All SAT II US History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #21 : Facts And Details In U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
The controversially-convicted murderers Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were members of the dissident political movement known as __________.
populism
socialism
fascism
majoritarianism
anarchism
anarchism
Sacco and Vanzetti were two Italian immigrants who worked as fishmongers in the Boston area in the 1910s and 1920s, who were arrested, tried and convicted for a murder during an armed robbery of a shoe factory in Braintree, MA.
The police investigating the crime began to focus on the Italian immigrant community, particularly the anarchist followers of Luigi Galleani. Sacco and Vanzetti, while having no criminal background, were well known Galleanisti, and were convicted quickly of the crime and sentenced to be executed. A controversy quickly arose about the manner of their trial and conviction, and they became a cause celebre around the country. Despite this, both men were executed on August 23, 1927.
Example Question #22 : Facts And Details In U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
The term "Baby Boomers" generally refers to __________
the changing attitudes to children in the Victorian era.
the large numbers of people born in the immediate Post-World War II era.
the changing approaches to marriage and sexuality in the 1960s and 1970s.
the lowering of the voting age to 18.
the changing birth rates and death rates during the Industrial Revolution.
the large numbers of people born in the immediate Post-World War II era.
The "Baby Boomers" were the product of the conditions of America in the years immediately after World War II. Many young people had delayed marriage due to the War, and laws like the GI Bill helped many people start careers and families. Between 1946 and 1964, the birth rate grew exponentially. This "Baby Boom" generation helped foment Second Wave Feminisim, the 1960s Counterculture, and the anti-Vietnam movements.
Example Question #23 : Facts And Details In U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
The only Constitutional amendment to be repealed is __________
the Seventeenth Amendment requiring the direct election of Senators by popular vote.
the Nineteenth Amendment providing for women's suffrage.
the Twentieth Amendment that fixes the end date of Presidential and Congressional terms.
the Sixteenth Amendment providing for a Federal Income Tax.
the Eighteenth Amendment prohibiting the manufacture, sale, and distribution of alcohol.
the Eighteenth Amendment prohibiting the manufacture, sale, and distribution of alcohol.
The Twenty-First Amendment, passed in Congress on February 20, 1933 and ratified by the states on December 5, 1933, served just one function: to repeal the Eighteenth Amendment that enacted Prohibition. Over the 24 years Prohibition had been in effect, it had been a disaster. Alcohol was still pervasive in the country, and its illegal status had merely encouraged a spread in criminal activity producing it. By Franklin Roosevelt's election, the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment seemed inevitable.
Example Question #21 : U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
The circumstances of economic growth during World War II saw factory work filled by __________.
child laborers
traditional blue collar workers
large numbers of women
European immigrants
Mexican immigrants
large numbers of women
World War II saw a large amount of healthy, working aged men drafted into the armed forces. At the same time, factories were expanding at a rapid rate to supply war materiel for those same armed forces. Stepping into the place of the usual factory workers were large numbers of women, who could not serve in the war effort by fighting.
Example Question #25 : Facts And Details In U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
Late-nineteenth-century immigration to America was primarily made up of people from where?
Great Britain and its territories
Eastern and Southern Europe
South Asia
Latin America
East Asia
Eastern and Southern Europe
Beginning in the 1880s, America experienced a massive surge of immigration that swelled its population. Overwhelmingly, these immigrants were peasants and laborers from Southern and Eastern Europe. Italians, Bavarians, Poles, Russians, and Jews from all over Eastern Europe came to America from turmoil and conflict in their native countries. Beginning in the early twentieth century, new immigration laws restricted the entrance of immigrants, which were not changed until mid-century.
Example Question #29 : U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
1. ________________ challenged Americans to build a Great Society that eliminated the troubles of the poor.
John F Kennedy
Dwight Eisenhower
Richard Nixon
James Carter
Lyndon Johnson
Lyndon Johnson
Several acts were passed under Lyndon Johnson that promoted liberalism and allowed for the use of public money to fund the arts, tighter controls on pollution, and construction of low income housing.
Example Question #26 : Facts And Details In U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
The 1955 Bus Boycott in Montgomery, Alabama targeted what specific legal form of discrimination?
Racial segregation in public spaces
Preventing African Americans from buying homes in certain neighborhoods
Segregation in public education
Immigration quotas
The ban on African American owned businesses
Racial segregation in public spaces
The Montgomery Bus Boycott began in December 1955 when Rosa Parks protested the practice of African Americans being required to sit in the back portion of public buses. Led by a young Martin Luther King, Jr. in his first high profile civil rights campaign, the African American community of Montgomery refused to ride public transportation in the city. In 1956, a Supreme Court ruling ended the Alabama and Montgomery laws enabling segregation in buses.
Example Question #31 : U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
The Gideon v. Wainwright case .
established that a citizen accused of a crime has the right to legal assistance if he or she is unable to afford it.
declared laws preventing interracial marriage as unconstitutional.
prohibited racial discrimination in property sale and rental.
prohibited prayer in public schools.
established that law enforcement officials must inform suspects of their rights before questioning.
established that a citizen accused of a crime has the right to legal assistance if he or she is unable to afford it.
The Gideon v. Wainwright case was presented to the Supreme Court during the extremely liberal era of Chief Justice Warren. It established that any citizen accused of a crime has the right to legal assistance, even in the event that the citizen is unable to afford the costs. Engel v. Vitale prohibited prayer in public schools. Miranda v. Arizona mandated that law enforcement officials had to inform suspects of their rights prior to questioning. Loving v. Virginia declared laws preventing interracial marriage as unconstitutional. Racial discrimination in property sale and rental was ended by the Civil Rights Act of 1968.
Example Question #32 : U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
All of the following statements are true of the Civil Rights Movement except that __________.
the Civil Rights movement included both black and white protestors in its actions
there were significant legal victories for integration in federal courts
Civil Rights leaders would resort to violent methods when their initial protests did not work
Southern authorities opposed Civil Rights protestors with intimidation and violence
nonviolent protests were widely used to force integration
Civil Rights leaders would resort to violent methods when their initial protests did not work
The Civil Rights Movement, which began in the mid-1950s with the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, pursued a variety of methods, including political lobbying, legal arguments, and direct protests. Most notably, the Civil Rights Movement was a non-violent protest movement, led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on principles established by Mohandas Ghandi in India. The Civil Rights activists, usually multiracial and well trained, eschewed violence in all of their protests.
Example Question #33 : U.S. Social History From 1899 To The Present
The event known as the Stonewall Riots helped to ignite the ____________.
Chicano Rights Movement
Black Power Movement
Gay Rights Movement
Women's Rights Movement
American Indian Movement
Gay Rights Movement
The Stonewall Inn was a popular gay bar in Manhattan's Greenwich Village that was raided by police on June 28, 1969. While such raids, which were aiming to arrest bar patrons on decency charges, were common in the period, this raid made many people turn on the police and begin to riot. The event is largely seen as one of the key sparks in the gay rights movement, as it was the first time that gay people had stood up against authorities who persecuted them for simply for being homosexuals.