Muckrakers - A name given to American journalists during the first decade of the 20th century. Originally derived from the name "muckrake" used in President Theodore Roosevelt 's speech in 1906. Roosevelt thought they were irresponsible and suffered from garbage. After he had known it through his work, he lied with problems and lies, people distorted information and attracted more people to attract more people to read articles and pull their attention, and exaggerated I learned to cause confusion and scandal by doing.
Throughout the history of the United States there are many historical figures that are responsible for or part of the gradual change in our country. From the early 1900s to the middle of the year, the United States was separated and African-Americans were considered second-class citizens. In the mid 1900s, now known as the civil rights movement, there were many different people who helped teach apartheid in the United States. Among the historical figures whose names are synonymous with the civil rights movement are political activists Martin Luther King, National Association Med Gate for the progress of colored people, Malcolm Baptist X and the general public. Rosa
In the American history, the period from the end of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century is often called a progressive era. This is a great era of social, political and economic changes that affect all aspects of American life. Progressive movement focuses on human factors, stimulating human and human powers, and promoting liberation to remove the constraint of liberalization. By the end of the nineteenth century, due to westward progress and years, after decades of expansion
Arturo Alfonso Schomburg has contributed to the history of African Americans. From the early 1900s to the early years of 1938, Zumburg attracted African History and Cultural Heritage Museum (Afro-Puerto Rican). It became the foundation of the black literature and art collection of the New York Public Library, later Arthur. Black Fort Black Culture Research Center. Carlos Cooks from the Dominican Republic is an important figure of the Garvey United Black Improvement Association. Kwame Ture (formerly Stokely Carmichael) from Trinidad and Tobago created the term "black power" and started the black conscious movement in the 1960s and 1970s. Two influential and politically motivated two actors and performers from the Caribbean, Sidney Poitier and Harry Belafonte