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Answer. C. Columbus explores the Americas. Which of the following is NOT directly associated with the Protestant Reformation?. A. Martin LutherB. Selling of indulgencesC. Bible as ?direct pipeline to God"D. The Magna Carta. . Answer. D. The Magna Carta. 1. Matching. A. CrusadesB. Renaissan
E N D
1. Social Studies Reading Comprehension Bell-Ringers Which answer BEST completes the diagram?
A. Alexander Fleming Discovers penicillin
B. Impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh paints Starry Night
C. Columbus explores the Americas
D. Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin
2. Answer C Columbus explores the Americas
3. Which of the following is NOT directly associated with the Protestant Reformation? A. Martin Luther
B. Selling of indulgences
C. Bible as direct pipeline to God
D. The Magna Carta
4. Answer D The Magna Carta
5. 1. Matching A. Crusades
B. Renaissance
C. Reformation
D. Conquistadors 1. Intellectual pursuits resulted in more advanced technology
2. Attempt to take Holy Lands away from Muslim
3. Rise of the Protestant religion
4. Exposure to Middle East and Asian cultures and goods
5. Spanish explorers searching for God, gold, and glory
6. Galileo and Leonardo Da Vinci contributed inventions and art to society during this time
7. Unscrupulous church practices led to this movement
6. Answer B
A
C
A
D
B
C
7. 2. Match each fact below to the applicable colony. Jamestown
St. Augustine Founded in 1607 by the Virginia Company
Founded in 1565 by Pedro Menendez, expedition funded by King Philip II of Spain
Located on what is now northern Florida
Changed leaders when colonists began to starve; Captain John Smith took over
8. Answers A
B
B
A
9. 3. The Columbian Exchange had a major impact on Native American societies What was the Columbian Exchange?
How did it affect Native Americans?
How did it affect European countries?
What was a major disadvantage of the Columbian Exchange?
10. Answers The Columbian Exchange began when Columbus came to America. Columbus brought native life forms from Europe to the new land, and when he left America, he brought native forms from America back to Europe
Columbus brought the first horses and pigs to America. He also brought many new foods including peaches, pears, and limes. These animals and fruits provided Native Americans with transportation and more food. When Columbus returned to Europe, he brought many new food crops including corn, potatoes, and squash from America. These crops allowed Europeans to have more food available to them.
The spread of disease was the most devastating result of the Columbian Exchange. Smallpox, measles, and influenza are some examples of new diseases spread throughout Native American societies, killing large numbers of people. Syphilis originated in America and spread to Europe.
11. 4. The colonists wanted to separate from Great Britain for a number of reasons. What did the 3 issues listed below mean to the colonists? What events came about because of these 3 issues? Taxation
Lack of Free Trade
French and Indian War
12. Answers Taxation- the British forced numerous tax acts upon the colonists including the Stamp Act and the Tea Act. Colonists believed these additional taxes were unfair. Colonists objected to taxation without representation. The Boston Tea Party was a result of the objections to taxes
Lack of Free Trade- The British imposed strict control over trading done by colonists. The Navigation Acts which regulated trade had been in effect for a while. Many colonists, however, believed that these acts worked for the interest of Great Britain at the expense of the colonists The French and Indian War- The British had gone into debt during the French and Indian War. Parliament enforced taxation on and restricted westward movement of the colonists to help collect taxes. These actions would help the British government get out of debt
13. 5. Complete the following chart
14. Answer
15. 6. How are an authoritarian monarch and a dictator alike and different?
16. Answer Alike- Both hold absolute power Different- the monarch inherits power by birth, the dictator takes power by force.
17. 7. Read this excerpt from Patrick Henrys speech It is in vain, sir, to extenuate the matter. Gentlemen may cry, Peace! Peace! but there is no peace. The war is actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from the north will bring to our ears the clash of resounding arms! Our brethren are already in the field! Why stand we here idle? What is it that gentlemen wish? What would they have? Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty, or give me death!
18. In March of 1775, Patrick Henry spoke in a meeting of Virginia delegates.
1. His speech was the precursor to what document?
2. What body declared independence from Great Britain after Patrick Henrys speech?
3. Which war occurred after America declared independence from Great Britain?
19. Answers 1. The Declaration of Independence
2. Second Continental Congress
3. The Revolutionary War
20. 8. Which of the following statements does not represent the thinking of the Enlightenment? People have natural rights
There should be a system of checks and balances in government
The power of the monarch is absolute
All people have the right to worship, think, and speak as they choose
Rebellion is justified if the ruler no longer has the consent of the people
21. Answer C. The Enlightenment was a response to the abuses of monarchies and other social institutions. Enlightenment thinkers believed that power belonged to citizens, not kings and queens
22. 9. What ideas from the Enlightenment did Thomas Jefferson incorporate into the U.S. Declaration of Independence?
23. Answer Laws of nature; a decent respect for the opinions of mankind; all men are created equal; inalienable rights of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness; powers from the consent of the governed; the right of the people to change or abolish the government if it does not protect their rights
24. 10. Match the Revolutionary War sites with the correct description Saratoga
Valley Forge
Yorktown George Washingtons troops stayed here during the winter of 1777-1778
This was the last major battle of the Revolutionary War. It was here that Cornwallis surrendered to Washington.
This battle was the turning point in the Revolutionary War because France became Americans ally.
25. Answer B
C
A
26. 11. Match these men with their role in the Revolutionary War Patrick Henry
Samuel Adams
George Washington
Paul Revere He rode through Boston letting the colonists know the British were coming
In a stirring speech, he urged the colonists to go to battle against Great Britain to gain independence
He was the leader of the Sons of Liberty
He was the commander of the Continental Army
27. Answer D
A
B
C
28. 12. All of these measures most directly apply to which document? Measures passed by Congress must be approved by nine of the 13 states.
Congress cannot require payment of taxes.
Congress has the power to coin money and establish post offices. Declaration of Independence
Constitution
Bill of Rights
Articles of Confederation
29. Answer D Articles of Confederation
30. 13. The U.S. Constitution was written to address the flaws in the Articles of Confederation. What were some of the problems with the articles of Confederation?
31. Answer Some people thought there was a need for a stronger central government. The states were experiencing economic hardships, and inflation caused dissention within the states. Regulation of commerce was also needed
32. 14. Matching Constitution
Declaration of Independence
Northwest Ordinance
Bill of Rights
Magna Carta The Document that laid out a plan for territories to enter the union as new states
The document that separated the colonies from Great Britain
The document that limited the power of the king
The first 10 amendments to the Constitution
Supreme law of the United States
33. Answer E
B
A
D
C
34. 15. Which document begins with the following passage? When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, that separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Natures God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal
. Constitution
Magna Carta
Bill of Rights
Declaration of Independence
35. Answer D
36. 16. Fill in the chart with the following items Duty-
Interpret Laws; decide Cases
Make Laws
Enforce Laws
Name of Federal Office-
President
Congress
Supreme Court of the U. S.
37. Answer
38. 17. Select the four duties associated with the national (federal) level of government Collect Taxes
Send the army to defend the country
Require all students to take graduation tests
Set a curfew for teenagers
Regulate trade with Canada
Have a system of courts
Set the amount charged for a parking ticket
Set the level of support for the University of Alabama
39. Answer Collect Taxes
Send the army to defend the country
Regulate trade with Canada
Have a system of courts
40. 18. Which 4 duties are associated with the state? Collect Taxes
Send the army to defend the country
Require all students to take graduation tests
Set a curfew for teenagers
Regulate trade with Canada
Have a system of courts
Set the amount charged for a parking ticket
Set the level of support for the University of Alabama
41. Answer 1. Collect Taxes
3. Require all students to take graduation tests
6. Have a system of courts
8. Set the level of support for the University of Alabama
42. 19. Which powers do the two levels of government share? Do local governments share these powers? Collect Taxes
Send the army to defend the country
Require all students to take graduation tests
Set a curfew for teenagers
Regulate trade with Canada
Have a system of courts
Set the amount charged for a parking ticket
Set the level of support for the University of Alabama
43. Answer 1. Collect Taxes
6. Have a system of courts
Yes these are also local powers
44. 20. The Federalist Papers were written in 1787 Who were the authors of these articles?
What was the purpose of the Federalist Papers?
45. Answer The authors of the Federalist Papers included Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay
The purpose of the Federalist Papers was to gain support for the proposed Constitution
46. 21. Read the following excerpt from the Federalist #8 If we should be disunited
or, which is more probable, should be thrown together into two or three confederacies, we should be
in the predicament of the continental powers of Europeour liberties would be prey to the means of defending ourselves against the ambition and jealousy of each other. What point does Hamilton convey in this passage?
47. Answer He wants strong unity among states so that there will be no hostility among them. This unity will help ensure everyones liberty
48. 22. Which five rights are listed in the Bill of Rights? Freedom of speech
Freedom of the press
Freedom of religion
The abolition of slavery
Rights of a person accused of a crime
The right of 18-year-olds to vote
The right to keep and bear arms
The right of women to vote
49. Answer #s 1,2,3,5 and 7
50. 23. A change or addition to the Constitution is _______ ?
51. Answer An amendment
52. 24. Why did President Jefferson send Lewis and Clark to explore the Louisiana Territory? How did Sacagawea help the expedition to be successful?
53. Answer 1. Jefferson wanted to learn about the large amount of land the U.S. purchased from France. Lewis and Clark wrote about and drew pictures of what they saw and created maps of the land they explored
2. Sacagawea helped Lewis and Clark by communicating with the Native American tribes that they met while exploring the territory. She also was able to get supplies and horses for the explorers
54. 25. Matching Land Ordinance of 1785
Louisiana Purchase
Gold Rush
Santa Fe Trail
Oregon Trail
Mormon Pioneer Trail
Manifest Destiny In 1846-1849 people traveled to the Great Salt Lake Valley of Utah to maintain religious freedom
An effort to consolidate schools and make education mandatory
Trail connecting Missouri and New Mexican; used in 1846 during Mexican American War
United Sates bought land from France in 1803
Pathway to the Pacific for fur traders, gold seekers, missionaries, and others
In 1849 many young American men went to California to get rich quickly
Phrase used to explain continental expansion to the West
55. Answer F
A
D
B
E
C
G
56. 26. Andrew Jackson proposed the Indian Removal Act in 1830. Congress passed the Act, which required Native Americans to move west of the Mississippi River
The Peaceful Cherokees were forced to leave their lands in North Carolina and head to Oklahoma over 1,000 miles of hostile road. Approximately 4,000 Cherokees died during this evacuation What was the name of the route the Cherokees took to Oklahoma?
Why did the federal government force the Native Americans to evacuate west of the Mississippi River?
57. Answer The Trail of Tears
The settlers looked with envy on Native American lands. The Federal government saw an opportunity to increase farmable land for the U.S. by evacuating Native Americans from that land
58. 27. Through which states did the Trail of Tears go?
59. Answer The Trail of Tears went through North Carolina, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma
60. 28. During the 1850s sectional division occurred in the United States. Three events during this time exemplified the loss of freedom for African Americans. Put these three events on a timeline. How did they increase sectional division across the country? Fugitive Slave Act
Dred Scott Decision
John Browns Raid
61. Answer 1850 Fugitive Slave Act
1857 Dred Scott Decision
1859 John Browns Raid These three events increased the split between abolitionists and slavery supporters. The fugitive Slave Act was part of the Compromise of 1850 that mandated the return of runaway slaves. The Dred Scott Decision declared that African Americans were not citizens of the U.S. and therefore could not sue. John Brow was an abolitionist who raided Harpers Ferry, Virginia to seize weapons and arm slaves
62. 29. William Lloyd Garrison
Frederick Douglass
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Susan B. Anthony
Harriet Tubman Wrote the novel Uncle Toms Cabin which described the horrors of slavery
Organized the American Anti Slavery Society; published the newspaper The Liberator
Escaped to the north; wrote the North Star, a newspaper devoted to abolishing slavery in all its forms
Led slaves north on the Underground Railroad
Saw similarities between womens rights and abolitionism; both slaves and women were offered no rights and no opportunities
63. Answer B
C
A
E
D
64. 30. The Underground Railroad reached its peak from 1830 to 1865. What was the Underground Railroad?
65. Answer The Underground Railroad was a network of aid and assistance to fugitives escaping from slavery. Many sympathetic Americans played a role in helping slaves escape to freedom in the North and in Canada
66. 31. The Republican Party formed in the 1850s when the Whig party and the Democratic Party split on issues. Are the statements about the Republican Party true or false?
Supported an anti slavery platform
Was the party of Abraham Lincoln
Supported the Kansas Nebraska Act
Supported construction of transcontinental railroad
Opposed a high tariff on imports
Supported the Homestead Act
Wanted to gain political control in the North
67. Answer True
True
False
True
False
True
True
68. 32. List three parts of the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854
69. Answer Provided for the creation of two new territories: Kansas and Nebraska
Each territory would separately decide whether to allow slavery within its borders
Contradicted the provisions of the Missouri Compromise
70.
33. The cartoon was created in 1861. What does it depict?
71. Answer The Souths separation from the North
72.
34. What opinion does the cartoon express about the Souths secession?
73. Answer: The men are sitting on the very branch they are separating from the tree. If they are successful, they will fall to the ground, indicating that if the South secedes it too will collapse
74. 35. Southern states began to secede from the Union in 1860. List some reasons for secession.
75. Answer: Election of Abraham Lincoln
Federal laws that had negative effects on Southern economy
Tariffs
Southern states favored a right to nullification
Issues over slavery
76. 36. South Carolina was the fist state to secede, and six more states followed soon after. Alabama was one of those states. One county in Alabama did not secede. What was the name of the county? Which Southern state split on the issue of secession and what happened to that state?
77. Answer Winston County, Alabama never seceded. The western counties of Virginia did not want to secede so Virginia split into two states, Virginia and West Virginia
78. 37. The eleven states that seceded formed a new nation. What was the name of this nation and who was the first president?
79. Answer: The name of the new nation was the Confederate States of America (CSA), and Jefferson Davis was the first president.
80. 38. Matching First Battle of Bull Run
Battle of Vicksburg
Battle of Gettysburg
Shermans March to the Sea
Gettysburg Address
Appomattox Court House Union general captured Atlanta and continued to Savannah destroying everything in his path, 1864-1865
General Robert E. Lee surrendered here, 1865
Lincolns speech dedicating a cemetery, 1863
Battle that cut off parts of the South when the Union gained control of the Mississippi River, 1863
Major three-day battle in Pennsylvania lost by Confederacy, 1863
First major battle of the Civil War, 1861
81. Answer: D
F
E
B
C
A
82. 39. Read the Following Quote The Homestead Act of 1862 has been called one of the most important pieces of legislation in the history of the U.S. Signed into law in 1862 by Abraham Lincoln after the secession of southern states, this Act turned over vast amounts of the public domain to private citizens. 270 million acres were claimed and settled under this act. A homesteader had only to be the head of a household and at least 21 years of age to claim a 160-acre parcel of land. Settlers from all walks of life including newly arrived immigrants, farmers without land of their own, single women and former slaves came to meet the challenge of keeping this free land. Each homesteader had to live on the land, build a home, make improvements and farm for five years
-National Park Service
83. 39. Question Who was eligible for land from this Act?
What did a homesteader have to do to keep the free land?
Draw a conclusion. How would the Homestead Act benefit the U.S.?
84. Answer: Any person who was a t least 21 years of age and head of a household was eligible for the land.
For five years, a homesteader had to live on the land, build a house, farm, and make improvements in order to keep the land.
Congress passed this Act to help all settlers acquire land. This would help the nation by increasing food supply, employing people, and settling the land.
85. 40. Which statements belong to Lincolns plan for the reconstruction of the south, and which belong to the Congressional plan? Granted amnesty to any Confederate who supports the Constitution
Pass the Wade-Davis Bill which required 50% of states male voters to take an oath that they never voluntarily supported Confederacy
States government must abolish slavery to be granted executive recognition
Military governors to rule Southern States
86. Answer: Lincolns plan: #1 and 3
Congressional plan: #2 and 4
87. 41. What was Radical Reconstruction?
88. Answer: Radical Reconstruction included the Civil Rights Act of 1865, which defined citizenship and outlawed discrimination because of race. Newly freed slaves, Northern carpetbaggers, and Southern scalawags supported radical governments formed in Southern states
89. 42. I was elected in 1876 because I promised to end Reconstruction. Who am I?
90. Answer: Rutherford B. Hayes
91. 43. Industrialization and urbanization began to be evident in Alabama during the late 1800s. Look at the graph below and answer the questions..
92. 43. Question Describe the trends in industrialization and urbanization from 1850-1900.
What factors might have contributed to the growth of manufacturing in Alabama?
93. Answer: The number of urban residents tripled from 1850 to 1900. The number of manufacturing establishments grew rapidly.
Alabama had abundant steel, coal, iron, and natural gas deposits. The resources that were manufactured in Alabama were shipped via the railroad system.
94. 44. What conditions led to the formation of the labor movement and the rise of unionism during the Industrial Revolution?
95. Answer: Low wages, frequent layoffs, long working hours, unsafe working conditions
96. 45. What would have been each groups view of unions? Factory owners
Factory workers
Reformers who wanted to improve life
97. Answer: Factory owners had taken a risk to start a business. They expected large profits. It was costly to improve working conditions and raise wages. Unions interfered with an owners right to run a business and make a profit
Factory workers saw unions as a way to improve safety at work and raise wages. Unions protected workers rights
Reformers tended to favor unions as a way to raise the standard of living for all
98. 46. In the late 1800s, who were leaders in the steel and oil industry?
To whom did Robber Barons refer?
Explain Andrew Carnegies Gospel of Wealth.
What main theme did Horatio Alger use in his novels to illustrate the power of industry during the late 1800s?
99. Answer: Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller
The unscrupulous leaders in industry
Wealthy should give money back to the community
Rags to Riches
100. 47. Explain Social Darwinism
101. Answer: Social Darwinists believed that government programs to help the poor were a mistake. The fit would survive, and others must perish
102. 48. In the late 1800s, the nations farmers were helped by new inventions, but they also faced economic challenges. List three new inventions farmers found helpful
List three complaints the farmers had
103. Answer Steam powered threshers, cornhuskers, and harvesters, barbed wire
Tariffs, deflation, and decline in crop prices
104. 49. Some Alabama farmers could not afford to buy the land they farmed. These farmers became tenant farmers or sharecroppers. Explain these terms.
105. Answer: A tenant farmer is a farmer who works land owned by someone else. Sharecroppers worked the land in return for a fraction of the crops. This system of farming developed in the Reconstruction era after the Civil War
106. 50. Look at the timeline and answer the questions
What conflicts did the U.S. army and settlers have with Native American tribes between 1870-1893?
How did settlers gain Native American land?
What impact did the dwindling buffalo population have on Native Americans?
107. Answer: The U.S. Army battled Native American tribes in the Red River War, Battle of Rosebud, Battle of Little Bighorn, Nez Perce War, and Wounded Knee
Settlers gained Native American land through the Dawes Act and claimed Cherokee land in Oklahoma.
Native American people used the buffalo for food, clothing, shelter, and weapons. Settlers eliminated many of the resources available to Native American people by over hunting the buffalo
108. 51. Match the Amendment with the correct description 16th
17th
18th
19th The manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the United States is prohibited (Prohibition)
The right of citizens of the U.S. to vote shall not be denied by the U.S. or by any State on account of sex (Women's Suffrage)
The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two Senators from each Sate, elected by the people thereof, for six years; and each Senator shall have one vote (Elections of Senators by popular vote)
The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration (establish income tax)
109. Answer C
D
B
A
110. 52. Define suffrage, and then draw a conclusion about the map. What does it illustrate?
Which constitutional amendment most directly applies to the map? How would that amendment change the maps appearance?
111. Answer: Suffrage means the right to vote. The map illustrates womens voting rights
The 19th Amendment gave all women suffrage in 1920. The entire map would be the lightest color, indicating full suffrage.
112. 53. Explain the meaning of this quotation. There will never be complete equality until women themselves help to make laws and elect lawmakers. -Susan B. Anthony 1820-1906
113. Answer: Voting rights are a sign of equality. Voting rights also ensure that elected officials are responsive to womens needs and concerns.
114. 54. What event led to each group below gaining the right to vote? African American Men
Women
115. Answer: After the Civil War, the Constitution was amended to give citizenship to all former slaves and the right to vote to the men
Suffragists demonstrated and lobbied for decades before the Constitution was amended in 1920
116. 55. Populism and Progressivism were major reform movements in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Compare the view of each on the following social problems:
118. From The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair (1906)
Marija was shut up in one of the rooms where the people seldom saw the daylight; beneath her were the chilling rooms, where the meat was frozen, and above her were the cooking rooms; and so she stood on an ice-cold floor, while her head was often so hot that she could scarcely breathe. Trimming beef off the bones by the hundred-weight , while standing up from early morning till late at night, with heavy boots on and the floor always damp and full of puddles
she worked till she trembled in every nerve and lost her grip on her slimy knife, and gave herself a poisoned wound
56.
1. Name three unsafe or unhealthy working conditions that Marija faced.2. Why did some employers resist efforts by unions to organize workers and improve working conditions?
119. Answer: Insufficient light, temperature extremes, long hours, slick floor, unsafe tools for the job
It costs money to improve working conditions. Some business owners were concerned that they would not make a profit if they had to spend money to make factories safer
120. 57. Matching Led by W.E.B. Du Bois
Believed that vocational education was more valuable to African Americans than social advantages or political office
Called for full political, civil, and social rights for African Americans
Forerunner of NAACP
Supported by Booker T. Washington
1905-1910
1895 Atlanta Compromise
Niagara Movement
121. Answer: B
A
B
B
A
B
A
122. In detail our demands are clear and unequivocal. First, we would vote
Second, We want discrimination in public accommodation to cease
Third, We claim the right of freemen to walk, talk, and be with them that wish to be with us
Fourth, We want the laws enforced against rich as well as poor; against Capitalist as well as Laborer; against white as well as black. 58. In 1906, W.E.B. DuBois delivered the Niagara Movement Speech. What issues did he want the nation to address?
123. Answer: African American right to vote should be exercised; no more discrimination against African Americans; African Americans allowed to interact with all humankind; laws enforced fairly and equitably
124. 59. Woodrow Wilson won the Presidential election in 1912. With his election, the government became more involved in regulating business. Discuss the following programs implemented by Wilson and Congress: Clayton Anti-Trust Act 1914
Federal Reserve System 1913
Federal Trade Commission 1914
125. Answer: The Clayton Anti-Trust Act was implemented to break up monopolies. It also made unions legal.
Congress changed the banking industry by establishing the Federal Reserve System. This provided the nation with a safer, more flexible money supply and controlled money in circulation.
The Federal Trade Commission required fair competition among businesses. This commission also monitored business
126. 60. Why did Woodrow Wilson favor legalizing unions?
127. Answer: Wilson believed that there were unfair labor practices occurring in industry. In 1916, he proposed laws that prohibited child labor and limited railroad workers to an eight-hour day
128. 61. The Spanish American War 1898 was a struggle for Cubas independence from Spain. Why would the United States be interested in Cubas independence?
129. Answer: Americans sympathized with the Cuban population because of human rights issues. American business interests, and American military interests.
130. 62. Because of U.S. involvement with Spain regarding Cuba in the late 1800s, over what other territories did the U.S. gain control?
131. Answer: Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines ($20 million purchase)
132. 63. What does the term yellow journalism mean? How did it play a major role in the Spanish American War?
133. Answer: Two newspaper publishers (Hearst and Pulitzer) saw the conflict with Spain as a way to sell more newspapers. They played upon American patriotism by printing anti-Spanish stories. An example of this was their reports of Spanish brutality against Cubans, but no reports of Cuban brutality against the Spanish
134. 64. List and explain the four major causes of WWI.
135. Answer Nationalism- Pride and devotion in ones nation created competition and hatred among nations
Imperialism- A strong country dominating a weaker region for its own gain- Great Britain, France, Germany, and Italy competed for colonies in Asia and Africa
Militarism- The buildup of military forces to protect colonies and prepare for war
Alliance System- In order to protect themselves European nations formed alliances. The Triple Alliance was made up of Austria Hungary, Germany and Italy. The Triple Entente included Great Britain, France and Russian
136. 65. WWI changed the conditions in Europe and the world. What are two important changes cause by World War I?
137. Answer: Creation of the League of Nations
Creation of independent nations in Europe and the Middle East (Poland and Iraq)
Created conditions that led to WWII
Created conditions that led to rise of Adolph Hitler
138. 66. List the technologies and methods that changed the way WWI was fought.
139. Answer: Poison Gas
Trench Warfare
Machine Guns
Airplanes
Submarines
Tanks
140. 67. Explain how the development of the machine gun changed the tactics used during WWI and led to the development of other weapons.
141. Answer: The machine gun forced both sides into the trenches and led to the development of the armored tank as a countermeasure to the machine gun
142. 68. The U.S. entered WWI in 1917. What were the precipitating incidents that led the U.S. to abandon isolationism?
143. Answer: Sinking of the Lusitania
Unrestricted Submarine Warfare
Zimmermann Telegram
144. 69. What document formally ended WWI?
145. Answer: The Treaty of Versailles
146. 70. What were some of the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles?
147. Answer The League of Nations was formed
Germany had to make large reparations for war
Germany had to announce guilt in causing the war
Limits were placed on Germanys army and on Germanys naval vessels
Provisions for trial of former Kaiser
Alsace Lorraine was restored to France
148. 71. What was the primary goal of the League of Nations? Did the U.S. join?
149. Answer: The League of Nations would unite the nations of the world to ensure peace and security for all members. No, the U.S. did not join. Many Americans wanted to remain isolated from problems in Europe
150. 72. American culture changed after WWI. Two changes were the Harlem Renaissance and the Jazz Age
What was the Harlem Renaissance?
151. Answer After WWI, African Americans had more opportunities to express their heritage through literature, art, and music. This period became known as the Harlem Renaissance. It began when groups of African Americans gathered in Harlem during the 1920s to discuss social and cultural aspects of African American Life
152. 73. Name two authors who contributed to the literature of the Harlem Renaissance
153. Answer: Zora Neale Hurston
Countee Cullen
Langston Hughes
154. 74. How did African American migration to the North contribute to the Harlem Renaissance
155. Answer: Unemployment and racism in the South resulted in African American migration to the North. This allowed more African Americans to contribute to the movement
156. 75. What was the Jazz Age? How was it related to blues?
157. Answer: Jazz music has roots in African American culture and experienced a surge of popularity in the 1920s. The Jazz Age followed the increased popularity of blues music earlier in the 20th century. Both types of music influenced one another. W.C. Handy, an Alabama native, was known as the father of Blues.
158. 76. What was the Red Scare
159. Answer: A nationwide fear of communists, socialists, and anarchists spread throughout America after the end of WWI
160. 77. What was the Ku Klux Klan
161. Answer: This group exemplifies hatred and intolerance. The KKK led many riots and lynchings in the U.S. against minorities
162. 78. Who were Sacco and Vanzetti
163. Answer: Two men robbed an murdered two businessmen as they were transferring money. Italian immigrants and known anarchists, Sacco and Vanzetti, were accused and arrested for the crime, despite the little evidence against them. On circumstantial evidence, Sacco and Vanzetti were convicted of murder and sentenced to death
164. 79. Explain Immigration laws of 1920
165. Answer: During the 1920s, large numbers of immigrants came to the U.S. from eastern and southern Europe. The U.S. government limited the number of immigrants allowed into the country because Americans were fearful that these immigrants would take jobs away from citizens. Asian immigration was completely banned
166. 80. The Great Depression occurred after the stock market crash of 1929. What were some reasons for the stock market crash?
167. Answer: Wages and consumer spending increased in the 1920s
Stock prices rose
Many investors invested life savings during 1929
In October 1929, buying craze dwindled followed by wilder selling craze
Many banks speculated in stock market
Stock prices dropped as investors tried to sell
168. 81. Franklin Delano Roosevelt focused on the nations recovery from the Great Depression. In 1933, he implemented his New Deal. Explain what each program did for the nation. Agricultural Adjustment Act
Civilian Conservation Corps
Tennessee Valley Authority
National Industrial Recovery Act
169. Answer: AAA-paid subsidies to farmers not to plant certain crops to help the price of crops increase
CCC- created many jobs for the unemployed through public works projects
TVA- built dams and power plants to supply electrical power to seven states
NIRA- simulated production and competition by regulating prices of manufactured goods
170. 82. Using this information read the descriptions in the chart and decide which President favored each solution for the Great Depression President Hoover believed that the way to end the Great Depression was through the actions of business, private consumers, local government, and the aid of charities
Roosevelt favored an active role on the part of the federal government
171. Answer: A. Hoover
B. FDR
C. Hoover
D. FDR
172. 83. The Great Depression affected all sates in America. Alabamians suffered tremendous hardships during this time and the years leading up to the Depression. Describe the Alabama industrial and farming situations during the 1920s and 1930s.
173. Answer: Alabama attracted business and industry during the 1920s because there was an abundance of cheap labor in the state. The industrial economy started declining in Alabama around 1926. Agriculture in Alabama had been depressed during the 1920s because of insects and falling cotton prices; therefore, many farms were lost to foreclosure. Sharecropping and tenant farming in Alabama collapsed during the Depression
174. 84. The majority of Alabamians supported the New Deal and Franklin Roosevelt. What programs from the New Deal most helped Alabama?
175. Answer: The Civil Works Administration and the Civilian Conservation Corps employed thousands of people from Alabama. The Tennessee Valley Authority helped to supply electricity to the northern part of Alabama
176. 85. What led the nations of the world to fight another war so soon after WWI?
177. Answer: Economic Depression- Germany was unable to pay its war reparations, the Allies were unable to repay their war debts, and the US withdrew foreign investments. These conditions set the stage for the rise of dictators
Nationalism, Imperialism, and Militarism- The same factors that led to WWI also played an important role in causing WWII
Axis Expansion- Italy, Germany, and Japan made up the Axis Powers and sought to expand their territory through coercion and conquest
Appeasement- As Germany, Italy, and Japan moved to take more land and territory, Britain and the other Allied nations gave into their demands to preserve the peace
178. 86. How did these German problems from WWI help propel the world into WWII? German Guilt
War Reparations
Disarming Germany
German Colonies Seized
179. Answer: Guilt- Germany was forced to accept blame for WWI
Repartitions- Germany was forced to pay huge reparations to the Allies
Disarmed- Germany was completely disarmed
Colonies seized- German colonies were placed under the control of Allied Nations
180. 87. Match the WWII leader with his country or position Franklin D. Roosevelt
Joseph Stalin
Adolph Hitler
Winston Churchill
Benito Mussolini
Dwight Eisenhower
Douglas MacArthur Great Britain
USSR
Italy
Commander of General Forces in Europe
United States
U.S. military leader in the Pacific
Germany
181. Answer E
B
G
A
C
D
F
182. 89. What countries were the Allies in WWII?
183. Answer: United States
Great Britain
USSR
France
184. 90. What countries were the Axis in WWII?
185. Answer: Germany
Japan
Italy
186. 91. Which of the following best completes this list? On the Home Front during WWII
-Rosie the Riveter
-Victory Gardens
-Gas Rationing
-???? Is it
Prohibition
War Bonds
Widespread Protests
Yellow Journalism
187. Answer B- War Bonds
188. 92. What were Japanese Relocation Centers? Why were they created?
189. Answer: In 1942 President Roosevelt signed an executive order that sent over 120,000 Americans of Japanese heritage to camps in the American West. Each camp was surrounded by barbed wire and armed guards. The camps were established because people of Japanese ancestry were perceived as potential threats to the American war effort after Japans attack on Pearl Harbor
190. 93. Match each event to its place and date. Use of atomic bomb ended WWII
Attack brought U.S. into WWII
Attack started WWII in Europe Poland, 1939
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, 1941
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 1945
191. Answer: C
B
A
192. 94. Hitler attempted to exterminate Jews and other groups he deemed inferior. Define Holocaust. How many people were murdered in the Holocaust?
193. Answer: The term Holocaust refers to the systematic annihilation of Jews and other groups by Nazi Germany from 1933-1945. An estimated six million Jews were killed. Hundreds of thousands of others were also murdered