| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Naval officer who published The Influence of Sea Power upon History (1890) which called for a large fleet of ships involved in international trade, with a strong navy to protect them | Alfred Mahan | 100%
|
| Emotional Great Awakening preacher who proclaimed a merciful God; travelled across country | George Whitefield | 100%
|
| Photographer who published How the Other Half Lives (1890) that exposed the conditions of the poor working class of the cities | Jacob Riis | 100%
|
| Preacher during the First Great Awakening; used a new style of emotionally intense preaching; from Massachusetts | Jonathan Edward | 100%
|
| Era of Supreme Court history under the leadership of a federalist Chief Justice; strengthened national power | Marshall Court | 100%
|
| 1896 winner of the democratic nomination (also supported by populists); gave famous cross of gold speech calling for switch from gold standard; supported government welfare, precursor to New Deal | William Jennings Bryan | 100%
|
| New churched that were formed during the FIrst Great Awakening; against focus on money (was seen as sin); saw religious freedom as essential and to be supported by the government | Baptists and Methodists | 0%
|
| 1881 book by Helen Hunt Jackson that describes the systematic destruction of Native American culture and the unjust treatment by the American government | Century of Dishonor | 0%
|
| Movement led by César Chávez to improve the conditions of poor migrant farm workers from Latin America | Chicano Movement | 0%
|
| End disputed election; Hayes becomes president if he ends reconstruction efforts in the South | Compromise of 1877 | 0%
|
| 1824 US Supreme Court decision reinforcing the “commerce clause” (the federal govenment’s right to regulate interstate commerce) of the Constitution; Chief Justice Marshal ruled against the State of New York’s granting of steam boat monopolies | Gibbons v. Ogden | 0%
|
| These include throwing the existing power system into criticism, anti-commercial ideologies, increased printing across the colonies, and the questioning and personal interpretations of religion | Great Awakening Effects | 0%
|
| Editor from Atlanta, who in the 1880s promoted the idea of a New South (prosperous because of industrial expansion and the diversity of agriculture) | Henry Grady | 0%
|
| Congregational clergyman who wrote In Our Country (1885) which called for the expansion of Manifest Destiny to all “inferior races” across world; argued it would benefit economy | Josiah Strong | 0%
|
| 1819 US Supreme Court decision in which Chief Justice Marshall, holding that Maryland could not tax the Second Bank of the US, supported the authority of the federal government versus the states | McCulloch v. Maryland | 0%
|
| Era of the gilded age where international markets were sought to help deal with over production | New Markets | 0%
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| 1883 law replacing the spoils system with merit based positions in the government | Pendleton Civil Service Act | 0%
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| An undeclared war fought between the US and France (1798-1800) in Caribbean and Atlantic; based in French anger over American neutrality | Quasi War | 0%
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| Sioux leader who’s tribe suffered from the loss of buffalo; helped to lead the Battle of Little Big Horn to reclaim native lands in the Black Hills, eventually forced to surrender | Sitting Bull | 0%
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| 1832 Supreme Court case that held that Native American nations were distinct people who could not be dealt with by the states—instead, only the federal government could negotiate with them. President Jackson refused to enforce | Worcester v. Georgia | 0%
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