HY-121 Exam 1

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Bonanza

Farms that covered thousands of acers and employed large numbers of anticultural wage workers.

Emergency Banking Act

First New Deal measure that provided for reopening the banks under strict conditions and took the United States off the gold standard.

True

Following the civil war, generals like Philip H. Sheridan set out to destroy the foundations of the American Indian Economy.

House Un-American Activities Committee

Formed in 1938 to investigate subversives in the government and holders of radical ideas more generally;

Dust bowl

Great plains counties where millions of tons of topsoil were blown away from parched farmland in the 1930s; massive migration of farm families followed.

True

In 1869, President Ulysses S. Grant announced a new "peace policy" in the west

True

In 1882 and again in 1902, the United States Congress passed laws excluding immigrants from China.

none

In 1900, in the entire South, how many public high schools for blacks existed?

True

In 1925, John Scopes, a public school teacher in Tennessee, was convicted of violating the state's law against the teaching of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution

False

In a show of demographic solidarity on the part of the American people, the Farmers' Alliance, especially in the southern states, welcomed black farmers into the alliance.

Ordered federal troops to be withdrawn from the south

In consequence of the "Bargain of 1877" President Rutherford B. Hayes:

Open door policy

In hopes of protecting the Chinese market for U.S. exports, Secretary of State John Hay Demanded in 1899 that Chinese trade be open to all nations.

The Great Depression

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the years from 1873 to 1897 were known as:

Be returned to its former owners

In the summer of 1865, President Andrew Johnson ordered nearly all land in federal hands:

Schenck v. U.S.

In what legal case did Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., declare that the First Amendment did not prevent congress from prohibiting speech that presented a clear and present danger

Steel

In which industry did Andrew Carnegie make his fortune?

British Guiana

In which of the following nations was the institution of slavery replaced by indentured servitude?

True

Inspired in part by President Garfield's assassination by a disappointed office seeker, the Civil Service Act of 1883 created a merit system for federal employees.

The crop-lien system:

Kept many sharecroppers in a state of constant debt and poverty.

Dawes Act

Law passed in 1887 meant to encourage adoption of white norms among Indians; broke up tribal holdings into small farms for Indian Families, with the remainder sold to white purchasers.

The black codes

Laws that sought to regulate the lives of former slaves

The 1887 Dawes Act

Led to the loss of tribal lands and the erosion of Indian cultural traditions

True

Like the American federation of labor, The National American Women's Suffrage Association was infused with the social elitism of the times

The Freedmen's Bureau:

Made notable achievements in improving African-Americans education and health care.

True

More people were killed by the flu (epidemic of influenza) at the end of World War I than died during all the years of fighting that war.

Listed in Proper sequence

Munn V. Illinois; Wabash v. Illinois; Interstate Commerce Act; Lochner v. New York

True

Opposition to Reconstruction resulted from the distaste many southerners had for tax increases that were needed to fund public schools and other improvements, and also because many white southerners could not accepts black Americans voting, holding office, nd enjoying equality before the law.

American Civil Liberties Union

Organization founded during World War I to protest the suppression of freedom of expressing in wartime; played a major role in court cases that achieved judicial recognition of Americans' civil liberties.

KKK

Organized in Pulaski, Tennessee, in 1866 to terrorize former slaves who voted and held political offices during Reconstruction; a revived organization in the 1910's and 1920's

Works Progress Admin

Part of the Second New Deal, it provided jobs for millions of the unemployed on construction and arts projects

Social Gospel

Preached by liberal Protestant clergymen in the last nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; advocated the application of Christian principles to social problems generated by industrialization.

Offered direct relief to the unemployed

President Herbert Hoover's 1932 Reconstruction Finance Corporation did all of the following except:

Liberal internationalist

President Wilsons foreign policy that called for active intervention to remake the world in America's image, and which asserted the view that greater freedom worldwide would follow from increased American investment and trade abroad was called:

True

Segregation was more than a form of racial separation; it was one part of an all-encompassing system of white domination.

True

Some 700 blacks sat in state legislatures during Reconstruction

The 15th Amendment

Sought to guarantee that one could not be denied suffrage rights based on race

The 14th amendment

Specifically defined suffrage as one of the civil rights to which freed people were entitled

Atlanta speech

Speech in which Booker T. Washington repudiated the abolitionist tradition that stressed ceaseless agitation for full equality, urging blacks not to try to combat segregation.

The Peoples Party or Populists

Spoke for all 'producing classes' and embarked on a remarkable effort of community organization and education.

Sit-down strike

Tactic adopted by labor unions in the mid and late 1930s, whereby striking workers refused to leave factories, making production impossible; proved highly effective in the organizing drive of the Congress of Industrial Organization.

The Spanish-American War

The "splendid little war" of 1898 was:

the hays code

The 1922 self-imposed guidelines in the film industry that prohibited depicting adultery, nudity, and long kisses, and barred scripts that portrayed clergymen in a negative light was called:

The Roosevelt Corollary

The American foreign policy principle that held the United States has a right to exercise "an international police power" in the Western Hemisphere was called:

True

The Bargain of 1877 marked the formal end to Reconstruction

True

The Civil Rights era of the 1950's and 1960's is sometimes called the Second Reconstruction

True

The Federal Housing Authority (FHA) ensured millions of mortgages issued by private banks; and during the 1930s, the Federal government set out, for the first time, to build thousands of units of low rent housing for American citizens

True

The Haymarket Affair resulted in the hanging of four convicted anarchists

True

The Knights of labor regarded inequalities of wealth and power as a growing threat to American democracy

True

The National Association for the advancement of colored people (NAACP) launched a long battle for the enforcement of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments

False

The New American Indian tribes that migrated to the Great Plains were greeted with open arms and friendly words by the Indians already living there.

Cooperative Commonwealth

The Phrase that best captures the vision of the Knights of Labor is:

William Marcy Tweed

The Political "boss" of New York City in the early 1870s was

The ku klux klan

The anti-black, anti-catholic, and anti-Semitic organization that claimed over 3 million members by the mid-1920s was:

John Collier

The commissioner of Indian affairs who launched an "Indian New Deal" that ended a policy of forced assimilation and allowed Indians unprecedented cultural autonomy

William Jennings Bryan

The congressmen from Nebraska who was the democratic Party nominee for president in 1896 and who called for the free coinage of silver was:

True

The country was plunged into an economic depression in 1873, and support among Republicans for further reforms in the South weakened

False

The democrats were the party of big Government; the Republicans were the party of laissez-faire.

True

The election of 1896 is sometimes called the first modern presidential campaign, in part, because of the amount of money spent - William McKinley raised some $10 million, while William Jennings Bryan raised only around $300,000.

False

The fifteenth Amendment granted the vote to white women but not black women

The Intersate Commerce Commission

The first federal agency intended to regulate economic activity, and ensure that railroad rates were reasonable, and favoritism was avoided was?

Gospel of wealth

The idea proposed by Andrew Carnegie in 1889 that those who are wealthy have an obligation to use their resources to improve society

White mans burden

The idea that white imperialism contributed to the progress of civilization.

China

The immigrants facing the harshest reception in late-nineteenth century America were those arriving from:

The Northeast and the Midwest

The industrial revolution in the United States took place principally in:

The farmers alliance

The largest citizens' movement of the nineteenth century was?

Illegal Alien

The law of 1924, established, in effect, for the first time the new category of the ___________

Jacob Coxey

The leader of the band of several hundred unemployed men who marched on Washington in May 1894 to demand economic relief was:

True

The most famous American Indian victory in American history took place in June 1876 when General George A. Custer and his 250 men perished

The readjuster movement

The name for the collation of black Republicans and anti-Redeemer Democrats that governed the state of Virginia from 1879 to 1883 was:

The equal rights amendment

The proposed constitutional amendment to eliminate all legal distinctions "on account of sex" promoted by Alice Paul was:

Versailles Treaty

The treaty signed at the Versailles peace conference

Tulsa, Oklahoma

The worst race riot in American history occurred in 1921, when more than 300 blacks were killed and over 10,000 were left homeless after white mobs burned an all-black section of which city to the ground?

True

Tom Watson, who had earlier been a leading figure in forging an interracial Populist coalition had, by the early twentieth century, emerged as a power in Georgia, whipping up prejudice against African-Americans, Catholics and Jews

Thomas A. Scott and Andrew Carnegie

Two of the Gilded Age's leading business figures were:

False

Under Radical Reconstruction, blacks held most of the South's top election positions.

Sharecropping:

Was preferred by African-Americans to gang labor (because they were less subject to supervision)

The Southern Black Codes:

Were some of the first laws adopted as part of Radical Reconstruction of 1867

Fong Yue Ting

What 1893 United States Supreme Court decision authorized the federal government to expel Chinese immigrants without due process of law?

Plessy v. Ferguson

What landmark United States Supreme Court decision gave approval to state laws requiring separate facilities for white and blacks?

The nation

What was being reconstructed (constructed again) in Reconstruction?

Progress in Poverty

What was the book in which Henry George proposed a "single tax" on real estate that would replace all other taxes?

Lusitania

What was the name of the British liner sunk by a German submarine in May 1915 that resulted in the deaths of more than 1,000 passengers, including 124 Americans?

The American Federation of labor

What was the name of the labor organization of principally white, male, skilled workers that arose in the 1880s and was headed by Samuel Gompers?

Alfred T. Mahan, The Influence of Sea Power upon History

What was the name of the naval officer and his 1890 book that argued that no nation could prosper without a large fleet of ships engaged in international trade, protected by a powerful navy operating overseas bases?

The knights of labor

What was the name of the organization that sought to organize both skilled and unskilled workers, women as well as men, blacks along with whites, and achieved a membership of nearly 800,000 in 1886?

1880

Which census reveled for the first time that there were more non-farming jobs than farming jobs in the United States?

Feared by U.S. Army officials

Which of the following best describes the Ghost Dance?

It is vital that unions include workers of all backgrounds, regardless of race, ethnicity, sex, or skill

Which of the following was not a central principal of the American Federation of Labor?

Using vigilante tactics to intimidate farmers who failed to join the cause

Which of the following was not a leading strategy of the Populists?

A desire to broaden the exposure of Americans to different cultures

Which of the following was not a major reason for America's imperial expansion?

Support black churches and businesses

Which was not a principle task of the Freedmen's Bureau (1865-1870)?

The family, the church, the school

Which were central elements in the lives of post emancipation blacks in the twenty years following the end of the civil war?

Booker T. Washington

Who was the African-American leader who delivered a speech in 1895 at the Atlanta Cotton Exposition urging black Americans to adjust to segregation and stop agitating for civil and political rights?

Nicola Sacco and Bartholomeo Vanzetti

Who were the two immigrants arrested for their participation in a robbery in which a security guard was killed whose case became a cause

Yellow Press

Widely- sold news papers, so called by their critics after the color in which a popular comic strip was printed, that mixed sensational accounts of crime and political corruption with aggressive appeals to patriotic sentiments.

False

With the mechanization of manufacture, skilled workers virtually disappeared from the industrial America.

Not a major cause in the decline of Reconstruction

a deepening of mutual respect between black and white southerners, making Reconstruction seem no longer necessary.

25 Million

between 1870 in 1920, how many immigrants arrived from overseas?

Listed in proper sequence

ratification of Thirteenth Amendment; Tenure of Office Act; impeachment of Johnson; election of Grant

Black Americans who refused to sign labor contracts to work for whites during Reconstruction:

were often convicted of vagrancy and fined; sometimes they were then auctioned off to work for the person who paid the fine.

A religious test

which was not one of the devices used by southern whites to keep blacks from exercising suffrage?

True

"Scalawags" was a derogatory term used to describe southern white Republicans

True

"Vertical Integration" is defined as one company controlling every phase of the business from raw materials to transportation, manufacturing, and distribution.

Not true of the second industrial revolution

A boom in automobile manufacture spurred the rise of oil, rubber, and steel production.

Dollar Diplmacy

A leading characterization of U.S. foreign policy in the early twentieth century was:

William Jennings Bryan

A leading opponent of American imperialism was:

"Waving the bloody shirt" referred to:

A republican attempt to associate Democrats with secession and treason

Anti Imperialist League

A union of writers and social reformers who believed American energies should be directed at home, businessmen fearful of the cause of maintaining overseas outposts, and racists who did not wish to bring non-white populations into the United States

False

According to Social Darwinism, government should seek to help the poor, and build and activist state to regulate the nation's corporations

True

After emancipation, many freedwomen elected to withdraw from work in the fields and focus their energies at home

False

American presidents during the Gilded Age exerted strong, effective leadership.

False

American women overwhelmingly supported the Equal Rights amendment; American men overwhelmingly opposed it

True

An oversupply of cotton on the world market, which led to a sharp decline in prices, contributed to a farmers' revolt and gave rise to the Populist movement.

Non-slave labor in market economy

As meant in the section on the free labor system, define "free labor"

False

At the Battle of Little Big Horn, General George Armstrong Custer's troops were victorious.

False

Beginning about 1880, new immigrants were welcomed with open arms by the American people.

Kansas

Between 1879 and 1880, an estimated 40,000-60,000 African-Americans migrated to:

True

Between 1880 and 1940 there were more white sharecroppers than black sharecroppers

True

By 1900, southern per capita income was only 60 percent of that of the national average.

True

By the early 1890's, a pension system for the Union soldiers, their widows, and children consumed more than 40 percent of the federal budget.

Redeemers

Conservative white Democrats, many of them planters or businessmen, who reclaimed control of the South following the end of Reconstruction.

Social Security Act

Created a system with provisions for a retirement pension, unemployment insurance, disability insurance and public assistance (welfare)

The Enforcement Acts of 1870 and 1871:

Defined crimes that deprived citizens of their civil and political rights as federal offenses, and under these laws President Grant sent federal marshals to arrest hundreds of accused Klansmen.

Carpetbaggers and scalawags

Derisive term for northern emigrants who participated in the republican government of the Reconstruction South; southern white Republicans some former Unionists who supported Reconstruction governments

The Reconstruction Act of March 1867:

Divided the South into five military districts and called for creation of new state governments, with black men given the right to vote.

William Howard Taft

Dollar Diplomacy, the U.S. foreign policy that emphasized economic investment and loans from American banks, rather than direct military intervention, the policy of:

True

During Reconstruction, some 2,000 African-Americans held public office, among them fourteen in the Unites States House of Representatives and two U.S. senators.

True

During the 1872 elections, the Liberal Republicans argued that reconstruction was a failure.

Selective service act

Enacted in 1917, required 24 million men to register with the draft

Civilian Conservation Corp

Established by congress in 1933 and ending in 1942, the program set unemployed young men to work on projects like forest preservation, flood control, and the improvement of national parks and wildlife preserves.


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