Muckrakers p.550 Jane Addams Hull House p. 552 Niagara MovementBooker T. Washington p. 566 T. Roosevelt versus W.H. Taft. P. 574-575 Federal Reserve Act p. 577 Establishment of colonies in the 1800s. p. 586-591 Social Darwinism p. 447 Yellow Press p. 594 Post-Spanish American WarU.S. forces p. 597-603 Open Door Policy p. 602 Panama Canal p. 607 President Woodrow Wilsonmoral diplomacy p. 609 Causes of WWI. P. 618-620; 652 American opinionWWI (beginning) p. 621-622; 628-635 Great Migration p. 634 Wilsons opinion towards defeated nations following WWI p. 641-642 Post WWIWomen / African Americans p. 648 Palmer Raids p. 649 National Defense Act / Naval Construction Act of 1916 p. 625 Manila Bay / George Dewey / Spanish-American War p. 793/ p. 595 / p. 590-598 Sewards FollyAlaska p. 588 Militarism Imperialism
p. 619 p. 586
Woodrow WilsonAmerican workers p. 566; 567-577
Short Answer / Essay
p. 557-558 21. Analyze Cause and Effect. How did education for women affect the Progressive Era? p. 586 22. Summarize. Toward the end of the nineteenth century, some American politicians and diplomats believed that the United States should become an imperialist power. Write an essay explaining at least three of the points in favor of increased U.S. involvement overseas.
Essay- Interpreting Maps
https://www.connexus.com/content/media/369613-12132010-114245-AM1722506434.png 23. What does the graph suggest about the effectiveness of the naval blockade that Great Britain set up to keep essential goods from reaching Germany during World War I?
A passage from the October 8, 1918, diary entry of Corporal Elmer
Sherwood, a soldier in the American Expeditionary Force in France: Two of our fellows had already been wounded by an explosion near our kitchen this morning, but I was determined to go back for some mess because I was so confounded hungry. Besides, shells seemed to be landing everywhere and one place seemed about as safe as another (or as dangerous), so I climbed out of the trench and made my way carefully back to the clump of bushes where our kitchen was concealed. I had just got a panful of slum and started eating when I saw part of the temporary trench which I had left screened by an exploding shell. I thought it had come over the trench, but nojust then Smithy and Netterfield jumped out calling for stretchers. I dropped my mess and ran to the trench and looked in. Poor Art was dead, one arm completely severed from his body. Danny had a hole in his stomach and we placed him on a stretcher and sent him back to the first aid station. . . .
I have seen many die, but none have been so close to me as these fellows. I have worked with them and fought beside them every day since I joined the outfit, and they have been my best pals. But we must carry on, whatever happens.
24. How did Corporal Sherwood narrowly escape injury or death?
25. What types of hardships and dangers faced by American soldiers does Sherwoods diary entry describe? What other hardships does the entry hint at?
(Culture, Politics, and The Cold War) Chad H. Parker - Making The Desert Modern - Americans, Arabs, and Oil On The Saudi Frontier, 1933-1973 (2015, University of Massachusetts Press)