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Social Darwinism
Darwinism said stronger people, businsses, and nations would prosper, weaker ones wold fail, no one the right to interfere with the processes. -
Henry Ford Innovations
Henry ford was an engineer and early automobile manufacturer.
Ford wanted to give workers enough buying power to purchase the cars and other goods they were mass production. He introduced the assembly line in 1914, increasing product by moving cars along a conveyor belt while workers completed their assigned tasks. -
Father of Naval Aviation
Between 1908 and 1910 Glenn H. Curtis helped build a number of aircraft and set several early Aviation records. It made everything more faster and easier to transport. -
The 19th Amendment
To the constitution of the provides men and women with equal voting rights, the amendment also failed to bring about the equality to economic sexes that sponsors hoped for. -
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Nativism in the 20
Nativism is the policy of protecting the interesting of native born or established inhabitants against those immigrants. -
emergency qouta
The Act legislation restricted new immigration of 3% of the numbers of residents per year from their country of origin all ready living in the U.S. -
Fatts Waller
He was a Jazz professional pianist.He wrote "Ain't misbehaving" and "honey Sickle Rose." He was very famous in the black community for his jazz and radio show -
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The pledge of allegance
-In 1923, The pronoun "my" was dropped from the pledge of all allegiance and the words "the flag of the u.s.a." were added.
-in 1954, the pledge of allegiance underment yet another change in 1954. Responding the threat of soviet communism, president eisenhower encouraged congress to add the words "under God" to the pledge. -
Charles Lindbergh
Charles Lindbergh became the first person to fly across the atlantic ocean in 1927. His airplane is called "the spirit of st. Louis. He traveled from Isaland, new york to paris, france charles became a national hero, he also said the foundation for the future development of transcontinental ariation. -
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the roaring twenties
This time period is marked by optimism, celebration, experimentation and social change, but also fear of external influences an a loss of American culture. -
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Harlem renaissance
Duke Ellington was an american Composer, pianist, and leader of a jazz orchestra, which he led from 1923 until his death in a career spanning over fifty years in 1974.