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An American author, orator, educator, and advisor for lots of presidents
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An American sociologist, socialist, historian, civil-rights activists, Pan-Africanist, author, writer, and editor
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Founded in 1881 by Booker T. Washington
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A law that prevented Chinese laborers from immigrating to the United States
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Allowed Congress to regulate interstate commerce, mostly towards railroads companies
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The Hull House was built in 1889 and helped the working class get social and educational opportunities in nearby neighborhoods
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Outlawed monopolistic business practices
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A court case where the law, "separate but equal" was argued if it was constitutional or not
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Was shot twice on the Pan-American Exposition grounds at the Temple of Music in Buffalo, New York before dying a few days later
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Strike by the United Mine Workers of America by demanding higher wages, shorter workdays, and the recognition of their Union. They threatened to shut down the winter fuel supply for big American cities
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Provided federal funds for the construction of dams, reservoirs, and canals in the West to help with cheap power
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Exposé about the Standard Oil Company, run by John D. Rockefeller at the time
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Exposé of conditions in of the working classes
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DuBois and Trotter's mission was to develop an aggressive way of fighting racial inequality
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Laws that put the African Americans in states, mostly Southern, to a disadvantage in many aspects
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Prohibited the sale of adulterated or misbranded livestock and derived products as food and ensured that livestock was slaughtered and processed under sanitary conditions
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Prohibited the sale of misbranded or adulterated food and drugs in interstate commerce
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Gives the president the ability to declare lands/sites to be national monuments
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William H. Taft won against Democrat William Jennings Byran
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A court case where Oregon had a law which had women work at a maximum of 10 hours and Muller thought that this law violated the 14th amendment
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Established in NYC to respond to the violence against African Americans
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A civil rights organization that advocates and helps racial discrimination for economic and social justice problems against African Americans
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The Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire in NYC is known as one of the deadliest workplace catastrophes in US history, killing 146 workers
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Democrat Woodrow Wilson, from New Jersey, won the 1912 election
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Established to improve the welfare of working people
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The central banking system of the United States of America
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Re-imposed federal tax and lowered tariff rates
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Ratified in 1913, it established Congress's right to impose a federal tax income
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Ratified in 1913, allowing voters to directly vote for US senators, 2 from each state, to serve for 6 years
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An independent agency that works to enforce the Clayton Anti-trust Act and prevented unfair methods of competition
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Prevents unfair methods of competition in commerce
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Passed to try to curb the power of trusts and monopolies and maintain market competition
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When armies of both sides attack, counterattack, and defend from permanent systems of trenches
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An American film that was the first blockbuster Hollywood hit
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The "new" KKK was not only against African Americans, but also against Jews, Roman Catholics, foreigners, and organized labor
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During WW1, the German attacked the British steamship, killing 1,195 people, including 128 Americans. This brought the US into WW1
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A telegram from Zimmerman to Eckhardt, offering US territory to Mexico in return for joining the German cause
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Wilson asks Congress for permission to declare war against Germany
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Made it a crime if anyone gives information intended to interfere with the US armed forces in a war or to help the enemy
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A court case on if the Keating-Owen Act was a regulation of Commerce or not
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Made it a crime to write anything untrue or bad about the US government and expanded the list of crimes from the Espionage Act
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Statement of principles of peace to help with peace negotiations for WW1
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Banned the manufacture, transportation, and selling of alcohol
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To honor those who fought and died for the country
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Wilson had presented a treaty to the Senate and addressed the chamber
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Wilson suffers a stroke in October in the white house
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Reform-minded journalists who exposed established institutions and leaders who are corrupted (1890s-1920s) (Couldn't really find dates)
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Gives women the right to vote
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An International diplomatic group developed after WW1 to prevent warfare