Rolfs Master APUSH American Pageant Periods 1-5 Key Terms and Ideas Chapters 1-21, Rolfs Pageant Chapter 22, Rolfs Pageant Chapter 23, Rolfs Pageant Chapter 24, Rolfs Pageant Chapter 25, Rolfs Pageant Chapter 26, Rolfs Pageant Chapter 27, Rolfs Pagea...
Washington Irving
an American author, essayist, biographer, and historian of the early 19th century. He is best known for "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" and Rip Van Winkle
Ulysses S. Grant
an American general and the eighteenth President of the United States (1869-1877). He achieved international fame as the leading Union general in the American Civil War.
James Russell Lowell
an American romantic poet, critic, editor, and diplomat. He wrote the the "Biglow Papers" and was associated with the Fireside Poets.
Phineas T. Barnum
an American showman, businessman, and entertainer; founder of the circus
Political and economic power in the southern colonies was dominated by
extended families of wealthy planters
Issues with killing beavers
extreme ecological damage
Horace Kallen
an intellectual who championed alternative conceptions of the immigrant role in American society, defended newcomer's right to practice their ancestral customs, vision- the US should provide a protective canopy for ethnic and racial groups to preserve their cultural uniqueness, stressed the preservation of identity, believed pluralism
Cornelius Vanderbilt
famous industrialist who worked in railroads and shipping, partner with Thomas Gibbons with the Union Line
Farmer's Alliance
farmer's organization that manifested rural discontent; led to the creation of the Populist party after breaking down due to ignorance towards landless tenant farmers and blacks
Wyoming Stock-Growers Association
farmers organization that controlled state and legislature
The Half-Way Covenant provided
baptism, but not full communion, to people who had not had a conversion experience
Bryan
became Democratic nominee for the election of 1896 after his sensational "Cross of Gold" speech; advocated for radical coinage of silver
Root
became Secretary of War and established a general staff of the army and War College
Republicanism, without the monarchy, depended on the ___________________ and mattered more than __________ and interests
collective good of the people private rights
Mercantilism
colonies purpose is to enrich mother country. Colonies provide bullion or raw materials which Mother country processes and resells to colonial markets for more bullion. Goal: Accumulation of bullion
When British officials decided to enforce the East India Company's tea monopoly and the three-pence tax on tea,
colonists were outraged because they saw it as a trick to undermine their principled resistance to the tax
The British Proclamation of 1763 angered
colonists who thought that it deprived them of the fruits of victory
Protestant Ethic
commitment to work and engagement in worldly pursuits
mariner's compass
compass eliminated some of the uncertainties of sea travel
The original cause of the French and Indian War was
competition between French and English colonists for land in the Ohio River Valley
The original cause of the French and Indian War was
competition between French and English colonists for land in the Ohio River valley
Indentured servants
displaced farmers coming to the colonies to work for several years and "received" parcels of land and some money at the end (3/4 of the immigrants to the colonies were indentured servants)
Hickok
gunman and cowboy of Abilene
Fundamental Orders
established a regime in Connecticut democratically controlled by regular people
The average colonial New England woman who did not die in childbirth could expect to
experience about ten pregnancies, occurring on average every two years from her twenties through menopause
Custer
leader of the 7th Cavalry that was destroyed by the Sioux in Montana
Mao Zedong
leader of the Chinese Communists whose revolutionary army seized power in China in 1949
Raplh Waldo Emerson
leader of the Transcendentalist movement; also an American lecturer, essayist, and poet
Walter Rauschenbusch
leading Protestant advocate of the social gospel who tried to make Christianity relevant to urban and industrial problems
stephen austin
leads many early American Pioneers into texas
Blaine
led Half-Breeds
Conkling
led Stalwarts
Half-Breeds
led by Blaine (split from the Republican party)
Stalwarts
led by Conkling (split from the Republican party
Kelley
led the Grange and encouraged the farmers to socialize
Andrew Carnegie
led the expansion of the American steel in the late 19th century, one of the richest Americans ever
Dakota and Oklahoma
places were government herded Indians through the reservation system
Must of the impetus of Spanish exploration and pursuit of glory in the early 1500s came from Spain's recent
national unification and expulsion of the Muslim Moors *Ferdinand and Isabella Inquisition*
Great Britain
England in Scotland joined in 1707
Salutary Neglect
England took a hands-off approach with colonies as long as they were making money - Lasted 150 years until 1763
Henry Hudson
English explorer for Netherlands who got land for Dutch after being told to go Northeast
General Court
representative assembly of Plymouth
"unconditional surrender"
Controversial U.S.-British demand on Germany and Japan that substituted for a " second front"
Maize
Corn that fed large populations and sustained life
The British forces suffered crushing early defeats in the French and Indian War under the overall command of
General Braddock
Meuse-Argonne offensive
General John J. "Black Jack" Pershing led American troops in this effort to cut the German railroad lines supplying the western front. It was one of the few major battles that Americans participated in during the entire war, and was still underway when the war ended.
2nd Era of Good Feelings
General peace because of the Compromise but the Fugitive Slave Law made tension
Unicameral
Having one branch of a type of government
Bicameral
Having two branches of a type of government
Progress and Poverty
Henry George's best-selling book that advocated social reform through the imposition of a single tax on land
Spice Islands
Indonesia
Underground Railroad
Informal chain of anti-slavery homes through which white and black abolitionists assisted slaves in escaping from slave states to the North or Canada
William Wilberforce
Inspired by Charles Grandson Finney during the Second Great Awakening, this British abolitionist was instrumental and helped to gain emancipation for the British West Indies in 1833.
Cambridge
Intelectual center for England's Puritanism
War aims of the North
Preserve Union and later abolish slavery
Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, and 1937
Short-sighted acts passed in 1935, 1936, and 1937 in order to prevent American participation in a European War. Among other restrictions, they prevented Americans from selling munitions to foreign belligerents.
Sacajawea
Shoshone woman that helped Lewis and Clark
Lewis
Lewis Domineering boss who launched the CIO
Beginning Battles of the Revolution
Lexington and Concord
A crucial political development that paved the way for the European colonization of America was the
rise of the centralized national monarchies, such as those of Spain, Portugal, and France
Capitalism & the commercial revolution
rose because of the flood of gold and silver from Spain's New World Empire into Europe after 1500
Fighting in 1776: British concentrated on _____ because ________ was _________
NYC - Boston - evacuated
Liliuokalani
Native Hawaiian queen overthrown in a revolution led by white planters and aided by US troops
New England praying towns
Natives gathered to be baptized
George Dewey
Naval commander whose spectacular May Day victory in 1898 opened the doors to American imperialism in Asia
Rome-Berlin Axis
Nazi Germany, under Adolf Hitler, and Fascist Italy, led by Benito Mussolini, allied themselves together under this nefarious treaty. The pact was signed after both countries had intervened on behalf of the fascist leader Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War.
reason Americans allied with French
Need for supplies
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty
Neither US nor Britain would seek exclusive control of the isthmus waterway
National banking system
Network of member banks that could issue currency against purchased government bonds. Created during war to establish a stable national currency and stimulate sale of war bonds
Thurmond
southern segregationist who led Dixiecrat presidential campaign against Truman in 1948
Winfield Scott
the American general who led his forces from Vera Cruz to Mexico City in 1847.
Cortés and his men were able to conquer the Aztec capital Tenochtitlán party because
the Aztec ruler Montezuma believed the Cortés was a god whose return had been predicted
Which of the following was not among the ancient Indian cultures established in North America before 1300 A.D.? a. the Incas b. The Pueblos c. The Anasazis d. The Cahokia e. the Mound Builders
the Incas
Tenskwatawa was known as
the Prophet
One of the advantages the British enjoyed in the impending conflict with the colonies was
the ability to enlist foreign soldiers, Loyalists, and Native Americans in their military forces.
Pet banks
State institution banks that were pro-Jackson
Johnson Debt Default Act
Steeped in ugly memories of World War I, this spiteful act prevented debt-ridden nations from borrowing further from the United States.
scabs
Stirkebreakers hired by employers as replacement workers when unions went on strike
Cold War
The 45 year tension between the United States and the Soviet Union that divided much of the world into polarized camps, capitalist against communist. Most of the international conflicts during that period, particularly in the developing world, can be traced to the competition between the United States and the Soviet Union.
Stalin
The Allied leader who constantly pressured the U.S. a nd Britain to open a "second front" against Hitler
Battle of Buena Vista
the battle won by the forces of Zachary Taylor in 1847 that made Taylor a "hero" and presidential timber.
antinomianism
the belief that a holy life was no sure sign of salvation and that the truly saved don't need to bother to obey the law of either God or man
Black Legend
the belief that the Spanish only killed, tortured, and stole in the Americas while contributing nothing good
The British theory of mercantilism, by which the colonies were governed, held that
the colonial economy should be carefully controlled to serve the home country's needs.
Nahuatl
the language of the powerful Aztec rulers of the great empire in the highlands of central Mexico
vertical integration
the practice perfected by Andrew Carnegie of controlling every step of the industrial production process in order to increase efficiency and limit competition
horizontal integration
the practice perfected by John D. Rockefeller of dominating a particular phase of the production process in order to monopolize a market, often by farming trusts and alliances with competitors
cult of domesticity
tradition that housework and child care were considered the only proper activites for married women
George Washington won the election _________
unanimously
New England Emigrant Aid Company
2,000 people sent to KS to forestall the South and make a profit (supported by Henry Ward Beecher)
Cleveland
22nd U.S. President. 1885-1889. Democratic
Pequot War
1637 New England colonists wipe out Pequot tribe using total warfare
New England Confederation
1643 - Military alliance intended to defend New England (except RI) colonies against potential threats - First step towards colonial unity
King Philip's / Metacom's War
1675-76 - Leader of Wampanoags defeated by colonists - End of significant Native resistance to NE colonies - Made pan-Indian alliance to strike English colonies
Bacon's Rebellion (characteristics)
1676 - Went on a Native killing spree - Chased Berkeley out of Jamestown - Set fire to Jamestown - Nathaniel Bacon died - Rebellion collapsed
NYC Slave revolt
1712 - Death of 12 whites and 21 blacks - Some burned at stake over slow fire
The War of Jenkin's Ear
1739 - Spanish revenue authorities encountered Captain Jenkins and cut off his ear - Occurred in Caribbean sea and Georgia - James Oglethorpe fought Spanish to a standstill - War merged with War of Austrian Succession
Stono River Rebellion
1739 - Tried to march to Spanish Florida but were stopped by local militia - 50 Southern Carolina blacks
Declaratory Act
1766 - Occurred at the same time of the repeal of the Stamp Act - Permitted Parliament to affirm its power to legislate for the colonies "in all cases whatsoever" - Claimed the leaders were unqualified
Neutrality Proclamation
1793 - GW proclaimed the government's official neutrality - Warned citizens to be impartial to armed camps
Andrew Johnson
17th President of the United States, came to office after Lincoln's assassination and opposed Radical Republicans; he was impeached but remained in office
Anglo-American Convention
1818 - Pact with Britain to share the Newfoundland fisheries with Canada - Fixed vague northern limits of LA along 49th parallel - 10-year joint occupation of Oregon
McCulloch v. Maryland
1819 - 1816 - 2nd BUS charter passed by Congress - 1818 - MD attempted to destroy a branch of the BUS by imposing tax on their money *- Marshall declared bank constitutional by Hamilton doctrine of implied powers* - Strengthened federal authority by not allowing MD to tax the bank - Loose constitution
Dartmouth College v. Woodward
1819 - College granted charter by King George III in 1769 - NH legislature saw fit to change it → Dartmouth appealed - Marshall said the original charter must stand - Safeguarded business from state governments - Corporations are also protected charters or contracts -Enabled chartered corporations to escape public control - *Restricted ability of state governments to control corporations*
Cohens v. Virginia
1821 - Cohen Brothers found guilty by VA courts for illegally selling lottery tickets - VA won by conviction of Cohen Brothers being upheld - Lost because Marshall asserted *rights of the Supreme Court to review decisions of all state courts involving federal powers*
Monroe Doctrine
1823 - Message to Congress delivered annually - Stern warning to European powers: → 1) Not to colonize Latin America → 2) Not to intervene in Latin America - The US would stay out of European affairs - Permit current settlements
Gibbons v. Ogden
1824 - "Steamboat Case" - NY attempted to grant a private company a monopoly of commerce on rivers between NY and NJ - Marshall decision expanding Federal power over the states Broad expansion of "commerce clause" that allows Federal government to regulate all interstate commerce or exchanges
Anthony Burns
1853 slave who escaped from slavery
Civil Rights Bill
1866; Passed over Andrew Johnson's veto, the bill aimed to counteract the Black Codes by conferring citizenship on African Americans and making it a crime to deprive blacks of their rights to sue, testify in court, or hold property.
Roosevelt Corollary
1904; A brazen policy of "preventative intervention" advocated by Theodore Roosevelt in his Annual Message to Congress in 1904. Adding ballast to the Monroe Doctrine, his corollary stipulated that the United States would retain a right ti intervene in the domestic affairs of Latin American nations in order to restore military and financial order.
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
1942; Nonviolent civil rights organization committed to the "Double V" - victory over fascism abroad and racism at home. Wafter World War II, CORE would become a major force in the civil rights movement,
Huey P. "Kingfish" Long
"Kingfish" Rep. senator of LA; pushed "Share Our Wealth" program and make "Every Man a King' at the expense of the wealthy; assassinated
Virtual representation
"Parliament had in mind the interest of all the King's subjects, no matter where they resided." - George Grenville's idea
Congressman Matthew Lyon
"Spitting Lion" - Spit in a Federalist's face and got the nickname - Was sent to jail for four months (not because of spitting)
Midwifery
*Assists with childbirths* - Fostered bonds - One midwife alone delivered 3000+ babies
Economy of New England
*Fishing* - cod off of coast of Newfoundland *Lumber* *Shipbuilding* - more exports of cod led to building better ships
Results of the Alien and Sedition Acts
- 10 Jeffersonians brought to trial with Federalist judges - Made converts for Jeffersonians - Made expire in 1801 so it couldn't be used against them if they lost the election
End of Constitutional Convention
- 17 weeks - Feared if the Constitution would be acceptable to the country
Demographics of colonies from 1700-1775
- 1700 - 300,00 souls, 20,000 being black - 1775 - 2.5 million, 500,000 being black - 400,000 white and 400,000 black immigrants - Most of the population growth done by procreation - 5% of multicolored population European - Mainly Anglo-Saxon - South held 90% of slaves - New England had least ethnic diversity
George Grenville
- 1763 - ordered British navy to strictly enforce Navigation Laws - 1764 - Sugar Act - Caused protest - duties lowered and agitation died down - 1765 - Quartering Act
Results of Salem Witch Trials
- 19 hung, 1 pressed to death, and 2 dogs hung - *Most accused witches came from wealthy families* - *Most accusers came from subsistence farming families* - Showed tension between classes
Results to the VA and KY Resolutions
- 1st statement of states' rights - Opened for nullification controversy and secession later on
Jefferson's military
- 2,500 men and officers - Supplanted by huge state militia force - Jeffersonians distrusted large armies to prevent military dictatorship
Results of Bacon's Rebellion
- 20+ rebels hung by Berkeley - Tensions remained - Landowners went to African slavery because the indentured servants seemed to be an unreliable labor source
British uprooting of French Acadians
- 4,000 - Expected a stab in the back - Caused them to be spread elsewhere - Cajuns in the South
Confederate States of America
- 7 seceding states made a government (SC, AL, MS, FL, GA, LA, & TX) - Jefferson Davis as president
Scots-Irish characteristics
- 7% of population - Non-English but spoke English - Turbulent Scots Lowlanders - Presbyterians - Violent against Natives - Frontiersmen
Jefferson winning the election
- 73-65 - Won NY because of Aaron Burr - Won South states and West states because of male suffrage - 3/5 Compromise helped him - more representatives
9th and 10th Amendment
- 9th - Rights not listed in the Constitution are still rights - 10th - Anything the Constitution says Congress doesn't have is up to the states and the people
Federalist accusations of Thomas Jefferson
- Accused of robbing a widow and son - Sally Hemmings relationship - Separated church and state in VA - Alleged athiest
Land Ordinance of 1785
- Acreage of the Old Northwest should be sold and that the proceeds should be used to pay off national debt - Land surveyed by six square miles per area - 16th district was for education
Voyageurs went to look for beavers where?
- Across Great Lakes into Saskatchewan and Manitoba - Along valleys of the Platte - Arkansas and Missouri - West of the Rockies - South to border of Spanish Texas
Chief Justice John Marshall
- Adams appointed to Supreme Court as 4th choice - Cousin of Thomas Jefferson - Served at Valley Forge
Negatives of American army
- Badly organized and lacked unity - Continental Congress just debated and grew feebler - Fought almost the whole war without Constitution till 1781 - Jealousy - Economic difficulties - Other states had to make their own depreciated currency - Inflation occurred
George Washington in the war between France and Britain
- Believed war had to be avoided at all costs - Nation was unstable and disunited - Strategy of delay allowed population to increase, stabilize the nation, and then assert its power
Women's rights
- Believed women were weaker than men - Women kept house and men worked with their hands - New England would separate abusive spouses
Positives of making a new government
- Functioned under similar constitutions - Political inheritance from Britain - High order leaders
The Americans, in terms of British, were expected to:
- Furnish products needed in the mother country - Refrain from making for export certain products - Buy manufactured goods from Britain - Not indulge in economic self-sufficiency or self-government
Issues with the end of the French Revolution
- King beheaded in 1793 - Church attacked - Reign of terror began
California gold rush
- Many were German, Irish or Chinese immigrants, - - Overwhelmingly male in nature - Attracted thousands of people to CA - Sped up state's admission to the Union - Creates new dilemma for Taylor Admin
Republican Convention of 1860
- Met in Chicago in a wigwam - Voted Lincoln because he had fewer enemies
Republican Party
- Spontaneously occurred as protest against the Kansas-Nebraska Act - Included Whigs, Democrats, free soilers, Know-Nothings, and others against the KS-NE Act - Spread eastward quickly, became 2nd major political party - Not allowed South of the Mason-Dixon Line...
Issues with colonists when refusing to provide resources for conflict
- Wanted the rights and privileges of an Englishmen without the responsibilities and not actually being an Englishman - Only enthusiastic when reimbursed by Pitt
Crops used
- tobacco in MD and VA - wheat/grain in Middle colonies
Basic principles of the Model Treaty
1) No political connection 2) No military connection 3) Only a commercial connection
Brigham Young
a Mormon who caught and continued to lead the religion after Joseph Smith's death
Oneida Community
a Utopian community in Oneida, New York that strived for perfection. They believed that Christ had already returned in the year 70
Lancaster Turnpike
a broad, hard-surfaced highway built in Pennsylvania in the 1790s (by a private company) that extended 62 miles from Philadelphia to Lancaster, PA. Drivers had to pay a toll to gain access to the highway
Gilbert Stuart
a competant painter who produced several portraits of George Washington
Charter
a document, issued by a sovereign or state, outlining the conditions under which a corporation, colony, city, or other corporate body is organized, and defining its rights and privileges
Maine Law
a drastic statute of 1851 that prohibited the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor in the state of Maine
Edgar Allen Poe
a gifted poet who is best known for his short stories (horrors); was an orphan at an early age, who was cursed with ill health, poverty, hunger, debt, and bad luck.
American Temperance Society
a group established in Boston of 1826 for the reform and abstinence of alcohol
Knickerbocker group
a group of talented writers including Washington Irving, James Fennimore Cooper, and William Cullen Bryant
plantation
a large piece of land (or water) where one crop is specifically planted for widespread commercial sale and usually tended by resident laborers.
trust
a mechanism by which one company grants control over its operations, through ownership of its stock, to another company. The Standard Oil Company became known for this practice in the 1870s as it eliminated its competition by taking control of smaller companies
Hudson River School
a mid 19th century American Art Movement embodied by a group of landscape painters whose aesthetic vision was influened by romance
American Federation of Labor
a national federation of trade unions that included only skilled workers, founded in 1886. Led by Samuel Gompers for nearly 4 decades, this sought to negotiate with employers for a better kind of capitalism that rewarded workers with better wages, hours, and conditions. Their membership was mostly white and male until the middle of the 20th century
John J. Audubon
a painter who made "Bird of America"
Henry David Thoreau
a poet (wrote mostly about nature) who advocated for Transcendentalism and civil disobedience
domestic feminism
a political movement composed mainly of women, begun in the late 19th century in order to campaign against women's suffrage in the United States and United Kingdom
Tammany Hall
a political organization within the Democratic Party in New York city (late 1800's and early 1900's) seeking political control by corruption and bossism
Shakers
a popular name for members of the United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Appearing (aka the Millenial Church)
Because there were few urban centers in the colonial South...
a professional class of lawyers and financiers was slow to develop
Louis Agassiz
a professor at Harvard College for 25 years who broke paths in biology
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
a professor at Harvard College for many years who taught modern languages
James Fenimore Cooper
a profilic and popular American writer of the early 19th century who wrote numerous sea-stories and historical novelss known as the the "Leatherstocking Tales"
Almshouse
a shelter for widows and/or orphans
Caravel
a ship built by the Portuguese that could sail more closely into the wind
Stephen Foster
a white Pennsylvanian who made a valuable contribution to American folk music by capturing the plaintive spirit of true slaves with songs like "Old Folks at Home" and "Oh!Susana!"
Mayflower compact
agreement established a basic government based upon majority rule (basis of self-government)
Nonimportation
agreements among the American colonies to boycott English goods about the revealing of the Stamp and Townshend Acts
The primary source of livelihood for most colonial Americans was
agriculture
Noah Webster
aka "Schoolmaster of the Republic" and was educated at Yale. He wrote Webster's Dictionary and it was published in 1828
Horace Mann
an American Education reformer and a member of the Massachussetts House of Representatives from 1827-1833. He was elected into the U.S. House in 1848
Peter Cartwright
an American Methodist revivalist and politician in Illinois. He helped start the 2nd Great Awakening.
Lucretia Mott
an American Quaker, abolitionist, social reformer, and advocate for women's rights. She was aroused when she and fellow female delegates were not recognized at the Candon Antislavery Convention of 1840
Sylvester Graham
an American dietary reformer who was ordained in 1826 as a Presbyterian minister. He is notable for his emphasis on vegrtarianism and the Temperance Movement.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
an American social activist, abolitionist, and leading figure of the early women's rights movement. She wrote the "Declaration of Sentiments" at the Women's Rights Convention of 1842.
Malinche
an Indian slave who knew Mayan and Nahuatl
Frederick W. Taylor
an engineer, an inventor, and a tennis player. He sought to eliminate wasted motion. Famous for scientific-management especially time-management studies.
Coureurs de bois
an independent entrepreneurial French-Canadian woodsman who traveled in New France and the interior of North America — did not follow the "laws"
Williem H. McGuffey
an influential person for the education reform. He wrote books that taught lessons on morality, patriotism, and idealism. 122 million copies were sold
Herman Melville
an orphan from New York who went on a sea voyage at 18 and produced "Moby Dick"
Pribilof Islands
area of conflict with Canada; resolved with arbitration (1893)
Samoan Islands
area of conflict with Germany in the Caribbean; resolved by division (1899)
The mobilization of non-importation policies against the Stamp Act was politically important because it
aroused revolutionary fervor among many ordinary American men and women
William D. ("Big Bill") Haywood
as a leader of the Industrial workers of the World, the Wester Federation of Miners, and the Socialist Party of America. He was one of the most feared of American labor radicals. During WWI, he became a special target of anti-leftist legislation
Guiteau
assassinated Garfield
Tilden
attorney that gained fame after prosecuting Tweed; ran for president in 1876 on the Democrats side
problem with amount of growing population
available soil supply and growing population did not equate, so land was subdivided repeatedly
The French fur trade decimated
beaver populations while spreading the French empire
Social Darwinism/ Darwinists
believes in the idea, popular in the late 19th century, that people gained wealth by "survival of the fittest". Therefore, the wealthy had simply won a natural competition and owed nothing to the poor, and indeed service to the poor would interfere with this organic process. Some also applied this theory to whole nations and races, explaining that powerful people were naturally endowed with gifts that allowed them to gain superiority over others. This theory provided one of the popular justifications for US imperial ventures like the Spanish-American War
Slave codes made...
blacks and their children property for life to their masters
Shawnee mission
border ruffians made a puppet government in Kansas
Middle Colonies nickname
breadbasket
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
brilliant feminist writer who advocated cooperative cooking and child care arrangements to promote women's economic independence and equality
Separatists
broke away from the church because of fraternization of the damned and saints
Among the many important results of the Great Awakening was that it
broke down sectional boundaries and created a greater sense of common American identity
Most of the slaves who eventually reached North America were originally
captured by West African coastal tribes and sold to European slave merchants
Which of the following was not among the generally small-scale manufacturing enterprises in colonial America? a. Carriage manufacturing b. Liquor distilling c. Beaver hat making d. Iron making e. Spinning and weaving
carriage manufacturing
treaty of 1846
compromised dispute between 54-40 line and 40 line to 49th parallel line with GB for oregon
Yellowstone & Yosemite
conservative national parks created after the frontier line was no longer discernible
For most of their early history, the colonies of Maryland and Virginia
contained far more men than women
Henry George
controversial reformer whose book, Progress and Poverty, advocated solving problems of economic inequality by a tax on land
Joint-stock company colony type
corporate colony
Many of the early Puritan settlers of America were
displaced farmers from eastern and western England
The Indian peoples of the Americas were...
divided into many diverse cultures speaking more than two thousand different languages
Remington
drew sketches for Hearst's "Journal"
The passage of the Quebec Act aroused intense American fears because it
extended Catholic jurisdiction and a non-jury judicial system into the English-speaking Ohio country.
One of the advantages the colonists enjoyed in the impending conflict with Britain was
fighting defensively on a large, agriculturally self-sufficient continent.
The passage of increasing British restrictions on trade encouraged colonial merchants to
find ways to smuggle and otherwise evade the law by trading with other countries
West Africa Squadron
group organized by the British Royal Navy meant to capture slave ships en route to the Americas. This lasted for a few years after the abolition of the slave trade in Britain in 1807
British issuance of the Proclamation of 1763
heightened colonial anger and encouraged illegal westward expansion
Comstock Lode
huge silver and gold deposit that brought wealth and statehood to Nevada
Georgia legislature called the tribal council ________ Result:
illegal - Cherokees appealed to the Supreme Court three times
Colonial American smuggling and trading with French enemy
increased British government's disdain for colonial Americans and raised doubts about their loyalty to the empire
Lower classes were getting a flow of...
indentured servants
Printing presses
introduced in 1450 and spread scientific knowledge
twine binder and combined reaper-thresher
inventions that increased production of wheat
Propreitorship
land given by the king to an individual or group
Sand Creek, Colorado
location of an Indian massacre led by Chivington
Central Valley, California
location of large agricultural business
Whigs associated with...
log cabins and hard cider as symbols of their campaign
Nat Turner's Rebellion
named for the leader, this rebellion involved the killing of around 60 Virginians in 1831.
Adams' advocated for
nationalism
Bering isthmus
once was made of an ice bridge that immigrant ancestors of the Native Americans traveled on
annexation of texas
opposed by whigs b/c created another slave state; done b/c texas as an independent nation threatened US to become involved in war w/ North America & GB; highlight of Tyler administration for capitalizing on Manifest Destiny
Royal
paid for and ruled directly by the monarchy
New Orleans
place where Americans lynched Italians and therefore had to pay compensation in order to prevent conflict
Fire-eaters
refers to a group of extremist pro-slavery politicians from the South who urged the separation of southern states into a new nation, which became known as the Confederate States of America.
Benjamin Franklin's attempt to create inter-colonial unity at the Albany Congress resulted in
rejection of the congress' proposal for colonial home rule both by London and by the individual colonies
Tariff of 1842
reluctantly signed by Tyler for additional revenue; gradually led the country out of recession (panic of 1857)
The French and Indian War weakened interior Indian peoples like the Iroquois and Creeks by
removing their French and Spanish allies from Canada and Florida
The summoning of the Albany Congress
represented the first major attempt at inter-colonial unity
Wolfe's victory over Montcalm at Quebec
resulted in decisive French defeat and British domination of North America
Carlisle Indian School
school in Penn that "civilized" Native American children
pilgrims
separatists who wanted to break away from the Anglican church
Electoral Count Act
set up a commission to resolve the crisis of the Hayes-Tilden standoff in the election of 1876
Jackson planned to eliminate the BUS by...
taking money for government expenses
Dingley Tariff Bill (1897)
tariff bill proposing new high rates after McKinley's election
Joseph Smith
the creator of the Mormon religion(Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints). He ran into much opposition and was murdered with his brothers in 1844 by a mob
38th parallel
the dividing line between north and south korea, across which the fighting between communists and united nations forces ebbed and flowed during the korean war
Elizabeth Blackwell
the first female graduate of a medical college; also was part of the women's rights movement and helped educate women
Middle Passage
the passage from Africa to the West - The death rate was 20% - survivors sold in auctions in major port cities
Even before the discovery of the Americas, Portugal became the first nation to enter the slave trade and establish large-scale plantations using slave labor in
the sugar islands off the coast of Africa
The most significant effect on the colonists of the French defeat in North America was
to reduce the colonies' reliance on Britain for protection and increase their sense of independence
Cheyenne and Sioux
transformed themselves into nomadic traders and hunters with horses
Savannah Indians
wanted to end peace alliance with Carolina and go to Maryland and Pennsylvania; all were killed by 1710
John D. Rockefeller
was an American oil industry businessman, head of Standard Oil Company
John Wilkes Booth
was an American stage actor who, as part of a conspiracy plot, assassinated Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States, at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. on April 14, 1865.
Pony Express
A Mail carrying service; ran from 1860-1861; was established to carry mail speedily along the 2000 miles from St. Joseph, Missouri, to Sacramento, California; they could make the trek in 10 days.
Total War
A conflict in which the participating countries devote all their resources to the war effort
Ida Tarbell
A famous muckraker; published a devastating but factual exposé about the Standard Oil Company
Copperheads
A group of northern Democrats who opposed abolition and sympathized with the South during the Civil War
cotton gin
A machine for cleaning the seeds from cotton fibers, invented by Eli Whitney in 1793
After 1776, what terms did the British offer to all Americans? Why?
A measure offering all Americans home rule — everything they wanted other than independence Because of Saratoga
Eli Whitney
A mechanical genius who invented the cotton gin, which was machine that separated the cotton from the seed. This greatly improved efficiency, and the South was able to clear more acres of cotton fields, which also increased the demand for slaves.
League of Nations
A world organization of national governments proposed by President Woodrow Wilson and established by the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. It worked to facilitate peaceful international cooperation. Despite emotional appeals by Wilson, isolationists' objections to the League created the major obstacle to American singing of the Treaty of Versailles.
Merrimack
Abandoned Union warship salvaged by the Confederacy. Enforced with iron plates to become an ironclad ship. Renamed "Virginia"
Maine
Acquired by Sir Ferdinando Gorges' heirs Fishermen and fur trades
Florida Purchase Treaty
Adams-Onís Treaty (1819) - Spain ceded FL and Spanish claims in Oregon in exchange for American TX claims - Adams-Onís Treaty Line NW to Rockies and Pacific
North Carolina in the ratification of the Constitution
Adjourned convention without a vote
Who could vote in the meeting houses to elect leaders, schoolmasters, discuss issues, etc.?
Adult males
Freemen
Adult males who belonged to Puritan congregations
Langston Hughes
African American poet who described the rich culture of african American life using rhythms influenced by jazz music. He wrote of African American hope and defiance, as well as the culture of Harlem and also had a major impact on the Harlem Renaissance.
Party Convention
After 1828 Members of the political party nominate the candidate
Albany Congress
Albany, New York - 7/13 colonial representatives showed up - Purpose: to keep Iroquois loyal to British - Long-term: achieve greater colonial unity and defend against France
Most of the population lived east of the _____________.
Allegehnies
Churchill
Allied leader who met with FDR to plan strategy at Casablanca and Tehran
Result of the end of the war on Britain
Allowed London to rebuild its army, navy, etc. and eventually defeat Napoleon
Robert Fulton
American inventor who designed the first commercially successful steamboat and the first steam warship (1765-1815)
Margaret Sanger
American leader of the movement to legalize birth control during the early 1900's. As a nurse in the poor sections of New York City, she had seen the suffering caused by unwanted pregnancy. Founded the first birth control clinic in the U.S. and the American Birth Control League, which later became Planned Parenthood.
Goethals
American military engineer who built the Panama Canal
Hessians
American slang for the German troops under British command
Rosenberg
Americans convicted and executed for spying and passing atomic secrets to the Soviet Union
Catharine Beecher
An American educator known for her forthright opinions on female education as well as her strong support of the many benefits of the incorporation of kindergarten into children's education.
Federal Reserve Act
An act establishing twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks and a Federal Reserve Board, appointed by the president, to regulate banking and create stability on a national scale in the volatile banking sector. The law carried the nation through the financial crises of the First World War.
"Molly Maguires"
An active, militant Irish organization of farmers based in the Pennsylvania anthracite coal fields who are believed responsible for much violence
Two Colonial churches by 1775
Anglican and Congregational
Disestablished
Anglican church was reformed and was named Protestant Episcopal Church and disestablished as the official religion
The two denominations that enjoyed the status of established churches in various colonies were the
Anglicans and Congregationalists
Lexington and Concord
April 19, 1775 - British commander sent troops there to seize colonial stores of gunpowder and to bag the rebel ringleaders - Minute Men couldn't disperse rapidly enough, so eight Americans died in Lexington and several were wounded - Redcoats pushed onto Concord where they were forced to retreat - British went back to Boston - Killed 70 - Americans won - Precedented the first major "battle" between the British and Americans
John Tyler
Ascending to presidency after William Henry Harrison's death; famous for not having a political party, as he was removed from the Whigs after denying their proposal for another BUS, house talked of impeaching him.
William Walker
Attempted to take control of Nicaragua to make it a slave state; failed because of an alliance of Central American countries (Mnemonic: William Walkeragua)
A. Mitchell Palmer
Attorney General who rounded up many suspects who were thought to be un-American and socialistic; he helped to increase the Red Scare; he was nicknamed the "Fighting Quaker" until a bomb destroyed his home; he then had a nervous breakdown and became known as the "Quaking Fighter."
V-J (Victory in Japan) Day
August 15, 1945, heralded the surrender of Japan and the final end to World War II.
Sigmund Freud
Austrian physician whose work focused on the unconscious causes of behavior and personality formation; founded psychoanalysis.
Adolf Hitler
Austrian-born founder of the German Nazi Party and chancellor of the Third Reich (1933-1945). His fascist philosophy, embodied in Mein Kampf (1925-1927), attracted widespread support, and after 1934 he ruled as an absolute dictator. Hitler's pursuit of aggressive nationalist policies resulted in the invasion of Poland (1939) and the subsequent outbreak of World War II. His regime was infamous for the extermination of millions of people, especially European Jews. He committed suicide when the collapse of the Third Reich was imminent (1945).
David Walker
Author of "Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World" Walker incited the idea of a violent war for emancipation. He was among the ranks of influential black abolitionists.
William Lloyd Garrison
Author of "The Liberator" (est. 1831), this abolitionist exemplified unyielding fights for liberty. He was instrumental in beginning radical abolitionism, and continued the war with words over slavery.
Which Native American tribe took the hearts of living victims to offer to gods as a crowning of a new chieftain?
Aztecs
African slavery became the prevalent form of labor in the 1680s when
Bacon's Rebellion and rising wages in England made white indentured servants no longer a reliable labor force
Lend-Lease Bill
Based on the motto, "Send guns, not sons," this law abandoned former pretenses of neutrality by allowing Americans to sell unlimited supplies of arms to any nation defending itself against the Axis Powers. Patriotically numbered 1776, the bill was praised as a device for keeping the nation out of World War II.
Some of the coureurs de bois new settlements
Baton Rouge, Terre Haute, Des Moines, and Grant Teton
What type of hat was sought after?
Beaver
Most important product to French at the time
Beaver skins
Frances E. Willard
Became leader of the WCTU; worked to educate people about the evils of alcohol; urged laws banning the sale of liquor; worked to outlaw saloons as a step towards strengthening democracy
Calvin Coolidge
Became president when Harding died of pneumonia. He was known for practicing a rigid economy in money and words, and acquired the name "Silent Cal" for being so soft-spoken. He was a true republican and industrialist. Believed in the government supporting big business.
Why was New England less ethnically mixed?
Because Europeans wouldn't want to come to a place with stony soil and angry preachers
Orders in Council
Began in 1806 Series of edicts closing European ports unless stopped at a British port first
Charles Darwin
Believed in evolution by natural selection, the principal that the weaker die out or "survival of the fittest." Wrote On The Origin of Species.
W. E. B. Du Bois
Believed that African Americans should strive for full rights immediately; founded the NAACP
Richard Olney
Belligerent US Secretary of State who used the Monroe Doctrine to pressure Britain in the Venezuelan boundary crisis as well as broke up the Pullman Strike
Great *Plains* and Great Basin Natives
Blackfeet, Sioux, and Chippewa -Nomadic -Lots of flat land for fertile soil and grazing animals -Lived in tepees or grass houses -Hunter-gatherers for caribou or bison -Worked together to hunt and trade together -Irrigation and dam attempts
Gullah
Blended English with African languages like Yoruba, Ibo, and Hausa (remember yih)
muckrakers
Bright young reporters at the turn of the twentieth century who won this unfavorable moniker from Theodore Roosevelt but boosted the circulations of their magazines by writing exposés of widespread corruption in American society. Their subjects included business manipulation of the government, white slavers, child labor, and the illegal deeds of the trusts and helped spur the passage of reform legislation.
Royal veto
British government had the right to nullify any legislation passed by colonies if it went against the mercantilist system — used 469 times in relation to the 8,563 laws
The French and Indian War created conflict between the British and the American military because
British officers treated the American colonial militia with contempt
Lusitania
British passenger liner that sank after it was torpedoed by Germany on May 7, 1915. It ended the lives of 1,198 people, including 128 Americans, and pushed the United States closer to war.
The decisive event in the French-British contest for North America was the
British victory in the Battle of Quebec
positives and negatives about winning the French and Indian War
British victory made Britain a master of domain in North America but financially challenged them to put troops on the frontier
General Zachary Taylor
Candidate for the Whigs, had slaves, didn't commit himself to the issue
Louis Sullivan
Chicago-based architect whose high rise innovation allowed more people to crowd into limited urban space
Jiang Jieshi
Chinese Nationalist leader whose corrupt and ineffective government fell to communist rebels in 1949
Port Arthur, Manchuria
Chinese territory that was in dispute between Russia and Japan
Democratic convention of 1856
Chose Buchanan (no enemies), not Pierce or Douglas because of the KS-NE Act - For popular sovereignty
Whigs in the election of 1852
Chose Winfield Scott, didn't boast about the Compromise of 1850 as much as the Democrats
Boston Port Act
Closed harbor until damages were paid and order ensured
land-grant colleges
Colleges and universities created from allocations of public land through the Morrill Act of 1862 and the Hatch Act of 1887. These grants helped fuel the boom in higher education in the late nineteenth century, and many of today's public universities derive from them.
Fort Sumter
Comfederacy shot first shots of the Civil War in South Carolina in 1861 after Union forces attempted to provision the fort
Wood
Commander in Spanish-American War who organized the efficient American military government of Cuba
Dwight D Eisenhower
Commander of the Allied military assault against Hitler in North Africa and France
Douglas MacArthur
Commander of the US Army in the Pacific during WWII, who fulfilled his promise to return to the Philippines
Chester W. Nimitz
Commander of the US Naval forces in the Pacific and brilliant strategist of the island-hopping campaign
Joseph Stalin
Communist leader of Russia
holding companies
Companies that own part or all of other companies' stock in order to extend monopoly control. Often, a holding company does not produce goods or services of its own but only exists to control other companies. The Clayton Anti-Trust Act of 1914 sought to clamp down on these companies when they obstructed competition.
Compromise of 1877
Compromise that enables Hayes to take office in return for the end of Reconstruction in the South.
Battle of Shiloh
Confederate forces surprised union troops & drove them across the Tennessee river; union got backup and won the battle but it was one of the most bloody battles in the civil war
Robert E. Lee
Confederate general who had opposed secession but did not believe the Union should be held together by force
Carolinas and the Tuscaroras
Crushed Tuscaroras - Sold into slavery - Go north and seek protection of Iroquois (6th nation to join confederacy)
insurrectos
Cuban insurgents who sought freedom from colonial Spanish rule. Their destructive tactics threatened American economic interests in Cuban plantations and railroads.
Results of Goliad and Alamo
Delayed Mexico advancement and stimulated US opposition
Lewis Cass
Democrat candidate who believed slavery should be decided based on popular sovereignty
Bryan
Democratic and Populist candidate for President "Great Commoner" in 1896 who advocated a policy of free silver known for "Cross of Gold Speech"
Sutter's Mill
Discovery of gold in California starting the gold rush
Steffens
Early muckraker who exposed the political corruption in many American cities
The Man Without a Country
Edward Everett Hale's fictional account of a treasonous soldier's journeys in exile. The book was widely read in the North, inspiring greater devotion to the Union.
interchangeable parts
Eli Whitney's innovation of manufacturing precise identical components that can be used in place of one another in manufacturing
Free-soilers in Kansas
Established a government in Topeka because of Shawnee Mission
National War Labor Board (NWLB)
Established by FDR to act as an arbitration tribunal and mediate disputes between labor and management that might have led to work stoppages and thereby undermined the war effort. The NWLB was also charged with adjusting wages with an eye to controlling inflation.
Allies of 7 Years War; name them
Europe: Britain and Prussia vs France, Spain, Austria, and Russia
Powell
Explorer and geologist who warned that traditional agriculture could not succeed west of the 100th meridian
Craftspeople/artisans
Extremely scarce e.g. Virginia carpenter murdered somebody but was freed because his working skills were needed
Eleanor Roosevelt
FDR's Wife and New Deal supporter. Was a great supporter of civil rights and opposed the Jim Crow laws. She also worked for birth control and better conditions for working women
Wallace
FDR;s liberal vice president during most of WWII, dumped from the ticket in 1944
Operation Dixie
Failed effort by the CIO after WWII to unionize southern workers, especially in textile factories.
Battle of Tippecanoe
Fall 1811 - William Henry Harrison - gov. of Indiana - gathered army - Advanced to Tecumseh's HQ - Tecumseh was absent b/c he was recruiting Southern support - Tenskwatawa attacked Harrison's army with small force of Shawnees
What events caused the Americans to realize that they needed to separate?
Falmouth and Norfolk
Effects of inflation
Families of soldiers hit hard, and hundreds of anxious husbands and fathers were abandoned
Appomattox Courthouse
Famous as the site of the surrender of the Confederate Army under Robert E. Lee to Union commander Ulysses S. Grant
Thorstein Veblen
Famous sociologist/economist; wrote "The Theory of the Leisure Class"
Antoine Cadillac
Founded Detroit to thwart English settlers pushing into Ohio River Valley
Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
Founded in Ohio in the 1870s to combat the evils of excessive alcohol consumption, it went on to embrace a broad reform agenda, including campaigns to abolish prostitution and gain the right to vote for women.
The event of the end of the 20-month conflict with Britain showed that...
France hoped America would be a naval power in the future
Fort McHenry
Francis Scott Key was detained and watched from a British ship the battle — wrote "The Star Spangled Banner"
General William Howe
GW opponent focused on his own wife - satirists made fun of the incident
The only colony formally established in the American colonies by the royal government was
Georgia
Arthur Zimmermann
German minister whose famous telegram was responsible for drawing the US into WWI
U-boats
German submarines, named for the German Unterseeboot, or "undersea boat," proved deadly for Allied ships in the war zone. U-boat attacks played an important role in drawing the United States into the war.
Dust Bowl
Grim nickname for the Great Plains region devastated by drought and dust storms during the 1930s. The disaster led to the migration into California of thousands of displaced "Okies" and "Arkies."
Eugene V. Debs
Head of the American Railway Union and director of the Pullman strike; he was imprisoned along with his associates for ignoring a federal court injunction to stop striking. While in prison, he read Socialist literature and emerged as a Socialist leader in America.
Randolph
Head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters whose threatened march on Washington opened job opportunities for blacks during WWII
Abraham Lincoln Brigade
Idealistic American volunteers who served in the Spanish Civil War, defending Spanish republican forces from the fascist General Francisco Franco's nationalist coup. Some 3,000 Americans served alongside volunteers from other countries.
"Lost Cause" Myth
Idealized version of Southern culture; black slaves were happy to be slaves, they were never mistreated. Blacks wanting rights was offensive, outrageous, and a challenge to white supremacy.
Why did the Whigs believe British freedom was being fought for in America?
If George III won, his rule might be tyrannical
New Immigrants
Immigrants from southern and eastern Europe who formed a recognizable wave of immigration from the 1880s until 1924, in contrast to the immigrants from western Europe who had come before them. These new immigrants congregated in ethnic urban neighborhoods, where they worried many native-born Americans, some of whom responded with nativist anti-immigrant campaigns and others of whom introduced urban reforms to help the immigrants assimilate.
Birds of Passage
Immigrants who came to America to earn money for a time and then returned to their native land
Justification for expanding?
Improve land by clearing lands for urban usage
Benjamin Franklin's impact on *reading*
In Philadelphia, he established first privately supported circulating library
modernism
In response to the demanding conditions of modern life, this artistic and cultural movement revolted against comfortable Victorian standards and accepted chance, change, contingency, uncertainty, and fragmentation. Originating among avant-garde artists and intellectuals around the turn of the twentieth century, modernism blossomed into a full-fledged cultural movement in art, music, literature, and architecture.
Harry S. Truman
Inconspicuous former senator from Missouri who was suddenly catapulted to national and world leadership on April 12, 1945
Morrill Tariff Act
Increased duties back up to 1846 levels to raise revenue for the Civil War
One way in which Indians and Africans were similar to whites in 18 century North America was they
Increasingly mingled and intermarried with people from beyond their original ethnic group or tribe
Trail of Tears
Indian route to the Indian Territory under the Indian Removal Act
The primary reason for the drastic decline in the Indian population after the encounter with the Europeans was the
Indians' lack of resistance to European diseases such as smallpox and malaria
United Nations/UN
International body formed in 1945 to bring nations into dialogue in hopes of preventing further world wars. Much like the former League of Nations in ambition, the UN was more realistic in recognizing the authority of the Big Five powers in keeping the peace in the world. Thus, it guaranteed veto power to all permanent members of its Security Council - Britain, China, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States.
Kearny
Irishman who fired up a street fight between Irish and Chinese
East Natives
Iroquois mainly -Made Iroquois Confederacy to organize socially and politically (led by Hiawatha) -Matrilineal system -Typically lived in longhouses and wigwams -Three sister farming
Nonimportation agreement effects on jobs
It stimulated *manufacturing* because there was a higher need for things that were originally supplied by England - *agriculture* was still the *leading* industry
Marco Polo
Italian adventurer who returned to Europe in 1295 and began telling tales of his sojourn in China. His book stimulated European desires for a cheaper route to the East
Nicola Sacco
Italian immigrant and anarchist who may have been unfairly convicted because of his political views
Candidates in the election of 1824
JQA, Henry Clay, William H. Crawford, and Andrew Jackson — all claimed to be Republicans
Indian Removal Act
Jackson proposed the movement of tribes to the West — 100,000 Indians transplanted from the East to the West
Virginia Resolution
James Madison made a similar but less extreme resolution approved by VA legislature. Introduced Interposition, governor shields state from unconstitutional federal acts
Norfolk
January 1776 British set fire to Virginia town of Norfolk
Hirohito
Japanese emperor who was allowed to stay on his throne despite unconditional surrender policy
"We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists"
Jefferson's Inaugural Address
Congress declaring war
June 1, 1812 - Showed division over wisdom of fighting - Support from S & W and Republicans in populous states (VA, PN) - Federalists in N & S disliked the war
Battle of Bunker Hill
June 1775 - Was really Breed's Hill - Colonists seized the hill and menaced enemy in Boston - British launched an attack with 3,000 men instead of cutting off the retreat of the colonists by flanking them - 1,500 Americans killed but eventually ran out of gunpowder - Forced to abandon hill in disorder - British won, but it killed majority of the British army and was a confidence booster for America
Monmouth, New Jersey
June 1778 - Withdrawing redcoats attacked by Washington - Many collapsed from heatstroke - Indecisive battle - British went to New York - 1/3 of Hessians deserted - Washington remained in NY area
Two people in power at the time
King George III and Lord North
Virginia Plan
Known as large-state plan - Both houses of Congress should be based on population - Gave big states the advantage
The Great Compromise
Known as the Connecticut Compromise - House of Representatives - representative assembly based on the number of districts in a state (all tax bills must originate from here - population counted more heavily) - Senate - Two representatives from each state
New Jersey Plan
Known as the small-state plan - Equal representation of a one-branched Congress regardless of size and population - Feared larger states would override them
William Pitt's siege of Louisbourg
Laid siege to Louisbourg and got victory — first British victory
New Jersey
Land given to two proprietors by Duke of York
Lower social group than small farmers
Landless whites who were former indentured servants and never got their payment
Jones Act
Law according territorial status to the Philippines and promising independence as soon as a "stable government" could be established. The United States did not grant the Philippines independence until July 4, 1946.
Clayton Anti-Trust Act
Law extending the anti-trust protections of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and exempting labor unions and agricultural organizations from antimonopoly constraints. The act conferred long-overdue benefits on labor.
Repeal of the Townshend Acts
Lord North persuaded Parliament to repeal them, but a three-pence toll was kept on tea
Ernest Hemingway
Lost Generation writer, spent much of his life in France, Spain, and Cuba during WWI, notable works include A Farewell to Arms
Most important manufacturing activity
Lumber, which also supplied shipbuilders
Tallmadge Amendment
MO asked Congress to be a slave state → No more slaves should be brought into MO and emancipation of children born from slave parents
The ________ and the ________ reinvigorated the spirit of Manifest Destiny
MX War and CA gold rush
Non-separatist puritans secured royal charter to form... Why?
Massachusetts bay Company Feared faith persecution and future of England
Jackson
Massachusetts writer whose books aroused sympathy for the plight of Native Americans
Bretton Woods Conference
Meeting of Western allies to establish a postwar international economic order to avoid crises like the one that spawned World War II. Led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, designed to regulate currency levels and provide aid to underdeveloped countries.
Atlantic Charter
Meeting on a warship off the coast of Newfoundland in August 1941, Franklin Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill signed this covenant outlining the future path toward disarmament, peace, and a permanent system of general security. Its spirit would animate the founding of the United Nations and raise awareness of the human rights of individuals after World War II.
realism
Mid-nineteenth century movement in European and American literature and the arts that sought to depict contemporary life and society as it actually was, in all its unvarnished detail. Adherents eschewed the idealism and nostalgia of the earlier romantic sensibility.
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Military alliance of Western European powers and the United States and Canada established in 1949 to defend against the common threat from the Soviet Union, marking a giant stride forward for European unity and American internationalism.
Midwest Natives
Mississippian culture -Built mounds, biggest being Cahokia -Made larger settlements when maize was introduced -Had certain ways of life similar to 10 commandments -Trading routes because of Mississippi River
Platt
NY politician who successfully schemed to get TR out of NY and into the vice presidency in Washington
Name of the Middle Colonies
NY, NJ, DE, and PN
John Hancock
Nicknamed "King of the Smugglers"; he was a wealthy Massachusetts merchant in 1776 who was influential in persuading the American colonies to declare their independence from England. He was the ringleader in the plot to store gunpowder which resulted in the battles of Lexington and Concord. These battles began the American Revolution.
Whig ideas about the British army and taxes
No need for the army because the French were gone
Nonimportation agreements on the Townshend Acts
Not effective because the acts weren't heavily taxed
Baron von Steuben
Notable Prussian officer who whipped the regulars into shape through stern drills and discipline
Battle of Saratoga
October 17, 1777 - American militia swarmed around Burgoyne and caught British army - Burgoyne surrendered - Decisive battle in colonial favor - Revived colonial cause and led to foreign aid from France
Falmouth (Portland), Maine
October 1775 British burned it down
Bonus Army
Officially known as the Bonus Expeditionary Force (BEF), this rag-tag group of 20,000 veterans marched on Washington to demand immediate payment of bonuses earned during World War I. General Douglas MacArthur dispersed them with tear gas and bayonets.
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
One of the best-known sculptors of the period. he was known for his large and robust compositions.
Mary Harris "Mother" Jones
One of the first and most influential female members in the Knights of Labor. She got her start by agitating for the Knights in the Illinois cornfields.
Thomas Alva Edison
One of the most prolific inventors in US history. He invented the phonograph, light bulb, electric battery, mimeograph and moving picture.
US Sanitary Commission
Organization developed to provide medical supplies and assistance to Union armies in the field
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
Organization founded by W. E. B. Du Bois and others to advance black social and economic equality
Quakers
Pacifists, no paid clergy, no taxes to Church of England, etc.
Greenbacks
Paper currency issued by union. Was not supported by gold, fluctuated in value through out war reaching a low of $.39
Why was the Bank a monster in Jackson's eyes?
Paper notes by private banks were worthless and value fluctuated
Loyal opposition
Party out of power balances wishes of their political party
Workingmen's Compensation Act
Passed under Woodrow Wilson, this law granted assistance to federal civil-service employees during periods of disability. It was a precursor to labor-friendly legislation passed during the New Deal.
Incas location Mayans location Aztec location
Peru Central America Mexico
Benjamin Spock
Physician who provided advice on child rearing to baby boomers' parents after World War II
Herbert Croly
Political theorist that argued that the government should use its regulatory and taxation powers to promote the welfare of its citizens
Taft
Politically inept inheritor of the Roosevelt legacy who ended up allied with the reactionary Republican Old Guard
Election of 1844
Polk (Dem) defeats Clay (Whig) Polk's campaign- 54 40 or fight, expansion, Manifest Destiny
Horatio Alger
Popular novelist during the Industrial Revolution who wrote "rags to riches" books praising the values of hard work.
Treaty of Tordesillas
Portugal received territory in Africa, Asia, and Brazil. Spain received the discovery of Columbus
John Brown
Pottawatomie Creek, studied L'Ouverture and Turner's tactics
Women's Christian Temperance Union
Powerful progressive women's organization that sought to "make the world homelike" by outlawing the saloon and the product it sold
Warren G. Harding
Pres.1921 laissez-faire, little regard for gov't or presidency. "return to normalcy" after Wilson + his progressive ideals. Office became corrupt: allowed drinking in prohibition, had an affair, surrounded himself w/ cronies (used office for private gain). Ex) Sec. of Interior leased gov't land w/ oil for $500,000 and took money himself. Died after 3 years in office, VP: Coolidge took over
Fundamentalists
Protestant believers who strongly resisted liberal Protestantism's attempts to adapt doctrines to Darwinian evolution and biblical criticism
Reed
Republican Speaker of the House who dominated Billion Dollar Congress, proposed the Dingley Tariff Bill in 1897
Dewey
Republican presidential nominee in 1944 who failed in his effort to deny FDR a fourth term
Landon
Republican who carried only two states in the futile campaign against "The Champ" in 1936
Taft-Hartley Act
Republican-promoted, anti-union legislation passed over President Truman's vigorous veto that weakened many of labor's New Deal gains by banning the closed shop and other strategies that helped unions organize. It also required union leaders to take a noncommunist oath, which purged the union movement of many of its most committed and active organizers.
Waving the Bloody Shirt
Republicans that revived gory memories of the Civil War, coined powerful Republican slogan "Vote as You Shot"
"Give me liberty or give me death"
Said by Patrick Henry in the Virginia Assembly
Southern defense of slavery
Said it was a violation of their Constitutional rights
Alamo
San Antonio - Santa Anna came to TX and trapped 200 Texans - Wiped them out in a 13-day siege
Gilded Age
Sarcastic name given to the three decade long post Civil War era by Mark Twain in 1873; time of a large increase in wealth caused by industrialization
Bunau-Varilla
Scheming French engineer who helped stage a revolution in Panama and then became the new country's "instant" foreign minister
What did the Constitutional Convention do with the Articles of Confederation (AOC)?
Scraped it completely
Royal order of Connecticut
Sea-to-sea charter grant legalized squatter settlements
homesteaders
Settlers who acquired free land from the government
Executive Order No. 9066
Signed by President FDR on Feb. 19, 1942, it authorized the secretary of war to designate military zones from which certain categories of people could be excluded. Fueled by historic anti-Japanese sentiment as well as panic following the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, the order led to the forced removal of some 120,000 persons of Japanese ancestry (70,000 of the US citizens) from the Western Military Zone (the coastal sections of Washington, Oregon, and California.) Most but not all of those removed were interned in relocation camps in the interior West. The order was rescinded in December 1944, and legislation passed in 1988 offered an official government apology and modest financial compensation to surviving citizen internees.
Casablanca
Site of 1943 Roosevelt-Churchill conference in North Africa, at which the Big Two planned the invasion of Italy and further steps in the Pacific war
Detroit
Site of a serious racial disturbance during WWII
Yamasee
South Carolinians annihilated Yamasee Indians and sold into slavery or allowed them to wander
Redeemers
Southern Democratic politicians who sought to wrest control from Republican regimes in the South after Reconstruction.
Francisco Franco
Spanish General; organized the revolt in Morocco, which led to the Spanish Civil War. Leader of the Nationalists - right wing, supported by Hitler and Mussolini, won the Civil War after three years of fighting.
conquistadors
Spanish conquerors that fanned out across the Caribbean and eventually onto the mainland of the American continents
"Butcher" Weyler
Spanish general whose brutal tactics against Cuban rebels outraged American public opinion
Brain Trust
Specialists in law, economics, and welfare, many of them young university professors, who advised President Franklin D. Roosevelt and helped develop the policies of the New Deal.
Aim of the Committees of Correspondence
Spread resistance by exchanging letters and keep opposition to British
Stamp Act's Repeal in 1766
Stamp Act repealed — Colonists celebrate the victory attributed to their political protest and economic boycotts. NY residents made King George III statue
Acceptance of the concessions of the Compromise
Strengthened by relief and prosperity of the CA gold rush as well as Union-savers like Clay, Webster, and Douglas
Issues when the Bank was gone
Surplus federal funds placed in pet banks without a central bank and no stable currency
Rosie the Riveter
Symbolic personification of female laborers who took factory jobs in order to sustain U.S. production during WWII
Sharecropping
System in which ex slaves would rent land and pay by growing crops, turned in to a very abusive system a second time bondage.
Peculiar institution
System of black slavery in the South US
Adams became known as...
The Father of the American Navy
Why did anti-feds later adopt the Constitution?
The Federalists promised to add a Bill of Rights
Industrial Workers of the World
The IWW, also known as the "Wobblies," was a radical organization that sought to build "one big union" and advocated industrial sabotage in defense of that goal. At its peak in 1923, it could claim 100,000 members and could gain the support of 300,000. The IWW particularly appealed to migratory workers in agriculture and lumbering and to miners, all of whom suffered from horrific working conditions.
The French and Indian War eventually became part of the larger world conflict known as
The Seven Years' War
Dupuy de Lôme
The Spanish minister in Washington, overwhelmed and infuriated by the depiction of Spanish customs officials brutally disrobing and searching American women; forced to resign his position
Judicial Review
The Supreme Court alone had the last word on the question of constitutionality
Why did Southerners want a stronger fugitive slave law?
The Underground Railroad assistance from northern abolitionists seem a moral judgment against slavery
Battle of Fredericksburg
The Union, led by Major General Ambrose Burnside, was defeated and lost 12,000 men. General Robert E. Lee, Commander of the Army of Northern Virginia, was the Confederate general who led in the defeat.
the trained mob
The common people of Samuel Adams
Thirteenth Amendment
The constitutional amendment ratified after the Civil War that forbade slavery and involuntary servitude.
Nineteenth Amendment
The constitutional amendment, finally passed by Congress in 1919 and ratified in 1920, gave women the right to vote over seventy years after the first organized calls for woman's suffrage in Seneca Falls, New York.
Black Tuesday
The dark, panicky day of October 29, 1929 when over 16,410,000 shares of stock were sold on Wall Street. It was a trigger that helped bring on the Great Depression.
mechanization of agriculture
The development of engine-driven machines, like the combine, which helped to dramatically increase the productivity of land in the 1870s and 1880s. This process contributed to the consolidation of agricultural business that drove many family farms out of existence.
Sunbelt
The fifteen-state crescent through the American South and Southwest that experienced terrific population and productivity expansion during World War II and particularly in the decades after the war, eclipsing the old industrial Northeast (the "Frostbelt").
Monitor (ship)
The first Union ironclad held its own battle but was unable to claim a victory.
Château-Thierry, Battle of
The first significant engagement of American troops in World War I—and, indeed, in any European war. To weary French soldiers, the American doughboys were an image of fresh and gleaming youth.
Iwo Jima & Okinawa
The last two heavily defended Japanese islands conquered by the U.S. in 1945
Great Migration
The movement of 6 million African American from the rural South to the urban North and West in two major waves. The first, from World War I until the onset of the Great Depression, brought more than 1.5 millions migrants to northern cities. From 1940 to 1970, another 5 million left the South, pushed off the land by the mechanization of cotton farming and lured north and west by hopes for greater economic opportunity and more equitable political participation. After the 1970, increasing numbers of African Americas trekked back to the South in what was called the New Great Migration, as new jobs became more plentiful in the South than in the older industrial cities of the North and racial relations improved in the South
Ostend Manifesto
The proclamation that the US would pay $120 million for Cuba, and if Spain refused, the US would be justified in taking it if it threatened the US. Pierce dropped it. (Free-soilers?)
Bible Belt
The region of the American South, extending roughly from North Carolina west to Oklahoma and Texas, where Protestant Fundamentalism and belief in literal interpretation of the Bible were traditionally strongest.
Knights of Labor
The second organization in US history , organized in 1869 as a secret society and opened for public membership in 1881. They were known for their efforts organize all workers, regardless of skill level, gender, or race. After the mid 1880s, their membership declined for a variety of reasons, including their participation in violent strikes and discord between skilled and unskilled members
WACs (Women's Army Corps)
The women's branch of the US Army established during World War II to employ women in noncombatant jobs. Women now participated in the armed services in ways that went beyond their traditional roles as nurses.
WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service)
The women's branch of the US navy established during WWII to employ women in noncombatant jobs.
Why was funding at par made?
There was no public funding for Alex because of the lack of confidence from the public
Why was the Era of Good Feelings misleading?
There were still issues like the tariff, bank, internal improvements, sale of public land, sectionalism, and slavery
Conscience Whigs
These fierce antislavery Whigs denounced the Mexican-American war on moral grounds and delayed the approval for the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo; whigs against slavery
Why did most states have to join the Union?
They couldn't get advantages of new land sales and couldn't "exist" without them
What did Britain do to American markets other than cut it off?
They flooded it with lowered prices for goods that would cost more locally made
Britain's reasons for moving into Texas in the 1840s
They wanted to halt southward American expansion
Reason the Bostonians were angry at the red-coated "ruffians"
They were angry over the death of an 11-year-old boy shot down during a protest against a merchant who defied colonial boycott of British goods
Neutrality Act of 1939
This act stipulated that European democracies might buy American munitions, but only if they could pay in cash and transport them in their own ships. The terms were known as "Cash-and-Carry." It represented an effort to avoid war debts and protect American arms-carriers from torpedo attacks.
Liberty Party
This antislavery party, obsessed with preventing the annexation with Texas, is known for absorbing 16,000 votes in New York that would have swayed the election in Henry Clay's favor in 1844.
Eighteenth Amendment
This constitutional amendment prohibited the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages, ushering in the era known as prohibition.
John C. Fremont
This explorer and captain helped to overthrow the Mexican government in California in 1846.
California Bear Flag Republic
This flag was briefly flown before the overthrow of Mexican rule in California in 1846.
factory system
This new system gradually replaced localized cottage industry. Workers were paid by the hour instead of for what they produce. On one hand it decreased the need for skilled labor, but in other ways it increased the amount of specialization due to labor being concentrated in factories.
"Fifty-four forty or fight"
This slogan represents the expansionist claims that desired all of the Oregon Territory up to 54° 40' line below Alaska. It was coined after the presidential race where it was significant for James Polk's election.
Underwood Tariff
This tariff provided for a substantial reduction of rates and enacted an unprecedented, graduated federal income tax. By 1917, revenue from the income tax surpassed receipts from the tariff, a gap that has since been vastly widened.
Duke of York
Took New Netherland and Peter didn't even fire a shot
Rommel
Top German general in North Africa whose advance was finally halted at El Alamein by British General Montgomery
Lewis
Tough head of the United Mine Workers, whose work stoppages precipitated anti-strike laws
Hitler-Stalin pact
Treaty signed on August 23, 1939 in which Germany and the Soviet Union agreed not to fight each other. The fateful agreement paved the way for German aggression against Poland and the Western democracies.
Issue when British invaded Canada
Tried to attack multiple posts at once instead of the two major ones, which would cause the rest to die off
Peninsula Campaign
Union General George B. McClellan's failed effort to seize Richmond, the Confederate Capital. Had McClellan taken Richmond and toppled the Confederacy, slavery would have most likely survived in the South for some time.
Sherman's march
Union General William Tecumseh Sherman's destructive march through Georgia. An early instance of "total war," purposely targeting infrastructure and civilian property to diminish morale and undercut the Confederate war effort.
William Tecumseh Sherman
Union General who destroyed South during "march to the sea" from Atlanta to Savannah, example of total war
John Pope
Union general with brief but successful career in the Western Theater, but he is best known for his defeat at the Second Battle of Bull Run in the East.
Bartolomeo Vanzetti
United States anarchist (born in Italy) who with Nicola Sacco was convicted of murder and in spite of world-wide protest was executed (1888-1927)
Charles A. Lindbergh
United States aviator who in 1927 made the first solo nonstop flight across the Atlantic Ocean (1902-1974)
Frederick Jackson Turner
United States historian who stressed the role of the western frontier in American history (1861-1951).
Alexander Graham Bell
United States inventor of the telephone, born in Scotland (1847-1922)
William Seward
United States politician who, as Secretary of State in 1867, arranged for the purchase of Alaska from Russia (Seward's Folly).
Samuel Morse
United States portrait painter who patented the telegraph and developed the Morse code (1791-1872)
John Dewey
United States pragmatic philosopher who advocated progressive education (1859-1952).
Mark Twain
United States writer and humorist best known for his novels about Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn (1835-1910)
Common Law
Unnecessary to be specific about every conceivable detail
New York draft riots
Uprising mostly of working-class Irish, in protest of draft. Rioters were incensed by the ability of the rich to hire substitutes or purchase exemptions
The Jungle
Upton Sinclair's book that inspired pro-consumer federal laws regulating meat food and drugs
Divorce Bill
Van Buren - Divorce govt from banking because some of the issues were from federal funds in private banks - Lock surplus money in the major cities in private banks
Who gave the charter for the pilgrims to settle in Plymouth?
Virginia Company
The capital was moved because...
Virginia in the assumption of debt wanted the DOC to be on Potomac River to gain commerce and prestige, so it was passed by Congress
Who could be apart of the church in the Bay Colony?
Visible saints or freemen
Order of the Star-Spangled Banner
Was an oath-bound secret society in NYC created by Charles Allen in 1849 to protest the rise of the Irish, Roman Catholic, and German immigration into the U.S. They were also known as the "Know-nothings" because they kept the society a secret.
Mercantilism
Wealth was power and a country's economic wealth could be measured by the amount of gold or silver in its treasury. Goal was to plant colonies to get mineral wealth by finding it in mines/conquered cities, gaining valuable natural resources that could be traded for bullion and forcing colonies to buy all their manufactured goods from the mother country.
Blue Eagle
Widely displayed symbol of the National Recovery Admin. (NRA), which attempted to reorganize and reform U.S. industry
Governor of Virginia in 1676
William Berkeley
The Liberator
William Lloyd Garrison's abolitionist newspaper founded in 1831. It was said to be the first shot of the Civil war.
"America was conquered in Germany" what did this mean, and who said it?
William Pitt because the French wasted so much of their energy defeating Frederick the Great that they seemed to be unable to focus on America and therefore not on Britain
Extraterritoriality
Would make Americans accused of crimes in China appear before a US court
Steinbeck
Writer whose best-selling novel portrayed the suffering of the dust bowl Okies in the 1930s
Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World
Written by David Walker in 1829, this writing promoted a bloody war for emancipation.
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass
Written by the former slave, this autobiography chronicled Douglass' personal story of learning to read and write as a slave, and later escaping to the North.
Francis Scott Key
Wrote "The Star Spangled Banner" at Fort McHenry
Nixon
Young California congressman whose investigation of Alger Hiss spurred fears of communist influence in America
Chivington
US general who massacred Indians at Sand Creek, Colorado (1864)
Joseph Pulitzer
Used yellow journalism in competition with Hearst to sell more newspapers. He also achieved the goal of becoming a leading national figure of the Democratic Party.
Most populous colonies
VA, MA, PN, NC, and MD
Hearst
Vigorous promoter of sensationalistic anti-Spanish propaganda and eager advocate of imperialistic war
Norris
Vigorously progressive senator from Nebraska whose passionate advocacy helped bring about the New Deal's Tennessee Valley Authority
Virginia Dynasty
Virginian president for four out our first five presidencies
In New England, elementary education
was mandatory for any town with more than 50 families
Competition for land and furs in the Ohio Valley
led to Washington's expedition and battle with the French at Fort Necessity
Compared with the English colonies in North America, New France was
more autocratically governed (e.g. government sponsored mercantilism at its best)
mestizos
people of mixed Indian and European heritage
Manila
place in the Philippines where a Spanish fleet was wrecked by Dewey's American Asiatic Squadron (Roosevelt's Command)
El Alamein
place were Rommel was halted by Montgomery
Long Drive
practice of moving cattle from cities to railroads
Federalist vs Democratic-Republican (Google Doc)
removed
Henry Street Settlement
settlement house made by Wald
Most white Americans and some blacks were
small farmers
nicholas trist
the chief clerk of the state department sent by the U.S. to accompany General Scott to arrange for an armistice with Santa Anna in 1847
Charles G. Finney
the greatest of revival preachers. He was trained as a lawyer, but changed paths to hold massive religious revivals. He encouraged women to pray in public and made in "anxious bench" where repentant sinners could sit in full view of the Congregation
john slidell
the man sent to Mexico City in 1845 to offer $25 million for California and the territory to the east
Among the factors that tended to promote British colonists' inter-colonial unity during the French and Indian War was
their common language and shared wartime experiences
English settlers greatly altered the character of the New England environment by
their extensive introduction of livestock
Alfred E. Smith
this American Democratic politician ran against Herbert Hoover during the election of 1928. Because he was both Catholic and anti-Prohibition, he divided the Democratic voting base and lost the election.
Goering
top nazi official who committed suicide after being convicted in war crimes trials
The focus of much of New England's politics, religion, and education was the institution of the
town
Americans wanted ______ on British Parliament. Why?
trade restrictions - because they were restricting their trade vice versa, but Congress couldn't control commerce
webster-ashburton treaty
treaty of 1842; settles quebec-maine border arising from GB trying to build a road from halifax to quebec
The fundamental flaw in the British strategy before William Pitt gained control of the London government was it
tried to attack numerous French wilderness forts simultaneously instead of concentrating on the key French fortresses
A primary weapon used by colonial legislature in their conflicts with royal governors was
using their power of the purse to withhold the governor's salary
Henry Adams
well connected and socially prominent historian who feared modern trends and sought relief in the beauty and culture of the past
The primary beneficiaries of the headright system were
well-off planters who acquired land by paying the transatlantic passage for indentured servants
Freedmen's Savings & Trust Company
went bankrupt in the Panic of 1873
The four world wars between 1688 and 1763
were echoed by four small wars between French and British subjects in North America
Declaration of Sentiments
a list of grievance (based on the Declaration of Independence)written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton at the Senenca Falls Convention about women's rights
Grimke Sisters
advocated against slavery
William Miller
an American Baptist preacher who is credited with the beginning of the Adventism movement (a religion part of the Second Great Awakening that is similar to modern day Conservative Protestants)
Margaret Fuller
an advocate for women's rights who was also a successful writer
Emily Dickinson
gifted but isolated New England poet, the bulk of whose works were not published until after her death
Reed
got rid of mosquitos in Cuba
Taft
governor at Philippines who became attached to "little brown brothers"
William Bradford
governor of Plymouth
Compared to the seventeenth century, American colonial society in 18th-century showed
greater gaps in wealth and status between rich and poor
The colonial militia's military success in the French and Indian War
increased American military confidence and resentment of British redcoats
Positives of the American Army
- Better gunners, crew, and skill - Frigates had thicker sides, heavier firepower, and larger crews - 1/6 were free blacks
Matthew C. Perry
- Brought American technology to Japan, dispatched by Fillmore - Asked for free trade and friendly relations - Left and came back a year later
Results of Pontiac's Rebellion
- Brought uneasy truce to frontier - British need to stabilize relations with Natives and keep troops against frontier - Americans went west and settled Inspired Proclamation of 1763
Loyalist
- Colonists loyal to the King - 16% of colonists - Consisted of the educated/wealthy, Anglican clergy/congregation, King's officers/beneficiaries, older generation - Most numerous where the Anglican church was the strongest (other than VA b/c debt) - Believed that any violent change would be for the worst - Believed if they won, Patriots like GW would be disgraced, punished, and forgotten
Results of privateers on the English
- English insurance rates skyrocketed - Merchant British ships sailed in convoy - Brought pressure on Parliament to end war
Similarities with all colonies
- English language and customs - Protestant mostly - Ethnic and religious toleration - Social mobility - Self-government - Communication and transportation improving
Federalists
- Favored stronger federal government - Wealthier, more organized, and had the press on their side - 100+ newspapers, only 12 supported anti-feds
General Benedict Arnold becoming a traitor
- Felt his services weren't fully appreciated - Sold West Point Fort Plans for £6,300 and an officer's commission - Plot detected and plans thwarted - Fled to the British, Major Andre his BR accomplice is hung
Similarities among middle colonies
- Fertile and broad land - Rivers for trading - Ports, lumber, and industry - Land owners had larger than north and smaller than south - Local govt balance b/t N and S
Causes of Bacon's Rebellion
- Freemen unable to marry women or find land after term - Disliked friendly policy towards Natives - Nathaniel Bacon led them
Why did the Republicans lose the election of 1856
- Freemont's lack of prudence, honesty, and capacity - Fire-eaters threatened secession of a Republican president won -> Northerners feared disunion and business hurting
Admiral de Grasse
- French (obviously) naval officer who offered to join the Americans in the assault of Cornwallis - GW accepted quickly
Effects of the Louisiana Purchase
- Larger foreign threat to U.S. eliminated -Mississippi river and New Orleans outlet secured -Doubled size of U.S. - Removed most of the Old World power
New Amsterdam
- Later to be called New York City - No religious toleration, free speech, or democratic practices - Local body (which didn't have much power) developed
Benjamin Franklin's impact on *education*
- Launched University of Pennsylvania - First American college free from denominational control
Senator Charles Sumner
- Lead abolitionist, speech of "The Crime Against KS" - Condemned pro-slavery men - Referred insultingly to SC and Andrew Butler
Results of the Kansas-Nebraska Act
- Led to War virtually directly - Antislavery northerners upset → would make more difficult to compromise with the South → conflict - Made Fugitive Slave Law invalid
Marias River
- Lewis and three other men went to explore - Attacked by teen Blackfoot Indians and horses got stolen - Shot them and left the peace necklace on their neck
Democrats (beliefs)
- Liberty of the individual and against privilege into government - States' rights and federal restraint in social and economic affairs
Sons and Daughters of Liberty
- Liberty, property, and no stamps - Enforced nonimportation agreements against violators - Tar and feathered "offenders" - Ransacked houses of unpopular officials, confiscated their money, and hanged "models" of stamp agents on liberty poles
Townshend Acts
- Light import on duty on glass, white lead, paper print, and tea - Indirect customs duty payable at American ports
Louisiana Purchase
- Livingston paid $15 million for all of Louisiana - Jefferson submitted treaties to Senate and admitted it was unconstitutional - 828,000 sq mi for 3¢ an acre
Issues with the Tallmadge Amendment
- MO first state carved from LA purchase - emancipation might damage future vicinity - If Congress would abolish peculiar institution, would they do the same in other states? - North began to be abolitionist
Results of John Marshall
- Made Union unified and enforced - Helped made a stable, nationally uniformed environment for business - Checked excesses of popularly elected state legislatures -Cases helped promote growth of economy and national power - Shaped Constitution to conservative and centralized lines
North African Barbary States
- Made industry of blackmailing and plundering ships that came into the Meditteranean - Federalists earlier forced to pay for protection
Charles Willson Peale
- Made portraits of George Washington - Ran a museum, stuffed birds, and practiced dentistry
Ben Franklin's role in the Albany Congress
- Made propaganda that said "Join, or die." - Albany delegates accepted it - Individual colonies spurned it because of the "lack of independence." - London regime thought there was too much independence
Marquis de Lafayette
- Major general at age 19 - Secured further aid from France
Battle of Fort Henry and Fort Donelson
(February 1862) Key victory for Union General Ulysses S. Grant, it secured the North's hold on Kentucky and paved the way for Grant's attacks deeper into Tennessee.
Effects of Harpers Ferry
- Many Southerners wanted to leave the Union - abolitionists = murderers - Moderate Northerners deplored it - Abolitionists and free-soilers were infuriated
Lord De La Warr
- Military regime, military actions against Natives - Raided villages, burned houses, confiscated provisions, torched cornfields
Whigs (beliefs in comparison to the Democrats)
- Natural harmony of society and value of community - Govt leaders with self-interest caused conflict of people or sections/classes - Renewed national bank, protective tariff, internal improvements, public schools, and moral reforms
"War" between France and America
- Navy Department made - Three-ship Navy expanded - Marine Corps reestablished - 10,000 men army
Results of the Impending Crisis of the South
- Negligible among poor whites but made planter elites fear nonslaveholding majority abandon them - Banned in the South - Republican distributed it in the North - made the South bitter
Results of the Divorce Bill
- Never highly popular - Democrats supported it slightly - Whigs wanted the BUS
Reasons that republicanism would work (examples of events)
- New England town halls and annual elections - Committees of Correspondence - No hereditary aristocracies and farm equality
Whig party in 1848
- Nominated General Zachary Taylor, not Clay because enemies and issues with him - Avoided troubling issues, focused on the good
Massachusetts in the ratification of the Constitution
- Originally majority antifederalist - Feds assured Bill of Rights to Constitution - Ratification - 187 to 168
Cuba
- Owned by Spain, held large population and could restore political balance in Senate - Two attempts of Southerners to take Cuba but failed
Laws Jefferson undid by Federalists
- Pardoned martyrs under Sedition Act - Remitted fines - Convinced Congress to repeal excise tax
Tripolitan War
- Pasha of Tripoli dissatisfied with share of money - Informally declared war on the US - Jefferson got a treaty after four years with a ransom of $60,000 for Americans
Causes of the panic of 1837
- People in the West doing land-office business on borrowed money from wildcat banks - Bank War and Specie Circular - Grain prices high because of the Hessians - Two main British banks needed foreign loans
Second Continental Congress
- Philadelphia - May 10, 1775 - All 13 colonies - Conservative even despite shooting in MA - Not independence - continue fighting for hope of King and Parliament redressing issues - Congress drafted documents spurned by British and King - Raised money to make an army and navy
Things that prevented the tea from coming to America
- Philadelphia and New York - Told to go back - Annapolis - Marylanders burned cargo and vessel - Charleston, SC officials took it as a payment
Democratic party in 1848
- Polk pledged himself to one term - Democrat convention went to General Lewis Cass - Silent on slavery
Characteristics of America at the time (late 1780s to 1790s)
- Population doubling every 25 years - Still 90% rural - 5% lived West of Mountains - KY, TN, and OH resistive and not loyal because the Spanish and British agents offered them independence
Republic
- Power flowed from people themselves, not a corrupt monarch - All good officials should derive authority from public consent - Derived from Greece and Rome - Appealed to British politicians critical of excess power in hands of King - Interested colonists
New Light centers
- Princeton - Brown - Rutgers - Dartmouth
Types of governments
- Proprietors - MD, PN, and DE - 8 were royal - Self-governing - CT and RI
Results of any tariff in the US
- Protected American industry - Drove up prices - Caused some to be content and some to be upset
Division of the tariff of 1828 and 1832 in the US
- Protected northern industry from European manufactured goods - Southerners saw it as discrimination and didn't have protection for agriculture and exporting goods
Sugar Act and Stamp Act effect on courts:
- Provided for trying offenders in admiralty court (no juries) - Guilty until proven innocent
Bureau of Indian Affairs
- Relation of whites and Indians - Govt guaranteed permanent riddance of whites there - lasted 15 years
How Douglas provoked issues in the US
- Repeal of the MO Comp made the North feel breached of faith - Predicted a conflict but underestimated the scale
Freeport Doctrine
- Reply of Douglas to the Freeport question - No matter how the SC ruled, slavery would stay down if the people voted it down - Laws to protect slavery would have to be passed by territorial legislatures
Sugar cane impacts in the Caribbean
- Required expensive process, so only rich could do it - More labor - More land clearing - Imported 250,000 African slaves from 1640-1690
Goals of Jefferson's presidency
- Restore Republican government - Check growth of Federal government's power - Stop decay of virtue under the Federalists
Tariff law
- Revenues would pay for debt, and profits depended on foreign trade - 8% of value of imports - Also designed to put protection around smaller industries (not in Hamilton's original plan — he wanted it to be for larger manufacturers)
Economic and social atmosphere at the time
- Rich profiteers present more so than before - The previously rich were left destitute - General disrespect for the majesty of the law
Development of transportation
- Rivers most popular - Taverns sprung up along main courses of travel into cities - Postal system established by mid 1700s
Gadsden Purchase
- SW part of the US from MX for $10 million - Opposed by the North, passed Senate to eliminate window on the Sea of Cortez - Pushed by John C. Calhoun for transcontinental RR construction in S
John Smith
- Saved colony by setting up strict policy of "He who shall not work shall not eat" - Kidnapped by Powhatan as a symbol of their power - Reason? Pocahontas "saved" Smith by interposing her head between his and the war clubs of his captors
Results of Thomas Macdonough
- Saved upper NY from conquering and New England from disaffection - Saved the Union from dissolution - Affected the Anglo-American peace treaty in Europe
Impacts of Puritans in America
- Scattered across the whole US - Town democracy - High idealism in national character
Results of nationalism
- School textbooks were written by Americans for Americans - Revived bank in 1816 - Washington reemerged - Army expanded to 10k - Defeated Barbary States in 1815 - North American Review
Jeremiad
- Scolded parishioners for their declining and weaker faith - Decline in conversions
Federalists in New England regarding the war
- Sympathized with Britain and disliked Napoleon - Disliked Canadian acquisition - more voting for Republicans
Life in the New England Towns
- Tight-knit communities - Puritans close together - New towns legally chartered by colonial authorities
Ticonderoga and Crown Point
- Upper New York - Tiny American force under Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold captured soldiers - Large Gunpowder store and numerous "heavy" artillery pieces secured
Why did Americans expand socially and geographically?
- Way of life since colonial times - European immigrants came after the war for cheap land - Tobacco ruined soil
Three reasons for decline of Spain as a world power
-*Defeat of Armada* — (Protestant wind) -*Holland declares independence* - Spanish Netherlands Rebels -Economy compromised by gold/silver and constant wars
Iroquois
-*Iroquois Confederacy* - Created the political and organizational skills to sustain a robust military alliance
encomienda system
-Initially promised conversion of Natives to Christianity in exchange for "slavery." -Killed many that Africans had to be brought in (Columbian exchange)
Christopher Columbus
-Italian seafarer who received funding from Spanish monarchy and set out to find a cheaper route to Asia. -Accidentally stumbled upon the Bahamas -Brought animals to the New World -brought seedlings of sugarcane
England
-John Cabot to explore NE coast Roanoke Lost Colony -Joint-stock companies -Colonists landed in the Chesapeake Bay, so settled Jamestown x
James K. Polk
-the Democrats' "Young Hickory" who defeated Henry Clay in the first presidential election to feature a "dark horse" candidate; came up with the four-point plan; provoked the Mexican-American war -Southern expansionist
Gold Standard Act
1900; An act that guaranteed that paper currency would be redeemed freely in gold, putting an end to the already dying "free-silver" campaign.
Berlin Decree
1806 Napoleon ordered seizure of all ships that entered British port
Rush-Bagot Agreement
1817 Limited naval armament on the Great Lakes
Invasion of Florida by Jackson
1818 - Seized St. Marks and Pensacola - Monroe alarmed, consulted cabinet — all but JQA resented it - he demanded more
Siege of Vicksburg
1863 Union army's blockade of Vicksburg, Mississippi, that led the city to surrender during the Civil War
Woman's Loyal League
1863-1865; Woman's organization formed to help bring about an end to the Civil War and encourage Congress to pass a constitutional amendment prohibiting slavery.
Henry Ford
1863-1947. American businessman, founder of Ford Motor Company, father of modern assembly lines, and inventor credited with 161 patents.
Dominion of Canada
1867 unified Canadian government created by Britain to bolster Canadians against potential attacks from the US
Hayes
1877-1881 19th U.S. President, Republican, his presidency saw the end of Reconstruction
Chinese Exclusion Act
1882 law that barred Chinese laborers from immigrating and entering the United States, continued until 1943.
Pendleton Act
1883 began a transfer of federal jobs from the patronage (spoils system) to the merit system based on passing a test and merit.
Ratio of men to women in 1650
6:1
When was the Articles of Confederation ratified (before what event)?
8 months before the victory at Yorktown... coincidence?
Gettysburg Address
A 3-minute address by Abraham Lincoln during the American Civil War (November 19, 1963) at the dedication of a national cemetery on the site of the Battle of Gettysburg
The Federalist
A book with Adams, Madison, and Jay's influential propaganda writings promoting the ratification of the Constitution
red scare
A period of intense anti-communism lasting from 1919 to 1920. The "Palmer raids" of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer resulted in about six thousand deportations of people suspected of "subversive" activities.
nativism
A policy of favoring native-born individuals over foreign-born ones
Francisco "Pancho" Villa
A popular leader during the Mexican Revolution. An outlaw in his youth, when the revolution started, he formed a cavalry army in the north of Mexico and fought for the rights of the landless in collaboration with Emiliano Zapata. (819)
recall
A progressive ballot procedure allowing voters to remove elected officials from office.
initiative
A progressive reform measure allowing voters to petition to gave a law placed on the general ballot. Like the referendum and recall, it brought democracy directly "to the people" and helped foster a shift toward interest group politics and away from old political "machines."
referendum
A progressive reform procedure allowing voters to place a bill on the ballot for final approval, even after being passed by the legislature.
John Muir
A rather eccentric man notable for his push for conservationism on a national level
regionalism
A recurring artistic movement that, in the context of the late nineteenth century, aspired to capture the peculiarities, or "local color," of America's various regions in the face of modernization and national militiamen.
social gospel
A reform movement led by Protestant ministers who used religious doctrine to demand better housing and living conditions for the urban poor. Popular at the turn of the twentieth century, it was closely linked to the settlement house movement, which brought middle-class, Anglo-American service volunteers into contact with immigrants and working people.
Wilderness Campaign
A series of brutal clashes between Ulysses S. Grant's and Robert E. Lee's armies in Virginia, leading up to Grant's capture of Richmond in April of 1865. Having lost Richmond, Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse.
industrial revolution
A series of improvements in industrial technology that transformed the process of manufacturing goods.
London Economic Conference
A sixty-nation economic conference organized to stabilize international currency rates. By Roosevelt revoking U.S. participation, there was a deeper world economic crisis.
Fordism
A system of assembly-line manufacturing and mass production named after Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Company and developer of the Model T car.
Scientific Management
A system of industrial management created and promoted in the early twentieth century by Frederick W. Taylor, emphasizing stopwatch efficiency to improve factory performance. The system gained immense popularity across the United States and Europe.
Teapot Dome Scandal
A tawdry affair involving the illegal lease of priceless naval oil reserves in Teapot Dome, Wyoming, and Elk Hills, California. The scandal, which implicated President Harding's secretary of the interior, was one of several that gave his administration a reputation for corruption
City Beautiful Movement
A turn-of-the-century movement among progressive architects and city planners, who aimed to promote order, harmony, and virtue while beautifying the nation's new urban spaces with grand boulevards, welcoming parks, and monumental public buildings.
Nat Turner
A visionary black preacher and leader of the 1831 rebellion named after him.
mining industry
After gold and silver strikes in Colorado, Nevada, and other western territories in the second half of the nineteenth century, fortune-seekers by the thousands rushed to the West to dig. These metals were essential to US industrial growth and were also sold into world markets. After surface metals were removed, people sought ways to extract ore from under the ground, leading to the development of heavy mining machinery. This, in turn, led to the consolidation of the mining industry, because only big companies could afford to buy and build the necessary machines.
Kentucky bluegrass
After the land in the tobacco region was exhausted, it was discovered that ______ was perfect in the burned cane field, which helped to feed livestock.
leading industry in Workaday America
Agriculture with 90% of people working in that industry
20,000 _________ went to _________ to besiege the outnumbered british under General Gage
American Minute Men - Boston
Colonial assumptions about Canada
American leaders believed that Canadians were reluctant to British, so it would add a 14th colony and deprive Britain of a valuable base for striking of the colonies
MacArthur
American military commander in Korea fired by President Harry Truman
George F. Kennan
An American advisor, diplomat, political scientist, and historian, best known as the "father of containment" and as a key figure in the emergence of the Cold War
Quarantine Speech
An important speech delivered by Franklin Roosevelt in which he called for "positive endeavors" to "quarantine" land-hungry dictators, presumably through economic embargos. The speech flew in the face of isolationist politicians.
naturalism
An offshoot of mainstream realism, this late-nineteenth-century literary movement purported to apply detached scientific objectivity to the study of human characters shaped by degenerate heredity and extreme or sordid social environments.
National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA)
An organization founded in 1890 to demand the vote for women. It argued that women should be allowed to vote because their responsibilities in the home and family made them indispensable in the public decision-making process. During World War I, it supported the war effort and lauded women's role in the Allied victory, which helped to finally achieve nationwide woman suffrage in the Nineteenth Amendment of 1920.
oregon fever
5, 000 american pioneers made Oregon a territorial issue for the election of 1844 with GB
Lower social group than landless whites
Indentured servants still serving, whose numbers diminished as African slaves replaced them
In contrast to the Chesapeake Bay colonists in the South, those in New England
enjoyed longer lives and more stable families
The new Constitution provided for an __________ branch and Judiciary
executive
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin
Chinese Nationalists
Jiang Jieshi's pro-American forces which lost the Chinese civil war to Mao Zedong's communists in 1949
Sitting Bull
Leader of the Sioux during war of 1876-1877
Kaiser
Leading American industrialist and shipbuilder during WWII
Reinhold Niebuhr
Leading American theologian who advocated Christian realism and the use of force if necessary to maintain justice against Nazi or Stalinist evil
Bryan
Leading Democratic politician whose intervention narrowly tipped the Senate vote in favor of acquiring the Philippines in 1899
Great Rapprochement
After decades of occasionally "twisting the lion's tail," American diplomats began to cultivate close, cordial relations with Great Britain at the end of the nineteenth century - a relationship that would intensify further during World War I.
General Incorporation Law
Allows corporations to be formed without a charter from the legislature
Theodore Dwight Weld
Also inspired during the Second Great Awakening, this religious American Abolitionist wrote propaganda and spoke to help further the cause in America.
Immigration Act of 1924
Also known as the "National Origins Act," this law established quotas for immigration to the United States. Immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe were sharply curtailed, while immigrants from Asia were shut out altogether.
Salmon Chase
Ambitious secretary of the treasury who wanted to replace Lincoln as president in 1864
Sedition Act
Anyone who hindered policies of government or defamed its officials would be liable to a heavy penalty and imprisonment
The geologically oldest mountains in North America are the
Appalachians
The event that precipitated the first real shooting between the British army and American colonists was the
British attempt to seize colonial supplies and leaders at Lexington and Concord.
Most important action of Second Continental Congress
Select GW to head the hastily improved army besieging Boston
James Gadsden
Sent by Jefferson Davis to negotiate with Santa Anna for the territory (Anna lacked $$)
Caleb Cushing
Sent by John Tyler to get equal ports in China
Battles after Yorktown
Continued because George III had 54,000 troops in North America
Champagne Charley Townshend
Control of British ministry and passed Townshend Acts
Isaac Brock
Defense leader of the British capturing of Fort Michilimackinac
South Advantages
Defensive war = self determination/motivated More talented officers (more experienced with guns and horses) "Bred" to fight Lacked an economy and suffiecnt transportation
Results of Buchanan
Divided the Democratic party (the only national one left) and antagonized Douglas Democrats in the North
California on slavery
Drafted a constitution in 1849 that excluded slavery, applied to Congress → Alarmed Southerners wanting to block free soil
Effects of the Corps of Discovery
Greater scientific knowledge, maps, Indians in the region, wilderness adventure stories, and allowed other explorers venture like Zebulon M. Pike *Original purpose: find a path to the Pacific (MS River to the West)*
Garfield
20th President Republican was assassinated in office.
National debt at the time
$75 million
Positives and negatives of trading
(+) Could trade freely with other countries (+) More items to be traded (-) Couldn't trade with Britain or British West Indies (-) Commercial outlets may have local restrictions
Positives and negatives of privateers
(-) Diverted workforce from war to ventures (+) Brought in gold (+) Harassed enemy (+) Raised morale by providing victory in times of minimal victory
William H. Taft
27th President of the United States; angered Progressives by moving cautiously toward reforms and by supporting the Payne-Aldrich Tariff; lost Roosevelt's support and was defeated for a second term
Goliad
Texas outpost where American volunteers, having laid down their arms and surrendered, were massacred by Mexican forces in 1836. The incident, along with the slaughter at the Alamo, fueled American support for Texan independence.
Hiram Revels
Black Mississippi Senator elected to the seat that had been occupied by Jefferson Davis when the South seceded
Fetterman
Captain whos troops were brutally massacred by the Sioux who wanted the stop of the Bozeman Trail construction
Leisler's Rebellion
Caused by animosity between landholders and merchants
Henry Cabot Lodge
Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he was a leader in the fight against participation in the League of Nations
Corrupt bargain
Clay and JQA had the same values, but Jacksonians believed Adams had bribed Clay with the position to be the "unpopular president" (the vote had gone to the House)
Whigs' plan to fix the panic of 1837
Expansion of bank credit, higher tariffs, and subsidies for internal improvements
Funding at par
Federal government would pay off its debts at face value plus accumulated interest (would sell bonds from federal to state to ensure credibility)
Comstock Law
Federal law promoted by a self-appointed morality crusader and used to prosecute moral and sexual dissidents
Montreal
Fell in 1760 and became controlled by British
FFVs
First Families of Virginia
William H. Crawford's campaign
Had a paralytic stroke, so he was out of the picture
Henry Demarest Lloyd
Journalist who was notable for, pre-1900, attacking the Standard Oil Company with his book "Wealth Against Commonwealth"
Olive Branch Petition
July 1775 - Adopted by the Continental Congress - Professed American loyalty to the crown and begged the king to prevent further hostilities - Not accepted by all colonies
Non-Intercourse Act
March 1, 1809, expired 1810 Formally reopened trade with the rest of the world other than Britain and France
Boston Massacre
March 5th, 1770 - 60 townspeople threw snowballs at 10 redcoats - Troops opened fire on them - wounded and killed 11 - Crispus Attucks died - one leader of the mob - 2 redcoats found guilty of manslaughter and others branded on the hand - John Adams served as a defense attorney for soldiers later on
Plantation colonies (list?)
Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia
Top of social group (characteristics)
Plantation owners - monopolized political power - Fitzhughs, Lees, and Washingtons were major names in the social class - Possessed Virginia real estate - Dominated House of Burgesses - Before Revolutionary War, 70% of leaders of VA legislature came from families in VA before the 1690s (FFVs) - Usually labored over plantation issues and worked extremely hard
Emancipation Proclamation (1863)
Proclamation issued by Lincoln, freeing all slaves in areas still at war with the Union.
Reason for morale in the Revolution being low
Profiteers put profit before patriotism
Southwest Natives
Pueblos/Anasazi -Made towns of adobe, stone, and other materials with numerous rooms -Matrilineal -Used irrigation to water crops -Rio Grande Valley -Battle of Acoma - Spanish encountered Natives, dismembered -Popé's rebellion - killed priests, settlers, and churches -*three sister farming*
Union League
Reconstruction-era African American organization that worked to educate Southern blacks about civic life, built black schools and churches, and represented African American interests before government and employers. It also campaigned on behalf of Republican candidates and recruited local militias to protect blacks from white intimidation.
Battle of the Thames
Redcoats withdrew from Detriot and Fort Malden by General Harrison
Benedict Arnold in the Hudson River
Retreated along St Lawrence River by Lake CHamplain
Spoils system
Rewarding political supporters with public office - Argued that it was unnecessary to have a class of aristocratic, bureaucratic people and to give everyone a chance
Belknap
SoW that got caught stealing from supplies meant for Indian Reserves
Allies of America
Spain, Holland, and France
Treaty of Portsmouth
TR negotiated a deal in which Japan got half of Sakhalin but no indemnity for its losses
Wilson-Gorman Tariff
Tariff passed by Cleveland which was humiliating; Democrats left McKinley tariff unchanged, 2% income tax allowed
Lawrence
Tension in land claims led to an attack by proslavery forces
Battle of the Bulge
The December 1944 German offensive (stopped by Patton) that marked Hitler's last chance to stop the Allied advance
Women's Rights Convention
The Seneca Falls Convention that was held in New York that advocated for women's rights. The Declaration of Sentiments was written here
Jackson's support came from... Adams' support came from...
The South and West From New England and the Northeast
SPARs (US Coast Guard Women's Reserve)
The women's branch of the US Coast Guard established during WWII to employ women in noncombatant jobs.
Incas
Were crushed by Pizarro to add riches to his boat
The British political party that was generally more sympathetic to the American cause was the
Whig party
Two political parties
Whigs and Democrats
The inaugural brawl
White house thrown open to the public and people came in and destroyed everything - Jackson rushed out, and they got everyone to leave by having spiked punch on the front lawn
closed shop
a union-organized that refers to the practice of allowing only unionized employees to work for a particular company. The AFL became known for doing this with employers, in which the employer would agree not to hire nonunion members
Susan B. Anthony
a militant lecturer for women's rights
Anti-feds criticized the Constitution because of the lack of...
guarantees of rights
tidewater
narrow eastern coastal plain region
Southern vs. New England property rights
— *South* - men died young in South, leaving wife as a widow. The wife was allowed to retain separate title to her property and got her husband's property rights to herself when he died — *New England* - Puritan lawmakers feared that recognizing separate property rights acknowledged conflicting interests - women gave up property rights when married
Results of the panic of 1837
- 100s of banks collapsed with millions of government money gone - Regular items' prices drooped - Sales of public land fell off - Customs revenues were small - Factories shut down and workers went to the streets
Calhoun's speech
- Approved of Clay's purpose but not enough safeguards for the South. - Leave slavery alone, return runaway slaves, give South its rights, and political balance - Attempted to preserve union and stand on Constitution but undid it
Congress' action on the Declaration of Independence
- Appointed a committee to prepare a more formal statement of separation - Drafting fell to Thomas Jefferson - Formally approved by Congress on July 4th, 1776
Canning (proposal)
- Approached American minister offering the US to ally with Britain in not being interested in Latin American land and to keep Europeans off of them - Minister gave it to his superiors in Washington
Carrie Chapman Catt
(1859-1947) A suffragette who was president of the National Women's Suffrage Association, and founder of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance. Instrumental in obtaining passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920.
Second Battle of Bull Run
(1862) a Civil War battle in which the Confederate army decisively defeated and forced most of the Union army out of Virginia, set the stage for Lee's first northern invasion, the Antietam campaign
National Labor Union
(1866-1872) This first organization in US history gained 600,000 members from many parts of the work force, although it limited the participation of Chinese, women, and blacks. The organization devoted much of its energy to fighting for an eight-hour workday before it dissolved in 1872
Haymarket Square
(1886) A May Day rally that turned violent when someone threw a bomb into the middle of the meeting, killing several dozen people. Eight anarchists were arrested for conspiracy contributing to the disorder, although evidence linking them to the bombing was thin. Four were executed, one committed suicide, and three were pardoned in 1893
Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railroad Company vs Illinios
(1886) A supreme court decision that prohibited states from regulating the railroads because the Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce. As a result, reformers turned their attention to the federal government, which now held sole power to regulate the railroad industry
Interstate Commerce Act
(1887) Congressional legislation that established the ICC, compelled railroads to publish standard rates, and prohibited rebates and pools. Railroads quickly became adept at using this to achieve their own ends, but it gave government an important means to regulate big business
Sherman Silver Purchase Act
(1890) Government bought silver and printed paper money for it and people could turn in the paper money for gold
Sherman Anti-trust Act
(1890) a law that forbade trusts or combinations in business, this was landmark legislation because it was one of the first congressional attempts to regulate big business for the public good. At first the law was mostly used to restrain trade unions, as the court tended to side with companies in legal cases. In 1914 this was revised so it could more effectively be used against monopolistic corporations
Caribbean
(Barbados and Jamaica) - Cash crop was sugar cane - Strict slave labor system from the start
Frances Perkins
(born Fanny Coralie Perkins, lived April 10, 1882 - May 14, 1965) was the U.S. Secretary of Labor from 1933 to 1945, and the first woman ever appointed to the cabinet. As a loyal supporter of her friend Franklin D. Roosevelt, she helped pull the labor movement into the New Deal coalition
Labor relations and the transition to slavery
- Early period, primary source was indentured servants - 1st Africans arrived in colony in 1619
Emergence of political parties
- Economic plan restored credibility but infringed upon states' rights - Madison and Jefferson made an opposition group to Hamiltonians - Originally supposed to be confined to Congress
Philadelphia Congress (2nd Continental Congress)
- Edged toward independence - Richard Henry Lee of Virginia on June 7, 1776: "These United colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states" - Motion adopted on July 2nd, 1776 after debate
Radical Whigs
- Feared the threat to liberty posed by the arbitrary power of the monarch and his ministers about elected representatives in Parliament - Mounted attacks on use of patronage and bribes by the King's minister
Southern Victories
- February 1776 - Against 1,500 Loyalists at Moore's Creek Bridge in NC - June 1776 - Against British fleet coming to Boston Harbor
New England families - factors that contributed to better conditions
- Clean water and cooler temperatures (less disease) - Immigrants added 10 years when settling in New England - 70-year life expectancy for Puritan colonists - People reproduced - Migrated as families - *TIGHTLY-KNIT FAMILIES*
Slave life in the *Deep South*
- Climate was hostile to health - Labor was life-draining - South Carolina rice and indigo plantations - male Africans worked then died - Only new slaves could sustain population
Spanish in America
- Closed Mississippi River in 1784 to Americans - Got land given to US - Schemed with the Natives
Samuel Swartwout
- Collector of customs at port in NY - 9 years later, stole $1 million from Washington
Difference between legislation and taxation in colonies
- Colonists gave right to Parliament to legislate on matters that affected the entire empire - Denied right to Parliament to tax them — only elected colonial legislatures could
Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa
- Concluded it was time to end the conflict - Gathered tribes for a confederacy - Tecumseh said to never cede land to whites unless all Indians agreed
Negatives of mercantilist system in America
- Constrained economic initiative and imposed dependency on British agents and creditors - Felt they could never come out of economic opportunity
Battle of Quebec
- Chose James Wolfe to lead - Sent troops to a poorly-guarded area of the rocky eminence guarding Quebec - Vanguard scaled cliff and made way for the rest - Two armies met each other in the morning on the Plains of Abraham - British had Wolfe, and French had Marquis de Montcalm - Both commanders fell fatally wounded, but the French surrendered
Republican convention of 1856
- Chose John C. Fremont (no enemies) - Against slavery
Some issues with the colonies at the time
- Churches not heated - No running water or plumbing - No bathtub - Hogs and buzzards roamed streets
Bleeding Kansas
- Civil War in Kansas, merged with the Civil War - Destroyed property, agriculture in some area, and lives
Results of the Bank War
- Claimed for president to have equal power to 2/3 of Congressional vote - Clay had thousands of copies distributed as a campaign document - Commoners saw reasoning, but easterners didn't
France's reasons for being a latecomer to colonization
- Clashes between Catholics and Huguenots - Edict of Nantes and Louis XIV came to power
Abolitionist movements
- Continental Congress abolished it with a positive response - No states south of Pennsylvania abolished slavery - discrimination continued - Any major abolitionist movement would have disrupted unity that was already fragile
Thomas Jefferson
- Drafted first Declaration of Independence but had to withdraw because of torrent of protest from Southern slave masters - showed cruel complexity of slavery
Benjamin Franklin in Paris to discuss the treaty
- Dressed plainly - Walking stick instead of a sword - Parisians adored him as a new type of social order - Kissed Voltaire in a theatre in Paris - everybody applauded
Aaron Burr
- Dropped from Cabinet second term - Joined group of Federalists to secede New England and NY - Hamilton exposed them - Burr challenged Hamilton to a duel and shot him
Issues in America about the French Revolution
- Federalist aristocrats feared Jeffersonian masses - "Lukewarm" Federalists approval of the revolution changed to disapproval - Jeffersonians disregarded bloodshed - thought a few thousand deaths were necessary for freedom
Alien Laws
- Federalists raised citizen requirement to be from 5 years to 14 years - President could deport foreigners in times of peace and deport/imprison them in times of hostility
Issues with Southern cities
- Few cities, so water provided most transportation - Economy revolved around plantations - Professional class was slow to emerge - Family burial plots in the South occurred because the roads were bad for funeral parties
Defeat of General Braddock
- Few miles from Fort Duquesne - encountered small French and Indian army - Didn't expect it and was defeated - George Washington was there - two horses under him shot and took four bullets to the coat
Virginia in the ratification of the Constitution
- Fierce antifederalist opposition - Strong leaders influenced them - New Hampshire was about to ratify, so the Union would be made anyway - couldn't continue as independent - 89-79 ratification
Treaty of Wanghia
- First diplomatic agreement between the US and China - US became the "most favored nation" and "extraterritoriality" - Missionaries came to save the people
Articles of Confederation
- First governing document of the US - Lacked strong central government - Needed 13 states to ratify - Translated into French to show they had a government
Panic of 1819
- First national panic since George Washington - Overspeculation in frontier lands → Western branch bank involved in risky decisions
Andrew Jackson (facts)
- First president from the West - First nominated at a formal party convention (1832) - 2nd president other than Washington without a college education - Owned many slaves, cultivated, and lived in the Hermitage
Congregational Church
- Grown from Puritan church - Formally established in all New England colonies except RI - MA originally taxed all residents to support church
How did animals have an impact on the environment?
- Had a large appetite - Stomped on earth, which led to flooding - Changed local climates
Positives of the South in 1850
- Had a southern president, Taylor - Majority in cabinet and the SC - Equality in Senate (thus far) - Cotton fields expanding and became more profitable
Andrew Jackson's first campaign in 1824
- Had a strong personal appeal especially in the West - Didn't get majority electoral vote
Benjamin West and John Singleton Copley
- Had to go to England to succeed and complete their training - *Two separate people*
States that *didn't* have land West of mountains - characteristics
- Had to tax more heavily - Took longer to pay off tax - Main reason states refused to sign the AOC
Why did Napoleon sell Louisiana?
- Haitian Revolution - End of the 20-month conflict with Britain - feared he might have to gift it to Britain
Explain the idea of the Bank of the United States
- Hamilton took the model of the English bank - Private institution with government being the primary stockholder - Federal Treasury would keep its money - Federal funds would stimulate business by remaining in circulation - Could print money when needed
London Governmental administration in the colonies
- Handling of salary by colonial assembly led to prolonged conflicting - Townshend Acts of 1767 did nothing because of the already bad attitude
Fugitive Slave Law of 1850
- Increase in sectional tension - Turned North into hunting ground for fugitive slaves - Northerners who assisted runaways could be arrested - Slaves could not testify in court, denied a jury trial
Impacts of the Great Awakening
- Increased church competition - Encouraged missionary work - Led to founding of New Light centers - First spontaneous movement of American people - Broke down sectional boundaries
Reasons for transition to African slavery
- Indentured servants are seen as unreliable labor source - Rising wages in England led to deficit of indentured servants
Issues with recruiting Native workers for beaver hunting
- Indians killed by diseases - Alcohol - Killing beavers violated Natives' religious beliefs - Contact with natives wreaked tradition
Result of the defeat of General Braddock and his army
- Indians were inflamed by victory - Went to go destroy colonists from PN to NC - Scalping Indians was common; $50 for women and $130 for warrior - George Washington attempted to defend with his 300 men army
Types of people in the Free Soil Party
- Industrialists against Polk's tariff - Democrats against Polk (all of TX but not OR) - Northerners against blacks and sharing land with them - Conscience Whigs - condemned slavery on moral grounds
Worries in the South (1850)
- Initially, 15 free and 15 slaves, now with CA meant more free states - Texas had disputed area - Northern advocation for abolishment in DC - Underground Railroad
Tariff of 1816
- Instituted for protection, *not* revenue - 20 to 25% of dutiable imports - Made because the British competitors came to America
Whigs (characteristics)
- Internal improvements - Welcomed market economy - Absorbed most of Anti-Masonic Party - Portrayed Jackson and Van Buren as aristocrats
John Rolfe
- Introduces tobacco - Perfected methods of raising and curing it - Married Pocahontas - died because of the massacre
British weaknesses over Americans
- Ireland was an issue - France wanting to stab Britain in the back - London government was inept - No William Pitt — just George III and Lord North
Jackson and Adams' second campaign in 1828
- Jackson began under JQA's presidency - Adams supporters personally attacked Jackson's mother and wife - Jackson's supporters criticized Adams for having gambling furniture, taking money unjustly, etc. - Two parties: National Republicans with Adams and Democratic-Republicans with Jackson
The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
- Made in opposition to the Alien and Sedition Acts - 13 states were individual judges of whether or not authority was abused - Tried to preserve union - Crystalize opposition to Federalists
Results of the Sumner-Brooks issue
- Made more Republican votes - South angered because Sumner was applauded in the North - Showed increased divide about the issue
Results of the Freeport question/doctrine
- Made popular sovereignty decide senators - Abe won a moral victory and fame - Made Southern Democrats be against him
Explain why the Revolution was a minority movement
- Many colonists were apathetic/neutral (like Byrds) - Opposing forces contended against each other - Depended on the allegiance and support of civilian population - Loyalists were inept but Patriot militia was successful - British could only control where they had a large military presence
Similarities between Democrats and Republicans
- Mass-based and appealed to majority - Wanted loyalty of all kinds of people
Results of Shays' Rebellion
- Massachusetts passed debtor relief laws - Caused fear among elites - Created a mobocracy - civic virtue became insignificant *-Showed that America needed a strong central government that was not provided by the AOC*
Samuel Adams
- Master propagandist and engineer of rebellion - Had a deep faith in the common people - Organized local *Committees of Correspondence* in MA - Made first one in Boston and 80 towns followed
Issues with indentured servants that impacted themselves
- Masters became more strict as their term came to an end - Often had to go back to the previous master and work on low wages - Became an unreliable source
Results of the Panic of 1857
- North hit hard (grain) - South was great (cotton) - Made people demand homesteads - opposed by eastern industrialists - South said 160 acres wasn't enough for slavery - Tip political balance (free-soilers coming)
Southern Democrats Baltimore convention 1860
- North mostly unrepresented - Elected someone else, favored extension of slavery - Nominated John Breckenridge
People in Kansas
- Norther pioneers looking for land - Small amount was financed northern abolitionists as free-soilers
Republican platform appeals
- Northern manufacturers - protective tariff - Free-soilers - nonextension of slavery - Immigrants - no abridgment of rights - NW - Pacific railroad - West - Internal improvements at federal expense - Farmers - homesteads
Results of Dred Scott v. Sanford
- Northerners upset - called the decision an opinion, not a decision. Essentially allowed slavery in the Western territories - Northerners' reaction upset the South
Issues with the American army
- Not trained, disciplined, and very scattered - Generals lacked vigor and vision - many Revolutionary leaders were now leaders
Nullification Crisis
- Nullies tried to get 2/3 vote for SC nullification - Unionists blocked them - Inspired by Calhoun - Tariff of 1832 passed
South Carolina Legislatures
- Sensed dangers of resentful slaves - Tried to halt importation of slaves into colonies - Britain vetoed all attempts
General Braddock
- Sent to Virginia with British regulars - Got supplies from reluctant colonies and went with 2,000 men to capture Fort Duquesne - Encountered small French and Indian army and was defeated - Was impressed by the "behind-the-tree" warfare method
Stamp Act of 1765
- Supposed to raise revenues to support new military force - Required use of stamped paper to certify payments of tax - On 50 items and commercial/legal items - Caused by *George Grenville* But the British paid higher taxes than these
Slave life in the *Chesapeake Region*
- Tobacco was less demanding - Size and proximity allowed more contact with friends and relatives - 1720 - female population in Chesapeake bay rose to make family life possible - Procreation of fertility and new imports for population
Transportation issues in the Americas
- Too long from the isthmus of Panama - Camels proposed, brought in, didn't work out - *South wanted a railroad to gain economic momentum*
Results of Model Treaty on America
- Too self-denying restrictions - Led to idealism into American attitudes towards international affairs
Little Turtle
- War Chief of Miamis - Defeated armies led by Josiah Harmar and Arthur St. Clair - Gave notice to the Miami Confederacy that there were divided borders
Quebec Act
- Taken in America as British reaction in Boston - Guaranteed French Catholic religion - Permitted to retain many of their old customs and institutions - No representative assembly or jury - Boundaries extended all the way to the Ohio River Valley
Results in France — the quarrel between America and France
- Talleyrand realized another war would add another enemy - New American minister sent should be treated with respect
Ways to get rich fast
- commercial ventures - land speculation
Spain
-Slavery -King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella Castille and Aragon united (Reconquista Inquisition) -Encomienda system -Pizarro crushed Incas for gold -Cortés crushed Aztecs -Bartolome de las Casas to put an end to torture -Treaty of Tordesillas
France
-Sent out Giovanni da Verranzo to look at Eastern Seaboard -Jacques Cartier explores St. Lawrence -Robert de la Salle to go down Mississippi river
"10 percent" Reconstruction plan
1863; Introduced by President Lincoln, it proposed that a state be readmitted to the Union once 10 percent of its voters had pledged loyalty to the United States and promised to honor emancipation.
Black Codes
1865-1866; Laws passed throughout the South to restrict the rights of emancipated blacks, particularly with respect to the negotiating labor contracts. Increased Northerners' criticisms of President Andrew Johnson's lenient Reconstruction policies.
Freedmen's Bureau
1865-1872; Created to aid newly emancipated slaves by providing food, clothing, medical care, education, and legal support. Its achievements were uneven and depended largely on the quality of local administrators.
Ex parte Milligan
1866; Civil War-era case in which the Supreme Court ruled that military tribunals could not be used to try civilians if civil courts were open.
Reconstruction Act
1867; Passed by the newly elected Republican Congress, it divided the South into five military districts, disenfranchised former Confederates, and required that Southern states both ratify the Fourteenth Amendment and write state constitutions guaranteeing freedmen the franchise before gaining readmission to the Union.
Tenure of Office Act
1867; Required the president to seek approval from the Senate before removing appointees. When Andrew Johnson removed his secretary of war in violation of the act, he was impeached by the House but remained in office when the Senate fell one vote short of removing him.
Force Acts
1870-1871; Passed by Congress following a wave of Ku Klux Klan violence, the acts banned clan membership, prohibited the use of intimidation to prevent blacks from voting, and gave the US military the authority to enforce the acts.
Harlem Renaissance
A creative outpouring among African American writers, jazz musicians, and social thinkers, centered around Harlem in the 1920s, that celebrated black culture and advocated for a "New Negro" in American social, political, and intellectual life.
Good Neighbor policy
A departure from the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, the Good Neighbor Policy stressed nonintervention in Latin America. It was begun by Herbert Hoover but associated with Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Jacob A. Riis
A muckraker; famous for using photography to document the incredibly poor conditions of many impoverished communities in the early 20th century' wrote "How the Other Half Lives"
Tuskegee Institute
A normal and industrial school led by Booker T. Washington in Tuskegee, Alabama. It focused on training young black students in agriculture and the trades to help them achieve economic independence. Washington justified segregated, vocational training as a necessary first step on the road to racial equality, although critics accused him of being too "accommodationist."
Gifford Pinchot
A notable conservationist who headed the federal Division of Forestry
transportation revolution
A period of rapid growth in the speed and convenience of travel because of new methods of transportation.
fourth party system
A term scholars have used to describe national politics from 1896 to 1932, when Republicans had a tight grip on the White House and issues such as industrial regulation and labor concerns became paramount, replacing older concerns such as civil-service reform and monetary policy.
Alfred Thayer Mahan
American naval officer who wrote influential books emphasizing sea power and advocating a big navy
Penal
Bring debtors to the New World and start over
Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson
Confederate general; he commanded troops at both battles of Bull Run and was mortally wounded by his own soldiers at Chancellorsville in 1863.
Sally Tompkins
Confederate nurse who ran a hospital in Richmond, Virginia during the Civil War
The Elastic Clause
Congress shall have the power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers
Army-McCarthy hearings
Congressional hearings called by Senator Joseph McCarthy to accuse members of the army of communist ties. In this widely televised spectacle, McCarthy finally went too far for public approval. The hearings exposed the Senator's extremism and led to his eventual disgrace.
Cordell Hull
Congressman from Tennessee, he became the Secretary of State under FDR and served in that position longer than anyone in American history. He is often called the "Father of the United Nations." He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1945.
Tweed Ring
Corrupt political organization that controlled New York City government milked New York City for over $200 million dollars.
Canadian patriotism and nationalism
Created by defending against American invasion
American Colonization Society
Created in 1817, This abolitionist organization supported colonization of slaves to Africa. This was an accurate representation of the early abolitionist efforts. It founded Liberia in 1822.
Stephen Douglas
Creator of the KS-NE Act, made as a response to the Gadsden Purchase (also invested in real estate and railway stocks and didn't want to lose money)
Anthracite Coal Strike
Dangerous labor conflict resolved by Rooseveltian negotiation and threats against business people
Seventh of March speech
Daniel Webster - Urged all reasonable concessions to the South, including a new FSL - God "passed" the Wilmot Proviso - why debate over it? - Poor geography didn't allow for a plantation economy to exist (he was wrong on this) - Only compromise, concessions, and reasonableness would provide solutions
Treaty of Ghent
December 24, 1815 Agreed to stop fighting and restore conquered territory
Battle of Trenton
December 26, 1776 - GW recrossed Delaware River - Surprise captured 1,000 Hessians sleeping after Christmas celebrations - Washington at his peak because of this battle
Specie Circular
Decree that required all public lands to be purchased with gold or silver
DeWitt Clinton
Governor of New York who started the Erie Canal project. His leadership helped complete the canal, which boosted the economy greatly by cutting time traveled from west New York to the Hudson.
Edict of Nantes
Granted limited toleration to French Protestants
Reform Bill of 1867
Granted suffrage to all male British citizens, dramatically expanding the electorate. The success of the American democratic experiment, reinforced by the Union victory in the Civil War, was used as one of the arguments in favor of the Bill.
Allies
Great Britain, Russia, and France, later joined by Italy, Japan, and the United States, formed this alliance against the Central Powers in World War I.
Hoovervilles
Grim shantytowns where impoverished victims of the Great Depression slept under newspapers and in makeshift tents. Their visibility (and sarcastic name) tarnished the reputation of the Hoover administration.
Cause of the beginning of the French and Indian War
Group of British colonial speculators secured "rights" to 500,000 acres in Ohio River valley
Cause of the beginning of the Inauguration with War with France
Group of British colonial speculators secured "rights" to 500,000 acres in Ohio River valley
Origin of Salem Witch Trials
Group of adolescents in Salem, MA were "bewitched" by certain older women
Know Nothing Party
Group of prejudice people who formed a political party during the time when the KKK grew. Anti-Catholics and anti-foreign. They were also known as the American Party.
Civil Rights Act of 1875
Guaranteed equal accommodation in public places and prohibited racial discrimination in jury selection; SCOTUS much of the act unconstitutional in Civil Rights Cases 1883.
France provided America with...
Guns, money, equipment, 1/2 of the armed forces, and all naval strength
Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt
Imperialist advocate, aggressive assistant navy secretary, Rough Rider
Result of the Proclamation of 1763
In 1765, about 1,000 wagons rolled through Salisbury, NC to the West
Result of the Judiciary Act
Jeffersonians claimed that the Federalists attempted to entrench themselves in one branch of government
Freeport Question
Lincoln asked Douglas if people of a territory would vote slavery down, who would prevail: SC or the people? Dred Scott declared that they couldn't
Society of the Cincinatti
Lordly pretensions of the Continental Army officers who formed a hereditary order
Harriet Tubman
Major conductor in the Railroad, 19 ventures south, saved 300+ slaves including her parents
Maximilian
Man sent into Mexico by emperor of France; puppet of Napoleon III
Charles Maurice de Tallyrand
Man who was at the XYZ affair meeting the American delegates
rugged individualism
The belief that all individuals, or nearly all individuals, can succeed on their own and that government help for people should be minimal. Popularly said by Herbert Hoover.
Onley
Secretary of State during Cleveland's presidency who warned Britain to back off Venezuela (conflict due to gold)
George C. Marshall
Secretary of State during and after World War II
Edwin M. Stanton
Secretary of War appointed by Lincoln. President Andrew Johnson dismissed him in spite of the Tenure of Office Act, and as a result, Congress wanted Johnson's impeachment.
Ancient Order of Hibernians
Semisecret Irish organization that became a benevolent society aiding Irish immigrants in America
New Deal
The economic and political policies of Franklin Roosevelt's administration in the 1930s, which aimed to solve the problems of the Great Depression by providing relief for the unemployed and launching efforts to stimulate economic recovery. The New Deal built on reforms of the progressive era to expand greatly an American-style welfare state.
What event caused the reservation system to be born?
The ending of the second Anglo-Powhatan War with the peace treaty banning Natives from their land
Hetch Hetchy Valley
The federal government allowed the city of San Francisco to build a dam here in 1913. This was a blow to preservationists, who wished to protect the Yosemite National Park, where the dam was located.
Crittenden Amendments
Slavery was prohibited north of the 36°30' line, but South of it would have federal protection in all territories, including Cuba. Future states could come into the Union with or without slavery
Largest social group
Small farmers - Tilled modest plots - Owned maybe 1-2 slaves - Ragged existence
Impacts of the Treaty of Paris on the Natives
Spanish removal from Florida and French Canada meant no more ability to play off the rival of European powers
American Expeditionary Force (AEF)
The name given to the US Army force deployed to Europe in World War commanded by General John J. Pershing and composed mostly of conscripts.
Amistad
The name of a Spanish slave ship where the captives took control of the ship until being run aground on Long Island. They were imprisoned but later freed through the legal efforts of John Quincy Adams.
Appeasement
The policy followed by leaders of Britain and France at the 1938 conference in Munich. Their purpose was to avoid war, but they allowed Germany to take the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia.
British reply to Americans not wanting representation in Parliament
The power of government could be divided between "legislative" in London and "taxing" in the colonies
Aroostook War
The Maine boundary dispute brought about this small lumberjack war in northern Maine. This issue was later resolved with a treaty in 1842.
Bolshevik Revolution
The second stage of the Russian Revolution in November 1917 when Vladimir Lenin and his Bolshevik party seized power and established a communist state. The first stage had occurred the previous February when more moderate revolutionaries overthrew the Russian Czar.
V-E (Victory in Europe) Day
The source of frenzied rejoicing, May 8, 1945, marked the official end to the war in Europe, following the unconditional surrender of what remained of the German government.
reservation system
The system that allotted land with designated boundaries to Native American tribes in the West, beginning in the 1850s and ending with the Dawes Severalty Act of 1887. Within these reservations, most land was used communally, rather than owned individually. The US government encouraged and sometimes violently coerced Native Americans to stay on the reservations at all times.
Why did France support the Treaty?
They didn't have to pay Spain promises they had made
Result of the loyalist estates
They were cut up into smaller pieces -> spread economic democracy
Battle of Antietam
Turning point Civil War battle in which the North succeeded in halting Lee's Confederate forces in Maryland. Was the bloodiest battle of the war resulting in 25,000 casualties
Battle of Gettysburg
Turning point of the War that made it clear the North would win. 50,000 people died, and the South lost over 7,000 of its best veteran VA soldiers and any future opportunities for invading the North.
Indian allies of America
Tuscaroras and Oneidas
Laird rams
Two well-armed ironclad warships constructed for the Confederacy by a British firm. Seeking to avoid war with US British purchased two ships for its Royal Navy instead
James G. Blaine
Two-time Secretary of State; pushed his Big Sister policy into effect; presided over the first Pan-American conference held in Washington DC
George Pickett
U.S. Army officer who became a general in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. He is best remembered for his participation in the futile and bloody assault at the Battle of Gettysburg that bears his name, Pickett's Charge.
Jiang Jieshi
U.S. ally who resisted Japanese advances in China during WWII
Philippines
U.S. owned Pacific archipelago seized by Japan in the early months of WWII
Joseph McCarthy
Wisconsin senator claimed to have list of communists in American government; took advantage of fears of communism post World War II to become incredibly influential
Women's Christian Temperance Union
Women's organization founded by reformer Frances Willard and others to oppose alcohol consumption
Fourteen Points
Woodrow Wilson's proposal to ensure peace after World War I, calling for an end to secret treaties, widespread arms reduction, national self-determination, and a new league of nations.
Indentured servants
Worked for 4-7 years in exchange for passage to the colony
Dorothea Dix
a reformer who worked hard to improve the treatment of the mentally ill. At the outbreak of the Civil War, she was appointed superintendent of women nurses for the United States
Second Great Awakening
a religious revival movement during the early 19th century in the United States
Oliver Wendell Holmes
a prominant poet, essayist, novelist, and lecturer. He taught anatomy at Harvard Medical School.
responsorial
a style of preaching developed by African-Americans based off of traditional African call and response ringshout dance.
Transcendentalism
a term associated with a group of new ideas in literature that was a protest against the general state of culture and society
black belt
a term used to describe the area in the Deep South where African American slaves were the most concentrated by 1860. It stretched from South Carolina to Louisiana.
breakers
a term used to describe the white overseers who were given strong-willed slaves to break. They often used severe lashing.
Clara Barton
Nurse during the Civil War; founder of the American Red Cross
_______ and _______ made the US a Pacific power
OR and CA
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
Occurred in Freeport, IL - Lincoln challenged Douglas to a debate because the Senate term was beginning to end for Douglas
Bartolome de las Casas (case study)
-Missionary -Denied confession to slave owners -Protector of the Indians
James Madison's nickname
"Father of the Constitution"
James Madison
- Feared a new convention might make the Federalists lose - Made the Bill of Rights - "Father of the Constitution"
Patronage
"the power to control appointments to office or the right to privileges" by favoritism - Jeffersonians complained about Federalist appointees
Constitutional Union party
- Feared disunion (Southern Democrats Baltimore convention) - Whigs, Know-Nothings - John Bell was their candidate
Merriwether Lewis and William Clark
- Lewis - personal secretary of Jefferson - Clark - army officer
Gorgas
American doctor who led the medical efforts to conquer yellow fever during U. S. occupation of Cuba
Whigs in the election of 1836
- Nominate multiple candidates with each a regional appeal w/o majority - Elected Harrison
chattels
"property" (that being African slaves)
Proprietors
"sober-minded town fathers"
Electoral College
"a body of people representing the states of the US, who formally cast votes for the election of the president and vice president" - Large states had advantage in first round of popular voting - Small states would get a larger voice if no candidate got majority of electoral votes and given to House of Representatives
Half-way Covenant
"allowed the children of baptized but unconverted church members to be baptized and thus become church members and have political rights" - Weakened distinction between elect and others - Weaker spiritual purity
William Henry Harrison
"old tippecanoe"; led the log cabin and hard cider campaign in the election of 1840
Act of Toleration in MD
(1649) - religious freedom for all Christians (intended primarily to protect Catholics) and death to anyone who denied the divinity of Jesus
Commonwealth v. Hunt
(1842) a landmark ruling of the MA Supreme Court establishing the legality of labor unions and the legality of union workers striking if an employer hired non-union workers.
Arminians
*Believed that a person has free will, and divine doctrine did not determine a person's fate* - followers of the Dutch theologian Jacob Arminius - churches were pressured and agreed that conversion wasn't necessary for church membership
The British parliamentary government at the time of the American Revolution was headed by
*Lord North* (Townshend went down in 1767)
Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper
*Separate people* First writers of importance to write about American scenes and themes in literature
Stamp Act Congress of 1765
- 27 delegates from 9 colonies forced Parliament to repeal Stamp Act - Rivaling colonies brought together - Little effect in England
Burning of Washington
- 4,000 British forces landed in Chesapeake - Militia of 6,000 dispersed - Invaders set fire to the Capitol and White House
British advantages over Americans
- 50,000 professionally trained army men - Could hire foreign soldiers - 30,000 Germans employed - 50,000 American loyalists - Recruited Indians and had frontier advantage
Germans in the colonies
- 6% of total population by 1775 - Fled from religious persecution, economic oppression, and ravages of war - Settled in Pennsylvania - Known as Pennsylvania Dutch
Results in America — the quarrel between America and France
- Adams got respect - Convention of 1800
Cherokees of Georgia
- Adopted system of agriculture (some cotton) and private property (some slavery) - Missionaries opened schools - Sequoyah made alphabet - 1808 - wrote a legal code - 1827 - Constitution for branches of government
French Revolution
- Against Louis XVI - Americans cheered for liberty - second part of their revolt - Only a few Federalists were hostile to them - France declared war on Austria - won and declared itself a republic
Douglas and the Lecompton Constitution
- Against it, threw away support in the South - Compromise that made Lecompton actual popular vote - Free-soilers went to polls and voted
Democratic Republicans problems with Federalists
- Alien and Sedition Acts - Hamilton made a private pamphlet attacking Adams - published to the public - Adams refused to give them a war with France - taxes with no use
Plantation colonies (similarities)
- All devoted to exporting agricultural products - Tobacco and rice - All had slavery at one point - Multiple plantations (retarded city, church and school growth) Intensive Agriculture - caused colonists to expand west
Constitutional Convention
- All states chose representatives by state legislatures and people — except Rhode Island - Met in secrecy in 1787 - Sentinels outside - Made men drop personal pursuits and focus on the country's needs - GW became chairman
Fears of European powers in America
- Allegedly wanted to demolish democratic tendencies - Feared diminishing of republicanism - Would send troops to restore FL
Miami Confederacy
- Alliance of eight Indian nations who terrorized Americans invading their lands - Received firearms and firewater from British agents
Colonial society *characteristics* (hint: development of)
- Ambitious colonist could rise in social status - Merchant princes gained wealth in 1690s to 1700s from armed conflicts and demand of military weapons - Churches and schools became to be seated/separated by social status - War made a class of widows and orphans
King George's War
- Called War of Austrian Succession in Europe - France allied with Spain - New Englanders invaded New France - Captured Fortress of Louisbourg
Oliver Hazard Perry
- American naval officer - Captured British fleet on Lake - new prosperity - Battle of Lake Erie
Patriots
- American rebels - Also called Whigs
Trade with other countries from America
- American shippers used fraudulent papers and developed a trade system with Spanish and French West Indies - British authorities forbade export of all supplies from New England and the middle colonies
William H. Seward
- Anti-slavery, against concessions for the South - Didn't realize compromise unified - Against slavery in the new territories because of a "higher law" than the Constitution
Battle of New Orleans
- Andrew Jackson and his 7,000 troops and 400 blacks fought British - British attacked a frontal assault on January 8th, 1815 - British lost 2,000 in 30 mins — Americans lost 70 - Fought two weeks after the Treaty
Church of England
- Anglicans - Official faith in GA, NC, SC, VA, MD, and part of NY - Major prop of kingly authority
New York in the ratification of the Constitution
- Anti-fed majority convention - Articles used as propaganda - State couldn't prosper without the Union - 30-27 - Approved 32 proposed amendments
Daniel Webster
- Argued Dartmouth College v. Woodward case -Massachusetts Senator -Northern Sectional leader & Warhaw -Champion of the National Bank - Left Senate to SC to expound Federalist and nationalistic ideas - Challenged states' rights and nullification (in the future) -Immortal "Liberty and Union, now and Forever!" speech
Concerns about Central America
- Aroused because of the gold rush - Atlantic-to-Pacific transportation route → whoever took control of it would hold maritime supremacy
John Peter Zenger
- Assailed corrupt royal governor in New York in a newspaper - Defended by Andrew Hamilton - "The very liberty of both exposing and opposing arbitrary power" is at stake - Jury declared him not guilty - Laid path for freedom of the press and health of democracy
Why was secession supported?
- Assumed it would be unopposed - Believed Yankees would/could not fight - Northern bankers and manufacturers were believed to not cut ties - Debt to North from South - later repudiated
Why were Britain's terms so generous?
- At the time, they could still have won over the US - Wanted to reopen old trade channels - Prevent future wars over trans-Appalachian region
Customs of Pennsylvania
- Bought land from Natives fairly - Representative Assembly elected by landowners - Disliked black slavery
Currency shortage on the colonies (not in terms of paper)
- Bought more from Britain than they sold - Difference had to be made up in cash — most were from the French West Indies or the Spanish - Money was so low that they went to butter, nails, pitch, and feathers as currency
Civic virtue
- Democracy depended on the unselfish commitment of each citizen to the public good - Mothers spread this to children
Proclamation of 1763
- BR Act that Prohibited American colonists from settling West of Appalachians - Meant to work out issue with Natives and prevent another uprising
Results of the Panic of 1819
- BUS forced Western banks "to the wall" - Mortgaged many farms - Deflation, depression, bankruptcies, bank failures, unemployment, soup kitchens, and debtors' prisons - Poorer classes strapped (Jacksonian democracy...) - Imprisoned debtors unnecessarily
Safeguards for conservatism
- Barriers and safeguards against the mob - President indirectly elected by Electoral College - Senators were indirectly chosen by state legislatures - Judges appointed for life - Only House of Reps was direct
Arnold beginning his invasion characteristics
- Began invasion with heavy baggage train - With many women (most were wives of militiamen) - Axemen had to chop a path through the forest
John Jay
- Believed France would betray America's trans-Appalachian interest - Went to London for agreement and they speedily came to terms with them to allure them
Hamilton's response to Thomas Jefferson
- Believed that Congress could pass anything necessary and proper - Government explicitly empowered to collect taxes and regulate trade - "Implied powers" or "loose constitution" - "Elastic clause"
Delegates in Paris - events as well as characters
- Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and John Jay - Congress told them to make no separate peace, but they all knew they were under "control" of French Foreign Office - France wanted US to be East of Allegheny - John Jay believed France would betray America's trans-Appalachian interest
African slavery (characteristics)
- Black slaves outnumbered white servants in plantation colonies by 1680s - Royal African Company - lost charter to monopolize carrying African slaves to the colonies - Rhode Island rushed to trading slave industry *- Slaves captured from West African tribes and traded to colonists*
Governor John Winthrop
- Blossomed fur trading, fishing, and ship-building - "We shall be as a city upon a hill" - Governor of Massachusetts
Uncle Tom's Cabin
- Book about cruelty of slavery - Inspired by Fugitive Slave Law (FSL), deeper sources came from the 2nd Great Awakening and the death of her son - Translated into many foreign languages
Abraham Lincoln
- Born in a log cabin, not rich, self-educated - Married above himself, studied law, became a lawyer
Jay's Treaty
- Britain would pay back for captured ships - Evacuate claims on US soil - Didn't say anything about future maritime seizures - Forced Jay to pay debts
Small gunboats
- Called "Jeffs" or "mosquito fleet" - Jefferson believed they would be useful in defense and made 200 of them
Differences that caused tension between American colonies and mother Britain
- British refused to recognize American militia above colonel - Colonists believed they were cutting edge and deserved credit, not contempt - British subduing Spanish and French West Indies, but colonies fed them
Panic of 1857
- CA gold inflated currency - Crimean War overstimulated growing of grain - Overspeculation in land and railroads
Complications with Jackson's attempt to eliminate the BUS
- Cabinet called it unnecessary - Jackson changed cabinet twice - Biddle's Panic
Compromise of 1850
- California admitted as a free state - Mexican Cession land; Utah and New Mexico set up as territories and slavery determined by popular sovereignty - Ban slave trade in DC - New fugitive slave law for the South - Settled border dispute between NM and TX in NM favor
Why did Harpers Ferry occur?
- Call upon slaves to rise - Furnish them with arms - Establish a black free state as a sanctuary
Citizen Edmond Genêt
- Came to Charleston, SC to negotiate - Fit out privateers and took advantage of alliance - Believed Neutrality Proclamation didn't reflect the true wishes of Americans - Recruited armies to invade Spanish Florida, Louisiana, and British Canada (in *America*!!!) - Threatened to appeal over the head of "Old Washington." - President demanded his withdrawal
Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation
- Can't maintain armies without Congress' approval - Unanimous agreement needed to get articles passed - 9/13 needed for bills to be passed - One vote for each colony regardless of size - States collect the tax, give money to federal government - *usually "lost"* - No executive branch or strong court system - Congress was intentionally weak
Franklin Pierce
- Candidate for the Democrats - Indecisive, proslavery - Revived Democrat commitment to expansion
South Carolina
- Cash crop was rice - Plantation economy - Wealthy aristocratic elite - African slave labor
General Howe
- Caused confusion because he went to Philadelphia instead of from the Hudson River to New York - Wanted to form engagement on Washington's army, destroying it and leave a way for Burgoyne
Results of the Fugitive Slave Law
- Caused moderates to join antislavery forces - Personal Liberty Laws - Vigilance Committees
Anne Hutchinson
- Challenged accepted role of women within the church by openly speaking out against church leaders - Antinomianism - Banished for heresy - Went to Rhode Island but then killed by Natives when moving to NY
Result of France entering America on the British
- Changed Britain's strategy - Originally could count on blockading colonial coast and commanding seas - French had powerful ships in the water to protect West Indies and jeopardize Britain's blockade and line of supply - British evacuated Philadelphia and focused on NYC
Changes within society in the pursuit of equality
- Changed forenames to Mr. and Mrs. - Master replaced with boss - Not many indentured servants - No primogeniture
Established bank of the US
- Chartered for 20 years - 1791 in Philidelphia - Capital of $10 million - 1/5 owned by federal government - Stock thrown to the public - sold out in two hours
English Whigs against English characteristics
- Cheered for the Americans - Opposed Lord North's Tory wing - Wanted to embarrass Tories - Believed British freedom was being fought in America
What laid the basis for the separation of church and state?
- Congregation could hire, fire, and set salary of the preacher - Clergymen couldn't hold political office chair
Tariff of Abominations
- Congress in 1824 increased the tariff dramatically - Wool manufacturers wanted it higher - Jacksonites proposed to make it larger, and Congress passed it in 1828 Also called the Black Tariff
Results of secession
- Considered to cast issues with the North aside - Felt they did nothing wrong - Strong sense of nationalism - Parallels to the Revolution
Antifederalists
- Consisted of poorer people, like debtors who feared to pay back all of their money - Opposed stronger federal government - Freedom of individuals was compromised, wanted annual elections, no standing army, feared no ref. to God, and disliked the ratification of 2/3 states needed
George Washington's Cabinet
- Constitution didn't mention it - Washington's administration - President "may require" written opinions of the heads of the executive branch departments
Strategic advantages to getting ports in Mississippi and Louisiana
- Control of the head of the Mississippi river - Grain sent down through Louisiana to West Indies and Europe - Established trading ports in Kaskaskia, Cahokia, and Vincennes
Yorktown
- Cornwallis waited in the Chesapeake Bay for more supplies and troops - Naval superiority began to ship - Admiral de Grasse defeated British fleet and blockaded them - GW marched to the Chesapeake Bay 300 miles from NY - Cornwallis surrendered w/ 7,000 men on October 19, 1781
Know-Nothing Party
- Created because of Irish and German immigrants - Nativists fearing foreigners ruining their economy - Anti-foreign and anti-Catholic - Chose Millard Fillmore
The Association
- Created by Continental Congress - Called for a complete boycott of British goods: nonimportation, nonexportation, and nonconsumption
Compromise Tariff of 1833
- Created by Henry Clay - Would reduce the tariff of 1832 by 10% over 8 years - New England opposed; South favored
Carolina
- Created in 1670 after Charles II granted Lords Proprietors land -Barbados Connection - Hoped to grow food to provision sugar plantations and export non-English products - *Rice became major export crop in Carolina* --- paid for African slaves and their knowledge of rice
Northwest Ordinance of 1787
- Created the Northwest Territory - Allowed an area to be a state when it had 60,000 people in it - Prohibited slavery
Health issues in the Chesapeake Bay
- Cut off ten years for immigrants - Average lifespan was 20 years - Malaria, dysentery, and typhoid were major diseases - Death within seven years of marriage - Not common to have grandparent
Effects of the Embargo Act
- Dead ships and harbor in New England - Unexportable cotton, grain, and tobacco in the South - Illicit trade - Revived Federalist party
Boston Tea Party
- December 16th, 1773 - About 100 Bostonians disguised as Indians, went on board, smashed open 342 chests of tea, and dumped it into the Atlantic
Frederick the Great
- Defeated French, Austrian, and Russian armies 3:1 - British unable to send troops — sent gold - French wasted most of their strength on this battle, so they were able to throw force in New World
Thomas Macdonough
- Defeated by British ships on 11 September 1814 near Pittsburgh - Came back to confront the British and defeated them - Battle of Lake Champlain
Similarities among state constitutions
- Defined government with authority from the people - Documents required annual elections - A bill of rights - A weak judiciary - Little executive power - Legislature had too much power
Agreements that were mutual among states
- Demanded established money and private property - Strong government with three branches and having checks & balances - Suffrage for men
North Carolina and Rhode Island similarities
- Democratic - Independent-minded - Least aristocratic
Problems with tobacco
- Destroyed land - Demand for labor goes up - Tensions rise with natives as colonists move west - Natives to slavery
Buchanan in his lame duck period
- Didn't believe they could legally secede but he couldn't do anything about it - Prosouthern advisors - Couldn't take 15,000 men army - Indians - Violence would ruin any hope at bondage
Government in New France
- Direct control under king - No representative assemblies - No right to trial by jury
Town Governments
- Discussed local issues - Voted fairly - No flaming
the three d's
- Disease - Disorganization - Disposability
Reasons that the colonists disliked the Townshend Acts
- Disliked any taxation without representation - Were to pay salaries of royal governors and judges (held the purse)
Preston S. Brooks
- Disliked insults of Sumner - May 22, 1856 - pounded the orator with a cane until he fell bleeding and unconscious
Jackson and Democrat's view of the BUS
- Distrusted monopolistic banking and large businesses - Seemed to sin against egalitarian democracy - Foreclosed the Western farms
Punishments and routine for divorce
- Divorce was rare but was allowed for abandonment and/or adultery - If adultery occurred, the offender would be whipped and public and would have the letter "A" stitched to their clothes forever
Democratic (Charleston) convention 1860
- Douglas was the primary candidate - Fire-eaters regarded him as a traitor (Lecompton and Freeport) - Most Southern delegates walked out - remainder couldn't get 2/3 vote, body dissolved
John Trumbull
- Father said "Connecticut is not Athens" - Forced to move to London to pursue art
James Monroe
- Elected, ran against one more candidate - Monroe represented the age of the Founding Fathers and nationalism - Monroe went from New England to Detriot to inspect military defenses - New England welcomed him
Revolution of 1800
- Election of Jefferson was the original spirit of the Revolution - Believed Adams and Jefferson betrayed ideas of 1776 and 1787 - Peaceful transfer of power
Why did America expand politically and economically?
- Embargo caused expansion - Indians crushed by Harrison and Jackson - opened land - Highways
Glorious Revolution of 1688
- Ended Dominion of New England - Caused Sir Edmund Andros to be kicked out
Treaty of Paris (1763)
- Ended French and Indian War - No more French power in North America
Sir Edmund Andros
- Ended town meetings - Laid restriction on courts, press, and schools - Revoked all land titles - Taxation without elected "yes" - Enforced Navigation Laws - Affiliated with Church of England
Causes of disunity in the colonies
- Enormous distances - Geographical barriers - Conflicting religions from Catholic to Quaker - Varied nationalities - Different types of government - Boundary disputes - Resentment of backcountry settlers against aristocrats
Lord Dunmore's Ethiopian Regiment
- Enrolled black slaves into the army against Americans - 14,000 enrolled at the end of the war
Judiciary Act of 1789
- Established a Supreme Court with a chief justice & five associates, federal districts & circuit courts, and an established office of the attorney general - John Jay became the first Chief Justice
New England teaching
- Established primary and secondary schools (many couldn't go because of work on farms) - Focus on doctrine and dogma rather than reasoning and logic
Results of George Washington's presidency
- Established two-term tradition - Central government established - Expanded West - Merchant trading safer - Kept out of foreign affairs
Differences among middle colonies
- Ethnically mixed - More free - Easier to get land
Results of the Monroe Doctrine
- Europeans angered but do nothing - Little impact in the South - Many praised then forgot it -America's first official foreign policy
Results of the Treaty of Ghent
- Evidence of insincerity of the war hawks - Proof that Americans had not defeated the British - No territory gained nor lost
Sam Houston
- Ex-governor of TN - Bride of a few weeks left him, so he took residence with Natives in AR
War hawks wanted... Southern expansionists wanted...
- Expansion in Canada - Florida
Great Awakening
- Exploded in 1730s and 1740s - Ignited in Northampton, MA by Jonathan Edwards
Characteristics of Jefferson's presidency
- Extended idea of seating without regard to rank - Sent messages to Congress to be read by a clerk - Didn't make public appearances - Didn't dismiss many public servants for political reasons
Samuel de Champlain
- Father of New France - Leader in Quebec - Entered into friendly relations with Huron Indian tribes - Joined them in battle against Iroquois - 3 died, 1 wounded - Hampered French penetration of Ohio River Valley and served as British allies
Issues with the election of 1848
- Focused on personalities instead of slavery - Taylor won, free soilers diverted votes from Cass in NY
Results of the protest of the Stamp Act
- Forced stamp agents to resign - America bought 1/4 of British export - 1/2 of shipping devoted to American colonies
Different types of actions from Patriots and Loyalists in colonies
- Forcefully affirming their loyalty to the King and earnestly voicing their desire to patch up difficulties - Also raising armies and shooting down the King's soldiers
Impressment
- Forcible enlistment of sailors - 6,000 US citizens captured by British in 1808-1811
Impacts of the Peace Terms in Utrecht in 1713
- Foreshadowed French and Spanish doom - Salutary neglect followed - Got limited trading rights in Spanish America (smuggling)
Free Soil Party
- Formed because of the avoidance by both parties of slavery - Wanted no slavery in the new land to the west - Keep West an opportunity for whites only - Not against slavery in the South - Homesteads for settlers, internal improvements - Not radical, disunited other than opposing extension of slavery
New Haven
- Founded by Puritans - Merged with Connecticut - Charles II gave charter for this to happen because it sheltered two judges that killed his father
Mutual benefits from ally with France
- France - wanted to stab Britain in the back - France might gain back its power - America - needed assistance and ally with France
Convention of 1800
- France agreed to end 22-year-old treaty - America agreed to pay damage claims
Issues with France at the time
- France promised reluctant Gibraltar to Spain - Pioneers settling on Spanish trans-Allegheny - France wanted the US to be east of Allegheny Mountains so they could control them more easily
Election of 1852
- Free soil party might have taken votes from the Whigs - Ended the whig disorganization and later death
Issues with the Kansas-Nebraska Act
- Free-soilers disliked it - Would have to repeal the MO Comp, which distinguished the two regions
Rhode Island
- Freedom of every religion - Aided by Natives - No taxes to support state church - No oaths regarding religious belief - No compulsatory attendance at worship - Sheltered abused Quakers - Received charter from Parliament in 1644
Peace Terms in Utrecht in 1713
- French and Spanish allies awfully beaten - Britain rewarded with French-populated Acadia
Events within the attempt to get the Ohio River Valley
- French putting up forts along River Valley - Virginia governor issued George Washington to the Ohio Country as a lieutenant colonel - Fort Duquesne - British fired and killed French leader - French returned with reinforcements and laid siege to Fort Necessity - Surrendered but marched away with full honors
Positives of the American army
- GW and Ben Frank were major leaders - French foreign aid - European officers volunteered - Marquis de Lafayette - Fought defensively - Self-sustaining colonies - Had the belief that they had moral advantage for a good cause
Farewell Address
- GW delivered it written out Four pieces of advice 1) Don't get involved in European affairs 2) Don't make "permanent alliances" in foreign affairs 3) Don't form political parties 4) Avoid sectionalism
Reactions and results to the Whiskey Rebellion
- GW summoned 13,000 militiamen - GW government gained a new respect for strength and authority - Brutal force to crush a small rebellion
GW vs General Howe
- GW transferred his troops to Philadelphia - Lost 2 battles - Brandywine Creek and Germantown - General Howe stayed in Philadelphia and left Burgoyne alone - GW retreated to Valley Forge - Stern drillmasters whipped them into place
Events surrounding American attempts to gain Canada
- General Richard Montgomery (for the colonists) pushed up the Lake Champlain route and captured Montreal - General Benedict Arnold met him in Quebec - Last day of 1775 - Quebec assault killed Montgomery and wounded Arnold in one leg
Difficulties in America of the British armies
- Generals were mediocre, and soldiers were brutally treated and Hessians commit atrocities - Provisions often scarce - Redcoats had to conquer America because the pre-1763 status quo restoration would be a victory for America - British army commands - 3,000 miles away - America's geographic expanse was large - Colonies had no core center - 150 patriots killed, 60,000 babies born
William Penn
- Got grant of fertile land from king b/c of death to father - Called area Pennsylvania - Advertised area and attracted everybody
Pioneers going West to get land
- Got land from government (directly or indirectly) - Looked at national capital for "guidance" -> weakened local power - Uniform land policy made possible
Lord Cornbury
- Governor of NY and NJ in 1702 - Drunk, bigot, unfit for governor - Appointed by king
Charles Francis Adams
American envoy whose shrewd diplomacy helped keep Britain neutral during the Civil War
Results of Tippecanoe
- Harrison became a national hero - Killed and discredited Tenskwatawa - Drove Tecumseh into an alliance with Britain
Whigs (background)
- Hatred of Jackson and misuse of power only unifying element - Clay, Webster, and Calhoun all censured Jackson
General James Wilkinson
- He and Burr planned to separate the West part of the US to expand - Burr and 60 followers went to him in Natchez - Jefferson learned of the plan - He fled to France and told Napoleon to make an alliance with Britain in America
Squanto
- Helped Plymouth colonists grown corn, improve hunting and gathering in early years - Wampanoag people signed treaty with Plymouth - Had first Thanksgiving
Results of the Seventh of March speech
- Helped turn the North to compromise - Strengthened Union sentiment - Pleasing for banking and commercial centers in the North because they would lose by secession - Made free soilers and abolitionists feel betrayed (advocated for a stronger FSL) - he regarded slavery as evil but disunion as worse
Van Buren's presidency
- High intelligence and education - Enemies of Jackson and dislike from Democrats - Rebellions in Canada - Attempted to be neutral
Indian allies of Britain (list them and characteristics)
- Hoped to protect their land - Known as "hair buyers" because they got American scalps - Senecas, Mohawks, Cayugas, and Onondagas
San Jacinto
- Houston's small army retreated East and lured Santa Anna - April 21, 1836 - Houston turned, wiped out army, and captured Santa Anna
Issues with the Lecompton Constitution
- If voted against, slaves would be protected anyway - Free-soilers upset, boycotted the polls, pro-slavery forces voted for - Supported by Buchanan
America invasion of Canada
- Important because British lacked control - American strategy was a three-pronged invasion attacking Detroit, Niagara, and Lake Champlain at once
Taverns
- Included amusements of bowling, pool, bars, and gambling - All social classes could mingle - Crystallized public opinion
Armed Neutrality
- Made by Catherine the Great - Maritime neutrals of Europe demanded more rights - Lined up almost all remaining neutrals in passive hostility to Britain - Later called the Armed Nullity
Kentucky Resolution
- Jefferson feared Federalists were wiping out Jeffersonians and other rights - Made a series of resolutions approved by KY legislature Introduced Nullification
Benefits the North had in the 1850s
- North gaining population and wealth - Delay added to moral strength and gave time to accumulate materials - Moderates resisted secession at any cost - Fought for the Union
Opposition to The American System
- Jeffersonians disliked federal involvement of intrastate internal improvements - New England opposed the federal roads because it would drain eastern population
XYZ Affair
- John Adams sent three men to meet Charles Maurice de Tallyrand - Named X, Y, and Z - French asked for $250k to talk to them - Americans found it intolerable
Passing of Lee's resolution results
- John Adams wrote that July 2nd will be forever celebrated with fireworks - Inspirational appeal needed to enlist other British colonies in the Americas, to invite assistance from foreign, nations, and rally resistance at home, leading to the declaration
Pottawatomie Creek
- John Brown led a band of followers and hacked to pieces five men who were assumed to be pro-slavery - Upset free-soilers and retaliation from pro-slaveryites
Massachusetts Bay Colony
- John Winthrop takes charter to establish MA Bay Colony - "City upon a hill." American Exceptionalism idea - Religious freedom reserved for only Puritans - Church membership required to participate in politics - Town hall meetings in direct democracy - Mixed economy of commerce and agriculture
Event when Jefferson sent James Monroe to discuss the treaty
- Joined Robert R. Livingston - Was to only pay $10 million for New Orleans and the rest of the East - If the proposal failed, they would ally with Britain
Midnight judges
- Judges selected by Adams - Appointments continued to midnight - Stayed up until 9 pm in last day of office signing commissions
Diseases and their impact on society
- Killed elders, which meant no oral tradition - Had to reinvent themselves without connections - Killed many
New town-founding process
- Land distributed by proprietors after charter was issued from colonial authority - Moved to designated place with family and laid out the plan of the town - Each family got wood lot for fuel, a tract for growing crops, and another for pasturing animals
Motives for each class in New France
- Landowning French peasants had little economic motive to move - Protestant Huguenots denied refuge in Canada - Preferred Caribbean island colonies for sugar and rum
Stephen Austin
- Large tract of land given to him because of Mexican independence (would bring 300 American families to TX) - Went to Mexico City in 1833 to negotiate differences - Santa Anna put him in jail for 8 months
Black slaves
- Least fortunate - no equality - fear of black rebellion plagued colonists
Skippers
- Leave New England port with a cargo of rum - Sail to West Africa - Sold rum for slaves - Brought slaves to West Indies - Would get molasses for slaves - Carry back molasses to New England to make rum - Repeat
Regulator Movement
- Led by Paxton Boys - North Carolina - Small, nasty insurrection against eastern domination of the colony's affairs
Haitian Revolution
- Led by Toussaint L'Ouverture - Inspired by the French Revolution - Revolt was broken, but mosquitoes with yellow fever killed French army - Santo Domingo not needed, so no need for Louisiana
Ottawa Chief Pontiac
- Led several tribes with the help of French fur traders - Tried to drive British out of Ohio Country - Besieged Detroit and eventually overran all but 3 posts west of the Appalachians
John Quincy Adams making the Treaty
- Led the group of mercenaries - British wanted Indian buffer state in Great Lakes region - Control of the Great Lakes - Substantial part of Maine - Americans rejected all of these
Results of the Mallarino-Bidlack Treaty
- Led to Panama Railway - Future for Panama Canal
South Carolina legislature in 1832
- Legislature called for a meeting - Declared tariff to be null and void in SC - Threatened to secede if the govt took customs duty by force
Positives of mercantilist system in America
- London paid liberal bounties to colonial producers of ship ports - VA tobacco farmers enjoyed small monopoly in British market - Had free protection from the world's mightiest army
Concessions of the Treaty
- Loyalists not to be persecuted - Congress should *recommend* to state legislature that Loyalist property should be returned from confiscation - States wouldn't put laws preventing collecting debt money
Why did some Americans oppose independence?
- Loyalty to the Empire - Many Americans wanted to be in a transatlantic community with Mother Britain - Colonial unity was weak - Open rebellion was dangerous (Irish were hanged)
Thomas Hutchinson
- MA governor - Stamp Act protesters destroyed his home in 1765 - Agreed tea tax was unjust be believed that colonists have no right to flaunt the law - Ordered tea ships not to clear Boston harbor until cargoes unloaded
Hartford Convention
- MA, CT, RI sent full delegates, and NH and VT sent partial - Reps met in secrecy to discuss grievances - Wanted financial assistance from Washington to compensate for lost trade - Proposed Constitutional amendments requiring 2/3 vote before embargo imposed, new states admitted, or war declared - Abolish 3/5 Compromise - The Presidency to one term - Prohibit election of two successive presidents from the same state
Benjamin Franklin's impact on *knowledge*
- Made Poor Richard's Almanack - Edited it from 1732-1758 - 2nd bestseller under Bible - Called "The first civilized American." - Kite-flying stunt proves electricity - Made bifocal spectacles and Franklin stove
The American System
- Made by *Henry Clay* in 1824 - Provide strong banking system → easy and abundant credit - Protective tariff → provide money and eastern manufacturing - Network of roads and canals by tariff in Ohio Valley especially → can transport easily
Corps of Discovery
- Meriwether Lewis and William Clark sent by Jefferson to explore north part of LA - went by MS River - Assisted by Sacajawea
Annapolis Convention
- Met because of controlling commerce - Virginia called for a meeting in Annapolis - 5 state reps - Alexander Hamilton called for a convention in Philadelphia the following year - Congress called a convention to *revise* A.O.C.
First Continental Congress in 1774
- Met in Philadelphia to consider ways of redressing colonial grievances - 12/13 (not GA) sent 50 men, including Samuel Adams, John Adams, George Washington, and Patrick Henry - Frictions melted away by social activity after working hours - 7 weeks - Drew up papers like Declaration of Rights
Anti-Masonic Party members
- Middle Atlantic and New England - Those suspicious of secret societies - Evangelical Protestants
Issues with Britain in ≈ 1782
- Minorca in Mediterranean fell - Rock of Gibraltar falling - Lord North's ministry fell - Whig ministry replaced Tory regime of Lord N.
Issues with making a new government
- No more Tories, which meant no more conservatives to balance and help with government - Patriots didn't have a common cause anymore - Hard to start a new government from scratch
Joseph Brant
- Mohawk Leader - Convert to Anglicanism - Believed victorious Britain would stop American expansion westward - Destroyed backcountry PN and NY until checked by Americans in 1779
Results of the Battle of Quebec
- Montreal fell in 1760 - British gained control - Treaty of Paris in 1763 - French allowed to retain small but valuable sugar islands in the West Indies and two islets in the Gulf of St Lawrence for fishing - French gave Spanish trans-Mississippi Louisiana - Spanish gave Florida to Britain in exchange for Cuba
John Quincy Adams' presidency
- More austere than his father - More of a closeted thinker than politician - One of the most successful secretaries of state but one of the least successful presidents - Refused to remove efficient officeholders to make vacancies for his supports - only removed 12 in his time Got less than 1/3 of the popular vote
Rebels in New England
- Most numerous because self-government, and mercantilism was weak - Presbyterianism and Congregationalism
Characteristics of New England families
- Mothers had many kids - Strong social characteristics - Children received habits of obedience and guidance from their parents and grandparents - Family stability reflected in low premarital pregnancy rates
Republican motherhood
- Mothers taught their children civic virtue early on - People realized women were important and extended education to them
Scots-Irish beginnings and background history
- Moved to Northern Ireland over many decades - Tension between Irish Catholics and Scottish Presbyterians - English government placed restrictions on production of linens and woolens - Early 1700s - left Ireland and came to America, mostly PN - Illegally squatted on unoccupied lands
War Hawks
- Name for the young hotheads from the N & S - Disliked impressment and British policy - West Warhawks wiped out Indians for the safety of pioneers
Explain the transfer of Louisiana from Spain to France
- Napoleon had the king of Spain give up LA - Guaranteed to be true when warehouse privileges were taken away - Thomas would have to seek foreign ally help
Effect of Macon's Bill No. 2
- Napoleon wanted an embargo on Britain, and Madison accepted - Gave Britain three months to repeal their acts, yet the didn't - Virtually guaranteed future conflict with Britain
Reaction of the American Colonists to the Quebec Act
- No representative assemblies or juries seemed to be a dangerous precedent in America - Alarmed land speculators - Aroused anti-Catholics by extension of Catholicism south into a region regarded as Protestant
Issues with colonies surrounding New Netherland
- Native massacres - New England hostile (MA voted against wiping out New Netherland) - Swedes placed New Sweden on Delaware river
Things leading growth of stable and distinctive slave culture
- Native-born African Americans - Language
Slave/servant problems in the Chesapeake Bay
- Natives died too quickly upon white man contact - Africans were too expensive - Whites were dying - Solution was indentured servants
List of things in the Declaration
- Natural rights of humankind violated and were justified in cutting away - Taxes without consent - Establishing military dictatorship - Maintaining standing armies in peace times - Cutting off trade - Burning towns - Hiring mercenaries - Hostilities against Natives
Two ways amendments could be added to the Constitution
- New Constitutional Convention requested by 2/3 of the states - 2/3 vote of both houses of Congress
Types of government in the colonies
- New England - Town meetings - South - County government - Middle colonies - modification of the previous two
Women's "rights"
- New Jersey allowed women to vote for a short time - Some disguised as men and served in the army - Generally didn't have many rights
Results of the Battle of New Orleans
- New respect for Jackson - Nationalism and self-confidence increase - Royal Navy made a blockade on the shore, crippled the economy, and bankrupt the treasury
How was the 1856 election victorious for the Republicans
- No secession and Civil War after a Republican election - Showed they could win
Old Lights vs New Lights
- Old Lights were skeptical of the emotionalism - New Lights defended the awakening - Congregationalism and Presbyterianism split - Many went to baptist church
Judiciary Act of 1801
- One of the last important laws passed by Federal Congress - Made up new federal judgeships and other judicial offices
Jeffersonian beliefs
- Only educated whites should vote- - Believed slaves were essential - without them, poor whites would have to provide labor - Strong appeal to middle class and underprivileged
Anti-Masonic Party
- Opposed influence and secrecy of Masonic order - Third party in 1832 - Energized by (murder) of New Yorker who threatened to expose secret rituals of Masons
Democratic-Republican disunity
- Opposition to Federalists was a uniting factor - As the Federalists faded, so did the unity
New Hampshire in the ratification of the Constitution
- Originally anti fed - Feds arranged an adjournment and won waverers
How did English get the West Indies from the Spanish?
- Overextended military on Spanish side - Dutch rebel colonies
New Netherland
- Owned by Dutch West India Company - Wanted Manhattan island
Independent Treasury Bill
- Passed because of the Divorce Bill in 1840 - Repealed in 1841 by Whigs - Reenected in 1846
Embargo Act of 1807
- Passed so powers would be forced to respect its rights (they got food from them) - Forbade the export of all goods from the US whether in American or foreign ships
1783 - march to Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvania soldiers marched to Independence Hall - Members had to ask state for protection - Fled to Princeton
Government bonds
- People didn't trust the Treasury with his plan, so the value of them depreciated by 10 to 15¢ each - Some had many and bought more when Congress passed the plan
Legislatures
- People enjoyed direct representation - Voted tax amounts by colonial government needs - Self-taxation through representation
Result of Adams' idea of nationalism
- People going to sectionalism and state sovereignty - Didn't want to work for an astronomical observatory - Would have to continue tariffs and possibly the disruption of peculiar institution to achieve the goals
Results of the spoils system
- People that weren't capable of the position were appointed to high office - Provided concrete reason to stick with a political party forever
Trade imbalance
- Population in Britain was low - America would seek other foreign markets - Started supplying France with tobacco - Molasses Act tried to end trade with French West Indies, but they bribed and smuggled their way around it - West Indies purchases of North American timber supplied money
Tension between patriot and loyalist militia in the Carolinas
- Prisoners butchered in cold blood after they threw down arms - Multiple battles
Privateers
- Privately owned armed ships authorized by Congress to prey on enemy shipping - "Sailors of Fortune" - about 27,000
Jonathan Edwards
- Proclaimed folly of believing in salvation through good works and affirmed dependence on God's grace - "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" was one of his most popular sermons - Believed that hell was "paved with the skulls of unbaptized children"
Treaty of Kanagawa
- Proper treatment of shipwrecked sailors - American coaling rights in Japan - Established diplomatic relations
Alex I of Russia
- Proposed mediation between Britain and America — didn't want Britain to get rid of Russian power in America - Brought in motion ideas of the treaty
Maryland
- Proprietorship: Lord Baltimore gave land by King (land for money and religious reasons) - Permitted freedom of worship - Act of Toleration in 1649 - Tobacco and indentured servants
Plymouth Colony
- Protestant Reformation sparked dramatic changes in Europe and led to the rise of Puritanism - Puritans to purify the church - Pilgrims sought to establish Land at Plymouth - Mayflower Compact - Squanto helped in early years
Aspects of popular sovereignty
- Public liked it because it went along with democratic self-determination - Politicians liked it because it seemed to be a compromise - Advocates hoped to dissolve the issue - Could serve to spread slavery
Results of Uncle Tom's Cabin
- Pushed many people on the fence about slavery to begin opposing it - Fueled Northern opposition to the new fugitive slave law - Made France and Britain not side with the South (realized they were being treated unfairly)
Roger Williams
- Questioned Puritan leadership - Called for complete separation of church and state - Criticized treatment of Native Americas - Banished from colony and found Providence, RI
Issues with tobacco as more was produced
- Ran out of land; more farmers went west (Native contact) - Failing prices planting more
John Q. Adams (involvement of the Canning proposal)
- Realized that the British feared the Yankees would seize Spanish territory and jeopardize Britain's possessions in the Caribbean - Would ruin England's Latin American trading
Results of the Crittenden Amendments
- Rejected by Lincoln - elected on a platform against the extension of slavery - All hope of compromise gone
New England Colonies characteristics
- Religious motives for colonization--Fleeing Anglican persecution - Male and female settlers along with their families - Tight-knit, communal society - Mixed economy
Macon's Bill No. 2
- Reopened trade with the rest of the world - Replaced Non-Intercourse Act - If either France or Britain would respect American shipping, US would cut off trade with the other
James I
- Revoked charter and made Virginia a royal colony - Detested tobacco - Destroyed House of Burgesses
Issues with transportation and traveling
- Roads (dirt) not developed until 1700 - Tree-strewn roads - Rickety bridges - Carriage overturns - Runaway horses
Texan Americans
- Roman Catholic - Disliked imposition of foreign government - Associated as American
Dominion of New England
- Royal authority - Combined all the New England colonies into one jurisdiction - Enforced Navigation laws -Led by Andros
Lord Dunmore
- Royal governor of Virginia - Promised freedom for any slave in VA that would join British army - VA and MD tightened slave patrols
Thomas Jefferson's rebuttal for Hamilton's bank idea
- Said they had no power to make it — believed it was the states' rights - "Strict Constitution"
Reason for British focusing on NYC
- Seaport - Central - King could count on loyalist cooperation
Three department heads at the time
- Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson - Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton - Secretary of War Henry Knox
Albert Gallatin
- Secretary of the Treasury under Jefferson - Believed debt was bane
The South Carolina Exposition
- Secretly written by John C. Calhoun - Denounced tariff as unjust and unconstitutional - States (specifically SC) should nullify it
Harpers Ferry
- Seized federal arsenal, killing 7 innocent people - Failed to make slaves rise - US Marines, led by Robert E. Lee, captured him
Second Seminole War
- Seminole Indians refused to leave FL - Brutal war took place between US and Seminoles for 7 years
Rise of Abraham Lincoln
- Served a term in Congress - Passage of the KS-NE Act -> republican -> foremost politician and orator of the NW - Philly Convention of 1856 - Lincoln got 110 votes for VP
Georgia
- Served as a buffer colony against Spanish and French threat - Penal colony for debtors - Originally banned slavery but would later become a plantation-based slavery society - James Oglethorpe - protects against Spanish - Savannah - melting pot community
George Washington (GW)
- Served without pay - Elected by 2nd Cont. Congress - Evading main BR army except around key cities to keep main army intact strategy worked - Lost more battles than he won - Lived at Mount Vernon - Came from a wealthy family (FFV)
Republicanism
- Set in the American minds -People are sovereign (in charge), not the King, so they need to possess public virtue - A just society as one in which all citizens willingly subordinated their private, selfish interests to the common good - Stability of society and the authority of government depended on citizenry - Opposed to hierarchical and authoritarian institutions like aristocracy and monarchy
States that had land West of mountains - characteristics
- Seven did - Didn't have to tax heavily - Pay off debt faster - Land-rich
Results of the War of 1812
- Showed power to defeat - Emissaries treated with less scorn - Sectionalism showed - War heroes emerged - Indians forced to make own concessions - Manufacturing grew - not relying on European workshops
Treaty of Paris
- Signed 1783, effective 1784 - British formally recognized independence of the US - Granted boundaries to Mississippi on the West, Great Lakes in the North, and Spanish Florida in the South - Yankees retain share of fishing in Newfoundland
Phillis Wheatly
- Slave girl brought to Boston at 8 years old - Published a book at 20 when transported to England - Revealed influence of Alexander Pope - No education - First published African-American poet
Dred Scott v. Sanford
- Slave who lived on IL and WI territory with his master sued for freedom on the basis of residence on free soil - SC ruled he was a slave and thus could not sue in federal courts - he was property (5th amendment) - Majority wanted to forestall two free-soil justice arguments - Also ruled MO Comp was unconstitutional
North Carolina
- Small tobacco farms - Less reliance on slavery
Issues with some states in the mid 1780s
- Some states refused to pay anything - Boundary issues caused minor battles, and there was no judicial branch - Making paper money - some states sanctioned making it
Whig party split
- South - doubted Scott's loyalty to the Compromise and Slave Law - North - deplored platform but accepted Scott
Missouri Compromise
- South - made MO a slave state - North - would forbid slavery in remaining territories other than MO - Lasted 34 years - Maine admitted as a free, separate state - 36°, 30'
South vs North education
- South couldn't establish system because of the dispersal of blacks and whites - North established primary, secondary, and college
Three-Fifths Compromise
- South wanted slaves to be voters - North didn't and would logically require more representation - Slaves would count as 3/5 of a person
Nashville Convention
- Southern extremists met in Nashville in 1850 - In favor of slavery but condemned the concessions - Met again in November - Southern opinion was reluctantly for concessions in Congress at the time
Lincoln's controversial election
- Southern secessionists said his election would split the Union - when he won, made SC secede - Wasn't allowed on 10 Southern state ballots - Wasn't completely abolitionist though and didn't issue statements to quiet Southern fears
Results of the Tallmadge Amendment
- Southerners upset - wanted unhampered expansion West - Diehard Federalists and northerners wanting to get rid of the VA dynasty - Threat to sectional balance
Pinckney's Treaty
- Spain granted navigation of rivers - Warehouse rights at New Orleans - West Florida - Feared Anglo-American alliance
Southern reaction to the KS-NE Act
- Supported the KS-NE Act with the understanding that KS would be slave and NE would be free - Northerners would "abolitionize" both - Some Southerners attempted to assist well-armed slave owners to KS
Results of nonimportation on the colonies (events that occurred)
- Spontaneously united American people - People not involved signed petitions to uphold terms of consumer boycotts - Gave American colonists opportunity to participate in colonial protests - Women gathered to make spinning bees to replace British textiles
North Carolina and its beginnings and inhabitants
- Squatters came from Virginia without legal right to the soil - No need for slaves because they raised their own tobacco, -Exported Naval stores to England (shingles, masts, turpentine, tar) - Developed strong resistance to authority - Became a royal colony
Assumption
- State debts regarded as national debt because of the Revolution - Would chain states more to the "federal chariot" - Would shift attachment of wealthy creditors from states to federal government
African-Americans in the war against British
- States didn't initially allow them to volunteer - about 5,000 enlisted by war's end - Most came from New England because most of them were free
Results of Assumption
- States with heavy debt, like MA, appreciated it - States without tax, like VA, wanted some compensation
South positives 1860
- Still had majority in SC and Repubs didn't control HOR or Senate - Fed govt couldn't touch slavery other than an amendment
General Nathaniel Greene
- Strategy of delay - standing and then retreating - Exhausted his enemy, Charles Cornwallis - Lost battles but won campaigns - Called the "Fighting Quaker" because he cleared most of GA and SC of British troops
British Royal Navy post Rev. attacks on American shipping--controversy
- Struck the American ships giving supplies to French West Indies - Patriotic Americans wanted to fight George III - Federalists wanted peace — Hamilton's economic plan depended on trade with Britain
Responses to Hamilton from the public
- Support from North because of commercial and financial centers - Opposition came from the South and West with agriculture
Paper money in the colonies
- Swiftly depreciated - Parliament prohibited colonial legislatures from printing paper currency and from passing indulgent bankruptcy laws that might harm the British
Reactions of the Boston Tea Party
- Sympathetic colonists applauded and referred to tea as a badge of slavery - Conservatives complained that destruction of private property violated the law and threatened anarchy and the breakdown of civil decorum - Hutchinson left to Britain to never come back
An unexpected consequence of the Embargo Act
Gives New England an incentive to create a manufacturing industry
Why did the South fear slavery being taken away?
- Tariff (might use the same power they enforced the tariff to get rid of slavery) - Aborted a slave rebellion in Charleston by Denmark Vesey and the Missouri Compromise (calmed it down a bit) - British West Indies getting abolition from the London government → might use the same power
Excise tax
- Tax on a few domestic items, notably whiskey - 7¢ a gallon - Whiskey was used as currency because it flowed freely in the backcountry
Issue of Texas boundary
- Taylor was thought to march to TX and hang them for threatening to invade New Mexico - Didn't - Civil War could have occurred earlier because the South would have defended them
The Era of Good Feelings
- Term made by a Boston newspaper - Idea that one party was present because the Federalists died/were dying off
Why do the Gadsden Purchase
- Terrain was less mountainous - Didn't go through unorganized territory (NM had defense against Indians, but Nebraska didn't) - North argued that Nebraska should become organized
Kansas-Nebraska Act
- Territory of Nebraska would be split into Nebraska and Kansas - Slavery would be decided by popular sovereignty - Likely that Kansas would be slave and Nebraska free (KS[lave], N[fre]E) - Southerners supported it in hopes of gaining a slave state
Results of the Lone Star Rebellion
- Texans couldn't win without the US help - Mexico said for the US to enforce neutrality statutes (nullified) - Texans wanted union with US (slavery...)
William Pitt
- The "Great Commoner" — commoners often kissed his horse - 1757 - was a leader in London government - "Organizer of Victory" - Focused less on West Indies and more on Quebec-Montreal area - Chose young and energetic leaders rather than older ones
Two-house legislative body
- The upper house was appointed by the king in royal colonies and the proprietors in proprietary colonies - The lower house was appointed by landowners
Common Sense
- Thomas Paine - Explained nature of government - Anticipated Declaration of Independence because of no consent of governed - King referred to as "Royal Brute of Great Britain" - 120,000 copies sold in the first few months - Why have a small island regulate a big country? - Foundation for American independence and foreign policy
Jackson's response to the nullification
- Threatened to invade the state and have nullies hanged - Dispatched reinforcements to SC
Results of the Hartford Convention
- Three envoys sent to Washington - rejected because of New Orleans and Ghent that just happened - Fears that Federalists in New England subordinate to agrarian S and W - Ended Federalist party - never again made a successful presidential campaign
Why did the Southern states secede?
- Tipped political balance - Triumph of the new Republican party threatened rights of the slaveholding minority - Weary of free-soil criticism, abolitionist nagging, and Northern interference
British in America
- Trading posts with fur trade by redcoats - The main purpose - keep Natives allied on attack on the USA
Results of The American System
- Transportation highly wanted - Couldn't find funding → Congress passed for $1.5 million for states to use, vetoed by Madison as unconstitutional
British capturing Arnold
- Tried to get his army but couldn't until they had control of the lake - Road couldn't carry their supplies
Jesuits
- Tried to save Natives for God and from fur trappers - Served as explorers and geographers - Were tortured by Natives
Results of the election of 1840
- Triumph of a popular democratic style — politicians had to appeal to the masses - Had to have the common touch - Divine right of the people - Two-party system
Alaska in Russia
- Tsar in 1821 extended area of 100 miles of Sea to 51° - Established trading in San Francisco
King's Mountain and Cowpens
- Turning point in the war between patriots and loyalists in Carolinas - American riflemen wiped out British detachments at King's Mountain and a smaller force at Cowpens
Results of San Jacinto
- Two treaties made: 1) Withdraw Mexican troops 2) Make the Rio Grande SW boundary When released, he repudiated them because they were forced
Economic plan of Alexander Hamilton
- Wanted to shape policies of the government to favor wealthy groups - Would lend government monetary and political support - Prosperity would trickle down (BEFAT)
Why did the embargo collapse after 15 months?
- Underestimated determination of British and overestimated the two nations' reliance on America - Latin America opened its ports - Unpopularity - Didn't continue on long enough
Results of the Nullification Crisis
- Unionist minority in SC - No other southern states supported SC - Resulted in Henry Clay's popularity
Declaration of Independence - Patriot perspective
- Wanted united front - Loyalty to the colonies first - Regarded opponents as traitors - Hanged, imprisoned, and mistreated loyalists - Loyalists fled to Britain (80,000) - Several hundred thousand mild loyalists permitted to stay
Land policy of the people under Adams
- Wanted wide-open expansion - White Georgians wanted Cherokees gone - GA governor threatened with arms to Washington at govt authority on behalf of the Cherokees
Intercolonial Committees
- VA made House of Burgesses — led the way in 1773 - Evolved directly into *congress*
Relations with natives in the colonies
- Very hostile relationship developed between colonists and Powhatan tribe - Higher tension when moving west - Caused Anglo-Powhatan Wars - Powhatan Confederacy defeated
George Whitefield
- Very talented orator and interested people to listen - Sent out his message of human helplessness and divine omnipotence - Many were "saved" during his sermons
Chesapeake colonies
- Virginia and Maryland - 1st permanent English colony: Jamestown - Set up under a joint-stock company *Virginia Company* - John Smith established discipline and saved colony - John Rolfe introduced tobacco
Goals of the Constitutional Convention
- Wanted a firm, dignified, and respected government - Wanted to preserve the union - Forestall anarchy - Ensure security of life and property against dangerous uprisings by the mobocracy
Characteristics of Patriots not wanting republicanism
- Wanted social hierarchy but not hereditary aristocracy - Saw lower class of society wanting to be put with them
Robert de La Salle
- Went down the Mississippi River to check Spanish penetration into the Gulf of Mexico region - Named Louisiana after Louis XIV - Returned with four ships three years later to the region - Failed to find Mississippi Delta and was murdered by his men after landing in Spanish Texas
Britain's strategy for rolling up the colonies
- Went to the South first because of the numerous Loyalists - GA taken 1778-1779 - Charleston in 1780 - 5,000 men and 400 cannons were captured
Yankee seamen
- Were traders - Provided Caribbean with food and timber products - Hauled riches to various countries
Shays' Rebellion
- West Massachusetts in 1786 - Backcountry farmers were losing property because of foreclosure and tax delinquencies - Captain Daniel Shays - leader - Wanted paper money, lighter taxes, and suspend property takeovers - Massachusetts made a small army in order to defend against them
Land Act of 1820
- West lacked popularity and needed allying with other sections (as seen in the Panic of 1819) - Buy 80 acres for a minimum of $1.25 an acre cash - Demanded cheap transportation - Demanded cheap money issued by "wildcat" banks
Massachusetts process for making a new state Constitution
- When made - given to the people for ratification - Once adopted, only another specially called constitutional convention could change things - Future process
Economic division in the election of 1840
- Whigs wanted to expand and stimulate economy - Democrats wanted to reduce expenses and end large banks & corporations
Marbury v. Madison 1803
- William Marbury sued James Madison for shelving his commission - Marshall said that under the Judiciary Act of 1789 on which Marbury tried to base his case was unconstitutional. The Act attempted to assign Supreme Court powers the Constitution did not foresee - Marshall dismissed the case to avoid Jeffersonian rivalry too
Positive effects of Benedict Arnold protecting the US
- Winter ending - British had to go back to Canada - If he didn't stall, Fort Ticonderoga would be captured - If he started in 1777 instead of Montreal, he would have succeeded
John Adams' presidency
- Won presidential election 71-68 especially in New England - Jefferson became VP - No appeal to the masses - Couldn't fulfill GW's position as well
Impacts of slave culture
- Words introduced like voodoo, goober, and gumbo - Ringshout (dancing in circle with preacher in middle) led to jazz - Banjo and bongo drum - Became artisans - Menial tasks were taken care of
Why Free Soilers were against slavery
- Would take jobs from whites, meaning they couldn't own land - Only traditional American commitment would allow mobility to flourish
Vigilance Committees
Goal to protect fugitive slaves from slave catchers
smallpox
- became a big epidemic - 1/5 had it - vaccinations were crude and not suggested - clergy and physicians opposed vaccinations, so powdered dried toad became a favored remedy
Tariff of 1832
Got rid of the worst parts of the tariff of abominations but not all the South wanted
Paupers and convicts
- less fortunate than indentured servants - many convicts were victims of circumstances of harsh English penal code
issues with the Anglican church
- ministers began to talk about political issues - Anglicans had to go to England to become ordained - sermons were boring - ethicality was not up to par
Physicians
- poorly trained and not highly esteemed - young doctors served as apprentices - bleeding was frequent and fatal - barbers summoned instead of physicians
Fishing
- ranked below agriculture - major industry in New England - Cod to Europe - Stimulated shipbuilding
law profession
- regarded as useless, and in CT put with drunkards and brothel keepers
Racism in the colonies
- some made illegal to teach slaves to read or write - not even Christianity would make them free - *originally economic reasons - now was racial discrimination*
How many states needed to ratify the Constitution for it to be accepted? Why
9/13 because the Framers foresaw that hesitant states wouldn't comply
How did Natives *benefit* from the Columbian Exchange?
-Brought weapons for Natives as well as food and other goods Brought horses for Natives to transport — revolutionized farming for the Natives
How did Natives *suffer* from the Columbian Exchange?
-Brought white men to brutalize Natives ↳Battle of Acoma ↳Smallpox ↳Slave owners
Francisco Pizarro
-Brutalized Incas for an increase of riches -Contributed to the rise of capitalism and merchant banking -Also signed contract
Anasazi
-Build pueblo in Chaco Canyon -ancestors of the modern Pueblo Indians
What led to a revival of European trade?
-Crusades* led revival by bringing taste of spices and goods from Asian -Renaissance nurtures spirit of adventure and new ideas -Guttenberg press spread navigation & technological news —Marco Polo* writes of his adventures -Sailing improvements
Aztec achievements
-Cultivated Maize -Built elaborate cities without wheels -Carried on far-flung commerce -Made accurate astronomical observations
Why did the English experience an increase in the national spirit? How did the search for new markets encourage English colonization?
-Defeat of Spanish Armada, religious, unity, and stability -Elizabeth I sent explorers on the seas and encouraged them -New markets mean new employment opportunities and more wealth -Joint-stock companies promoted
arguments against annexing texas
-Didn't want to start conflict with Mexico -Didn't want to upset the slave/free balance (Texas would be a slave state)
john tyler
-Fake Whig -supported states' rights over a nationalist agenda -disliked protective tariffs -opposed a national bank - rejected the idea of turning profits from the sale of western lands over to the states (Rejected Clay's American System/Whig funding of internal improvements like roads and canals)
Religious conflicts in England beginning with Henry VIII — and how they led directly to New World settlements
-Henry VIII to divorce wife and broke away from Roman Catholic Church to make his own -Protestant Reformation - Catholics battled Protestants -Elizabeth I, who was a Protestant, came to the throne Spanish and English conflict
Opening to the New World lifted Europe. Explain how Columbian Exchange affected Europe's economies
-Maize, beans, and squash to the Old World food nourishes people to repopulate America and start settlements-Settlements became producers of the Old and New world crops
Hernando Cortés
-Malinche -Burnt his ships -Manipulated Moctezuma into thinking he was a god -Aztecs attacked on June 30th, 1520 (Nochte Triste) -Tenochtitlán temples destroyed for Christian Cathedrals -Created Mestizo
How did the demand for unskilled labor lead to a massive slave-trading industry in West Africa?
-Smallpox epidemic caused death of many Natives -Sugar plantations and mineral/crop demands -Rise of Transatlantic Slave Trade -Portuguese and Arabs began as major monopolies in slave trade 1) Africans already exposed to diseases 2) Africans didn't know the land 3) Pope banned Natives use as slaves
sam houston
-Successfully led Texans in the battle of San Jancito defeating Santa Anna's superior force -Served as first governor of texas
American relationship w/ britain in the 1830s
-a borrower-lender status -a constant state of being on the brink of war -a series of compromises -ongoing boundary disputes (NOT tension over tariffs)
Issues with Congress
1) No power to regulate commerce - different tariffs and navigation laws created by different states to attract money 2) No tax collection - *asked* them to contribute but usually only got 1/4 if lucky
Navigation Acts
1) Trade carried only in English/Colonial ships 2) Trade had to pass through English ports 3) Certain goods from colonies could be exported only to England **Smugglers" bypassed these**
Paxton Boys
1764 - Armed march to Philadelphia - Disliked friendly policy to Natives - Usually later joined American Revolution - 12 presidents were of Scot-Irish descent
Anglo-Powhatan Wars
1610-1646 - 1st ends in 1614 with marriage of Pocahontas and John Rolfe - Massacre of 1622 begins - 347 colonists killed (including John Rolfe) - Powhatan Confederacy defeated by 1646 (disease, disorganization, and disposability) - Peace Treaty of 1646
King Williams War and Queen Anne's War
1689-1697 — 1702-1713 - Earliest struggle for power among Europeans - French and British trying to ally with Natives - No large detachments of troops commissioned — guerrilla warfare - Indian allies of French ravaged with torch and tomahawk to British colonial frontiers - Spain allied with France and probed South Carolina from Florida - British not able to affirm sallies against Quebec and Montreal - Turning point - got stronghold of Port Royal in Acadia
Tea Act
1773 - British East India Company had 17 million pounds of unsold tea - Ministry gave company monopoly over America to sell it - Americans thought it was a trick to be baited into more tax - British officials decided to enforce it
Troops coming in to capture the Hudson River Valley
1777 *All three were British* - General John Burgoyne went down Lake Champlain route from Canada - General Howe's troops in New York could go up Hudson River and meet John if needed - Colonel Barry St. Leger would come in from West by Lake Ontario and Mohawk Valley
Valley Forge, Pennsylvania
1777-1778 - Went without bread and minimal woolens and/or clothing for the whole winter
George Rogers Clark
1778-1779 - Went down Ohio River and captured Kaskaskia, Cahokia, and Vincennes
Inflation in the colonies
1780-1781 - Government almost bankrupt - 2.5¢ on $1 - Dispair, disunity, and rebellious attitudes infected army
Treaty of Fort Stanwix
1784 - First treaty between US and Natives - Ceded most of their land to Americans
Caucus System
1790-1828 A small group of individuals within the party would choose the candidate
Bill of Rights
1791 - First 10 Amendments - American principles like natural rights, jury, no cruel and unusual punishments, etc.
Battle of Fallen Timbers
1794 - New army under General "Mad Anthony" Wayne - British refused to shelter Indians - Treaty of Grenville offered
Chesapeake Affair
1807 - British demanded surrender of American deserters - American captain refused - British killed 3 Americans and wounded 18 *Led to resentment by Americans*
Fletcher v. Peck
1810 - GA legislature bribed by granting 35 million acres in Yazoo River country to private speculators - Next legislature after the election canceled transaction because of the public disapproval *- Marshall decreed legislative grant was a contract and forbids states impairing the contract* - One of the earliest, clear assertions of the rights of the SC
Congress of Vienna
1814-1815 European powers were to establish a new balance of power in Europe and redraw the map after Napoleon was gone — British made the Treaty of Ghent to avoid another war because they were preoccupied with this in Europe
Worcester v. Georgia
1832 - Georgia law does not apply to the Cherokee nation - Cherokee can't be forced to move by US govt
Bank War
1832 - Webster and Clay presented renewal of charter 4 years earlier than necessary - Jackson vetoed as unconstitutional even though McCulloch v. MD declared Constitutional
Black Hawk War
1832 Sauk and Fox led by Black Hawk - crushed by regular troops including Jefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
1848 treaty ending the Mexican-American War $15 to Mexico US got Mexican Secession (California, Nevada)
Jane Addams
1860-1935; Founder of Settlement House Movement and the first American woman to earn the Nobel Peace Price in 1931 as the president of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
Trent Affair
1861 diplomatic row that threaten to bring British on side of confederacy into war after union ship stopped British steamer and arrested two confederate diplomats On board
Homestead Act
1862 law that gave 160 acres of land to citizens willing to live on and cultivate it for five years Helped make a land accessible to hundreds of westward moving settlers
Pacific Railroad Act
1862; Helped fund the construction of the Union Pacific transcontinental railroad with the use of land grants and government bonds.
Standard Oil Company
1870-1911; John D. Rockefeller's company, formed in 1870, which came to symbolize the trusts and monopolies of the Gilded Age. By 1877 this company controlled 95% of the oil refineries in the United States. It was also one of the first multinational corporations and at times distributed more than half of its kerosene production outside the United States. By the turn of the century it had become a target for trust-busting reformers, and in 1911 the Supreme Court ordered it to break up into several dozen smaller companies.
Credit Mobilier Scandal
1872 during the Grant administration; Railroad company bribed Congressmen offering them stocks and pay offs to ignore their corrupt ways, eventually they were caught.
Battle of the Little Bighorn
1876; A particularly violent example of the warfare between whites and Native Americans in the late nineteenth century, also known as "Custer's Last Stand." In two days, June 25 and June 26, 1876, the combined forces of 2,500 Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho Indians defeated and killed more than 250 US soldiers, including Colonel George Custer. The battle came as the US government tried to compel Native Americans to remain on the reservations and Native Americans tried to defend territory from white gold-seekers. This Indian advantage did not last long, however, as the union of these Indian fighters proved tenuous and the US Army soon exacted retribution.
Big Sister policy
1880s; A foreign policy of Secretary of State James G. Blaine aimed at rallying Latin American nations behind American leadership and opening Latin American markets to Yankee traders. The policy bore fruit in 1889, when Blaine presided over the First International Conference of American States.
Dawes Severalty Act
1887; An act that broke up Indian reservations and distributed land to individual households. Leftover land was sold for money to fund US government efforts to "civilize" Native Americans.
Battle of Wounded Knee
1890; A battle between the US Army and the Dakota Sioux, in which two hundred Native Americans and twenty-nine US soldiers died. Tensions erupted violent over two major issues: the Sioux practice of the "Ghost Dance," which the US government had outlawed, and the dispute over whether Sioux reservation land would be broken up because of the Dawes Act.
McKinley Tariff
1890; Shepherded through Congress by President William McKinley, this tariff raised duties on Hawaiian sugar and set off renewed efforts to secure the annexation of Hawaii to the United States.
Jim Crow
1890s Series of state laws in the South that legalized segregation.
Homestead Strike
1892 Strike at Andrew Carnegie's steel plant in Pennsylvania in which Pinkerton detectives clashed with steel workers
World's Columbian Exposition
1893; Americans saw this world's fair, held in Chicago, as their opportunity to claim a place among the world's most "civilized" societies, by which they meant the countries of western Europe. The fair honored art, architecture, and science, and its promoters built a mini city in which to host the fair that reflected all the ideals of city planning popular at the time. For many, this was the high point of the City Beautiful movement.
Pullman strike
1894; A strike by railroad workers upset by drastic wage cuts. The strike was led by socialist Eugene Debs but not supported by the American Federation of Labor. Eventually President Grover Cleveland intervened, and federal troops forced an end to the strike. The strike highlighted both divisions within labor and the government's new willingness to use armed force to combat work stoppages.
Plessy v. Ferguson
1896 SCOTUS ruling that separate but equal facilities for different races were not unconstitutional.
Anti-Imperialist League
1898-1921; A diverse group formed to protest American colonial oversight in the Philippines. It included university presidents, industrialists, clergymen, and labor leaders. Strongest in the Northeast, this assosiation was the largest lobbying organization on a US foreign-policy issue until the end of the nineteenth century. It declined in strength after the United States signed the Treaty of Paris (which approved the annexation of the Philippines), and especially after hostilities broke out between Filipino nationalists and American forces.
Teller Amendment
1898; A proviso for President William McKinley's war plans that proclaimed to the world that when the United States had overthrown Spanish misrule, it would give Cuba its freedom. The amendment testified to the ostensibly "anti-imperialist" designs of the initial war plans.
Maine
1898; American battleship dispatched to keep a "friendly" watch over Cuba in early 1898. It mysteriously blew up in Havana harbor on February 15, 1898, with a loss of 260 sailors. Later evidence confirmed that the explosion was accidental, resulting from combustion in one of the ship's internal coal bunkers. But many Americans, eager for war, insisted that it was the fault of a Spanish submarine mine.
Rough Riders
1898; Organized by Theodore Roosevelt, this was a colorful, motley regiment of Cuban war volunteers consisting of western cowboys, ex-convicts, and effete Ivy Leaguers. Roosevelt emphasized his experience with the regiment in subsequent campaigns for governor of New York and vice president under William McKinley.
Open Door note
1899-1900; A set of diplomatic letters in which Secretary of State John Hay urged the great powers to respect Chinese rights and free and open competition within their spheres of influence. The notes established the "Open Door policy," which sought to ensure access to the Chinese market for the United States, despite the fact that it did not have a formal sphere of influence in China.
Boxer Rebellion
1900; An uprising in China directed against foreign influence. It was suppressed by an international force of some eighteen thousand soldiers, including several thousand Americans. The Boxer Rebellion paved the way for the revolution of 1911, which led to the establishment of the Republic of China in 1912.
Foraker Act
1900; Sponsored by Senator Joseph B. Foraker, a Republican from Ohio, this accorded Puerto Ricans a limited degree of popular government. The first comprehensive congressional effort to provide for governance of territories acquired after the Spanish-American War, it served as a model for a similar act adopted for the Philippines in 1902.
Insular Cases
1901-1904; A badly divided Supreme Court decreed in these cases that the Constitution did not follow the flag. In other words, Puerto Ricans and Filipinos would not necessarily enjoy all American rights.
Hay-Pauncefote Treaty
1901; A treaty signed between the United States and Great Britain giving Americans a free hand to build a canal in Central America. The treaty nullified the Clayton-Bulwer treaty of 1850, which prohibited Britain or the United States from acquiring territory in Central America.
Platt Amendment
1901; Following its military occupation, the United States successfully pressured the Cuban government to write this amendment into its constitution. It limited Cuba's treaty-making abilities, controlled its debt, and stipulated that the United States could intervene militarily to restore order when it saw fit.
Elkins Act
1903; Law passed by Congress to impose penalties on railroads that offered rebates and customers who accepted them. The law strengthened the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887. The Hepburn Act of 1906 added free passes to the list of railroad no-no's.
Lochner v. New York
1905; A setback for labor reformers, the Supreme Court decision invalidated a state law establishing a ten-hour day for bakers. It held that the "right to free contact" was implicit in the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Pure Food and Drug Act
1906; A law passed by Congress to inspect and regulate the labeling of all foods and pharmaceuticals intended for human consumption. This legislation, and additional provisions passed in 1911 to strengthen it, aimed particularly at the patent medicine industry. The more comprehensive Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1983 largely replaced this legislation.
Meat Inspection Act
1906; A law passed by Congress to subject meat shipped over state lines to federal inspection. The publication of Upton Sinclair's novel The Jungle earlier that year so disgusted American consumers with its description of conditions in slaughterhouses and meatpacking plants that it mobilized public support for government action.
Muller v. Oregon
1908; A landmark Supreme Court case in which crusading attorney (and future Supreme Court justice) Louis D. Brandeis persuaded the Supreme Court to accept the constitutionality of limiting the hours of women workers. Coming on the heels of Lochner v. New York, it established a different standard for male and female workers.
Root-Takahira agreement
1908; Agreement by which the United States and Japan agreed to respect each other's territorial possessions in the Pacific and to uphold the Open Door in China. The agreement was credited with easing tensions between the two nations, but it also resulted in a weakened American influence over further Japanese hegemony in China.
Payne-Aldrich Bill
1909; While intended to lower tariff rates, this bill was eventually revised beyond all recognition, retaining high rates on most imports. President Taft angered the progressive wing of his party when he declared it "the best bill that the Republican party has ever passed."
New Freedom
1912; Platform of reforms advocated by Woodrow Wilson in his first presidential campaign, including stronger antitrust legislation to protect small business enterprises from monopolies, banking reform, and tariff reductions. Wilson's strategy involved taking action to increase opportunities for capitalist competition rather than increasing government regulation of large trusts.
New Nationalism
1912; State-interventionist reform program devised by journalist Herbert Croly and advocated by Theodore Roosevelt during his Bull Moose presidential campaign. Roosevelt did not object to continued consolidation of trusts and labor unions. Rather, he sought to create stronger regulatory agencies to ensure that they operated to serve the public interest, not just private gain.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
1932 to 1944; Created New Deal reforms to combat Depression; Established Social Security; Assisted homeless & unemployed; Federal Deposit Insurance Company; Security & Exchange Commission; Civil Conservation Corp (CCC); Led US through WWII; Established United Nations; Led US from isolationism to internationalism; America became a superpower; Government permanently expanded its role in society; Focused attention & power in Oval Office
Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)
1933; A New Deal program designed to raise agricultural prices by paying farmers not to farm. it was based on the assumption that higher prices would increase farmers' purchasing power and thereby help alleviate the Great Depression.
Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
1933; A government program created by Congress to hire young unemployed men to improve the rural, out-of-doors environment with such work as planting trees, fighting fires, draining swamps, and maintaining national parks. The CCC proved to be an important foundation for the post-World War II environmental movement.
Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act
1933; A law creating the federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which insured individual bank deposits and ended a century-long tradition of unstable banking that had reached a crisis in the Great Depression.
National Recovery Administration (NRA)
1933; Known by its critics as the "National Run Around," the NRA was an early New Deal program designed to assist industry, labor, and the unemployed through centralized planning mechanisms that monitored workers' earnings and working hours to distribute work and established codes for "fair competition" to ensure that similar procedures were followed by all firms in any particular industrial sector.
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
1933; One of the most revolutionary of the New Deal public works projects, the TVA brought cheap electric power, full employment, low-cost housing, and environmental improvements to Americans in the Tennessee Valley.
Hundred Days
1933; The first hundred days of Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration, stretching from March 9 to June 16, 1933, when an unprecedented number of reform bills were passed by a Democratic Congress to launch the New Deal.
Social Security Act
1935; A flagship accomplishment of the New Deal, this law provided for unemployment and old-age insurance financed by a payroll tax on employers and employees. It has long remained a pillar of the "New Deal Order."
Wagner Act
1935; Also known as the National Labor Relations Act, this law protected the right of labor to organize in unions and bargain collectively with employers and established the National Labor Relations Board to monitor unfair labor practices on the part of employers. Its passage marked the culmination of decades from labor protest.
Court-packing plan
1937; Franklin Roosevelt's politically motivated and ill-fated scheme to add a new justice to the Supreme Court for every member over seventy who would not retire. His objective was to overcome the Court's objections to New Deal reforms.
Fair Labor Standards Act
1938; Important New Deal labor legislation that regulated minimum wages and maximum hours for workers involved in interstate commerce. The law also outlawed labor by children under sixteen. The exclusion of agricultural, service, and domestic workers meant that many blacks, Mexican Americans, and women - who were concentrated in these sectors - did not benefit from the act's protection.
Office of Price Administration (OPA)
1941-1947; A critically important wartime agency charged with regulating the consumer economy by rationing scarce supplies, such as automobiles, ties, nylon, fuel, and sugar, and by curbing inflation by settling ceilings on the price of goods. Rents were controlled as well as in parts of the country overwhelmed by war workers. The OPA was extended after WWII ended to continue the fight against inflation.
ABC-1 Agreement
1941; An agreement between Britain and the United States developed at a conference in Washington DC between January 29 and March 27, 1941, that should the United States enter WWII, the two nations and their allies would coordinate their military planning, making a priority of protecting the British Commonwealth. That would mean "getting Germany first" in the Atlantic and European theater and fighting more defensively on other military fronts.
Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC)
1941; Threatened with a massive "Negro March on Washington" to demand equal opportunities in war jobs and in the military, FDR's administration issues an executive order forbidding racial discrimination in all defense plants operating under contract with the federal government. The FEPC was intended to monitor compliance with the executive order.
Battle of Midway
1942; A pivotal naval battle fought near the island of Midway on June 3-6. The victory halted Japanese advances in the Pacific.
Manhattan Project
1942; Code name for the American commission to develop the atomic bomb. The first experimental bomb was detonated on July 16, 1945, in the desert of New Mexico. Atomic bombs were then dropped on two cities in Japan in hopes of brining the war to an end: Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, and Nagasaki on August 9, 1945.
Bracero program
1942; Program established by agreement with the Mexican government to recruit temporary Mexican agricultural workers to the United States to make up for wartime labor shortages in the Far West. The program persisted until 1964, by which time it had sponsored 4.5 million border crossings.
Smith-Connelly Anti-Strike Act
1943; Passed amidst worries about the effects that labor strikes would have on war production, this law allowed the federal government to seize and operate plants threatened by labor disputes. It also criminalized strike action against government-run companies.
D-Day
1944; A massive military operation led by American forces in Normandy beginning on June 6, 1944. The pivotal battle led to the liberation of France and brought on the final phases of WWII in Europe.
Potsdam conference
1945; From July 17 to August 2, President Harry S. Truman met with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and British leaders Winston Churchill and later Clement Attlee (when the Labour party defeated Churchill's Conservative party) near Berlin to deliver an ultimatum to Japan: surrender or be destroyed.
Seward's Folly
1967; Popular term for Secretary of State William Seward's purchase of Alaska from Russia. The derisive term reflected the anti-expansionist sentiments of most Americans immediately after the Civil War.
House of Burgesses
1st form of representative government, made of wealthy land owners -- est in Virginia
The Great Migration (not after WWI!)
20,000 refugees to Massachusetts and 48,000 to West Indies
Arthur
21st President 1881-1885 Republican Pendleton Act.
Willian McKinley
25th President; Responsible for the American-Spanish war.
Herbert C. Hoover
31st President who was a Quaker humanitarian, head of the Food Administration, and who helped forge a war economy by "voluntary conservation" with patriotism
Loyalists for British cause characteristics
50,000 - Spies - Asked Indians to ally with BR - Often kept Patriot soldiers at home so they could protect their family from Loyalist reprisals
British fleet in July 1776
500 ships, 15,000 men - largest fleet until Civil War
Father Charles Coughlin
A Catholic priest from Michigan who was critical of FDR on his radio show. His radio show morphed into being severely against Jews during WWII and he was eventually kicked off the air, however before his fascist (?) rants, he was wildly popular among those who opposed FDR's New Deal.
Robert F. Wagner
A Democratic senator from New York State from 1927-1949, he was responsible for the passage of some of the most important legislation enacted through the New Deal. The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 was popularly known as the Wagner Act in honor of the senator. He also played a major role in the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 and the Wagner-Steagall Housing Act of 1937.
William T. Johnson
A Free mulatto slave owner in New Orleans. This illustrates the power gained by some freed slaves in the South.
Carl Schurz
A German immigrant that arrived in 1860. He was a politician and journalist that fought against slavery and for good treatment of Native Americans.
Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO)
A New Deal-era labor organization that broke away from the American Federation of Labor (AFL) in order to organize unskilled industrial workers regardless of their particular economic sector or craft. The CIO gave a great boost to labor organizing in the midst of the Great Depression and during World War II. In 1955, the CIO merged with the AFL.
Harry L. Hopkins
A New York social worker who headed the Federal Emergency Relief Administration and Civil Works Administration. He helped grant over 3 billion dollars to the states wages for work projects, and granted thousands of jobs for jobless Americans.
Fundamentalism
A Protestant Christian movement emphasizing the literal truth of the Bible and opposing religious modernism, which sought to reconcile religion and science. It was especially strong in the Baptist Church and the Church of Christ, first organized in 1906.
Winslow Homer
A Realist painter known for his seascapes of New England.
Alamo
A Spanish mission converted into a fort, it was besieged by Mexican troops in 1836. The Texas garrison held out for thirteen days, but in the final battle, all of the Texans were killed by the larger Mexican force.
Schenck v. United States
A Supreme Court decision that upheld the Espionage and Sedition Acts, reasoning that freedom of speech could be curtailed when it posed a "clear and present danger" to the nation.
War Refugee Board
A U.S. agency formed to help rescue Jews from German-occupied territories and to provide relief to inmates of Nazi concentration camps. The agency performed noble work, but it did not begin operations until very late in the war, after millions had already been murdered.
Federal Trade Commission Act
A banner accomplishment of Woodrow Wilson's administration, this law empowered a standing, presidentially appointed commission to investigate illegal business practices in interstate commerce like unlawful competition, false advertising, and mislabeling of goods.
United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA)
A black nationalist organization founded in 1914 by the Jamaican-born Marcus Garvey in order to promote resettlement of African Americans to their "African homeland" and to stimulate a vigorous separate black economy within the United States.
McCarthyism
A brand of vitriolic, fear-mongering anti-communism associated with the career of Senator Joseph McCarthy. In the early 1950s, Senator McCarthy used his position in Congress to baselessly accuse high-ranking government officials and other Americans of conspiracy with communism. The term named after him refers to the dangerous forces of unfairness and fear wrought by anticommunist paranoia.
American plan
A business-oriented approach to worker relations popular among firms in the 1920s to defeat unionization. Managers sought to strengthen their communication with workers and to offer benefits like pensions and insurance. They insisted on an "open shop" in contrast to the mandatory union membership through the "closed shop" that many labor activists had demanded in the strike after World War I.
Union party
A coalition party of pro-war Democrats and Republicans formed during the 1864 election to defeat anti-war Northern Democrats.
Liberia
A colony of freed African-American slaves who were returned to Africa. About 15,000 originally populated this country on the West Coast of Africa.
Fordney-McCumber Tariff Law
A comprehensive bill passed to protect domestic production from foreign competitors. As a direct result, many European nations were spurred to increase their own trade barriers.
"Lost Generation"
A creative circle of expatriate American artists and writers, including Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Gertrude Stein, who found shelter and inspiration in post-World War I Europe.
pragmatism
A distinctive American philosophy that emerged in the late nineteenth century around the theory that the true value of an idea lay in its ability to solve problems. The followers thus embraced the provisional, uncertain nature of experimental knowledge. Among the most well-known purveyors of this theory were John Dewey, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., and William James.
Al Capone
A famous Chicago gangster who made a fortune ($60 million in one year) off of bootlegging, and "murdered" his way to the top of the crime network, buying off public officials, the police, and judges. He was not convicted of any wrongdoing, however, until a judge in a federal court convicted him of income-tax evasion and sent him to jail in 1931.
McNary-Haugen Bill
A farm-relief bill that was championed throughout the 1920s and aimed to keep agricultural prices high by authorizing the government to buy up surpluses and sell them abroad. Congress twice passed the bill, but President Calvin Coolidge vetoed it in 1927 and 1928.
Volstead Act
A federal act enforcing the Eighteenth Amendment, which prohibited the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages.
limited liability
A form of business ownership in which the owners are liable only up to the amount of their individual investments.
Frederick Douglass
A former slave, and son to a plantation owner, Douglass became a leader in the abolitionist cause after he was "discovered" in 1841. He was a radical speaker who employed all legal means to fight for emancipation, even going so far as to burn a copy of the Constitution publicly.
Benjamin Wade
A founder of the Republican party and senator from Ohio from 1851 to 1869. A passionate abolitionist, he pressured President Lincoln throughout the Civil War to pursue harsher policies toward the South. He co-sponsored the Wade-Davis Bill in 1864, which required 50 percent of the registered voters of a southern state to take a loyalty oath as a precondition for reentry into the Union, rather than the 10 percent proposed by Lincoln. As President Pro Tempore of the Senate in 1868, he was next in line for the presidency should Andrew Johnson be impeached, and the prospect that someone of such radical views might become president may have contributed to the failure of the effort to impeach Johnson.
George B. McClellan
A general for northern command of the Army of the Potomac in 1861; nicknamed "Tardy George" because of his failure to move troops to Richmond; lost battle vs. General Lee near the Chesapeake Bay; Lincoln fired him twice.
Reconstruction Finance Corporation
A government lending agency established under the Hoover administration in order to assist insurance companies, banks, agricultural organizations, railroads, and local governments. It was a precursor to later agencies that grew out of the New Deal and symbolized a recognition by the Republicans that some federal action was required to address the Great Depression.
Committee on Public Information
A government office during World War I known popularity as the Creel Committee for its Chairman George Creel, it was dedicated to winning everyday Americans' support for the war effort. It regularly distributed pro-war propaganda and sent out an army of "four-minute men" to rally crowds and deliver "patriotic pep."
Boston Associates
A group of Boston businessmen who built the first power loom. In 1814 in Waltham, Massachusetts, they opened a factory run by Lowell. Their factory made cloth so cheaply that women began to buy it rather than make it themselves.
George Creel
A journalists who was the head of the Committee of Public Information. He helped the anti-German movement as well as inspired patriotism in America during the war.
Adkins v. Children's Hospital
A landmark Supreme Court decision reversing the ruling in Muller v. Oregon, which had declared women to be deserving of special protection in the workplace.
Espionage Act
A law prohibiting interference with the draft and other acts of national "disloyalty." Together with the Sedition Act of 1918, which added penalties for abusing the government in writing, it created a climate that was unfriendly to civil liberties
Grandfather Clause
A law to discriminate against blacks (If your grandfather couldn't vote you can't either.)
Mary McLeod Bethune
A leader in the struggle for women's and black equality. She founded a school for black students that eventually became Bethune-Cookman University. She also served as an advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt
William Randolph Hearst
A leading newspaperman of his times, he ran the New York Journal and helped create and propagate "yellow (sensationalist) journalism."
Sojourner Truth
A renowned speaker, she was a freed slave who advocated for women's rights as well as slavery.
Francis E. Townsend
A retired physician who proposed an Old Age Revolving Pension Plan to give every retiree over age 60 $200 per month (using money from a 2% federal sales tax), provided that the person spend the money each month in order to receive their next payment; the object of Towsend's plan was to help retired workers as well as stimulate spending in order to boost production and end the Depression.
yellow journalism
A scandal-mongering practice of journalism that emerged in New York during the Gilded Age out of the circulation battles between Joseph Pulitzer's New York World and William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal. The expression has remained a pejorative term referring to sensationalist journalism practiced with unethical, unprofessional standards.
Kellogg-Briand Pact
A sentimental triumph of the 1920s peace movement, this 1928 pact linked sixty-two nations in the supposed "outlawry of war."
New Hampshire
Acquired by MA Bay Colony in 1641, separated & made royal in 1679
J.P. Morgan
American financier and banker who dominated corporate finance and industrial consolidation; purchased Carnegie Steel and created U.S. Steel.
Nine-Power Treaty
Agreement coming out of the Washington "Disarmament" Conference of 1921-1922 that pledged Britain, France, Italy, Japan, the United States, China, the Netherlands, Portugal, and Belgium to abide by the Open Door Policy in China. The Five-Power Naval Treaty on ship ratios and the Four-Power Treaty to preserve the status quo in the Pacific also came out of the conference.
containment doctrine
America's strategy against the Soviet Union based on the ideas of George Kennan; it declared that the Soviet Union and communism were inherently expansionist and had to be stopped from spreading through both military and political pressure and, as a result, guided American foreign policy throughout most of the Cold War.
davy crockett, jim bowie
American Pioneer Frontiersmen who died defending the Alamo and whose sacrificial defense helped buy time for Sam Houston to organize an army to repulse Santa Anna's march into Texas
Supporters of the Whigs
American System, Southern states' rights, northern merchants/industrialists, and Evangelical Protestants
Daniel Burnham
American architect and planner who helped bring French Baron Haussman's City Beautiful movement to the United States
clipper ships
American boats, built during the 1840's in Boston, that were sleek and fast but inefficient in carrying a lot of cargo or passengers.
Josiah Strong
American clergyman who preached Anglo-Saxon superiority and called for a stronger US missionary effort overseas in his book "Our Country"
Why didn't Americans want representation in Parliament?
American representatives would have been overwhelmingly outvoted
John Hay
American secretary of state who attempted to preserve Chinese independence and protect American interests in China
Henry James
American writer who lived in England. Wrote numerous novels around the theme of the conflict between American innocence and European sophistication/corruption, with an emphasis on the psychological motivations of the characters. Famous for his novel Washington Square and his short story "The Turn of the Screw."
Distrust in the colonies in regards to the 2nd Continental Congress
Americans in other sections, who were jealous, were already beginning to distrust the large New England army being collected around Boston
Pearl Harbor
An American naval base in Hawaii where Japanese warplanes destroyed numerous ships and caused 3,000 casualties on December 7, 1941—a day that, in President Roosevelt's words, was to "live in infamy." The attack brought the United States into World War II.
Dawes Plan
An arrangement negotiated in 1924 to reschedule German reparations payments. It stabilized the German currency and opened the way for further American private loans to Germany.
Tampico Incident
An arrest of American sailors by the Mexican government that spurred Woodrow Wilson to dispatch the American navy to seize the port of Veracruz in April 1914. Although war was avoided, tensions grew between the US and Mexico.
Keynesianism
An economic theory based on the thoughts of British economist John Maynard Keynes, holding that central banks should adjust interest rates and governments should use deficit spending and tax policies to increase purchasing power and hence prosperity.
John T. Scopes
An educator in Tennessee who was arrested for teaching evolution. This trial represented the Fundamentalist vs the Modernist. The trial placed a negative image on fundamentalists, and it showed a changing America.
Ku Klux Klan
An extremist, paramilitary, right-wing secret society founded in the mid-nineteenth century and revived during the 1920s. It was anti foreign, anti black, anti Jewish, anti pacifist, anti Communist, anti internationalist, anti evolutionist, and anti bootlegger, but pro Anglo-Saxon and pro Protestant. Its members, cloaked in sheets to conceal their identities, terrorized freedmen and sympathetic whites throughout the South after the Civil War. By the 1890s, Klan-style violence and Democratic legislation succeeded in virtually disenfranchising all southern blacks.
Treaty of Grenville
August 1795 - Confederacy gave up Old Northwest - Received $20k with $9k annually by Americans - Right to hunt lands - Recognition of status
William Faulkner
Author of A Rose for Emily, Barn Burning, Sound of Fury
Harvey
Author of the popular pro-silver pamphlet "Coin's Financial School"
Force Bill
Authorized the president to use the army and navy, if necessary, to collect federal tariff duties
Why did most North American tribes not achieve high levels of development?
Because of the lack of resource and minimally shared knowledge. Europeans and Asians collaborated to bring together knowledge as to advance both of their technology. The Natives only had a success or fail system and adapted by oral tradition. Also, they were vulnerable to disease and could easily die from it.
Why was nonimportation weakening in 1773
Because the legal BR tea was cheaper than smuggled tea from other countries
Alabama
British built confederate warship that raided the union shipping during the Civil War one of many built by British for confederacy despite union protest
Keynes
British economist whose theories helped justify New Deal deficit spending
George Canning
British foreign secretary that approached the American minister in an "alliance to issue a new foreign policy involving the Americas"
Whiskey Rebellion
By the Whiskey Boys in SW PN 1794 - Countrymen challenged national government - High excise tax was a burden on economic necessity - Made whiskey poles - like liberty poles - Tarred and feathered revenue officers - brought collections to a halt
Constitution making in the states - what did Congress call for?
Called for colonies to rewrite their Constitutions - not everybody did it
Paine's ideas
Called for not only independence but also the creation of a new kind of political system called republicanism
Women and Economics
Charlotte Perkins Gilman's book urging women to enter the work force and advocating cooperative kitchens and child-care centers
Royal order of Rhode Island
Charter gave kingly sanction to Rhode Island
Revolutions in Latin America
Cheered by Americans because they too are rebelling against Kings & imitating America's Revolution - Caused Spain's Florida troops to leave and defend
Five Civilized Tribes
Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Seminoles
The three Native tribes that remained were the...
Cherokees, Creeks, and Iroquois
One of the important factors that first stimulated European interest in trade and discovery was the...
Christian crusaders who brought back a taste for the skills and spices of Asia
Puritans achieved to make better __________ rather than ________
Christians ; citizens
Detroit
City of Straits
market revolution
Drastic changes in transportation (canals, RRs), communication (telegraph), and the production of goods (more in factories as opposed to houses)
Central Powers
Germany and Austria Hungary, later joined by Turkey and Bulgaria made up this alliance against the Allies in World War I
Albert Einstein
German-born physicist who helped persuade Roosevelt to develop the atomic bomb
The two largest non-English white ethnic groups in the colonies were the
Germans and the Scots-Irish
Martin Delany
Delany was one of few black leaders who advocated for colonization, and even went so far as to scout the West Coast of Africa for a suitable plot of land in 1859.
John W. Davis
Democratic convention nominee in 1924 against Coolidge. He was a wealthy lawyer connected with J.P. Morgan and Company. Coolidge easily defeated him.
baby boom
Demographic explosion from births to returning soldiers and others who had put off starting families during the war. This large generation of new Americans forced the expansion of many institutions such as schools and universities.
scalawags
Derogatory term for pro-Union Southerners whom Southern Democrats accused of plundering the resources of the South in collusion with Republican governments after the Civil War.
Sheppard Towner Maternity Act
Designed to appeal to new women voters, this act provided federally financed instruction in maternal and infant health care and expanded the role of government in family welfare.
Fredrick Law Olmsted
Designer of New York City's Central Park, who wanted cities that exposed people to the beauties of nature. One of his projects, the Chicago Columbian Exposition of 1893, gave a rise to the influential "City Beautiful" movement.
Personal Liberty Laws
Did not allow use of local jails for housing fugitive slaves
Rhode Island in the ratification of the Constitution
Didn't even call a convention and rejected it popularly
End of the Whigs
Disorganization because of the FSL and other sectional issues. They contributed to upholding the Union and providing valuable statesmen
Napoleon III
Dispatched a French army to occupy Mexico City he then installed on the ruins of the crushed republic. Ignored the monroe doctrine
Patronage
Distributing jobs by the bucketful in return for votes, kickbacks, and party service.
Peter Stuyvesant
Dutch military leader that took down the newly-planted New Sweden on Delaware River
Jacobus Arminus
Dutch theologian who rejected predestination and preached that salvation could be attained through the acceptance of God's grace and was thus open to all, not just the elect.
Cahokia
East St. Louis Mound Builder people built intricate society housing 25,000 people
North advantages
Economy Factories Controlled sea/naval power Larger manpower/more immigrants more mineral deposits
Greely
Editor of the NY tribune selected to run for president by liberal Republicans in 1872 against Grant
Civil Law
Elaborate lengthy legal codes
Spanish control in America
Eliminated in Florida but still held much of West North America
Lease
Eloquent Kansas Populist who urged farmers to "raise less corn and more hell"
Lord Sheffield
Englishman who declared that Britain shouldn't have to try to get America to trade with them; commerce would follow old channels naturally
Byrd family
Enjoyed a library of 4,000 volumes of books
Congressional Committee on the Conduct of the War
Established by Congress during the Civil War to oversee military affairs. Largely under the control of Radical Republicans, the committee agitated for a more vigorous war effort and actively pressed Lincoln on the issue of emancipation.
War Production Board (WPB)
Established in 1942 by executive order to direct all war production, including procuring and allocating raw materials, to maximize the nation's war machine. The WPB had sweeping powers over the US economy and was abolished in November 1945 soon after Japan's defeat.
Confiscation of estates
Estates of Loyalists confiscated and sold for financing the war
Border States
Five slave states-Missouri Kentucky Maryland Delaware and West Virginia - that did not succeed Missouri Kentucky Maryland Delaware and West Virginia - that did not secede during the Civil War to keep the states in the union Lincoln insisted that war was not about forcing slavery but protecting the union
Russo-American Treaty of 1824
Fixed Southern Alaskan limits at 54° 40'
Benito Mussolini
Fascist dictator of Italy (1922-1943). He led Italy to conquer Ethiopia (1935), joined Germany in the Axis pact (1936), and allied Italy with Germany in World War II. He was overthrown in 1943 when the Allies invaded Italy.
Alliance with America and France
February 6, 1778 - Not like Model Treaty - Offered full support until full independence and both agreed on common terms on the enemy - Made the Revolution a World War
Patroonships
Feudal estates that were needed to settle 50 people on them
Panic of 1873
Financial crisis caused by excessive lending by banks to businesses that did not turn a profit, caused a world wide economic collapse.
Korean War
First "hot war" of the Cold War. It began when the Soviet-backed North Koreans invaded South Korea and UN forces, dominated by the United States, launched a counteroffensive. The war ended in stalemate in 1953.
Elizabeth blackwell
First female physician Who helped organize sanitary commission to assist Union armies in the field
Battle of Bull Run (Manassas Junction)
First major battle of the Civil War and a victory for the South, it dispelled Northern illusions of swift victory.
George Catlin
First painted portraits of American Indian Life. First person to envision the idea of a national park
At this point, explain why Buchanan couldn't have prevented the Civil War
Force on SC would make war occur earlier under less favorable conditions, would make the North seem aggressive, and make the Border States go to the South
Ickles
Former Bull Moose Progressive who spent billions of dollars on public building projects while carefully guarding against waste
Weaver
Former Civil War general and Granger who ran as the Greenback Labor party candidate for president in 1880
Hiram W. Johnson
Fought for railroad regulation in California; helped to break the dominant grip of the Southern Pacific Railroad on California politics in 1910
Results of the Townshend Acts on tea
Found they could secure tea at a cheap price by *smuggling* — usually drank 2 brews a day
American Anti-Slavery Society
Founded by abolitionists in 1833, as the movement gains momentum.
The Society for Propagating the Gospel Among Indians
Founded in 1787 - missionaries to Indian villages
Results of the Ostend Manifesto
Free soilers condemned it, led to Civil War by South attempting to gain more slave states
Who could vote in the Bay Colony?
Freemen
Huguenots
French protestants
Plains of Abraham
French were defeated and had to give up Montreal and Quebec
Michel-Guillaume de Crèvecoeur
Frenchman that reported that America was a "strange mixture of blood, which you will find in no other country"
Nickname for Hessians and why
From German state of Hesse. Hessian flies - worried more about money than serving — many remained in America and became citizens
Thaddeus Stevens
From Pennsylvania; leader of the House in the joint committee; abolitionist
Clermont
Fulton's steamboat in 1807 which powered on/by a newly designed engine. It took the this boat 32 hours to go 150 miles from New York to Albany.
"Whom can we trust now"
George Washington in regards to Arnold being a traitor
Watson
Georgia politician and leader of the Populist Party; assisted poor Georgians and farmers
Kristallnacht
German for "night of broken glass," it refers to the murderous pogrom that destroyed Jewish businesses and synagogues and sent thousands to concentration camps on the night of November 9, 1938. Thousands more attempted to find refuge in the United States, but were ultimately turned away due to restrictive immigration laws.
Zimmermann note
German foreign secretary Arthur Zimmerman had secretly proposed a German-Mexican alliance against the United States. When the note was intercepted and published in March 1917, it caused an uproar that made some Americans more willing to enter the war.
Hessians and results
German mercenaries fighting for England in favor of George III and hired by him - Upset colonists by bringing mercenaries into a quarrel
Peace Treaty of 1748
Handed Louisbourg back to French
One way that the British combatted Pontiac's Rebellion
Handed out blankets with smallpox
James
Harvard philosopher and one of the leading anti-imperialists opposing U.S. acquisition of the Philippines
August 1775 Declaration of George III
He declared the colonies in open rebellion
Albert B. Fall
He was Secretery of the Interior during Harding's administration, and was a scheming anticonservationist. He was convicted of leasing naval oil reserves and collecting bribes, which was called the Tea Pot Dome scandal.
Samuel Slater
He was a British mechanic that moved to America and in 1791 invented the first American machine for spinning cotton. He is known as "the Father of the Factory System" and he started the idea of child labor in America's factories.
Alice Paul
Head of the National Woman's party that campaigned for an equal rights amendment to the Constitution. She opposed legislation protecting women workers because such laws implied women's inferiority. Most condemned her way of thinking.
Gould
Head of the Union Pacific Railroad, made millions of dollars by embezzling stocks from several railroad companies with Fisk
War Industries Board
Headed by Bernard Baruch, this federal agency coordinated industrial production during World War I, setting production quotas, allocating raw materials, and pushing companies to increase efficiency and eliminate waste. Under the economic mobilization of the War Industries Board, industrial production in the United States increased 20 percent during the war.
Henry the Navigator
Henry sent many sailing expeditions down Africa's west coast, but did not go on them himself
Nuremberg war crimes trial
Highly publicized proceedings against former Nazi leaders for war crimes and crimes against humanity in postwar Germany. The trials led to several executions and long prison sentences.
The Impending Crisis of the South
Hinton R. Helper - Nonaristocratic white from the North who hated slavery and blacks - Attempted to give statistics about nonslaveholders suffering the most from slavery
ecological imperialism
Historians' term for the spoliation of western natural resources through excessive hunting, logging, mining, and grazing.
Why was Jackson justified in invading Florida?
Hostile Seminole Indians and fugitive slaves were using FL a refuge
War aims of the South
Independence, states rights, Gov't power, low tariffs, slavery/southern way of life
Result of the Treaty of Wanghia
Inspired mission to Japan
Coercive Acts
Intolerable Acts - Port Act - Massachusetts Governor Act - Restrictions on town meetings, power to royal ruler - Administration of Justice Act - no self-government in MA and sent rebels to Britain for trial - Enforcing officials who killed colonists in the line of duty could be sent to Britain for trial - New Quartering Act gave local authorities the power to lodge British soldiers anywhere
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)
Investigatory body established in 1938 to root out "subversion." Sought to expose communist influence in American government and society, in particular through the trial of Alger Hiss.
Tehran
Iranian capital where Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin met to plan D-Day in coordination with Russian strategy against Hitler and the East
Cyrus McCormick
Irish-American inventor that developed the mechanical reaper. The reaper replaced scythes as the preferred method of cutting crops for harvest, and it was much more efficient and much quicker. The invention helped the agricultural growth of America.
Marcus Alonzo Hanna
Iron tycoon from Ohio who helped to elect McKinley with his strong endorsement, "I love McKinley". Served as kingmaker and campaign manager, trying to make the focus of the election the tariff.
How was America useful to France by being neutral?
It supplied the French West Indies needed foodstuffs. If they were in war, Britain would have blockaded the Yankees off
GI Bill
Known officially as the Servicemen's Readjustment Act and more informally as the GI Bill of Rights, this law helped returning World War II soldiers reintegrate into civilian life by securing loans to buy homes and farms and set up small businesses. It also made tuition and stipends available for them to attend college, as well as job training programs. The act was intended to cushion the blow of 15 million returning servicemen on the employment market and to nurture the postwar economy.
Works Project Administration
Large federal employment program, established in 1935 under Harry Hopkins that provided jobs in areas from road building to art
Wendell L. Willkie
Lawyer in the United States and was the dark horse Republican Party nominee for the 1940 presidential election. Liberal who was against domestic policies of the New Deal. He thought were inefficient and anti-business.
Emilio Aguinaldo
Leader of Filipino insurgents who aided Americans in defeating Spain and taking Manila
Oliver O. Howard
Leader of Freedman's Bureau, Boden's College, Christian general, from Maine, founder of Howard University
Jacob S. Coxey
Leader of a group of unemployed workers who petitioned Washington DC.
Geronimo
Leader of the Apaches of Arizona in their warfare with the whites
Chief Joseph
Leader of the Nez Percé tribe who conducted a brilliant but unsuccessful military campaign in 1877; his tribe was fooled and forced into Kansas
irreconcilables
Led by Senators William Borah of Idaho and Hiram Johnson of California, this was a hard-core group of militant isolationists who opposed the Wilsonian dream of international cooperation in the League of Nations after World War I. Their efforts played an important part in preventing American participation in the international organization.
Employment Act of 1946
Legislation declaring that the government's economic policy should aim to promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power, as well as to keep inflation low. A general commitment that was much shorter on specific targets and rules than its liberal creators had wished. The Act created the Council of Economic Advisers to provide the president with data and recommendations to make economic policy.
Marshall Plan
Massive transfer of aid money to help rebuild postwar Western Europe, intended to bolster capitalist and and democratic governments and prevent domestic communist groups from riding poverty and misery to power. The pan was first announced by Secretary of State George Marshall at Harvard's commencement in 1947.
Yalta conference
Meeting of Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin in February 1945 at an old tsarist resort on the Black Sea, where the Big Three leaders laid the foundations for the postwar division of power in Europe, including a divided Germany and territorial concessions to the Soviet Union.
Liberal Protestants
Members of a branch of Protestantism that flourished from 1875 to 1925 and encouraged followers to use the Bible as a moral compass rather than to believe that the Bible represented scientific or historical truth. Many became active in the "social gospel" and other reform movements of the era.
Why did Alexander Hamilton believe national debt was a blessing?
More creditors the government owed money to meant more people with a personal stake in enterprise
Dey of Algiers
North African pirates - Destroyed commerce and enslaved Yankees - Yankees came and forged British papers to pretend they were Britain
settlement houses
Mostly run by middle-class native-born women, settlement houses in immigrant neighborhoods provided housing, food, education, child care, cultural activities, and social connections for new arrivals to the United States. Many women, both native-born and immigrant, developed lifelong passions for social activism in the settlement houses. Jane Addams' Hull House in Chicago and Lillian Wald's Henry Street Settlement in New York City were two of the most prominent.
dollar diplomacy
Name applied by President Taft's critics to the policy of supporting US investments and political interests abroad. First applied to the financing of railways in China after 1909, the policy then spread to Haiti, Honduras, and Nicaragua. President Woodrow Wilson disavowed the practice, but his administration undertook comparable acts of intervention in support of US business interests, especially in Latin America.
National Security Council Memorandum Number 68 (NSC-68)
National Security Council recommended to quadruple defense spending and rapidly expand peacetime armed forces to address Cold War tensions. It reflected a new militarization of American foreign policy, but the huge costs of rearmament were not expected to interfere with what seemed like the limitless possibility of postwar prosperity.
Result of the election of 1832
National nominating conventions and formal platforms, and aristocratic advantages didn't matter anymore
code talkers
Native American men who served in the military by transmitting radio messages in their native languages, which were undecipherable by German and Japanese spies.
American Protective Association
Nativit organization that attacked New Immigrants and Roman Catholicism in the 1880's and 1890's
Result of having a federation instead of a *con*federation
Needed to recast local government free to control all domestic affairs
Security and Exchange Commission
New Deal agency established to provide a public watchdog against deception and fraud in stock trading
The triangular trade involved the sale of rum, molasses, and slaves among the ports of
New England, Africa, and the West Indies
Blue Light Federalists
New Englanders who flashed lanterns on the shore so blockading British would be alerted of escape
Triangle Shirtwaist Company Fire
New York City disaster that underscored urban workers' need for government protection
First two North American English colonies:
Newfoundland and North Carolina
"Not worth a Continental"
No metal money left and no taxation "allowed," so the Continental Congress made paper money and was worthless
Before Columbus arrived, the only Europeans known to have visited North America, temporarily, were the
Norse
Populists
Officially known as the People's party, the Populists represented Westerners and Southerners who believed that US economic policy inappropriately favored Eastern businessmen instead of the nation's farmers. Their proposals included nationalization of the railroads, a graduated income tax, and, most significantly, the unlimited coinage of silver.
Executive Order 9981
Order issued by President Truman to desegregate the armed forces. The president's action resulted from a combination of pressure from civil rights advocates, election-year political calculations, and the new geographical context of the Cold War.
American Liberty League
Organization of wealthy Republicans and conservative Democrats whose attacks on the New Deal caused Roosevelt to denounce them as "economic royalists" in the campaign of 1936
Mason-Dixon Line
Originally the southern border of Pennsylvania, this term describes the north/south divide of slavery in the states. This line was erased, however, in the early abolitionist reform when most movements were in the South.
writ of habeas corpus
Petition requiring officers to present detained individual's before the court to examine the gallery of arrest. Protects individuals from arbitrary state action
Gag Resolution
Passed by Congress in 1836 as a result of Southern protest, this resolution silenced antislavery appeals without debate. It was later repealed.
Wade-Davis Bill
Passed by congressional Republicans in response to Abraham Lincoln's "10 percent" Reconstruction plan, it required that 50 percent of a state's voters pledge allegiance to the Union and set stronger safeguards for emancipation. Reflected divisions between Congress and the president, and between radical and moderate Republicans, over the treatment of the defeated South.
criminal syndicalism laws
Passed by many states during the red scare, these nefarious laws outlawed the mere advocacy of violence to secure social change. Stump speakers for the International Workers of the World, or IWW, were special targets.
carpetbaggers
Pejorative used by Southern whites to describe Northern businessmen and politicians who came to the South after the Civil War to work on Reconstruction projects or invest in Southern infrastructure.
German settlement in the colonies was especially heavy in
Pennsylvania
Popular sovereignty
People in the territory should determine the status of slavery
Lecompton Constitution
People were "allowed" to vote for or against the constitution in Kansas with slavery or without slavery
racketeers
People who obtain money illegally by fraud, bootlegging, gambling, or threats of violence. Racketeers invaded the ranks of labor during the 1920s, a decade when gambling and gangsterism were prevalent in American life.
Meiji Restoration
Period began by the Kanagawa Treaty of restoration in Japan
Fair Deal
President Truman's extensive social program introduced in his 1949 message to Congress. Republicans and southern Democrats kept much of his vision from being enacted, except for raising the minimum wage, providing for more public housing, and extending old-age insurance to many more beneficiaries under the Social Security Act.
Truman Doctrine
President Truman's universal pledge of support for any people fighting any communist or communist-inspired threat. Truman presented the doctrine to Congress in 1947 in support of his request for $400 million to defend Greece and Turkey against Soviet-backed insurgencies.
Difference between powers of war in the president and Congress
President could wage war, but Congress could declare war
Nicholas Biddle
President of the BUS
Jefferson Davis
President of the Confederate States of America
Robert M. "Fighting Bob" La Follette
Progressive Republican Governor of Wisconsin; wrested control from the corporations and gave it back to the people
Sinclair
Progressive novelist who sought to aid industrial workers, but found his book, The Jungle, instead inspiring middle-class consumer protection
Benedict
Prominent 1930s social scientist who argued that each culture produced its own type of personality
Clement L. Vallandigham
Prominent Copperhead who was an ex-congressman from Ohio, demanded an end to the war, and was banished to the Confederacy
Booker T. Washington
Prominent black American born into slavery who believed that racism would end once blacks acquired useful labor skills and proved their economic value to society. Head of the Tuskegee Institute in 1881. Wrote a book called "Up From Slavery."
Clay's speech
Proposed a series of compromises, North should yield by allowing feasible slave law, seconded by Stephen Douglas
Border ruffians
Proslaveryites who came from MO to vote for KS to become a slave state
Debs
Railway union leader who converted to socialism while serving jail time during the Pullman strike
Sugar Act of 1764
Raised tax revenue in colonies and increased duty on foreign sugar imported from West Indies and made by *George Grenville*
Fourteenth Amendment
Ratified in 1868; Constitutional amendment that extended civil rights to freedmen and prohibited states from taking away such rights without due process.
Fifteenth Amendment
Ratified in 1870; Prohibited states from denying citizens the franchise on account of race. It disappointed feminists, who wanted the amendment to include guarantees for women's suffrage.
Naturalization Law of 1802
Reduced citizen residency requirement from 14 to 5 years
Tariff of 1857
Reduced duties to 20% on dutiable goods - Northern industrialists desired increased protection, surplus drained in Treasury (higher duties)
Florence Kelley
Reformer who worked to prohibit child labor and to improve conditions for female workers
West Virginia (WV)
Region that broke away from Virginia to form it's on state after Virginia ceded from the union. (Joined union in 1863) Most residents were independent farmers and miners who did not own slaves and opposed confederate cause
Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom
Religious freedom in Virginia - Established by Thomas Jefferson
Quartering Act of 1765
Required certain colonies to provide food and quarters for British troops
Other name for French and Indian War
Seven Years War
Musters
Several days of drilling with some amusement in
Treaty of Versailles
Signed in France's famed palace after six months of tough negotiations, it established the terms of settlement of the First World War between Germany and Allied and Associated Powers. Article 231, soon dubbed "the war guilt clause," blamed the war on Germany as justification for forcing German disarmament and saddling Germany with heavy reparations payment to the Allied victors. Germans detested the treaty as too harsh, the French feared it was too weak to prevent future aggression, and the US Senate rejected it, largely because it obliged the United States to join the League of Nations.
Slave Trade Compromise
Slave trade can continue slave trade until the end of 1807 - Meant slaves increase more by procreation
Friction between Mexico and Texas
Slavery emancipated and prevented further importation and colonization — Texans disagreed
Democratic (Baltimore) convention 1860
Try #2 - Southerners walked out again - Voted for Douglas - popular sovereignty and against destruction of the FSL
Levittown
Suburban communities with mass-produced tract houses built in the New York and Philadelphia metropolitan areas in the 1950s by William Levitt and Sons. Typically inhabited by white middle-class people who fled the cities in search of homes to buy for their growing families.
Battle of Long Island
Summer/Fall of 1776 - Washington escaped to Manhattan island b/c of wind/fog - Escaped northward and crossed Hudson River to NJ - Reached Delaware River with British close - Rebel remnants fled across the river after collecting all available boats to forestall pursuit - General William Howe didn't crush them because he was focused on his wife
London government's reaction after the Townshend Acts
Suspended New York legislature after passing the Townshend Acts for failure to comply with the Quartering Act
Pragmatism
The American philosophical theory, especially advanced by William James, that the test of the truth of an idea was its practical consequences
Why didn't the Jeffersonians like Jay's Treaty
They would have to pay their debts
Caroline
This US ship was attacked on the Niagara River by Britain in 1837 because it carried supplies meant for rebels in Canada. It brought about more serious tension than the travel magazines and "word wars" at the time.
Creole
This US ship was captured by Virginia slaves who were later given refuge by Britain in 1841 to the Bahamas. This also heightened tensions in the US - especially with the slave south.
Agricultural Marketing Act
This act established the Federal Farm Board, a lending bureau for hard-pressed farmers. The act also aimed to help farmers help themselves through new producers' cooperatives. As the depression worsened in 1930, the Board tried to bolster falling prices by buying up surpluses, but it was unable to cope with the flood of farm produce to market.
Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act
This act reversed traditional high-protective-tariff policies by allowing the president to negotiate lower tariffs with trade partners, without Senate approval. Its chief architect was Secretary of State Cordell Hull, who believed that tariff barriers choked off foreign trade.
Wilmot Proviso
This famous proposal, by congressmen David Wilmot, declared that slavery should never enter the territory that would be acquired from Mexico after the War; never passsed; defined the slavery issue at the time and was hotly debated and referenced until the Civil War.
Norris-La Guardia Anti-Injunction Act
This law banned "yellow-dog," or antiunion, work contracts and forbade federal courts from issuing injunctions to quash strikes and boycotts. It was an early piece of labor-friendly federal legislation.
Adamson Act
This law established an eight-hour day for all employees on trains involved in interstate commerce, with extra pay for overtime. It was the first federal law regulating the hours of workers in private companies, and was upheld by the Supreme Court Wilson v. New (1917).
sewing machine
This machine was invented in 1846 by Elias Howe and Isaac Singer and made sewing clothes faster and easier.
Randolph Bourne
This man was a "cultural pluralist" along with Horace Kallen. He opposed the idea of immigration restriction. He, in fact, believed in cosmopolitan interchange which was destined to make America "not a nationality but a trans-nationality." In this view the U.S. should serve as the vanguard of a more international and multicultural age. (pgs. 724-725)
Walker Tariff
This tariff reduced the protective rates of the Tariff of 1842 to please the southerners, and anger the Clayites. Signed by James Polk in 1846, this tariff proved to be very successful for producing revenue.
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
This treaty, created with the help of secretary of state Nicholas P. Trist, secured all of Texas and California for $15 million in 1848. This was received with varied opposition from land-hungry southerners and antislavery Whigs. This was after the Mexican-American war.
Stephen W. Kearny
This war general from the Mexican-American war is famous for taking Santa Fe with his 1700 troops in 1846.
Manifest Destiny
This was a popular and nationalistic idea that promoted the idea of "empire" along with "liberty" and was employed by many southern expansionists before the Civil War.
Purpose of the American Navy (mainly privateers) at this point
To destroy British merchant shipping and carry war around the British Isles
Joseph ("Fighting Joe") Hooker (1814-1879)
Union army general, known as his nickname for his bold attacks on Confederate lines during McClellan's peninsular campaign. He took command of the Army of the Potomac from A.E. Burnside in 1863, a post he lost just six months later after he led a failed attack on Lee's forces at Chancellorsville.
George G. Meade
Union general who replaced Hooker three days before the Battle of Gettysburg, where he finally broke the Confederate attack.
Berlin airlift
Year-long mission of flying food and supplies to blockaded West Berliners, whom the Soviet Union cut in the first major crisis of the Cold War.
Bartolome de las Casas (definition)
a Spanish missionary that called the encomienda system a moral pestilence invented by Satan. He then wrote a book about it
Unitarianism
a nontrinitarian Christian religion that believes that God only exists in one person. They also believe that God is a loving father and not a stern creator and that all people will go to Heaven.
F. Scott Fitzgerald
a novelist and chronicler of the jazz age. his wife, zelda and he were the "couple" of the decade but hit bottom during the depression. his noval THE GREAT GATSBY is considered a masterpiece about a gangster's pursuit of an unattainable rich girl.
Perhaps the most enduring result of France's years of colonial rule in North America was
a permanent French-Canadian minority in Quebec in Canada
Robert Owen
a wealthy and idealistic Scottish textile manufacturer who was also a member of New Harmony Utopian Society
Louis May Alcott
a woman writer who wrote "Little Women" and other books based on her mother and sisters. She got many ideas from her philosophical father Branson Alcott
Walt Whitman
a writer who authored a famous collection of poems known as "Leaves of Grass". He wrote with much romance, emotion, and truthfulness
Nathaniel Hawthorne
a writer who is best known for "The Scarlet Letter"; had a tragic childhood when his father died on a sea voyage
Francis Parkman
a writer whose eyes were so defective that he had to write with the aid of a guiding machine. He wrote epic chronicles about the struggle between France and Britian in colonial times for the control of North America
Canadian shield
a zone ungirded by ancient rock, probably the first part of what became the North American landmass to have emerged above sea level
If the charter was accepted (allegedly), it would... If the charter was vetoed (allegedly), it would...
alienate Western followers cause lost support from the East
Encomienda
allowed the government to give Indians to certain colonists in return for the promise to try to Christianize them
The expansion of New France occurred especially
along the paths of North America's interior lakes and rivers
Royal order of Bay Colony
charter removed
The most honored profession in colonial America was the
clergyman
The most intolerable of the Intolerable Acts that the British imposed as punishment for the Boston Tea Party were
closing the port of Boston and the Quartering Act lodging British soldiers in private homes.
An unfortunate group of involuntary immigrants who ranked even below indentured servants on the American social scale were
convicts and paupers
The primary staples of Indian agriculture before the European arrival were...
corn, beans, and squash
Glidden
created the barb wire
In 1836, Texans...
declared independence
French in America
demanded repayment of money loaned
William Pitt's assumption of control of British government and strategy
ended a string of defeats and turned the French and Indian War in Britain's favor
Millerites
followers of William Miller and the belief in the Second Coming of Christ
Among the most important American Indian products or discoveries to spread to the Old World were...
foodstuffs such as corn, beans, and tomatoes
Oppenheimer
former scientific director of the Manhattan Project who joined Albert Einstein in opposing development of the hydrogen bomb
Wallace
former vice president of the United States whose 1948 campaign as a pro-Soviet liberal split the Democratic Party
The most important action the First Continental Congress took to protest the Intolerable Acts was
forming the Association to impose a complete boycott of all British goods.
In the Revolutionary War, African Americans
fought in both the American patriot and British loyalist military forces
The number of Indians in North America at the time Columbus arrived was approximately
four million
What type of people weren't able to marry or get land?
freemen
Those people accused of being witches in Salem were generally
from families associated with Salem's burgeoning market economy
Economy of Plymouth
fur, fish, and lumber
Headright system
get land if you paid for someone's journey to the colony
One of the ways in which mercantilism harmed the colonial economy was by
inhibiting the development of banking and paper currency in the colonies.
Renaissance
inspired adventure and discovery
Barbados Slave Code of 1661
inspired future slave codes when brought to North Carolina in 1670
Colonial Americans were unhappy about the peace treaty of 1748 following the War of Jenkin's Ear because
it returned the Louisbourg fortress they had captured back to France
The Anglican Church suffered in colonial America because of
its poorly qualified clergy and close ties with British authority
Granger Laws
laws that pushed for public control of private business for general welfare
Resumption Act of 1875
lowered the amount of greenbacks and redeemed paper was decreased
Calvinism
major theological credo of New England Puritans - Signs of conversion - sanctified lives after conversion
Mormons
members of the Church of Latter Day Saints created by Joseph Smith and led later by Brigham Young
Grand Army of the Republic
military veteran group that supported Republicans
A.E. Burnside
more than 10,000 Northern soldiers were killed when this man, McClellan's successor as commander of the Army of the Potomac, decided on the frontal attack on Lee's Virginia army on December 13, 1862.
Samuel Gompers
most significant person in history of the American labor movement. Founded the American Federation of Labor and served as its first president for 40 years
Besides offering rest, refreshment, and entertainment, colonial taverns served an important function as centers of
news and political opinion
Dodge City, Abilene, Cheyenne
notable terminal points of the Long Drive
Matrilineal
power and possessions passed down the female side of the family line
social work
profession established by Addams and others that opened new doors for women while engaging in urban problems
Braddock's defeat at Fort Duquesne
prompted widespread Indian assaults on the weakly defended colonial frontier
Victoria Woodhull
radical feminist propagandist whose eloquent attacks on conventional social morality shocked many Americans in the 1870's
Seymour
ran against Grant in the election of 1868; wanted to keep more money in circulation to help south debtors
100th Meridian
ran through Dakotas to Texas separating two climatologically regions
Burned-Over District
refers to the region of upstate New York where the Second Great Awakening had swept through the area
Austrialian ballot
secret ballot
Greenback Labor Party
started as a result of the hard money Policies and contraction
Widening gap of social statuses was based on
the amount of slaves owned vs smaller farmers
The Congregational Church of the Puritans contributed to
the development of basic ideas of democracy as expressed in the New England town meeting
zachory taylor
the general who led the American troops as war broke out in 1846
Hawley-Smoot Tariff
the highest protective tariff in the peacetime history of the United States, passed as a result of good old fashioned horse trading. o the outside world, it smacked of ugly economic warfare
spot resolutions
the legislation introduced by Abraham Lincoln in 1846 to determine exactly where American blood had been spilled on American soil.
The primary reason for the spectacular growth of America's population in the eighteenth century was
the natural fertility of the population
Sally Hemmings
the now-proven "wife" of Thomas Jefferson
The primary cause of Bacon's Rebellion was
the poverty and discontent of many single young men unable to acquire land
interlocking directorate
the practice of having executives or directors from one company serve on the board of directors of another company. J.P. Morgan introduced this practice to eliminate banking competition in the 1890s
Deism
the religion where believers relied on reason rather than revelation and on science rather than Bible
social gospel
the religious doctrines preached by those who believed that the churches should directly address economic and social problems
American colonists especially resented the Townshend Acts because
the revenues from the taxation would go to support British officials and judges in America
Primogeniture
the right of succession belonging to the firstborn child, specifically during the 16th century of England
willamette valley
the river valley south of the Columbia that was the goal of many people who took the Oregon Trail in the 1840s
twisting the British lion's tail
the slang term for a politician in America in the mid-1800s making negative remarks about the British to his Irish audiences.
Nationalism
the spirit of nation consciousness or natural oneness
Three sister farming
the three main crops of various Native American groups in North America: winter squash, maize, and climbing beans
African diaspora
the vast scattering of African peoples throughout the New World
Emma Willard
the woman responsible for attaining respect for women's schools; also established the Troy Female Seminary in New York
Napoleon's exile to Elba by European adversaries hurt the US because
there was less protection from France
If colonial grievances made by the Continental Congress were not redressed
they would meet again in May 1775
Headright system and who got the benefits
those who paid for the passage of a laborer got 50 acres of land *land owners got benefits*
At the time of the American Revolution, the population of Britain was approximately _____ _____ than the population of the thirteen American colonies.
three times larger
Household manufacturing
women's role of spinning and weaving was rather profitable
How did the colonial assembly combat corrupt governors?
would hold the salary until yielded to their wishes
"Influence of Sea Power on History"
written by Mahan
"Our Country"
written by Strong
T.S. Eliot
wrote "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," "The Waste Land" and "The Hollow Men;" British WWI poet, playwright, and literary critic
"A Century of Dishonor" and "Ramona"
wrote by Jackson which resulted in increased sympathy for natives
Louis D. Brandeis
wrote the book Other People's Money and How the Bankers Use it. Further showed the problems of the American banking system. Wilson nominated him to the supreme court making him the first jew in that position.
H. L. Mencken
young author; published the monthly American Mercury; assailed marriage, patriotism, democracy, prohibition, Rotarians, and the middle class Americans; dismissed the South and attacked the Puritans