1. After Franklin Roosevelt's failed attempt to pack the Supreme
Court
a. Roosevelt was unable to make any changes in the
Court.
b. the Democrats lost the next election in 1940.
c.
Congress permanently set the number of justices at nine.
d. much
New Deal legislation was ruled unconstitutional.
e. the Court
began to rule that New Deal programs were constitutional.
e
2. The Glass-Steagall Act
a. took the United States off the gold
standard.
b. empowered President Roosevelt to close all banks
temporarily.
c. created the Securities and Exchange Commission to
regulate the stock exchange.
d. permitted commercial banks to
engage in Wall Street financial dealings.
e. created the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation to insure individual bank deposits.
e
3. In 1935, President Roosevelt set up the Resettlement
Administration to
a. help farmers migrate from Oklahoma to
California.
b. place unemployed industrial workers in areas where
their labor was needed.
c. remove Native Americans from land that
could be farmed by victims of the Dust Bowl.
d. find jobs for
farmers in industry.
e. help farmers who were victims of the Dust
Bowl move to better land.
e
4. The Wagner Act of 1935 proved to be a trailblazing law
that
a. gave labor the legal right to organize and bargain
collectively.
b. established the NRA.
c. established the
Social Security system.
d. authorized the Public Works
Administration (PWA).
e. established a national minimum wage law.
a
5. Match each New Deal critic below with the cause or slogan that he
promoted.
A. Father Coughlin 1. "social
justice"
B. Huey Long 2. "every man a
king"
C. Francis Townsend 3. "a holy crusade for
liberty"
D. Herbert Hoover 4. "$200 a month for
everyone over 60"
a. A-l, B-2, C-4, D-3
b. A-2, B-1,
C-3, D-4
c. A-3, B-4, C-2, D-1
d. A-4, B-3, C-1, D-2
e.
A-1, B-4, C-3, D-2
a
6. ______ proved to be immensely popular among those Americans it
served by putting thousands of people
immediately to work at
good-paying jobs and providing access to low-cost electricity to a
region lacking cheap
electrical power,.
a. The Public Works
Administration
b. The Agricultural Adjustment Act
c. The
National Recovery Administration
d. The Civilian Conservation
Corps
e. The Tennessee Valley Authority
e
7. While Franklin Roosevelt waited to assume the presidency in early
1933, Herbert Hoover unsuccessfully tried to
get the
President-elect to commit to
a. maintaining a balanced federal
budget.
b. renewal of the extremely high Hawley-Smoot
Tariff.
c. an anti-inflationary policy that would have made much
of the New Deal impossible.
d. appointing some Republicans to his
cabinet.
e. a policy of not offering direct welfare to the unemployed.
c
8. One striking new feature of the 1932 presidential election results
was that
a. the South had shifted to the Republican
party.
b. Democrats made political gains in the normally
rock-ribbed Republican western states like Kansas.
c. despite the
calamity of the Great Depression, the popular and the electoral vote
for president was
surprisingly close.
d. a clear gender gap
opened up in which more women favored the Democrats.
e. African
Americans shifted from their Republican allegiance and became a vital
element in the
Democratic party.
e
9. The National Labor Relations Act proved most beneficial to
a.
small business employers.
b. skilled workers.
c. the
long-term unemployed.
d. trade associations.
e. unskilled workers.
e
10. As a result of the 1937 Roosevelt recession
a. Roosevelt cut
income taxes as part of a supply-side economics experiment.
b.
Social Security taxes were reduced.
c. Republicans gained control
of the Senate in 1938.
d. Roosevelt adopted Keynesian (planned
deficit spending) economics.
e. much of the early New Deal was repealed.
d
11. The most immediate emergency facing Franklin Roosevelt when he
became president in March 1933 was
a. the collapse of nearly the
entire banking system.
b. runaway inflation.
c. the growing
power of demagogues such as Huey Long and Father Coughlin.
d. the
near collapse of international trade.
e. riots by unemployed
workers and farmers unable to sell their goods.
a
12. The Federal Securities Act and the Securities Exchange Commission
aimed to
a. prohibit completely the sale of stocks on margin
(i.e. with borrowed funds).
b. force stockbrokers to register
with the federal government.
c. prevent interlocking directorates
and business pyramiding schemes.
d. provide full disclosure of
information and prevent insider trading and other fraudulent
practices.
e. stop the practice of establishing interlocking
directorates on America's corporate boards that
produced
controversial conflicts-of-interest in the governance of
American businesses.
d
13. Senator Huey P. Long of Louisiana gained a large national
following by promising to
a. nationalize all banks and public
utility companies.
b. launch a statewide infrastructure
construction project that would employ thousands.
c. help farmers
and workers organize to resist the power of corporations.
d.
provide the unemployed and elderly a $200-a-month social security
payment.
e. "share our wealth" by raising taxes on the
rich and giving every family $5,000.
e
14. The Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) proposed to solve the farm
problem by
a. reducing agricultural production.
b.
subsidizing American farm exports overseas.
c. increasing
agricultural production for certain crops in high consumer
demand.
d. helping farmers to pay their mortgages.
e.
creating farm cooperatives.
a
15. The American Social Security System, established by the New Deal,
differed from most European social
welfare systems primarily
because it
a. was opposed by large sectors of the public.
b.
did not permit the Social Security number to be used for
identification and security purposes.
c. did not address the
issue of single mothers in the home with dependent children.
d.
linked unemployment and disability insurance to old age
pensions.
e. did not initially cover all categories of workers.
e
16. The Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 attempted to
a. reverse the forced assimilation of Native Americans into white
society by establishing tribal self-
government.
b. encourage Native Americans to give up their land claims.
c.
reinforce the coercive assimilation policies since the Dawes Act of
1887.
d. pressure Native Americans to renounce
self-government.
e. persuade Native Americans to give up their
native crafts and tribal traditions.
a
17. When Franklin Roosevelt assumed the presidency in March
1933
a. Congress refused to grant him any legislative
authority.
b. he knew exactly what he wanted to do.
c. he
received unprecedented congressional support.
d. he rejected a
pragmatic approach to governing the country.
e. he at first
proceeded cautiously.
c
18. The New Deal program of the following agency represented the most
economically complex, managerially
ambitious, and unsuccessful
New Deal effort to achieve recovery and reform the entire American
economy.
a. Public Works Administration
b. National Recovery
Administration
c. Tennessee Valley Authority
d. National
Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act)
e. Social Security Administration
b
19. By 1938, the New Deal
a. had lost most of its
momentum.
b. turned more toward direct relief than social
reform.
c. had plainly failed to achieve its objectives.
d.
had won over the majority of business people to its policies.
e.
was prepared to embark on ambitious new initiatives.
a
20. Prominent female social scientists of the 1930s, like Ruth
Benedict and Margaret Mead, brought widespread
contributions to
the field of
a. economics.
b. political science.
c.
psychology.
d. sociology.
e. anthropology.
e
21. The federally-owned Tennessee Valley Authority was seen as a
particular threat to
a. the entire capitalist system.
b. the
Republican party.
c. the automobile industry.
d. the private
electrical utility industry.
e. white Southern racial practices.
d
22. The Social Security Act of 1935 provided all of the following
EXCEPT
a. unemployment insurance.
b. old-age
pensions.
c. economic provisions for the blind and
disabled.
d. support for the blind and physically
handicapped.
e. health care for the poor.
e
23. Roosevelt supported the repeal of Prohibition because
a. he
thought it was unconstitutional.
b. he believed the problem of
drunkenness could be solved by restricting alcohol content to 3.2
percent by
weight.
c. he thought that it afforded the
opportunity to raise needed federal revenue and provide jobs.
d.
he needed support from the repeal movement to gain reelection.
e.
drys - those who opposed alcohol - were an increasingly small segment
of the population.
c
24. Eleanor Roosevelt had honed her own skills and developed a
personal network of reform activists through
a. running for local
offices in New York State.
b. her experience in settlement houses
and women's reform organizations.
c. her long resistance to
Franklin Roosevelt's personal infidelities.
d. her personal
association with women's colleges and sororities.
e. sitting in
on Franklin Roosevelt's cabinet meetings when he was governor of New York.
b
25. The Democratic party platform on which Franklin Roosevelt
campaigned for the presidency in 1932 called for
a. extensive
social reforms and a balanced budget.
b. deficit spending and a
higher military budget.
c. higher tariffs and support for
American manufacturers.
d. a 60 percent tax on the income of the
highest tow percent of American income earners.
e. breaking up
monopolistic corporations and supporting small business.
a
26. Most Dust Bowl migrants headed to
a. Oklahoma.
b.
Arizona.
c. Nevada.
d. Oregon.
e. California.
e
27. All of the following contributed to the Dust Bowl of the 1930s
EXCEPT
a. dry-farming techniques.
b. unprecedented drought
and wind storms of the trans-Mississippi Great Plains.
c.
farmers' failure to use steam tractors and other modern
equipment.
d. the cultivation of marginal farmlands on the Great
Plains.
e. soil erosion.
c
28. President Roosevelt's chief "administrator of relief"
and one of his closest advisors was
a. George Norris.
b.
John L. Lewis.
c. Mary McLeod Bethune.
d. Harry
Hopkins.
e. David Lilienthal.
d
29. In 1932, Franklin Roosevelt campaigned on the promise that as
President he would attack the Great Depression
by
a.
nationalizing all banks and major industries.
b. mobilizing
America's youth as in wartime.
c. returning to the traditional
policies of laissez-faire capitalism.
d. continuing the policies
already undertaken by President Hoover.
e. experimenting with
bold new programs for economic and social reform.
e
30. Both ratified in the 1930s, the Twentieth Amendment ____ and the
Twenty-first Amendment ____.
a. shortened the time between the
presidential election and inauguration; ended Prohibition
b.
limited a president to two complete terms in office; repealed the
Eighteenth Amendment
c. rendered most New Deal programs
unconstitutional; limited a president to two complete terms in
office
d. ended prohibition; shortened the time between
presidential election and inauguration
e. expanded the size of
the Supreme Court; ended Prohibition
a
31. ____ contributed the most to Franklin Roosevelt's development of
compassion and strength of will.
a. Education
b. Domestic
conflicts with Eleanor Roosevelt
c. Family ties with Teddy
Roosevelt
d. Affliction with infantile paralysis
e. Service
in World War I
d
32. The phrase Hundred Days refers to the
a. worst months of the
Great Depression.
b. time it took for Congress to begin acting on
President Roosevelt's plans for combating the
Great
Depression.
c. flood of legislation passed by Congress
in the first months of Franklin Roosevelt's presidency.
d.
"lame-duck" period between Franklin Roosevelt's election and
his inauguration.
e. time that all banks were closed by FDR.
c
33. President Roosevelt's Court-packing scheme in 1937 reflected his
desire to ensure that the Supreme Court
a. became more
conservative.
b. became more independent of Congress.
c.
upheld the constitutionality of legally challenged New Deal
programs.
d. less burdened with appellate cases.
e. more
respectful of the Constitution's original intent.
c
34. The fate of most of the Okies and other Dust Bowl migrants who
headed west to California was that they
a. acquired farms in the
San Joaquin Valley.
b. found steady work in the canning
industry.
c. found themselves mired in poverty, squalor, and lack
of economic opportunity in the San Joaquin Valley.
d. joined
reactionary, quasi-fascist organizations in protest of Roosevelt's
economic policies.
e. formed mutually supportive evangelical
religious communes.
c
35. Immediately after taking office, President Roosevelt responded to
the banking crisis by
a. restoring the gold standard to guarantee
the soundness of American currency.
b. nationalizing the ten
largest banks in the United States.
c. providing major federal
loans to the largest and soundest banks.
d. establishing a new
Bank of the United States to guarantee deposits.
e. closing all
American banks for a week, while reorganizing them on a sounder basis.
e
36. Franklin Roosevelt took America off the gold standard and adopted
a managed currency policy designed to
a. stimulate
inflation.
b. reduce the traded price of gold.
c. reduce the
traded price of silver.
d. reduce the amount of money in
circulation.
e. shake up the Federal Reserve Board.
a
37. The first Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) raised the money that
it paid to farmers not to grow crops by
a. raising the
tariff.
b. imposing a tax on the sale of farms.
c. selling
government surplus grain.
d. increasing taxes on the
wealthy.
e. taxing processors of farm products.
e
38. Recently, some historians have argued that the New Deal had a
more radical effect on men than women for all
of the following
reasons EXCEPT
a. Social Security was designed to assist male
breadwinners, who were expected to share benefits with
their
families.
b. married women were rarely favored for jobs in New
Deal agencies.
c. social and economic programs of the New Deal
maintained or reaffirmed women's traditional roles as
wives or
mothers.
d. social and economic programs of the New Deal tended
to provide more opportunities to men than
women.
e. many men
were required to assume significant child rearing responsibility
because of the millions of
women who went to work for New Deal agencies.
e
39. The early New Deal experiments borrowed rather freely and
randomly from
a. Marxism, Leninism, and European
socialism.
b. the principles of early 20th-century laissez-faire
economists such as Freidrich Hayek.
c. Mussolini's fascism and
Hitler's Nazism.
d. U.S. wartime and pre-war agencies and
European social reform models.
e. the late nineteenth-century
utopian literature of Henry George, Edward Bellamy, and Charlotte Perkins
Gilman.
d
40. The primary interest of the Congress of Industrial Organization
was
a. the effective enforcement of yellow dog contracts.
b.
the organization of trade unions.
c. the maintenance of open shop
industries.
d. the organization of all unskilled and semiskilled
workers within an industry.
e. maintaining existing wage levels.
d
41. All of the following are true statements about the men who joined
the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps)
EXCEPT
a. there were
about three million men in the program.
b. the men were mostly
young, hired to work in fresh-air camps.
c. many of the men had
criminal records.
d. they worked on reforestation, flood control
and swamp drainage projects.
e. CCC workers helped families by
sending most of their paychecks home.
c
42. Match each New Dealer below with the federal agency or program
with which he or she was closely identified.
A. Robert Wagner 1.
Department of Labor
B. Harry Hopkins 2. Public Works
Administration.
C. Harold Ickes 3. Works Progress
Administration
D. Frances Perkins 4. National Labor Relations
Act
a. A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
b. A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
c. A-3,
B-1, C-4, D-2
d. A-4, B-3, C-1, D-2
e. A-2, B-4, C-1, D-3
b
43. The most controversial aspect of the Tennessee Valley Authority
was its effort to
a. provide cheap electrical power in
competition with private industry.
b. control floods in the
Tennessee and Cumberland valleys.
c. prevent soil erosion
throughout the region.
d. build housing for poor and middle-class
citizens in the region.
e. provide moderately priced electrical
power in collaboration with private industry.
a
44. The group that had experienced the worst suffering as a result of
the Great Depression was
a. women who worked outside the
home.
b. financial professionals connected to Wall
Street.
c. African Americans.
d. skilled factory
workers.
e. recent immigrants.
c
45. The National Recovery Administration (NRA) failed largely
because
a. businesses and labor aggressively and universally
resisted any regulation of wages, prices, and hours by
the
agency.
b. it required too much self-sacrifice on the part of
industry, labor, and the public.
c. Harold Ickes, the head of the
agency, proved to be an incompetent administrator.
d. it did not
provide enough protection for labor to bargain with
management.
e. the agency did not have enough power to control business.
b
46. Some Native Americans denounced the Indian Reorganization Act of
1934 because its provisions
a. encouraged Native Americans to
create and promote a faux museum piece livelihood and
embrace
certain native traditions and lifestyles incompatible
with the modern 20th-century world.
b. continued to promote
coercive assimilation policies.
c. discouraged the establishment
and sound management of local self-governments.
d. ignored the
increasing loss of Native American lands to real estate and commercial
development and
environmental degradation.
e. None of these
choices are correct.
d
47. Probably the most radically economic New Deal program that
provoked widespread charges of creeping
socialism by Republican
and conservative critics of President Roosevelt's administration was
the
a. Indian Reorganization Act.
b. Social Security
Act.
c. Agricultural Adjustment Act.
d. Federal Housing
Administration.
e. Tennessee Valley Authority.
e
48. The Works Progress Administration was a major ____ program of the
New Deal; the Public Works
Administration was a long-range ____
program; and the Social Security Act was a major ____ program.
a.
relief; recovery; reform
b. reform; recovery; relief
c.
recovery; relief; reform
d. relief; reform; recovery
e.
reform; relief; recovery
a