Summary of U.S. Social History from 1899 to the Present

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AP U.S. History › Summary of U.S. Social History from 1899 to the Present

Questions 1 - 10
1

Post-World War II America could best be characterized by .

economic prosperity and massive population growth

economic stagnation and limited immigration

political reform and massive population growth

economic prosperity and political reform

military disarmament and political reform

Explanation

Post-war and 1950s America is most commonly characterized as a time of massive population growth and economic prosperity. Americans returning from World War II were assisted back into society by the G.I. Bill, which provided for the higher education of veterans. Many American families that had been set back by the outbreak of war made up for lost time and the “baby boom” precipitated massive population growth over the next fifteen years. The “baby boom” in turn then encouraged the growth of consumerism which maintained economic prosperity even in the face of a rapidly advancing Social Security program. Political reforms were existent in the post-war years, as they are in all eras, but the major reforming movements would come into existence in the 1960s as the generation of “Baby Boomers” began to battle the established social and political norms.

2

Which Supreme Court case established that the right to free speech was not an absolute guarantee?

Schenck v. United States

Gideon v. Wainwright

Gregg v. Georgia

Engel v. Vitale

Griswold v. Connecticut

Explanation

Charles Schenck was the Secretary of the Socialist Part of America during World War One. He argued passionately that the young men being drafted to fight in the “Imperialist, European war” owed it to themselves and to the principles of the United States to resist the draft and the involuntary servitude it required. Schenck was indicted under the Espionage Act of 1917 and took his case to the Supreme Court. Schenck believed that his First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and press were being infringed upon by the Espionage Act; however, the Supreme Court ruled against him. The Court's majority verdict maintained that during times of war an individual did not have the right to speak out against military service or the draft.

3

The so-called “Second Reconstruction” refers to .

the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s

the literary and arts movement known as the Harlem Renaissance

the movement towards female equality following WWII

the rulings of the Warren Court

the implementation of Jim Crow Laws across the South

Explanation

The term “Second Reconstruction” is used to refer to the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s. What is implicitly implied is that the first period of Reconstruction failed to achieve the proper emancipation and status of Blacks in America; therefore a “Second” Reconstruction was required in order to align society correctly. The rulings of the Warren Court were crucial to the Civil Rights Movement; however that answer is significantly less inclusive.

4

The Keating-Owen Act .

was enacted by Congress to address the issue of child labor

was supported by Supreme Court decisions

gave greater freedom to the hiring practices of industrialists

imposed a strict tariff on European goods

imposed a series of immigration restrictions on individuals arriving from Eastern Europe

Explanation

The Keating-Owen Act was a series of reforms aimed at ending the use and abuse of child labor in American industrial practices. The act was passed by Congress in 1916 but rendered unconstitutional by the Supreme Court only two years later. The specific nature of the bill stated that goods produced in a factory or mine worked by children under fourteen years of age could not be sold in interstate trade. The Supreme Court overturned it on the grounds that it exceeded the federal government’s power to regulate interstate commerce; however, it represented an important beginning to the end of child labor abuses in America.

5

“Rosie the Riveter” __________.

encouraged women to work jobs, traditionally only open to men, during World War Two

demanded that women adhere to the Cult of Domesticity

deplored male abuses of alcohol prior to Prohibition

called for full and protected female suffrage

implored women to volunteer as nurses and secretaries to assist in the Pacific theatre of war

Explanation

Rosie the Riveter was an important cultural icon during World War Two. It was the term used to describe the American women who were replacing male workers in factories across the United States. The work of these women was vital to the war effort—they produced munitions and supplies. The effect of women entering the workplace in large numbers has been very significant for the growth of sexual equality in the United States and across the Western world.

6

The National Origins Act of 1924 ____________.

Heavily restricted the immigration of Eastern and Southern Europeans to the United States

Heavily restricted the immigration of Western Europeans, particularly those of German and Irish descent, to the United States

Lifted the restriction of immigrants arriving from Eastern and Southern Europe

Lifted the restriction on immigrants arriving from Western Europe

Lifted the restriction on immigrants arriving from East Asia

Explanation

The Immigration Acts of 1924 included several provisions to restrict the immigration of people from certain parts of the world. Those from East Asia, the Middle East, and the Indian subcontinent were forbidden entirely from moving to the United States. People from Eastern and Southern Europe found their ability to settle in the United States heavily curtailed by the National Origins Act. The Act was passed largely to restrict the arrival of Jews from countries where they faced persecution, such as Poland and Russia. The National Origins Act overturned the earlier Immigration Restriction Act of 1921, which had set the cap at three percent. The Act remained in effect until 1965, when it was overturned by the Immigration and Nationality Act.

7

Langston Hughes, Nella Larson, James Weldon Johnson, and Duke Ellington helped usher a key social change through the arts of the recent African American migration to New York City. This Jazz Age phenomenon is known as .

The Harlem Renaissance

The Cotton Club

The Blue Note

The Flapper Age

The Black Sox Scandal

Explanation

The Harlem Renaissance peaked in the 1920s as a result of the freedoms for African Americans offered by the North. As many African Americans moved from the Jim Crow laws of the south, they pushed for tangible goals and a more positive image. The Cotton Club, the most most famous of nightclubs, was a home of many of these musicians, but still only offered whites admittance. The flappers followed this incredible influx of music and art, as did the rise of organized crime and the Black Sox Scandal of 1919.

8

The Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s was characterized by all but which of the following features?

An appeal to the traditions of Southern culture

Nonviolence

Legal battles

Mass protests and marches

Participation of religious organizations

Explanation

The Civil Rights Movement, led most notably by Martin Luther King, Jr., was a nonviolent movement that sought to end the Jim Crow style discrimination against African Americans throughout the country, mostly in the South. The movement was largely organized by ministers and found much support from the organization of black churches. Additionally, leaders encouraged civil rights lawyers, like Thurgood Marshall, to advance court cases that would end discriminatory laws and practices, such as segregation in schools, public transportation, and housing. Mass demonstrations, such as the March on Washington in 1963 and the Freedom March from Selma to Montgomery in Alabama, brought widespread attention to the cause.

9

The Great Migration refers to the movement of __________

African-Americans from the rural south to the cities of the North and West in the early twentieth century.

Southern European immigrants to America in the late nineteenth century.

English citizens to the new American Colonies in the seventeenth century.

New England natives to the Northwest Territory in the late eighteenth century.

urban dwelling whites to the suburbs in the late twentieth century.

Explanation

In response to a rise in racist driven violence against African-Americans in the South and new factory employment opportunities in the North, large numbers of African-Americans left rural areas in the South for the urban areas of the North. This mass movement of people was one of the largest in American history. The "Great Migration" also drastically changed demographic patterns throughout the country from 1910-1960.

10

Which early-twentieth-century feminist was the most ardent advocate of birth control?

Margaret Sanger

Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Susan B. Anthony

Catharine Beecher

Jane Addams

Explanation

Margaret Sanger was a prominent feminist who pushed adamantly for the use of birth control and contraception in the first decades of the twentieth century. At the time it was generally held that women did not have the right to intercourse with the assurance that they might not get pregnant. Sanger worked as a nurse for several years and observed the trauma and hardship that unwanted pregnancies brought upon single and poor women, especially in inner cities. She distributed diaphrams freely to women and was tried and convicted for the practice. Her case attracted wide publicity and helped push forward a movement to change the law in 1918. Sanger founded the first American family planning and birth control clinic in Brooklyn, in 1916, and established the American Birth Control League in 1921.

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