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Jeopardy!. Begin. Gilded Politics. Labor Unrest. Industrial - ization. Social Reform. Social Reform II. Populism. $100. $100. $100. $100. $100. $100. $200. $200. $200. $200. $200. $200. $300. $300. $300. $300. $300. $300. $400. $400. $400. $400. $400. $400.
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Jeopardy! Begin
Gilded Politics Labor Unrest Industrial -ization Social Reform Social Reform II Populism $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500
Laws and Acts Imperialism Imperialism II Progressive Reform Wilson WWI $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $600 $600 $600 $600 $600 $600 $800 $800 $800 $800 $800 $800 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000
Final Jeopardy World War I
The formation of this, from Wilson’s Fourteen Points, caused the Republican Congress the most issue. League of Nations
Gilded Politics- $100This campaign technique reminded voters of the “treason” committed by Confederate Democrats during the Civil War. C1-$100 “Waving the Bloody Shirt”
Gilded Politics - $200Congressmen accepted stock from this company to keep the company’s corrupt dealings secret. C1-$200 Crédit Mobilier
Gilded Politics- $300This allowed the withdrawal of troops from the South to end Reconstruction. C1-$300 Compromise of 1877
Gilded Politics - $400This Supreme Court case set forth the doctrine of “separate but equal”. C1-$400 Plessy v. Ferguson
Gilded Politics - $500In response to the panic of 1873, debtors suggested use of these. C1-$500 Inflationary policies
Labor Unrest - $100The use of these to break strikes marked labor unrest in the late 1800s. C2-$100 Federal troops
Labor Unrest - $200 This Amendment helped corporations by considering them as “persons” when it came to the law. C2-$200 14th Amendment
Labor Unrest - $300Immigrants were welcomed by industries because they could be used as these. C2-$300 strikebreakers
Labor Unrest - $400This strike proved the alliance between governments and big business. C2-$400 Pullman Strike
Labor Unrest - $500This strike showed the government was no longer immediately siding with business owners. C2-$500 Anthracite Coal Strike
Industrialization - $100He used spies, rebates, crushing the competition, and high-pressure sales methods to crush his oil industry opponents. C3-$100 John D Rockefeller
Industrialization - $200This suggested the wealthy should display moral responsibility for their God-given money. C3-$200 “Gospel of Wealth”
Industrialization - $300This was the major factor bringing farmers into the big cities in the late 1800s. C3-$300 Industrial jobs
Industrialization - $400To finance the first transcontinental railroads, the national government offered this form of help. C3-$400 Land Grants
Industrialization - $500This was the greatest single factor helping to spur the amazing industrialization of the post-Civil War years. C3-$500 Railroads
Social Reform I - $100This was the first federal regulatory agency designed to protect the public interest from business combinations. C4-$100 Federal Communications Commission
Social Reform I - $200These engaged in providing child care, instruction in English, cultural activities, and social reform lobbying, especially for immigrants and the poor. C3-200 Settlement Houses
Social Reform I - $300He promoted black self-help, but did not challenge segregation. C3-$300 Booker T Washington
Social Reform I - $400This act granted public lands to states to support higher education. C3-$400 Morrill Act of 1862
Social Reform I - $500Advocates of this argued it would enable women to extend their roles as mothers and homemakers to the public world. C3-$500 Woman Suffrage
Social Reform II- $100Prohibition strongest supporters belonged to this group. C4-$100 Women’s Christian Temperance Union
Social Reform II- $200This act was designed to promote Indian assimilation. C4-$200 Dawes Severalty Act
Social Reform II- $300These settlers “jumped the gun” when it came time to claim lands in Oklahoma. C4-$300 “SOONERS”
Social Reform II- $400Reformers of this movement came mainly from the middle class. C4-$400 Progressivism
Social Reform II- $500These people believed their primary function was to make the public aware of social problems. C4-$500 Muckrakers
Populism - $100This campaign’s attempt to form an alliance between white & black farmers ended in a racist blacklash that eliminated black voting in the South. C4-$100 Populist
Populism - $200This was the root cause of the American farmers’ problem after 1880. C4-$200 Overproduction
Populism - $300The original purpose of this group was to stimulate self-improvement through educational and social activites. C4-$300 The Grange
Populism - $400This was formed to take action to break the strangling grip of the railroads on farmers. C4-$400 Farmers’ Alliance
Populism - $500This was the major issue of the election of 1896. C4-$500 Free and unlimited coinage of silver
Laws & Acts - $200 These were legal codes that established the system of segregation in the South. Jim Crow Laws
Laws & Acts - $400 This act gave 160 acres to someone who promised to live on and improve the land within 10 years. Homestead Act
Laws & Acts - $600 To justify American intervention in the Venezuela boundary dispute with Britain, this was invoked. Monroe Doctrine
Laws & Acts - $800 This amendement guaranteed that the US would uphold the independence of Cuba. Teller Amendment
Manifest Destiny I- $1000 The Webster-Ashburton treaty settled this dispute between the lumberjacks of Maine and Canada Aroostok War
Imperialism - $200 The need for overseas markets for increased industrial and agricultural production led to this policy. Imperialism
Imperialism - $400 Cleveland becoming president stopped this from occurring immediately, as President Harrison had wanted. Annexation of Hawaii
Imperialism - $600 This was the most controversial event associated with the Spanish American war. Acquisition of Philippines
Imperialism - $800 This was designed to promote free trade with China. Open Door Policy
Imperialism - $1000 This added a new provision to the Monroe Doctrine, which was designed to justify US intervention in the affairs of Latin American countries. Roosevelt Corollary
Imperialism II - $200 This president said acquisition of the Philippines was the only option for this country. McKinley
Imperialism II - $400 These immigrants first entered the country through Hawaii to work on sugar plantations. Japanese
Imperialism II - $600 This president refused to extend formal diplomatic recognition to th government in Mexico headed by Victoriano Huerta. Woodrow Wilson
Imperialism II - $800 President Taft’s foreign policy was named this. Dollar Diplomacy