US History

US History Table of Contents3
Chapter 1: The First Americans16
Early America: Pre Columbus16
1.1 Early America up till 149216
1.3 Tribes of the Northwest16
1.4 Great Basin Culture Area17
1.5 Plateau Culture Area17
1.6 Tribes of the Southwest17
1.7 Tribes of the Great Plains17
1.8 Tribes of the Southeast17
1.9 Tribes of the Northeast18
1.11 Chapter One Practice Exam19
Chapter 2: Age of Exploration 1492-1600s21
2.1 Age of Exploration 1492-1600s21
2.2 The Age of Exploration21
2.3 Columbus21
2.4 The Columbian Exchange22
2.5 The Treaty Tordesillas22
2.6 The Spanish Conquistadors23
2.7 Conquistadors take the New World23
2.8 French Explorers24
2.9 Dutch (Netherlands) Explorers25
2.10 English Explorers25
2.11 European Effects on Native Population25
2.12 Slavery in the New World26
2.13 Chapter Two Practice Exam27
Chapter 3: Early Settlements and Colonies mid 1500s- Mid 1600s29
3.1 Settlements and Colonies mid 1500s- Mid 1600s29
3.2 New Spain29
3.3 New France30
3.4 The English Colonies30
3.5 Colonization31
3.6 Jamestown32
3.7 The Massachusetts Bay Colony33
3.8 Under the Leadership of John Winthrop34
3.9 Dissension in the Colony34
3.10 The New World Powers38
3.11 Chapter Three Practice Exam39
Chapter 4: Colonial Life mid 1600s-176342
4.1 Colonial Life42
4.2 Early Colonial Economy42
4.3 The Navigation Acts42
4.4 The Triangular Trade43
4.5 Bacon's Rebellion44
4.6 King Phillip's War (King Mediacom’s War) and the New England Confederation44
4.7 The Half-Way Covenant45
4.9 The Enlightenment46
4.10 Ideas on a Social Contract47
4.11 The First Great Awakening48
4.12 Colonial Culture49
4.13 Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (The Middle Passage)51
4.14 Slavery in North America52
4.15 Conflicts Leading to the French and Indian War52
4.16 The Albany Plan53
4.17 The French and Indian War53
4.18 Pontiac's Rebellion54
4.19 The Colonial Landscape54
4.20 Chapter Four Practice Exam56
Chapter 5: Road to Independence 1763-177659
5.1 Road to Independence59
5.2 The Beginnings of Unpleasantness59
5.3 The Writs of Assistance59
5.4 The Proclamation Line60
5.5 The Sugar Act60
5.6 The Stamp Act60
5.7 Stamp Act Repealed and Declaratory Act Enacted61
5.8 The Sons of Liberty and the Daughters of Liberty61
5.9 The Townshend Duties62
5.10 Boston Massacre62
5.11 Committees of Correspondence63
5.12 The Tea Act64
5.13 The Boston Tea Party64
5.14 The Hutchinson Letters Affair64
5.15 The Intolerable Acts65
5.16 The Four Coercive Acts:65
5.17 The First Continental Congress65
5.18 The First Battles66
5.19 The Second Continental Congress66
5.20 The Olive Branch Petition67
5.21 Washington Elected as Commanding General67
5.22 The Declaration of Independence67
5.23 Common Sense68
5.24 Chapter Five Practice Exam70
Chapter 6: The Revolution 1776-178373
6.1 Revolution 1776-178373
6.2 The Continental Army73
6.3 Division among the Colonists73
6.4 Benjamin Franklin in France73
6.5 War in the North74
6.6 The Campaign in New York74
6.7 Battle of Saratoga75
6.8 France and American Alliance76
6.9 Valley Forge76
6.10 War in the South77
6.11 Yorktown78
6.12 The Treaty of Parris 178378
6.13 Chapter Six Practice Exam79
Chapter 7: Creating a Government81
7.1 Creating a Government81
7.2 State Constitutions81
7.3 The Articles of Confederation (1776-1787)81
7.4 The Events which lead to the Constitution82
7.5 Toward a New Constitution (1787-1789)84
7.6 The Annapolis Convention84
7.7 The Constitutional Convention85
7.8 The Virginia Plan and New Jersey Plan85
7.9 The Great Compromise86
7.10 The Three-Fifths Compromise86
7.11 Electing a President86
7.12 Electoral College86
7.13 The Struggle for Ratification87
7.14 Outline of the Unites States Constitution87
7.15 Amendments to the Constitution89
7.16 Separation and Limitation Of Powers90
7.17 Required Percentages of voting92
7.18 Chapter Seven Practice Exam93
Chapter 8: Creating a Nation (1789-1817)95
8.1 Creating a Nation95
8.2 The Federalist Era95
8.3 The New Executive95
8.4 The Establishment of the Federal Court System96
8.5 The Establishment of the Executive Departments96
8.6 Washington’s Administration, 1789-179796
8.7 Alexander Hamilton and the Federalists97
8.8 Thomas Jefferson and the Republicans (Democratic-Republicans)97
8.9 Foreign and Frontier Affairs97
8.10 Frontier Problems98
8.11 Treaty of Greenville98
8.12 The Whiskey Rebellion99
8.13 Washington's Farewell Address (1796)99
8.14 John Adams Administration, 1797-1801100
8.15 Repression and Protest100
8.16 The Election of 1800 (The Revolution of 1800)101
8.17 The Jeffersonian Era, 1801-1817101
8.18 Conflict with the Constitution102
8.19 The Louisiana Purchase103
8.20 The Burr Conspiracy104
8.21 The Yazoo Land Scandal104
8.22 International Involvement104
8.23 Madison's Administration 1809-1817105
8.24 Events Leading to the War of 1812105
8.25 Native American Resistance and Tippecanoe Creek (Tecumseh's War)106
8.26 War Hawks106
8.27 The War of 1812106
8.28 The Battle of New Orleans106
8.29 The Treaty of Ghent, Christmas Eve 1814107
8.30 The Hartford Convention (1814)107
8.31 Post War Development108
8.32 Chapter Eight Practice Exam109
Chapter 9 The Era of Good Feelings and the John Quincy Adams Administration 1817-1829112
9.1 Era of Good Feelings and the John Quincy Adams Administration 1817-1829112
9.2 The Monroe Presidency 1817-1825112
9.3 Jackson’s Florida Invasion (1817)112
9.4 The Adams-Onis Treaty (1819)112
9.5 The Monroe Doctrine113
9.6 Postwar Boom113
9.7 The Depression of 1819113
9.8 The John Marshall Court114
9.9 Mason-Dixon Line115
9.10 The Missouri Compromise (1820)115
9.11 Tallmadge Amendment115
9.12 Henry Clay’s Compromise Solution116
9.13 Missouri Compromise Final Outcome116
9.14 Culture, Economy, and Innovations116
9.15 Industrialization118
9.16 Education119
9.17 The Growth of Cultural Nationalism120
9.18 The Election of 1824121
9.19 The Adams Administration 1825-1829122
9.20 Return of the Two-Party System122
9.21 The Election of 1828122
9.22 Chapter Nine Practice Exam123
Chapter 10: Jacksonian Democracy and Westward Expansion (1829-1848)125
10.1 Jacksonian Democracy and Westward Expansion (1829-1848)125
10.2 The Petticoat Affair (Eaton Affair)125
10.3 The Kitchen Cabinet and Spoils System126
10.4 Tariff of Abominations and Nullification Crisis126
10.5 South Carolina Exposition and Protest127
10.6 Nat Turner's Revolt127
10.7 Indian Removal Act of 1830128
10.8 The Trail of Tears128
10.9 The Bank War129
10.10 The Election of 1832129
10.11 The Rise of the Whig Party130
10.12 The Election of 1836130
10.13 Van Buren’s Administration 1837-1841130
10.14 The Panic of 1837130
10.15 The Election of 1840 and End of Jacksonian Era131
10.16 The "Log Cabin Campaign"131
10.17 Harrison Administration 1841-1841131
10.18 John Tyler Administration 1841-1845131
10.19 Manifest Destiny132
10.20 The Election of 1844132
10.21 Polk Administration 1844-1848132
10.22 Texas Annexed into the Union133
10.23 The Lead-up to War with Mexico133
10.24 The Mexican American War134
10.25 The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo134
10.26 California Gold Rush134
10.27 The Oregon Trail 1843135
10.28 Effects of Expansion: Sectional Tension Intensified136
10.29 Wilmot Proviso136
10.30 The Free Soil Party137
10.31 Chapter Ten Practice Exam138
Chapter 11: Antebellum Culture 1820-1860140
11.1 Antebellum Culture 1820-1860140
11.2 Tocqueville’s Democracy in America140
11.3 Developments in Religion140
11.4 Inventions and Innovations142
11.5 Transportation and Leisure142
11.6 Social Reforms of the Period143
11.7 Utopian Communities146
11.8 American Literature147
11.9 Economic Growth147
11.10 Northern Culture148
11.11 Southern Culture150
11.12 Southern Slave Culture151
11.13 Chapter Eleven Practice Exam153
Chapter 12: Events that Lead to the Civil War, 1848-1861155
12.1 The Election of 1848155
12.2 Taylor's Administration 1848-1850155
12.3 Fillmore Administration 1850-1853155
12.4 The Compromise of 1850155
12.5 The Great Debate156
12.6 The Fugitive Slave Acts156
12.7 Election of 1852157
12.8 Pierce Administration 1852-1856157
12.9 Gadsden Purchase 1854158
12.10 The Kansas-Nebraska Act158
12.11 Bleeding Kansas and John Brown 1855-1858158
12.12 From Whigs to Republicans159
12.13 The Election of 1856159
12.14 Buchanan Administration 1856-1860160
12.15 The Dred Scott Decision160
12.16 Republicans and Democrats Face Off161
12.17 The Impending Crisis161
12.18 Republican Ascendancy: The Election of 1860162
12.19 The Secession Crisis162
12.20 The Confederate States of America163
12.21 Chapter Twelve Practice Exam164
Chapter 13: The Civil War 1861-1865166
13.1 War Was Inevitable166
13.2 Union and Confederacy: Advantages/Disadvantages166
13.3 Reasons the North and South Fought167
13.4 Fighting Breaks Out168
13.5 Border States168
13.6 The Anaconda Plan and Winfield Scott169
13.7 The Beginning of the Civil War169
13.8 Theaters of War169
13.9 Confederate Generals170
13.10 Union Generals170
13.11 Civil War Hospitals171
13.12 Naming the Battles171
13.13 Civil War 1861171
13.14 Civil War 1862172
13.15 The Emancipation Proclamation173
13.16 Lincoln's Martial Law174
13.17 Raising Money and Troops174
13.18 Helping the Union Settle the West175
13.19 Civil War 1863176
13.20 Civil War 1864177
13.21 The Election of 1864178
13.22 Civil War 1865179
13.23 Lincoln Assassinated179
13.24 Chapter Thirteen Practice Exam181
Chapter 14: Reconstruction, 1865-1877183
14.1 Reconstruction183
14.2 Reconstruction under Lincoln Administration183
14.3 The Ten Percent Plan183
14.4 The Wade-Davis Bill184
14.5 The Freedmen’s Bureau184
14.6 The Thirteenth Amendment Passed184
14.7 Reconstruction under Johnson Administration184
14.8 Black Codes185
14.9 Congressional Reconstruction185
14.10 The Fourteenth Amendment Passed185
14.11 Reconstruction Act of 1867186
14.12 Impeachment Crisis186
14.13 The Fifteenth Amendment Passed186
14.14 The Rise of the KKK187
14.15 Enforcement Acts of 1870 and 1871 and the Klu Klux Klan Act 1871187
14.16 Reconstructed Governments in the New South187
14.17 Reconstruction under Grant Administration 1869-1877188
14.18 Liberal Republicans189
14.19 The Panic of 1873189
14.20 The Battle of Little Bighorn and the Battle of Wounded Knee189
14.21 The United States Purchases Alaska (Seward's Folly)190
14.22 The End of Reconstruction190
14.23 Hayes-Tilden Compromise190
14.24 Chapter Fourteen Practice Exam192
Answer Keys195

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