1. After the Treaty of Versailles had been signed, Woodrow Wilson
a. was assailed by ardent isolationists in America who despised the notion of international collective security
and mocked the League of Nations.
b. was condemned by disillusioned American liberals who thought the treaty was too punitive on Germany
and sacrificed self-determination of Asians and Africans still under the yoke of European colonialism.
c. failed to plan a shrewd strategy for gaining Senate ratification of the treaty
d. was the subject of the rhetorical ire of German political leaders who felt the terms of the treaty were
excessively punitive.
e. All of these choices are correct.
c
2. Before his first term ended, Woodrow Wilson had militarily
intervened in or purchased all of the following
countries
EXCEPT
a. Haiti.
b. the Dominican Republic.
c. the
Virgin Islands.
d. Cuba.
e. Mexico.
d
3. The Underwood Tariff Act and the Sixteenth Amendment reflected
Wilson's progressive goals by
a. establishing the first graduated
federal income tax.
b. creating an optional retirement system for
workers.
c. guaranteeing equal treatment for men and women in
employment.
d. using tariffs only for revenue and not to protect
American industry from competition.
e. providing protection for
American farmers against subsidized foreign crop imports.
a
4. The two major battles of World War I in which United States forces
engaged the Central Powers in 1918 were
a. Ypres and the Ardennes
Forest.
b. Verdun and the Somme.
c. Gallipoli and
Locarno.
d. Jutland and Trafalgar.
e. St. Mihiel and the
Meuse-Argonne Offensive.
e
5. Because of the benefits that it conferred on labor, Samuel Gompers
called the ____ "labor's Magna Charta."
a. Federal
Reserve Act
b. Underwood Tariff Act
c. Clayton Anti-Trust
Act
d. Wagner National Labor Relations Act
e. Workmen's
Compensation Act
c
6. When Woodrow Wilson won the election of 1912, he became the first
president since the Civil War who was
a. born in the
South.
b. a Democrat.
c. a lawyer.
d. a non-Civil War
veteran.
e. a Methodist.
a
7. Wilson's progressive programs provided relief to
a.
sailors.
b. farmers and agricultural colleges.
c. civil
service workers.
d. train employees involved in interstate
commerce.
e. All of these choices are correct.
e
8. To secure passage of the Underwood Tariff Bill, President Woodrow
Wilson broke new ground by
a. enlisting organized business groups
to lobby for its passage.
b. personally presenting his case to
Congress and arousing public opinion.
c. writing a book showing
that high tariffs were harming the American economy.
d. stirring
up Western and Southern regional hostility against the high-tariff
East.
e. All of these choices are correct.
b
9. The Second Battle of the Marne was significant because it
a.
was the first time American troops saw action in France.
b.
marked a temporary reversal of the Allies progress in Europe that
extended the war by at least six
months.
c. was the first
time American troops fought by themselves.
d. saw the first use
of combat aircraft.
e. marked the beginning of a German
withdrawal that was never reversed.
e
10. Despite reluctance by both the President and Congress, the United
States resorted to forced conscription in
1917 because
a.
there was no other way to raise the huge numbers of American army
servicemen efficiently that would
need
to be sent to
Europe.
b. it was the most effective way to destroy opposition to
the war.
c. all the Allied and Central powers had already
instituted the draft.
d. the early American volunteers for the
war proved to lack discipline, bravery, and competence.
e. the
U.S. government was unwilling to accept women into the armed forces.
a
11. The dangerous proviso that Germany attached to its Sussex pledge
not to attack unarmed neutral shipping was
the requirement
that
a. Americans would have to refrain from sailing on
British-owned passenger ships.
b. U-Boats could capture merchant
vessels if the submarines surfaced.
c. the Americans would have
to guarantee that passenger vessels were not secretly carrying
military
supplies.
d. the United States would have to
persuade the Allies to end their blockade of Germany or
submarine
warfare would be resumed.
e. Woodrow Wilson would
have to seek a fair, negotiated settlement of the war.
d
12. Woodrow Wilson showed the limits of his progressivism by
a.
opposing workingmen's compensation.
b. opposing the entry of
women into politics.
c. endorsing immigration limitations on
Japanese and Chinese immigrants.
d. refusing to appoint the
Jewish Louis D. Brandeis to the Federal Trade Commission.
e.
accelerating the segregation of African Americans in the federal bureaucracy.
e
13. Congress's passage of the Sheppard-Towner Maternity Act
demonstrated that the federal government
a. was beginning to
address the issue of equal treatment of mothers in the
workplace.
b. was prepared to take substantial steps toward
federally funded child care.
c. was indifferent to mothers
working outside the home and providing maternal and infant health
care.
d. supported pregnancy and maternity leave benefits for
women
e. was willing to benefit and support women primarily in
their role as mothers.
e
14. When Woodrow Wilson became president in 1912, the most serious
shortcoming in the country's financial
structure was that
a.
federal paper money was not backed by sound gold or silver.
b.
heavy state and federal regulation of big business and trusts that
handicapped the development of
business in America.
c. the
banking system was too heavily regulated by the federal
government.
d. the U.S. dollar was rigidly tied to gold.
e.
money for lending was inelastic and heavily concentrated in New York City.
e
15. Which of these is NOT a true statement about Black soldiers
during World War I?
a. Most Black troops were denied combat
duty.
b. Black soldiers were more likely to serve in combat than
white soldiers.
c. Black soldiers typically served as laborers
and stevedores.
d. Blacks served in segregated units in the
military.
e. Mothers of slain Black soldiers in 1930 were invited
to visit their sons' graves in segregated travel
arrangements.
b
16. Woodrow Wilson was most comfortable when surrounded by
a.
African Americans.
b. Catholics.
c. political
professionals.
d. journalists.
e. academic scholars.
e
17. One primary effect of World War I on the United States was that
it
a. opened new markets in Germany and Austria-Hungary.
b.
reduced opportunities for trade with the Allies.
c. conducted an
immense amount of trade with the Allies.
d. turned more of its
economic activity toward Latin America and Asia.
e. virtually
ended American international trade.
c
18. President Wilson's first direct use of American military forces
in revolutionary Mexico occurred when he
a. sent armed forces to
protect against Mexico's nationalization of American
businesses.
b. sent the army to prevent Venustiano Carranza from
becoming president of Mexico.
c. seized the Mexican port of Vera
Cruz to prevent German delivery of arms to President Huerta.
d.
sent General Pershing to capture Pancho Villa after Villa staged raids
into New Mexico.
e. None of these choices are correct.
c
19. Which of these is NOT a true statement about the sinking of the
Lusitania?
a. 128 Americans onboard lost their lives.
b.
Germany expressed profound regret.
c. Afterwards, Germany issued
a warning to travelers about the perils of traveling in war zone
waters.
d. Germany immediately pledged not to sink unarmed
passenger ships anymore.
e. The incident helped feed a growing
anti-Germany sentiment in the U.S.
d
20. The Federal Reserve Act gave the Federal Reserve Board the
authority to
a. issue paper money and increase or decrease the
amount of money in circulation by altering interest rates.
b.
close weak banks.
c. take the U.S. dollar off the gold
standard.
d. permit the free coinage of silver.
e. guarantee
individual banking deposits against bank failures.
a
21. The European Allies were able to finance their costly war effort
during the period of American neutrality mainly
because
of
a. confiscation of German property.
b. income
taxes.
c. tariffs.
d. sale of armaments to the United States
and Russia.
e. American bankers, most notably the Wall Street
firm of J.P. Morgan and Company.
e
22. The central provisions of the Clayton Anti-Trust Act
a.
included trade unions under the antimonopoly provisions of the Sherman
Anti-Trust Act.
b. declared that no single corporation could
control more than 75 percent of a given industry.
c. established
minimum wage rates for goods produced in interstate commerce.
d.
outlawed corporate interlocking directorates and price discrimination
against different purchasers.
e. weakened regulations against
interlocking directorates and private discrimination against different
purchasers.
d
23. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 guaranteed a substantial measure
of public control over the American
banking and currency system
through the great authority given to
a. the secretary of the
treasury.
b. the House and the Senate.
c. banking
shareholders.
d. regional Federal Reserve banks.
e. the
presidentially appointed Federal Reserve Board.
e
24. For German military strategists, the entry of the United States
into the war in April 1917 meant that
a. they would no longer be
able to use their submarine weapon effectively.
b. they would
have to defeat France and Britain before a large American force
arrived in Europe.
c. they would have to seek an immediate
cessation of hostilities and peace treaty with Russia.
d. the war
would become one of swift movements rather than stalemated trench
warfare.
e. they would have to switch from an offensive to a
defensive strategy.
b
25. All of the following are true statements about Mexicans who
settled in the area known as the borderlands
EXCEPT
a. they
relocated mostly in Texas, New Mexico, California and Arizona.
b.
they helped build highways and railroads.
c. most were wealthy
farmers with significant landholdings.
d. many followed the
harvest as fruit pickers.
e. they helped create a unique culture
that blended Mexican and American folkways.
c
26. Although Germans were generally loyal citizens, during the war
they were subjected to all of the following
EXCEPT
a. rumors
that they were spying and sabotaging in the U.S.
b. violent
attacks such as tarring, feathering, beatings, and lynchings.
c.
summary revocation of American citizenship and deportation back to
Germany.
d. German books were removed from libraries and German
academic courses canceled.
e. severely damaged by the pressures
for loyalty and conformity.
a
27. The United States' primary contributions to the Allied victory in
Europe included all of the following EXCEPT
a. munitions.
b.
manpower.
c. credits and loans.
d. foodstuffs.
e.
multiple battlefield victories.
a
28. The Senate likely would have accepted American participation in
the League of Nations and America would
have been welcomed by
other nations into the League of Nations if President Wilson
had
a. stuck to the principles of his own Fourteen
Points.
b. guaranteed that American troops would never be used in
League for collective security military
operations to maintain
peace among nations.
c. actively campaigned for support from the
American public.
d. been willing to compromise with moderate
League opponents in Congress on some constitutional and
American
sovereignty issues surrounding American participation in League
matters.
e. run for re-election.
d
29. When the United States entered the war in April 1917, most
Americans did NOT believe that
a. the navy was obligated to
defend freedom of the seas.
b. it would be necessary to continue
making loans to the Allies.
c. the United States would have to
ship war material to the Allies.
d. mobilization for war would be
largely voluntary and forced conscription would soon be
required.
e. it would be necessary to send a large American army
to Europe for more than a year.
e
30. Senate opponents of the League of Nations, as proposed in the
Treaty of Versailles, argued that it
a. failed to provide enough
German financial reparations to the United States.
b. violated
Wilson's own Fourteen Points.
c. robbed Congress of its
constitutional war-declaring powers by entangling America in an
international
organization capable of authorizing collective
force against an aggressor nation.
d. isolated the United States
from postwar world affairs.
e. made collective international
security and alliances of peaceful democratic states more difficult
to
construct and sustain.
c
31. President Wilson insisted that he would hold ____ to "strict
accountability" for ____.
a. Britain; repaying the loans
made to it by American bankers
b. Britain; the disruption of
American trade with the European continent
c. Germany; ship
damage and destruction to neutral countries other than the United
States
d. Germany; fair treatment of civilians in Belgium
e.
Germany; the loss of American ships and American lives to submarine warfare
e
32. Woodrow Wilson's administration refused to extend formal
diplomatic recognition to the government in Mexico
headed
by
a. Porfirio Diaz.
b. Venustiano Carranza.
c. Pancho
Villa.
d. Victoriano Huerta.
e. Santa Anna.
d
33. In 1913, Woodrow Wilson broke with a custom dating back to the
Jefferson administration when he
a. stopped having formal cabinet
meetings.
b. abolished all tariffs.
c. endorsed woman
suffrage.
d. personally delivered his presidential State of the
Union address to Congress.
e. failed to write a presidential
State of the Union address to be read by a clerk to Congress.
d
34. The major problem for George Creel and his Committee on Public
Information was that
a. he oversold Wilson's ideals and led
Americans and the world to expect too much.
b. relied too much on
formal laws and police power to gain compliance with the war
effort.
c. the entertainment industry was not willing to go along
with the propaganda campaign.
d. the courts curbed many of
Creel's and the committee's war propaganda efforts on constitutional
grounds.
e. the public was skeptical of government propaganda.
a
35. Woodrow Wilson's ultimate goal at the Paris Peace Conference was
to
a. stop the spread of communism.
b. blame no one for
starting the war.
c. force Germany to pay reparations for the
war.
d. establish the League of Nations.
e. destroy the
Austrian and Russian empires.
d
36. President Woodrow Wilson persuaded the American people to enter
World War I by
a. appealing to the American intervention in
Europe.
b. convincing the public for the need to make the world
safe from the German submarine.
c. declaring it a crusade
"to make the world safe for democracy."
d. asserting
that Germany was committing immoral war crimes in Europe against the
British and the
French.
e. insisting that the war would be
fought primarily by the navy.
c
37. After the conclusion of World War I, most women who
worked
a. soon gave up their war jobs.
b. kept their war
jobs after the war.
c. pursued advancement jobs in their jobs in
wartime industries.
d. gave up their traditional role as
mothers.
e. None of these choices are correct.
a
38. The chief political difference between President Woodrow Wilson
and the European parliamentary statesmen
represented at the Paris
peace table was that Wilson
a. lacked a comparable personal
popularity among Europeans.
b. did not appreciate or attempt to
galvanize domestic political support among Americans for a
postwar
Paris peace settlement.
c. respected the opinions of
his domestic political adversaries and made a good-faith effort to
include them
in the Paris peace conference.
d. refused to
appreciate fully the need to break a reasonable political compromise
between democratic
idealism and great power of imperialism or
colonialism for quickly coming to a peace agreement that all
the
Allies could support enthusiastically.
e. was generally not
popular with Americans at home; while, the European Allied leaders
enjoyed
overwhelming popularity with their own peoples.
d
39. The Germans gained an immense military advantage in the first
months of 1918 because
a. they had discovered how to use the tank
and poison gas effectively.
b. the Austrian army was able to
switch from the Italian front to the western front.
c. the
Bolsheviks took Russia out of the war allowing German troops to move
to the western front.
d. they had seized the two key strategic
points of Verdun and Ypres.
e. their brilliant generals
Hindenburg and Ludendorff has taken effective control of the German
government.
c
40. Woodrow Wilson's early efforts to conduct a strongly
anti-imperialist U. S. foreign policy were first undermined
when
he
a. dispatched U.S. military forces to protect American
interests in China.
b. told the Filipinos that they could not
obtain their independence for at least forty years.
c. sent
American marines to Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
d. sent the
U.S. Navy to seize the Virgin Islands from Denmark.
e. began
constructing a massive U.S. Navy base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
c
41. When Woodrow Wilson won reelection in 1916, he received strong
support from
a. Socialists.
b. the working class and former
Progressive Bull Moose party members.
c. the big business
community.
d. prowar members of both parties.
e. new women voters.
b
42. Which term best characterizes Woodrow Wilson's fundamental
approach to American foreign policy?
a. imperialistic
b.
moralistic
c. realistic
d. balance-of-power
e. isolationist
b
43. Woodrow Wilson's political philosophy included all of the
following EXCEPT
a. faith in the masses.
b. a belief that
compromise was necessary to be an effective leader.
c. a belief
that the president should provide leadership for Congress.
d. a
belief that the president should appeal over the heads of legislators
to the sovereign people.
e. a belief in the central importance of
morality of politics.
b
44. The Federal Trade Commission was established in 1914 to address
all of these practices EXCEPT
a. eliminating unfair and
discriminatory trade practices.
b. outlawing unfair business
competition and bribery.
c. sale of stocks without full
disclosure of a business's organization and profits.
d.
prohibiting false and misleading advertising.
e. outlawing the
mislabeling or adulterating of products.
c
45. The World War I military draft
a. generally worked fairly
and effectively to provide military manpower.
b. caused
widespread resistance and riots.
c. permitted men to purchase
substitutes to go in their place.
d. included women as well as
men.
e. was not as fair as the Civil War draft.
a
46. The first Jewish member of the United States Supreme Court,
appointed by Woodrow Wilson, was
a. Felix Frankfurter.
b.
Benjamin Cardozo.
c. Abraham Cahan.
d. Louis D.
Brandeis.
e. Bernard Baruch.
d
47. Opposition to the League of Nations by many United States
senators during the Paris Peace Conference
a. gave Allied leaders
in Paris a stronger bargaining position.
b. stemmed from only a
small minority of hard-core isolationists who rejected on principle
tying American
national security to Wilson's internationalist
Fourteen Points or a collective League of Nations.
c. led to an
abandonment of the Monroe Doctrine.
d. reinforced Germany's
unwillingness to sign the treaty.
e. forced Wilson to drop his
goal of establishing collective security internationally through the
League of
Nations.
a
48. As World War I began in Europe, the alliance system placed
Germany and Austria-Hungary as leaders of the
____, while Russia
and France were among the ____.
a. Central Powers; Holy
Alliance
b. Central Powers; Triple Alliance
c. Allies;
Central Powers
d. Triple Alliance; Central Powers
e. Central
Powers; Allies
e
49. The Progressive Bull Moose party died when
a. Teddy
Roosevelt refused to run as the party's presidential candidate in
1916.
b. Teddy Roosevelt lost the presidential race in
1916.
c. the United States entered World War I.
d. the
Republican candidate, Charles Evans Hughes, advocated the same
programs as Roosevelt.
e. Woodrow Wilson won over most Bull Moose voters.
a
50. Besides prohibiting anticompetitive business practices, the
Clayton Anti-Trust Act broke new ground by
a. exempting labor
unions and agricultural cooperatives from antitrust
prosecution.
b. exempting organized major-league baseball from
antitrust prosecution.
c. prohibiting colleges and universities
from cooperating to establish tuition and fees.
d. permitting
American businesses to form monopolies when operating
overseas.
e. creating a federal incorporation law for large businesses.
a
51. Prosecutions under the Espionage Act (1917) and the Sedition Act
(1918) can be characterized in the following
ways EXCEPT
a.
antiwar socialists and labor leaders were visibly targeted.
b.
1,900 Americans were prosecuted under these laws.
c. the laws
meant that any criticism of the government could be censored and
punished.
d. the Supreme Court ultimately ruled that they were
unconstitutional violations of freedom of speech
and
association.
e. after the war, President Harding issued
pardons to many of those prosecuted, including labor
leader
Eugene Debs.
a
52. Which of the following American passenger liners was sunk by
German submarines?
a. Lusitania
b. Arabic
c.
Sussex
d. All of these American ships were sunk.
e. None of
these were American ships.
e
53. Difficulties in Mexico in the early 20th century affected the
U.S. by
a. interfering with trade relations.
b. encouraging
massive migration of Mexicans across the border.
c. providing an
investment opportunity for U.S. corporations.
d. provoking a
full-fledged shooting war between Mexico and the United
States.
e. None of these choices are correct.
b
54. German submarines began sinking unarmed and unresisting American
and British merchant and passenger ships
without warning
a.
because they were violating international law by operating in a war
theater.
b. in retaliation for the British naval blockade of
Germany.
c. in an effort to keep the United States out of the
war.
d. because international law now allowed this new style of
warfare.
e. in a last-ditch effort to win the war.
b
55. Which one of the following was NOT among Wilson's Fourteen
Points, upon which he based America's
idealistic foreign policy
in World War I?
a. reduction of armaments
b. an
international guarantee of freedom of religion
c. abolition of
secret treaties
d. an international organization to guarantee
collective security
e. The principle of national
self-determination for subject peoples
b
56. From 1914 to 1916, America's growing trade with Britain and loss
of trade with Germany essentially occurred
because
a. the
British needed American goods and weapons and the Germans did
not.
b. more Americans sympathized with Britain than with
Germany.
c. Germany raised tariffs and other protectionist
barriers on America's exports to Germany.
d. American bankers
like J.P. Morgan were willing to loan money to Britain but not to
Germany.
e. the British navy controlled the Atlantic shipping lanes.
e
57. With the outbreak of World War I in 1914, the great majority of
Americans
a. earnestly hoped to stay out of the war.
b.
favored entering the war in support of the Allies.
c. supported
the Central Powers.
d. wanted to form a military alliance of
neutral nations.
e. favored U.S. mediation of the conflict.
a
58. In the Sussex pledge, Germany promised
a. not to sink
passenger ships.
b. to maintain the territorial integrity of
France.
c. to halt its naval blockade of Britain.
d. to halt
all submarine warfare.
e. not to sink passenger ships without warning.
e
59. President Wilson's position at the Paris Peace Conference was
weakened by
a. his refusal to attend the conference
personally.
b. Republican party victories in the 1918 midterm
elections.
c. his lack of popular support among people outside
the United States.
d. his failure to appoint a leading Senate
Republican to the conference delegation.
e. his paralyzing stroke.
b, d
60. The election of 1920
a. was defined by Warren Harding's
clear position on the League.
b. indicated the public's
exhaustion with moral idealism and self-sacrifice.
c. was the
first presidential election since passage of the woman suffrage
amendment.
d. signaled the renewal of progressive domestic reform
activity.
e. was used by Republican isolationists to kill the League.
b, c, e
61. President Wilson's Fourteen Points included
a. arms
limitation.
b. self-determination.
c. maintaining great
powers' spheres of influence.
d. freedom of the seas.
e. a
permanent international organization.
a, b, d, e
62. President Wilson's legal attack on anticompetitive and unfair
business practices was implemented by passage of
the
a.
Jones Act.
b. Federal Trade Commission Act.
c. Clayton
Act.
d. Adamson Act.
e. Federal Reserve Act.
b, c
63. Upon becoming president, Woodrow Wilson launched an attack on the
"triple wall of privilege," which he said
consisted
of
a. high tariffs.
b. racial discrimination.
c.
powerful monopolistic trusts.
d. conservative banking
practices.
e. exclusive private social clubs.
a, c, d
64. The twelve regional banks created by the Federal Reserve Act
were
a. unable to meet the monetary demands of business
expansion.
b. regulated by the Federal Reserve Board.
c.
owned by private banks.
d. subject to state banking
regulation.
e. authorized to issue their own paper money.
b, c
65. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge effectively stalled consideration of
the Treaty of Versailles by the full Senate
a. by holding
extended Senate hearings on the treaty, which permitted its various
opponents to air their
opposition to ratification.
b. by
engaging in parliamentary procedural maneuvers such as reading the
entire treaty aloud on the Senate
floor.
c. by loading the
treaty down with numerous crippling amendments or reservations opposed
by Wilson and
many Democrats in the Senate.
d. by mobilizing
liberal intellectual and internationalist opinion against the
treaty.
e. All of these choices are correct.
a, b, c
66. Examples of forceful federal government action to organize the
nation for war were
a. the conscription of certain essential
wartime workers.
b. rationing of certain foodstuffs for the
manufacture of alcoholic beverages.
c. the federal government
takeover of the railroads.
d. the federal government's imposition
of nationwide daylight savings time.
e. the issuance of
production quotas and the allocation of raw materials by the War
Industries Board.
b, c, d, e
67. The flood of progressive legislation during Wilson's first term
included laws to
a. provide disability assistance to
civil-service workers.
b. establish the eight-hour day for
interstate railroad workers.
c. end discrimination against Black
employees of the federal government.
d. provide credit and
low-interest loans to farmers.
e. establish decent treatment and
a living wage on American merchant ships.
a, b, d, e
68. Among the major targets of the wartime Espionage and Sedition
Acts were
a. the American Federation of Labor.
b. Samuel
Gompers.
c. the Industrial Workers of the World.
d. Eugene
V. Debs.
e. German Americans.
c, d, e
69. The United States declared war on Germany
a. in response to
demands by American munitions makers
b. because it appeared that
France was about to surrender.
c. after German U-boats sank four
unarmed American merchant vessels.
d. after Mexico signed an
alliance with Germany.
e. after final negotiations between
Germany and the United States over unrestricted submarine
warfare
failed to come to an agreement.
c
70. Unlike Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson tended to
a. favor
progressive reform.
b. lack the common touch.
c. find it
difficult to compromise.
d. believe that the president should
defer to congressional leadership.
e. be uninterested in ideas.
b, c
71. Most wartime mobilization agencies prepared the economy for the
war by relying on
a. congressional legislation.
b. voluntary
compliance.
c. presidential edict.
d. court
decisions.
e. business trade organizations.
b