APUSH

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APUSH
Chapter 32 (703-720)
Wilsonian Progressivism at Home and Abroad, 1912-1916
IDs
1. Dr. Thomas Woodrow Wilson
2. “New Freedom”
3. 1912 Election
4. “Bull Moose” Party
5. Herbert Croly
6. “Phraseocrat”
7. “Triple wall of Privilege”
8. Underwood Tariff Act (1913)
9. Sixteenth Amendment (1913)
10. Arsene Pujo
11. Federal Reserve Act (1913)
12. Federal Trade Commission Act (1914)
13. Clayton Anti-trust Act (1914)
14. Federal Farm Loan Act (1916)
15. Warehouse Act (1916)
16. Seamens Act (1915)
17. Workingmen’s Compensation Act (1916)
18. Adamson Act (1916)
19. Jones Act (1916)
20. Gen. Victoriano Huerta
21. Venustiano Carranza
22. Francisco “Pancho” Villa
23. Tampico
24. Vera Cruz
25. ABC Powers
26. Columbus, New Mexico
27. Gen. John “Black Jack” Pershing
28. Unterseeboot
29. Lusitania
30. Arabic
31. Sussex Ultimatum
32. Election of 1916
33. Charles Evans Hughes
34. “He kept us out of the war”
PQs
1. What were the essential
qualities of Wilson’s
presidential leadership,
and how did he display
them in 1913-1914?
2. What were the results of
Wilson’s great reform
assault on the “triple
wall of privilege”-the
tariff, the banks, and the
trusts?
3. How was Wilson’s
foreign policy an
attempt to expand
idealistic progressive
principles from the
domestic to the
international arena?
Why did Wilson’s
progressive democratic
idealism lead to the kind
of U.S. interventions he
professed to dislike?
4. What were the causes
and consequences of
U.S. entanglement with
Mexico in the wake of
the Mexican
Revolution? Could the
U.S. have avoided
involvement in Mexican
affairs?
5. Why was it so difficult
for Wilson to maintain
America’s neutrality
from 1914-1916?
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