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Unit 3: Industrialization of the U.S., 1865-1920 Unit 4: The Progressive Movement, 1900-1920
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Radical Reconstruction: South split into 5 military districts, must grant African American males the right to vote, ratify 14 th Amendment. Compromise of 1877: Ends Reconstruction, federal troops removed from South.
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Constitutional Amendments: 13 th : Abolished slavery (Free) 14 th : Granted citizenship (Citizens) 15 th : Universal male suffrage (Vote)
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Whites used black codes, secret societies (KKK), poll taxes, literacy tests, grandfather clauses, and Jim Crow Laws to limit blacks’ civil liberties.
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New business developments (corporations, monopolies, trusts) led to innovations: Telephone Light bulb Bessemer Process Assembly line
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“Old Immigration”: 1600’s-1850: Irish, German, Africans “New Immigration”: 1870-1924: Eastern Europe, Asia Industrial workers Cities, ghettos
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Consumer Protection – Pure Food and Drug Act Poverty – Settlement Houses, housing reform Temperance & Prohibition – 18 th Amendment Women’s Suffrage – 19 th Amendment
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Initiative Referendum Recall Direct primary
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Drive for markets and raw materials! Social Darwinism/White Man’s Burden Manifest Destiny
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Neutrality to Imperialism: Spanish-American War (1898) Puerto Rico, Guam, Philippines Hawaii (1898)
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Theodore Roosevelt Woodrow Wilson Roosevelt Corollary : U.S. is “international police” in Latin America “Big Stick” Policy Panama Canal Roosevelt Corollary : U.S. is “international police” in Latin America “Big Stick” Policy Panama Canal World War I (1917) Espionage & Sedition Acts Schenck v. United States Fourteen Points World War I (1917) Espionage & Sedition Acts Schenck v. United States Fourteen Points
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