Difference between revisions of "American History Lecture Eight"

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Reading maps:  before Civil War there was no West Virginia.  If you see West Virginia on a map, then it was after the Civil War started.
 
Reading maps:  before Civil War there was no West Virginia.  If you see West Virginia on a map, then it was after the Civil War started.
  
Imperialism.  We were getting bigger and more powerful.  We had expanded to the Pacific Ocean.  Why stop there?  We took Hawaii in the 1890s.  Americans then started wanting to free Cuba from Spanish control.  “Yellow journalism” consisted of newspapers increasing their sales by stirring up a desire to go to war.  In 1895, some Cubans wanted to become independent from Spain.  Americans seemed to like the idea.  It would push Spain back.  It sparked idealism.  It reminded people of our American Revolution.  Big business could profit from the island.  Newspapers stirred up sentiment.
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== Key Terms Through Reconstruction ==
  
Two things triggered a war: the Spanish minister to the U.S., Enrique Dubuy de Lome, wrote a letter criticizing our president, William McKinley. Cuban rebels intercepted it and leaked it to the press.  The bigger cause, however, was an explosion on the battleship “Maine” in the Havana, Cuba harbor.  The ship sunk, and immediately the press blamed Spain.  In fact, the explosion was probably just an accident.
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American Indians Thomas Paine/Common Sense Utopian communities
 
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Meso-America Valley Forge Examples of Utopian groups
So we declared war on Spain in 1898.  We fought them in the Spanish colony of the Philippines and Cuba.  The fighting in the Philippines was much fiercer.  We beat Spain quickly but natives of the Philippines rebelled against us for 3 years.  Finally we just killed all the insurgents.  This type of intense resistance was a precursor to the difficult Vietnam War.  The Philippines became our territory until 1946, when we granted it independence.
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Europe: Crusades Franco-American Alliance Women's Rights/Seneca Falls
 
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Christopher Columbus Declaration of Independence Shakers
The fighting in Cuba produced a future president:  Theodore Roosevelt and his “Rough Riders.”  They merely conquered a hill there but the media played it up as much as possible.
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Treaty of Tordesillas Articles of Confederation William Lloyd Garrison
 
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John Cabot Treaty of Paris American Antislavery Society
After the War, we granted Cuba independence on the condition that it inserted the “Platt Amendment” into its constitution. This Amendment gave us the right to intercede in Cuba whenever we want, and allowed us to keep a naval base (called Guantanamo Bay) on the island.  We hold terrorists there now.
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Ponce de Leon Newburgh Addresses (or Conspiracy) Horace Mann/Public Education
 
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Hernando Cortes Land Ordinance of 1785 Liberty Party
We also became more active in Central America, and built the magnificent Panama Canal to link the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans.
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"St. Augustine, Florida" Northwest Ordinance of 1787 Mormon Church
 
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"Santa Fe, New Mexico" Annapolis Convention Emerson and Thoreau
Was our imperialism driven by business interests, such as sugar in Cuba and Philippines?  Many critics said so, calling our foreign policy “dollar diplomacy.”
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League of Iroquois Shay's Rebellion Commonwealth v. Hunt
 
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Sir Humphrey Gilbert Constitutional Convention of 1787 Seventh Day Adventist Church
Progressive Movement
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"Roanoke Island (""Lost Colony"")" Virginia Plan Elizabeth Blackwell
 
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Spanish Florida New Jersey Plan Oregon Trail
A very interesting political movement began to develop around 1900:  the progressive movement. It started with a Republican governor of Wisconsin named Robert LaFollette.  It was not so much a political party as a movement that can be summarized in two words:  “better government.”  Not “less government” that a conservative like President James Monroe wanted, and not “more government” that a liberal like Franklin Delano Roosevelt wanted. But “better government.
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Spanish Armada Connecticut Plan Texas secedes from Mexico
 
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Samuel de Champlain bill of attainder Gag rule
We have progressives today in both parties.  Today the former New Jersey Republican candidate for governor (and former mayor of Jersey City) Bret Schundler is like a progressive. His view is let’s run government in a smarter manner.  We have had two progressive presidents:  Republican Teddy Roosevelt and Democrat Woodrow Wilson.  The “progressive era” is considered to be 1900-1920.
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Virginia Company Federalist Papers John Tyler
 
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Jamestown (Virginia) bicameral legislature Elijah Lovejoy
Here were goals of the progressive movement:
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economic system of Jamestown President George Washington Webster-Ashburton Treaty
 
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"""Starving time""" Judiciary Act of 1789 James Polk
Political “reform”
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Henry Hudson full ratification of Constitution Manifest Destiny
Suffrage for all – women, Constitutional Am.
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House of Burgesses Hamilton's report on the public credit Texas enters Union
Direct elections of senators – Constitutional Am.
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"Jamestown's ""cash crop""" Hamilton's report on manufacturers Slidell Mission
Civil service system
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First slaves First Bank of the United States Oregon Treaty
More equitable tax laws – income tax Constitutional Am.
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Plymouth Bay Colony Bill of Rights Wilmot Proviso
Breaking up monopolies
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Mayflower Compact cotton gin Iowa enters Union
Food and drug acts
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"economic system of Plymouth, Mass." federal assumption of state debts Mexican War
Child labor laws
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difference between English & Spanish Washington's Neutrality Proclamation """Spot Resolutions"""
Sweatshops -  
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Powhatan Confederacy Citizen Genet Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
Creation of federal reserve system and federal trade commission
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Mercantilism Jay's Treaty Barnburners
Aid to farmers
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Royal Colony """Executive Privilege"" of President" Zachary Taylor
Protection of labor rights (pro-union)
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Charter Colony Chisholm v. Georgia Gold in California
Rail commission to regulate railroad rates
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Joint-Stock Colony Whiskey Rebellion Millard Fillmore
Safety
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Proprietary Colony Pinckney's Treaty Compromise of 1850
Referenda
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Massachusetts Bay Company Washington's Farewell Address Fugitive Slave Act
Regulation
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Puritans Quids Minnesota and Oregon join US
Peace
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Puritans compared to Pilgrims John Adams Economy of South in 1850s
Pro-business
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Great Migration XYZ Affair Clayton-Bulwer Treaty
Electing smarter people
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Virginia as Royal Colony Alien and Sedition Acts Clipper ships
Against spoils system
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Maryland Virginia and Kentucky Resolves German and Irish immigration
 
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Connecticut Undeclared naval war with France Perry/Japan
A specific example of what the progressive movement addressed was the “Triangle Fire” in New York City on March 25, 1911. This was the worst workplace disaster in New York City until the terrorist attack on 9/11 (note the odd similarity in dates!). In the Triangle Fire, 140 people burned to death, many of them young girls, due to a 10-minute fire that swept through a “sweatshop” shirt factory in Manhattan.  The doors had been locked to keep workers from taking breaks or stealing goods, and the girls could not quickly escape.  Public outrage followed, and the progressive movement passed building code laws to help protect against this happening again.
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Rhode Island "Adam's ""midnight judges""" Ostend Manifesto
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Pequot War """Revolution of 1800""" Transatlantic cable/telegraph
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Colonies settled 1607-39 Thomas Jefferson """Uncle Tom's Cabin"""
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Congregational Church Tripoli War Know-Nothing (American) Party
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Anne Hutchinson John Marshall Franklin Pierce
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Roger Williams Marbury v. Madison Kansas-Nebraska Act
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United Colonies of New England Lewis and Clark Republican Party
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Toleration Act of 1649 Burr-Hamilton Duel early leaders of Republican Party
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Fundamental Orders of Connecticut British Orders in Council Ostend Manifesto
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Religious Persecution in Mass. Chesapeake Affair (Leopard) """Bleeding Kansas"""
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New Amsterdam Embargo Act John Brown's attack
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New Jersey Nonintercourse Act Brooks-Sumner incident
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Carolina Harrison at Tippecanoe Creek James Buchanan
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King Philip's War James Madison Panic of 1857
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Bacon's Rebellion "British burn Washington, D.C." Dred Scott v. Sanford
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Pennsylvania Star-Spangled Banner Lecompton Constitution
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Quaker beliefs Treaty of Ghent Lincoln-Douglas Debates
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Colonies with most religious freedom Hartford Convention "Freeport Doctrine (Freeport, IL)"
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Charter of Liberties Battle of New Orleans John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry
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Dominion of New England Bonus Bill 1860 Repub. Platform
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Glorious Revolution in England James Monroe Abraham Lincoln
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Delaware Rush-Bagot Agreement Copperheads
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Georgia Fulton's steamboat The Confederate States of America
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Middle Colonies Fletcher v. Peck Fort Sumter
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Founding of colleges in colonies Cumberland (National) Road Trent Affair
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Halfway Covenant Protective Tariff Confiscation Act
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Triangular trade Second Bank of the U.S. Emancipation Proclamation
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Salem Witchcraft Trials John Jacob Astor Clara Barton
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Scotch Irish Erie Canal Sherman's march through Georgia
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Great Awakening Tecumseh Absentee Voting
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Jonathan Edwards """Era of Good Feelings""" Southern Disunion
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George Whitefield Florida Homestead Act
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John Peter Zenger Case Dartmouth College v. Woodward Pacific Railway Act
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Stono Rebellion McCullough v. Maryland Morrill Land Grant Act
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King William's War Adams-Onis Treaty Procl. of Amnesty and Reconstr.
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Queen Anne's War Tallmadge Amendment Sioux Wars
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"""Salutary Neglect""" Missouri Compromise Wade-Davis Bill
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King George's War Cohens v. Virginia Freedmen's Bureau
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Albany Congress Denmark Vesey Appomattox Court House
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Albany Plan of Union Monroe Doctrine Andrew Johnson
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French and Indian War John Marshall "13th, 14th, 15th Amendments"
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Treaty of Paris caucus Black Codes
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George III John Quincy Adams Civil Rights Act
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Colonial economy in 1763 Andrew Jackson carpetbaggers
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Pontiac's Rebellion Whigs Ku Klux Klan
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Louisiana territory Tariff of Abominations Burlingame Treaty
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British Proclamation of 1763 South Carolina Exposition and Protest Military Reconstruction Act
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Sugar Act Jackson's attitude towards Calhoun Tenure of Office Act
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Currency Act Maysville Road Veto Command of the Army Act
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Stamp Act Indian Removal Impeachment of Johnson
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Stamp Act Crisis Tom Thumb Ulysses S. Grant
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Stamp Act Congress Peggy Eaton Affair Gilded Age
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Quartering Act Cherokee Nation v. Georgia Fisk-Gould Scandal
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Sons of Liberty Antimasonic Party """Boss"" Tweed"
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Declaratory Act S.C. Ordinance of Nullification Force Act
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Townshend Duties Compromise Tariff Amnesty Act
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Boston Massacre Force Bill Credit Mobilier scandal
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Gaspee incident Whig Party """Salary Grab"" Act"
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Committees of Correspondence Whig supporters """Crime of '73"""
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Tea Act Martin Van Buren Greenback Party
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Boston Tea Party Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge Women's Christian Temperance Union
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Intolerable (Coercive) Acts """Trail of Tears""" Wounded Knee massacre
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First Continental Congress William Henry Harrison Whiskey Ring
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Second Continental Congress Nat Turner Rutherford B. Hayes
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Benjamin Franklin's achievements Lowell System Compromise of 1877
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Colonial population Reform Movements Baseball
  
 
[[Category:American History lectures]]
 
[[Category:American History lectures]]
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:American History Lecture 08}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:American History Lecture 08}}

Revision as of 13:37, October 26, 2008

Lecture - Questions - Student Answers


Next week: 30-question test, roughly broken down as follows: 10 questions political, 5 questions economic, 5 questions social, 5 questions intellectual and 5 questions foreign policy.

Know your list of presidents, by memorizing the list and counting forward. For example, who was 10th President? (Count forward from Washington until you reach John Tyler.) Who was the president in 1826? (John Quincy Adams) Best tip of all: understand each question before trying to answer it. That is essential.

Cartoons: a combination of facts and argument by the cartoonist. He uses caricatures to express a point of view. The key to deciphering cartoons is to have attention to detail, to pick up all the clues.

History exams are weighted by importance, and a big mistake in preparation is to spend too much time on an obscure time period or issue. Only one third of the first CLEP exam (through Reconstruction) is devoted to the beginning of time to 1789. So don't start with that period and burn out before you reach 1790 to 1877, where two-thirds of the questions will come from.

"Time is money" is a famous, and true, saying. The time you spend not making money, or making little money, could be spent making more money. Lost time is lost opportunity to make money, or do something else useful, such as charity or prayer.

You will spend a certain amount of time preparing for the midterm exam. Call that amount of time "x". How you allocate that time to different areas of 1500-1877 will make a difference on how well you do on the exam. If you spend 90% of x on the period between 1500 and 1700, then you will do poorly on 90% of the questions, because they will be from the period 1700 to 1877. You would have done far better to spend the 90% of x on the time period that will have 90% of the questions.

Why did the Republicans win the presidency every time between Andrew Johnson and World War I, except for Grover Cleveland’s victories? Because the Republicans would “wave the bloody shirt,” which means reminding the voters of how the Democrats sided with the South during the Civil War.

Debate: “spoils system,” which gave the victor (the President) the “spoils” (numerous appointments to easy government jobs for his supporters). Civil service reform ended the spoils system for most federal government jobs in 1883. But Jared argued persuasively that the President should be able to fire all the workers who were hired by his predecessor. After all, didn’t the voters want a change in how government ran things?

Reading maps: before Civil War there was no West Virginia. If you see West Virginia on a map, then it was after the Civil War started.

Key Terms Through Reconstruction

American Indians Thomas Paine/Common Sense Utopian communities Meso-America Valley Forge Examples of Utopian groups Europe: Crusades Franco-American Alliance Women's Rights/Seneca Falls Christopher Columbus Declaration of Independence Shakers Treaty of Tordesillas Articles of Confederation William Lloyd Garrison John Cabot Treaty of Paris American Antislavery Society Ponce de Leon Newburgh Addresses (or Conspiracy) Horace Mann/Public Education Hernando Cortes Land Ordinance of 1785 Liberty Party "St. Augustine, Florida" Northwest Ordinance of 1787 Mormon Church "Santa Fe, New Mexico" Annapolis Convention Emerson and Thoreau League of Iroquois Shay's Rebellion Commonwealth v. Hunt Sir Humphrey Gilbert Constitutional Convention of 1787 Seventh Day Adventist Church "Roanoke Island (""Lost Colony"")" Virginia Plan Elizabeth Blackwell Spanish Florida New Jersey Plan Oregon Trail Spanish Armada Connecticut Plan Texas secedes from Mexico Samuel de Champlain bill of attainder Gag rule Virginia Company Federalist Papers John Tyler Jamestown (Virginia) bicameral legislature Elijah Lovejoy economic system of Jamestown President George Washington Webster-Ashburton Treaty """Starving time""" Judiciary Act of 1789 James Polk Henry Hudson full ratification of Constitution Manifest Destiny House of Burgesses Hamilton's report on the public credit Texas enters Union "Jamestown's ""cash crop""" Hamilton's report on manufacturers Slidell Mission First slaves First Bank of the United States Oregon Treaty Plymouth Bay Colony Bill of Rights Wilmot Proviso Mayflower Compact cotton gin Iowa enters Union "economic system of Plymouth, Mass." federal assumption of state debts Mexican War difference between English & Spanish Washington's Neutrality Proclamation """Spot Resolutions""" Powhatan Confederacy Citizen Genet Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo Mercantilism Jay's Treaty Barnburners Royal Colony """Executive Privilege"" of President" Zachary Taylor Charter Colony Chisholm v. Georgia Gold in California Joint-Stock Colony Whiskey Rebellion Millard Fillmore Proprietary Colony Pinckney's Treaty Compromise of 1850 Massachusetts Bay Company Washington's Farewell Address Fugitive Slave Act Puritans Quids Minnesota and Oregon join US Puritans compared to Pilgrims John Adams Economy of South in 1850s Great Migration XYZ Affair Clayton-Bulwer Treaty Virginia as Royal Colony Alien and Sedition Acts Clipper ships Maryland Virginia and Kentucky Resolves German and Irish immigration Connecticut Undeclared naval war with France Perry/Japan Rhode Island "Adam's ""midnight judges""" Ostend Manifesto Pequot War """Revolution of 1800""" Transatlantic cable/telegraph Colonies settled 1607-39 Thomas Jefferson """Uncle Tom's Cabin""" Congregational Church Tripoli War Know-Nothing (American) Party Anne Hutchinson John Marshall Franklin Pierce Roger Williams Marbury v. Madison Kansas-Nebraska Act United Colonies of New England Lewis and Clark Republican Party Toleration Act of 1649 Burr-Hamilton Duel early leaders of Republican Party Fundamental Orders of Connecticut British Orders in Council Ostend Manifesto Religious Persecution in Mass. Chesapeake Affair (Leopard) """Bleeding Kansas""" New Amsterdam Embargo Act John Brown's attack New Jersey Nonintercourse Act Brooks-Sumner incident Carolina Harrison at Tippecanoe Creek James Buchanan King Philip's War James Madison Panic of 1857 Bacon's Rebellion "British burn Washington, D.C." Dred Scott v. Sanford Pennsylvania Star-Spangled Banner Lecompton Constitution Quaker beliefs Treaty of Ghent Lincoln-Douglas Debates Colonies with most religious freedom Hartford Convention "Freeport Doctrine (Freeport, IL)" Charter of Liberties Battle of New Orleans John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry Dominion of New England Bonus Bill 1860 Repub. Platform Glorious Revolution in England James Monroe Abraham Lincoln Delaware Rush-Bagot Agreement Copperheads Georgia Fulton's steamboat The Confederate States of America Middle Colonies Fletcher v. Peck Fort Sumter Founding of colleges in colonies Cumberland (National) Road Trent Affair Halfway Covenant Protective Tariff Confiscation Act Triangular trade Second Bank of the U.S. Emancipation Proclamation Salem Witchcraft Trials John Jacob Astor Clara Barton Scotch Irish Erie Canal Sherman's march through Georgia Great Awakening Tecumseh Absentee Voting Jonathan Edwards """Era of Good Feelings""" Southern Disunion George Whitefield Florida Homestead Act John Peter Zenger Case Dartmouth College v. Woodward Pacific Railway Act Stono Rebellion McCullough v. Maryland Morrill Land Grant Act King William's War Adams-Onis Treaty Procl. of Amnesty and Reconstr. Queen Anne's War Tallmadge Amendment Sioux Wars """Salutary Neglect""" Missouri Compromise Wade-Davis Bill King George's War Cohens v. Virginia Freedmen's Bureau Albany Congress Denmark Vesey Appomattox Court House Albany Plan of Union Monroe Doctrine Andrew Johnson French and Indian War John Marshall "13th, 14th, 15th Amendments" Treaty of Paris caucus Black Codes George III John Quincy Adams Civil Rights Act Colonial economy in 1763 Andrew Jackson carpetbaggers Pontiac's Rebellion Whigs Ku Klux Klan Louisiana territory Tariff of Abominations Burlingame Treaty British Proclamation of 1763 South Carolina Exposition and Protest Military Reconstruction Act Sugar Act Jackson's attitude towards Calhoun Tenure of Office Act Currency Act Maysville Road Veto Command of the Army Act Stamp Act Indian Removal Impeachment of Johnson Stamp Act Crisis Tom Thumb Ulysses S. Grant Stamp Act Congress Peggy Eaton Affair Gilded Age Quartering Act Cherokee Nation v. Georgia Fisk-Gould Scandal Sons of Liberty Antimasonic Party """Boss"" Tweed" Declaratory Act S.C. Ordinance of Nullification Force Act Townshend Duties Compromise Tariff Amnesty Act Boston Massacre Force Bill Credit Mobilier scandal Gaspee incident Whig Party """Salary Grab"" Act" Committees of Correspondence Whig supporters """Crime of '73""" Tea Act Martin Van Buren Greenback Party Boston Tea Party Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge Women's Christian Temperance Union Intolerable (Coercive) Acts """Trail of Tears""" Wounded Knee massacre First Continental Congress William Henry Harrison Whiskey Ring Second Continental Congress Nat Turner Rutherford B. Hayes Benjamin Franklin's achievements Lowell System Compromise of 1877 Colonial population Reform Movements Baseball