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- Hist 1302 Ch 24 America and the Great War - Quizlet
The wartime Espionage and Sedition Acts A were upheld by the supreme Court B led to the persecution of more that 1500 people C hit hard at socialists and radicals D all the above
- The Fourteen Points - U-S-History. com
The resulting Fourteen Points were presented in a speech before both houses of Congress and were intended to generate support for Wilson’s vision of the postwar world, both at home and also among allies in Europe
- What did Wilsons first 5 points address? - Brainly. com
The first five points of Wilson's** Fourteen Points** were aimed at ending secret treaties and negotiations, ensuring freedom of the seas, promoting free trade, reducing armaments, and adjusting colonial claims fairly
- U. S. History - Chapter 11 Section 4 Flashcards | Quizlet
1 Open treaties; no secret treaties 2 Freedom of the seas; no barrier for trade 3 Tariffs or taxes should be lowered abolished to increase free trade 4 Arms reduction; weapons reduced; lessen the possibility of military attacks 5 Consider the interests of the colonial people as well as your own 6-13 Dealt with boundary changes 14
- Wilsons Fourteen Points, 1918 - United States Department of State
Five of the other six concerned general principles for a peaceful world: open covenants (i e treaties or agreements), openly arrived at; freedom of the seas; free trade; reduction of armaments; and adjustment of colonial claims based on the principles of self-determination
- Woodrow Wilsons speech notes, in shorthand, for his Fourteen Points . . .
Here in 1918 he outlined his famous Fourteen Points, the terms which he believed should be used as the basis for the peace treaty settling the First World War, which the United States had entered in April 1917 on the side of the Allies--Great Britain, France, Italy, and Russia
- Wilson and the Fourteen Points - historycentral. com
U S President Woodrow Wilson put forth fourteen points that he believed could be the basis for a settlement of the Great War The Points were: Creation of a League of Nations Wilson speech was widely covered all around the world, and his 14 points were circulated widely in Europe
- Understanding Wilsons Fourteen Points and the League of Nations
His plan ultimately became known as the Fourteen Points and was designed to create a lasting peace in the world Once negotiations for the Treaty of Versailles were completed in June 1919, the United States was divided over whether to join the League of Nations - a vital component of the Treaty
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