Chapter 31
Among the key groups that made up the powerful Roosevelt coalition in the election of 1936 and for many decades afterward were
Aferican Americans, southerners, and Catholics
The Roosevelt landslide of 1932 included the shift into the Democratic camp of traditionally Republican
African Americans
Naval Treaty
Agreement emerging from the Washington Disarmament Conference that reduced naval strength and established a 5:5:3 ratio of warships among the major naval powers
Douglas MacArthur
Commander of the troops who forcefully ousted the army of unemployed veterans from Washington in 1932
The new labor organization that flourished under Depression conditions with the New Deal's legal backing was the
Committee for Industrial Organization
After Roosevelt's Court-packing plan failed, the conservative Supreme Court continued to strike down New Deal legislation just as it had done before
F
Brain Trust
FDR's reform-minded intellectual advisers, who conceived much fo the New Deal legislation
By 1939, the New Deal had largely solved the major depression problem of unemployment
False
Eleanor Roosevelt had little experience with social reform and women's concerns before her husband was elected president
False
Even amidst the worst of the Great Depression, most Americans did not worry that the US would follow Italy or Germany in giving a dictator power to solve the crisis
False
In designing the New Deal, Roosevelt and his advisers avoided drawing on European models that might smack of socialism to Americans
False
The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and the Public Works Administration (PWA) were both designed to reform American business practices
False
The Republican administration of the 1920s believed in strict enforcement of antitrust laws to maintain strong business competition.
False
The Republican administrations of the 1920s pursued policy toward national security by engaging in a larger military buildup.
False
The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) was signed primarily to aid in conversing water and soil resources in eroded hill areas
False
The US Social Security System created by the New Deal provided more comprehensive social welfare insurance than anything available in Europe at the time
False
The major sources of support for liberal third-party presidential candidate Robert La Follette in the election of 1924 were among the urban working class and in the South.
False
Throughout his term, Hoover consistently adhered to his firm belief that the federal government should play no role in providing economic relief and assisting the recovery from the Depression
False
The Hawley-Smoot Tariff strengthened the trend toward expanded international trade and economic cooperation.
Falseq
McNary-Haugen Bill
Farm proposal of the 1920's, passed by Congress but vetoed by the president, that provided for the federal government to buy farm surpluses and sell them abroad
Strong political challenges to Roosevelt came from extremist critics like
Father Charles Coughlin and Huey Long
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Former New York governor who roused the nation to action against the depression with his appeal to the "forgotten man"
Harry Hopkins
Former New York social worker who became an influential FDR adviser and head of several New Deal agencies
Harold Ickes
Former bull moose progressive who spent billions of dollars on public building projects while carefully guarding against waste
Albert B. Fall
Harding's interior secretary, convicted of taking bribes for leases on federal oil reserves
Henry Stimson
Hoover's secretary of state, who sought sanctions against Japan for its aggression in Manchuria
Which two terms best describe the Harding and Coolidge administrations' approach to foreign policy?
Isolationism and disarmament
Works Progress Administration (WPA)
Large federal employment program, established in 1935 under Harry Hopkins, that provided jobs in areas from road building to art
Robert La Follette
Leader of a liberal third-party insurgency who attracted little support outside the farm belt
Francis E Townsend
Leader of senior citizen movement who called for the federal government to pay $200 a month to everyone over sixty
Huey "Kingfish" Long
Louisiana senator and popular mass agitator who promised to make "every man a king" at the expense of the wealthy
Teapot Dome
Naval oil reserve in Wyoming that gave its name to one of the major Harding administration scandals
Charles Dawes
Negotiator of a plan to reschedule German reparations payments and Calvin Coolidge's vice president after 1925
Tennessee Valley Authority
New Deal agency that aroused strong conservative criticism by producing low-cost electrical power while providing full employment, soil conservation, and low cost housing to an entire region
Agricultural Adjustment Administration
New Deal farm agency that attempted to raise prices by paying farmers to reduce their production of crops and animals
Social Secruty
New Deal program that financed old-age pensions, unemployment insurance, and other forms of income assitance
New Deal
Phrase used to describe all of Franklin Roosevelt's policies and programs to combat the Great Depression
Ohio Gang
Poker-playing cronies from Harding's native state who contributed to the morally loose and corrupt atmosphere in his administration
Hundred Days
Popular term for the special session of Congress in early 1933 that rapidly passed vast quantities of Roosevelt-initiated legislation and handed the president sweeping power
Eleanor Roosevelt
Presidential wife who became an effective lobbyist for the poor during the New Deal
The federal agency that Hoover established in order to provide pump-priming loans to business was the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation
Charles Evans Hughes
Strong-minded leader of Harding's cabinet and initiator of major naval agreements
Adkins v. Children's Hospital
Supreme Court ruling that removed women's workplace protection, invalidated a minimum wage for women, and undermined the earlier Court decision in Muller v. Oregon
The daring New Deal program that attempted simultaneously to provide flood control, electric power, and economic development occurred in the valley of the
Tennessee River
Black Tuesday
The worst single event of the great stock market crash of 1929
Calvin Coolidge
Tight-lipped Vermonter who promoted frugality and pro-business policies during his presidency
Briand Pact
Toothless international agreement of 1928 that pledged nations to outlaw war
Britain, France, and America's other Allies vigorously protested U.S. demands for repayment of loans made during World War 1.
True
Calvin Coolidge's image of honesty and thrift helped restore public confidence in the government after the Harding administration scandals.
True
Congress rushed to pass many of the early New Deal programs that granted large emergency powers to the president
True
Hoover's harsh use of the U.S. Army to disperse the veterans' Bonus Army from Washington brought him widespread condemnation.
True
In the election of 1918, Democratic nominee Al Smith's urban, Catholic, and wet background cost him support from many traditionally Democratic southern voters.
True
One sector of the American economy that did not share the prosperity of the 1920s was agriculture.
True
Roosevelt's call for a New Deal in the 1932 campaign included attacks on the Hoover deficits and a promise to balance the federal budget
True
Roosevelt's political coalition rested heavily on lower-income groups, including African Americans, Jews, Catholics, and southerners.
True
The American economic collapse during the Great Depression was the most severe suffered by any major industrial nation in the 1930s.
True
The Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO) used sympathetic New Deal laws to unionize many unskilled workers previously ignored by the American Federation of Labor (AF of L).
True
The Great Depression was caused partly by overexpansion of credit and excessive consumer debt.
True
The New Deal more than doubled the US national debt through deficit spending
True
The New Deal opened new opportunities for women through appointment to government offices and the new social sciences
True
The high tariff policies of the 1920s enhanced American prosperity but crippled international trade and Europe's economic recovery from World War 1.
True
The main exception to American's isolationist foreign policy in the 1920s was continuing U.S. armed intervention in the Caribbean and Central America.
True
Two early New Deal programs, the National Recovery Administration (NRA) and the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA), were both declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court
True
Harry Daugherty
US attorney general and a member of Harding's corrupt Ohio Gang who was forced to resign in administration scandals
George W. Norris
Vigorously progressive senator from Nebreaskaa whose passionate advocacy helped bring about he New Deal's Tennesee Valley Authority
American Legion
WWI veterans' group that vigorously promoted militant patriotism, political conservatism, and economic benefits for former servicemen
John Davis
Weak compromise Democratic candidate in 1924
Warren G. Harding
Weak-willed president whose easygoing ways opened the door to widespread corruption in this administration
Andrew Mellon
Wealthy industrialist and conservative secretary of the treasury in the 1920's
Blue Eagle
Widely displayed symbol of the National Recovery Administration (NRA), which attempted to reorganize and reform US industry
John Steinbeck
Writer whose best-selling novel portrayed the suffering of dust bowl Okies in the 30's
In the political campaign of 1928, Herbert Goover revealed himself to be
a combination of 19th century small-town virtues with big business efficientcy
The proposed ratio of 5:5:3 in the Washington Disarmament Conference of 1921-1922 referred to the
allowable ratio of battleships and carriers among the US, Britain, and Japan
The very high tariff rates of hte 1920's had the primary economic effect of
causing the Europeans to erect their own tariff barriers and thus severely reduce international trade
Roosevelt's first bold action during the Hundred Days was
closing all the banks and declaring a national band holiday
The sky-high Hawley-Smoot Tariff of 1930 had the economic effect of
crippling international trade and deepening the depression
In addition to the natural forces of drought and wind, the Dust Bowl of the 1930's was also caused by
excessive use of dry farming and mechanization techniques on marginal land
THe farm bloc's favorite solution to the severe drop in prices that caused farmers' economic suffering in the 1920's was
for the federal government to buy up agricultural surpluses at higher prices and sell them abroad
Al Smith's Roman Catholicism and opposition to prohibition hurt him especially
in the South
Roosevelt's attempt to pack the Supreme Court with his supporters proved extremely costly because
its failure took away much of the political momentum of the New Deal
The so-called Indian New Deal included an emphasis on
local tribal self-government and recovery of Indian identity and culture
Two groups that suffered severe political setbacks in the immediate post-WWII environment were
organized labor and blacks
One important cause of the great stock market crash of 1929 was
overexpansion of production adn credit beyond people's ability to pay for goods
The social Security Act of 1935 provided for
pensions for the elderly, the blind, and unemployment insurance for workers
The international economic crisis caused by unpaid war reparations and loans was partially resolved by
private American bank loans to Germany that enabled Germany to pay war reparations
Franklin Roosevelt's presidential campaign in 1932
promised to aid the "forgotten man" by balancing the federal budget and ending deficits
The primary purpose of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was to
provide jobs and experience for unemployed young people
Roosevelt's Agricultural Adjustment Administration met especially sharp criticism because it
raised prices by paying farmers to slaughter animals and not grow crops
Herbert Hoover
secretary of commerce, through much of the 1920's, whose reputation for economic genius became a casualty of the Great Depression
Besides deep divisions within the Democratic party, the elections of 1924 revealed
that the progressive movement was much weaker than it had been before WWI
Al Smith
the "happy Warrior" who attracted votes in the cities but lost them in the South
Father Coughlin
the "microphone messiah" of Michigan whose mass radio appeals turned anti-New Deal and anti-Semitic
Roosevelt's National Recovery Administration (NRA) ended when
the Supreme Court declared it unconsitutional
Dust Bowl
the drought-stricken plains areas from which hundreds of thousands of Okies and Arkies were driven during the Great Depression
Civilian Conservation Corps
the early New Deal agency that worked to solve the problems of unemployment and conservation by employing youth in reforestation and other beneficial tasks
The relationship between government and big business advocated by the Republican presidents of the 1920's was that
the government should keep hands off business and actively promote laissez-faire
The central scandal of Teapot Dome involved members of Harding's cabinet who
took bribes for leasing federal oil lands
As president, Warren G. Harding proved to be
weak-willed and tolerant of corruption among his friends and his cabinet
Henry Sinclair
wealthy oilman who bribed cabinet officials in the Teapot Dome scandal
Even before FDR won the White House, Eleanor Roosevelt had become an influential figure in her own right by advocating the causes of
women and the poorer classes