SAT II US History : SAT Subject Test in United States History

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for SAT II US History

varsity tutors app store varsity tutors android store

Example Questions

Example Question #181 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

Which president implemented the Good Neighbor Policy?

Possible Answers:

Theodore Roosevelt

Franklin Roosevelt

Woodrow Wilson

Harry Truman

John F. Kennedy

Correct answer:

Franklin Roosevelt

Explanation:

The Good Neighbor Policy, defined by its main principle of non-intervention in the domestic affairs of Latin American nations, was implemented by Franklin Roosevelt's administration in the 1930s. Instead of military intervention in Latin American nations, Roosevelt favored peaceful, reciprocal trade relations with said nations. Both Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson had favored military intervention in certain Latin American nations during their presidencies, while Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy were presidents later, during the Cold War, when the US was again starting to take a more interventionist approach in Latin America.

Example Question #182 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

Which countries were members of the “Triple Alliance”?

Possible Answers:

Italy, France, Russia

France, Great Britain, US

Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy

Germany, Russia, Italy

Correct answer:

Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy

Explanation:

Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy were all part of the Triple Alliance. Basically, what that meant, was that all three countries had interloping “aid” treaties; that is, if country X attacks Italy, Germany and Austria-Hungary are going to come help Italy.

Example Question #183 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

Which countries were members of the “Triple Entente”?

Possible Answers:

 Great Britain, France, Russia

France, Great Britain, US

Italy, France, Russia

Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy

Correct answer:

 Great Britain, France, Russia

Explanation:

Great Britain, France, and Russia were all members of the Triple Entente. This one is slightly easier to remember than the Triple Alliance because the word “entente” is French—clearly, then, the French belong in that group. At any rate, this question is just as important for what it doesn’t ask as for what it does. Note that the question does not ask which countries fought each other in the war; just what countries had overlapping treaties with each other.

Example Question #184 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

The “Western Front” was the trench line in between France and Germany.
       

Possible Answers:

False, this term refers to the portion of the war that occurred outside of the Middle East

True, as WWI was the first instance of defined trench warfare, the line separating the major powers was named

None of these

False, this term is from WWII (referring to the European portion of that war), not WWI

Correct answer:

True, as WWI was the first instance of defined trench warfare, the line separating the major powers was named

Explanation:

The “western front” became a major focal point for WWI (and also was the setting of a novel/memoir by Erich Marie Remarque). WWI was the first time that trench warfare was employed and used so brutally; the western front turned into a “war of attrition,” with either side using gas warfare and tanks to inflict massive injury to the other.

Example Question #185 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

Which of the following was/were first used in WWI?

Possible Answers:

None of these

Chlorine gas

Tanks

More than one answer is correct

Correct answer:

More than one answer is correct

Explanation:

WWI, while rightfully known as one of the deadliest conflicts in all of human history, is also famous (or infamous) for the introduction of new, modern weapons used by both sides. One of the reasons that the casualties in WWI were so astoundingly high was that the development of offensive weaponry--such as the use of poison gas and tanks--had far outpaced military warfare tacticians. In other words, each side of the War had access to new and deadlier technology, but neither side adjusted their warfare tactics to account for it.

Example Question #186 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

What officially ended WWI?

Possible Answers:

The League of Nations

The Treaty of the Thames

 The Treaty of Versailles

The Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo

Correct answer:

 The Treaty of Versailles

Explanation:

The Treaty of Versailles officially ended WWI. The “Big Four” (Italy, France, UK, US) were responsible for crafting the terms of the treaty, and saddled the losers of the war (primarily Germany) with massive reparations. The reparations (repayments for the war, essentially) were so large (both at that time, and even today), that Germany didn’t finish paying them off until 2010.

Example Question #187 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

What was/were (an) event(s) that led to the US entering WWI?

Possible Answers:

The Zimmerman Telegraph

Submarine warfare

The sinking of the Lusitania

All of these

Correct answer:

All of these

Explanation:

All of the answers given were correct. The two specific ones—the sinking of the Lusitania and the Zimmerman telegraph—are likely the most important. The Lusitania was a British passenger ship that was carrying American civilians. The Germans, suspecting it of smuggling arms, torpedoed the ship, killing innocents. The Zimmerman telegraph was essentially a telegraph from the Germans to Mexico asking them to join in an alliance with Germany against the US.

Example Question #188 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

Which of the following is the "date which will live in infamy"?

Possible Answers:

The assassination of JFK

December 7, 1941

September 11, 2001

The inaction of Herbert Hoover on October 29, 1929

Correct answer:

December 7, 1941

Explanation:

This should have been a relatively simple question. The "day which will live in infamy" is a line from FDR regarding December 7, 1941. It was the day that the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, and the beginning of the United States' formal involvement in World War II (after a declaration of war from Congress).

Example Question #47 : U.S. Foreign Policy From 1899 To The Present

The Zimmerman Telegram helped generate support for the United States' entry into World War I because ____________________.

Possible Answers:

it appealed to pro-German sentiment in American society and called for an internal uprising

it gave conclusive proof that American cargo and transport ships were being specifically targeted by German U-boats

it outlined the exact war plans made by Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire to invade the United States

in it Germany promised Mexico a military alliance aimed at retaking the American southwest

it proved that the United Kingdom was having secret talks with Germany about switching sides in the war

Correct answer:

in it Germany promised Mexico a military alliance aimed at retaking the American southwest

Explanation:

By the beginning of 1917, the War in Europe was in a long stalemate, but America had not yet joined in despite being strongly favored towards the Allied powers of Great Britain and France, largely thanks to German wartime policies such as U-boat attacks on neutral ships. In January of 1917, a secret message from the German foreign office to the government of Mexico, known as "The Zimmerman Telegram," was discovered. In it, the German government suggested a military alliance that would seek to return the American Southwest to Mexico. This factor directly sparked the American entry into World War I.

Example Question #189 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

What was the general aim of Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points speech given in January of 1918?

Possible Answers:
None of the other answers
To criticize Allied war goals in their conflicts with the Central powers as too idealistic and moralistic
To declare American neutrality in any European conflict, no matter the political or economic ramifications for those nations
To announce American support for any nation in the Western Hemisphere that might be invaded by a European nation.
To state clear aims and goals for America’s involvement in World War I, apart from the nationalistic or territorial aims of many European powers fighting the war.
Correct answer: To state clear aims and goals for America’s involvement in World War I, apart from the nationalistic or territorial aims of many European powers fighting the war.
Explanation:

Wilson’s Fourteen Points speech was delivered months after the United States entered the war on behalf of the Allied Powers in April of 1917.  Facing political blowback about reasons for joining a nationalistic war, Wilson constructed a pro-war argument based around the need for a new form of diplomacy post-war and sovereignty for specific European populations.

Learning Tools by Varsity Tutors