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?