APUSH Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
| Terms | Description | Description |
| Henry Street Settlement House in Lower East Side Manhattan | led by Lillian Wald, Mary Brewster, Jacob Schiff | community medical services from the inside |
| progressivism | best described as varied collection of reform communities, often fleeting, uniting citizens in a host of political, professional, and religious organizations, some of which were national in scope. | |
| P as a political movement | ending political corruptions, bringing more businesslike methods to governing, and offering a more compassionate legislative response to the excesses of industrialism. | |
| P as a national movements | reached peak in 1912 when four major presidential candidates all ran on some version of progressive platform. | |
| P opposed excesses of industrial capitalism and urban growth | optimistic about the ability of citizens to improve social and economic conditions. | |
| P rejected idea of individualistic economy | opposed social Darwinism | |
| P believed in active citizens, politically and morally, to improve social conditions | pushed for stronger govt. in regulating economy and solving nation's social problems | |
| P rhetoric and methods drew on two distinct sources | evangelical Protestantism: rejection of theory that original sin is the cause of human suffering and obligation of purging the world of poverty, inequality, and economic injustices | social and natural scientists who are trained in statistical analyses and engineering in order to make govt. and industry more efficient |
| Hull House (1889) in Chicago | the first settlement house founded bout Jane Addams | |
| Florence Kelley | Hull House Maps and Papers (1895): described urban poverty in in America | est. with Lillian Wald: New York Child Labor Committee and pushed for U.S. Children's Bureau (1912) led by Julia Lathrop |
| initiative | procedure by which citizens can introduce a subject for legislation, usually through a petition signed by a specific number of voters | |
| referendum | submission of a law ,proposed or already in effect, to a direct popular vote for approval or rejection | |
| direct primary | allowed voters to cross party lines | |
| recall | the process of removing an official from office by popular vote, usually after using petitions to call for such a vote | |
| wester progressives | targeted political parties, railroads, mining and timber companies and public utilities for reform | |
| south progressives | were white supremacists | stronger "Jim Crow" laws, understand and grandfather clauses |
| Jacob Riis | HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVES (1890) | a portrait of New York City's poor |
| S.S. McClure | MCCLURE'S (1893) | first large-circulation magazine |
| Lincoln Steffens | THE SHAME OF THE CITIES (1902) | revealed the widespread graft at the center of American urban politics |
| Ida Tarbell | HISTORY OF STANDARD OIL COMPANY (1904) | |
| "exposer journalism" | ||
| Upton Sinclair | The Jungle (1906) | |
| Lester Frank Ward | DYNAMIC SOCIOLOGY (1883) | |
| National Board of Censorship (NBC) | ||
| Americanization through public schools | ||
| Elwood Cubberley | CHANGING CONCEPTIONS OF EDUCATION (1909) | |
| Smith-Hughes Act of 1917 | provided federal grants to support these programs and set up Federal Board for Vocational Education | |
| barrios | distinct communities of Mexicans | El Paso: most thoroughly Mexican city in U.S. |
| New York City | became center for Jewish immigration and AMerica's huge ready-to-wear clothing industry | |
| The Uprising of 20000 | swept through New York's garment district | |
| Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire | March 25, 1911 | |
| Colorado Fuel and Iron Company | employed roughly half of the 8000 coal miners who labored in state's mines | |
| United Mine Workers of America | AFL affiliate | |
| Danbury Hatter's Case (Loewe v. Lawler, 1908 | federal court ruled secondary boycotts aimed by strikers at other companies doing business with their employer were illegal under the Sherman Antitrust Act | |
| Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) | wobblies-union members | William D. "Big Bill" Haywood |
| Bohemian rebels | bohemian-referred to anyone who had artistic or intellectual aspirations and who lived with disregard for conventional rules of behavior | Greenwich Village |
| General Federation of Women's Clubs 1890 | brought together 200 local clubs, representing 20000 women | |
| National Consumers' League 1898 | started by Maud Nathan and Josephine Lowell | embodied ideal of "social housekeeping." |
| Margaret Sanger | Coined "Birth Control" | Woman Rebel |
| Niagara movement | African American group organized in 1905 to promote racial integration, civil and political rights, and equal access to economic opportunity | |
| National Association for the Advancement of Colored People | interracial organization co-founded by W.E.B. Du Bois in 1910 dedicated to restoring African American political and social rights | |
| Women's convention of the National Baptist Convention | largest black denomination in the U.S. offered African American women a new public space to pursue reform work and racial uplift |
Created by:
pakamor
Popular U.S. History sets