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BLINN HIST 1302 - A KEY

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A KEY TO SUCCESS: HISTORY 1302 STUDY SHEET #2 CHAPTERS 23-26 Note these terms in highlighting the pages of the textbook, Tindall and Shi, America: A Narrative History. Chapter 23: An American Empire “free security” Tydings-McDuffe Act “Manifest Destiny” Commonwealth of Puerto Rico arguments for acquiring foreign territories “Insular Cases” imperialism in Africa and Asia Army Yellow Fever Commission The Influence of Seapower upon History Platt Amendment expansion of the navy Guantanamo Bay John Fiske, American Political Ideas Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895 Josiah Strong, Our Country “spheres of influence” “Seward’s Folly” John Hay’s Open Door Note (1899) Samoan Treaty of 1878 great powers and the open door policy Pearl Harbor Boxer Rebellion Liliuokalani Hay’s “second” Open Door Note (1900) Hawaiian joint resolution (1898) Theodore Roosevelt Venezuelan boundary dispute Roosevelt’s character Richard Olney Panama Canal arbitration treaty with Venezuela (1897) U. S. S. Oregon chief motive for imperialism in Cuba second Hay-Paunceforte Treaty (1901) Wilson-Gorman Tariff of 1894 Ferdinand de Lesseps Cuban Revolutionary party Hay-Herran Treaty (1903) guerrilla warfare in Cuba U. S. S. Nashville Valeriano Weyler Canal Zone William Randolph Hearst Harding administration and Columbia Joseph Pulitzer Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine “yellow journalism” Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 Cleveland administration and Cuba Treaty of Portsmouth (1905) McKinley’s platform of 1896 Taft-Katsura Agreement (1905) De Lome letter Root-Takahira Agreement (1908) U. S. S. Maine “yellow peril” “Remember the Maine!” “Gentlemen’s Agreement” of 1907 McKinley and Spain Act of Algeciras (1906) McKinley’s war message Nobel Peace Prize Teller Amendment “Great White Fleet” reasons for war with Spain “splendid little war” Battle of Manila Bay (1898) Santiago problems in the army “Rough Riders” San Juan Hill Battle of Santiago Bay (1898) peace protocol American casualties in the Spanish-American War Treaty of Paris (1898) expansionist fever four motivating ideas of imperialism arguments of the anti-imperialists ratification of the Treaty of Paris Emilio Aguinaldo American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 24: The Progressive Era Progressive Era Ballinger-Pinchot controversy the progressives Roosevelt’s “New Nationalism” “real heart of the movement” “hopeless fathead” element of conservatism in progressivism Appalachian Forest Reserve Act (1911) common assumptions of the progressives Mann-Elkins Act (1910) populism and progressivism Sixteenth Amendment (1913) socialist doctrines Progressive party “muckrakers” Thomas Woodrow Wilson Henry Demarest Lloyd, Wealth against Commonwealth Congressional Government Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives Election campaign of 1912 Lincoln Steffens, The Shame of the Cities “bull moose” Ida Tarbell, History of the Standard Oil Company The Promise of American Life progressive faith in democracy Wilson’s “New Freedom” direct primary significance of the election of 1912 initiative, referendum and recall Colonel Edward M. House “millionaire’s club” Wilson’s 1913 inaugural address Seventeenth Amendment (1913) tariff reform “gospel of efficiency” Underwood-Simmons Tariff (1913) “Taylorism” Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act (1913) “time-motion studies” impact of the Federal Reserve System commission system Federal Trade Commission (1914) city-management plan Clayton Antitrust Act (1914) “Wisconsin Idea” labor’s “Magna Carta” Robert M. La Follette administration of the antitrust laws concentration of economic power Wilson and social justice four solutions for the problem of economic power Seaman’s Act (1915) social justice Wilson and African-Americans National Child Labor Committee Federal Farm Board Florence Kelley Warehouse Act of 1916 Lochner v. New York Smith-Hughes Act of 1917 Muller v. Oregon Federal Highways act of 1916 Triangle Shirtwaist fire Keating-Owen Child Labor Act of 1916 prohibition Adamson Act of 1916 Anti-Saloon League impact of progressivism Theodore Roosevelt and progressive reform the paradoxes of progressivism “square deal” the supreme irony of progressive reform Northern Securities Company Roosevelt’s role in the coal strike of 1902 Swift Company v. United States Elkins Act Bureau of Corporations antitrust suits Roosevelt’s 1905 annual message Hepburn Act Upton Sinclair, The Jungle Meat Inspection Act of 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 conservation movement National Park Service Gifford Pinchot Forest Reserve Act (1891) William Howard Taft “dollar diplomacy” in Latin America Aldrich tariffChapter 25: America and the Great War United States and Europe War Industries Board Wilson’s idealism labor shortage “cooling-off” treaties “Great Migration” Wilson’s dollar diplomacy racial tensions “missionary diplomacy” impact of the war on women Porfirio Diaz impact of the war on labor unions Victoriano Huerta Committee on Public Information Venustiano Carranza witch-hunting Veracruz incident Espionage Act of 1917 Pancho Villa Sedition Act of 1918 Columbus, New Mexico raid impact of the acts Pershing expedition Schenck v. United States (1918) “ten cent diplomacy” Abrams v. United States (1919) Franz Ferdinand Bolshevik Revolution Central Powers “race for France” Allied Powers Ferdinand Foch Turkey and Italy Second Battle of the Marne (1918) “impartial in thought as well as action” Meuse-Argonne offensive (1918) “hyphenated Americans” Lenin old-tine Americans Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (1918) wartime propaganda Allied intervention in Russia wartime boom Wilson’s war aims “freedom of the seas” Fourteen Points war of attrition Wilson’s psychological warfare Declaration of London (1909) Allied reservations Order in Council (1914) and contraband goods German home front in 1918 doctrine of the continuous voyage armistice Germany’s war zone Paris Peace


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