1913 – Federal Reserve Act was passed by the 63rd United States Congress and signed into law by President Woodrow Wilson on December 23, 1913.
Federal_Reserve_Act
1917–1919 –
Silent Sentinels hold a vigil outside the White House gates in favor of women's suffrage, a nearly two–and–a–half year demonstration organized by
Alice Paul and the
National Woman's Party
1917–1920 –
First Red Scare, marked by a widespread fear of Bolshevism and anarchism
1918 – President Wilson's
Fourteen Points, which assures citizens that the Great War was being fought for a moral cause and postwar peace in Europe
1918 – Republicans win back Congress in the Midterm elections.
March 4, 1925 – President Coolidge begins full term, Dawes becomes the 30th vice president
1925 –
Scopes Trial, whose outcome found that the teaching of evolution in the classroom "does not violate church and state or state religion laws but instead, merely prohibits the teaching of evolution on the grounds of intellectual disagreement"
1913 – Federal Reserve Act was passed by the 63rd United States Congress and signed into law by President Woodrow Wilson on December 23, 1913.
Federal_Reserve_Act
1917–1919 –
Silent Sentinels hold a vigil outside the White House gates in favor of women's suffrage, a nearly two–and–a–half year demonstration organized by
Alice Paul and the
National Woman's Party
1917–1920 –
First Red Scare, marked by a widespread fear of Bolshevism and anarchism
1918 – President Wilson's
Fourteen Points, which assures citizens that the Great War was being fought for a moral cause and postwar peace in Europe
1918 – Republicans win back Congress in the Midterm elections.
March 4, 1925 – President Coolidge begins full term, Dawes becomes the 30th vice president
1925 –
Scopes Trial, whose outcome found that the teaching of evolution in the classroom "does not violate church and state or state religion laws but instead, merely prohibits the teaching of evolution on the grounds of intellectual disagreement"