EXAMINATION 3 REVIEW--US HISTORY SINCE 1877
EXAMINATION 3 REVIEW
US HISTORY SINCE 1865
This is your third examination. It will cover events from chapter 25 to 28 in your text.
Your examination will be part multiple choice AND part essay. You will need to bring to class with you a pencil for the multiple choice and a bluebook for the essay. We will take the exam during the second part of the period on Thursday.
Things you should know:
Chapter 23: A Clash of Cultures, 1920-1929
You should know:
· Reaction of the 1920s—rise of Nativism, immigration restriction laws, KKK, Fundamentalism, Scopes Trial and Prohibition
· Culture of the 1920s—“Jazz Age”, mass culture, mass consumerism, “New Morality”
· Women’s History—“New Woman”, Women’s suffrage, women in the workforce
· Minority Issues—Demographic shifts, Harlem Renaissance, “Negro Nationalism”, NAACP
· Culture of Modernism—Science and social thought, art and literature, Southern Renaissance
Chapter 24: The Reactionary Twenties
You should know:
· The status of the Progressives in the 1920s
· Return to Normalcy—Elections of 1920; mood of the country; desire for “normalcy”; what did normalcy mean?
· Harding Administration: Policies, not Progressive; Its stance toward business; Tariffs and Taxes; scandals and corruption
· Coolidge Administration: Character and Ideology
· The “New Era”: The Mass Consumer Culture—Advertising; Popular Media; Transportation & Automobiles
· Republican Economic Policy: Hoover and the Commerce Department
· Relations with Business and Trade Associations
· Agricultural Issues: Problems in Agriculture; Farm Bloc; McNary-Haugen Plan
· Organized Labor: Set backs for Unions
· Hoover Presidency: Progressive policies; Farm issues; Problems with the economy
· Stock Market collapse & Great Depression: Hoover’s response to Depression; Congressional action—i.e. Glass-Steagall Act, Fed. Home Loan Bank Act; Bonus Expeditionary Force
Chapter 25: The Great Depression, 1929-1939
You should know:
· Election of 1932 and FDR’s “New Deal” proposal
· FDR’s “100 Days”: Banking Crisis & Holiday; Securities and Exchange Commission; CCC, FERA, WPA
· Agricultural Adjustment Act: Supreme Court and the AAA, Second AAA
· National Recovery Administration (NRA): Objectives, Fair Practice Codes, Effects on Labor, Controversies and Supreme Court and the NRA
· TVA
· Dust Bowl and Migration to California
· Culture of the 1930s: Literature, Popular Culture, Movies
· Second New Deal: Election of 1936; Critics of New Deal (Long, Coughlin, Townsend); Wagner Act; Social Security Act; Court-packing Plan; Wagner-Steagall National Housing Act; Fair Labor Standards Act
TERMS:
1. Sacco and Vanzetti case
2. Scopes trial
3. Al Capone
4. “New Woman”
5. Alice Paul
6. Carrie Chapman Catt
7. 18th Amendment
8. 19th Amendment
9. 20th Amendment
10. 21st Amendment
11. Marcus Garvey
12. NAACP
13. Gertrude Stein
14. William Faulkner
15. Teapot Dome Scandal
16. Calvin Coolidge
17. Charles Lindbergh
18. Farm Bloc
19. McNary-Haugen
20. Glass-Steagall Act
21. (Veterans) Bonus Expeditionary Force
22. Bank Holiday
23. Secrutities and Exchange Commission
24. CCC
25. FERA
26. WPA
27. AAA & Second AAA
28. National Recovery Administration (NRA)
29. TVA
30. John Steinbeck
31. Huey Long
32. Wagner Act
33. Social Security Act
34. Alfred Landon
35. Wagner-Steagall National Housing Act
US HISTORY SINCE 1865
This is your third examination. It will cover events from chapter 25 to 28 in your text.
Your examination will be part multiple choice AND part essay. You will need to bring to class with you a pencil for the multiple choice and a bluebook for the essay. We will take the exam during the second part of the period on Thursday.
Things you should know:
Chapter 23: A Clash of Cultures, 1920-1929
You should know:
· Reaction of the 1920s—rise of Nativism, immigration restriction laws, KKK, Fundamentalism, Scopes Trial and Prohibition
· Culture of the 1920s—“Jazz Age”, mass culture, mass consumerism, “New Morality”
· Women’s History—“New Woman”, Women’s suffrage, women in the workforce
· Minority Issues—Demographic shifts, Harlem Renaissance, “Negro Nationalism”, NAACP
· Culture of Modernism—Science and social thought, art and literature, Southern Renaissance
Chapter 24: The Reactionary Twenties
You should know:
· The status of the Progressives in the 1920s
· Return to Normalcy—Elections of 1920; mood of the country; desire for “normalcy”; what did normalcy mean?
· Harding Administration: Policies, not Progressive; Its stance toward business; Tariffs and Taxes; scandals and corruption
· Coolidge Administration: Character and Ideology
· The “New Era”: The Mass Consumer Culture—Advertising; Popular Media; Transportation & Automobiles
· Republican Economic Policy: Hoover and the Commerce Department
· Relations with Business and Trade Associations
· Agricultural Issues: Problems in Agriculture; Farm Bloc; McNary-Haugen Plan
· Organized Labor: Set backs for Unions
· Hoover Presidency: Progressive policies; Farm issues; Problems with the economy
· Stock Market collapse & Great Depression: Hoover’s response to Depression; Congressional action—i.e. Glass-Steagall Act, Fed. Home Loan Bank Act; Bonus Expeditionary Force
Chapter 25: The Great Depression, 1929-1939
You should know:
· Election of 1932 and FDR’s “New Deal” proposal
· FDR’s “100 Days”: Banking Crisis & Holiday; Securities and Exchange Commission; CCC, FERA, WPA
· Agricultural Adjustment Act: Supreme Court and the AAA, Second AAA
· National Recovery Administration (NRA): Objectives, Fair Practice Codes, Effects on Labor, Controversies and Supreme Court and the NRA
· TVA
· Dust Bowl and Migration to California
· Culture of the 1930s: Literature, Popular Culture, Movies
· Second New Deal: Election of 1936; Critics of New Deal (Long, Coughlin, Townsend); Wagner Act; Social Security Act; Court-packing Plan; Wagner-Steagall National Housing Act; Fair Labor Standards Act
TERMS:
1. Sacco and Vanzetti case
2. Scopes trial
3. Al Capone
4. “New Woman”
5. Alice Paul
6. Carrie Chapman Catt
7. 18th Amendment
8. 19th Amendment
9. 20th Amendment
10. 21st Amendment
11. Marcus Garvey
12. NAACP
13. Gertrude Stein
14. William Faulkner
15. Teapot Dome Scandal
16. Calvin Coolidge
17. Charles Lindbergh
18. Farm Bloc
19. McNary-Haugen
20. Glass-Steagall Act
21. (Veterans) Bonus Expeditionary Force
22. Bank Holiday
23. Secrutities and Exchange Commission
24. CCC
25. FERA
26. WPA
27. AAA & Second AAA
28. National Recovery Administration (NRA)
29. TVA
30. John Steinbeck
31. Huey Long
32. Wagner Act
33. Social Security Act
34. Alfred Landon
35. Wagner-Steagall National Housing Act