US History II

  • Theodore Roosevelt nominated for Vice-Presidency

    nominated for Vice President with McKinley.
  • Booker T. Washington Autobiography

    He pulished his autobiography "Up From Slavery"
  • McKinley assassinated

    William McKinley shot.
  • Lincoln Steffen

    He publishes an article in McClure's magazine titled "Tweed Days in St. Louis" exposing how city officials worked in league with big business to maintain power while corrupting the public treasury.
  • J.P. Morgan gets call from Attorney General

    Roosevelt's Attorney General was bringing suit against the Nothern Securities Company, owned by J.P. Morgan.
  • Thomas Lawson

    Published in Frenzied Finance, he brings to light the inner workings of the Stock Market.
  • John Spargo Mucraker

    He unearthed the horrors of child labor in The Bitter Cry of the Children.
  • David Phillips Mucraker

    He linked 75 senators to big business interest in "The Treason of the Senate".
  • Booker T. Washington summoned to the White House

    He was the first African American leader received such a pretigious invitation to the White House, by the president.
  • Willam Hard Mucraker

    He went public with industrial accidents in the steel industy in the "Making Steel and Killing Men.".
  • Ray Stannard Baker

    He revealed the oppression of southern blacks in "Following the Color Line".
  • Sinking of the Lusitania

    German U-boat torpedoed the Lusitania, killing 1198.
  • Espionage and Sedition Acts of 1917

    Anyone found guilty of criticizing the government war policy or hindering wartime directives could be sent to jail.
  • War Industries Board

    The coordinated production of munitions and supplies. They allocated raw materials and determined what products would be given high priority,
  • Germany anounced unrestricted submarine warfare

    Stating the U.S. trade with the Allies was unbalanced Germany announced a policy of unrestricted submarine warfare.
  • Zimmerman Telegram

    British intelligence intercepted the notorious Zimmerman telegram from German foreign minister trying to get Mexico to side with them in the war. He promised them a return of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.
  • War Declared

    Congress declared war on Germany
  • Selective Service Act

    Congress passed the Selective Service Act, reinstating the draft. All males between the ages of 21 and 30 were required to register for military service.
  • American Expeditionary Force

    Began arriving in France in June.
  • Doughboys

    The new soldiers were arriving in early 1918. The French named the "doughboys" because they were so green.
  • Meuse River

    Efforts were concentrated on dislodging German troops from the Meuse River and chaed the Germans into the trench-laden Argonne Forrest, were many American casualties were suffered.
  • Germany agreed to armistice

    The war was over. Over 14 million soldiers and civilians perished in the so-called Great War, including 112,000 Americans. Countless more were wounded.
  • Period: to

    23 million registered owners of the Model T

  • Warren G. Harding deafets James Cox for president

  • Miss America

    The first pageant was staged in Atlantic City
  • Reader's Digest began

  • Shuffle Along

    Sometimes credited with starting the Harlem Renaissance.
  • 500 TV stations accros the US

  • Time Magazine

    Hit the newsstands
  • Radio Cooperation of America (RCA)

    licensed telephone lines and made the first radio network called, National Broadcasting Company
  • Federal Radio Commission created

  • 659 banks closed in 1929

    659 banks closed in 1929
  • 5102 more banks closed in 1932

    5102 more banks closed in 1932
  • Civilian Conservation Corps

    Civilian Conservation Corps
    this program was aimed at over two million unemployed unmarried men between the ages of 17 and 25
  • Farm Credit Act

    Farm Credit Act
    refinanced many mortgages in danger of going unpaid
  • bank holiday

    bank holiday
    banking transactions were suspended across the nation except for making change from March 6th - 10th
  • Tennessee Valley Authority

    Tennessee Valley Authority
  • Roosevelt signed the Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act

    Roosevelt signed the Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act
  • Civil Works Administration

    Civil Works Administration
    CWA workers tutored the illiterate, built parks, repaired schools, and constructed athletic fields and swimming pools. Some were even paid to rake leaves.
  • Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
    Deposits up to $2500, a figure that would rise through the years, were henceforth 100% safe. The act also restricted banks from recklessly speculating depositors' money in the stock market
  • only 61 banks closed in 1934

    only 61 banks closed in 1934
  • Social Security Act of 1935

    Social Security Act of 1935
  • Huey "the Kingfish" Long aasassination

    Huey "the Kingfish" Long aasassination
  • The Supreme Court put an end to the AAA

    The Supreme Court put an end to the AAA
    ruled unconstitutional
  • 1938 Congressional elections

    1938 Congressional elections
    Roosevelt campaigned vigorously against anti-New deal Democrats
  • the unemployment rate was still 19 percent

    the unemployment rate was still 19 percent
    the unemployment rate was still 19 percent, and not until 1943 did it reach its pre-Depression levels
  • Blitzkrieg

    Blitzkrieg
    the German blitzkrieg moved rapidly into Denmark and Norway
  • Operation Sea Lion

    Operation Sea Lion
    an all-out assault on the British mainland, launched by Hitler
  • transfer of 50 old destroyers to the British fleet

    transfer of 50 old destroyers to the British fleet
    in exchange for naval bases in the Western Hemisphere
  • U.S. restricts trade with Japan

    U.S. restricts trade with Japan
    the United States grew less patient with Japanese atrocities and began to restrict trade with the Empire
  • Chiang Kai-shek

    Chiang Kai-shek
    the United States began to send military hardware to Chiang Kai-shek, the nominal leader of the Chinese forces resisting Japanese takeover
  • Lend-Lease Act

    Lend-Lease Act
    appropriated $50 billion of aid to the Allies
  • Atlantic Charter

    Atlantic Charter
    Roosevelt met with Churchill in the summer of 1941 and agreed to the Atlantic Charter, a statement that outlined Anglo-American war aims
  • closing the ring

    closing the ring
    Roosevelt and Churchill agreed to implement an immediate blockade of supplies to Germany and to begin bombing German cities and munitions centers. The army would attack Hitler's troops at their weakest points first and slowly advance toward German soil. In December 1941, Roosevelt and Churchill agreed to attack German holdings in North Africa first
  • Pearl Harbor

    Pearl Harbor
    Bombed by Japanese planes, almost 3,000 Americans were killed. Six battleships were destroyed or rendered unseaworthy, and most of the ground planes were ravaged as well
  • simultaneous assault

    simultaneous assault
    As the British forced a German retreat, Anglo-American forces landed on the west coast of Africa on November 8 to stage a simultaneous assault. Rommel fought gamely, but numbers and positioning soon forced a German surrender. The Allies had achieved their first important joint victory.
  • Suburia takes hold

    Suburia takes hold
    Suburbia takes a big jump with manufactured affordable homes, manufactured by William Levitt
  • McCarthy's Wheeling Speech

    McCarthy's Wheeling Speech
    McCarthy proclaimed that he was aware of 205 card-carrying members of the Communist Party who worked for the U.S. Department of State.
  • Edward R. Murrow's See it Now news show

    Edward R. Murrow's See it Now news show
    The first coast-to-coast live news show
  • TV becomes affordable and popular

    TV becomes affordable and popular
  • First national issue of TV Guide

    First national issue of TV Guide
    Lucille Ball's new baby was on the cover of the first national issue of TV Guide
  • first coast-to-coast color broadcast on TV

    first coast-to-coast color broadcast on  TV
    NBC broadcasted to first national color broadcast of the Tournament of Roses Parade
  • AFL and CIO merge

    AFL and CIO merge
    Because of McCarthy's "witch hunt" Unions merged to close ranks against it.
  • Snap, Crackle, and Pop commercial

    Snap, Crackle, and Pop commercial
    a cartoon made to advertise Rice Krispies cereal in 1955
  • First McDonald's restaurant opens

    First McDonald's restaurant opens
  • Nat "King" Cole becomes first African American on TV as host

    Nat "King" Cole becomes first African American on TV as host