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Goals 7-12 US History Review

Goals 7-12 US History Review. Muckrakers" was the name that Theodore Roosevelt gave journalists of the early part of the 20th century who exposed governmental and abuses in American business.

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Goals 7-12 US History Review

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  1. Goals 7-12 • US History Review

  2. Muckrakers" was the name that Theodore Roosevelt gave journalists of the early part of the 20th century who exposed governmental and abuses in American business. • Ida Tarbell, one of the original muckrakers, was able to help shut down the Standard Oil Company monopoly by advocating for the Clayton anti-trust Act, which declared monopolies illegal in America.

  3. Muckrakers: Ida Tarbell, Upton Sinclair, and Lincoln Steffens Helped Expose Scandals. • Inspired Reform using Investigative writing about dangerous and questionable practices in the: • Standard Oil Company Trust, • Meat packing industry • Poor conditions of the cities • Political reforms, intiative, recall reform

  4. President Theodore Roosevelt was sickened after reading an advance copy. He called upon Congress to pass a law establishing the Food and Drug Administration and, for the first time, setting up federal inspection standards for meat.

  5. Jacob Riis was among the first to use flash powder (PICTURES) as a muckraking journalist, which enabled him to photograph interiors and exteriors of the horrible conditions of city slums. Jacob Riss advocated for clean sewer systems in cities to ensure safe drinking water in Urban slums.

  6. Seventeenth Amendment: • Direct Election of Senators • Progressives wanted the direct election of senators to stop continued government corruption and rioting

  7. Content: Sharecropping • The primary means of African American livelihood became sharecropping. Former white plantation owners would hire former slaves to work the land cheaply in exchange for food, clothing, housing and a small bit of pay. In terms of the power structure, the laborer was subjected to the demands of the sharecropper until he paid all debts in full tying them to the farm.

  8. Content: Legalized government segregation • The Plessey decision set the precedent that "separate" facilities for blacks and whites were constitutional as long as they were "equal." The "separate but equal" doctrine was quickly extended to cover many areas of public life, such as restaurants, theaters, restrooms, and public schools.

  9. Content: Henry Ford –Model T • Had the greatest impact on transportation during the first quarter of the 20th century • The Model T replaced railroad travel which led the country throughout the 1800’s

  10. Content: The factors caused the U.S. to enter WWI • Sinking of the Lusitania • Zimmermann Note • Unrestricted submarine warfare

  11. Content: Enlistment slogans to defeat the German army • the United States entered World War I, April 1917 • Make the world safe for democracy enlist today • Keep freedom of the seas defeat the Huns (Germans)

  12. Sedition Act of 1918, which made it a crime to "willfully utter, print, write, or publish any disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language about the form of the Government of the United States" or to "willfully urge, incite, or advocate any curtailment of the production" of the things "necessary or essential to the prosecution of the war.

  13. A group of over 20, 000 World War I veterans who marched on Washington, D.C., to receive their World War I bonus during the summer of 1932. Most of the veterans, unemployed and in desperate circumstances, demanded the passage of a bill providing immediate payment of their bonus.

  14. Content: Republicans Big Business, • Reduce the size of the US government • Republicans of the late 1920’s wanted to reduce government influence of big business • Halt continued progressive reforms

  15. Content: easy consumer credit • Buying on Margin • Over speculation (thought you had the money but did not) • The factors that contributed to both the boom and bust of the 1920’s and 1930s in the US.

  16. Content: Dust Bowl - Agricultural depression • During the 1920's, farmers in the United States experienced the worst Depression in history; an economic slump which turned on its head the prosperity of the 1920's a slump in which thousands of farmers lost their farms.

  17. A group of over 20,000 World War I veterans who marched on Washington, D.C., to receive their World War I bonus during the summer of 1932. Most of the veterans, unemployed and in desperate circumstances, demanded the passage of a bill providing immediate payment of their bonus.

  18. The 1920s are known today as the “Jazz Age.”  Jazz music was created at the beginning of the 20th century.  It was influence by blues and ragtime which were popular during previous years.  Since jazz was the popular music of the time, it was often played for social dancing.  For the most part, ballroom style dances were still common.  Some popular danced were the Fox Trot, Black Bottom, Charleston, Waltz, and Shag.

  19. Content: Cars replaced railroads in the 1920s • Social travel was mostly impacted by cars • The movement to upgrade the practical cars of the 1920s escalated during the decade. The luxurious, large, high-class cars captured the imaginations of the people. (I guess nothings changed!)

  20. Content: Flappers • The 19th amendment gave women the right to vote, allowing them a voice in the government. This had a large impact on dance because since women had voting rights they were allowed to do more things but dance was an outlet for women who had been oppressed in America

  21. Red Scare 1919 • Unemployment surged upward until summer of 1919. There were 3600 strikes in 1919 involving 4 million workers. The cost of living was 99% higher in 1919 than in 1914 due to inflation, some people began to think that communism might be a better system causing the red Scare

  22. When President Roosevelt took office in 1933, he feverishly created program after program to give relief, create jobs, and stimulate economic recovery for the U.S. These programs were called relief, recovery and reform a bold experiment to reform and enlarge the U.S. government to aid the people during the great depression.

  23. WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION (Relief)Established under the $4.8 billion Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935, the WPA lasted until 1943 and employed at least 8.5 million people. They built thousands of roads, bridges, schools, post offices and other public construction projects. The New deal enlarged the size of government and put people back to work

  24. Content: Authoritarian regimes • Germany Japan and Italy • Sought world domination during WWI • Germany invaded Europe and Africa • Japan the pacific

  25. Content: WWII theater battles • Battle at Stalingrad was fought in the European theater • Battle of Midway fought in the pacific –strategy island hoping • Battle of El Amien fought in North Africa

  26. Content: Manhattan project • The attack and its aftermath killed an estimated 140,000 people at the end of World War II. • Atomic bomb was a weapon with great explosive power that results from the sudden release of energy upon the splitting, or fission, of the nuclei of such heavy elements as plutonium or uranium created as deterrent to German and Japanese advancement for world power

  27. Content: Internment of Japanese-Americans • The Japanese Imperial Navy attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii Dec. 7,1941. • The U.S. Supreme Court argued in Korematsu v. United States that the internment camps were legal and justified for military and security reasons.

  28. Content: Containment of communism • the Truman Doctrine, asked Congress for $400 million in military and economic assistance for Turkey and Greece. • Domino theory contain communist in Southeast Asia

  29. Content: During the Cold War of the 1950s and 1960s, threat of possible nuclear attack by the Soviet Union inspired the creation Containment policy • Nuclear offensive weapons grew dramatically in quality and quantity during the Cold War.

  30. United Nations • World Peace keeping organization • 5 country member security council

  31. Content: The Federal-Aid Highway Act • By the late 1930s, the pressure for construction of transcontinental superhighways was building. It even reached the White House, where President Franklin D. Roosevelt repeatedly expressed interest in construction of a network of toll superhighways as a way of providing more jobs for people out of work. Congress, too, decided to explore the concept

  32. Western Europe and North America were locked in a battle with a Soviet regime committed to developing its military might. The allies needed a safety net to repel any form of aggression and to safeguard their freedom. • Their solution was the North Atlantic Treaty

  33. Americans were routinely persecuted because they were suspected of being insufficiently patriotic in the struggle against Communism and, in particular, the Soviet Union. The persecution took various forms, from imprisonment to the purging and blacklisting of untold thousands

  34. Content The “Space Race” began in 1957 when the Soviet Union launched the first manmade satellite, Sputnik. The American government and the American people feared that control of space determine the winner in the cold war. The tension created by the cold war, along with the perceived technology gap, led the United States to pour billions of dollars into the development of a space program (NASA).

  35. U.S. families respond to the threat of a nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union as the cold war intensified • The purpose of a fallout shelter is to shield the people inside from the harmful effects of radiation

  36. Cold War • President Harry Truman established the CIA during the Cold War to collect Intelligence information on Communist activities Truman actions proved useful during the Cuban Missile Crisis

  37. The only Cold War to turn hot was the Korean war • The Korean War was not a war at all it was a US police action to stop the spread of communism in east Asia • Creating a problem between Communist China and Capitalist America at the 38th parallel dividing North Korea and South Korea

  38. Content: Bay of Pigs Invasion • U.S. under estimates Cuba resistance forces • In April 1961 anti- U.S. forces engaged in the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, but Cuban forces stop the United States attempt to unseat Castro's government.

  39. Content: Civil rights Movement • Bus boycott in Montgomery Alabama • CIVIL LIBERTIES -Fundamental individual rights, such as freedom of speech and religion, protected by law against unwarranted governmental or other interference.

  40. Content: Civil Rights turn to militant Action • After the assassination of MLK, Jr.

  41. President Lyndon Baines Johnson used the domino theory to justify early U.S. involvement in Vietnam • Asia is where the communist conspirators have decided to make their play for global conquest. If we lose Vietnam, south east Asia will fall to the communist its inevitable. LBJ 

  42. Content: War Power ACT • The War Powers Resolution of 1973 (Public Law 93-148) limits the power of the President of the United States to wage war without the approval of the Congress. The United States has formally declared war against foreign nations eleven separate times.

  43. Counterculture refers to the social revolution that swept America in the 1960’s protesting war, the civil rights problems, and poverty, otherwise known as the hippy movement. (Because young people wore their hair long in protest of old values) • The Vietnam war led to the counter culture of the 1960’s Young Americans referred to as hippies opposed the bombing of Cambodia, and the US police Action in called the Vietnam war.

  44. Content: Block grants • Block grants reduce federal involvement in state run housing projects • The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development funds must be used to benefit state residents.

  45. Chief Justice Earl Warren led the court toward a number of landmark decisions in the fields of civil rights and individual liberties. Among these were the unanimous 1954 decision, written by Warren, ending segregation in the nation's schools, Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas

  46. Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 is a federal law that enforces men’s and women’s equality in any educational sports program or activity at any educational institution that receive federal funds.

  47. Content: Bakke v. Regents, University of California.  • The Supreme Court first considered that question in 1978, in the case of Bakke v. Regents, University of California.  Bakke, a white applicant to the UC-Davis Medical School, claimed that he was denied admission even though his test scores and grades were markedly better than minority applicants who were admitted.  The Court found that Bakke had been denied equal protection of the laws by UC-

  48. After the Watergate scandal of the Nixon [Republican] administration • President Carter campaigned on the promise that he would not lie or deceive the American people and he won the 1976 presidential election

  49. U.S. oil consumption was the major cause of ill shortages in the early 1970’s, mainly from gas inefficient vehicles • Arab-Israeli conflicts had produced a growing tension between U.S. and Arab countries, but over consumption was the major problem

  50. Ronald Reagan domestic policy- The rich and prosperous do not pay taxes, "trickle down economies" and the lower classes. Lower taxes on wealthily incomes would benefit American society. • This policy led to a high Government deficit and deficit spending

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