Reading Quiz (p.206-214) Terms Flashcards

1
Q

The invention of the “horseless carriage”

A

Automobiles by the millions rolled off assembly lines in American factories in the 1920s. Henry Ford applied the assembly-line technique in producing his cars, and the Model T Ford became the favored means of transportation.

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2
Q

The electrification of the nation

A

Electricity grew at a tremendous pace, with nearly seventy percent of American homes receiving electric power. The increase in the demand for power resulted in the expansion of the industry, and it soon became the second most important economic activity in the country. Consequently, the production of home appliances, motorized machines, and electric turbines also expanded.

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3
Q

The motion picture camera

A

Invented by Thomas Edison in 1896, but not until the beginning of the twentieth century did the motion picture industry emerge as an art form, especially with the production of “The Birth of a Nation” in 1915. Motion picture theaters were opened in thousands of cities and towns, and by the 1930s the industry enjoyed an investment value of $2 billion and employed nearly 500,000 people.

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4
Q

Airplane industry

A

Started at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, on December 17, 1903, when Wilbur and Orville Wright made the first successful flight aboard a heavier-than-air plane. Stimulated by WWI, the airplane industry took off, and aviation became an integral part of the nation’s army and navy. Soon airplanes carried mail, passengers, and cargo around the world. Journeys that had once taken days, weeks, or months to complete now took only hours.

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5
Q

Lindbergh’s Transatlantic Flight

A

On May 21, 1927, in a solo flight, Charles A. Lindbergh flew his monoplane The Spirit of St. Louis from New York to Paris in thirty-three hours nonstop. The age of flight had truly arrived.

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6
Q

18th Amendment and Volstead Act

A

Amendment Introduced in 1917 and ratified in 1919. Prohibited the manufacture, sale, and transportation of intoxicating liquors. Volstead Act, passed over Wilson’s veto on January 16, 1920, was intended to implement the Eighteenth Amendment.

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7
Q

Prohibition and dismissal

A

Prohibition had become law, but many Americans had no intention of changing their drinking habits. To obtain liquor, they relied on bootleggers, or they made it themselves in their bathtubs. This acceptance of illegal activities corrupted the thinking of Americans throughout the country and encouraged a carefree disregard for the law.

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8
Q

George L. Cassiday

A

Congress’ own bootlegger. He operated out of the House Office Building on Independence Avenue.

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9
Q

Alice Roosevelt Longworth

A

The daughter of Theodore Roosevelt and the wife of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Nicholas Longworth. Said, “I don’t think that we foresaw in the slightest degree the great bootlegging industry that was to develop, the complete and organized violation of law and order.”

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10
Q

How did organized crime became rampant?

A

The Mafia, an offshoot of a Sicilian criminal organization, controlled not only bootlegging but gambling and prostitution in the major cities.

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11
Q

“Speakeasies”

A

Illicit liquor stores or nightclubs. In these dark, crowded places young women, called flappers, could be seen dancing the Charleston or listening to jazz and the blues.

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12
Q

Jazz

A

Began among black musicians in New Orleans but quickly spread north just before World War I. Fundamentally African in its rhythms and tradition, jazz drew from black ragtime, but also included French, Spanish, and English elements. In the 1920s it circled the globe and attracted the attention of serious composers. A number of popular musicians, such as Cole Porter, Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin, and George Gershwin, provided songs that became classics and were sung worldwide. These songs marked the beginning of an American musical tradition that was innovative and unique and extremely popular.

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13
Q

Flappers

A

Wore short dresses, cut their hair short, and smoked cigarettes. Having lost husbands, brothers, and boyfriends in the war, and parents in the influenza epidemic of 1919–1920, they exhibited a carefree wildness and independence that represented an entirely new version of the American woman. They had the vote and a sense of freedom that encouraged a boldness never expressed before.

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14
Q

American literature

A

The most important literary trend provided venturesome styles of writing in the novels of Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Dos Passos, Theodore Dreiser, and Sherwood Anderson. They completed the full development of the naturalistic school of literature.

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15
Q

American drama

A

Eugene O’Neill virtually single-handedly created the American theater tradition.

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16
Q

American Poetry

A

Writers including T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, e. e. cummings, Robinson Jeffers, Robert Frost, and Carl Sandburg added outstanding and uniquely American works of poetry.

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17
Q

Harlem Renaissance

A

Celebrated of black culture. Gifted writers Langston Hughes, W. E. B. DuBois, James W. Johnson, Alain Locke, and Claude McKay emphasized both the joy and the pain of being African-American.

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18
Q

Name a prominent painter and an influential architect

A

Painters like Georgia O’Keeffe produced works that had a definite American cast, and Frank Lloyd Wright’s “prairie-style” architecture was so distinctive that it drew international attention.

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19
Q

Ku Klux Klan during 1920s

A

The Roaring Twenties witnessed the renewed growth of the Ku Klux Klan throughout the South; then it migrated northward and established itself in many northern states.

20
Q

“Red Scare”

A

Emanated from a fear of communism and foreign influence in American life and culture. Increased isolationism throughout the country and resulted in the arrest of hundreds of individuals suspected of subversive activities. The Red Scare intensified after June 2, 1919, when an assassin attempted to kill the U.S. attorney general, A. Mitchell Palmer. The courts dismissed any concern they should have had about the legality of such arbitrary arrests as they too were caught up in the excitement over fear of foreign radicals. Such corruption engulfed the nation and seeped into the operation of every level of government.

21
Q

Warren Gamaliel Harding: corruption

A

The President’s personal tastes ran to booze, gambling, and sex. His immoral behavior was soon reflected in the many scandals that permeated his administration.

22
Q

Teapot Dome scandal

A

Occurred in 1921, when two naval oil reserves, at Teapot Dome inWisconsin and Elk Hills in California, were transferred from the Navy Department to the Interior Department and subsequently leased, without competitive bidding, to private oil companies.

23
Q

Albert B. Fall

A

Fall, the secretary of the interior, received hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes during the Teapot Dome Scandal. When an investigation revealed the extent of the fraud, Fall fled to Europe, but he was caught, brought home, tried, convicted, and sentenced to prison. He was the first cabinet officer in American history to be fined and imprisoned for his crimes. Other members of the Harding administration also went to the penitentiary or committed suicide.

24
Q

First Immigration Quota Act

A

Passed on May 19, 1921.Limited the number of immigrants to be admitted to the country: the number of aliens of any nationality was not to exceed three percent of the number of persons of that nationality listed in the 1910 census; also, the act set a limit of 357,803 immigrants per year.

25
Q

Isolationism; and xenophobia

A

Un-involvement in foreign affairs; the fear of that which is perceived to be foreign or strange.

26
Q

First Immigration Quota Act

A

Passed on May 19, 1921. Limited the number of immigrants to be admitted to the country: the number of aliens of any nationality was not to exceed three percent of the number of persons of that nationality listed in the 1910 census; also, the act set a limit of 357,803 immigrants per year.

27
Q

President Harding’s death and consequences

A

Harding died of a heart attack on August 2, 1923. The Vice President, Calvin Coolidge, took the oath the next day. A determined conservative, he pressured Congress to amend the Immigration Act so that certain nationalities that he deemed unworthy of entering the United States would be discriminated against.

28
Q

Immigration Act of 1924

A

Passed May 26, 1924. Lowered the quota of each nationality to be admitted to two percent, based on the 1890 census. Furthermore, only 150,000 immigrants would be admitted each year, and Japanese citizens were excluded altogether.

29
Q

Indian Citizenship Act

A

Passed on June 2, 1924.Providing equality in American society to the native population.

30
Q

Illegal immigration from Mexico

A

There was a large and eager market for unskilled laborers, especially in the farming industry. Fruit and vegetable growers in the Southwest chose not to ask probing questions of their workers about their legal status.

31
Q

National Budget and Accounting Act

A

Passed on June 10, 1921.Created for the first time a Budget Bureau in the Treasury Department to regulate and supervise the expenditures of the national government. Later, during the Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved this bureau from the Treasury Department to the White House in order to better control and regulate the sources and disbursement of funds.

32
Q

Progressives for social and political reform

A

Held a conference in Chicago in May 1923. They proposed child labor limitation, lower railroad rates, farm relief, freedom for the Philippines, excess profits taxes, and limits on the power of injunctions which were issued by the courts to halt labor strikes. It would take time but eventually most of these reforms were enacted into law.

33
Q

Republican nominations (1924)

A

Republicans nominated Coolidge, but a number of Insurgent Republicans formed a new Progressive Party and nominated Senator Robert La Follette. During the campaign they attracted Socialists, Bull Moosers, and Single Taxers. They proposed the nationalization of the railroads,public development of hydroelectric facilities, and the right of Congress to override decisions of the Supreme Court.

34
Q

Democratic nomination

A

Northern delegates who represented Jews, Catholics, and the foreign-born demanded the condemnation of the Ku Klux Klan and repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, but southern delegates, controlled to a large extent by the KKK and representing religious fundamentalists, objected. After a protracted struggle between Governor Alfred E. Smith (wet) of New York and a former secretary of the treasury, William G. McAdoo (dry), the convention gave the nod to John Davis, a New York lawyer with strong ties to banking and industrial interests.

35
Q

“Wet” vs. “dry”

A

Prohibition supporters, called dries, presented it as a victory for public morals and health. Anti-prohibitionists, known as wets, criticized the alcohol ban as an intrusion of mainly rural Protestant ideals on a central aspect of urban, immigrant, and Catholic life.

36
Q

Innovation during presidential campaign

A

For the first time the conventions were broadcast over the newest form of communication, radio. Radio stations in New York, Washington, and six- teen stations in twelve cities across the country, carried the proceedings.

37
Q

Federal Radio Commission

A

The radio became immediately popular and necessitated the establishment of the Federal Radio Commission, with five members appointed by the President to issue and revoke licenses for the operation of radio stations and to regulate programming. The name of this commission was later changed to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and granted additional power over television after its invention.

38
Q

Presidential election of 1924

A

Coolidge and the Republican Party enjoyed a stunning victory. Coolidge himself garnered over 15 million votes, compared with 8 million for Davis and almost 5 million for La Follette. Both houses of Congress were also captured by the Republicans.

39
Q

The Roaring Twenties

A

American songs, jazz, the shimmy (a dance), and illegal drinking gave the 1920s a special and uniquely American quality. Everyone seemed to be making money, one way or another. The stock market soared; investors found all sorts of ways to increase their wealth, including buying on margin.

40
Q

Farmers’ economic depression

A

Farm prices went into a steady decline following World War I, and conditions on the farm became dire. Farmers appealed to the government for help but received little. They formed a farm bloc and demanded subsidies to underwrite the unloading of farm surpluses overseas. But what few bills passed in Congress were quickly vetoed by Coolidge on the ground that the measures constituted price fixing for a special interest.

41
Q

Presidential election of 1928

A

Republicans chose Herbert Hoover to head their ticket, along with Charles Curtis, while the Democrats fielded Alfred E. Smith and Joseph T. Robinson, a senator from Arkansas. During the campaign Hoover promised to provide relief for the despairing farmers, and this promise undoubtedly helped him to win the election overwhelmingly.

42
Q

Republican Oscar S. Priest of Illinois

A

The first African-American from outside the south to join the House of Representatives. Served with distinction from 1929 to 1935. Because Washington was so racially segregated, he was forced to dine in the basement of the Capitol next to the kitchen rather than in the all-white dining room for congressmen on the first floor.

43
Q

Smoot-Hawley Tariff

A

Signed by Hoover on June 17, 1930 to deal with the economic problems facing farmers. It was the highest tariff ever passed by Congress and raised import duties on agricultural items to forty-five percent, with special protection awarded to sugar, cotton, and citrus fruits. These increases were so excessive that twenty-six foreign countries retaliated by raising their rates, and American exports took a nosedive.

44
Q

Agricultural Market Act

A

Passed in June 1929 to aid the farmers even further, which established the Federal Farm Board of eight members plus the secretary of agriculture and created a revolving fund of $500 million for low-interest loans to cooperatives to build warehouses and sell surplus crops.

45
Q

Stock market crash

A

On October 23, 1929, the stock market crashed, and thus began the worst economic depression in the nation’s history.