calhoun's opposition to the Compromise of 1850
Formerly Jackson's vice-president, later a South Carolina senator. He said the North should grant the South's demands and keep quiet about slavery to keep the peace. He was a spokesman for the South and states' rights
Berlin Wall
Fortified and guarded barrier between East and West Berlin erected on orders from Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in 1961 to stop the flow of people to the West. Until its destruction in 1989, it served as a vivid symbol of the divide between the communist and capitalist worlds.
1436. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
Founded in 1909 to improve living conditions for inner city Blacks, evolved into a national organization dedicated to establishing equal legal rights for Blacks.
1203. National Industrial Recovery Administration (NIRA)
Founded in 1933 to carry out the plans of the National Industry Recovery Act to fight depression. It established code authorities for each branch of industry or buisness. The code authorities set the lowest prices that could be charged, the lowest wages that could be paid, and the standards of quality that must be observed.
Vietnam was part of what European empire
France
Triple Entente
France, Great Britain, Russia
1188. Good Neighbor Policy
Franklin Roosevelt described his foreign policy as that of a "good neighbor." The phrase came to be used to describe the U.S. attitude toward the countries of Latin America. Under Roosevelt's "Good Neighbor Policy," the U.S. took the lead in promoting good will among these nations.
Georges Clemencaeau (TIGER)
French Leader (Names Tiger for firece war policy)
1466. Geneva Conference, 1954
French wanted out of Vietnam , the agreement signed by Ho Chi Minh France divided Vietnam on the 17th parallel, confining Minh's government to the North. In the South, an independent government was headed by Diem.
Entente Cordial
Friendly understanding
Detente
From the French for "reduced tension," the period of Cold War thawing when the United States and the Soviet Union negotiated reduced armament treaties under Presidents Nixon, Ford, and Carter. As a policy prescription, it marked a departure from the policies of proportional response, mutually assured destruction, and containment that had defined the earlier years of the Cold War.
Whose model of resistance did CR advocate
Gandhi
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
Gave Johnson the freedom to conduct operations in Vietnam as he saw fit
G.I Joe
General Issue
Lee, Jackson
General Robert E. Lee and General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson were major leaders and generals for the Confederacy. Best military leaders in the Civil War.
Capture of Atlanta
General Sherman seized the city after the South put General Hood in charge. Hood fled to the city after being pounded by the North and lost over 20,000 troops. This enables Lincoln to win since it was so close to the election.
Marshal Plan
George Marshal the US secretary of state saw Europe as very important to the USA, he saw the best way to keep them out of communism is to help restore their countries in 1947, June, and he proposed a plan to provide massive economic aid to Europe
Marshall plan
George Marshall Money to rebuild Europe If we don't rebuild Stalin will rebuild
Arthur Zimmermann
German Foreign Minister
U-Boats
German Submarine used in World War I and World War 2
U-BOATS
German Submarines that did tremendous damage
Dresden
German city ferociously firebombed by the Allies from February 13 to 15, 1945
Schlieffen Plan
German plan for holding against Russia, combined with a quick drive through Belgium to Paris
The Final Solution
German plan to wipe all Jews from Europe
Unterseeboot
German submarine
u-boats
German submarines that enforced the blockade around Great Britain, which became unrestricted submarine warfare
Poison Gas Warfare
Germans used poison gas as a weapon, in retaliation allies used gas as well.
Triple Alliance
Germany formed the ____ with Austria-Hungary and Italy.
Battle of Verdun
Germany vs. France; 11 months; 500,000 deaths
The Schlieffen Plan
Germany's plan to invade France through Belgium
Central Powers
Germany, Austria-Hungary, bulgaria, ottoman empire (not sure if we need to know ottoman empire)
1441. "I have a dream" speech
Given August 1963 from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
"Fortunate Sons"
Glorias Emerson's grim reports portrayed the war as a class based effort in which poor and disproportionally non-white troops fought and died so that the rich man, with draft exempt "fortune sons"
Militarism
Glorification of war
Election of 1964
Goldwater fought very gard against Johnson and his policies. Johnson beat Goldwater very easily, but Goldwater's campaign technique lead future republicans to victory
Shoddy Goods
Goods sold during war time (or otherwise) to make a profit without regards for the consumer. The goods were not up to product standards and fell apart or spoiled before its time.
Impact of watergate
Got Nixon to resign and Gerald Ford takes over
Orval Faubus
Governor of Arkansas who mobilized the National Guard to prevent the "Little Rock Nine" from enrolling in Central High School
Name of his agenda
Great Society
Truman Doctrine helped 2 countires
Greece, Turkey
League of Nations
Guaranteed peace for the future
Vietnam war was
Guerrilla warfare
1213. Home Owners' Local Corporation (HOLC)
Had authority to borrow money to refinance home mortgages and thus prevent forclosures. It lent over $3 billion to 1 million homeowners.
Example of persecution of the Jews
Had to wear the star of David
Langston Hughes
Harlem poet, The Weary Blues (1926)
William T. Sherman
He commanded the Union army in Tennessee. In September of 1864 his troops captured Atlanta, Georgia. He then headed to take Savannah. This was his famous "march to the sea.". His troops burned barns and houses, and destroyed the countryside.
George F. Kennan
He created the containment doctrine that avoided an expansionary Russia
Why was Johnsons push contradictory
He pushed for Civil rights but he was a southerner who opposed it before
John Bell
He was a moderate and wanted the union to stay together. After Southern states seceded from the Union, he urged the middle states to join the North.
William H. Seward
He was secretary of state under Johnson and Lincoln. He helped purchase Alaska as well as creating a secret police force.
1412. Gunnar Myrdal, An American Dilemma
He wrote this to increase White awareness of the awful discrimination against Blacks.
Vo Nguyen Giap
Head of NVA (North Vietnam)
1435. Southern Christian Leadership Conference
Headed by Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., a coalition of churches and Christians organizations who met to discuss civil rights.
1237. Father Charles Coughlin
Headed the National Union for Social Justice. Began as a religious radio broadcaster, but turned to politics and finance and attracted an audiance of millions from many faiths. Promoted inflationary currency, anti-sematism.
Father Coughlin
Headed the National Union for Social Justice. Began as a religious radio broadcaster, but turned to politics and finance and attracted an audiance of millions from many faiths. Promoted inflationary currency, anti-sematism.
1437. Urban League
Helping Blacks to find jobs and homes, it was founded in 1966 and was a social service agency providing facts about discrimination.
1465. Dien Bien Phu
In 1946, war broke out between communist insurgents in North Vietnam, called the Viet Minh, and the French Colonial government. In the spring of 1954, the Viet Minh surrounded and destroyed the primary French fortress in North Vietnam at Dien Bien Phu. The defeat was so disastrous for the French that they decided to withdraw from Vietnam.
1429. Dennis v. U.S., 1951
In 1948, the Attorney General indicted two key Communist leaders for violation of the Smith Act of 1940 which prohibited conspiring to teach violent overthrow of the government. They were convicted in a 6-2 decision and their appeal was rejected.
Berlin Blockade
In 1948, the Soviets choked off all rail and highway access to Berlin, hoping to starve out the residents and gain the territory
1404. AFL-CIO merger
In 1955 at a New York City Convention, these two once-rival organizations decided to put aside their differences and unite. Had a total membership of over 15 million.
1447. Stokely Carmichael
In 1966, as chair of SNCC, he called to assert Black Power. Supporting the Black Panthers, he was against integration.
1419. Thurgood Marshall (1908-1993)
In 1967, appointed the first Black Supreme Court Justice, he had led that NAACP's legal defense fund and had argued the Brown v. The Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas case before the Supreme Court.
1458. Thurgood Marshall (1908-1993)
In 1967, appointed the first Black Supreme Court Justice, he had led that NAACP's legal defense fund and had argued the Brown v. The Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas case before the Supreme Court.
1454. Kerner Commission on Civil Disorders
In 1968, this commission, chaired by Otto Kerner, decided that the race riots were due to the formation of two different American cultures: inner-city Blacks and suburban Whites.
Bay of Pigs
In April 1961, a group of Cuban exiles organized and supported by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency landed on the southern coast of Cuba in an effort to overthrow Fidel Castro. When the invasion ended in disaster, President Kennedy took full responsibility for the failure.
Democratic Convention riots
In Chicago in 1968; where Democratic delegates gathered to nominate Vice-president Hubert Humphrey. The hall was protected with barbed wire and police officers to keep the protesters away.
Purchase of Alaska
In December, 1866, the U.S. offered to take Alaska from Russia. Russia was eager to give it up, as the fur resources had been exhausted, and, expecting friction with Great Britain, they preferred to see defenseless Alaska in U.S. hands. Called "Seward's Folly" and "Seward's Icebox", the purchase was made in 1867 for $7,200,000 and gave the U.S. Alaska's resources of fish, timber, oil and gold.
Verdun
In France
1415. Desegregation of the Armed Forces, 1948
In July, Truman issued an executive order establishing a policy of racial equality in the Armed Forces "be put into effect as rapidly as possible." He also created a committee to ensure its implementation.
Lincoln's "House Divided" speech
In his acceptance speech for his nomination to the Senate in June, 1858, Lincoln paraphrased from the Bible: "A house divided against itself cannot stand." He continued, "I do not believe this government can continue half slave and half free, I do not expect the Union to be dissolved - I do not expect the house to fall - but I do believe it will cease to be divided."
1232. Monetary policy, fiscal policy
In monetary policy, government manipulates the nation's money supply to control inflation and depression. In fiscal policy, the government uses taxing and spending programs (including deficit spending) to control inflation and depression.
Czechoslovakia
In order to appease Hitler England and France gave him control of this country.
V.I Lenin
In power, he promised to pull tropps out of the war. Later signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Extraterritoriality
In the 1920's, China wated an end to the exemption of foreigners accused of crimes from China's legal jurisdiction.
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education
In this 1971 Supreme Court Decision, the court ruled that, even though the schools in the district worked out to be only minimally integrated because of the full black or white neighborhood, the schools had to be intergraded based on the percentage of blacks in the whole district, meaning that blacks had to be bussed over great distances to integrate schools that naturally sat in all white neighborhoods. This cause a great push-back from middle America, who saw the end of the neighborhood school
1457. Robert Weaver (b. 1907)
Influential Black economist, he served in the Department of the Interior and was Secretary of Housing and Urban Affairs under Lyndon B. Johnson, becoming the first Black Cabinet official in the U.S.
Office of Price Administration
Instituted in 1942, in charge of stabilizing prices and rents and preventing speculation, profiteering, hoarding and price administration, froze wages and prices and initiated a rationing program
Office of Price Administration
Instituted in 1942, this agency was in charge of stabilizing prices and rents and preventing speculation, profiteering, hoarding and price administration. The OPA froze wages and prices and initiated a rationing program for items such as gas, oil, butter, meat, sugar, coffee and shoes in order to support the war effort and prevent inflation.
Nationalism
Intense feeling of pride in and devotion to one's country
Escalation
Intensity of war increasing
ICBM
Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles, long-range nuclear missiles capable of being fired at targets on the other side of the globe. The reason behind the Cuban Missile Crisis -- Russia was threatening the U.S. by building launch sites for ICBM's in Cuba.
United Nations
International body formed in 1945 to bring nations into dialogue in hopes of preventing further world wars. Much like the former League of Nations in ambition, the UN was more realistic in recognizing the authority of the Big Five Powers in keeping peace in the world. Thus, it guaranteed veto power to all permanent members of its Security Council—Britain, China, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States
House Committee on Un- American Activities (HUAC)
Investigatory body established in 1938 to root out "subversion." Sought to expose communist influence in American government and society, in particular through the trial of Alger Hiss
Nickname for buffer zone
Iron curtain Churchill first to use the phrase. Fulton speech- Fulton university
Malcolm X
Islamic, initially denounced the civil rights movement, wanted to be separate from whites
Emancipation Proclamation
Issued by Abraham Lincoln on September 22, 1862; it declared that all slaves in the confederate states would be free
1424. Civil Rights Act, 1960
It gave the Federal Courts the power to register Black voters and provided for voting referees who served wherever there was racial discrimination in voting, making sure Whites did not try to stop Blacks from voting.
Communist China
It had become a communist power and interfered in the Vietnam War on the Soviet Side
1200. Gold Clause Act, 1935
It voided any clause in past or future contracts requiring payment in gold. It was enacted to help enforce 1933 legislation discontinuing the gold standard and outlawing circulation of gold coin.
CIA
It was opened by the National Security Act and was begun to coordinate the government's foreign fact gathering
Guglielmo Marconi
Italian; invented wireless telegraphy used excessively for long-range communication during World War I
Triple Alliance
Italy, Germany, and Austria-Hungary
Marcus Garvey
Jamaican political leader, founded the United Negro Improvment Association (UNIA), convicted of mail fraud and deported by government, movement later led to founding of Nation of Islam (Black Muslim) Movement
Casablanca Conference
Jan. 14-23, 1943 - FDR and Chruchill met in Morocco to settle the future strategy of the Allies following the success of the North African campaign. They decided to launch an attack on Italy through Sicily before initiating an invasion into France over the English Channel. Also announced that the Allies would accept nothing less than Germany's unconditional surrender to end the war.
1479. Paris Accord, 1973
January 7, 1973 - U.S. signed a peace treaty with North Vietnam and began withdrawing troops. On April 25, 1975, South Vietnam was taken over by North Vietnam, in violation of the treaty.
Russo-Japanese War, Treaty of Portsmouth
Japan had attacked the Russian Pacific fleet over Russia's refusal to withdraw its troops from Mancharia after the Boxer Rebellion (1904-1905) War fought mainly in Korea. Japan victorious, the U.S. mediated the end of the war. Negotiating the treaty in the U.S. increased U.S. prestige. Roosevelt received a Nobel Peace Prize for the mediation.
"December 7, 1941... a date that will live in infamy" is in reference to what event?
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor
Kamikaze
Japanese tactic of crashing piloted planes into Allied ships in the hopes of causing enough damage to sink them. Death before Dishonor.
Internment Camps
Japanese-Americans were sent to these places during World War 2 so they could be watched by the government.
People targeted by the Nazis
Jews, Gypsies, Communists, intellectuals, handicapped, elderly, homosexuals, and anti-Nazis
Segregation also known as
Jim Crow
Pottawatomie Massacre
John Brown led a part of six in Kansas that killed 5 pro-slavery men, hacking them to death with broadswords and axes. The helped make the Kansas border war (Bleeding Kansas) a national issue.
War on Poverty
Johnson's declaration to end poverty while in office
Berlin Airlift
Joint effort by the US and Britian to fly food and supplies into W Berlin after the Soviet blocked off all ground routes into the city
John Spargo, The Bitter Cry of the Children
Journalist and novelist, he wrote of the unfair treatment of children used as child labor. Stressed better education, better schools and teachers. A muckraker novel.
"Muckrakers"
Journalists who searched for and publicized real or alleged acts of corruption of public officials, businessmen, etc. Name coined by Teddy Roosevelt in 1906.
Helsinki accords
July 1975 Ford joined other leaders in Helsinki Finland to sign agreements to legitimize the Soviet holdings following WWII. Outlined boundaries for Poland and other Eastern European countries. Also guaranteed basic human rights to Soviet controlled countries
Potsdam Conference
July 26, 1945 - Allied leaders Truman, Stalin and Churchill met in Germany to set up zones of control and to inform the Japanese that if they refused to surrender at once, they would face total destruction.
Suez Crisis
July 26, 1956, Nasser (leader of Egypt) nationalized the Suez Canal, Oct. 29, British, French and Israeli forces attacked Egypt. UN forced British to withdraw; made it clear Britain was no longer a world power
1218. National Youth Association (NYA)
June 1935 - Established as part of the WPA to provide part-time jobs for high school and college students to enable them to stay in school and to help young adults not in school find jobs.
1224. Fair Labor Standards Act, maxium hours and minimum wage
June 1938 - Set maximum hours at 40 hours a week and minimum wage at 20 cents an hour (gradually rose to 40 cents).
1411. Detroit race riots
June 25, 1943 - Outright racial war broke out between Blacks and Whites and the government did not send help.
When did N. Korea invade South?
June 25, 1950
1184. Hoover Moratorium
June 30, 1931 - Acting on President Hoover's advice, the Allies suspended Germany's reparation payments for one year.
D-Day
June 6, 1944 - Led by Eisenhower, over a million troops (the largest invasion force in history) stormed the beaches at Normandy and began the process of re-taking France. The turning point of World War II.
D-Day
June 6, 1944 - US invasion of France at the beaches of Normandy, largest sea invasion in history
November22, 1963
Kennedy Assassinated in Dallas by Lee Harvey Oswald
1496. "Flexible Response"
Kennedy abandoned Eisenhower's theory of massive nuclear war in favor of a military that could respond flexibly to any situation at any time, in different ways.
1480. Election of 1960: issues, candidates, "Missile gap"
Kennedy, the Democrat, won 303 electoral votes, Nixon, the Republican, won 219 electoral votes, Byrd, the Independent, won 15 electoral votes. Kennedy and Nixon split the popular vote almost 50/50, with Kennedy winning by 118,000. The issues were discussed in televised debates. The "Missile gap" referred to the U.S. military claim that the U.S.S.R. had more nuclear missiles that the U.S., creating a "gap" in U.S. defensive capabilities.
1472. Kent State Incident, Jackson State Incident
Kent State: May 4, 1970 - National Guardsmen opened fire on a group of students protesting the Vietnam War. Jackson State: Police opened fire in a dormitory.
Hay-Herran Treaty
Kept the purchase price of the canal strip in Panama the same but enlarged the area from 6 to 10 miles.
Oct. 23
Khrushchev accuses America of piracy 20 Russian ships to cuba
Oct. 28
Khrushchev agreed blockade lifted and missiles dismantled
Results of Cuban missile crisis
Khrushchev respect goes down Kennedy's respect for up China breaks away from soviets
Leader N. Korea
Kim Il Sung
GI Bill of Rights
Known officially as the Servicemen's Readjustment Act, this law helped returning World War II soldiers reintegrate into civilian life by securing loans to buy homes and farms and set up small businesses and by making tuition and stipends available for them to attend college and job training programs. The Act was also intended to cushion the blow of 15 million returning servicemen on the employment market and to nurture the postwar economy
1st proxy war against Soviets
Korean War
Dolores Huerta
Laborer activist worked with Cesar Chavez to form UNW
Roe v. Wade (1973)
Landmark Supreme Court decision that forbade states from barring abortion by citing a woman's constitutional right to privacy. Seen as a victory for feminism and civil liberties by some, the decision provoked a strong counter-reaction by opponents to abortion, galvanizing the Pro-Life movement
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
Landmark Supreme Court decision that overturned Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) and abolished racial segregation in public schools. The Court reasoned that "separate" was inherently "unequal," rejecting the foundation of the Jim Crow system of racial segregation in the South. This deci- sion was the first major step toward the legal end of racial discrimination and a major accomplishment for the Civil Rights Movement
Zeppelins
Large balloons to bomb the English Coast
South's advantages in the Civil War
Large land areas with long coasts, could afford to lose battles, and could export cotton for money. They were fighting a defensive war and only needed to keep the North out of their states to win. Also had the nation's best military leaders, and most of the existing military equipment and supplies
North's advantages in the Civil War
Larger numbers of troops, superior navy, better transportation, overwhelming financial and industrial reserves to create munitions and supplies, which eventually outstripped the South's initial material advantage
Auschwitz
Largest death camp. Located in Poland
Great War
Largest war in history
Battle of the Bulge
Last major offensive of the European Theater. Germany trying to keep Allies out.
1440. Sit-ins, freedom rides
Late 1950's, early 1960's, these were nonviolent demonstrations and marches that challenged segregation laws, often braving attacks by angry White mobs.
Sputnik
Launched 1957 first satellite into space
Clara Barton
Launched the American Red Cross in 1881. An "angel" in the Civil War, she treated the wounded in the field.
War Powers Act (1973)
Law passed by Congress limiting the President's ability to wage war without Congressional approval. The act required the President to notify Congress within 48 hours of committing troops to a foreign conflict. An important consequence of the Vietnam War, this piece of legislation sought to reduce the President's unilateral authority in military matters.
War Powers Act
Law that repealed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. Any president was now required to notify Congress within 48 hours of deploying troops and had to gain congressional approval to keep troops deployed for more than 90 days.
Black Codes
Laws denying most legal rights to newly freed slaves; passed by southern states following the Civil War
Grant, McClellan, Sherman and Meade
Lead Union generals in the Civil War.
Hitler
Leader of Germany during WWII
Churchill
Leader of Great Britain during WWII
Mussolini
Leader of Italy during WWII
Cesar Chavez
Leader of Mexican American civil rights movement, and the United Farm Workers (UFW)
US. Grant
Leader of Northern Army during Civil War - Later becomes president
Stalin
Leader of Russia during WWII
1403. Jimmy Hoffa
Leader of the teamster's union, he was anti-AFL/CIO. He threatened to defeat for reelection an Congressman who dared to vote for a tough labor law.
1448. Black Panthers
Led by Bobby Seale and Huey Newton, they believed that racism was an inherent part of the U.S. capitalist society and were militant, self-styled revolutionaries for Black Power.
Appomattox Court House
Lee surrenders to grant in 1865; basically ends war.
Voting Rights Act (1965)
Legislation pushed through Congress by President Johnson that prohibited ballot-denying tactics, such as literary tests and intimidation. The act was a successor to the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and sought to make racial disenfranchisement explicitly illegal.
Enabled the U.S. to "loan" weapons and other war supplies to the Allies while still remaining neutral
Lend Lease Act
1166. Lansing-Ishii Agreement, 1917
Lessened the tension in the feuds between the U.S. and Japan by recognizing Japan's sphere of influence in China in exchange for Japan's continued recognition of the Open Door policy in China.
Lansing-Ishii Agreement, 1917
Lessened the tension in the feuds between the U.S. and Japan by recognizing Japan's sphere of influence in China in exchange for Japan's continued recognition of the Open Door policy in China.
1189. Norris-LaGuardia (Anti-Injunction) Act, 1932
Liberal Republicans, Feorelo LaGuardia and George Norris cosponsored the Norris-LaGuardia Federal Anti-Injunction Act, which protected the rights of striking workers, by severely restricting the federal courts' power to issue injunctions against strikes and other union activities.
Copperheads
Lincoln believed that anti-war Northern Democrats harbored traitorous ideas and he labeled them "Copperheads", poisonous snakes waiting to get him.
Election of 1864: candidates, parties
Lincoln ran against Democrat General McClellan. Lincoln won 212 electoral votes to 21, but the popular vote was much closer. Lincoln was "saved" by the capture of Atlanta which helped in the north. (Lincoln had fired McCllelan from his position in the war.)
Suspension of habeas corpus
Lincoln suspended this writ, which states that a person cannot be arrested without probable cause and must be informed of the charges against him and be given an opportunity to challenge them. Throughout the war, thousands were arrested for disloyal acts. Although the U.S. Supreme Court eventually held the suspension edict to be unconstitutional, by the time the Court acted the Civil War was nearly over.
Election 1864
Lincoln vs. McClellan, Lincoln wants to unite North and South, McClellan wants war to end if he's elected, citizens of North are sick of war so many vote for McClellan, Lincoln wins.
Election of 1860
Lincoln, the Republican candidate, won because the Democratic party was split over slavery. As a result, the South no longer felt like it has a voice in politics and a number of states seceded from the Union.
1163. Charles Lindbergh (1902-1974), Spirit of St. Louis
Lindbergh flew his airplane, the Spirit of St. Louis, across the Atlantic in the first transatlantic solo flight.
38th Parallel
Line that divided Korea - Soviet Union occupied the north and United States occupied the south, during the Cold War.
1425. Literacy tests, grandfather clause, poll taxes, White primaries
Literacy tests: Voters had to prove basic literacy to be entitled to vote. Because of poor schools, Blacks were often prevented from voting. Grandfather clause: Said that a person could vote only if their grandfather had been registered to vote, which disqualified Blacks whose grandparents had been slaves. Poll taxes and White primaries were other methods used to keep Blacks from voting.
Huey Long
Louisianna Senator who opposed FDR's New Deal and came up with a , "Share the Wealth" wants to give $5k to all families ,was later assasinated
26th Amendment
Lowered the voting age from 21 to 18 because it was unfair that those eligible for draft were not eligible to vote
Takes over after Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnso
1960 VP
Lyndon B. Johnson
becomes president after Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
1198. Emergency Banking Relief Act, 1933
March 6, 1933 - FDR ordered a bank holiday. Many banks were failing because they had too little capital, made too many planning errors, and had poor management. The Emergency Banking Relief Act provided for government inspection, which restored public confidence in the banks.
1195. Hundred Days
March 9, 1933 - At Roosevelt's request, Congress began a special session to review recovery and reform laws submitted by the President for Congressional approval. It actually lasted only 99 days.
Hundred Days
March 9, 1933 - At Roosevelt's request, Congress began a special session to review recovery and reform laws submitted by the President for Congressional approval. It actually lasted only 99 days.
1474. My Lai, Lt. Calley
March, 1968 - An American unit destroyed the village of My Lai, killing many women and children. The incident was not revealed to the public until 20 months later. Lt. Calley, who led the patrol, was convicted of murder and sentenced to 10 years for killing 20 people.
1477. Bombing of Laos and Cambodia
March, 1969 - U.S. bombed North Vietnamese positions in Cambodia and Laos. Technically illegal because Cambodia and Laos were neutral, but done because North Vietnam was itself illegally moving its troops through those areas. Not learned of by the American public until July, 1973.
1965(1st)
Marines
Fall of Saigon
Marked the end of the Vietnam War in April, 1975. North Vietnamese invaded South Vietnam and captured the capital of Saigon, renaming it Ho Chi Minh City.
Leader of CR
Martin Luther King Jr.
Mary McLeod Bethune
Mary McLeod Bethune was a leader in the struggle for women's and black equality. She founded a school for black students that eventually became Bethune-Cookman University. She also served as an advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Rolling Thunder
Massive bombing campaign on NV
"Losing Ground"
Massive gov. expedentures associated with Johnson's initiatives, encouraged anti-social behavior. people abandoned the goals of marrying, settling down, and seeking jobs that would raise their income. created gov deficits and slowed economic growth, were the main criticisms of the "Great Society"
Marshall Plan
Massive transfer of aid money to help rebuild postwar Western Europe, intended to bolster capitalist and democratic governments and prevent domes- tic communist groups from riding poverty and misery to power. The plan was first announced by Secretary of State George Marshall at Harvard's commencement in June 1947
1222. Wagner Act
May 1935 - Replaced Section 7A of the NIRA. It reaffirmed labor's right to unionize, prohibited unfair labor practices, and created the National Labor Relations Board.
1217. Rural Electrificaion Committee (REA)
May 1936 - Created to provide loans and WPA labor to electric cooperatives to build lines into rural areas not served by private companies.
Works Progress Administration
May 6, 1935- Began under Hoover and continued under Roosevelt but was headed by Harry L. Hopkins. Provided jobs and income to the unemplyed but couldn't work more than 30 hours a week. It built many public buildings and roads, and as well operated a large arts project.
1405. Alaska, Hawaii
McKinley had purchased Alaska in 1867 for nine cents an acre and it was admitted to the Union in 1959. Alaska had great natural resources, including gold and oil reserves. Hawaii became the 50th state in 1959.
2 healthcares under Johnson
Medicare- elderly Mediaid- poor paid
3 Main fronts of WWII
Mediterranean (North Africa), Europe, and the Pacific
North Africa & Italy
Mediterranean Theater fighting took place here.
braceros
Mexican workers that were brought to America to work when so many men and women were gone from home during World War II that there weren't enough workers.
MANIA
Militarism Alliances Nationalism Imperialism Assassination
NATO
Military alliance of Western European powers and the United States and Canada established in 1949 to defend against the com- mon threat from the Soviet Union, marking a giant stride forward for European unity and American internationalism
Benjamin Butler
Military mayor of New Orleans during the Civil War, South hated because of the tactics he used/ called the "Beast"
Vietnamization
Military strategy launched by Richard Nixon in 1969. The plan reduced the number of American combat troops in Vietnam and left more of the fighting to the South Vietnamese, who were supplied with American armor, tanks, and weaponry.
Charles Francis Adams
Minister to Great Britain during the Civil War, he wanted to keep Britain from entering the war on the side of the South. Son of John Q. Adams.
freedom rides
Mixed-race buses that were organized by CORE, faced violence from the Ku Klux Klan
Samuel F.B. Morse
Morse developed a working telegraph which improved communications
1156. Cecil B. DeMille (1881-1959)
Motion picture producer and director, he was famous for Biblical films and epic movies.
Detroit
Motorcar Capital of America
John Breckenridge (1821-1875)
Nominated by pro-slavers who had seceded from the Democratic convention, he was strongly for slavery and states' rights.
1175. Causes of the depression
Much debt, stock prices spiralling up, over-production and under-consuming - the stock market crashed. Germany's default on reparations caused European bank failures, which spread to the U.S.
MAD
Mutually assured destruction
Ho Chi Minh
NV Leader, charismatic and lead a war of attrition against us
1165. Twenty-One Demands
Name for Japan's demands to the U.S., including its threat to close China to European and American trade. Resolved by the 1917 Lansing-Ishii Agreement, a treaty which tried to settle differences between the U.S. and Japan.
1464. Viet Cong
Name given to the guerilla fighters on the Communist side. The North Vietnamese Army (NVA) were regular troops.
1181. "Hooverville"
Name given to the makeshift shanty towns built in vacant lots during the Depression.
Nuremberg Trials
Name of war crimes trials which began in November 1945
Sojourner Truth
Name used by Isabelle Baumfree, one of the best-known abolitionists of her day. She was the first black woman orator to speak out against slavery. "Ain't I A Woman"
1152. Leopold and Loeb case
Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb were convicted of killing a young boy, Bobby Franks, in Chicago just to see if they could get away with it. Defended by Clarence Darrow, they got life imprisonment. Both geniuses, they had decided to commit the perfect murder. The first use of the insanity defense in court.
Leading exponent of black nationalism
Nation of Islam
NASA
National Aeronautic and Space Administration - 1958; to get US back in running with the Soviets in space race
NASA
National Air and Space Museum Space race
1192. Wickersham Commission
National Law Enforcement Commission, so named after its chair, George Wickersham, it was a national commission on law observance and enforcement created by Hoover in 1929. Its 1930 report recommended the repeal of Prohibition.
NOW
National Organization for Women, bringing omen into full participation in American society
Henry Kissinger
National Security Advisor and Secretary of State during the Nixon Administration, he was responsible for negotiating an end to the Yom Kippur War as well as the Treaty of Paris that led to a ceasefire in Vietnam in 1973
NSC-68
National Security Council recommendation to quadruple defense spending and rapidly expand peace-time armed forces to address Cold War tensions. It reflected a new militarization of American foreign policy but the huge costs of rearmament were not expected to interfere with what seemed like the limitless possibilities of postwar prosperity
McGeogre Bundy
National Security advisor, predicted inevitable defeat unless the US greatly increased military role.
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- progess of war development (nuclear)
Battle of Midway
Naval victory for the Allies that forced the Japanese fleet to go on the defensive
Germany (type of government)
Nazism
England & France involvement
Neither countries recognized the South as a formal country,w hich caused the South's economy to suffer.
Napoleon III
Nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte, and elected emperor of France from 1852-1870, he invaded Mexico when the Mexican government couldn't repay loans from French bankers. He sent in an army and set up a new government under Maximillian. He refused Lincoln's request that France withdraw. After the Civil War, the U.S. sent an army to enforce the request and Napoleon withdrew.
Leader of South Vietnam
Ngo Dinh Diem
Hanoi Hilton
Nickname for most well-known POW camp in North Vietnam; prisoners were treated brutally and tortured
The Big Three
Nickname of the leaders for the Allies
1151. Sacco and Vanzetti case
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were Italian immigrants charged with murdering a guard and robbing a shoe factory in Braintree, Mass. The trial lasted from 1920-1927. Convicted on circumstantial evidence, many believed they had been framed for the crime because of their anarchist and pro-union activities.
Kristallnacht?
Night of broken glass
Stalins Successor
Nikita Khrushev
The Little Rock Nine
Nine black students who attended Central High School in Little Rock, AK, under the Eisenhower-ordered protection of federal troops
1st president to go to China
Nixon
Election of 1968
Nixon against Humphrey, different running platforms. Wallace the independent gave them a run for their money. Nixon beat Humphrey in a landslide
Christmas Bombing
Nixon last attempt to win in Vietnam
Cambodia/Laos
Nixon's "secret war" in Vietnam as he continued to bomb communist targets in the neighboring countries of Cambodia and Laos after major American troop withdrawals in 1973.
"peace with honor"
Nixon's perception in war
Election 1972
Nixon- Republican George McGovern- Democrat John Hospers- Libertarian Winner: Nixon
NATO
North Atlantic treaty organization
Hiram R. Revels
North Carolina free black, he became a senator in 1870.
NVA
North Vietnamese Army
1463. Ho Chi Minh (1890-1969)
North Vietnamese leader who had lead the resistance against the Japanese during WW II and at the end of the war had led the uprising against the French Colonial government. He had traveled in Europe, was an ardent Communist, and became President of the North Vietnamese government established after the French withdrawal. Often called the George Washington of North Vietnam.
Viet Cong
North Vietnamese sympathizers who fought against the US using guerilla tactics
Gulf of Tonkin
North Vietnamese torpedo boats fired on American destroyer(Maddox)
1462. Geography: North and South Vietnam
North and South Vietnam were split at the 17th parallel. North Vietnam is bordered by the Gulf of Tonkin on the east and Laos on the west. South Vietnam is bordered by Laos and Cambodia on the west. West of Laos and Cambodia lays Thailand.
racial discrimination also in
North and West
Vietcong
North vietnamese
What type of song is John Brown's body?
Northern
What type of song is When John Comes Marching Home?
Northern
Operation Torch
Nov 1942, American forces landed in Morocco and Algeria, trapped the German & Italian armies between them and the British, forcing German and Italian troops to surrender.
1220. Recognition of the U.S.S.R.
November 1933 - In an effort to open trade with Russia, mutual recognition was negotiated. The financial results were disappointing.
1493. Lee Harvey Oswald, Warren Commission
November, 22, 1963 - Oswald shot Kennedy from a Dallas book depository building, and was later himself killed by Jack Ruby. Chief Justice Earl Warren ruled that they both acted alone.
1963
Nuclear test ban treaty Crisis is the " start of the end"
Bataan "Death March"
Occurred in Philippines when the Japanese invaded the island, forcing 76,000 U.S. and Filipino soldiers to surrender; 10,000 died in the forced march to prison camps
1406. Sputnik
October, 1957 - The first artificial satellite sent into space, launched by the Soviets.
1491. Trade Expansion Act, 1962
October, 1962 - The Act gave the President the power to reduce tariffs in order to promote trade. Kennedy could lower some tariffs by as much as 50%, and, in some cases, he could eliminate them.
1467. National Liberation Front (NLF)
Official title of the Viet Cong. Created in 1960, they lead an uprising against Diem's repressive regime in the South.
Kent State
Ohio University where National Guardsmen opened fire on students protesting the Vietnam War on May 4,1970, wounding nine and killing four.
1242. Social Security Act
One of the most important features of the Second New Deal established a retirement for persons over 65 funded by a tax on wages paid equally by employee and employer.
1446. Malcom X
One-time pimp and street hustler, converted to a Black Muslim while in prison. At first urged Blacks to seize their freedom by any means necessary, but later changed position and advocated racial harmony. He was assassinated in February, 1965.
Letters continued...
Only reply to letter #1
Eugene Connor
Ordered police to meet marchers with orce
Japanese American Citizens League (JACL)
Organization for Japanese rights, filed lawsuits for lost property, challenged Alien Land Law, and lobbied Congress to allow Japanese to become full citizens
Southern Christian Leadership Conference
Organization formed by MLK in 1957; Aimed to mobilize the vast power of the black churches on behalf of black rights; Trained and tested African Americans for ability to remain calm so they could participate nonviolently in marches and "sit ins"
Mexican American Political Association (MAPA)
Organization that mobilized support for JFK and worked to elect Mexican American officials
Young Lords Organization (YLO)
Puerto Rican activist group that was inspired by the Black Panthers, worked to improve rights and living conditions of Puerto Ricans in New York and other cities.
1439. Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
Organized in the fall of 1960 by Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. as a student civil rights movement inspired by sit-ins, it challenged the status quo and walked the back roads of Mississippi and Georgia to encourage Blacks to resist segregation and to register to vote.
1225. Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), John L. Lewis
Originally formed by leaders within the AFL who wanted to expand its principles to include workers in mass produciotn industries. In 1935, they created coalation of the 8 unions comprising the AFL and the United Mine Workers of America, led by John L. Lewis. After a split within the organization in 1938, the CIO was established as a separate entity.
Little Rock Central High
Orval Faubus, the governor of Arkansas, mobilized the The National Guard to prevent nine black students from enrolling in Little Rock's Central High School. Confronted with a direct challenge to federal authority, Eisenhower sent troops to escort the children to their classes. The showdown at Little rock was a replay of nineteenth- century confrontations over "states' rights," and forced a reluctant eisenhower administration to assert the supremacy of federal power.
1428. Smith v. Allwright, 1944
Outlawed White primaries held by the Democratic Party, in violation of the 15th Amendment.
Battle of the Coral Sea
Pacific battle where the U.S. stopped the Japanese advance for the first time
Iwo Jima & Okinawa
Pacific islands where American and Japanese casualties were staggeringly high
Where did jewish people go after WWII
Palestine
1473. Daniel Ellsberg, Pentagon Papers
Papers were part of a top-secret government study on the Vietnam War and said that the U.S. government had lied to the citizens of the U.S. and the world about its intentions in Vietnam.
Most Favored Nation Clause
Part of RTA Act in 1834, allowed a nation to make a special agreement with another nation and give them a preferential low tariff rate.
The Hague
Part of the Netherlands that set up the world court to settle disputes between nations
the Three R's
Part of the New Deal; Relief, Recovery, Reform. Relief for immediate fixes (mostly for citizens), recovery to make the economy healthier, and reform for prevention
Republicans
Party that supported Lincoln and the Union. Mostly Northern states against slavery.
1193. Twenty-First Amendment
Passed February, 1933 to repeal the 18th Amendment (Prohibition). Congress legalized light beer. Took effect December, 1933. Based on recommendation of the Wickersham Commission that Prohibition had lead to a vast increase in crime.
1460. Voting Rights Act, 1965
Passed by Congress in 1965, it allowed for supervisors to register Blacks to vote in places where they had not been allowed to vote before.
National Security Act (1947)
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.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964
Passed under the leadership of Pres. Johnson, outlawed discrimination on the basis of sex, race, religion, or nationality. Also guaranteed access to public accommodations and schools
Reparations
Payments for war damages
Nonmilitary initiatives JFK created
Peace Corps, Space exploration
rationing
People in the United States were not allowed to buy unlimited amounts of gas, coffee, and other items. This term is called what?
Concentration Camps
People who opposed the Nazi government were sent to these locations to be watched, and punished by the government.
The Korean War
Phase 1- June 1950 North Korea invades South Korea Phase 2- united nation troops push back to Chinese borders Leader- MacArthur Phase 3- china gets in- MacArthur asks to have bomb used- pushed behind 38 parallel- Truman says no and sends in troops Phase 4- Truman fires MacArthur Phase 5- 1964 a truce is claimed and Truman claims victory in the name of containment
John T. Scopes
Physical Education teacher who was a biology substitute, accused of teaching evolution, "Monkey Trial"
Marshall plan
Plan is economic aid for any European country U.S. Provide aid to all European nations
Containment Policy
Policy introduced by Harry S. Truman after WWII that said the duty of the U.S. was to stop the spread of Totalitarianism (implying Communism); Defined the foreign policy for the period after WWII until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989
1490. Common Market
Popular name for the European Economic Community established in 1951 to encourage greater economic cooperation between the countries of Western Europe and to lower tariffs on trade between its members.
1177. Fordney-McCumber Tariff, 1922
Pushed by Congress in 1922, it raised tariff rates.
1173. Dawes Plan, Young Plan
Post-WW I depression in Germany left it unable to pay reparation and Germany defaulted on its payments in 1923. In 1924, U.S. Vice President Charles Dawes formulated a plan to allow Germany to make its reparation payments in annual installments. This plan was renegotiated and modified in 1929 by U.S. financier Owen Young.
Mobilized
Prepared its military forces for war
Domino Theory
President Eisenhower's theory that if Vietnam fell to the Communists other countries would also soon fall to the Communists: like dominoes. Therefore, it was important to keep Vietnam from falling to the Communists
1499. Dominican Republic, 1965
President Johnson sent 20,000 American troops to the island to keep a leftist government from coming to power.
New Frontier
President Kennedy's nickname for his domestic policy agenda. Buoyed by youthful optimism, the program included proposals for the Peace Corps and efforts to improve education and health care.
Great Society
President Lyndon Johnson's term for his domestic policy agenda. Billed as a successor to the New Deal, this aimed to extend the postwar prosperity to all people in American society by promoting civil rights and fighting poverty. Its programs included the War on Poverty, which expanded the Social Security system by creating Medicare and Medicaid to provide health care for the aged and the poor. Johnson also signed laws protecting consumers and empowering community organizations to combat poverty at grassroots levels.
Nixon Doctrine
President Nixon's plan for "peace with honor" in Vietnam. It stated that the United States would honor its existing defense commitments but, in the future, countries would have to fight their own wars
Vietnamization
President Richard Nixon's strategy for ending U.S involvement in the Vietnam War; involved a gradual withdrawal of American troops and allowing the South Vietnamese to fight for themselves.
Fair Deal Program
President Truman's extensive social program introduced in his 1949 message to Congress. Republicans and Southern Democrats kept much of his vision from being enacted, except for raising the minimum wage, providing for more public housing, and extending old-age insurance to many more beneficiaries under the Social Security Act
Truman Doctrine
President Truman's extensive social program introduced in his 1949 message to Congress. Republicans and Southern Democrats kept much of his vision from being enacted, except for raising the minimum wage, providing for more public housing, and extending old-age insurance to many more beneficiaries under the Social Security Act
1500. Salvador Allende
President of Chile from 1970 to 1973, a member of the Socialist Party, he attempted to institute a number of democratic reforms in Chilean politics. He was overthrown and assassinated in 1973 during a military coup lead by General Augusto Pinochet.
Ton Duc Thang
President of North Vietnam after Ho Chi Minh died in 1969
1409. Philip Randolph
President of the Brotherhood of Car Porters and a Black labor leader, in 1941 he arranged a march on Washington to end racial discrimination.
Roosevelt
President of the US during almost all of WWII
Gerald Ford
President of the United States who was appointed vice president when Spiro Agnew resigned in the fall of 1973. He succeeded to the presidency upon Nixon's resignation in August 1974 and focused his brief administration on containing inflation and reviving public faith in the presidency. He was defeated narrowly by Jimmy Carter in 1976
Woodrow Wilson
President who asked congress to declare war on Germany
Tojo
Prime Minister of Japan during WWII
Otto von Bismarck
Prime Minister of Prussia, and later Germany - master manipulator, wanted to unify Germany so he caused a war
The buck stops here!
Problems are resolved here. "A lot of people try to pass problems to other people. At my desk, however, the buck stops here."
New England Emigrant Aid Company
Promoted anti-slavery migration to Kansas. The movement encouraged 2600 people to move.
Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO)
Promoted unions and labor rights, esp. for Mexican Americans in the 1930's and 40's
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
Protest organization founded by the Fellowship of Reconciliation, inspired Americans to join the civil rights movement and adopted nonviolent disobedience
Montgomery bus boycott
Protest, sparked by Rosa Parks's defiant refusal to move to the back of the bus, by black Alabamians against segregated seating on city buses. The bus boycott lasted from December 1, 1955, until December 26, 1956, and became one of the foundational moments of the Civil Rights Movement. It led to the rise of Martin Luther King, Jr., and ultimately to a Supreme Court decision opposing segregated busing
National Banking Act 1863
Provided Union with a uniform currency.
1221. Section 7A of the NRA
Provided that workers had the right to join unions and to bargain collectively.
Public opinion on war
Public would see the carnage on TV, and in 1965 they formed activist groups to protest
1492. Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, 1963
Reacting to Soviet nuclear tests, this treaty was signed on August 5, 1963 and prohibited nuclear testing undersea, in air and in space. Only underground testing was permitted. It was signed by all major powers except France and China.
Agricultural Adjustment Act
Recovery: (AAA); May 12, 1933; restricted crop production to reduce crop surplus; goal was to reduce surplus to raise value of crops; farmers paid subsidies by federal government; declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in US vs Butler on January 6, 1936
Spheres of influence
Region in which political and economic control is exerted by on European nation to the exclusion of all others. Spheres of influence appeared primarily in the East, and also in Africa.
Election of 1860: candidates, parties, issues
Republican - Abraham Lincoln. Democrat - Stephen A. Douglas, John C. Breckenridge. Constitutional Union - John Bell. Issues were slavery in the territories (Lincoln opposed adding any new slave states).
"bloody shirt"
Republican campaign tactic that blamed the Democrats for the Civil War; it was used successfully in campaigns from 1868 to 1876 to keep Democrats out of public office, especially the presidency.
Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy
Republican senator who accused hundreds of Democrats as being Communists, His philosophy flourished in the seething Cold War atmosphere of suspicion and fear, Red-hunter who was the most ruthless and did the most damage to American traditions of fair play and free speech, Removed from the Senate when he attacked the the US Army
Election of 1900: candidates, issues
Republican, William McKinley defeated Democrate, Williams Bryan. The issue was imperialism.
1456. White Backlash
Resistance to Black demands led by "law and order" advocates whose real purpose was to oppose integration.
Black Codes
Restrictions on the freedom of former slaves, passed by Southern governments.
Berlin blockade
Results: Cold War got worse East- the German Democratic Republic/ west- federal republic of germany NATO and the Warsaw Pact created
Nobel Peace Prize
Rewarded each year to those individuals who work advanced the cause of peace. Alfred Nobel made this.
Election 1968
Richard Nixon- Republican Hubert Humphery- Democrat George Wallace- American Independent Winner: Nixon
Capitals of Confederacy
Richmond, VA Danville, VA Montgomery, AL
JFK's Sec. of Defense
Robert McNamara
Sec. Defense
Robert McNamara
Roosevelt's Big Stick Diplomacy
Roosevelt said, "walk softly and carry a big stick." In international affairs, ask first but bring along a big army to help convince them. Threaten to use force, act as international policemen. It was his foreign policy in Latin America.
destroyers for bases deal
Roosevelt's compromise for helping Britain as he could not sell Britain US destroyers without defying the Neutrality Act; Britain received 50 old but still serviceable US destroyers in exchange for giving the US the right to build military bases on British Islands in the Caribbean.
Frances Perkins
Roosevelt's secretary of labor (1993-1945); the first woman to serve as a federal Cabinet officer, she had a great influence on many New Deal programs, most significantly the Social Security Act.
1949
Russia developed the atomic bomb
Battle of Tannenburg
Russia loses to Germany
Joseph Stalin
Russian leader who succeeded Lenin as head of the Communist Party and created a totalitarian state by purging all opposition
Battle of Tannenburg
Russian troops suffered one of worst defeat at this war
New left
SDS( students for a democratic society)
KNOW WHICH COUNTRY IS IN WHICH ALLIANCE
STUDY MAP!!!!!!!
appeasement
Satisfying the demands of dissatisfied powers in an effort to maintain peace and stability.
Pentagon Papers
Secret U.S. government report detailing early planning and policy decisions regarding the Vietnam War under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. Leaked to the New York Times in 1971, it revealed instances of governmental secrecy, lies, and incompetence in the prosecution of the war
Henry Stimson
Secretary of War during War World II who trained 12 million soldiers and airmen, the purchase and transportation to battlefields of 30 percent of the nation's industrial output and agreed to the building of the atomic bomb and the decision to use it.
Elihu Root
Secretary of War under Roosevelt, he reorganized and monderized the U.S. Army. Later served as ambassador for the U.S. and won the 1912 Nobel Peace Prize.
Harold Ickes
Secretary of the interior who headed the Public Works Administration, which aimed at long-range recovery by spending over $4 billion on some 34,000 projects that included public buildings, highways, and parkways
Watergate (1974)
Series of scandals that resulted in President Richard Nixon's resignation amid calls for his impeachment. The episode sprang from a failed burglary attempt at Democratic party headquarters in Washington's Watergate Hotel during the 1972 election.
Oct. 16
Sets up excomm
new terms in Feminist movement and goals
Sexism,male chauvinism, and they wanted child care, equal pay, and reproduction rights
Kate Millet awareness
Sexual Politics
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935), Women and Economics
She urged women to work outside the home to gain economic independence. Attacked the traditional role of homemaker for women.
Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
She wrote the abolitionist book, Uncle Tom's Cabin. It helped to crystalize the rift between the North and South. It has been called the greatest American propaganda novel ever written, and helped to bring about the Civil War.
The Italian Campaign
Sicily, Salerno, Anzio
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Signed this with Germany ending Russian participation in WW1
Guadalcanal
Site of the US's first invasion of Japanese-held territory. August 1942. Protecting Australia and New Zealand. Horrendous losses on both sides.
Fort Sumter
Site of the opening engagement of the Civil War. On December 20, 1860, South Carolina had seceded from the Union, and had demanded that all federal property in the state be surrendered to state authorities. Major Robert Anderson concentrated his units at Fort Sumter, and, when Lincoln took office on March 4, 1861, Sumter was one of only two forts in the South still under Union control. Learning that Lincoln planned to send supplies to reinforce the fort, on April 11, 1861, Confederate General Beauregard demanded Anderson's surrender, which was refused. On April 12, 1861, the Confederate Army began bombarding the fort, which surrendered on April 14, 1861. Congress declared war on the Confederacy the next day.
Thurgood Marshall
Skilled attorney and first black supreme court justice, argued most of the NAACP's important cases
What type of song is The Drinking Gourd?
Slave
What type of song is the Hammer Song?
Slave
William Faulkner
Soldier's Pay (1926) - bitter war novel, The Sound and the Fury (1929) and As I Lay Dying (1930)
1241. Second New Deal
Some thought the first New Deal (legislation passed in 1933) did too much and created a big deficit, while others, mostly the elderly, thought it did not do enough. Most of the 1933 legislation was ineffective in stopping the Depression, which led F. D. R. to propose a second series of initiatives in 1935, referred to the Second New Deal.
ARVN
South Vietnamese Army
How battles named
South- nearest town North- nearest body of water
What type of song is Dixie?
Southern
What type of song is Goober Peas?
Southern
1413. Rural South vs. Urban North
Southern communities were more rural and Northern communities more urban.
Ideological struggle
Soviet and eastern bloc nations (iron curtain)- goal was to spread world wide communism US and western democracies- goals was the containment of communism and the collapse of the communist world (George Keenan)
What was spotted in Cuba in 1962
Soviet built bases with missiles
Sputnik
Soviet satellite first launched into Earth orbit on October 4, 1957. This scientific achievement marked the first time human beings had put a man-made object into orbit and pushed the USSR noticeably ahead of the United States in the Space Race.
Berlin Crisis
Soviets tried to remove the Allies from Berlin by cutting off access to the city
What happened to post war Germany?
Split into west and easy Germany Each of the four got a section. Berlin surrounded by soviet zone
Propaganda
Spreading of ideas to promote a cause or damage an opposing cause
Cuban missile crisis
Standoff between John F. Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in October 1962 over Soviet plans to install nuclear weapons in Cuba. Although the crisis was ultimately settled in America's favor and represented a foreign policy triumph for Kennedy, it brought the world's superpowers perilously close to the brink of nuclear confrontation.
Northern Blockade
Starting in 1862, the North began to blockade the Southern coast in an attempt to force the South to surrender. The Southern coast was so long that it could not be completely blockaded. (Part of the Anaconda Plan).
Border states
States bordering the North: Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri. They were slave states, but remained part of the Union throughout the war
SALT II
Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty agreement between Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev and American president Jimmy Carter. Despite an accord to limit weapons between the two leaders, the agreement was ultimately scuttled in the U.S. Senate following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979.
SALT I
Strategic Arms Limiting Treaty, first step in ending Cold war arms race
Levittown
Suburban communities with mass-produced tract houses built in the New York and Philadelphia metropolitan areas in the 1950s by William Levitt and Sons. Typically inhabited by white middle-class people who fled the cities in search of homes to buy for their growing families
Ho Chi Minh Trail
Supply route from North Vietnam to Viet Cong in South Vietnam
Immigration & Naturalization Service v. Chadha
Supreme Court case (1983); Congress had passed an immigration statute, and the President had signed it into law. It granted an administrative agency certain powers, but also included a provision for a legislative veto that allows either the Senate or the House to overrule administrative decisions with a simple majority vote. The veto did not require a presidential signature in order to be effective. The Supreme Court declared the Act to be unconstitutional because the Constitution requires Presidential approval before an act of Congress can become law, moreover, both Houses of Congress must pass a bill before it is presented to the President.
Dred Scott Decision
Supreme Court decision that deemed the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional, declared slaves to be "property" that could not be removed without due process (Fifth Amendment).
1430. Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company v. Sawyer, 1952
Supreme Court decision which restricted the powers of the president and the executive branch.
McLaurin v. Oklahoma 1950
Supreme court case ruling that universities could not segregate their black students from other students
Smith v. Allwright 1944
Supreme court case ruling that white primaries were unconstitutional, led by Marshall
Brown v. Board of Education 1954
Supreme court ruling, as led by Marshall, that the separate but equal doctrine was not applicable to schools and that public schools would be immediately integrated. Culmination of the NAACP's legal strategy
Tet Offensive
Surprise attack by NVA and Viet Cong on major cities in the South during a Vietnamese holiday; military victory for US, but political victory for V.C; was the turning point in the war. 1968
Alfred Nobel
Swedish inventor of dynamite, came to regret the military us of his invention
Whittaker Chambers
TIME magazine editor and former communist. Confessed to spying for the Soviet Union during the 1930's. Named fellow spies, some of them in Roosevelt's cabinet.
Austin Peay
TN govenor; March 21, 1925 signed Butler bill
Butler Act
TN law prohibiting teaching of evolution in schools; unsuccessfully challenged by the Scopes Monkey trial; repealed in 1967
Confederate States
TX, LA, AR, MS, AL, TN, GA, FL, SC, NC, VA
Slave states
TX, LA, AR, MS, AL, TN, GA, SC, FL, NC, VA (WV), MD, KY, MO, DE
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
Tantamount to a congressional declaration of war and cited it as a legal authorization for subsequent military action in Vietnam.
Kitchen debate
Televised exchange in 1959 between Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and American Vice President Richard Nixon. Meeting at the American National Exhibition in Moscow, the two leaders sparred over the relative merits of capitalist consumer culture versus Soviet state planning. Nixon won applause for his staunch defense of American capitalism, helping lead him to the Republican nomination for president in 1960
Solid South
Term applied to the one-party (Democrat) system of the South following the Civil War. For 100 years after the Civil War, the South voted Democrat in every presidential election.
Black Hand
Terrorist group by Bosnian Servs
1486. New Frontier
The "new" liberal and civil rights ideas advocated by Kennedy, in contrast to Eisenhower's conservative view.
Marbury v. Madison
The 1803 case in which Chief Justice John Marshall and his associates first asserted the right of the Supreme Court to determine the meaning of the U.S. Constitution. The decision established the Court's power of judicial review over acts of Congress, (the Judiciary Act of 1789).
Mapp v. Ohio
The 1961 Supreme Court decision ruling that the *Fourth Amendment's* protection against unreasonable searches and seizures must be extended to the states as well as to the federal government.; *due process clause*
Gideon v. Wainwright
The 1963 Supreme Court decision holding that anyone accused of a felony where imprisonment may be imposed, however poor he or she might be, has a right to a lawyer.
Wesberry v. Sanders
The 1964 case in which the Supreme Court invalidated unequal congressional districts, saying that all legislative districts must contain about equal numbers of people. The ruling is popularly known as the principle of one person, one vote.
Lemon v. Kurtzman
The 1971 Supreme Court decision that established that aid to church-related schools must (1) have a secular legislative purpose; (2) have a primary effect that neither advances nor inhibits religion; and (3) not foster excessive government entanglement with religion.
American/Know Nothing Party
a former political party active in the 1850s to keep power out of the hands of immigrants and Roman Catholics (called nativists)
Roe v. Wade
The 1973 Supreme Court decision holding that a state ban on all abortions was unconstitutional. The decision forbade state control over abortions during the first trimester of pregnancy, permitted states to limit abortions to protect the mother's health in the second trimester, and permitted states to protect the fetus during the third trimester.
United States v. Nixon
The 1974 case in which the Supreme Court unanimously held that the doctrine of executive priveledge was implicit in the Constitution but could not be extended to protect documents relevant to criminal prosecutions
Gregg v. Georgia
The 1976 Supreme Court decision that upheld the constitutionality of the death penalty, stating, "It is an extreme sanction, suitable to the most extreme of crimes." The court did not, therefore, believe that the death sentence constitutes cruel and unusual punishment.
Iranian hostage crisis
The 444 days, from November 1979 to January 1981, in which American embassy workers were held captive by Iranian revolutionaries. The Iranian Revolution began in January 1979 when young Muslim fundamentalists overthrew the oppressive regime of the American-backed shah, forcing him into exile. Deeming the United States "the Great Satan," these revolutionaries triggered an energy crisis by cutting off Iranian oil. The hostage crisis began when revolutionaries stormed the American embassy, demanding that the United States return the shah to Iran for trial. The episode was marked by botched diplomacy and failed rescue attempts by the Carter Administration. After permanently damaging relations between the two countries, the crisis ended with the hostages' release the day Ronald Reagan became president, January 20, 1981
Cold War
The 45-year-long diplomatic tension between the United States and the Soviet Union that divided much of the world into polarized camps, capitalist against communist. Most of the international conflicts during that period, particularly in the developing world, can be traced to the competition between the United States and the Soviet Union
Alabama
The Alabama was a British-made vessel which fought for the Confederacy, destroying over 60 Northern ships in 22 months,
"Powder Keg of Europe"
The Balkans
1230. Keynesian Economics
The British economist John Maynard Keynes believed that the government could pull the economy out of a depression by increasing government spending, thus creating jobs and increasing consumer buying power.
"cash-and-carry" plan
The Cash and Carry plan allowed nations at war to purchase munitions if they paid cash and transported the goods on non-American ships.
1475. Hanoi, Haiphong
The Declaration of Independence by the Vietnamese was proclaimed in Hanoi on September 2, 1945. Haiphong is Hanoi's harbor.
HUAC
The House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) was an investigating committee which investigated what it considered un-American propaganda,
Panama Revolution
The Isthmus of Panama had been part of Columbia. U.S. tried to negotiate with Columbia to build the Panama Canal. Columbia refused, so U.S. encouraged Panama to revolt. Example of Big Stick diplomacy.
Laird Rams
The Laird rams were ships specifically designed to break blockades; the English prevented them from being sold by a British manufacturer to the South after vocal union protests.
Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini
The Muslim religious leader who dominated the 1979 Iranian revolution
1204. National Recovery Administration, "The Blue Eagle"
The NRA Blue Eagle was a symbol Hugh Johnson devised to generate enthusiasm for the NRA codes. Employers who accepted the provisions of NRA could display it in their windows. The symbol showed up everywhere, along with the NRA slogan "We Do Our Part."
Financing of the war effort by North and South
The North was much richer than the South, and financed the war through loans, treasury notes, taxes and duties on imported goods. The South had financial problems because they printed their Confederate notes without backing them with gold or silver.
1167. Versailles Conference, Versailles Treaty
The Palace of Versailles was the site of the signing of the peace treaty that ended WW I on June 28, 1919. Victorious Allies imposed punitive reparations on Germany.
Cordell Hull
The Secretary of State who believed that trade was a two-way street, that a nation can sell abroad only as it buys abroad, that tariff barriers choke off foreign trade, and that trade wars beget shooting wars. He was one of the main contributors to the reciprocal trade policy of the New Dealers.
1236. Huey Long, Share the Wealth, Gerald K. Smith
The Share the Wealth society was founded in 1934 by Senator Huey Long of Louisiana. He called for the confiscation of all fortunes over $5 million and a 100% tax on annual incomes over $1 million. He was assassinated in 1935 and his successor Gerald K. Smith lacked the ability to be a strong head of the society.
The unreconstructed South
The South's infrastructure had been destroyed - manufacturing had almost ceased. Few banks were solvent and in some areas starvation was imminent. General Sherman had virtually destroyed large areas on his "march to the sea".
1497. Cuban Missile Crisis, 1963
The Soviet Union was secretly building nuclear missile launch sites in Cuba, which could have been used for a sneak-attack on the U.S. The U.S. blockaded Cuba until the U.S.S.R. agreed to dismantle the missile silos.
1483. Baker v. Carr, 1962
The Supreme Court declared that the principle of "one person, one vote" must be following at both state and national levels. The decision required that districts be redrawn so the each representative represented the same number of people.
1484. Gideon v. Wainwright, 1963
The Supreme Court held that all defendants in serious criminal cases are entitled to legal counsel, so the state must appoint a free attorney to represent defendants who are too poor to afford one.
Red River Campaign
Union leaders wanted to invade northeastern Texas from Louisiana along the red river. Didn't succeed. There were 2 battles before this: Battle of Pleasant Hill and Battle of Mansfield.
Army-McCarthy Hearings
The Trials in which Senator McCarthey accused the U.S. Army of harboring possible communists.These trials were one of the first televised trials in America, and helped show America Senator McCarthey's irresponsibility and meanness.
Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico, Cuba
The U.S. acquired these territories from Spain through the Treaty of Paris (1898), which ended the Spanish-American War.
1168. Washington Disarmament Conference, 1921-1922
The U.S. and nine other countries discussed limits on naval armaments. They felt that a naval arms race had contributed to the start of WW I. They created quotas for different classes of ships that could be built by each country based on its economic power and size of existing navies.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
The United States dropped the atomic bomb on these two cities helping to end World War 2.
Japan
The United States dropped two atomic bombs on which Axis nation to end World War 2?
women
The United States needed a lot of help during World War 2 in factories and need these people to work in factories to build weapons.
Iwo Jima and Okinawa
The United States took over these two islands and planned to invade the island of Japan.
1212. Works Progress Administration (WPA), Harold Hopkins, Federal Arts Project
The WPA started in May 1935 and was headed by Harold Hopkins. It employed people for 30 hours a week (so it could hire all the unemployed). The Federal Arts Project had unemployed artists painting murals in public buildings; actors, musicians, and dancers performing in poor neighborhood; and writers compiling guide books and local histories.
"Double V" campaign
The World War II-era effort of black Americans to gain "a Victory over racism at home as well as Victory abroad."
National Defense Education Act 1958
The act that was passed in response to Sputnik; it provided an opportunity and stimulus for college education for many Americans. It allocated funds for upgrading funds in the sciences, foreign language, guidance services, and teaching innovation.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur
The allied commander that carried out his program for the democratization of Japan, introducing a constitution that allowed for the denouncement of militarism, the introduction of women's equality, and the introduction of a western-style government
Berlin Blockade
The blockade was a Soviet attempt to starve out the allies in Berlin in order to gain supremacy. The blockade was a high point in the Cold War, and it led to the Berlin Airlift.
Freedman's Bureau
The bureau's focus was to provide food, medical care, administer justice, manage abandoned and confiscated property, regulate labor, and establish schools.
1202. National Industry Recovery Act (NIRA)
The chief measure to promote recovery was the NIRA. It set up the National Recovery Adminstration and set prices, wages, work hours, and production for each industry. Based on theory that regulation of the economy would allow industries to return to full production, thereby leading to full employment and a return of prosperity.
Ho Chi Minh City
The city that replaced Saigon after it fell communist
Popular Sovereignty
The doctrine that stated that the people of a territory had the right to decide their own laws by voting. In the Kansas-Nebraska Act, popular sovereignty would decide whether a territory allowed slavery.
Conscription
The draft
1478. Vietnamization
The effort to build up South Vietnamese troops while withdrawing American troops, it was an attempt to turn the war over to the Vietnamese.
Sunbelt
The fifteen-state crescent through the American South and Southwest that experienced terrific population and productivity expansion during World War II and particularly in the decades after the war, eclipsing the old industrial Northeast (the "Frost belt")
Potsdam Conference
The final wartime meeting of the leaders of the United States, Britain, and the Soviet Union was held at Potsdamn, outside Berlin, in July, 1945. Truman, Churchill, and Stalin discussed the future of Europe but their failure to reach meaningful agreements soon led to the onset of the Cold War.
Fletcher v. Peck
The first case in which the Supreme Court ruled a state law unconstitutional, the decision also helped create a growing precedent for the sanctity of legal contracts, and hinted that Native Americans did not hold title to their own lands -Judicial review
1196. "Relief, recovery, reform"
The first step in FDR's relief program was to establish the Civilian Conservation Corps in April, 1933. The chief measure designed to promote recovery was the National Industrial Recovery Act. The New Deal acts most often classified as reform measures were those designed to guarantee the rights of labor and limit the powers of businesses.
Zoot Suit Riots
The harassment of Mexican youth by American sailors during WWII.
1171. World Court
The judicial arm of the League of Nations, supported by several presidents.
Henry Kissinger
The main negotiator of the peace treaty with the North Vietnamese; Secretary of State during Nixon's presidency (1970s).
Abolitionism
The militant effort to do away with slavery. It had its roots in the North in the 1700s. It became a major issue in the 1830s and dominated politics after 1840. Congress became a battleground between pro and anti-slavery forces from the 1830's to the Civil War. Some major abolitionists include Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Grimke Sisters, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Harriet Tubman, William Lloyd Garrison, etc.
Bataan Death March
The name for the 65 mile march endured by U.S. and Filipino prisoners after the surrenders at the Bataan Peninsula and Corregidor
Black Hand
The name of the terrorist group
1228. Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins
The nation's first woman cabinet member.
Conscription draft riots
The poor were drafter disproportionately, and in New York in 1863, they rioted, killing at least 73 people, including many blacks who they blamed for their plight.
Lecompton Constitution
The pro-slavery constitution suggested for Kansas' admission to the union. It was rejected after widespread Southern cheating forced a revote but created bitterness on part of the South.
Ostend Manifesto
The recommendation that the US offer Spain $20 million for Cuba. It was not carried through in part because the North feared Cuba would become another slave state
Civil Rights Act of 1964
against job discrimination, also prohibited racial discrimination in all public accommodations, such as hotels
Charles Sumner
The same senator who had been caned by Brooks in 1856. Sumner returned to the Senate after the outbreak of the civil war. He was the formulator of the state suicide theory, and supporter of emancipation. He was an outspoken radical republican involved in the impeachment of Andrew Johnson.
Manhattan Project
The secret research project that developed the Atomic Bomb
Quarantine speech
The speech was an act of condemnation of Japan's invasion of China in 1937 and called for Japan to be quarantined. FDR backed off the aggressive stance after criticism, but it showed that he was moving the country slowly out of isolationism.
1226. Sit-down strikes
The strikers occupied the workplace to prevent any production.
"McCarthyism"
The term associated with Senator Joseph McCarthy who led the search for communists in America during the early 1950s through his leadership in the House Un-American Activities Committee.
McCarthyism
The term associated with Senator Joseph McCarthy who led the search for communists in America during the early 1950s through his leadership in the House Un-American Activities Committee.
"Hawks and Doves"
The war at home was between the people that supported the war and those who wanted peace.
Keynesian economics
Theory based on the principles of John Maynard Keynes, stating that government spending should increase during business slumps and be curbed during booms.
Ida Tarbell (1857-1944), History of the Standard Oil Company
This 1904 book exposed the monpolistic practices of the Standard Oil Company. Strengthened the movement for outlawing monopolies. A muckraker novel.
John McCain
This Republican senator was a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War
F. Scott Fitzgerald
This Side of Paradise (1920), The Great Gatsby (1925)
Battle of the Bulge
This battle was the last time that Hitler attacked the Allied forces.
Gibbons v. Ogden
This case involved New York trying to grant a monopoly on waterborne trade between New York and New Jersey. Judge Marshal, of the Supreme Court, sternly reminded the state of New York that the Constitution gives Congress alone the control of interstate commerce. Marshal's decision, in 1824, was a major blow on states' rights. -Congress has the right to regulate commerce
African-Americans
This group of people had racial-barriers removed during World War 2 and were not discriminated against in the government.
Japanese
This group of people were sent to internment camps during World War 2 in the United States.
1459. Civil Rights Act of 1964, Public Accommodations Section of the Act
This portion of the Act stated that public accommodations could not be segregated and that nobody could be denied access to public accommodation on the basis of race.
Massachusetts 54th
This regiment was one of the first official black units in the United States armed forces led by white officers, they earned honor and respect for fighting even after sustaining heavy losses
anti-semitic
This term describes when someone does not like Jewish people.
1211. Public Works Administration (PWA), Harold Ickes
Under Secertary of the Interior Harold Ickes, the PWA distributed $3.3 billion to state and local governments for building schools, highways, hospitals, ect.
Armistice
agreement to end fighting
U-2 incident
This took place under Eisenhower's administration just before the "summit conference" in Paris scheduled for May 1960. The American U-2 spy plane was shot down over Russia. Eisenhower was forced to step up and assume personal responsibility for the incident. Francis Gary Powers was the pilot who was captured by the Russians, but later returned. The incident kept Khrushchev from meeting with Eisenhower.
Normandy
This was the city in France where the United States landed during D-Day.
Manhattan Project
This was the code name given to the development of the atomic bomb.
Jewish
This was the main target of Hitler's hate during the Holocaust. 6 million of these people were killed.
aryan
This was the name of Hitler's master race who had blond hair, blue eyes, and an athletic build.
V-E Day
This was the name of the day that the United States celebrated the end of fighting in Europe.
V-J Day
This was the name of the day the the United States celebrated the end of the fighting in Japan.
Kristallnacht
This was the name of the night that Jewish stores, synagogues, and possessions were destroyed. Over 400 million dollars of damage was done on this day.
final soluation
This was the nickname that Hitler gave his plan to kill all Jewish and unwanted people in Europe.
Reason for interning Japanese-Americans in concentration camps in America
Thought Japanese-Americans were spying and sending information back to Japan.
Battle of Cold Harbor
Thousands of Union soldiers were killed or wounded in a hopeless frontal assault against the fortified troops of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. However, Grant was once again able to pull off to the left and continue south to Petersburg. Known as Grant's worst mistake.
Democracy, efficiency, pragmatism
Three characteristics that the U.S. felt made them superior to other countries. Many U.S. cities in the 1900 to 1920 instituted modern "scientific" political systems, such as the use of professional city managers, to replace inefficient traditional machine politics. The U.S. tried to spread there ideas abroad.
1170. 5-3-1 ration
Tonnage ratio of the construction of large ships, it meant that Britain could only have 1 ship for every 3 ships in Japan, and Japan could only have 3 ships for every 5 ships in the U.S. Britain, U.S. and Japan agreed to dismantle some existing vessels to meet the ratio.
Sherman's March to the Sea
Total War against civilians, burned homes and crops. Burned Atlanta and captured Savannah for Christmas present for Lincoln who had long sough such good news. Burned Columbia, SC before capturing the last Confederate rabble army at Fayetteville, (Bennent Place)
Bastonge
Town around which the Battle of the Bulge is fought.
SALT
Treaty signed in 1972 by the United States and the Soviet Union to slow the nuclear arms race
Paris Accords (1973 Peace Agreement)
Treaty that ended American involvement in Vietnam
pre-war alliances
Triple Alliance Triple Entente Great Britain and Belgium Russia and Serbia
Foreign policy for next 50 years
Truman doctrine Make an investment to contain communism Truman doctrine is containment Stop soviets from growing anymore
Battle of Gallipoli
Turkish troops tied down trapped allies on beaches
Oct. 26
Turns ships around. Khrushchev sends two letters
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
Two american citizens convicted of leaking atomic data to Moscow and were executed in peacetime for espionage
Battle of Midway
U.S. naval victory over the Japanese fleet in June 1942, in which the Japanese lost four of their best aircraft carriers. It marked a turning point in World War II.
Roosevelt Corollary
U.S. would act as international policemen. An addition to the Monroe Doctrine.
Oct 14, 1962
U2 spy plane takes a photo of Cuban nuclear bomb site Excomm- Kennedy- meet on the issue of Cuba
Peace Democrats
US Democrats who didn't support the war and hoped to reunite the states through negotiation. Also known as "Copperheads"
President Ford
US President during the Fall of Saigon
President Carter
US President who pardoned the draft dodgers and let them back into America without being arrested
President Johnson
US President who took a major role in escalating the Vietnam War and was the first president to send troops
Lyndon Baines Johnson
US Prez who increased US involvement in Vietnam using the Domino Theory as justification; lost popularity at home because of his inability to bring about an end to the war. Did not run again in 1968.
1235. Coalition of the Democratic Party: Blacks, unions, intellectuals, big city machines, South
Union took an active role providing campaign funds and votes. Blacks had traditionally been Republican but 3/4 had shifted to the Democratic party. Roosevelt still recieved strong support from ethnic whites in big cities and Midwestern farmers.
Allied Powers
United Kingdom, France, Portugal, Italy, Belgium, Monte-Negro, Serbia, Greece, Romania, Russia
1427. Korematsu v. U.S., 1944
Upheld the U.S. government's decision to put Japanese-Americans in internment camps during World War II.
Code Talkers
Used the Naviho Indian language
1158. Rudolph Valentino (1895-1926), Charlie Chaplin
Valentino, a romantic leading man, was one of the most popular dramatic stars of silent films. Chaplin was a popular star of silent slap-stick comedies.
Lyndon Johnson
Vice president of JFK, assumed the presidency in 1963 after Kennedy was assinated
V-E Day
Victory in Europe
Dr. Sigmund Freud
Viennese physician, believed nervous and emotional illnesses came from sexual repression
Tet Offensive
Viet Cong attack on key South Vietnamese cities, including Saigon; revealed to Americans that the war was not ending soon; sparked anti-war sentiment
My Lai Incident
Village in South Vietnam where more than 300 unarmed civilians, including women and children, were massacred by US troops in May 1968.
Harry F. Byrd
Virginia senator who reacted strongly to the Brown ruling, calling it totalitarian in the name of socialism and communism
Franco-Prussian War
War between France and Prussia and was the real cause of WW1 and WW2 - Prussia wins
U.S.S. Oregon
Warship involved in Spanish-American blockade in Cuba in 1898. Went from Cuba to the Philippines by going around the Southern tip of South America. Showed that we need a better route between the Atlantic and the Pacific.
bracero
Wartime agreement between the United States and Mexico to import farm workers to meet a perceived manpower shortage; the agreement was in effect from 1941 to 1947.
1401. St Lawrence Seaway
Waterway to connect Great Lakes on the U.S./Canadian border to the Atlantic Ocean via the St. Lawrence River, it allowed better shipping and transportation, and improved international relations and trade.
1453. Watts, Detroit race riots
Watts: August, 1965, the riot began due to the arrest of a Black by a White and resulted in 34 dead, 800 injured, 3500 arrested and $140,000,000 in damages. Detroit: July, 1967, the army was called in to restore order in race riots that resulted in 43 dead and $200,000,000 in damages.
1960
We cut trade to Cuba Cuba nationalizes all us companies Bay of pigs- Kennedy's most embarrassing moments After: Castro asks Russia and Russia public-ally offer military aid to cuba
Theodore Weld (1802-1895)
Weld was devoted to the abolitionism movement. He advised the breakaway anti-slavery Whigs in Congress and his anonymous tract "American Slavery as It Is" (1839) was the inspiration for Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Harry S. Truman
What American president made the decision to drop two atomic bombs on Japan to end World War 2?
D-Day
What battle allowed the allies to enter the nation of France and was the turning point of the Western Front?
Midway
What battle in the Pacific was the turning point of the war after 4 Japanese aircraft carries were destroyed and the Japanese code was cracked?
Stalingrad
What battle stopped the Germans in the Soviet Union and proved to be the turning point on the Eastern Front?
Midway
What major battle is labeled with the number 1?
Stalingrad
What major battle is labeled with the number 1?
Battle of the Bulge
What major battle is labeled with the number 2?
Iwo Jima and Okinawa
What major battle is labeled with the number 2?
D-Day
What major battle is labeled with the number 3?
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
What major battle is labeled with the number 3?
El Alamein
What major battle is labeled with the number 4?
Pearl Harbor
What major battle is labeled with the number 4?
June 6, 1944
When did D-Day also known as Operation Overlord take place?
Bao Dai
When the French occupied Vietnam, he was appointed as the leader of a new government because he was a member of the Vietnamese royal family; really was a French puppet leader
December 7, 1941
When was Pearl Harbor unexpectedly attacked by the Empire of Japan?
U2 spy incident
When? 1960 Who? Col. Francis Gary powers' plane was shot down over soviet airspace Khrushchev demand an apology and admit we were spying Eisenhower will not apologize or admit
Assassination of April 1865
While sitting in his box at Ford's Theatre watching "Our American Cousin", President Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth.
Ku Klux Klan
White supremacy organization that intimidated blacks out of their newly found liberties
Japan
allied with Britain; used war as an excuse to seize outpost in Pacific and China
Ku Klux Klan
White-supremacist group formed by six former Confederate officers after the Civil War. Name is greek for "Circle of Friends". Group eventually reverted to terrorist attacks on blacks. The original clan was disbanded in 1869, but was later resurrected by white supremacists in 1915.
Northern segregation
Whites lived in suburbs while blacks in "ghettos"
commander of American troops
William Westmoreland
"Peace without victory."
Wilson's idea which opposed punishing the defeated powers
Republican Legislation passed in Congress after Southerners left: banking, tariff, homestead, transcontinental railroad.
With no Southerners to vote them down, the Northern Congressman passed all the bills they wanted to. Led to the industrial revolution in America.
WACS, WAVES and WASPs
Women in army, air and navy corps, doing emergency service, and nursing
James Buchanon
Won the Presidential election of 1856; he was a Democrat who believed each state should decided slavery or free for themselves; :He won ALL southern States! (except Maryland)
1916 Democratic Candidate
Woodrow Wilson
Dorothea Dix
Worked for prison reforms, created special institution for mentally ill, campaigned for better conditions in mental hospitals. During the Civil War, was the head of nurses.
Austria-Hungary
Worried it might foster rebellion amoung its people
Hollywood 10
Writers and directors who went to jail refusing to testify
1191. Twentieth Amendment
Written by George Norris and also called the "Lame Duck Amendment," it changed the inauguration date from March 4 to January 20 for president and vice president, and to January 3 for senators and representatives. It also said Congress must assemble at least once a year.
Ralph Nader
Wrote "Unsafe at Any Speed" expose about auto safety protect the right to safety in a workplace, to a healthy environment and safe consumer products
counter culture
YAF(young americans for freedom)
Berlin Airlift
Year-long mission of flying food and supplies to blockaded West Berliners, whom the Soviet Union cut off from access to the West in the first major crisis of the Cold War
Emmett Till
Young black boy who was brutally murdered after being seen talking to a white woman in a store. His killers were found innocent in court, and once safe from prosecution, admitted to the crime.
Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee
Youth organization founded by southern black students in 1960 to promote civil rights. Drawing on its members youthful energies, SNCC in its early years coordinated demonstrations, sit-ins, and voter registration drives.
Plessy v. Ferguson
a 1896 Supreme Court decision which legalized state ordered segregation so long as the facilities for blacks and whites were equal
Geneva Accords
a 1954 peace agreement that divided Vietnam into Communist-controlled North Vietnam and non-Communist South Vietnam until unification elections could be held in 1956 17th parallel
Roth v. United States
a 1957 Supreme Court decision ruling that obscenity is not within the area of constitutionally protected speech or press.
the Lusitania
a British passenger ship torpedoed by a u-boat on May 7, 1915, killing 128 Americans among 1200 passengers
Operation Rolling Thunder
a US bombing campaign began in 1965 and authorized by President Johnson. This tactical movement relentlessly bombed Vietcong-occupied land, destroying the landscape of hundreds of miles of land. However, the intricate and enormously large network of tunnels the guerrilla soldiers had built were largely unharmed, and it failed to stop the Vietcong from continuing to press on.
Bush v. Gore
a United States Supreme Court case heard on December 11, 2000. In a per curiam opinion, by a vote of 7-2, the Court held that the Florida Supreme Court's scheme for recounting ballots was unconstitutional, and by a vote of 5-4, the Court held that no alternative scheme could be established within the time limits established by Florida Legislature.[1]. The per curiam opinion was argued on the basis of Equal Protection.
Freedom Summer
a coalition of civil rights groups were enlisting young volunteers for a voter registration campaign in Mississippi for blacks, usually kids around college age
Family Assistance Plan
a complex package of different programs, would replace most welfare measures, including the controversial aid to families w/dependent children, was abandoned
Daniel Ellsberg
a dissident member of the national security bureaucracy, leaked to the press a top-secret history of US involvement in the Vietnam War
George C. Marshall
a former chief of staff and Secretary of State that was denounced by McCarthy as a communist
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
Entente Cordiale
a friendly understanding
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
a joint resolution by Congress which gave President Lyndon B. Johnson authorization, without a formal declaration of war by Congress, for the use of military force in Southeast Asia
draft
a law requiring people of a certain age to serve in the military
The 14 points
a list of terms in order to resolve present and future wars
Henry Cabot Lodge
a man who wanted to keep the united states out of the league of nations in order to keep the US out of future war
Fourteen Points
a peace plan made by Wilson in January 1918 before the war ended which was ment to prevent international problems from causing another war - included having a League of Nations, ending secret agreements, freedom of the seas, free trade, a limit on arms, and support for national self-determination
isolationism
a policy of avoiding political or military involvement with other countries
Eisenhower's "New Look" Foreign Policy
a policy of nuclear deterrence, it gave priority to inexpensive nuclear weapons while reducing the funding for the other military forces to keep pressure on the Soviet Union and reduce federal deficits at the same time.
unrestricted submarine warfare
a policy that the Germans announced in January 1917 which stated that their submarines would sink any ship in the British waters
Pan Slavism
a powerful form of nationalism=all Slavic people shared a common nationality
Union League of America
a pro-Union organization that that freedmen turned into a network of political clubs that educated members and campaigned for Rep. candidates. Also built black churches and schools , representing black grievances and offering protection against retaliation from whites.
Alger Hiss
a prominent ex-New Dealer and a distinguished member of the "eastern establishment" that was accused of being a communist agent and had to face the House UnAmerican Activities Committee
Taft-Hartley Act
a rollback of several pro-union provisions of the 1935 National Labor Relations Act. The secondary boycott and the union shop, labor rights that workers had fought hard for, were eventually dismantled by the Republican Party
Pacific Railway Act 1862
a series of acts of Congress that promoted the construction of the transcontinental railroad in the United States through authorizing the issuance of government bonds and the grants of land to railroad companies.
Attrition
a slow wear-down process
"Over There"
a song sung by soldiers going into battle and to bring up American spirit, written by George M. Cohan in 1917
World Bank
a specialized agency of the UN that makes loans to countries for economic development, trade promotion, and debt consolidation, it was created at the Bretton Woods conference for the purpose of rebuilding a war-torn world
"Rolling Thunder"
a sustained campaign of bombing in NV
bureaucracy
a system of managing government through departments run by appointed officials
Zimmerman telegram
a telegram fron the German secretary to a German minister in Mexico telling him to urge Mexico to attach the US if the US declared war on Germany, and Germany woud help Mexico win back its lost land in the states
Domino theory
a theory stating that if one country came under the influence of communism, then the surrounding countries would follow
Treaty of Versailles
a treaty between the Allies and Germany which forced Germany to take full blame for the war, pay $300 billion ($75 billion today) of reparations, limit its size of army, forced it to give Alsace-Lorraine back to France, and made it give up its overseas colonies to the control of France and Britain
Indemnity
a war debt - in this case, the French war debt from Franco-Prussian war (5 billion gold francs) - also in this case, the german war debt for WWI
State's Rights Democratic Party
a.k.a. Dixiecrats, southern democrats who, in reaction to Truman's activism for black rights, split off and supported Strom Thurmond
Prohibition
abolition of alcohol; supported by churches and women; authorized by the 18th Amendment (1919), ratified Volstead Act; hard liquor & home brew (bathtub gin) popular; "noble experiment;" positives- bank savings increased, absenteeism in industry decreased; negatives- crime; ended with the 21st Amendment (1933)
Lindbergh Law
after kidnapping of Charles A. Lindbergh's infant son; interstate abductin in certain circumstances=death-penalty offense
the "blank check"
after the assassination of the Archduke, Germany tells A-H that they have a blank check, meaning A-H can declare war on Serbia and do anything they want with Germany's support
"Search and Destroy" missions
against communist forces 50,000 military personnel, basically went to enemy places and destroyed everything and everyone
George 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.
George 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. Diplomat in Russia
Harlem Hell Fighters
an American army unit which consisted of African Americans, and was attached to the French Army
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.
SEATO
an Asian alliance set up by secretary Dulles on the model of NATO to help support the anti-communist regime in South Vietnam
selective service act
an act that required all men fron 21 to 30 to register for the military draft
National Security Council (NSC)
an advisory body established by the National Security Act of 1947 that also created the Department of Defense and Central Intelligence Agency
armistice
an agreement to stop fighting
"Peculiar Institution"
another name for slavery
William Jennings Bryan
ardent Presbyterian Fundamentalist; prosecutor in the Scopes Monkey Trial; died 5 days after trial
British Blockade
as war continues Britain uses naval strength to blockade German coast to prevent weapons and other military supplies from getting through to Germany
Gavrilo Princip
assassinated Ferdinand
Pearl Harbor
attack in Hawaii that caused the US to join WWII (Dec. 7 1941)
Gasoline Age
automobile industry created thousands of jobs (glass, highway construction, etc.), petroleum business prospered
stock market
became like gambling, bought stocks "on margin" - small down payments
Mellonites
believed high taxed discouraged business & brought smaller net return to Treasury
John Dewey
believed in "learning by doing" and "education for life", formed the foundation of the progressive education
No Man' Land
between the opposing forces
Conditions in Germany which contributed to Hitler's rise
bitterness over previous defeat, resentment over term os Treaty of Versailles,"war guilt", reparations, severe economic depression, and extreme patriotism of the people
Harlem
black community of NYC; contained 100,000 African-American residents in the 1920s; vibrant, creative culture
Harlem Rennaissance
black culture; argued for a "New Negro"- full citizen & social equal to whites
Liberty Bonds
bonds bought by Americans which lent their money to the government to pay for the war (they raised $21 billion, which is more than half of what was spent in total)
CREEP
campaign org separate from the republican party, with the ironic acronym of CREEP, secretly raised millions of dollars, much of it from illegal contributions
New Orleans occupation
captured by NORTH- David Farragut. He joind with Butler's army and sailed Union ships ascending and descending the MS river- narrowing it between Vicksburg, MS and Port HUdson, LA. This affected trade and was early in the war.
reparations
cash payments for losses suffered during the war
Tet Offensive
caught US military off guard and ill prepared to take advantage of enemy losses. serious psychological defeat for the US, because it undercut Johnson's claims about an imminent win
Herbert Hoover
chosen to be head of Food Administration and relied on cooperation rather than force - food will win the war!
Hiroshima
city in Japan that had over 100k deaths from the first dropping of an atomic weapon
Black work
cleaning cooking, in the back
Manhattan Project
code name for the secret United States project set up in 1942 to develop atomic bombs for use in World War II
John J. Pershing
commanded the AEF, and also, in 1916, sent American troops into Mexico to hunt down Francisco "Pancho" Villa
Cambodia's Khmer Rouge
communist guerrilla force in Cambodia, became a well-disciplined army. came to power and in a murderous attempt to eliminate potential dissent.
How did Soviets use American racism against America
compared the South's treatment of blacks to Nazi's treatment of Jews
Imperialism
competition for land
Triple Entente (Allies)
consisted of France, Britain and Russia
Triple Alliance (Central Powers)
consisted of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
coordinating urban revitalization programs
Office of Economic Opportunity
created by Congress to coordinate a multi-part program, that would give everyone the equal chance to live in decency and dignity
NSC
created by the National Security Act it was designed to advise the president on security matters
Bureau of the Budget
created in 1921; designed to prevent extravagant appropriations
Henry Ford
created the Model T and built an empire from his mechanical genius, concerned about impact of drinking on labor productivity
Medicaid
culminated efforts begun during the New and Fair deals
Robert S. McNamara
defense secretary under President Kennedy who pushed the strategy of "flexible response"; began to doubt the Vietnam War and was eased out of the cabinet
Hubert Humphrey
democratic presidential nominee
Schlieffen Plan
designed by General Alfred von Schlieffenand used to avoid a two-front war against France in the west and Russia to the east
General William Westmoreland
directed the US effort in Vietnam, recommended moving his troops out of their enclaves and sending them on "search and destroy" missions
Influenza
disease that killed more than 20 million after WWI
VISTA
domestic version of the peace corps; provided low-wage jobs for young people, authorized the creation of federally funded social programs
Fordism
economically effective methods of mass-production; assembly-line production; standardized mechanical parts
Volstead Act
enacted to reinforce 18th Amendment; government regulation of alcohol
Johnson's Greatest motivation
end poverty
Glass-Steagall Act
established the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and included banking reforms, some of which were designed to control speculation
speakeasy
establishment that illegally sold alcohol during Prohibition
Ku Klux Klan
extremist ultraconservative uprising against diversity; pro-white, pro-"native" American, pro-Protestant
Militarism
glorification for military
War Production Board
government agency that decided which companies would make war materials and how to distribute raw materials
Equal Rights Amendment
guarantee women the same legal rights as men
The 14th Ammendment
guaranteed equal protection for blacks
Social Security Act
guaranteed retirement payments for enrolled workers beginning at age 65; set up federal-state system of unemployment insurance and care for dependent mothers and children, the handicapped, and public health
The 15th Ammendment
guaranteed voting rights for blacks
Wilson's War Message to Congress
he asked congress to declare war on Germany because they were killing innocent people, and they've disturbed the peace of the people in the US - the world must be made safe for democracy
Sinclair Lewis
heavy-drinking journalist, Main Street (1920), Babbit (1922)
Jack Dempsey
heavyweight boxer champion, knocked out Georges Carpentier
Archduke Ferdinand
heir to Austrian throne
The Central Intelligence Agency
helped to overthrow Iran's premier after he seized control of British oil properties
Gutzon Borglum
high ranking Kansmen,famous for carvings at Stone Mountain and Mount Rushmore
Joseph ("Joe") King Oliver
his band was the first important black jazz ensemble
George H. ("Babe") Ruth
home-run hero for the Yankees
Atrocity
horrible acts against innocent people
Darwinism
idea that all living organisms developed through evolution
Security Council
important part of the United Nations it has to maintain international peace and security, it takes care of the establishment of peacekeeping organizations, the establishment of international sanctions, and the authorization of military action
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti
in 1921 convicted of murder of Massachusetts paymaster and his guard, executed in 1927 by electrocution
1st Russian Revolution
in March 1917, the Czar is overthrown and the Provisional government is established, which is democratic
League of Nations
included 40 nations; no fighting ( is now called the United Nations)
Securities and Exchange
independent agency which holds primary responsibility for enforcing the federal securities laws and regulating the securities industry, the nation's stock and options exchanges; regulates stock market
Malcolm X
inspired by the militant black nationalists in the Nation of Islam; changed his surname to advertise his lost African identity in white America; a brilliant and charismatic preacher who trumpeted black separatism; inspired the militant Black Panther party
"Johnson" Treatment
intimidate people into supporting what he wanted
Alfred Nobel
inventor of dynamite
Frederick W. Taylor
inventor; engineer; known for mastering the efficiency of stopwatch techniques; "Father of Scientific Management"
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)
investigate Communist influence in labor unions and New Deal agencies
Nye Committee
investigated arms manufacturers and bankers of World War I. Claimed they had caused America's entry into WWI. Public opinion pushed Congress to pass the Neutrality Acts to keep us out of WWII.
Otto von Bismarck
knew France wanted revenge against Germany; wouldn't attack without the help of Italy and Austria
My Lai Massacre
lead by Calley, entered into the small hamlet of My Lai and shot more than 200 people. mostly women and children were killed, became public in 1969
Black Power Movement
lead by Malcolm X, popularly know as the black muslims, used violence to get their point across
Lt. William Calley
lead the My Lai massacre was charged
Phyllis Shlafly
leader of the "stop era" conservative women
Dwight D. Eisenhower
leader of the Allied forces in Europe during WW2--leader of troops in Africa and commander in D-Day invasion-elected president-president during integration of Little Rock Central High School
Flexible response
military strategy under Kennedy which called for the development of an array of military "options" that could be precisely matched to the gravity of the crisis at hand; resulted in increased spending on military and a bolstering of the Special Forces (Green Berets)
blitzkrieg
military strategy used by Germany in WWII, "lightning war"
NLF
mounted surprise attacks through south vietnam
"Killing Field"
murdered more than 1 million cambodians
Enola Gay
name of the PLANE that dropped the first atomic bomb
Fat Man
name of the SECOND atomic bomb, dropped on Nagasaki
Kent State incident
national guard troops fired on demonstrators and killed 4 students
Medicare
nationally funded medical coverage for the elderly and for low income citizens.
"red scare" (1919-1920)
nationwide crusade against the radical left-wing
Japanese Internment
nearly 120,000 Japanese put to live in specific areas due to fear of them being enemies
Diplomacy
negotiation between nations
VE Day
nickname for the end of the war in Europe
VJ Day
nickname for the end of the war in the Pacific
William Dean Howells
nicknamed "The Dean of American Literature" editor of the Atlantic Monthly
How did Rosa Parks challenge Jim Crow
not giving up her seat to white man
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
nuclear attacks during World War II against the Empire of Japan by the United States of America at the order of U.S. President Harry S. Truman
Fundamentalism
old-time relgious extremism; anti-evolution
RFK's assassination
on June 4 just after midnight was shot in a Los Angeles Hotel
Greece
one of the counties that was helped by the Truman Doctrine in order to avoid it falling to the communist powers
Earth Day
one-day "happening" which featured art, music, and countercultural theatre-aimed to raise awareness about environmental degradation and popularize the science of ecology
jazz
originally New Orleans black music; W.C. Handy's "St. Louis Blues;" later industry spawned all-white bands
Hollywood
originally used for anti-German propaganda; movie capital of the world; silent films, "talkies," color films; actors more famous & larger salary than political leaders; vulgarity; American mainstream
Title VII
outlawed discrimination of employment because of race, religion, origin, and sex
24th amendment
outlawed poll taxing
War on Poverty
part of President Johnson's Great Society program; it expanded the Social Security system by creating Medicare and Medicaid to provide health care for the aged and the poor
Reparation
payment for war damage
Loyalty-Security Program
permit officials to investigate any employee of the federal government
Eugene O'Neill
playwright, Freudian notions of sex, Strange Interlude (1928)
the Arabic Pledge
pledge issued by Germany after Arabic ship was sunk (2 americans dead), which promises that no more passenger ships will be sunk without warming and without providing for rescue of passengers - pledged on Sept. 1, 1915
the Sussex Pledge
pledge issued by Germany to try to only target passenger ships, to only sink ships after it has been confirmed that the ship was carrying war goods of weapons and to make sure all passengers and crew were safely evacuated
T.S. Eliot
poet, influenced by Ezra Pound, "The Waste Land" (1922)
Robert Frost
poet, wrote about New England
George Wallace
political right, a southern democrat who ran for president as a 3rd party candidate in 1968. against civil rights, focused on counterculture, and the anti-war movement
Henry Kissinger
political scientist from Harvard, became Nixon's national security advisor and turned the NSC into the most powerful shaper of US foreign policy within the gov.
Brinkmanship
practice of pursuing a dangerous policy to the limits before stopping
Nikita Khrushchev
premier of Russia during the race to get satellites into space between Russia and the United States. He used many propaganda techniques to try to fool the world of Russia's intentions. President's Eisenhower and Kennedy dealt with his communist tricks in Berlin and Cuba.
Mobilize
preparing forces for war
"Cold War liberalism"
preserved the core programs of the New Deal welfare state, developed the containment policy to oppose Soviet influence throughout the world, and fought so-called "subversives" at home
Harry S Truman
president during the beginning of the Cold War that enforced containment and a fair deal
Dwight D. Eisenhower
president from 1953-1961; General during WW2
Lyndon B. Johnson
president who assumed the presidency after Kennedy's assassination in 1963l; his domestic policy included the program of Great Society, the War on Poverty, and civil rights legislation; he escalated of the Vietnam war
Truman
president who took over after FDR, decided to drop the atomic bomb
Richard Nixon
presidential nominee, who was promising to restore "law and order"
Nationalism
pride for one's country
Clarence Darrow
prominent evolution supporter; "Abandon Faith;" embrace new scientific ideas
Community Action Program
promised greater political power to grassroot activists, authorized citizen working through neighborhood orgs, to design community based projects that could be financed by Washington
Environmental Protection Agency
protected the environment and enforced environmental laws
Economic Opportunity Act 1964
provided free nursery schools to disadvantaged pre schoolers, VISTA( Volunteers in service to America)
Treaty of Versailles
put full blame of Germany for starting the war
appeasement
putting up with an agressor to keep peace; Britain and France did not stop Germany from conquering areas
How did JFK respond to Soviet bases in Cuba
quarantine all offensive military equipment
Immigration Act of 1924
quotas cut from 3% to 2%; marked the end of virtually unrestricted immigration; no Japanese immigrants; Canadians and Latin Americans exempt
Bob Dylan
reclusive singer-songwriter who spurred the revival of acoustic folk music during the early 1960's became one such figure after his music went electric
NSC-68
recommending the development of a hydrogen bomb, increasing U.S. conventional forces, establishing a strong system of alliances, and increasing taxes in order to finance defense building
Muhammad Ali
refused to be drafted and lost his Heavyweight title
Loyalty oaths
required of many groups of teachers, especially teachers, to avoid communists infiltrating the American system
Conscription
required young men to be ready for military of other services-"the Draft"
Clean Air Act 1970
requirement for higher smokestacks for factories, for example, moved pollutants higher into the atmosphere, where they produced a dangerous by-product, "acid rain". Cleared smog cities
Emergency Quota Act of 1921
restricted incoming European immigrants to a definite quota, 3% of the people of their nationality already living in the US
Roe vs. Wade
ruled that a state law making abortion a criminal offense violated a woman's right to privacy
Russian Revolution
russia
Ho Chi Minh
the Vietnamese leader who believed in Asian nationalism and anti-colonialism in his country. He was trying to get rid of the French colonial rule in Vietnam. Ho Chi Minh's beliefs were discouraged by the Cold War and he became increasingly communist. He led the North Vietnamese against the U.S. and the South Vietnamese. He was the American enemy in Vietnam.
Total War
the channeling of an entire nation's resources into a war effort
Joseph Stalin
the communist leader of the Soviet Union that instigated the Berlin Blockade
Battle of the Somme
the deadliest battle of WWI
November 11, 1918
the end of world war 1
Spanish Flu
the flu epidemic which spread in 1918, right after the end of WWI and killed over half a million Americans and over 30 million people in the world
League of Nations
the fourteenth point in Wilson's peace plan which called for a general association of nations, whose jobs would be to protect the independence of all countries
black power
the idea that blacks should strengthen their own economic and social communities rather than depending on the "good intentions" of whites for peace
military-industrial complex
the interconnection of corporate influence of political policy in the interest of producing armaments for global warfare
the Big Four
the leaders of the most important Allied nations - Woodrow Wilson (US), David Lloyd George (GB), Georges Clemenceau (France), and Vittorio Orlando (Italy)
Little Boy
the name of the FIRST atomic bomb, dropped on Hiroshima
epidemic
the rapid spread of a contagious disease among large numbers of people
sovereignty
the right of a nation to govern itself, and the ability of a state to govern its territory, free from control of its internal affairs by other states
self-determination
the right of national groups to have their own territory and forms of government
propaganda
the spreading of ideas that help a cause or hurt an opposing cause - each side waged a propaganda war in the US by picturing the other as savage beasts who kiled innocent civilians
Propaganda
the spreading of ideas to promote a cause or to damage a cause
Ho Chi Minh Trail
the trail that north vietnamese funneled supplies into SV
Human rights
they were granted to the people of the Soviet Satellite Nations in the Helsinki Accords
gangsterism
thrived during Prohibition; bootlegging, prostitution, gambling, narcotics; "protection money"
abdicate
to give up power or step down
Khrushev
took over after Stalin, wasn't an intellectual, not strong guy, he came from peasants, brilliant man that survived the ruthlessness of Stalin; He understood that he needed the support of the people; He took money from the industry and military and put it in consumer goods
The Pentagon Papers
top secret 7,000 page history of US involvement in the Vietnam War
Warsaw Pact
treaty signed in 1945 that formed an alliance of the Eastern European countries behind the Iron Curtain; USSR, Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania
The New Left
tried to distance its politics from those of the democratic party and that the old communist inspired left
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
twelve nations agreed that an armed attack against one of them would be considered an attack against all of them
Trenches
two parallel systems of deep, rat infested trenches crossed France
My Lai Massacre
us troops executed nearly 500 people (men, women, children) in My Lai
eugenics
use power of the state to improve racial, genetic, or biological health of community; Adolf Hitler, Theordore Roosevelt, Charles Van Hise
McCarran Internal Security Bill National Security Act
vetoed by Truman, it authorized the president to arrest and detain suspicious people during an "internal security emergency."
casualties
victims of war - the dead and injured
Students for a Democratic Society
wanted to create the "new left"
Ernest Hemingway
war writer, witnessed Italian front, The Sun Aslo Rises (1926), A Farewell to Arms (1929)
The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO)
was created in 1954 to complement the NATO alliance in Europe
Richard M. Nixon
was elected president in 1968 and 1972, representing the Republican party. He was responsible for getting the United States out of the Vietnam War by using "Vietnamization," which was the withdrawal of 540,000 troops from South Vietnam over an extended period. He was responsible for the "Nixon Doctrine" saying the U.S. would not supply American troops for foreign wars, and he took the United States off the gold standard also. He was involved in détente, which was a way to create eased relations between the United States and the communist countries of Moscow and Beijing. One of the most distinct factors relating to Nixon was that he was the first president to ever resign due to the Watergate scandal. He resigned on August 8, 1974.
Vladimir Lenin
was the leader of the Bolsheviks, who were responsible for the communist revolution
Poison Gas
weapons used in the war; killed thousands
War of Attrition
wear sown the enemy by killing small groups of people, until they finally decide they are sick of it and give up
Russian Civil War
when "white" anticommunists fought the "red" communists to decide how Russia would be governed
The Red Scare
when Americans were afraid of a communist revolution in America - when they followed A. Mitchell Palmer in apprehending suspected communists
British Blockade
when Britain blockaded Germany's ports so nothing could get in or out
First Battle of the Marne
when GB and France together beat Germany
"race to the sea"
when GB and France together went against Germany to build trenches around each other, which ended up extending straight out to the sea, to see which army could outflank the other (neither did)
trench warfare
when GB and France vs. Germany dug trenches to live/fight from for protection during the race to the sea
German "Peace Offensive"
when German troops gathered together near Amiens for an all-out attack on the Allies, which they hoped would be the final push to end the war, but the British troops camped there held on as they were pounded by canons, lasted 2 weeks and germans moved on - then, they tried another place and German troops got through Allied lines along the Aisne river and reached the Marne river - this is when American troops entered the war
2nd Russian Revolution
when Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks took over the Russian democratic government and turned Russia into a communist nation - in October/november 1917
America's "unknown war"
when Wilson got involved in the Russian civil war by sending money to help the "white" anticommunists and also sending American troops to Russia to try and help overthrow the communist revolution
Miranda Warning
when arresting officers recite your rights to you.1
stalemate
when neither side is winning - both sides losing
the "Great Migration"
when people from other parts of the country migrated north to fill the jobs of the men who had gone to war - factory jobs - many African Americans migrated for the jobs
Stagflation
when unemployment rises, prices should remain constant or even decline, yet both unemployment and inflation were rising. economists coined the term to describe this puzzling, unprecedented convergence
Woodrow Wilson
white supremacist, showed Birth of a Nation
Holocaust
wholesale destruction of life, especially by fire
"flapper"
women of the new generation; wore hair short, bobbed dresses, etc; search for independence
Uncle Tom's Cabin
written by harriet beecher stowe in 1853 that highly influenced england's view on the American Deep South and slavery. a novel promoting abolition. intensified sectional conflict.
Rachel Carson
wrote "Silent SPring" raised concerns that the pesticides used in agriculture, especially DDT, threatened bird populations
Betty Friedan
wrote Domestic Mystic, she persuaded women that they need to work outside home
John F. Kennedy
youngest president and first Catholic president ever elected; won the 1960 presidential election against Nixon; during his presidency, he sent the Green Beret (Marines) to Vietnam and helped develop the Peace Corps; his foreign policy was Flexible Response and his domestic program was the New Frontier; he was assassinated on November 22, 1963
Ronald Reagan
40th President of the US. He ran on a campaign based on the common man and "populist" ideas. He served as governor of California from 1966-1974, and he participated in the McCarthy Communist scare. Iran released hostages on his Inauguration Day in 1980. While president, he developed his own form of economics, the trickle-down effect of government incentives. He cut out many welfare and public works programs. He used the Strategic Defense Initiative to avoid conflict. His meetings with Gorbachev were the first steps to ending the Cold War. He was also responsible for the Iran-contra Affair which bought hostages with guns.
Perestroika
An economic policy adopted in the former Soviet Union. Intended to increase automation and labor efficiency but it led eventually to the end of central planning in the Russian economy.
William Clinton
First baby boomer president and the second U.S. president to be impeached and acquitted
"Solidarity"
Polish labor union crushed by the communist-imposed martial-law regime in 1983
Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI or "Star Wars")
Reagan's proposed space-based nuclear defense system
George W. Bush
Republican nominee in the election of 2000. He was the eldest son of George H. W. Bush. Many people found him to be reckless and more of a divider rather than a uniter. He challenged research on global warming, didn't support abortions, limited research on embryonic stem cells, and allowed Vice President Cheney to hammer out his administration's energy policy behind closed doors.
Grenada
Ronald Reagan dispatched a heavy- fire- power invasion force to this island, where a military coup had killed the prime minister and brought Marxists to power; Americans captured the island quickly demonstrating Reagan's determination to assert the dominance of the US in the Caribbean
Panama
Ship canal cut across the isthmus of Panama by United States Army engineers; it opened in 1915. It greatly shortened the sea voyage between the east and west coasts of North America. The United States turned the canal over to Panama on Jan 1, 2000
Nicaragua
The United States intervened in this country in 1911 and sent marines when a civil war broke out in 1912 to protect American interests under Taft's dollar diplomacy. The marines remained in this country until 1933
Sandy Day O'Connor
The first woman to be in the Supreme Court. Appointed by Ronald Regan; she was an Associate Justice from 1981 until 2006
Saddam Hussein
Was a dictator in Iraq who tried to take over Iran and Kuwait violently in order to gain the land and the resources. He also refused to let the UN into Iraq in order to check if the country was secretly holding weapons of mass destruction.
Glastnost
a policy that called for increased openness and transparency in government institutions and activities in the Soviet Union.
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
established free trade zone between Canada, United States and Mexico, net gain in jobs due to opening of Mexican markets
"Sandinistas"
rebel group in Nicaragua who set out to oust the long term dictator of Nicaragua
"Contra" Rebels
rebels in Nicaragua backed by Reagan to fight the Sandinistas; tied to Iran Contra affairs
Iran-Contra Affair
scandal that erupted during the Reagan administration when it was revealed that US government agents had secretly sold arms to Iran in order to raise money to fund anti- communist "Contra" forces in Nicaragua. Those acts directly contravened an ongoing US trade embargo with Iran as well as federal legislation limiting aid to the Contras. Several Reagan administration officials were convicted of federal crimes as results
George H.W. Bush
the 42nd president of the United States, previously being Ronald Reagan's vice-president. His policies and ideals derived heavily from his predecessor and were built on them. He was a well-to-do oil tycoon before devoting himself to the public. He served as a congressman, emissary to China, ambassador to the UN, director of the CIA, and vice president before becoming president.
Oliver North
the National Security Council aid convicted of obstructing Congress in the terrorist-money-for-rebel-aid scandal
Mikhail Gorbachev
the Soviet leader that was installed as chairman of the Soviet Communist Party in March 1985. He was amicable, energetic, and most of all committed to reforming the Soviet Union. He championed two policies: glasnost and perestroika. These measures would promote "openness" and "restructuring" of the economy. These measures, however, required that the Cold War be put to an end. His cooperation with Ronald Reagan has earned the two leaders great praises.
Operation Desert Storm
the United States and its allies defeated Iraq in a ground war that lasted 100 hours; code name for the liberation of Kuwait during the Perisan Gulf War of 1991
World Trade Organization (WTO)
International trade organization that prompted strong protests from anti-global trade forces in Seattle, Washington in 1999
"Supply-side" economic theory
The economic theory of "Reaganomics" that emphasized cutting taxes and government spending in order to stimulate investment, productivity, and economic growth by private enterprise
"Supply-side" economics ("Reaganomics")
The federal economic policies of the Reagan administration; these policies combined a monetarist fiscal policy, supply-side tax cuts, and domestic budget cutting. Their goal was to reduce the size of the federal government and stimulate economic growth.