Loading...

Messages

Proposals

Stuck in your homework and missing deadline? Get urgent help in $10/Page with 24 hours deadline

Get Urgent Writing Help In Your Essays, Assignments, Homeworks, Dissertation, Thesis Or Coursework & Achieve A+ Grades.

Privacy Guaranteed - 100% Plagiarism Free Writing - Free Turnitin Report - Professional And Experienced Writers - 24/7 Online Support

Borderlands 2 mother lover rewards

13/11/2021 Client: muhammad11 Deadline: 2 Day

Rev.Confirming Pages

U.S. A N A R R A T I V E H I S T O R Y

Seventh Edit ion

V O L U M E 2 : F R O M 1 8 6 5

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd idav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd i 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

The Way You Once Had to Teach History . . .

McGraw-Hill provides INSIGHT® to help you achieve your course goals. How would your teaching experience change if you could access this information at a glance, either on your computer or tablet device?

1. How are my students performing?

2. How is this particular student performing?

3. How is my section performing?

4. How eff ective are my assignments?

5. How eff ective is this particular assignment?

McGraw-Hill’s Connect Insight® is a fi rst-of- its-kind analytics tool that distills clear answers to these fi ve questions and delivers them to instructors in at-a-glance snapshots.

Connect Insight’s® elegant navigation makes it intuitive and easy-to-use, allowing you to focus on what is important: helping your students succeed.

. . . IS NOW HISTORY!

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd iidav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd ii 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

U.S.: A Narrative History off ers thirty interactive maps that support geographical as well as historical thinking. These maps appear in both the eBook and Connect History exercises.

For some interactive maps, students click on the boxes in the map legend to see changing boundaries, visualize migration routes, or analyze war battles and election results.

With others, students manipulate a slider to help them better understand change over time.

Interactive maps give students a hands-on understanding of geography.

BR ITI SH CANADA

Mississippi R iver

Ohio R iv

er

R io Grande

Co lor

ad

o R ive

r

Snake River

Co lu

m bi

a R

Red River

Arkansas River

Gulf of Mexico

ATLANTIC OCEANPACIFIC

OCEAN

APACHE

COMANCHE

KIOWA

PAIUTE

UTE

HOPI NAVAJO

MOHAVE

OSAGE

KANSA

PAWNEEARAPAHO

CHEYENNE

ARIKARA

MANDAN SIOUX CROW

SHOSHONE

NEZ PERCÉ

BLACKFOOT

CHINOOK

CLATSOP

Chihuahua

St. Louis

New Orleans

New York Philadelphia

Fort Mandan

Fort Bellafontaine

Fort Clatsop

INDIANA TERRITORY

MICH. TERR.

OHIO

KENTUCKY

VIRGINIA

TENNESSEE

NORTH CAROLINA

SOUTH CAROLINA

GEORGIAMISSISSIPPI TERRITORY

MD. DEL.

N.J.

NEW YORK

PENNSYLVANIA

VT. N.H.

MAINE (part of MASS.)

MASS.

R.I. CONN.

LOUISIANA PURCHASE

OREGON COUNTRY (Disputed)

SPANISH POSSESSIONS

TEXAS (claimed by U.S.

1803–1819) SPANISH FLORID A

0 250

1000 km0 500

500 mi

U.S. POPULATION DENSITY PER SQUARE MILE, 1800

Under 2

18–45

2–17

Over 45

BR ITI SH CANADA

MiMM ssissipi pppiR i

R vii er

OOhO iih o RR iv

er

R io

Grande

Co loro

ar

do Ri

ve r

SnSS ake River

CoC lu

m bi

aa RR

Red River

Arkr ansas River

Gulf of Mexico

ATLANTIC OCEANPACIFIC

OCEAN

APACHE

COMANCANCHEMANCANCANC

KIOWA

PAIUTE

UTE

HOPI NAVAJO

MOHAVE

OSAGE

KANSA

PAWNEEARAPAHO

CHEYENNE

ARIKARA

MANDAN IOUXSSISISII CROW

SHOSHONE

NEZ PERCÉ

BLACKFOOT

CHINOOK

CLATSOP

Chihuahua

St. Louis

New OOrlearleansNNNNNNN

NNew w YYYoororkNNNNNeNNNNN PhPhiladedelphia

Fort Mandan

Fort Bellafontaine

FForrt CCClattssoop

INDIANA TERRITORY

MICH. TERR.

OHIO

KENTUCKYKENTUCKY

VIRGIVIRGINIAINIA

TENNESSEENE

NORTH CAROLINA

SOUTH LI ACAROLINLINAC AAAA

GEORGGIAMISSISSIPPI TERRITORY

DMDD.MDMDMDMDMDDDMDMD DELL..DDDDDDDDD

.J..N.NN.N.N.

NEW YORKNEW YORKORKORKK

PENNSYLVANIAPENNSYLVANIAANIAEN

VT.VT.TV NNN.H.N ..H

MAINEE (par(part of

)S.))MASS.S.S.)S.)S.)))))

MASS.MAMASSMASSSSS.SSSS

R.I.R.I..R IRRRR IIII CCOCONONNNN.

LOUISIANA PURCHASE

OREGON COUNTRY (Disputed)

SPANISH POSSESSIONS

TEXAS (claimed by U.S.

1803–1819) SSPAAAAAAAPP NNNNNNISH FLORID A

00 250

1000 km0 500

500 mi

U.S. POPULATION DENSITY PER SQUARE MILE, 1800

Under 2

18–45

2–17

Over 45

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd iiidav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd iii 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

U.S.: A Narrative History is a 21st-century approach to teaching history. Students study smarter with SmartBook.

The fi rst and only adaptive reading experience, SmartBook is changing the way students read and learn.

• As the student engages with SmartBook, questions test his or her understanding. In response to the student’s answers, the reading experience actually adapts to what the student knows or doesn’t know.

• SmartBook highlights the content the student is struggling with, so he or she can focus on reviewing that information.

• By focusing on the content needed to close specifi c knowledge gaps, the student maximizes the effi ciency of his or her study time.

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd ivdav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd iv 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

Critical missions promote critical thinking. What would your students do if they were senators voting on the impeachment of Andrew Johnson?

Or if they were advisers to Harry Truman, helping him decide whether to drop the atomic bomb?

Critical Missions make students feel like active participants in history by immersing them in a series of transformative moments from our past.

As advisers to key historical fi gures, they read and analyze primary sources, interpret maps and timelines, and write recommendations.

As a follow-up activity in each Critical Mission, students learn to think like historians by conducting a retrospective analysis from a contemporary perspective.

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd vdav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd v 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

This page intentionally left blank

Rev.Confirming Pages

U.S. A N A R R A T I V E H I S T O R Y

Seventh Edit ion James West Davidson

Christine Leigh Heyrman University of Delaware

Brian DeLay University of California, Berkeley

Mark H. Lytle Bard College

Michael B. Stoff University of Texas, Austin

V O L U M E 2 : F R O M 1 8 6 5

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd viidav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd vii 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

U.S.: A Narrative History AUTHORS

James West Davidson Brian DeLay Christine Leigh Heyrman Mark H. Lytle Michael B. Stoff

SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, PRODUCTS & MARKETS Kurt L. Strand VICE PRESIDENT, GENERAL MANAGER, PRODUCTS & MARKETS Michael Ryan VICE PRESIDENT, CONTENT DESIGN & DELIVERY Kimberly Meriwether David

MANAGING DIRECTOR Gina Boedeker BRAND MANAGER Laura Wilk

LEAD PRODUCT DEVELOPER Rhona Robbin EXECUTIVE MARKETING MANAGER Stacy Ruel Best

MARKETING MANAGER April Cole DIGITAL PRODUCT ANALYST John Brady

DIRECTOR, CONTENT DESIGN & DELIVERY Terri Schiesl PROGRAM MANAGER Marianne Musni

CONTENT PROJECT MANAGER Christine A. Vaughan CONTENT PROJECT MANAGER Emily Kline

BUYER Laura M. Fuller DESIGN Matt Backhaus

CONTENT LICENSING SPECIALIST, IMAGES Lori Hancock CONTENT LICENSING SPECIALIST, TEXT Beth Thole

COMPOSITOR Laserwords Private Limited TYPEFACE 10/12 UniMath PRINTER R. R. Donnelley

U.S.: A Narrative History, Seventh Edition Published by McGraw-Hill Education, 2 Penn Plaza, New York, NY 10121. Copyright © 2015 by McGraw-Hill Edu- cation. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Previous editions © 2012, 2009. No part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education, including, but not limited to, in any network or other electronic storage or transmission, or broadcast for distance learning.

Some ancillaries, including electronic and print components, may not be available to customers outside the United States.

This book is printed on acid-free paper.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 DOW/DOW 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4

ISBN 978-0-07-778042-5 (complete); MHID 0-07-778042-6 (complete)

ISBN 978-0-07-351330-0 (volume 1); MHID 0-07-351330-X (volume 1)

ISBN 978-0-07-778036-4 (volume 2); MHID 0-07-778036-1 (volume 2)

Cover image credits: Miss Ting; Idaho farm; woman weaving; “Our City” lithograph of St. Louis, Janicke and Co. 1859; “Pocahantas Saving the Life of Capt. John Smith,”(detail); “Heart of the Klondike”(detail): The Library of Congress; Caesar Chavez (detail): © Arthur Schatz/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images; Hopewell Hand: © Heritage Images/Corbis; Freedman’s School: © Bettmann/Corbis; “Mandan Dog Sled,” Karl Bodmer: © Free Library, Phila- delphia/Bridgeman Images; “Tragic Prelude” (detail): © Kansas State Historical Society; “Mrs. Chandler” (detail): Courtesy, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Uncle Sam with Banjo: HistoryPicks; View from Space: © NASA/ JSC; Buffalo Hunt: Courtesy, National Gallery of Art, Washington.

All credits appearing on page or at the end of the book are considered to be an extension of the copyright page.

Library of Congress Control Number: 2014943610

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd viiidav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd viii 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

17 Reconstructing the Union 1865–1877 332

18 The New South and the Trans-Mississippi West 1870–1890 351

19 The New Industrial Order 1870–1900 374

20 The Rise of an Urban Order 1870–1900 395

21 The Political System under Strain at Home and Abroad 1877–1900 417

22 The Progressive Era 1890–1920 442

23 The United States and the Collapse of the Old World Order 1901–1920 465

24 The New Era 1920–1929 488

25 The Great Depression and the New Deal 1929–1939 510

26 America’s Rise to Globalism 1927–1945 540

27 Cold War America 1945–1954 568

28 The Suburban Era 1945–1963 588

29 Civil Rights and Uncivil Liberties 1947–1969 611

30 The Vietnam Era 1963–1975 631

31 The Conservative Challenge 1976–1992 656

32 The United States in a Global Community 1989–Present 681

SOME HIGHLIGHTS: DUELING DOCUMENTS is a new feature appearing in half the chapters. Each box showcases two pri- mary sources with contrasting points of view.

HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX, alternating with Dueling Documents, showcases historical images and arti- facts, asking students to focus on visual evidence and examine material culture. New items in this edition include “A White Man’s View of Custer’s Defeat,” exhibiting a popular lithograph on the subject and discussing its iconography; “Youth in a Jar,” analyzing an advertisement for beauty cream; stills from the 1951 Civil Defense film, “Duck and Cover,” starring Bert the Turtle in atomic attack.

GEOGRAPHIC QUESTIONS have been added to many map captions to reinforce geographic liter- acy and to connect the maps to the chapter’s rel- evant themes.

CHAPTER 18, THE NEW SOUTH AND THE TRANS- MISSISSIPPI WEST discusses the costs of Jim Crow segregation to white as well as black south- erners; plus a discussion of the Navajo “Long Walk” or forced deportation from Arizona to east- ern New Mexico.

CHAPTER 20, THE RISE OF AN URBAN ORDER, con- tains a new opening narrative, “The Dogs of Hell,” evoking the famous Chicago fire of 1871.

CHAPTER 22, THE PROGRESSIVE ERA, includes new material on Margaret Sanger, birth control, and its relationship to a wave of forced steriliza- tions, as well as a new discussion of Progressiv- ism in western states. CHAPTER 24, THE NEW ERA, discusses the emer- gence of “Companionate Marriage,” in which companionship and sexual intimacy helped invest marriage with greater equality.

CHAPTER 28, THE SUBURBAN ERA, examines the “Cola Wars” between Coke and Pepsi, as an example of the role of advertising in a consumer economy.

CHAPTER 30, THE VIETNAM ERA, now ends with the fall of Saigon. Material on OPEC, the Middle East, and Kissinger-Ford diplomacy has been moved to Chapter 31. The restructuring makes both chapters more coherent and balanced in length.

CHAPTER 31, THE CONSERVATIVE CHALLENGE, pro- files Saturday Night Fever (the most popular box- office movie of the decade) to examine the era’s culture wars.

CHAPTER 32, THE UNITED STATES IN A GLOBAL COMMUNITY, expands to cover the troubled rollout of the Affordable Care Act, growing concern with income inequality, global warming and climate change; and the debate over hydraulic fracturing.

WHAT’S NEW U.S. BRIEF CONTENTS

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd ixdav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd ix 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

x | C O N T E N T S |

Racism and the Failure of Reconstruction 347

CHAPTER SUMMARY 349 | ADDITIONAL READING 349 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 350

18 THE NEW SOUTH AND THE TRANS-MISSISSIPPI WEST 1870–1890

AN AMERICAN STORY: “Come West” 351

The Southern Burden 352 Tenancy and Sharecropping 353

17 RECONSTRUCTING THE UNION 1865–1877

AN AMERICAN STORY: A Secret Sale at Davis Bend 332

Presidential Reconstruction 334 Lincoln’s 10 Percent Plan 334

Reconstruction under Andrew Johnson 334

The Failure of Johnson’s Program 335

Johnson’s Break with Congress 336

The Fourteenth Amendment 336

The Election of 1866 337

Congressional Reconstruction 337 Post-Emancipation Societies in the Americas 338

The Land Issue 338

Impeachment 338

Reconstruction in the South 339 Black and White Republicans 339

Reforms under the New State Governments 339

Economic Issues and Corruption 340

Black Aspirations 340 Experiencing Freedom 340

The Black Family 340

The Schoolhouse and the Church 341

New Working Conditions 341

Planters and a New Way of Life 343

The Abandonment of Reconstruction 343 The Grant Administration 343

Growing Northern Disillusionment 345

The Triumph of White Supremacy 346

The Disputed Election of 1876 346

HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Dressed to Kill 347

Contents

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xdav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd x 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

| C O N T E N T S | xi

Transportation and Communication 377

Finance Capital 378

The Corporation 378

An International Pool of Labor 378

Railroads: America’s First Big Business 379 A Managerial Revolution 380

Competition and Consolidation 381

The Challenge of Finance 381

The Growth of Big Business 381 Strategies of Growth 382

Carnegie Integrates Steel 382

Rockefeller and the Great Standard Oil Trust 383

The Mergers of J. Pierpont Morgan 384

Corporate Defenders 384

Corporate Critics 384

The Costs of Doing Business 385

The Workers’ World 386 Industrial Work 387

Children, Women, and African Americans 388

The American Dream of Success 389

The Systems of Labor 389 Early Unions 389

The Knights of Labor 389

HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Digital Detecting 390

The American Federation of Labor 391

The Limits of Industrial Systems 391

Management Strikes Again 392

CHAPTER SUMMARY 393 | ADDITIONAL READING 393 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 394

Southern Industry 354

The Sources of Southern Poverty 355

Life in the New South 356 Rural Life 356

The Church 356

Segregation 357

Western Frontiers 357 Western Landscapes 358

Indian Peoples and the Western Environment 358

Whites and the Western Environment: Competing Visions 359

The War for the West 360 Contact and Conflict 361

Custer’s Last Stand—and the Indians’ 361

HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX A White Man’s View of Custer’s Defeat 363

Killing with Kindness 363

Borderlands 364

Ethno-Racial Identity in the New West 365

Boom and Bust in the West 366 Mining Sets a Pattern 366

The Transcontinental Railroad 366

Cattle Kingdom 367

The Final Frontier 368 Farming on the Plains 368

A Plains Existence 368

The Urban Frontier 369

The West and the World Economy 370

Packaging and Exporting the “Wild West” 370

CHAPTER SUMMARY 372 | ADDITIONAL READING 372 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 373

19 THE NEW INDUSTRIAL ORDER 1870–1900

AN AMERICAN STORY: Scampering through America 374

The Development of Industrial Systems 375 Natural Resources and Industrial Technology 376

Systematic Invention 376

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xidav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xi 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

City Life 404 The Immigrant in the City 404

Urban Middle-Class Life 406

Victorianism and the Pursuit of Virtue 406

DUELING DOCUMENTS City Scenes 407

Challenges to Convention 408

The Decline of “Manliness” 409

City Culture 409 Public Education in an Urban Industrial World 409

Higher Learning and the Rise of the Professional 410

Higher Education for Women 411

A Culture of Consumption 412

Leisure 413

Arts and Entertainment 413

CHAPTER SUMMARY 415 | ADDITIONAL READING 415 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 416

21 THE POLITICAL SYSTEM UNDER STRAIN AT HOME AND ABROAD 1877–1900

AN AMERICAN STORY: “The World United at Chicago” 417

The Politics of Paralysis 419 Political Stalemate 419

The Parties 419

The Issues 420

The White House from Hayes to Harrison 421

Ferment in the States and Cities 422

20 THE RISE OF AN URBAN ORDER 1870–1900

AN AMERICAN STORY: “The Dogs of Hell” 395

A New Urban Age 397 The Urban Explosion 397

The Great Global Migration 397

Holding the City Together 398

Bridges and Skyscrapers 399

Slum and Tenement 400

Running and Reforming the City 401 Boss Rule 401

Rewards, Accomplishments, and Costs 402

Nativism, Revivals, and the Social Gospel 403

The Social Settlement Movement 403

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xiidav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xii 22/08/14 11:26 PM22/08/14 11:26 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

| C O N T E N T S | xiii

Controlling the Masses 450 Stemming the Immigrant Tide 450

The Curse of Demon Rum 450

Prostitution 451

“For Whites Only” 451

HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Mementos of Murder 452

The Politics of Municipal and State Reform 453 The Reformation of the Cities 453

Progressivism in the States 454

Progressivism Goes to Washington 455 TR 455

A Square Deal 456

Bad Food and Pristine Wilds 457

The Troubled Taft 459

The Election of 1912 459

Woodrow Wilson and the Politics of Morality 460 Early Career 460

The Reforms of the New Freedom 461

Labor and Social Reform 462

CHAPTER SUMMARY 463 | ADDITIONAL READING 463 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 464

23 THE UNITED STATES AND THE COLLAPSE OF THE OLD WORLD ORDER 1901–1920 AN AMERICAN STORY: “A Path Between the Seas” 465

Progressive Diplomacy 467 Big Stick in the Caribbean 467

The Revolt of the Farmers 422 The Harvest of Discontent 422

The Origins of the Farmers’ Alliance 423

The Alliance Peaks 423

The Election of 1892 424

The New Realignment 425 The Depression of 1893 425

DUELING DOCUMENTS WHAT SHOULD THE GOVERNMENT DO? 426

The Rumblings of Unrest 426

The Battle of the Standards 427

Campaign and Election 428

The Rise of Jim Crow Politics 429

The African American Response 429

McKinley in the White House 430

Visions of Empire 431 Imperialism, European-Style and American 431

The Shapers of American Imperialism 432

Dreams of a Commercial Empire 434

The Imperial Moment 435 Mounting Tensions 435

The Imperial War 436

Peace and the Debate over Empire 437

From Colonial War to Colonial Rule 438

An Open Door in China 439

CHAPTER SUMMARY 440 | ADDITIONAL READING 441 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 441

22 THE PROGRESSIVE ERA 1890–1920 AN AMERICAN STORY: Burned Alive in the City 442

The Roots of Progressive Reform 444 Progressive Beliefs 444

The Pragmatic Approach 444

The Progressive Method 445

The Search for the Good Society 446 Poverty in a New Light 446

Expanding the “Woman’s Sphere” 446

Social Welfare 447

Woman Suffrage 448

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xiiidav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xiii 22/08/14 11:27 PM22/08/14 11:27 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

xiv | C O N T E N T S |

24 THE NEW ERA 1920–1929 AN AMERICAN STORY:

Yesterday Meets Today in the New Era 488

The Roaring Economy 490 Technology, Consumer Spending, and the Boom in Construction 490

The Automobile 490

The Future of Energy 491

The Business of America 492

Welfare Capitalism 492

HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Youth in a Jar 493

The Consumer Culture 493

A Mass Society 494 A “New Woman” 494

Mass Media 496

The Cult of Celebrity 497

“Ain’t We Got Fun?” 497

The Art of Alienation 498

A “New Negro” 498

Defenders of the Faith 499 Nativism and Immigration Restriction 500

The “Noble Experiment” 500

KKK 501

Fundamentalism versus Darwinism 502

Republicans Ascendant 503 The Politics of “Normalcy” 503

A “Diplomatist of the Highest Rank” 468

Dollar Diplomacy 468

Woodrow Wilson and Moral Diplomacy 468 Missionary Diplomacy 469

Intervention in Mexico 470

The Road to War 470 The Guns of August 470

Neutral but Not Impartial 471

The Diplomacy of Neutrality 472

Peace, Preparedness, and the Election of 1916 473

Wilson’s Final Peace Offensive 473

War and Society 474 The Slaughter of Stalemate 474

“You’re in the Army Now” 475

Mobilizing the Economy 476

War Work 476

Great Migrations 477

Propaganda and Civil Liberties 477

Over There 478

DUELING DOCUMENTS The Limits of Free Speech 479

The Influenza Pandemic of 1918–1919 480

The Lost Peace 481 The Treaty of Versailles 483

The Battle for the Treaty 483

Red Scare 484

CHAPTER SUMMARY 486 | ADDITIONAL READING 486 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 487

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xivdav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xiv 22/08/14 11:27 PM22/08/14 11:27 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

| C O N T E N T S | xv

DUELING DOCUMENTS Two Views of the “Forgotten Man” 521

Saving the Banks 522

Relief for the Unemployed 522

Planning for Industrial Recovery 524

Planning for Agriculture 525

A Second New Deal (1935–1936) 526 Dissent from the Deal 526

The Second Hundred Days 527

The Election of 1936 528

The New Deal and the American People 529 The New Deal and Western Water 529

The Limited Reach of the New Deal 530

Tribal Rights 531

A New Deal for Women 531

The Rise of Organized Labor 532

“Art for the Millions” 533

The End of the New Deal (1937–1940) 534 Packing the Courts 534

The Demise of the Deal 535

The Legacy of the New Deal 537

CHAPTER SUMMARY 537 | ADDITIONAL READING 538 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 539

26 AMERICA’S RISE TO GLOBALISM 1927–1945

AN AMERICAN STORY: “Oh Boy” 540

The United States in a Troubled World 542 Pacific Interests 542

Becoming a Good Neighbor 542

The Diplomacy of Isolationism 543

Inching toward War 544

Hitler’s Invasion 545

Retreat from Isolationism 545

Disaster in the Pacific 546

A Global War 546 Strategies for War 547

Gloomy Prospects 547

A Grand Alliance 548

The Naval War in the Pacific 548

The Policies of Mellon and Hoover 503

Crises at Home and Abroad 504

The Election of 1928 505

The Great Bull Market 506 The Rampaging Bull 506

The Great Crash 506

Causes of the Great Depression 507

CHAPTER SUMMARY 508 | ADDITIONAL READING 509 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 509

25 THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE NEW DEAL 1929–1939

AN AMERICAN STORY: Letters from the Edge 510

The Human Impact of the Great Depression 512 Hard Times 512

The Golden Age of Radio and Film 513

“Dirty Thirties”: An Ecological Disaster 514

Mexican Americans and Repatriation 515

African Americans in the Depression 515

The Tragedy of Herbert Hoover 516 The Failure of Relief 516

The Hoover Depression Program 517

Stirrings of Discontent 518

The Bonus Army 519

The Election of 1932 519

The Early New Deal (1933–1935) 520 The Democratic Roosevelts 520

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xvdav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xv 22/08/14 11:27 PM22/08/14 11:27 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

xvi | C O N T E N T S |

HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Duck and Cover 574

The Atomic Shield versus the Iron Curtain 575

Postwar Prosperity 576 Hidden Costs of a Consuming Nation 576

Postwar Adjustments 576

The New Deal at Bay 577

The Election of 1948 578

The Fair Deal 579

The Cold War at Home 579 The Shocks of 1949 579

The Loyalty Crusade 580

HUAC and Hollywood 581

The Ambitions of Senator McCarthy 581

From Cold War to Hot War and Back 582 Police Action 583

The Chinese Intervene 583

Truman versus MacArthur 583

The Global Implications of the Cold War 584

The Election of 1952 584

The Fall of McCarthy 585

CHAPTER SUMMARY 586 | ADDITIONAL READING 586 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 587

28 THE SUBURBAN ERA 1945–1963

AN AMERICAN STORY: Dynamic Obsolescence (The Wonderful World of Harley Earl) 588

The Rise of the Suburbs 590 A Boom in Babies and in Housing 590

Turning Points in Europe 549

Those Who Fought 550

Minorities at War 550

Women at War 551

War Production 551 Mobilizing for War 551

Science Goes to War 552

War Work and Prosperity 553

Organized Labor 554

Women Workers 554

Mobility 554

A Question of Rights 555 Italians and Asian Americans 555

DUELING DOCUMENTS “Who Do You Want to Win This War?”—Justifying Internment 556

Minorities and War Work 558

Urban Unrest 558

The New Deal in Retreat 559

Winning the War and the Peace 560 The Fall of the Third Reich 560

Two Roads to Tokyo 561

Big Three Diplomacy 561

The Road to Yalta 561

The Fallen Leader 563

The Holocaust 564

A Lasting Peace 564

Atom Diplomacy 565

CHAPTER SUMMARY 566 | ADDITIONAL READING 566 | SIGNIFICANT EVENTS 567

27 COLD WAR AMERICA 1945–1954

AN AMERICAN STORY: Glad to Be Home? 568

The Rise of the Cold War 570 American Suspicions 570

Communist Expansion 570

A Policy of Containment 571

The Truman Doctrine 572

The Marshall Plan 572

NATO 572

dav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xvidav80361_fm_i-xxvii.indd xvi 22/08/14 11:27 PM22/08/14 11:27 PM

Rev.Confirming Pages

Homework is Completed By:

Writer Writer Name Amount Client Comments & Rating
Instant Homework Helper

ONLINE

Instant Homework Helper

$36

She helped me in last minute in a very reasonable price. She is a lifesaver, I got A+ grade in my homework, I will surely hire her again for my next assignments, Thumbs Up!

Order & Get This Solution Within 3 Hours in $25/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 3 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

Order & Get This Solution Within 6 Hours in $20/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 6 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

Order & Get This Solution Within 12 Hours in $15/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 12 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

6 writers have sent their proposals to do this homework:

Top Class Engineers
Quick Finance Master
Assignment Helper
Assignment Hub
Math Guru
Helping Hand
Writer Writer Name Offer Chat
Top Class Engineers

ONLINE

Top Class Engineers

I will be delighted to work on your project. As an experienced writer, I can provide you top quality, well researched, concise and error-free work within your provided deadline at very reasonable prices.

$47 Chat With Writer
Quick Finance Master

ONLINE

Quick Finance Master

I will be delighted to work on your project. As an experienced writer, I can provide you top quality, well researched, concise and error-free work within your provided deadline at very reasonable prices.

$20 Chat With Writer
Assignment Helper

ONLINE

Assignment Helper

I will provide you with the well organized and well research papers from different primary and secondary sources will write the content that will support your points.

$47 Chat With Writer
Assignment Hub

ONLINE

Assignment Hub

I have worked on wide variety of research papers including; Analytical research paper, Argumentative research paper, Interpretative research, experimental research etc.

$48 Chat With Writer
Math Guru

ONLINE

Math Guru

I am an elite class writer with more than 6 years of experience as an academic writer. I will provide you the 100 percent original and plagiarism-free content.

$37 Chat With Writer
Helping Hand

ONLINE

Helping Hand

I am a PhD writer with 10 years of experience. I will be delivering high-quality, plagiarism-free work to you in the minimum amount of time. Waiting for your message.

$44 Chat With Writer

Let our expert academic writers to help you in achieving a+ grades in your homework, assignment, quiz or exam.

Similar Homework Questions

Review on hbr course pack - Julian dyer piano rolls - Organizational ethics a practical approach 3rd edition - Midterm reflection - Classify the following cash flows as either operating - Infrared security alarm project report ppt - Sample letter to client requesting information - Coke mission statement - Dc analysis of bjt circuits - Mathsoc first year exam bank - Performance solution report example - Which of the following elements of the marketing communication mix - Master your money ron blue pdf - Examples of card stacking propaganda advertisements - Liquidity of short term assets - The bloody chamber context - Scholarly activity summary grand canyon university - Healthy body maintenance fact sheet - Week 3 Discussion Board - Peel catholic school board - Math assignment - Dis 6 - Http open lib umn edu communication - What is a cross cultural worker - Life space probiotic woolworths - Functionalist approach to religion - How to prepare 100 ppm nitrate solution from potassium nitrate - Explain the importance of information security policies and the role they play in ensuring sound and secure business information. - Beamex mc2 manual pdf - New holland br740a specs - Psychology final project - Terasaki tembreak 2 accessories - Andy warhol twenty five colored marilyns - Themes in the union buries its dead - Mark d smith md - Gsun solar panels review - Maria´s Project Plan - Essay - Vaccines should not be mandatory essay - How would the following transactions affect us exports - Lies my teacher told me chapter 13 - Goleman leadership styles self assessment - Lord i need you bpm - Circumference of a 6 inch circle - Disaster preparedness steps - Altman z score for private companies - Is nursing a career or profession - "American (Wild?) West of the 1800s" - Year 10 english standard elaborations - Research paper of 10 pages "Benefits of Information Technology in the Global Economy" - Business plan assessment template - Stanzas to augusta analysis - Barreling effect in compression testing - Middlesex county joint health insurance fund - Carrefour in asia case analysis - English 12 - Abc o and p - Blue skin disease kentucky - Blue remembered hills youtube - Oracle public cloud appliance - Www classzone com books hs ca sc bio 07 - The hobbit chapter 14 - R2 - Royal college of surgeons dublin ireland - Wk 7 forum 1 - Motrax vishas disc lock - How to critique an article psychology - Symantec messaging gateway price - From which direction does autocad start measuring angles - Engaging Students with Listening, Speaking, and Writing - I need help writing a Control plan for Six Sigma - Role of nurse as a social change agent - Great wide beautiful wonderful world - Newspaper article - How do you spell potato plural - American History Discussion #11 - Aboriginal heritage inquiry system - Carriage in lathe machine - Informative message examples - Sample interview questions for ethnographic research - How to convert spss tables into word - Aquastore tank capacity chart - Political science - Justification letter for an outstanding performance rating - French revolution key terms - Othello discussion questions and answers - Boston deep sea fishing v ansell case summary - Https owl english purdue edu owl resource 614 03 - Research at least three GIS systems - W2 bus dis - Iiba business analysis competency model - Question on Frankenstein - How to link documents in pebblepad - Mlt study guide pdf - Liu dapeng - Business - Roderick and madeline usher - Diebold technical support interview questions - Differences between aquatic and terrestrial environments - Mean Making Forum 5