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New Deal

AP US History ID's World War Two

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AP US History ID?s Foreign Policy 1920?s-1930?s Isolationism: national policy of abstaining from political or economic relations with other countries. US foreign policy prior to WWI Washington Naval Conference: conference hosted by the US which called for US and British de-fortification of Far East possessions Kellogg-Brian Pact: idealistic agreement between the great world powers to never engage in war except for defensive purposes Dawes Plan: loan program crafted to give money to Germany so that they could pay war reparations and lessen the financial crisis in Europe; program ended with 1929 stock market crash Stimson Doctrine: American foreign policy that the US would not formally recognize any territories that were seized by force

US History Notes

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SEMESTER 2 Unit 1: Growth of big business in America led to- Better transportation Transcontinental railroad Steel Industries Iron ore that is heater 1859= Drakes Folly He drilled a hole in Titusville Pa and oil came out Oil at the time was used to make Kerosene which was used for lighting and heating Lazzie Faire- hands off by the government Samuel Clements (Mark Twain)- Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Horratis Alger and Samuel Clements were both authors that lived at the same time Rockefeller- Believed in cutthroat competition Went from rags to riches Hard Worker Lived in Cleveland Started to make barrels for oil Came up with rebates Controls 90% of the oil Had a monopoly on oil Standard Oil is the name of his company now called exon Also a philanthropist Robber Barren

The Great Depression Notes

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904 Chapter 31 MAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW TERMS & NAMES ECONOMICS An economic depression in the United States spread throughout the world and lasted for a decade. Many social and economic programs introduced worldwide to combat the Great Depression are still operating. ? coalition government ? Weimar Republic ? Great Depression ? Franklin D. Roosevelt ? New Deal 2 SETTING THE STAGE By the late 1920s, European nations were rebuilding war- torn economies. They were aided by loans from the more prosperous United States. Only the United States and Japan came out of the war in better financial shape than before. In the United States, Americans seemed confident that the country would continue on the road to even greater economic prosperity. One sign of this was the

US History II Finals Guide

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1 6/16/2009, 6/17/2009 U.S. History II Final Study Guide Question-and-Answer 1. What were three causes of the Great Depression? a. Stock market crash b. Uneven distribution of wealth c. High tariffs and other disruptions of world trade 2. What three things did Hoover do to try to end the depression? a. Gave tax cuts b. Higher tariffs c. A limited program of public works 3. What does the stock market ?crash? refer to? a. The huge drop in the value of stocks 4. What is the chronological order of the presidential administrations of the 1920?s and 1930?s? a. Harding b. Coolidge c. Hoover d. Roosevelt 5. What were three effects of the Great Depression? a. Millions unemployed b. Malnutrition in children c. Fewer marriages

Unit 7 Slurves

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Unit 7 Slurves Jennifer Lyon 4/8/13 1. The progressive movement contributed to a decline in party influence. This resulted in a decline in voter turnout. After 1912, the voter turnout never again reached 70%, when it had regularly been in the 80%s in the late nineteenth century. The power of the parties was replaced by interest groups. 2. Wilson was, in general, a trustbuster. He believed that big business was both unjust and inefficient. He thought that monopoly could not be regulated and thus had to be destroyed. This was the basis of his successful New Freedom program.

FDR

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Thank you your honor. And before I give my opening statement I?d just like to thank the witnesses, my opponents, and the judge for participating in this trial. Ladies and gentlemen, Franklin Delano Roosevelt is a man who not only deserves his face to be put on Mt. Rushmore among many of the nation?s other most prominent leaders, but in fact it would be downright disrespectful to award this avid public servant with anything less. Not only has this man literally given his life for the betterment of his country, but he has done so flawlessly. Over the past twenty years, this country has and continues to see prosperity as a result of the implementation of the New Deal economic policies which only president Roosevelt can account for, unlike his do-nothing predecessors.

APUSH Midterm studyguide

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? APUSH/Michelena Second Semester Midterm Review: The exam is?65 questions, covering American Imperialism to the end WWII. American Imperialism: Why did the US become an imperial nation? Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine Social Darwinism: the application of ideas about evolution and "survival of the fittest" to human societies - particularly as a justification for their imperialist expansion. TR achievements Open Door Policy: statement of U.S. foreign policy toward china. Issued by U.S. secretary of state john hay (1899), the statement reaffirmed the principle that all countries should have equal access to any Chinese port open to trade.

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