Chapter 17 Key Terms

After studying Chapter 17 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 17?

Frederick Jackson Turner frontier thesis

Buffalo Bill Cody

Slaughter of the buffalo & the decline of salmon

US Government’s reservation policy

Battle of Little Big Horn

Helen Hunt Jackson

Women’s National Indian Association and the Indian Rights Association

Dawes Severalty Act

Government’s Indian school system

Ghost Dance movement

Wovoka

Massacre at Wounded Knee

Mining frontier

Women and nonwhites in frontier society

Conservation movement

Omnibus bill of 1889

Newlands Reclamation Act

Standard time zones

Westward migration, 1870-1890

Life on the Plains

Homestead Act of 1862

Morrill Land Grant Acts of 1862 and 1890

Hatch Act of 1887

George Washington Carver

Ranching frontier

Open range ranching

Barbed wire


Chapter 18 Key Terms

After studying Chapter 18 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 18?

Thomas Edison, Menlo Park, & Edison Electric Light Company

Patent System

George Westinghouse

General Electric Company

Henry Ford

Mass production and the assembly line

Economies of scale

Child labor

Triangle Shirtwaist Company Fire

Lochner v. New York

Muller v. Oregon

General railway strike of 1877

National Labor Union

Knights of Labor

Terence Powderly

Southwestern Railroad System Strike of 1886

Haymarket Riot

American Federation of Labor

Samuel Gompers

Homestead strike

Pullman strike

Eugene V. Debs

Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)

“Mother” Jones

The “Uprising of the 20,000”

Women’s Trade Union League

John D. Rockefeller

Trust

Holding company

Vertical integration

US Steel Corporation

Social Darwinism

Principles of laissez faire

Gospel of Wealth

Sherman Anti-Trust Act

United States v. E.C. Knights Co.


Chapter 19 Key Terms

After studying Chapter 19 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 19?

Electric trolley

Urban growth

African American migration

“New” immigration

Ghettos

Chinese Exclusion Act

Barrios

New York State tenement legislation

“Model tenements”

Public Health Regulations

Steel-frame construction

Urban poverty, crime, & violence

Charity Organization Societies

East St. Louis riot of 1917

City engineers

Political machines

Political boss

Urban reform movement

Social reformers

Settlement house

Beautiful City movement

Importance of kinship

Circus

Vaudeville

Ministrel Show

Motion pictures

Birth of a Nation

Still Camera

Phonograph

Joseph Pulitzer & William Randolph Hearst

Yellow journalism

Mass-circulation magazines

Telephone

Cultural pluralism


Chapter 20 Key Terms

After studying Chapter 20 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 20?

Pendleton Civil Service Act

Munn v. Illinois

The Wabash case

Interstate Commerce Act

Tariff controversy

Currency Controversy

Bland-Allison Act of 1878

Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890

Rutherford Hayes

James Garfield

Chester Arthur

Presidential campaign and election of 1884

Grover Cleveland

Presidential election and campaign of 1888

Benjamin Harrison

Ida B. Wells

Poll tax

Mississippi Plan

“Grandfather clause”

Civil Rights cases

Plessy v. Ferguson

Cummins v. County Board of Education

Jim Crow laws

National Woman Suffrage Association

Susan B. Anthony

Crop-lien system

Grange movement

White Hats

Farmers’ Alliances

Populist (People’s) party

Omaha platform

James B. Weaver

Depression of the 1890s

Eugene v. Debs

Jacob S. Coxey

Free coinage of silver

Presidential campaign & election of 1896

William McKinley

William Jennings Bryan

Gold Standard Act

Chapter 21 (The Progressive Era) Key Terms

After studying Chapter 21 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 21?

Florence Kelley

Muckrakers

Initiative, the referendum, & recall

Eugene V. Debs

Robert M. La Follette

The 17th Amendment

National Child Labor Committee

War on alcohol

The 18th Amendment

The Mann Act

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

Charles A. Beard

Social Gospel

Eugenics

Booker T. Washington

Atlanta Compromise

W.E.B. Du Bois

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People

Margaret Sanger

Harriott Stanton Blatch

The 19th Amendment

Theodore Roosevelt

Hepburn Act

The Jungle

Meat Inspection Act

Pure Food and Drug Act

Newlands Reclamation Act

Gifford Pinchot

William Howard Taft

Payne-Aldrich Tariff

Mann-Elkins Act of 1910

The 16th Amendment

Progressive Party

Woodrow Wilson

New Nationalism

New Freedom

Clayton Anti-Trust Act

Federal Trade Commission

Federal Reserve Act of 1913

Underwood Tariff

War Industries Board


Chapter 22 (Quest for Empire) Key Terms

After studying Chapter 22 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 22?

William H. Seward

Purchase of Alaska

Transatlantic cable

Washington Treaty

Captain Alfred Mahan

New Navy

Hawaiian-annexation question

Hawaii’s 1887 constitution

The 1893 overthrow of the Hawaiian government

The Venezuelan crisis of 1895

Cuban revolution

Jose Marti

Wilson-Gorman Tariff

General Valeriano Weyler

The Maine

The de Lome letter

Teller Amendment

Spanish-American-Cuban-Filipino War

Commodore George Dewey

Treaty of Paris

Emilio Aguinaldo

Philippine Insurrection

the Jones Act

the Open Door policy

Platt Amendment

Hay-Pauncefote Treaty of 1901

Panamanian revolution

Panama Canal

Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine

Portsmouth Conference

Taft-Katsura Agreement

Root-Takahira Agreement

Great White Fleet

Dollar diplomacy

Anglo-American rapprochement


Chapter 23 (Americans in the Great War) Key Terms

After studying Chapter 23 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 23?

The Lusitania

The Sussex Pledge

President Wilson’s proclamation of neutrality

Submarine and international law

Unrestricted submarine warfare

Zimmerman telegram

Wilson’s war message

Jeannette Rankin

National Defense Act of 1916 and the Navy Act of 1916

Selective Service Act

African American enlistees in the military

General John J. Pershing

Trench warfare and poison gas

Bolshevik Revolution

Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Food, Railroad, & Fuel Administration

War Industries Board

Revenue Act of 1916 & 1917

African American Migration

National War Labor Board

Civil liberties issue

Committee on Public Information

Espionage and Sedition Acts

Eugene V. Debs

Schneck v. United States

Red Scare

American Legion

Mitchell Palmer

Palmer Raids

“Red Summer” of 1919

Paris Peace Conference

Principle of self-determination

Mandate system

Balfour Declaration of 1917

League of Nation

Article 10 of the League Covenant

Treaty of Versailles

The “Irreconciliables”


Chapter 24 (The New Era) Key Terms

After studying Chapter 24 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 24?

Charles A. Lindbergh

Installment plan

Oligopolies

Teapot Dome Scandal

Calvin Coolidge

American Indian’s citizenship status

Bureau of Indian Affairs

League of Women Voters

National Women Party

The automobile

Federal Highway Act

The radio

Marcus Garvey

Mexican immigrants

Puerto Rican immigrants

Women in the 1920s labor force

The Flapper

Ku Klux Klan

Emergency Quota Act of 1921

Nicole Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti

The Scopes trial

Pentecostal religion

Motion pictures

Baseball

Prohibition

Al Capone

Lost Generation

Harlem Renaissance

Jazz Age

1928 presidential election

Herbert Hoover

Black Tuesday

Stock Market Crash


Chapter 25 Key Terms

After studying Chapter 25 of A People and a Nation, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each item listed below.

For each item, try to answer this question: What were the Political, Social, Economic, and/or Cultural consequences of this item? as described in Chapter 25?

Dust Bowl

“Hoovervilles”

Herbert Hoover

Hawley-Smoot Tariff

Bonus Expeditionary Force

Franklin D. Roosevelt

20th Amendment to the Constitution

Banking crisis

National bank holiday

Emergency Banking Relief Bill (March 9, 1933)

Roosevelt’s fireside chats

First Hundred Days

Brain Trust

National Recovery Administration

Agricultural Adjustment Act (May 12, 1933)

Civilian Conservation Corps (March 31, 1933)

Public Works Administration

Father Charles Coughlin

Dr. Francis E. Townsend

Huey Long

Second New Deal

Works Progress Administration

Social Security Act (August 15, 1935)

Federal Theater, Federal Arts, Federal Music, & Federal Writers Projects

National Labor Relations (Wagner) Act (July 5, 1935)

United Auto Workers’ strike of 1936

Indian Reorganization Act (June 18, 1934)

Tennessee Valley Authority (May 18, 1933)

Roosevelt’s court-packing plan

Scottsboro Boys

A. Philip Randolph