Deck 4: 1920-1929: The New ERA

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Question
Warren G. Harding won the presidency by a narrow margin.
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Question
Calvin Coolidge believed in governmental regulation of business.
Question
The Supreme Court supported Harding and Coolidge's business-friendly governmental policies.
Question
Politicians in 1920s America believed that U.S. economic power would prevent future wars.
Question
The United States loaned over $5 billion abroad between 1925 and 1929.
Question
The 1920s saw a drop-off in U.S. involvement in the affairs of Latin American nations.
Question
Herbert Hoover won the presidency by a narrow margin.
Question
During Prohibition, the U.S. government attempted to impose taxes on bootleggers.
Question
Membership among the reconstituted Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s was restricted almost entirely to the South.
Question
Fundamentalists correlated immoral behavior with the popularization of the theory of evolution.
Question
Explain the collapse of Progressivism in the 1920s.
Question
What was the connection between Prohibition and the rise of organized crime in the United States?
Question
Why did the Ku Klux Klan reemerge in the 1920s, and why were they so widely supported?
Question
Who won the 1920 presidential election?

A) Woodrow Wilson
B) Warren G. Harding
C) Calvin Coolidge
D) Herbert Hoover
Question
Who served as the U.S. secretary of the Treasury in the 1920s?

A) Warren G. Harding
B) Charles Forbes
C) Harry Daughtery
D) Andrew Mellon
Question
In his two years in office, how many Supreme Court justices did Warren G. Harding appoint?

A) 1
B) 2
C) 3
D) 4
Question
Who served as Secretary of State in the 1920s?

A) Charles Forbes
B) Charles Evan Hughes
C) Herbert Hoover
D) Andrew Mellon
Question
What was the pattern of international money circulation in the 1920s?

A) Germany to Britain/France to the United States to Germany
B) Britain/France to the United States to Germany to Britain/France
C) The United States to Britain/France to Germany to the United States
D) The United States to Germany to Britain/France to the United States
Question
The National Origins Act set no limits on immigration from which nation(s) or region(s)?

A) Mexico
B) Canada
C) South America
D) All of the above
Question
"I like silence and success better than socialism and sovietism" was the slogan of what political party in the 1924 presidential election?

A) Progressives
B) Democrats
C) Republicans
D) The Bull Moose Party
Question
Fiorello H. La Guardia served as a congressman from what state?

A) New Jersey
B) New York
C) Illinois
D) Delaware
Question
What congressional act provided for the enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment prohibiting the sale, consumption, importation, and exportation of intoxicating beverages?

A) The Volstead Act
B) The Blaine Act
C) Security Exchange Act
D) The Hepburn Act
Question
One in every how many agents of the Prohibition Bureau were dismissed for corrupt behavior, such as accepting bribes?

A) 2
B) 8
C) 12
D) 50
Question
How many years after the Scopes trial did Tennessee repeal the law prohibiting the teaching of the theory of evolution in biology classrooms?

A) 2
B) 13
C) 42
D) 51
Question
Which best describes the position advocated Marcus Garvey?

A) Separatist
B) Compatibilist
C) Assimilationist
D) Incompatibilist
Question
The "New Negro Renaissance" centered in what city?

A) Chicago
B) New York City
C) Philadelphia
D) Baltimore
Question
Which was not an argument put forward in the 1920s in favor of the use of contraception?

A) It would emancipate women
B) It would help cleanse the racial composition of the country
C) It would foster proletarian revolution
D) a. and b.
Question
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were tried, convicted, and executed in what state?

A) New York
B) Massachusetts
C) Connecticut
D) New Jersey
Question
In 1929, X percent of the American people received one-third of all personal income. What is X?

A) 1
B) 5
C) 7
D) 20
Question
The New York Stock Exchange crashed in what year?

A) 1928
B) 1929
C) 1930
D) 1931
Question
Within a month of "Black Thursday," the value of Wall Street stocks had plummeted by what percent?

A) 15 percent
B) 25 percent
C) 50 percent
D) 75 percent
Question
Between 1929 and 1930, unemployment in the United States increased by what number (from 1.5 million)?

A) 900,000
B) 1.5 million
C) 1.9 million
D) 2.7 million
Question
According to the text, which is not one of the ways in which the United States in the 1920s contributed to laying the groundwork for the Great Depression?

A) It adopted an isolationist stanc
B) It invested heavily in overseas markets
C) It established high tariffs
D) None of the above
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-Benito Mussolini
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-Black Thursday
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-Calvin Coolidge
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-Dawes Plan
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-Equal Rights Amendment
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-fascism
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-Herbert Hoover
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-Kellogg-Briand Pact
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-Ku Klux Klan
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-Marcus Garvey
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-Margaret Sanger
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-National Origins Act
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-organized crime
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-prohibition
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Talk About:
-Robert La Follette
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-Sacco-Vanzetti trial
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-Scopes trial
Question
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-Teapot Dome
Question
Talk About:
-Washington Naval Conference
Question
What was the "culture clash" of the 1920s? How did it play out across various spheres, such as the law, politics, education, private life, and race relations? Was it peculiar to the 1920s, or did it follow from prior decades and continue into subsequent decades?
Question
Discuss the failure of Prohibition. Many have argued that Prohibition proves that there are limits to what a government can effectively legislate. Intoxicating beverages were illegal in the 1920s, yet as a leading Prohibition agent testified, it took only eleven minutes to procure a drink in Pittsburgh, and only thirty-five seconds in New Orleans. Why did Prohibition fail? Could it have worked, or was it doomed to failure? If it could have worked, how? If it was doomed to failure, why? Many unpopular laws remain on the books and continue to be enforced. In many parts of the United States today, illegal drugs such as cocaine are as easily procured as a drink in New Orleans under Prohibition, yet cocaine remains illegal. Was Prohibition somehow different from other unpopular or apparently unenforceable laws? If so, how and why?
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Deck 4: 1920-1929: The New ERA
1
Warren G. Harding won the presidency by a narrow margin.
False
2
Calvin Coolidge believed in governmental regulation of business.
False
3
The Supreme Court supported Harding and Coolidge's business-friendly governmental policies.
True
4
Politicians in 1920s America believed that U.S. economic power would prevent future wars.
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k this deck
5
The United States loaned over $5 billion abroad between 1925 and 1929.
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k this deck
6
The 1920s saw a drop-off in U.S. involvement in the affairs of Latin American nations.
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k this deck
7
Herbert Hoover won the presidency by a narrow margin.
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k this deck
8
During Prohibition, the U.S. government attempted to impose taxes on bootleggers.
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k this deck
9
Membership among the reconstituted Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s was restricted almost entirely to the South.
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k this deck
10
Fundamentalists correlated immoral behavior with the popularization of the theory of evolution.
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k this deck
11
Explain the collapse of Progressivism in the 1920s.
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12
What was the connection between Prohibition and the rise of organized crime in the United States?
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13
Why did the Ku Klux Klan reemerge in the 1920s, and why were they so widely supported?
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k this deck
14
Who won the 1920 presidential election?

A) Woodrow Wilson
B) Warren G. Harding
C) Calvin Coolidge
D) Herbert Hoover
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15
Who served as the U.S. secretary of the Treasury in the 1920s?

A) Warren G. Harding
B) Charles Forbes
C) Harry Daughtery
D) Andrew Mellon
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16
In his two years in office, how many Supreme Court justices did Warren G. Harding appoint?

A) 1
B) 2
C) 3
D) 4
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17
Who served as Secretary of State in the 1920s?

A) Charles Forbes
B) Charles Evan Hughes
C) Herbert Hoover
D) Andrew Mellon
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k this deck
18
What was the pattern of international money circulation in the 1920s?

A) Germany to Britain/France to the United States to Germany
B) Britain/France to the United States to Germany to Britain/France
C) The United States to Britain/France to Germany to the United States
D) The United States to Germany to Britain/France to the United States
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k this deck
19
The National Origins Act set no limits on immigration from which nation(s) or region(s)?

A) Mexico
B) Canada
C) South America
D) All of the above
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20
"I like silence and success better than socialism and sovietism" was the slogan of what political party in the 1924 presidential election?

A) Progressives
B) Democrats
C) Republicans
D) The Bull Moose Party
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k this deck
21
Fiorello H. La Guardia served as a congressman from what state?

A) New Jersey
B) New York
C) Illinois
D) Delaware
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k this deck
22
What congressional act provided for the enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment prohibiting the sale, consumption, importation, and exportation of intoxicating beverages?

A) The Volstead Act
B) The Blaine Act
C) Security Exchange Act
D) The Hepburn Act
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k this deck
23
One in every how many agents of the Prohibition Bureau were dismissed for corrupt behavior, such as accepting bribes?

A) 2
B) 8
C) 12
D) 50
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k this deck
24
How many years after the Scopes trial did Tennessee repeal the law prohibiting the teaching of the theory of evolution in biology classrooms?

A) 2
B) 13
C) 42
D) 51
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Unlock for access to all 54 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
25
Which best describes the position advocated Marcus Garvey?

A) Separatist
B) Compatibilist
C) Assimilationist
D) Incompatibilist
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k this deck
26
The "New Negro Renaissance" centered in what city?

A) Chicago
B) New York City
C) Philadelphia
D) Baltimore
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k this deck
27
Which was not an argument put forward in the 1920s in favor of the use of contraception?

A) It would emancipate women
B) It would help cleanse the racial composition of the country
C) It would foster proletarian revolution
D) a. and b.
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k this deck
28
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were tried, convicted, and executed in what state?

A) New York
B) Massachusetts
C) Connecticut
D) New Jersey
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k this deck
29
In 1929, X percent of the American people received one-third of all personal income. What is X?

A) 1
B) 5
C) 7
D) 20
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k this deck
30
The New York Stock Exchange crashed in what year?

A) 1928
B) 1929
C) 1930
D) 1931
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k this deck
31
Within a month of "Black Thursday," the value of Wall Street stocks had plummeted by what percent?

A) 15 percent
B) 25 percent
C) 50 percent
D) 75 percent
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 54 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Between 1929 and 1930, unemployment in the United States increased by what number (from 1.5 million)?

A) 900,000
B) 1.5 million
C) 1.9 million
D) 2.7 million
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Unlock for access to all 54 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
According to the text, which is not one of the ways in which the United States in the 1920s contributed to laying the groundwork for the Great Depression?

A) It adopted an isolationist stanc
B) It invested heavily in overseas markets
C) It established high tariffs
D) None of the above
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k this deck
34
Talk About:
-Benito Mussolini
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35
Talk About:
-Black Thursday
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36
Talk About:
-Calvin Coolidge
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37
Talk About:
-Dawes Plan
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38
Talk About:
-Equal Rights Amendment
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39
Talk About:
-fascism
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40
Talk About:
-Herbert Hoover
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41
Talk About:
-Kellogg-Briand Pact
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42
Talk About:
-Ku Klux Klan
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43
Talk About:
-Marcus Garvey
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44
Talk About:
-Margaret Sanger
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45
Talk About:
-National Origins Act
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46
Talk About:
-organized crime
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47
Talk About:
-prohibition
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48
Talk About:
-Robert La Follette
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49
Talk About:
-Sacco-Vanzetti trial
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50
Talk About:
-Scopes trial
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51
Talk About:
-Teapot Dome
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52
Talk About:
-Washington Naval Conference
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53
What was the "culture clash" of the 1920s? How did it play out across various spheres, such as the law, politics, education, private life, and race relations? Was it peculiar to the 1920s, or did it follow from prior decades and continue into subsequent decades?
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k this deck
54
Discuss the failure of Prohibition. Many have argued that Prohibition proves that there are limits to what a government can effectively legislate. Intoxicating beverages were illegal in the 1920s, yet as a leading Prohibition agent testified, it took only eleven minutes to procure a drink in Pittsburgh, and only thirty-five seconds in New Orleans. Why did Prohibition fail? Could it have worked, or was it doomed to failure? If it could have worked, how? If it was doomed to failure, why? Many unpopular laws remain on the books and continue to be enforced. In many parts of the United States today, illegal drugs such as cocaine are as easily procured as a drink in New Orleans under Prohibition, yet cocaine remains illegal. Was Prohibition somehow different from other unpopular or apparently unenforceable laws? If so, how and why?
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