Kentucky History Chapter 13 Progressivism, Prohibition, and Politics 1900 -1920
Across
- 2. Acknowledged leader of the nineteenth century women's rights fight in Kentucky; her father had bitterly opposed women's rights
- 4. In 1906 a bill passed that allowed each ________ to decide whether it would allow alcohol sales (be wet) or not (be dry)
- 5. A bill forbidding railroads to offer free passes to public figures and a state antitrust law.
- 10. In less than a decade two politicians died from this kidney disease
- 12. Amendment that gave women the right to vote
- 15. This two-state cooperative formed in 1904 when a large number of farmers met at Guthrie
- 17. Nickname for the pandemic that swept through Kentucky and the US in 1918/1919
- 18. The label given to the time period from 1900-1920
- 20. Governor who allowed the people to vote on a state constitutional amendment that ended up banning alcohol in the home of bourbon before the nationwide ban in 1920
- 21. Nicknamed "Bothsides" and "Oily Jeems" this former governor was one of the most accomplished political survivors of Kentucky history
- 23. Women's rights leader in Kentucky who was known for saying, "Kentucky women are not idiots-even though they are closely related to Kentucky men."
- 24. In November 1920 Kentucky women were able to do this for the first time
- 25. Kentuckians' area of greatest difference regarding progressivism
Down
- 1. Author of the poem which ends in the lines, "The landscape is the grandest-and politics-the damndest In Kentucky"
- 3. The "Boy Governor"
- 6. Authorized the federal income tax
- 7. Brezing Owner of the most famous brothel in Kentucky
- 8. Despite a policy of neutrality when World War I initially broke out in Europe in 1914, __________ declared war by April 1917
- 9. The only governor in American history to die in office as a result of assassination
- 11. Another name for bourbon
- 13. Nickname for tobacco
- 14. In 1895 Louisville alone had 840 of these
- 16. Despite an overqualified record, this soldier was put on inactive status during wartime to prevent him from being appointed as a commander and thus being in charge of white troops
- 19. Once this man was pardoned of his crime in 1908, he quickly ran for a seat in the US House of Representatives and won
- 22. Lawless vigilante bands who rode across the regional to "persuade" farmers who had joined the PPA