Recent American History Exam 2

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US History

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Four cardinal virtues
Talents, skills, and virtues that the ideal woman would have.
1. piety
2. domesticity
3. chastity
4. submissive
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Mary Wollstoncraft
The first feminist; she grew up in an abusive home in England in the 18th century. She left as soon as she could and found herself wanting the opposite of her childhood home. Falls in love with a woman, Fanny Blood, but the relationship fails quickly because they weren't accepted by society. Meets another lesbian couple in Whales. Goes to a part of London that accepted her and met Richard Price who told her to keep a diary that would later be published.
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Eleanor Ponsonby and Sarah Butler
A lesbian couple that Mary Wollstoncraft met, they believed they were married but they weren't.
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Richard Price
A Unitarian minister that "counseled" Mary Wollstoncraft by telling her to write the diary "Mary"
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"Mary"
The diary written and published that focused on social issues that oppress society like the government's lack of opportunities and protection given to women, the church and how women must be submissive, marriage and being a man's possession and being in moral jeopardy and being expected to have children.
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"A Vindication of the Rights of Women"
Written by Mary Wollstoncraft, targets the issue and idea that women are only here to please men. Everyone was horrified by this very public display of issues.
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William Godwin
The First anarchist, saying that government is bad. Mary Wollstoncraft marries him and has a child, but dies in the process of having the second child.
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Mary Shelley
Daughter of Mary Wollstoncraft; writes Frankenstein
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Seneca Falls Convention
Takes place in 1837 and called by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. This is when feminism hits America. Stanton calls for women to get together to be unified on the goals of the movement. The first goal was suffrage, but was split down the middle on if it should be. Fredrick Douglass was the deciding vote FOR it.
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Fredrick Douglass
A black slavery abolitionist that casted the deciding vote at the Seneca Falls convention
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Oberlin
The first co-ed college
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First four women's colleges
1. Vassar
2. Brynmawe
3. Wellesley
4. Smith
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"The Lily"
Newspaper written and edited by Amelia Bloomer. It intended to convince others that providing opportunities for women would be a good thing.
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What is Amelia Bloomer known for?
Bloomers- the first pants, it allowed for women to do the same things men could do
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Jeanette Rankin
First women elected into Congress in 1916. Doesn't have much power because she didn't have the right to vote yet.
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Niota, TN
The 19th amendment was based of one guy who had the last vote
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19th amendment
passed in 1919, suffrage
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theodore roosevelt's young life
From NY, part of a wealthy family. Bullied as a kid, so worked out a lot and became good at boxing. Went to Law school and met Alice. They got married and took a honeymoon to the Alps, he got into an argument with a mountaineer and is forced to climb a mountain. After their honeymoon, Alice passes away and he goes out to North Dakota to get away from things that remind him of her. He later goes back home and then throws himself into politics and becomes a Police commissioner.
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"That damned cowboy"
People called TR this in politics in the Republican Party
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William McKinley
Elected in 1896, inaugurated in 1897. Doesn't make a big mark on US. Deals with the Spanish-American war, but there are very few casualties.
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"Editha"
A short story about the euphoria that sweeps the nation as a result of the Spanish-American war
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William Randolph Hearst vs Joseph Pulitzer
A battle within the Newspapers, they fictionalize the war. Hired a guy to take the pictures, but they wanted to provide the "war." This began the term Yellow Journalism, meaning fake news.
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yellow journalism
fake news
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TR enlists
In the Spanish-American War, TR is given command of the rough riders at the Charge of Sanjuan Hill, otherwise known as the "steep hill" that wasn't very steep. When he gets back, everyone raves over him thanks to yellow journalism that gave him a good reputation as a hero.
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McKinley gets shot
goes to upstate NY after reelection and is shot twice by Leon Czolgosz. The bullets weren't his downfall, but the infection that came as a result instead.
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Leon Czolgosz
The man that shot McKinley; his is tried and denies everything. Sentenced to death after being labeled clinically insane.
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Roosevelt gets placed in presidency
first meeting, calls for the Square deal.
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Roosevelt is known for:
1. The "Trust Buster"
2. Northern Securities Corporation
3. Foreign Policy
4. The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
5. Environmentalism
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Northern securities corporation
Said that railroad monopoly is a violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust act and must be destroyed. Brought about the Rule of reason
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Rule of Reason
only in the cases in which it is unreasonable restraint of trade could the Sherman Anti-Trust Act stop the monopoly.
- problem of definition of unreasonable
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Panama Canal
encouraged trade and redefined the world; Roosevelt bought it out and built it
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Great White Fleet
Represented the end designs in the building the ships and methods of powering them. They took them on a world voyage and stopped at every major port as a "goodwill mission"
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The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
A redefinition of the Monroe Doctrine that said that they understand that the loans should be paid in the foreign affairs and promised to make sure that they got paid. They then took an aggressive stance by taking over the governments of those small countries.
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monroe doctrine
Written in 1823, an American foreign policy opposing interference in the western hemisphere from outside powers
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Sphere of interest
A warning to stay out of the western hemisphere and that it would be reciprocated. no trade
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Conservatism
an orientation on nature, saying to use the resources responsibly because you could get many benefits from it.
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Preservationism
an orientation on nature, saying just don't touch it. you can't truly replace it.
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Lake District
Birthplace of Romanticism; prettiest place on Earth.
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romanticism
a movement in literature and art during the late 18th and early 19th centuries that celebrated nature rather than civilization
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William Wordsworth
From Lake District. Mother died at young age and moved to Cockermouth. Moved to Cambridge and had one friend, Coleridge. He goes to France during revolution and writes about it. Meets Anette Vallon there. Goes back to Grasmere and lives in Dove cottage for 7 years while he writes poetry. Moves to Rydal and is named poet laureate, but never writes a poem
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Anette Vallon
Wordsworth's love
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Grasmere
Where Dove Cottage is and where wordsworth lives for 7 years.
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Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Wordsworth's best friend. collaborates with him on "The Lyrical Ballads". Friendship falls apart because Coleridge is addicted to opioids.
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Transcendentalism
any system of philosophy emphasizing the intuitive and spiritual above the empirical and material
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Ralph Waldo Emerson
Wrote "Nature" in 1836. Kicked out of being a Unitarian Minister because he wrote about nature and said you could experience God more in nature than in a church building.
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Henry David Thoreau
Write "Walden"; had strong opinions on the Mexican war and said US provoked it. He wouldn't pay taxes that he knew went towards the war- went to jail for this and wrote "Civil Disobedience" while he sat there
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"Civil Disobedience"
written by Henry David Thoreau while sitting in jail.
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John Muir
Has 52 places named after him. From Edinburg, Scotland, moved to the Great Lakes as a kid where his Father evangelized the Indians. He went on a road trip to the Yosemite Valley in California and saw how faith related to nature and dedicates his life to protecting God's creation. Lives in the Yosemite, but journeys around to advocate for nature. Tries to save the valley and the red woods.
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Yellowstone National Park
First national park in the US, they took the steps to protect its beauty. Originally was going to be sold to a businessman who would turn Old Faithful into a gambling place, but that looks bad on the US, so they create the National Park Service that would have park rangers and laws to protect the environment there.
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Sierra Club
Organization that sought to protect the Yosemite Valley. They brought paintings by Albert Bierstadt, specifically Rocky Mountain School, to show the beauty in nature.
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Albert Bierstadt
Artist that made the Rocky Mountain School painting. Pioneered the operatic style.
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Forest Reserve Act
47 million acres are saved and preserved and designated to national forests
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Forest Management Act
The secretary has the right to designate access and use of all forest resources.
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James Watt
Man that wanted to dam the Grand Canyon and make it a reservoir.
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TR becomes president
in 1901. He was an environmentalist and founded the Boon and Crockett club to encourage people to use the environment and produce more opportunity to do so.
Dedicated 125 million acres of land to the national forest.
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Antiquities Act 1906
Preserved natural monuments
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Predator Kill Program
Made sure that there were no more animals to hunt in the wild by paying hunters to hunt for pelts of wolves, bears, mountain lions, and coyotes to eradicate the predators/4 species of animals.
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Aldo Leopold
One of the hired government hunters that was sent to New Mexico and wrote the "Sand County Almanac" where he tells the government to suspend the program.
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Izaak Walton League
Sold the idea that outdoors are important
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The American Game protective association
Began a national campaign and lobbied congress to make opportunities for hunters
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Winchester Firearm Cooperation
If more people hunt, they can make more money from guns
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William Howard Taft
Secretary of State to TR, he decided that he would try to take the Presidency. He was very limited in social affairs, but was very good in militarism. He promised TR that is he was supported, he would continue what TR started. When he wins, people don't think he can be trusted.
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Tariff
tax on imported goods
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Payne-Alderidge Tariff
Tariff revenue provides income for federal government to work with; this is a violation of everything he told TR he would do.
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Gifford Pinchot
Chief forester of the US
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Richard Ballinger
Pinchot's boss and become Taft's new secretary of state. He allows access to the public domain in Alaska to a coal mining company, Morgan-Guggenheim Syndicate
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Pinchot-Ballenger dispute
Pinchot is fired by Taft after saying that Ballinger wasn't competent. Then they go to Africa and find TR to tell him to go back to the US and fix everything that Taft is ruining. Taft tells US that he is inviting TR over for dinner to make him look good, but TR goes to Pinchot's for dinner instead to show that he doesn't support Taft. This causes a breach in the Republican party.
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Bull Moose Party
Formed by TR so that he can run for presidency in replacement of the place he had in the Republican Party.
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New Freedom
Woodrow Wilson's campaign platform as a part of the democratic party. Rests on supporitng Free enterprise and small businesses
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Eugene Debs
delegate of the American Socialist party during the election of 1912. Attacks everyone
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Cordell Hull "Rider"
Man that proposed for a graduated income structure
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16th amendment
graduated income tax
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Underwood Tariff
reduc4ed taxes on goods, off setting the Payne-Aldridge Tariff
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Keating-Owen Act
First child labor law; prohibited the interstate transport of goods made by children
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The Fundamentals
Essays published to say America had fallen away from righteousness. Interpreted Scriptures narrowly and didn't tolerate other interpretations. Against Prostitution, but only concerned with the health of white prostitutes. Against drinking alcohol
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Syphilis of the innocent
Men would sleep with prostitutes and then with their wives (innocent), giving them the STD.
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Procurers
Men who kidnapped women and forced them into prostitution
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Mann Act
Prohibited the in-state transportation of women for immoral purposes
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Webb-Kenyon Act
prohibited the inner-state transport of liquor into dry areas. It still left the decision up to each community to decide whether they wanted to have alcohol or not. It did not prohibit its use.
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Volstead Act
Bill passed by Congress to enforce the language of the 18th Amendment. Defined Intoxicant as anything .5-1% alcohol content or more
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Internal Revenue Service
The branch of the U.S. Treasury Department in charge of collecting taxes. They were responsible for busting illegal activity against prohibition.
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Al Capone

A mob king in Chicago who controlled a large network of speakeasies with enormous profits. His illegal activities convey the failure of prohibition in the twenties and the problems with gangs. Had 1000 men working for him, making it impossible for IRS to bust them
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Speakeasy
A place where alcoholic drinks were sold and consumed illegally during prohibition. A new modern culture came from here because of the young people there. Women smoked without judgement and relationships became more dating style than courting. Dressing for male attention came from this and therefore Flapper dresses were invented.