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The West Timeline A.G

  • New Railroads

    New Railroads
    Many things came from railroads in the 18th century. Time zones were created at departure and arrivals for people who traveled via train. It also opened up new lands for farming when railroad workers cleared space up for new tracks to be set. In the end, railroad expansion made cities like Portland, San Francisco, and other cities bloom.
  • Buffalo Hunters

    Buffalo Hunters
    Buffalo Hunters were usually civil war veterans who had experiences with weapons. They would kill the animal just to skin it and sell the fur for $4. These hunters almost made the animal go extinct from killing so many, some would kill so many they made more money than the president. Indians would find skinned buffalo's scattered across lands, and it angered them since they worshiped the buffalo and waste little to nothing when the Indians killed them.
  • Irish Immigrants

    Irish Immigrants
    The Irish population that migrated to the US seeking jobs and land for their families. Most of them came because of the potato famine happening in Ireland but there was also a revolution going on in Germany that failed. They came over in boats referred as Coffin Ships because they were unsanitary and dangerous, many of the immigrants died on their way to the land of the free.
  • Time Zones

    Time Zones
    When trains started being used as a mode of transportation, things got complicated with time since time isn't the same across the country. Each train station set its own clock making it difficult to coordinate train schedules and confusing passengers. So, they made time zones for the country making it easier to coordinate a meeting spot with someone in another time zone.
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    Transforming the West

  • Homestead Act

    Homestead Act
    The Homestead Act encouraged people to migrate west by providing settlers 160 acres of public land. In exchange, homesteaders paid a small filing fee and they were required to live on the land for 5 years before they received ownership of the land. After six months of residency, homesteaders also had the option of purchasing the land from the government for $1.25 per acre.
  • Morrill Land Grant College Act

    Morrill Land Grant College Act
    The Morrill Act funded more universities in places with small populations.The act first provided each state with 30,000 acres of federal land for each member in their Congressional delegation. Then the land was sold by the states and the proceeds used to fund public colleges that focused on agriculture and the mechanical arts.
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    Becoming an Industrial Power

  • Laissez Faire

    Laissez Faire
    Laissez Faire was created because the government felt they should stay out of the private business sphere. This idea came from France were this started. This also started corporations which were the biggest change in the economy. That's because these corporations were owned through stocks. There were corporations in places like railroad or telegraph businesses.
  • Andrew Carnegie

    Andrew Carnegie
    Andrew Carnegie was an immigrant from Ireland at first, but he then became an industrialist who amassed a fortune in the steel industry and then became a philanthropist. In the early 1870s, he entered the steel business, and over the years he became a dominant force in the industry. In 1901, he sold the Carnegie Steel Company to banker John Pierpont Morgan for $480 million. Carnegie then devoted himself to philanthropy, eventually giving away more than $350 million.
  • Alexander Graham Bell

    Alexander Graham Bell
    Alexander Graham Bell was granted the first official patent for his telephone in March 1876, though he would later face years of legal problems to his claim that he was its sole inventor, this ended up being one of the longest patent battles in history. Bell continued his scientific work for the rest of his life, and used his success and wealth to establish various research centers nationwide.
  • Phonograph

    Phonograph
    In 1877, Thomas Edison created a machine with two needles: one for recording and one for playback. While working on improvements to the telegraph and the telephone, Edison figured out a way to record sound on tinfoil-coated cylinders. When Edison spoke into the mouthpiece, the sound vibrations of his voice would be indented onto the cylinder by the recording needle. Edison loved the phonograph so much that he called it his "baby". He continued to work on it to continue improving it.
  • Blacklists

    Blacklists
    Blacklisting is the action of a group or authority, compiling a blacklist of people, countries or other entities to be avoided or distrusted as not being acceptable to those making the list. A blacklist can list people to be discriminated against, refused employment, or censured. Being put on a blacklist makes it virtually impossible so the people who were on the list would become homeless and eventually lose everything.
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    Gilded Ages

  • Western Immigrants

    Western Immigrants
    Immigrants that moved west lived a life more harsh than the rest. They faced racism and violence against them often and had the hardest and more dangerous tasks to do like planting the C4, a highly unstable explosive that people used to blow up holes in the mountains for railroads to be placed. The majority of immigrants were wage workers.
  • Chinese Exclusion Act

    Chinese Exclusion Act
    The Chinese Exclusion Act removed most Chinese immigrants from the US. Chinese immigrants who wanted to come in needed certification from the Chinese government that they were qualified to immigrate. But this group found it difficult to prove that they were not laborers because the 1882 act defined excludables as “skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining.”
  • Monopolies

    Monopolies
    Monopolies were owned by a few or just one person that controlled a sector of the economy. These companies could gauge their prices since there is no competition. They also were able to manipulate stock prices. The Sherman Antitrust Act also helped which was based on the constitutional power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce.
  • Haymarket Riot

    Haymarket Riot
    The Haymarket riot was the aftermath of a bombing that happened at a labor demonstration, Tuesday, May 4, 1886, at Haymarket Square in Chicago, Illinois. At first, the rally was peaceful in support of workers striking for an eight-hour day. But out of nowhere an unknown person threw a dynamite bomb at police as they acted to disperse the public meeting.It is believed that they did this in reaction to the killing of several workers the previous day by the police.
  • Cola-Cola

    Cola-Cola
    Dr. John Stith Pemberton, inventor of Coca-Cola, was a pharmasist who produced the syrup for Coke, and would carry a jug of the new product down the street to Jacobs' Pharmacy. He would give strangers samples of the drink who said it was "excellent" and put it on sale for five cents a glass as a soda fountain drink. Today, Coca-Cola is known around the world and is the most famous drink around the world.
  • The Dawes Severalty Act

    The Dawes Severalty Act
    The Dawes Severalty Act was signed by President Grover Cleveland into law. The act split up reservations held by Native American tribes into smaller units and distributed them into individual units within the tribe. The law also changed the legal status of Native Americans from tribal members to individuals subject to federal laws and dissolved many tribal affiliations.
  • Sherman Anti-trust Act

    Sherman Anti-trust Act
    The Sherman Antitrust Act is a landmark federal statute in the history of United States antitrust law that was passed by Congress in 1890 under the president Benjamin Harrison.The bill allowed certain business activities that federal government regulators deem to be competitive, and recommended the federal government to investigate and pursue trusts.
  • Tenements

    Tenements
    Tenements were poorly built, overcrowded apartments where many immigrants lived. These "apartments" were built in the cities, and it came with many benefits. Many immigrants found jobs which expanded the industrial economy and religious freedom was allowed. Even if they were crowded many people moved them however the conditions were bad, it was so overcrowded that it was filthy.
  • Ghost Dance

    Ghost Dance
    This dance was originated by the Paiute Indians and began to become popular in 1889 when shaman Wovoka had a vision during a sun eclipse. This was a Native American movement that called for a return to traditional ways of life and challenged white dominance in society (whites thought it was a threat) Gathers together to call the spirits of past warriors to inspire the young braves to fight. The dance has led to the Dawes Severalty Act and was later crushed in the Battle of the Wounded Knee.
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    Imperialism

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    Progressive Era

  • Wounded Knee

    Wounded Knee
    The Wounded Knee was a terrible massacre where US soldiers shot and killed a native tribe that was in an Indian reservation. The massacre left 150 Natives dead, all because a gunshot went off making the US soldiers thinking the Indians begun attacking so they began firing back. Many Indians begun occupying the reservation to protest against the government for the bad reservation treatments.
  • World's Columbian Exposition 1893

    World's Columbian Exposition 1893
    The World's Columbian Exposition was a fair that took place in Chicago that featured the progress of American civilization such as industrial technologies, represented through the grand architecture that shows an ideal urban environment. It was to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus' arrival in the New World, and the architecture of the fairgrounds was referred to as the White City. The fair honored art and science and the fair reflected all the ideals of the city at the time
  • City Beautiful Movement

    City Beautiful Movement
    The City Beautiful Movement was a reform philosophy of North American architecture and urban planning that flourished during the 1890s and 1900s with the intent of introducing beautification and monumental grandeur in cities. The movement, which was originally associated mainly with Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and Washington, D.C., promoted beauty not only for its own sake, but also to create moral and civic virtue among urban populations.
  • Depression of 1893

    Depression of 1893
    The depression was known for being the worst economic disaster in the 19th century. The panic started after railroad companies over-extending themselves, overbuilding, speculation, agricultural depression, labor disorder, ongoing labor depression, free silver, damaged American credit abroad, government running out of the gold reserve, and caused bank failures. The people blamed the Sherman Silver Purchase, and Cleveland had to borrow money from J.P. Morgan in order to stabilize the economy.
  • Pullman Strike

    Pullman Strike
    This strike took place against the Pullman Palace Car Company in Chicago and was caused by upset railroad workers who had drastic wage cuts. The strike was led by a person named Eugene Debs, and the nonviolent strike shut down western railroads. In the end, the strike failed due to the president's interference with the mail system, brought a bad image on unions, comprehensive injunction essentially forbidding all boycott activity and then dispatched regular soldiers to Chicago and elsewhere.
  • Henry Ford

    Henry Ford
    Ford was the American captain of industry, the founder of the Ford Motor Company, and the sponsor of the development of the assembly line technique of mass production.This man has developed and mass-produced the car called the Model T, which sold at an affordable price, unlike the other expensive cars that were already invented. His invention sparked the start of the assembly line, and greatly increased his worker's wages and instituted many modern concepts of regular work hours and job benefits
  • Cross of Gold Speech

    Cross of Gold Speech
    This was spoken by William J. Bryan at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. While Bryan supported bimetallism, he thought that the free silver would bring the nation prosperity. Bryan started off his speech by saying that it was "not a contest among persons" but rather "the cause of humanity". He opposed the gold standard, and had a famous quote in his speech, "you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold". The speech helped put him on as the Democratic presidential nomination.
  • Klondike Gold Rush

    Klondike Gold Rush
    This gold rush was an attempt by an estimated of one hundred people to travel to the Klondike region of the Yukon in north-western Canada in the hope of successfully prospecting for gold. Majority of the settlers though have found nothing because the place has been cleaned out before they came. But about four thousand miners were able to discover very rich deposits of gold and became immensely wealthy. Ending in 1899, after gold was discovered in Nome, prompting an exodus from the Klondike.
  • Election of 1896

    Election of 1896
    This U.S presidential election was considered one of the most dramatic campaign in American history. This election showed the Republican William McKinley (supported Gold standard act and was encouraged by industrialists, bankers, and other business leaders) defeat the democratic Willian Jennings Bryan (supported free silver and was encouraged by farmers in the south and west) Overall, McKinley had 271 electoral votes and 7,104,779 popular votes, and Bryan had 176 electoral and 6,502,925 popular.
  • Treaty of Paris (1898)

    Treaty of Paris (1898)
    A conflict in 1898 between Spain and the United States, resulted to this treaty that brought a formal end to the Spanish-American war. Commissioners from the U.S. were sent to Paris to produce a treaty that would bring an end to the war with Spain after six months of hostility. As a result of the treaty, Spain surrendered to America Guam, Puerto Rico and the United States had paid twenty million dollars for the Philipines. Then Spanish finally recognized Cuba's independence.
  • Siege of Santiago

    Siege of Santiago
    Is one of the most important battles of the Spanish American War that ended the Spanish fleet. The Spanish fleet was led by Admiral Cervera on the island of Cuba, and to protect his fleet from the Americans, he took shelter in the Santiago Harbor. After the American army took the city of Cuba, Cervera tried to escape. The American superior force destroyed every single one of Cervera's ships, which ended the Spanish control in Cuba, and I marked the defeat of the Spanish fleet in Cuba.
  • Battle of Manilla Bay

    Battle of Manilla Bay
    This battle occurred at Manila Bay in the Philipines when the US destroyed the Spanish Pacific Fleet with their Asiatic Squadron in the Spanish-American War. Under Commander George Dewey, the US victory won with American steel ships versus Spanish wooden ships. Dewey sailed from Hong Kong to the Philippine to defeat the Spanish fleet at the Battle of Manila Bay, and he open fire with the command, "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley." No US ships were lost, and the US gained the Philipines
  • Boxer Rebellion

    Boxer Rebellion
    Another name for it was the Boxer Uprising. The Boxer Rebellion was the popular peasant uprising in China that blamed foreign people and institutions for the loss of the traditional Chinese way of life. China started by a secret society of Chinese who opposed the "foreign devils" basically despised western intervention in China. Resulted in deaths of thousands of converted Chinese Christians, missionaries, and foreign legions and the rebellion was finally ended by British troops.
  • Teddy Roosevelt

    Teddy Roosevelt
    Theodore Roosevelt was the 26th President of the United States and became an advocate of the Progressive reform. He believed that reform was an important factor in remaking American Society than protecting it against more radical challenges. He allied himself with the supporters of progressives who urged regulation of the trusts, and At the heart of Roosevelt's policy was a desire to win for the government the power to investigate the activities of corporations and publicize the results.
  • Platt Amendment

    Platt Amendment
    This created a joint resolution of the U.S. Congress that replaced the earlier Teller amendment. This restricted Cuba's sovereignty and gave the US the right to intervene if Cuba got into trouble. Cuba pledged not to make treaties with other countries that might compromise its independence, and it granted naval bases to the United States, most notable being Guantanamo Bay. This defined the conditions for the withdrawal of United States troops from Cuba at the end of the Spanish-American war
  • Russo-Japanese War

    Russo-Japanese War
    The war was a military conflict where Japan forced Russia to get rid of its expansionist policy, and competing for the dominance of Korea and Manchuria. The first war began when the Japanese fleet launched a surprise attack and seige on the Russian naval at Port Arthur. And in the very last war in Mukden, with 333,000 Russian forces and 270,000 Japanese forces, there was a long battle, but in the end, Russian commander withdrew his forces. The battle resulted to the Treaty of POrtsmouth.
  • Pure Food and Drug Act

    Pure Food and Drug Act
    The act was a key piece of Progressive Era legislation. It was created because education and exposure from Muckrakers and researchers brought ideas. This was the first law to regulate the manufacturing of food and medicines. It forbid the manufacture or sale of mislabeled or adulterated food or drugs and gave the government broad powers to ensure the safety and effectiveness of drugs in order to get rid of the patent drug trade. Soon the act began the FDA, known as Food and Drug Administration.
  • Meat Inspection Act

    Meat Inspection Act
    The inspection was a large reaction to the book Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, which portrayed the filthy conditions in Chicago's meatpacking industry. This act required strict cleanliness for meat packers and created a program of federal meat inspection to ensure sanitary conditions. The American law makes it a crime to adulterate or misbrand meat and meat products being sold as food, and ensures that meat and meat products are slaughtered and processed under sanitary conditions.
  • Gentleman's Agreement

    Gentleman's Agreement
    An agreement with Japan where Japan agreed to limit emigration into the United States and Theodore Roosevelt agreed to talk with the San Francisco School Board about the segregation of Japanese children in school so it could be stopped. The reason why Roosevelt wanted to implement this agreement was that he wanted to stop the growing tension between the United States and Japan over the immigration of Japanese workers. A final Japanese note made the Gentlemen’s Agreement fully effective.
  • Muller vs Oregon

    Muller vs Oregon
    This case was about limiting the workday for females in places such as laundrymats, factories and machine manufacturer. The case started when the laundromat owned by Curt Muller, required women to work for more than the legal maximum of ten hours. When the state inspectors charged him with violating a law, Culler went to court with the state. But Louis D. Brandeis persuaded the Supreme Court to protect women workers by showing the harmful effects of factory labor on women's weaker bodies
  • Big Stick Policy

    Big Stick Policy
    The policy was created by Theodore Roosevelt who thought it was unnecessary to use force on foreign policy goal. He proposed a new foreign policy approach, that is based on the African quote, "speak softly, and carry a big stick, and you will go far.” The "big stick" in the quite symbolizes the power and readiness to use military force if necessary. Which was a way to intimidate other countries without actually harming them and was the basis of U.S. imperialistic foreign policy.
  • Angel Island

    Angel Island
    The Angel Island is an island in the San Francisco Bay, which is the main immigration processing station, mostly for the Chinese. Between the years of1910 and 1940, 50 thousand Chinese immigrants entered through Angel Island. The island had lots of questioning and, the conditions at Angel Island were much harsher than Ellis Island in New York because Angel Island was more of a prison, that held people for up to several years for interrogation, while most went through Ellis Island in a few hours
  • Bull Moose Party

    Bull Moose Party
    This was a nickname for the new Progressive third Party, which was created to support Roosevelt in the election of 1912. The Republicans were badly split in the 1912 election, so Roosevelt broke away forming his own Progressive Party/ Bull Moose Party. He chose to nickname his party "Bull Moose Party" because he believed he felt "fit as a bull moose". The third party called for direct election of U.S. senators, woman suffrage, reduction of the tariff, and many social reforms.
  • Election of 1912

    Election of 1912
    In this election, the Democrats nominated Woodrow Wilson, which he gave a strong progressive platform called the "New Freedom" program. On the other hand, the Republicans were split between Taft and Roosevelt's Bull Moose Party with its "New Nationalism" program. With the split between Taft and Roosevelt, the Republican vote was split and a Democratic victory was ensured. Woodrow Wilson won the election, and the Republicans were thrust into a minority status in Congress for the next six years.
  • Federal Reserve Act

    Federal Reserve Act
    This act intended to stop bank panics and was created by a man named Woodrow Wilson (under his progressivism). They created a new Federal Reserve Board with a nationwide system of twelve district banks. Each district bank had the power to issue paper money (also called Federal Reserve Notes). It was an attempt to stabilize the bank, provide the United States flexible currency and made it easier to fund all future wars without specifically going to Congress to ask for war funds.
  • Trench Warfare

    Trench Warfare
    The trench warfare was a type of military conflict strategy in which the opposing sides fought one another from the holes of trenches facing one and other. By hiding in the trenches troops are significantly protected from the enemy's small arms fire and are substantially sheltered from artillery. The trench warfare reached its highest development on the Western front during the World War 1 when men from Belgian coast through northeastern France and Switzerland using trench warfare as a tactic.
  • Ludlow Massacre

    Ludlow Massacre
    In the state of Colorado, mine workers walked out of coal mines owned by Rockefeller and they began to strike even after evicted from company housing. The state militia was called to protect mines and the violent outbreak occurred. The Colorado National Guard troops set fire to the tents and attacked 1,200 striking coal miners and their families. The result of the violent event was 20 deaths, 11 were children.The rebellion lasted ten days until the President ordered the US Army into the region.
  • Archduke Franz Ferdinand

    Archduke Franz Ferdinand
    Franz Ferdinand was the Archduke of Austria-Este. Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated on June 28, 1914, while paying a state visit to for good-will mission in Sarajevo. The Archduke was assassinated by the Black Hand who was a Serbian terrorist group that vowed to take action because Serbians viewed Austrians as foreign oppressors. The person who killed Ferdinand was Gavrilo Princip. In the end, the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand became a factor to the start of World War 1.
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    World War I

  • Mustard Gas

    Mustard Gas
    Also known as sulfur mustard, the gas was the poisonous gases created by Fritz Haber, a Professor at the University of Karlsruhe. During a mustard gas attack, the effects are very gradually, and after a few days or hours, there will be red spots on your skin that will quickly turn into painful blisters and cause second or third-degree burns. If you inhaled the mustard gas, then you would get swelling in your nose and throat as the blisters developed, sealing your airway. Was used in WWI.
  • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

    Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
    This disorder is when a person has a difficulty in recovering from being in or experiencing a traumatic event like a car crash, murder, and even in a war. In WWI, the distress of soldiers came from the concussions they had during the impact of shells. The symptoms included panic and sleep problems and were one of the first thought to be a result of damage to the brain after the impact of large guns. Treatment varied, and Soldiers received a few days rest before returning to the war zone
  • Spanish Flu

    Spanish Flu
    The flu became an unusually deadly influenza pandemic. The pandemic has caused more dead people than those who died in World War 1, with a number of 20 and 40 million deaths. More people have died from this disease than the Black Death Bubonic Plague from 1347 to 1351. The flu was first spotted in Europe, the United States, and Asia but is unknown how it came to be a pandemic. Victims died within hours or days of developing symptoms, their skin turning blue and their lungs filling with fluid
  • Espionage Act

    Espionage Act
    This act was reinforced by the Sedition Act shortly after the World War 1. The act made it a crime for a person to mail or print information that inspired the disagreement against American war effort or if they promoted their enemy's success. The Espionage Act was passed at the urging of President Woodrow Wilson, who was scared that any widespread dissent in time of war, thinking that this was a real threat to an American victory. In other words, this punished people for helping the enemy.
  • Sedition Act

    Sedition Act
    The sedition act made it illegal to criticize the government. This legislation attempted to silence criticism of the John Adams' Administration and weaken the many politically active Democratic-Republicans foreigners who had recently come to America from Europe. The legislation punished by fining or imprisoning people if they publicly spoke out, wrote critical articles or conspired against the government. Extended by Espionage Act, it reflected current fears about Germans and anti-war Americans
  • American Expeditionary Forces

    American Expeditionary Forces
    The United States Armed Forces sent to Europe in World War I. An American force of 14,500 that landed in France under the command of General Pershing. Both women and blacks including the regular army, the National Guard, and the new larger force of volunteers served during the war, mostly under white officers. In the United States, in World War I the American Expeditionary Forces fought in France alongside French and British allied forces in the last year of the war, against German forces.
  • 18th Amendment

    18th Amendment
    Section 1 of the amendment declares, "After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited". Overall, the amendment banned the sale, manufacture, and transportation of alcohol. The amendment also became the midpoint of a growing women's rights.
  • Henry Cabot Lodge

    Henry Cabot Lodge
    Lodge was an American Republican Congressman and historian and received his degree from Harvard University. He was the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and was a leader in the fight against participation in the League of Nations because he wanted to protect the sovereignty of the United States. He opposed the Treaty of Versailles and did not like the idea of commitments that would affect the American freedom. He notices the League of Nations would change American imperialism.
  • Treaty of Versailles

    Treaty of Versailles
    The treaty was what officially ended the World War 1. The treaty was mostly written by the Allies power with barely any participation of the Germans, and the Germans were forced to accept the treaty. The Treaty of Versailles had 15 parts with 440 articles. Since France wanted to be harsher to Germany, so they split up Germany to prevent any future wars with Germany. The treaty got rid of Germany's army, Navy, and Airforce, then prohibited Germany to create or possess certain types of weapons;
  • 19th Amendment

    19th Amendment
    The amendment from the U.S Constitution extended the right to vote to women in federal or state elections. In other words, established that no citizen can be denied the right to vote on account of sex. The amendment states "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation." It was ratified after a long women's suffrage movement.
  • Volstead Act

    Volstead Act
    Also known as the National Prohibition Act, this law established under the Prohibition Bureau within the Treasury Department. The act was under-budgeted and largely ineffective, especially in strongly anti-prohibition states. The Volstead Act asked that "no person shall manufacture, sell, barter, transport, import, export, deliver, furnish or possess any intoxicating liquor except as authorized by this act." It was said to forbid liquor and was implemented by the 18th amendment.
  • Speakeasies

    Speakeasies
    This was an illegal bar, also called blind pig or blind tiger, where alcohol were sold to people during the time of prohibition. The name Speakeasy was named this because people literally had to speakeasy so they were not caught drinking alcohol by the police. Some of the speakeasies were similar to today's club because there were singing and jazz performances, and to enter the bar they had to say a password to the door person. They provided the customers gambling, alcohol, and prostitution.
  • Anti-Saloon League

    Anti-Saloon League
    The league was founded in 1893 in Oberlin, Ohio by representatives of temperance societies and evangelical Protestant, and became popular in the 1920s. The Anti-Saloon league was one the most successful political action group that forced the prohibition of alcohol and Increased the public awareness of the social effects of alcohol on society. Their supporters viewed the saloon culture as corrupt and ungodly. They represented themselves through speeches, advertisements, and public demonstrations
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald

    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, he dropped out of Princeton University and joined the U.S. Army. He was one of the 20th century's literary stars, and his novels were written during the Jazz Age. He married a woman named Zelda who had a mental illness, and they were the couple of the decade. He wrote the greatest novel, the Great Gatsby and This Side of Paradise, during the roaring 20s. The Great Gatsby was considered a masterpiece about a gangster's pursuit of an unattainable rich girl.
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    The 1920s

  • Tea Pot Dome Scandal

    Tea Pot Dome Scandal
    This scandal shocked the Americans by revealing the greed and corruption of the federal government. It was a bribery incident during the administration of President Warren G. Harding. The Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall had leased the government's oil reserves, which were meant for the navy, to private oil companies in exchange for financial compensation. The event became the subject of a sensational investigation, and Fall was later convicted of accepting bribes from the oil companies
  • Tin Pan Alley

    Tin Pan Alley
    The Tin Pan Alley is the name given to the collection of New York City-centered music publishers and songwriters who dominated the popular music of the United States in the late 1800's and early 1900's. The was named by a place onWest 28th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenue in Manhattan, and a plaque on the sidewalk on 28th Street between Broadway and Sixth. The group started around in 1885, when a number of music publishers set up shop in the same district of Manhattan.
  • Margret Sanger

    Margret Sanger
    Sanger was an American birth control activist, sex educator, writer, and nurse. She was an early feminist and women's rights activist who worked with the birth control towards legalization. In 1916, she opened the first birth control clinic in the U.S. She wrote a column about the world of sex to women called "What Every Girl Should Know." She was a nurse in the poor sections of New York City, where she had seen the suffering caused by unwanted pregnancy. And she founded the Planned Parenthood.
  • American Indian Citizenship Act

    American Indian Citizenship Act
    On this day, the Congress has granted citizenship to all Native Americans born in the United States. The main reason for the whites to finally grant citizenship to Native Americans is because they wanted to absorb the Indians into white culture (also known as assimilation). Before the Citizenship Acts, getting Natives to have citizenship was almost impossible. Despite the Native Americans being able to become citizens in the United States, the Native Americans were still able to vote.
  • Billy Sunday

    Billy Sunday
    He was an American fundamentalist minister and a preacher. Sunday is known to use a creative language and sermons to give off the message of salvation of Jesus to oppose radical and progressive groups. Billy liked to teach people about the evils of alcohol, meaning he was a very powerful person who supported the Prohibition movement. He also was part of the Fundamentalist revival of the 1920's. His nativist and anti-radicalism views soon shaped the model of American politics after World War I.
  • Black Tuesday

    Black Tuesday
    The Black Tuesday was named after the day New York Exchange crashed. The day of the crash was a result because of inflated stock prices, they were too costly and much higher than their worth. With the products becoming worthless, people started to lose their money. Investors were willing to sell their shares for pennies on the dollar. People also had to borrow money to hold high-priced stocks, that the people became bankrupt. The Black Tuesday marked the beginning of the Great Depression.
  • Valentine's Day Massacre

    Valentine's Day Massacre
    During the streets of Chicago in the late 1920s, gang warfare ruled the streets. A chief gangster, Al Capone, was looking forward to controlling by eliminating his enemies that were in the prostitution, gambling and bootlegging. On February 14, 1929 in the garage on the city’s North Side, seven men who were involved with the Irish gangster George “Bugs” Moran (One of Capone's rivals), were shot to death by men who were dressed up as policemen, and this became the Valentine's Day Massacre.
  • Herbert Hoover

    Herbert Hoover
    Hoover was an American engineer, businessman, and politician who served as the 31st President of the United States from 1929 to 1933 during the Great Depression. He promised the American people prosperity and attempted to first deal with the Depression by trying to restore public faith in the community. Hoover attempted to combat the ensuing Great Depression with the strategy of volunteer efforts, but his tactics were useless which produced no economic recovery during his term.
  • Susan B. Anthony

    Susan B. Anthony
    Anthony was a Quaker, and lecturer for women's rights and the women's suffrage movement. She was a strong believer in equal rights for both men and women. She helped Elizabeth Cady Stanton in finding the National Women's Suffrage Association. She even convinced the congressional supporters to create a Constitutional amendment so women can have the right to vote. Anthony was arrested later in life because she had voted illegally. She has sentenced a fine that she never ever paid in her lifetime.
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    The Great Depression

  • The Dust Bowl

    The Dust Bowl
    This event, also known as the DIrty Thirties, was referred to the drought in Southern Plains region of the United States after a severe dust storm formed in the 1930s. The dust and high winds spread from Texas to Nebraska, and people and livestock died, and crops failed to grow everywhere. With the Dust Bowl taking place during the Great Depression, the economic depression intensifies and it made many farming families to migrate somewhere else for better living conditions and to find work.
  • Election of 1932

    Election of 1932
    In this election, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Democratic) ran against the Herbert Hoover (Republican). The election happened as the effects of the 1929 Stock Market Crash and the Great Depression. President Herbert Hoover's popularity was falling as voters felt he was unable to reverse the economic collapse or deal with prohibition. In the end, Frankin D. Roosevelt won 472 electoral votes and 22,821,857 popular votes. White Hoover lost with 59 electoral votes and 15,761,841 popular votes.
  • 20th Amendment

    20th Amendment
    Was known as the Lame Duck Amendment and written by George Norris, which changes the date on which the terms of the President and Vice President (January 20) and Senators and Representatives (January 3) end and begin.This was an amendment that shortened the time between Presidential election and inauguration. In short, the amendment cut the lame-duck period down to 6 weeks so that FDR began his second term a month and a half early. It also said Congress must assemble at least once a year.
  • Huey Long "The Kingfish"

    Huey Long "The Kingfish"
    This man was a politician from Los Angles and was one of Roosevelt's biggest threat. He increased the share of state taxes paid by corporations and also began on the public works projects including new schools, highways, bridges, and hospitals. He had a plan to take away from the rich to give to the poor called "Share Our Wealth." He controlled all government officed in Louisiana, both state and local. But in 1935, he was assassinated by a bullet by Louisiana State Capitol by Dr. Carl Weiss.
  • The Brain Trust

    The Brain Trust
    The trust was coined by James Kieran, a New York Times reporter. The Brain Trusts was a group who helped Roosevelt during his presidential candidacy continued to aid him after he entered the White House. They were more influential than the Cabinet. The trust consisted of Raymond Moley, Rexford Guy Tugwell, and Adolph A. Berle, Jr. They were specialists in law, economics, and welfare, many were young university professors. The government needed to regulate soon became the first new deal.
  • Emergency Relief Act

    Emergency Relief Act
    This was relief effort founded by Harry L. Hopkins for the unemployed people with immediate relief goals looking for immediate relief rather than long-term alleviation. The act fought for adult unemployment, they gave money away and provided a short term solution to unemployment. The relief included giving state and localities $3.1 billion and soon 20,000,000 people got jobs. Its purpose was to provide immediate relief until the economy was able to recover. Sadly, it only lasted for two years.
  • 21st Amendment

    21st Amendment
    The amendment was based on the recommendation of the Wickersham Commission that Prohibition had lead to a vast increase in crime. The amendment repeals the 18th Amendment. "The eighteenth article of amendment to the Constitution of the United States is hereby repealed." After this amendment, state and local prohibition no longer required by law. As a result, crime was reduced, more jobs, Americans were less healthy, corruption and more revenue were made since taxes were placed on beer.
  • Glass-Steagall Act

    Glass-Steagall Act
    This act forbade commercial banks from engaging in excessive speculation, added $1 billion in gold to the economy (bank reforms) and established the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. This was a reaction of U.S. government to cope with the economic problems which followed the Stock Market Crash of 1929. The $750 million that was kept in the government gold reserve was now able to be in use from the creation of loans. It took the U.S off the gold standard and gave government power over banks
  • John D. Rockefeller

    John D. Rockefeller
    John D. Rockefeller became one of the world’s wealthiest men and a major philanthropist. He was born into modest circumstances in upstate New York, he entered the oil business in 1863 by investing in a Cleveland, Ohio, refinery. Later on he established Standard Oil, which by the early 1880s controlled some 90 percent of U.S. refineries and pipelines. During his life Rockefeller donated more than $500 million to various philanthropic causes.
  • Period: to

    World War II

  • Navajo Code Talkers

    Navajo Code Talkers
    These were Native Americans served the country by enlisting in the armed services and working in thousands of factories across the United States, and there were more than 400 Navajos who were eventually recruited as Code Talkers The Native Americans were those who translated U.S. code into the Native American language so that enemy forces could not decipher the content. One of the majors, Howard Connor, said, “Were it not for the Navajos, the Marines would never have taken Iwo Jima.”
  • Allied Power

    Allied Power
    This was an alliance of Great Britain, Soviet Union, United States, and France during World War II. The leaders of the Allies were Franklin Roosevelt the United States, Winston Churchill Great Britain, and Joseph Stalin the Soviet Union. Their main purpose was to destroy the Axis powers so that they can create a peaceful post-war world. They wanted to prevent Germany from rising again, end the fascist regimes of Germany crush Germany and gain influence over Europe. In the end, Allied Powers won
  • Axis Power

    Axis Power
    Also known as the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo axis. These were the countries that opposed to the Allies during the World War II. The three major Axis Powers, Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy and the Empire of Japan were part of an alliance. The Axis Powers ruled empires that dominated large parts of Europe, Asia, Africa and the Pacific Ocean, but the Second World War ended with their total defeat. They all signed the tripartite pact, which vowed they will help each other in any events of attacks.
  • Pearl Harbor

    Pearl Harbor
    Pearl Harbor was a U.S. naval base near Honolulu, Hawaii. On December 7, 1941, the harbor suffered from a surprise attack by Japanese forces. Over a hundred Japanese fighter planes got near the base and destroyed about twenty American vessels, along with eight enormous battleships, and over 300 airplanes. As a result, over 2,400 Americans died in the attack, while 1,000 people were wounded. After this attack from Japan President Franklin D. Roosevelt asked Congress to declare war on Japan.
  • Battle of Moscow

    Battle of Moscow
    Also known as "Operation Tycoon". In October 2nd, 1941, Germans were closing in on the Russians in Moscow. The Russians dig trenches around the city with no plans of retreat. Hitler thought that if believed when the Moscow had been cut out of Russia, the whole nation would collapse.To defend Moscow, the Russians had under 500,000 men, less than 900 tanks and just over 300 combat planes. The Red Army counterattacks the German forces and they are the ones who are forced to retreat.
  • Scorched Earth

    Scorched Earth
    This was a military strategy of burning or destroying buildings, crops, or other resources that might be of use to an invading enemy force. Hitler also ordered a scorched earth policy. 28,000 villages were burned by the retreating Germans, and all their resources that could be used by the advancing Red Army were either evacuated or destroyed. Even though the scorched earth deprived armies of valuable resources, the civilian population left behind would suffer enormous privation and misery.
  • D-Day

    D-Day
    This day (known as the turning point of the World War II) was the long-promised invasion of France. The invasion was led by General Dwight D. Eisenhower with over a million troops going to the beaches at Normandy crossing the English Channel began the process of re-taking France. With 6,000 landing craft, ships and other vessels carrying 176,000 troops. By the end of June, the Allies had 850,000 men and 150,000 vehicles in Normandy and were grateful to continue their march across Europe.
  • Battle of the Atlantic

    Battle of the Atlantic
    The Battle of the Atlantic was the longest continuous military campaign in World War II over for the control of the ocean. The battle lasted from 1939 to 1945. In this battle, Germany's naval attempt to cut off British supply ships by using U-boats. In the end, the battle caused Britain and the US to officially join the war after their ships were sunk, and Allies won control of the seas. Germany suffered from heavy losses due to the innovations of radar and codebreaking from the Allies.
  • The Yalta Conference

    The Yalta Conference
    The Yalta Conference was a meeting held between the United States, Great Britain and Russia. The Yalta Conference was led by the 'Big Three' heads of governments. The purpose of the Yalta Conference was to discuss the surrender and occupation of Nazi Germany, the defeat of Japan and peace plans for the post war world. Furthermore, several agreements reached during the Yalta Conference were broken and led to tensions between the United States and Russia which eventually led to the Cold War.
  • Battle of Berlin

    Battle of Berlin
    The Battle of Berlin was the last major battle in Europe. It resulted in the surrender of the German army and an end to Adolf Hitler's rule.The battle was fought between the German Army and the Soviet Army. The Soviet army outnumbered the Germans. Many of the German soldiers were sick, wounded, or starving. The German army included young boys and old men. The Battle of Berlin resulted in the surrender of the German army and the death of Hitler. The Soviet Union and the Allies won the battle.