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Take-Home Review Activities To the Teacher The American Journey Take-Home Review Activities contains information and activities that students and their families/caregivers can do at home to reinforce their understanding of history. It is intended to give parents easy (not challenging) materials to help their children with each day’s lesson. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to reproduce the material contained herein on the condition that such material be reproduced only for classroom use; be provided to students, teachers, and families without charge; and be used solely in conjunction with The American Journey. Any other reproduction, for use or sale, is prohibited without written permission from the publisher. Send all inquiries to: Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 8787 Orion Place Columbus, OH 43240 ISBN 0-07-825221-0 Printed in the United States of America 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 024 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 Table of Contents To the Teacher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Take-Home Review Activities Activity 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Activity 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Activity 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Activity 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Activity 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Activity 6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Activity 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Activity 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Activity 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Activity 10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Activity 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Activity 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Activity 13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Activity 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Activity 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Activity 16 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Activity 17 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Activity 18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Activity 19 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Activity 20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Activity 21 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Activity 22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Activity 23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Activity 24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Activity 25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Activity 26 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Activity 27 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Activity 28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Activity 29 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Activity 30 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Activity 31 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Activity 32 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Answer Key . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 The American Journey iii Take-Home Review Activity 1 THE FIRST AMERICANS Small groups of people migrated from Asia to North, Central, and South America thousands of years ago. These early Americans have had an impact on our culture today. All of these societies contributed to our present-day understanding of subjects such as science, astronomy, math, and communication. Reviewing Chapter 1 The First Americans, Prehistory to 1492 • Called Native Americans • Crossed a land bridge that connected Siberia in Asia to present-day Alaska and spread throughout North, Central, and South America • Adapted to their surroundings by hunting and gathering for food, fishing, using resources of the land and sea, and building shelters The Powerful Native American Empires of South and Central America • Maya—built cities with ceremonial pyramids and created a calendar • Aztec—built the largest city in the Americas, Tenochtitlán, and established a military empire • Inca—cut terraces into steep mountain slopes so that crops could be planted Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The Influential Early Native American Cultures of North America • Hohokam—developed irrigation system for farming • Anasazi—created pueblos and cliff dwellings in which to live • Adena, Hopewell, Cahokia—created burial mounds in the shape of birds, bears, and snakes • Inuit—built igloos to help them survive cold Arctic climate • Tlingit, Haida, Chinook—used resources of the forest and sea to survive • Nez Perce, Yakima—fished for salmon and ate camas plants • Ute, Shoshone—traveled to find food and lived in temporary shelters • Hopi, Acoma, Zuni––lived in homes made of adobe • Apache, Navajo—hunted buffalo • Dakota—used horses for defense and to hunt • Iroquois, Cherokee—lived by formal law codes and formed federations • Creek, Chickasaw, Cherokee—farmed the region of the Southeast ? DID YOU KNOW? The symbol in the center of Mexico’s flag is an eagle sitting atop a cactus. The Aztec city, Tenochtitlán, was the place where the Aztec found their new home with an eagle sitting on a cactus. Tenochtitlán means “place of the cactus.” (continued) The American Journey 1 Take-Home Review Activity 1 Unscramble the Words DIRECTIONS: Below are many of the words you learned in Chapter 1, but the letters are out of order. Use the definitions to help you write the words correctly. 1. vilcitiaoniz a highly developed society 2. inagritom movement of a large group of people from place to place 3. opblue a stone dwelling 4. cstatiarf things that early people left behind 5. thgoudr a long period of little rainfall 6. modsan people who move from place to place 7. acyeocrth a society ruled by religious leaders 8. ulcuter a way of life of a group of people 9. ierontfead a form of government the study of ancient peoples 11. reihoylgscihp pictures or symbols used to represent words, sounds, or concepts 12. nbacor dingta a method used to determine the age of an artifact 13. geA ecI periods of extremely cold temperatures when part of the earth’s surface was covered with large ice sheets 14. rctarees broad platforms cut into steep slopes used for planting crops 15. bodea a sun-dried mud brick 2 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 10. charloygoea The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 2 EXPLORING THE AMERICAS Early exploration of the Americas had consequences both for Europeans and Native Americans. It influenced both cultures and has had a lasting impact on America’s culture. Reviewing Chapter 2 Europeans explored the Americas for many reasons: Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. • • • • • European explorers came from Spain, Portugal, France, the Netherlands, and England. The West Indies, Mexico, and South America provided these countries with gold and silver. interest in exploration increased trade new ideas the Renaissance new technology The Spanish developed a plantation system and used the Native Americans to work on the plantations. By the mid-1500s, thousands of West Africans were imported to the Americas to work the plantations. By the late 1500s, plantation slave labor was a large part of the economies of the Spanish and Portuguese colonies in the Americas. Exploring the Americas The Columbian Exchange grew out of the contact and interaction of Europe, Asia, and Africa with the Americas. Native Americans provided foods while Europeans brought cattle, and unknowingly brought diseases for which Native Americans had no immunity. Spain set up the encomienda system in which each conquistador, or explorer, had the right to tax or demand labor from the Native Americans living on the land. This system turned the Native Americans into slaves. The search for a Northwest Passage, early trading activities, and religious and economic rivalries among European countries led to continued exploration of North America. ? DID YOU KNOW? Pizarro conquered the Inca and decided to move their capital. In 1538 Pizarro had the Inca people build a new city, Lima, along the western coast. (continued) The American Journey 3 Take-Home Review Activity 2 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find in the hidden word search puzzle? Look for the words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, and spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. mission strait mercantilism Renaissance plantation tribute demarcation caravel pilgrimage classical technology mosque circumnavigate astrolabe encomienda pueblo presidio M E M C M O N Q U A C E I S D I S G I T O A D D O L C S R E E R I A S S S N R E A N T C E B M C L M S E Q I V S A R E D G A A U I I I R U A S S A N T S F L R M T R O R E I S I O M S P A O C N N G N N C I T I S H R C U R A A A L L A A E R S T N O E X T T V C I L N P L L E V A R A C S I I R P E O R P R E S I D I O A O G E R E T Y G O L O N H C E T N A M R I P L A N T A T I O N B U T T E C W M P U E B L O D H O S E S F A R E T U B I R T B S E P I Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. C Some of the letters that remain uncircled after the word search is complete create a secret message. Starting at the top left corner and reading across, write down the uncircled letters in the blanks below to find the secret message. . 4 The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 3 COLONIAL AMERICA People continued to come to America from Europe and African countries. During the 1600s and 1700s, the English, the French, and the Spanish established many colonies. The values and beliefs of these early colonists influenced how and why the colonies were organized. Reviewing Chapter 3 Early English Settlements • Many settlers came to America for adventure, wealth, and economic and religious freedom. • The Virginia Company of London established Jamestown in 1607. In 1624 King James took it over, making it the first royal colony in America. New England Colonies: Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut • Settlers called Pilgrims, a group of church reformers and church separatists, signed the Mayflower Compact. The compact was a promise to obey laws passed and a pledge of loyalty to England. • In 1629 a group of Puritans received a royal charter to establish the Massachusetts Bay Colony. • Settlers in Connecticut developed the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut—the first constitution in America. • In 1644 Rhode Island became a chartered colony. It became the first place in America where people were able to worship as they wished. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Middle Colonies: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware • People from the Netherlands settled the area that was a center for shipping. This area would become Manhattan Island in New York City. • New Jersey, formed from the southern part of New York, promised freedom of religion, trial by jury, and a representative assembly. • The king of England gave William Penn, a Quaker, a large piece of land that was named Pennsylvania. • Delaware, a separate colony supervised by Pennsylvania’s governor, was settled by the Swedes in 1638. Southern Colonies: Maryland, Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia • Maryland was a proprietary colony settled in 1632 as a safe place for Catholics to worship. • As settlers moved farther west in Virginia, conflicts arose between them and the Native Americans, who did not want their lands taken. • Carolina was established as a proprietary colony. In 1729 Carolina split into North Carolina and South Carolina. ? DID YOU KNOW? Indentured servants, who were mostly males from England, Ireland, and Wales, worked to cover the cost of sailing to America. As the number of indentured servants declined, however, plantation owners turned to the African slave trade to provide a large labor force. (continued) The American Journey 5 Take-Home Review Activity 3 • South Carolina was more prosperous than North Carolina because of fertile farmland, which increased the demand for slaves. • Georgia, the last of the British colonies to be established, was founded as a place where people in debt could start over. It also protected other British colonies from Spanish attack. Other European Settlements • The French founded Quebec in 1608. In the 1700s, they claimed the Louisiana Territory. • The Spanish established missions in California, Arizona, and New Mexico, and set up military posts in Texas. Identify Locations DIRECTIONS: Look at the map of the present-day United States. Use different colored markers to color the states that began as colonies of England, the Netherlands, and Spain. Include the colors on the map key. WA ND MT MN MI ME SD ID OR WI VT MI NH WY NY IA NE IL NV UT CO KS IN OK NM RI PA OH NJ WV MO VA KY CA TN DE MD NC AR SC MS TX AL Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. AZ MA CT GA LA FL Key England Netherlands Spain 6 The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 4 THE COLONIES GROW The colonies grew as more people came to America, but there were problems as well. Conflicts arose over land and resources, and hostility between Britain and the colonists began to grow. Reviewing Chapter 4 Growth Immigration helped the colonies grow. Between 1607 and 1790, almost a million people came to live in the colonies. Religion The Great Awakening called for a return to a strong faith, leading to the creation of new churches. Culture The Enlightenment advanced the idea that knowledge, reason, and science could improve society. There was a high level of literacy in the colonies. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Life in the Colonies Government • Connecticut and Rhode Island were charter colonies. The settlers were given a charter that named rights and privileges. They elected their own governors and the members of both houses of the legislature. • Delaware, Maryland, and Pennsylvania were proprietary colonies, ruled by people to whom Britain had granted land. The proprietors appointed the governor and members of the upper house (council). The colonists elected the lower house (assembly). • Georgia, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, and Virginia were royal colonies. The British Parliament appointed a governor and council. The colonists elected an assembly. The American Journey Economics • Farming was the main economic activity in all the colonies. A triangular trade route developed linking the Caribbean, Europe, and Africa. This impacted American society because it created economies based on slave labor. • New England was the center of trade and commerce, especially shipbuilding and fishing. • The Middle Colonies grew large quantities of wheat and other cash crops. They also had industries such as carpentry, lumber, and mining. • Most of the Southern Colonies made their living from the land. Slave labor that produced the cash crops contributed to much of the economic success of the Southern Colonies. ? DID YOU KNOW? Enslaved Africans traveling on ships from West Africa lived in small quarters. They were chained to each other and could only sit in a space that was about 25 inches high. (continued) 7 Take-Home Review Activity 4 Fill in the Blanks DIRECTIONS: Complete each sentence by filling in the blanks using the words below. Then rearrange the letters marked by to answer the question. smuggling triangular trade Iroquois Confederacy proprietary colony diversity speculators literacy 1. alliance charter colony cash crops means a variety of cultures. 2. The ability to read and write is called . 3. Trade routes that resembled the shape of a triangle made up the . 4. The most powerful group of Native Americans in the East during colonial times was the 5. foreign markets. . are produce that can be sold easily in colonial and 6. The illegal trade of goods is known as . 7. A colony run by an individual or a group to whom Britain had granted land was a . 8. An 9. is a network of unions. were investors who owned shares of land in the unsettled West. 10. A colony based on a document of rights and privileges was a . What do you call a person who learns a trade as an assistant to a craft worker? . 8 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Take-Home Review Activity 5 ROAD TO INDEPENDENCE A feeling of distrust grew between the American colonies and Britain. Many colonists were willing to give up their wealth and fight for their independence from England. Reviewing Chapter 5 Events Leading to Independence Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Colonists banded together to oppose British laws. The Boston Massacre, a deadly clash between British soldiers and the townspeople of Boston, led many to urge stronger boycotts of British goods. The Boston Tea Party in 1773 defied Britain’s rule. For recourse, Britain passed the Coercive (or Intolerable) Acts. These laws: 1. closed Boston Harbor until the colonists paid for the tea destroyed. 2. took away many rights of Massachusetts colonists. 3. forced Bostonians to provide shelter for British soldiers in their homes. The First Continental Congress met in Philadelphia in 1774. The Congress: 1. called for repeal of the Coercive Acts. 2. voted to boycott all British goods and trade. 3. passed a resolution to form groups of citizen-soldiers to be ready to fight the British. The American Journey The Battles of Lexington and Concord occurred in April 1775. More fighting broke out in the Battle of Bunker Hill in June 1775. The second Continental Congress met in 1775. It created the Continental Army to fight against Britain. It also drafted The Declaration of Independence which: 1. explained the reasons for forming a new country. 2. listed the rights of colonists. 3. listed grievances against Britain. 4. proclaimed the existence of a new nation. ? DID YOU KNOW? Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both died on July 4, 1826, exactly 50 years after they signed the Declaration of Independence. (continued) 9 Take-Home Review Activity 5 Unscramble the Words DIRECTIONS: Below are many of the words you learned in Chapter 5, but the letters are out of order. Use the definitions to help you write the words correctly. 1. tenueimmn groups of soldiers that claimed to be ready to fight on a minute’s notice 2. orstatpi colonists who wanted American independence during the American Revolution 3. trsiw fo sansestica legal documents allowing soldiers to search homes and warehouses for smuggled goods 4. teinitop formal request 5. eotmcimte fo ncepserdorcnoe a group that circulated writings about colonists’ grievances against Britain 6. uonsleotir a formal expression of an opinion 7. yoitaslsl colonists who chose to side with Britain during the American Revolution 8. litaimi group of citizen soldiers 9. eaelrmbp a document’s introductory text not importing goods from other countries or not using imported goods 11. ootybct to refuse to buy 12. gyfife a rag figure that represents an unpopular public figure 13. leerpa to cancel 14. euvreen incoming money 15. nagordappa information intended to influence opinion 10 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 10. proanttinmonio The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 6 THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION The Declaration of Independence proclaimed the birth of a new nation. However, it took the American Revolutionary War to gain full independence from Britain. Reviewing Chapter 6 SOME IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION 1776 Thomas Paine’s pamphlet 1778 France and the United States form an Common Sense inspires many alliance, and France gives money, troops, colonists to fight, despite the and equipment to the Patriots. hard times. 1777 The British capture Philadelphia. 1776 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1776 Washington’s troops cross the Delaware River to take Trenton, New Jersey, in a surprise attack. 1779 Naval hero John Paul Jones forces the surrender of British warship Serapis. 1778 1778 Fighting in the war spreads to the West and South, involving Native Americans as well as colonists. 1781 The British surrender after the Battle of Yorktown. 1782 1780 1784 1783 The Treaty of Paris is signed to end the war. 1780 The British capture Charleston. 1777 The Patriots defeat the British at the Battle of Saratoga, New York. The Americans were able to win the war against Britain because they • fought the battles on their own land • received help from other nations • had the leadership of George Washington • were strongly motivated by their ideal of being an independent country ? DID YOU KNOW? American naval hero John Paul Jones was born in Scotland and was apprenticed to learn seamanship at the age of 13. He was 32 years old in 1779 when he commanded the American warship that sunk the British ship Serapis. (continued) The American Journey 11 Take-Home Review Activity 6 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find? Look for words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, or spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. ambush neutral guerrilla blockade inflation privateer recruit desert mercenary ratify P B Q K P D R F S L N S D J D N S Z T R R A T I F Y P X U L M F G K I A P I A N Z I Y D P A N L N V J I U G M W X I U V M R H A A Y T R M H B X L I C T S T C T R J C T Q S U P D P T C G U E I V E S F T V S G R D B W S E U O R C H E X U H Y P A E M R N C N N D P E O Z N Q D E D A K C O L B R G B H L M E R C E N A R Y R M L Z W Z Y X F U B Y G T I G J H Z A F P Q M R B F E L Q A Q B Y O Y R J P F W C L W L J L P Z U Y R E E J D A A D E S K X K T 12 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. I Take-Home Review Activity 7 1 A MORE PERFECT UNION The Constitution became the official plan for the new American government. It defined the roles of the state and federal governments and still operates today as the fundamental law of the land. Reviewing Chapter 7 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. • The young United States needed to establish a working government. The Articles of Confederation were written in 1777 to describe the roles of the state and federal governments. This was the United States’s first constitution. • Reform of the Articles of Confederation led to approval of the United States Constitution. The Constitution created a federal system that divided powers more evenly between the federal government and the states. It was ratified in 1790. The Bill of Rights was added in 1791. • Before the Constitution was adopted, there were several compromise plans proposed: Here is a brief summary of what the United States Constitution provides: Federalism This feature allows for power to be shared between federal and state governments. Important Features of the U.S. Constitution ? DID YOU KNOW? Two amendments were not ratified when the Bill of Rights was passed. The first amendment defined size and representation in the legislative branch. The second amendment essentially kept members of Congress from raising their own pay. This second amendment took more than two hundred years from its official introduction to become the Twenty-Seventh Amendment. System of Checks and Balances This feature allows each branch to check, or limit, the power of the other two to keep any one branch from becoming too powerful. Three Branches of Government Legislative Branch This branch is responsible for making laws. It includes the House of Representatives and the Senate. Executive Branch The president heads this branch. It is responsible for carrying out the nation’s laws and policies. Judicial Branch This branch is responsible for hearing cases and solving disputes. It established the Supreme Court and other federal courts created by Congress. (continued) The American Journey 13 Take-Home Review Activity 7 Complete the Crossword Puzzle DIRECTIONS: Use the following clues to complete the crossword puzzle. 2 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 14 Down 2. those who did not want the Constitution ratified 3. something added to a document 4. a government ruled by citizens who elect representatives 5. system designed to keep the power of each government branch limited 8. a plan for a government 9. to apply to 10. the freeing of individual slaves 11. to fall in value The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Across 1. sharing power between federal and state governments 5. an agreement between sides in which each side gives up something 6. corresponding in size 7. a law 11. a period when economic activity is very slow 12. part of a document 13. to approve 14. College 15. two-house legislatures 16. movement promoting knowledge, reason, and science to improve society Take-Home Review Activity 8 A NEW NATION George Washington, as first president of the United States, had a huge task before him. He and Congress established procedures and precedents for the new government to follow. Reviewing Chapter 8 George Washington took the oath of office as first president on April 30, 1789. John Adams became the vice president. To establish the organization of the executive branch of government, Congress established a cabinet with three branches. This diagram shows how the executive branch is organized: Executive Branch of Government Cabinet President Vice President War Department This department provides for national defense. State Department This department handles issues with other nations. ? Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. DID YOU KNOW? When Washington gave his farewell speech, New York City was the capital of the United States. He gave his famous speech at Fraunces Tavern, a restaurant in downtown Manhattan. This landmark restaurant remained standing until the summer of 2000, when it finally closed its doors. The American Journey Treasury Department This department deals with financial matters. Two other offices Postmaster General This office oversees the postal service. Attorney General This office handles the government’s legal affairs. (continued) 15 Take-Home Review Activity 8 Unscramble the Words DIRECTIONS: Ten words from Chapter 8 are scrambled below. Read each clue to help you unscramble the word. Then write the unscrambled word in the boxes. TYLNITUARE 2. a tax on imported goods TAFFIR 3. meeting of a party’s leaders to choose candidates for offices CUSCAU 4. favoring one side of an issue SANITRAP 5. traditions DTRESCEEPN 6. group consisting of the secretary of state, the secretary of the treasury, the secretary of war, and the attorney general AINCTEB 7. activities designed to weaken the established government TISEONID 8. send out of a country POETRD 9. a person who risks money in order to make a larger profit TORPESCALU NUYFILL 10. legally overturn The circled letters above can be unscrambled to spell a word that answers the question below. What job did President George Washington give to Thomas Jefferson? 16 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1. the act of not choosing a side in a conflict Take-Home Review Activity 9 THE JEFFERSON ERA Beginning in 1812, the United States,led by President James Madison, went to war against the British and their Native American allies. Known as “Mr. Madison’s War,” the War of 1812 gave most Americans a new sense of confidence and patriotism. Reviewing Chapter 9 THE WAR OF 1812 November The United States won the Battle of Tippecanoe, in which General William Henry Harrison fought Tecumseh’s brother, the Prophet. Tecumseh, a Native American chief, then allied himself with the British. 1811 ? Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. DID YOU KNOW? Andrew Jackson was considered an American hero because of the American victory at the Battle of New Orleans. Jackson’s troops kept a British fleet from taking over the Mississippi River. This battle, however, took place 15 days after the peace treaty to end the war was signed. The American Journey 1812 March Andrew Jackson defeated the Creeks at Battle of Horsehead Bend. August The British overpowered the American military and marched into Washington, D.C. They burned the Capitol and the presidential mansion. September The British were defeated at the Battle of Plattsburgh. December The Treaty of Ghent was signed to end the war. 1813 September Oliver Perry defeated the British navy on Lake Erie. October Tecumseh was killed at the Battle of the Thames while pulling back from the Detroit area. 1815 1814 January The last battle of the War of 1812, the Battle of New Orleans, was fought. June The United States declared war on Britain for its actions against Americans. August The Constitution destroyed British vessels. November British blockaded the American coast from Chesapeake Bay to New York Harbor. December The Constitution destroyed another British vessel. (continued) 17 Take-Home Review Activity 9 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find? Look for the words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, or spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. embargo customs duty Conestoga wagon frigate tribute neutral rights nationalism War Hawks secede privateer judicial review laissez-faire T N H E L O U E I S E I C A R U N E A P U R C D R H O A Y E S D E U D O U B I E N L T E E D T I H T E S A I E C U Z M T S E O C F R F F S T D E S H A K E U S I Z A T R S C I S V V W I G S E A O L M I L N W W I A H T S N G L O R A G F V V R H I S V A T T R N I D A S Q P R I O W H S R O E L G B T H G A J A Z U V I I A V Z H W E L W G L C Q T J K B A I R T A H O E M B A R G O D U C E N S N T Z Z N U C N Y N L T D W J R X I I L W U J N O O U E E X Some of the letters that remain uncircled after the word search is complete create a secret message. Starting at the top left corner and reading across, write down the uncircled letters in the blanks below to find the secret message. . 18 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. J Take-Home Review Activity 10 GROWTH AND EXPANSION Three events impacted the growth of the United States during the early 1800s. These events are the birth of the Industrial Revolution, the movement of settlers west, and the announcement of the Monroe Doctrine. Reviewing Chapter 10 1. The Industrial Revolution brought new ways of working and producing goods. Around 1800 industrial technology took off in the United States. THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION 1785 The steam engine was invented and provided water power. 1780 1793 Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin. 1790 1790 Congress passed a patent law that gave inventors the legal right to their inventions and the profits for a specific period. 1807 Robert Fulton developed a river steamboat. 1816 Congress chartered a second national bank. The Tariff of 1816 passed to protect American industry from British competition. 1800 1798 Eli Whitney manufactured rifles using interchangeable parts. 1810 1820 1814 Frances Lowell opened a textile plant in Waltham, Massachusetts, that used the factory system for production. 2. More people moved west into the new lands of the Louisiana Purchase. • Between 1790 and 1820, America’s population grew from four to approximately ten million people. • In 1806 Congress approved funds for a National Road to the West. • The Erie Canal linked Albany on the Hudson River with Buffalo on Lake Erie. Trade between the East and West increased as more canals were built. • Between 1816 and 1821, Indiana, Illinois, Mississippi, Alabama, and Missouri became states. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 3. Regional differences grew. • Weak political divisions allowed James Monroe to be elected president in 1816 and 1829. • Sectionalism, or loyalty to a region, increased as states disagreed over domestic policies. • The Missouri Compromise of 1820 defined whether new states could be slave states or free states. 4. The United States tried to make peace with other countries so that it could further grow and develop. ? DID YOU KNOW? The United States paid France $15 million for the Louisiana Territory. The land represented about 800,000 square miles, so each square mile cost just over $18. • In the Rush-Bagot Treaty of 1817, Britain and America agreed to remove weapons along the American-Canadian border. • Spain and the United States signed the Adams-Onís Treaty in 1819. Spain retained Texas, while the United States gained Florida. The United States also received much of the Pacific Northwest. • President Monroe issued the Monroe Doctrine in December 1823. This doctrine declared that the United States would oppose new European colonies in the Americas but would not interfere with existing colonies. The American Journey 19 Take-Home Review Activity 10 Search for Clues DIRECTIONS: Write the answer to each clue on the line. Then use the clues to answer the question at the bottom of the page. Information to help you answer each clue can be found in Chapter 10 of your textbook. Clue 1: Scientific discoveries that simplify work are called . Write the third letter of the missing word in blank 1 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 2: A is an artificial waterway. Write the second letter of the missing word in blank 2 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 3: A soldier that is tried by a military court is . n. a convicted criminal o. impeached p. court-martialed q. acquitted In blank 3 at the bottom of the page, write the letter of the correct answer to this multiple-choice question. Clue 4: This is Henry Clay’s three-part plan to benefit all sections of the nation. The statement above is the definition of which of these terms? h. factory system i. American System j. sectionalism k. census plan Clue 5: Another word for money is . Write the fifth letter of the missing word in blank 5 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 6: The Rush-Bagot Treaty called for removal of weapons, or . What vowel appears as the fourth letter in your answer? Write that letter in blank 6 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 7: are separate compartments where water levels are raised or lowered. What consonant appears at the beginning of your answer? Write that letter in blank 7 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 9: In the 1800s private companies built toll roads called . p. national roads q. freeways r. highways s. turnpikes In blank 9 at the bottom of the page, write the letter of the correct answer to this multiple-choice question. Clue 10: The brings manufacturing steps together in one place to increase efficiency. In blank 10 at the bottom of the page, write the last letter of the missing term. QUESTION: What is the economic system of the United States? 1 20 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Clue 8: A border with no armed forces guarding it is . Write the fourth letter of the missing word in blank 8 in the box at the bottom of the page. Take-Home Review Activity 11 1 THE JACKSON ERA The spoils system got its name from words spoken by Senator Learned Marcy in which he said, “to the victor belong the spoils.” Reviewing Chapter 11 JACKSONIAN ERA OF DEMOCRACY Economics Politics Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. • The spoils system, or practice of replacing government employees with a winning candidate’s supporters, began. • Nominating conventions replaced caucuses. Delegates from states chose the party’s presidential candidate. ? DID YOU KNOW? During the Andrew Jackson presidency (1829 to 1837), there were changes in the United States’s political system, economic status, and policy toward Native Americans. Native American Policy • In 1834 Congress created the Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma) for southeastern Native Americans. • Starting in 1838, about 15,000 Cherokee were driven from their homelands in the Southeast and traveled west along the Trail of Tears, so named because of the sadness and defeat experienced by the Cherokee during the forced move. Tariffs Banking • In 1828 and 1832, Congress passed tariffs on manufacturing goods from Europe. These high tariffs outraged the Southern states. South Carolina passed the Nullification Act, asserting that the state would not pay the tariffs. • South Carolina threatened to secede from the United States and form its own government. • In 1833 Congress passed the Force Bill. South Carolina accepted the compromise tariff. • In 1832 Jackson ordered the withdrawal of all government deposits from the Bank of the United States and placed the funds in smaller state banks. • In 1836 the Bank of the United States was closed. The American Journey 21 Take-Home Review Activity 11 Unscramble the Words DIRECTIONS: Use the information in the paragraph to help you unscramble the letters of the missing words in each sentence below. The Panic of 1837 The United States entered into an economic depression in 1837. The panic affected laborers, farmers, and small businesspeople. It affected land values and prices of goods. People lost their jobs. Many banks failed when they could not collect on loans. States could not collect as much in taxes as they had done previously. Many people, having less money, could not afford food or rent. 1. The Panic of 1837 caused a 2. A people to carry on business. 3. Land sales 4. Prices (preesdnios). (agesorth) of gold and silver coins made it difficult for (popderd). (erso). 5. People could not pay their (sanol). 7. Many 8. Many Southern (lotclec) on their loans. (aftecrois) in the North closed. (ramrefs) began losing their lands. 9. Some states could not pay their bills because they could not collect as much money in (xeast) as they needed. 22 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 6. Banks failed because they could not Take-Home Review Activity 12 MANIFEST DESTINY During the first half of the 1800s, the United States extended its borders because of the belief in Manifest Destiny. Manifest Destiny refers to the idea that the United States was meant to grow into a stronger, larger nation. The additional land and wealth helped the nation eventually become a great power. Reviewing Chapter 12 • Great Britain, Spain, Russia, and the United States all had claims to the Oregon Territory. In the Adams-Onís Treaty, Spain gave up claim to Oregon and set limits at what is now the Oregon-California border. • Americans began moving to the Oregon country in the 1830s. Many traveled for six months in prairie schooners loaded with all of their belongings to settle in new land. • Religious freedom drew settlers to the Utah Territory. The Mormons founded Deseret, later called Salt Lake City. Utah became a state in 1896. a rni lifo Ca Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Oregon Territory Utah Territory Texas Mexico • American settlers came to California between 1848 and 1849 to mine for gold. Others also came for gold from Mexico, South America, Europe, Australia, and China. This era was called the California Gold Rush. Rapid economic growth occurred in these boomtown communities. California became a state in 1850. The American Journey ? DID YOU KNOW? Some Americans did not believe in Manifest Destiny and were against the MexicanAmerican War. The writer Henry Thoreau was one of these Americans. He refused to pay his taxes because he did not want his tax money used for the war effort. Against his will, Thoreau’s friends paid his taxes so that he would not go to jail. His essay Civil Disobedience explained his strong feelings. • Americans began settling in the southwest. Mexico had won its independence in 1821, but it did not try to keep Americans away like Spain did. Mexico encouraged settlement to boost trade. • Texas seceded from Mexico after fighting the War for Independence. It declared its independence in 1836. In 1845 Texas became a state. • Tensions between Mexico and the United States increased. In 1846 Congress declared war on Mexico over the disputed border. The Mexican-American War lasted until the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was signed in 1848. Mexico gave up Texas and also gave the California and New Mexico provinces to the United States. The United States gave Mexico $15 million in return. 23 Take-Home Review Activity 12 Complete the Crossword Puzzle DIRECTIONS: Use the following clues to complete the crossword puzzle. 1 3 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 14 13 15 16 24 Down 2. belief that Americans should spread out across the continent 3. American adventurers who lived in the Rocky Mountains 7. people who relocate to a place outside their own country 8. to give 10. Mexicans who lived in California 13. a meeting The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Across 1. a new community built almost overnight 4. people who came to California searching for gold in 1849 5. a huge property built by a Mexican settler 6. to take control of 9. a person given a large amount of Spanish land and required to bring in settlers 11. a person who takes the law into his or her own hands 12. a ranch owner 14. an official order 15. two groups of people settling in the same place 16. Mexicans who claimed Texas as their home Take-Home Review Activity 13 NORTH AND SOUTH Even though a national spirit was developing in the United States, economic and political differences were growing between the North and South. Reviewing Chapter 13 Industry grew. Many industrial cities grew quickly, but working conditions for people worsened. Workers formed trade unions and went on strike to improve conditions. Immigration changed the country as immigrants brought their ways and customs with them. Discrimination and prejudice existed, although slavery was illegal. Most immigrants at this time came from Ireland and Germany. North Technology changed the way Americans worked, traveled, and communicated. 1. Elias Howe invented the sewing machine in 1846, allowing the textile industry to mass-produce products. ? DID YOU KNOW? Inauguration Day for the president used to be held in March, even though elections were in November. Election results were sent by mail and could take months to reach Washington, D.C., so it was not possible to have an earlier inauguration. 3. Samuel Morse’s telegraph provided a way for people to communicate between cities in minutes. 4. Robert Fulton’s steamboat changed water travel. 2. Cyrus McCormick patented his Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. reaper in 1834, helping farmers harvest their crops faster. 5. Peter Cooper’s first steam locomotive in 1830 launched the railway system. Most white Southerners were farmers. Plantation owners, however, owned most of the enslaved workers. Enslaved African Americans were sometimes used as household help or were trained in a skill, but most worked as field hands on the large plantations. Enslaved life was harsh and miserable. Family life was almost nonexistent. Slave codes controlled enslaved African Americans and made their lives more difficult. Some tried to escape to the North using the Underground Railroad. The Upper South produced tobacco, hemp, wheat, and vegetables. Cotton and sugar were the leading cash crops in the Deep South. Large farms relied on enslaved laborers to clear land and to plant and pick crops. Southern cities grew more slowly than in the North or Midwest. Transportation consisted mainly of natural waterways. Roads were poor and railways were local. The American Journey South Farms and plantations increased, but industry did not. Capital, or money to invest in business, was lacking. 25 Take-Home Review Activity 13 Unscramble the Words DIRECTIONS: Complete each vocabulary puzzle square using the definitions below. Then rearrange the letters marked by a circle to answer the question at the bottom of the page. 2. an African American religious folk song PIRLUITAS 3. a machine that removed seeds from cotton fibers NTCOOGITN 4. an unfair opinion not based on facts PUCRIEDEJ 5. a type of sailing ship that was the result of improvements in the 1840s PRPIHSPCILE 6. an extreme shortage of food MEFNIA 7. a farmer who works land owned by another person METNARTARFEN 8. a plantation manager EVROSREE 9. a person opposed to immigration because it is seen as a threat to citizens SAVTINIT 10. refusing to work to put pressure on employers TISKER 11. an apparatus that used electric signals to transmit messages REHLAGTEP 12. money invested in businesses PIALACT 13. a regular expense DOETICSXF 14. a form of a loan TECDIR 15. an organization of workers in the same trade intending to improve working conditions TUDONNERAI 16. Southern laws that controlled enslaved people EASDLECOV 17. a farmer who did not have slaves NOMYEA What is unfair treatment of a group called? 26 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1. a system of dots and dashes tapped out to represent alphabet letters in order to send messages OECEOSMDR Take-Home Review Activity 14 THE AGE OF REFORM The Reform movement during the mid-1800s tried to improve people’s lives. Inspired by different philosophical and religious movements, reformers brought about changes in religion, politics, education, art, and literature. Reviewing Chapter 14 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Reforms Religion The Second Great Awakening stirred religious reform in the United States. People attended frontier camp meetings, or revivals, participated in missionary work, and built new churches. Politics The temperance movement grew, pushing for drinking little or no alcohol. The American Society for the Promotion of Temperance was formed in 1826. Education Horace Mann led education reform, believing, as did President Jefferson, that education was vital to democracy. The movement called for required attendance and helped students with special needs. Art and Literature Artists began to develop an American style, portraying American themes in their paintings, books, and poems. The American Journey ? DID YOU KNOW? Harriet Tubman escaped from slavery. She made 19 more trips to help more than three hundred people, including her parents, escape from slavery on the Underground Railroad. 27 Take-Home Review Activity 14 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find? Look for the words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, or spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. abolitionist conductors normal school transcendentalist M N O V N N T D K U B H H S D J D F Y E E E A K D S Y R D P Z U C G U D E V R D D Y P E I U R A O F J O S U G L H I T U Y K R L H N Y F G V N V P O N I C O C D T G A Z W R H V O D H O Z B H A A A Z J R T Q A W O I C U H V C S U N M T J Y O N G U Q T R K C U J J B W A E I Z V U E D W A C E S T M M N P S R R O N T N D F T P J L I O W Q L B B T I N O L D N S D F A P I R H N C M T I C P P B R E K F M A D U S S Y K X H compulsory revival temperance utopia S I M Q F A C X R K A Y X R G W T U P A A E F J I S O L A V I V E R H B J Z T N S Z X L N W C H X E K P D N M C J T E M P E R A N C E S R S M E L Q O I S T H Z H O R P D E C C C Y H I A N F T H G I P A T U G C W R C K B Q Q I L U E C S Z D X T S I N O I T I L O B A Some of the letters that remain uncircled after the word search create a secret message. Starting at the top left corner and reading across, write the uncircled letters in the blanks below to find the secret message. . 28 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. A R C G W U Y R O S L U P M O C M U Y coeducation stations suffrage Underground Railroad Take-Home Review Activity 15 ROAD TO CIVIL WAR Social, political, and economic differences grew between the North and South. The number of slave states and free states in the Senate was a central issue linked to the issue of admitting new states as slave states or free states. Eleven states permitted slavery, and 11 did not in 1819. Reviewing Chapter 15 1820 The Missouri Compromise passes, prohibiting slavery in any Louisiana Purchase territory north of the 36°30 N latitude except Missouri. This keeps an even balance of slave states and free states in the Senate. 1844 James Polk is elected president. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1849 California applies for statehood as a free state. The nation has 15 free and 15 slave states at the time, so this issue creates tension. 1850 The Compromise of 1850 resolves the issue. The results: • California becomes a free state. • There is no restriction on slavery in the New Mexico Territory. • The New Mexico-Texas border dispute favors New Mexico. • Slave trading ends in Washington, D.C., but people can still have enslaved laborers. • The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 passes. It requires all citizens to help capture runaways, or fugitive enslaved people. The American Journey ? DID YOU KNOW? Jefferson Davis served as secretary of war for the United States from 1853 to 1857. During that time, he helped create a strong army and navy. Davis was a Mississippi senator when he was elected president of the Confederate States of America in 1861. 1854 The Kansas-Nebraska Act passes. This creates the territories of Kansas and Nebraska in the region north of 36°30 N latitude. It gives both areas the right of popular sovereignty. This bill sparks further conflict over slavery. 1856 Proslavery and antislavery factions in Kansas begin fighting in what newspapers call “Bleeding Kansas” and the “Civil War in Kansas.” 1857 Two days after Buchanan takes office, the Supreme Count hands down the Dred Scott Decision. It rules that Dred Scott could not sue for freedom because Scott was a slave, and therefore property, not a citizen. It also rules that only states, not Congress, can prohibit slavery. This means that both the Missouri Compromise and popular sovereignty, or Congress’s rule allowing territories to vote whether or not to allow slavery, are unconstitutional. 1860 Abraham Lincoln is elected president. 1861 The Civil War begins on April 12 when Confederate troops attack Fort Sumter. 29 Take-Home Review Activity 15 Complete the Crossword Puzzle DIRECTIONS: Use the following clues to complete the crossword puzzle. 1 2 3 4 Across 3. to leave 7. withdrawal from the Union 10. a storage place for weapons and ammunition 11. a person who dies for a great cause Down 1. the idea that states choose to enter the Union and can also choose to leave it 2. armed groups that cross a border to vote in another state’s election 4. an exaggerated loyalty to a particular region of the country 5. to not cast votes 6. allowing people to decide 8. a conflict between citizens of the same country 9. a runaway 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 30 The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 16 THE CIVIL WAR The Civil War was fought between a divided United States. The South fought to defend its territory and maintain its separation. The North wanted to bring the Southern states back into the Union and end slavery. The border states, Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware, allowed slavery but remained in the Union. People of these states were divided over which side to support. Reviewing Chapter 16 ? DID YOU KNOW? The destruction of the Civil War caused economic setbacks throughout the country, especially in the South. Because of these economic problems, counterfeiting, or making fake currency and trying to spend it, became a problem. The Secret Service, part of the United States Department of the Treasury, was created in 1865 to fight counterfeiting. The Secret Service did not begin protecting the presidents until 1901, after President William McKinley was assassinated. Important Civil War Battles The first battle of the war was the First Battle of Bull Run in July 1861. The Union and Confederate armies met at Manassas Junction near a small river called Bull Run. The Union was defeated. In 1862 the Union narrowly defeated the Confederacy at the Battle of Shiloh. A few weeks later, the Union naval forces captured New Orleans, the South’s largest city. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The Second Battle of Bull Run ended in a Confederate victory. Lee’s army was now only 20 miles from Washington, D.C. In 1862 the armies fought in the single bloodiest day of the war at the Battle of Antietam. After the Union victory at Antietam, President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation that freed enslaved African Americans held in Confederate states. The effect of the Proclamation was to encourage enslaved African Americans to flee from their slaveholders. The turning points of the war were the Battle of Gettysburg and the Battle of Vicksburg, which were fought at the same time. The Confederates were defeated in both battles. With the surrender at Vicksburg, the Union now controlled the Mississippi River. Arkansas, Texas, and Louisiana were cut off from the rest of the South. In 1864 and 1865, Sherman and Grant led Union troops to victories in Atlanta, Savannah, and Richmond. Grant pushed south and Sherman pushed north in order to surround Lee’s army between their two armies. On April 8, 1865, General Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox, Virginia. The war ended. The American Journey 31 Take-Home Review Activity 16 Search for Clues DIRECTIONS: Write the answer to each clue on the line. Then use the clues to answer the question at the bottom of the page. Information to help you answer each clue can be found in Chapter 16 of your textbook. Clue 1: The name of the Confederate capital was . Write the second letter of the missing word in blank 1 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 2: The states allowed slavery but were still loyal to the Union. Write the third letter of the missing word in blank 2 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 3: The term refers to the name given to Southern soldiers. m. blockade runners n. Yankees o. Rebels p. greenbacks In blank 3 at the bottom of the page, write the letter of the correct answer to this multiple-choice question. Clue 4: “To set up a strong position” is the definition of which of these terms? blockade entrenched border state bounties Write the second letter of the correct term in blank 4 at the bottom of the page. Clue 5: George McClellan headed the Union army of the East called the Army of the Write the last letter of the missing word in blank 5 in the box at the bottom of the page. . Clue 6: David Farragut captured New . Write the third letter of the missing word in blank 6 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 8: The required men between the ages of 18 and 35 to serve in the Confederate army. Write the first letter of the missing word in blank 8 in the box at the bottom of the page. Clue 9: The Gettysburg helped Americans focus on why the Civil War was being fought. q. battle r. Cemetery s. Address t. Debate In blank 9 at the bottom of the page, write the letter of the correct answer to this multiple-choice question. QUESTION: What were ships such as the Monitor and the Merrimack called? 1 32 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Clue 7: Before the Battle of , Union soldiers found Lee’s plans for his army wrapped around three cigars. Write the first letter of the missing word in blank 7 in the box at the bottom of the page. Take-Home Review Activity 17 RECONSTRUCTION AND ITS AFTERMATH ? DID YOU KNOW? After the Civil War, cotton, tobacco, and rice continued to be important Southern crops. However, new crops began to be grown by Southern farmers: corn, wheat, fruits, pecans, and peanuts. Reconstruction was the difficult period after the Civil War when the country started to rebuild. The South struggled to repair its destroyed economy. A kind of farmwork that became common was sharecropping, in which a person works a piece of land owned by another, is given supplies by the landowner, farms the land, and is given a part of the profit from the landowner. Many freed African Americans did not have the money or the right to buy their own land, so they became sharecroppers. Reviewing Chapter 17 The Sharecropping Cycle Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1. The sharecropper rents a piece of land from the landowner. This rent includes a shack, seeds, and farming tools. The sharecropper promises to give the landowner a percentage of the crops. 5. Another portion of the crop is sold to pay rent to the landowner for the next season. 4. Some of the remaining crops feed the sharecropper’s family. Rarely, there are enough crops to sell for a profit. The American Journey 2. The sharecropper plants and harvests the crops. 3. The sharecropper gives the landowner the amount of crops agreed upon. 33 Take-Home Review Activity 17 Complete the Crossword Puzzle DIRECTIONS: Use the following clues to complete the crossword puzzle. 1 2 3 4 6 5 7 9 8 10 11 12 13 14 15 17 34 18 19 Down 1. period of rebuilding the United States following the Civil War 2. formerly enslaved people 4. including whites and African Americans 6. a test required of some Southern voters intended to prevent African Americans from voting 7. Northern whites who moved to the South during Reconstruction to become Republican leaders 9. to formally charge a person with wrongdoing 10. dishonest or illegal actions 12. crops that can be sold for money 19. a political pardon The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Across 3. a group formed to achieve a specific goal 5. a series of laws passed by Southern state legislatures after the Civil War 8. to defeat 11. laws that allowed individuals who did not pass literacy tests to vote if their fathers or grandfathers had voted before Reconstruction 13. name given to Southern whites who supported Republican policy throughout Reconstruction 14. renting land, working it, then sharing profits with the landowner 15. an angry mob hanging someone 16. extreme 17. come together again 18. a fee people had to pay before voting 16 Take-Home Review Activity 18 THE WESTERN FRONTIER Settlers moving to the Western United States developed farms, ranches, and the mining industry. This mass settlement was made possible by a new transcontinental railway system. The development of the West greatly affected the nation and forever changed the Native Americans’ way of life. Reviewing Chapter 18 ? DID YOU KNOW? Horses changed the Native Americans’ lives. Horses helped Native Americans do work, hunt buffalo, and make long trips. The Spanish first brought horses to the Americas. Over the years, horses that ran away from their Spanish owners became wild and traveled in herds across the Great Plains. The Wichita are the first Native Americans known to have caught and trained some of these wild horses. How the West Developed Transcontinental Railway Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Railways provided rapid transport for goods, people, and supplies. The government, through subsidies and land grants, helped the railroad companies grow. The first transcontinental railway was completed on May 10, 1869. Promontory Point was the place where the eastern part of the railway joined the western part. The railways encouraged and supported the huge population growth of the West. Farming Ranching Mining Thousands of farmers settled the Great Plains when Congress passed the Homestead Act of 1862, giving free land to settlers who lived on the land for five years. From the mid-1860s until the mid-1880s, the value of cattle rose as railroads transported longhorns to the North and the East for beef. Ranchers began driving cattle, herding them to towns near railroads. These cowtowns became important railroad stations. Gold and silver attracted thousands of settlers to the West. The mining industry grew as more people dug for ore from the underground lodes. A Different Life for Native Americans Native Americans from the Plains clashed with the new settlers. The Native Americans wanted to preserve their nomadic life, but the government wanted them to become farmers. In 1868 the government recommended moving Native Americans to a few large reservations. At first many Native Americans accepted this policy. But resistance soon grew, and fighting broke out, lasting until 1890. In 1887 Congress, with the Dawes Act, divided up reservations and gave each Native American a plot of land to farm, changing the Native American way of life forever. The American Journey 35 Take-Home Review Activity 18 Unscramble the Letters DIRECTIONS: Complete each sentence by filling in the blanks using the words below. Then rearrange the letters marked by to answer the question. railroads supplies grants 1. Promontory Point track east west goods connected the East and the West. 2. Trains shipped to markets. 3. Miners and farmers received their from the railway. 4. By 1890 the United States had more than 190,000 miles of 5. The federal government gave land which to lay track. . so companies received free public land on 6. The Central Pacific Company hired about 10,000 Chinese laborers to work on tracks leading from Sacramento, California. 7. The Union Pacific Company used mainly Irish and African American workers to lay tracks leading Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. from Omaha, Nebraska. 8. The two sets of track met to complete the transcontinental railway at . QUESTION: How did the railroad companies change how people measured time? ANSWER: They divided the country into four 36 z . The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 19 By 1890 the United States had become a great industrial power. The railroad, inventions, transportation and communication, and big business promoted this growth. Reviewing Chapter 19 Railways Railways changed the country and became the nation’s largest industry. Railways linked the country and opened new territories for settlement. They delivered raw materials to factories and goods to markets. They created jobs in coal mines, railroad-car manufacturers, construction companies, and the steel industry. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Industrial Growth ? DID YOU KNOW? THE GROWTH OF INDUSTRY John D. Rockefeller grew very rich heading the Standard Oil Company. His philanthropies, or charitable foundations, were equivalent to some $500 million. He founded Rockefeller University, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the University of Chicago. Rockefeller’s son, John Jr., took over the business in 1911 and continued his father’s giving, donating land for the United Nations in New York City and restoring colonial Williamsburg in Virginia. Corporations Manufacturers began to merge into large corporations. Companies that supported industry, such as steel and oil companies, became larger. Some companies formed trusts, or groups of companies managed by the same board of directors. Monopolies, or single producers that have total control of industries, began to form. By 1900 one-third of United States manufacturing was controlled by only 1 percent of corporations. The Sherman Antitrust Act was soon passed to restrict trusts and monopolies. New Inventions Inventions also changed the country. For example: Labor Unions Labor unions organized to demand better pay and working conditions. The American Federation of Labor (AFL), led by Samuel Gompers, formed in 1881 to represent skilled labor. The Knights of Labor formed in 1869 and mostly recruited unskilled workers. Labor unions became powerful and changed the workplace. The American Journey • In 1876 Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone. In 1877 he formed Bell Telephone Company. • In 1879 Thomas Edison developed the first lightbulb and then designed power plants to produce electric power. • In 1896 Henry Ford build the first automobile using assembly lines to mass-produce cars. • In 1903 the Wright brothers flew the first motorized plane at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. 37 Take-Home Review Activity 19 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find? Look for the words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, or spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. sweatshop dividend philanthropy trust corporation consolidation injunction merger stock monopoly standard gauge mass production rebate trade union pool strikebreaker shareholder assembly line N N P R E G R E M T S E R I M N O H D E L O O P R H G A N O I I I L N B R O A U A U D J N B T L N A E A R O S R A C U O N A A Y U S D T C T E G O N P O D N N L E T I E R H D R C O O I T L L B D E V D O R P T L T L H H E N M A A I L A O I Y T O R I O N S E R R D D R O A I S O S T O C K S T E N A N L R N P O A D T R A S R A T F F I O Y C Z O Z O E F A T I N Y E C S W E A T S H O P S O X M A S S P R O D U C T I O N L F Q R E K A E R B E K I R T S Some of the letters that remain uncircled after the word search create a secret message. Starting at the top left corner and reading across, write the uncircled letters in the blanks below to find the secret message. ’ 38 . The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. E Take-Home Review Activity 20 ? TOWARD AN URBAN AMERICA DID YOU KNOW? The United States population became more urban after the Civil War. Although poverty, crime, and inadequate housing emerged, people living in the cities enjoyed public parks, libraries, and the delivery of daily newspapers. Reviewing Chapter 20 Immigration and Industry Many people from other countries came to America looking for job opportunities between about 1880 and 1910. Most immigrants arrived in New York City and San Francisco. France gave the Statue of Liberty to the United States in 1886 to celebrate the friendship between the two countries. Sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi was commissioned to design the statue. Upon its completion, the statue was taken apart, shipped to the United States, and reassembled. The poem by Emma Lazarus inscribed at the base of the statue welcomes people to the United States. Economic Differences Despite some anti-immigrant sentiment and resulting laws designed to limit immigration, many Americans supported immigration. New industrial workers were essential for economic growth and immigrants flooded the workforces of many industries. Economic differences began to increase. The poor lived in run-down city neighborhoods. Middle-class professionals and office workers began moving to areas outside the center of the city. The wealthy lived in mansions or huge estates in the suburbs. These extended the boundaries of many cities. New Entertainment Forms New Buildings and Transportation Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The look of cities began to change. Elevators made taller buildings possible. The first skyscraper, a 10-story building, was built in Chicago in 1884. Cities also added parks, streetcars, and bridges. Characteristics of Modern City Life The work of United States musicians and artists took on a more American style. Jazz music emerged. Spectator sports, vaudeville shows, and movies filled leisure time. In these ways, cities began to offer an attractive, entertaining lifestyle to city dwellers. New Social Programs New Schools and Colleges New Libraries and Media The Morrill Act in 1862 gave states federal land to start colleges. Some women’s colleges—Vassar, Smith, Wellesley, and Bryn Mawr-—were started, and Howard University in Washington, D.C., was founded. In 1881 Booker T. Washington established Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. These learning centers attracted more people to the cities. Public libraries opened and newspapers were established. Many writers of the late 1880s and early 1900s wrote about new subjects. Some, called realists, described the lives of people of the time. Others, called regionalists, wrote about a region of the country. Cities became information centers, attracting more people into them. The American Journey The Salvation Army, started in 1879, fed the urban hungry and provided shelters for the homeless. Settlement houses provided medical care, child-care classes, and libraries. These new social programs resulted from the new needs of growing cities to reduce overcrowding, health problems, and crime. The programs, in turn, supported and encouraged the growing urban population. 39 Take-Home Review Activity 20 Complete the Crossword Puzzle DIRECTIONS: Use the following clues to complete the crossword puzzle. Across 3. a poor, run-down part of a city 7. the attempt to show real people’s lives 9. the attempt to show real people’s lives in one place only 11. low-paying, dark, uncomfortable clothing workshop 13. a type of music that is an offshoot of jazz 14. the time period in America when great wealth contrasted with terrible poverty 1 2 3 4 6 5 7 8 10 9 11 13 12 40 14 15 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Down 1. a low-rent, run-down apartment building in a slum 2. sensational style of newspaper writing 4. cheap, cramped, noisy quarters on the lower deck of a ship 5. an urban house set up to provide services to a poor community 6. to become part of 8. a variety show with dancing, singing, comedy, and magic 10. a residential area outside of a city 12. to leave one’s homeland 15. minorities with different languages and/or customs than the majority The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 21 PROGRESSIVE REFORMS Reformers, or progressives, focused on making positive changes. Reforms included attempts to change government, business, women’s rights, conservation, alcohol consumption, and discrimination against ethnic groups. Reviewing Chapter 21 ? DID YOU KNOW? Nellie Taft, president Taft’s wife, changed the look of Washington, D.C. She loved the cherry blossom tree of Japan and brought some of these trees back with her after she visited the country. The trees were planted along the Potomac River. Even today, the people of Washington, D.C., celebrate the beauty of these trees with the Cherry Blossom Festival. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Examples of Progressive Reforms Government • To fight against the corruption of political machines and party bosses in the cities, reformers organized and fought for cities to set up commissions or city managers to govern. • Progressives backed reforms that increased people’s control of the government. The Oregon System called for a direct primary election, the initiative, the referendum, and the recall. In 1912 the Seventeenth Amendment provided for direct election of senators. • Presidents Hayes and Garfield tried to reform the civil service. By 1833 the Civil Service Commission was established to control the hiring of federal employees. Business • In 1887 Congress passed the Interstate Commerce Act to control pricing on the railroads, which called for a commission to supervise the railroad industry. To control business trusts and monopolies, Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act in 1890. • Theodore Roosevelt became known as the “trustbuster,” taking legal action against the beef, tobacco, and oil trusts. His “square deal” in 1904 called for governmental regulation of business. The Meat Inspection and the Pure Food and Drug Acts were passed. • In 1913 taxes were lowered, and the Federal Reserve Act to regulate the banking industry passed. In 1914 Congress established the Federal Trade Commission to investigate corporations for unfair trade practices. Women’s rights • In 1896 the National Association of Colored Women was founded. • The Women’s Trade Union League formed in 1903. • In 1920 the Nineteenth Amendment gave women the right to vote. Prohibition A crusade against alcohol led to passage of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1919, making it illegal to make, transport, or sell alcohol in the United States. Conservation In 1905 Theodore Roosevelt established the United States Forest Service, which set aside millions of acres of national forests and created the nation’s first wildlife sanctuaries. Discrimination • In 1881 Booker T. Washington, a formerly enslaved African American, founded the Tuskegee Institute. The Institute taught African Americans farming and industrial skills. • In 1909 African American W.E.B. Du Bois helped form the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), which is still a powerful political force today. • In 1910 Native American leaders began to work together to form the Society of American Indians. The Society’s goal was to improve the lives of Native Americans and to maintain their different cultures. The American Journey 41 Take-Home Review Activity 21 Unscramble the Letters DIRECTIONS: Ten words from Chapter 21 are scrambled below. Read each clue to help you unscramble the word and write the word in the box. Then unscramble the circled letters to answer the question. 1. the passing of laws that made making and selling alcohol illegal HITBIORONPI 2. settling disputes by agreeing to accept the decision of an impartial outsider RATTARBINIO 3. an election during which voters choose candidates for a larger election RYPMIAR 4. a poor Mexican American neighborhood RIORAB 5. a person who fought for women’s right to vote URIGFAFSTS 7. President Theodore Roosevelt’s nickname TESBUTRUSRT 8. a combination of companies RUTST 9. the protection and preservation of natural resources VOATINSOECRN 10. those in power rewarding supporters with jobs and favors PAOTAGNER Question: Which amendment to the Constitution provided for the direct election of senators by voters? E 42 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 6. unequal treatment because of race, religion, ethnicity, gender, or birthplace MISDIINANCIORT Take-Home Review Activity 22 OVERSEAS EXPANSION ? DID YOU KNOW? The United States moved away from its policy of isolationism, or noninvolvement in world affairs. It began to trade more with other countries and to try to politically influence those countries. For these reasons, the late 1800s and early 1900s were called the “age of imperialism,” a time when powerful Western countries created large empires by controlling weaker regions. Reviewing Chapter 22 Gigantic locks make it possible for large ships to pass through the Panama Canal. The locks, elevator-like structures with gates at each end, raise and lower ships to different water levels as they pass through the canal. Two ships can pass in opposite directions. Expansion of United States Influence and Power, 1865–1917 U.S. interests Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The U.S. Navy grew larger starting in 1883. The U.S. gained territory: • Alaska, 1867 • Midway islands, 1867 • Hawaii, 1900 • Philippines, 1901 U.S. trade began to reach farther: • The Treaty of Kanagawa started trade between the United States and Japan in 1854. • Pacific island gains helped U.S. influence and trade with China. U.S. influence in Latin America grew: • The Platt Amendment gave Cubans independence. The U.S. got control of a naval base at Guantanamo Bay, and the right to interfere if the Cuban government became unstable. • In 1917 the Jones Act granted citizenship to Puerto Ricans, not independence. Instead, the Act made Puerto Rico a territory of the U.S. • A treaty with Panama gave the U.S. a 10-mile strip of land across Panama for $10 million. On this strip, the U.S. built the Panama Canal, finished in 1914. • Under the Roosevelt Corollary, the U.S. claimed the right to interfere in the affairs of Latin American nations when they appeared unstable. The American Journey 43 Take-Home Review Activity 22 Identify Locations DIRECTIONS: Answer each of the following questions by writing the question’s number on the correct spot on the world map below. 1. The Treaty of Kanagawa began a trade relationship between the United States and what country? 2. Which northern territory was purchased by the United States in 1867? 3. Which Central American nation, formerly part of Colombia, now controls the Panama Canal since the United States’s 99-year lease ran out? 4. Which Pacific islands were acquired in 1867 as United States territories? 5. Which Pacific region became a territory of the United States in 1900 and eventually became a state? 6. Which Caribbean island is not part of the United States, but is home to a United States naval base at Guantanamo Bay? 7. Which Latin American island is still a United States territory, and the people are American citizens? 8. When the United States gained islands in the Pacific in the late 1800s, this helped the United States trade with what country? N RUSSIA W E Alaska S NORTH AMERICA ASIA PACIFIC OCEAN Midway Islands Wake I. Philippines Guam Hawaiian Islands Johnston I. Kingman Reef Howland I. Palmyra I. Baker I. Jarvis I. American Samoa Cuba Puerto Rico Panama SOUTH AMERICA AUSTRALIA 44 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. CHINA UNITED STATES JAPAN Take-Home Review Activity 23 WORLD WAR I Although World War I began among European powers, the United States entered it in 1917. The end of the war brought great change, and the United States emerged as one of the great world powers. Reviewing Chapter 23 World War I starts in Europe when Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia in July 1914. Tension had grown because of nationalism, imperialism, military buildup, and the alliance system. The two sides in the war were the Allied Powers and the Central Powers. The Allied Powers, or Allies: • • • • Great Britain France Russia Japan and Italy (joined later) The Central Powers: • Germany • Austro-Hungary • the Ottoman Empire ? DID YOU KNOW? During 1918 there was an outbreak of influenza. The flu originated from a Norwegian passenger ship docked in New York City’s harbor and spread throughout the United States and Europe. More than 27 million people died worldwide. The war is difficult for both soldiers in Europe and Americans at home. • Millions of men had to leave their jobs to serve in the armed forces. • Immigration from Europe almost stopped. • The war cost the United States about $32 million. The war causes conflict at home. The Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. America sends support to the Allies after trying to remain neutral. America became involved early in the war by • trading with the Allies • loaning the Allies money to help pay for their war efforts The United States declares war against Germany in April 1917. President Wilson was convinced that the United States could no longer remain neutral for several reasons, including: • the revolution in Russia • the sinking of three American merchant ships by German U-boats In June American troops land in France. The Allies desperately needed these American troops in the war. They helped turn the war around. The American Journey Committee on Public Information distributed pamphlets and books to persuade Americans that the war represented a battle for freedom and democracy. The German government asks President Wilson for an armistice, or agreement to end the fighting, in October 1918. The armistice went into effect in November 1918. Germany agreed to withdraw all land forces west of the Rhine River, to withdraw its fleet to the Baltic Sea, and to surrender equipment. Europe is in ruins and looks to the United States to help build a better postwar world. Wilson’s Fourteen Points set out the requirements for peace. The Treaty of Versailles was signed in June 1919, but was rejected by the Senate. The United States signed separate peace treaties with each of the Central Powers. 45 Take-Home Review Activity 23 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find? Look for the words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, or spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. ethnic group socialist front Fourteen Points convoy balance of power nationalism alliance system sabotage reparations pacifist mobilization entente propaganda armistice autocracy espionage League of Nations dissent F T N A T I O N A L I S M L L H O A O E N F I Y R A S E A L P T U W I O E O R B L A D D I A U T R W T V S O A G R T N A R P O W T N A T S U A E S A N M A C R O E A Z E I G S I G C I C R C G G E O I A D T L A E S I A C E C F N N L N A A P S T F C L L N I O P O I E I O Y I I Y D A T I N R O H B C R S C S E T G P R F H E I A O P T E T I T S W A R V T G N S M E H O T E T N E T N E E F T D M N S N O I T A R A P E R U S S R E W O P F O E C N A L A B Some of the letters that remain uncircled after the word search is complete create a secret message. Starting at the top left corner and reading across, write the uncircled letters in the blanks below to find the secret message. . 46 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. A Take-Home Review Activity 24 TURBULENT DECADES ? DID YOU KNOW? Movies with sound were introduced in 1927. About that time, filmmakers also made the move from black and white to color. In 1932 a coloring process, Technicolor, was developed and used by all the movie studios. During the 1920s, many Americans prospered. Radio, movies, and the automobile changed people’s lifestyles. Racial and labor unrest as well as prejudice towards foreigners also affected American society. Reviewing Chapter 24 The 1920s Political Differences Desire for Normalcy Time of Unrest • President Warren G. Harding promised a “return to normalcy,” an era of isolation and calm stability after the Progressive Era and World War I. • Calvin Coolidge became president after Harding died. Coolidge reestablished honesty in government, supported businesses, and was reelected in 1924. He believed in the policies of isolationism and peace. • The Ohio Gang scandal and the Tea Pot Dome scandal were problems for the Harding administration. • During the Red Scare, the government went after “Reds” (Communists) and other suspicious groups. Some aliens were forced out of the United States. • The labor movement led to much dissatisfaction in the workplace. This unrest led to strikes and, at times, violence. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Economic Differences The Booming Economy Recession and Prohibition • The stock market soared. The GNP reached $70 billion in 1922 and $100 billion in 1929. Installment buying boosted consumer spending. • The economy steadily grew after the post-war recession. Technology and electricity powered industry. The auto industry influenced other growing industries such as the steel, rubber, and glass industries. • Immediately after World War I, the economy entered a recession, or downturn, for about two years. • The Eighteenth Amendment established Prohibition, or total ban on manufacture, sale, and transportation of liquor. • Prohibition contributed to the rise of organized crime as criminals began to deal in alcohol. Cultural Differences The Roaring Twenties Clashing Cultures • Women won the right to vote. More women felt that working outside the home was acceptable. • Motion pictures became very popular. The radio brought entertainment into people’s homes. The happy, dancing flapper image blossomed. • The Harlem Renaissance instilled an interest and pride for the culture of African Americans. • Nativism, the belief that native-born Americans are better than foreigners, revived the Ku Klux Klan and its campaign of racial hatred. • Suspicion of other cultures caused Congress to pass quota laws to limit immigration. • The clash of cultures became material for many writers and artists of the 1920s. The American Journey 47 Take-Home Review Activity 24 Complete the Crossword Puzzle DIRECTIONS: Use the following clues to complete the crossword puzzle. 1 Across 8. a total ban on the making, sale, and transportation of liquor in the United States 10. the amount of work each worker can do 11. to rent 12. the scientific theory that humans and animals evolved over vast time periods 14. an arrangement that limits the number of immigrants from each country 15. an economic downturn 16. to expel from a country 2 3 4 5 6 8 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 16 Down 1. buying goods by paying small, regular amounts over time 2. forms of communication that reaches millions of people 3. a person who believes there should be no government 4. a citizen of a country who chooses to live in another country 5. an economic system based on private property and free enterprise 6. the idea that a country should stay out of international disagreements 7. the total value of all goods and services produced by a country 9. the belief that native-born Americans are superior to foreigners 13. a carefree, young woman of the 1920s who represented liberation 48 The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 25 THE DEPRESSION AND FDR The prosperous 1920s ended with the worst economic depression in America’s history. President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal was a set of programs and reforms aimed at helping the country recover from the Depression that lasted into the 1930s. Some of the programs still exist today. Reviewing Chapter 25 The Great Depression In 1929 the stock market crashed. Shrinking farm income and lagging sales in goods and services caused a decline in the automobile and construction industries. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. A credit crisis developed. People bought so much on credit that they could not pay the resulting large debts. During the 1930s, drought and storms hit the Dust Bowl states of Kansas, Oklahoma, northern Texas, and eastern Colorado and New Mexico. Life became difficult for most Americans. Banks and businesses closed. Millions of people lost their jobs, so families had to live on less income. Minority groups were hit hard. More than half of African Americans in the South had no jobs and continued to fight against prejudice. Many Mexican Americans lost their jobs and returned to Mexico, often involuntarily. President Hoover thought the crisis was only temporary. Many people blamed him for starting the Depression. He authorized federal spending for public works in 1931 and created the RFC in 1932. He hoped these steps would improve the economy. The American Journey ? DID YOU KNOW? President Franklin D. Roosevelt and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt were distant cousins. President Theodore Roosevelt was Eleanor’s uncle and Franklin’s cousin. Franklin D. Roosevelt was reelected in 1936 because of improvements in the economy. There was still much economic progress to be made. In the late 1930s, however, world conflicts caused Americans to focus on foreign affairs. The Second New Deal was a new set of programs and reforms launched in 1935. Some of its programs included: • the WPA that created jobs between 1935 and 1941 • the National Labor Relations Act that guaranteed workers the right to form unions • the FLSA that established a minimum wage • the SSA that created a tax on workers and employers to help the retired and the unemployed. Roosevelt’s first Hundred Days in office restored some confidence. His New Deal laws affected banking, the stock market, industry, agriculture, public works, relief for the poor, and conservation of resources. Although they provided some relief, these New Deal programs did not end the Depression. In 1932 the next president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, promised immediate action to solve the economic crisis. 49 Take-Home Review Activity 25 Match the Initials DIRECTIONS: Below is a list of New Deal programs and their initials. Underneath this list are descriptions of these programs. In each description, there are underlined letters. Put these letters in the correct order to match each description with the correct program’s initials. Write the initials in the blanks. Civilian Conservation Corps Fair Labor Standards Act Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Securities and Exchange Commission Works Progress Act National Industrial Recovery Act Tennessee Valley Authority Social Security Act Emergency Banking Relief Act National Labor Relations Act CCC FLSA FDIC SEC WPA NIRA TVA SSA EBRA NLRA 1. the first program passed after Roosevelt took office that set up a system to reorganize banks 2. provided jobs for young men such as planting trees, building bridges and parks, and setting up flood control projects 3. an experiment in regional planning to control flooding, promote conservation and development, and bring electricity into rural areas 5. insured savings accounts in banks approved by the federal government 6. helped keep workers employed by building or repairing airports, public buildings, bridges, and roads 7. regulated the sale of stocks and bonds 8. created a tax on workers and employers to help retired people and the unemployed 9. also called the Wagner Act, guaranteed workers the right to form unions to bargain collectively with employers 10. banned child labor and set minimum wages and maximum hours for all business engaged in interstate commerce 50 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 4. helped to boost the economy by helping business regulate itself Take-Home Review Activity 26 ? DID YOU KNOW? WORLD WAR II Oskar Schindler helped Jews and other minorities during the war. A German factory owner, he was given permission by the Nazis to use Jews as factory workers. Schindler was able to save about 1,000 people from being killed by the Nazis. World War II resulted in the deaths of more than 40 million people. When it was over, the United States emerged as a strong economic and military world power. Reviewing Chapter 26 Military Action During World War II Dictators Gained Power Dictators rose in power and threatened world peace. The United States wanted to stay neutral. • Adolf Hitler became the German chancellor in 1933. His Nazi Party ended democracy there and established a totalitarian state. • Benito Mussolini ruled Italy and made facism popular. • Military leaders rose to power in Japan. • Joseph Stalin took charge of the Soviet Union. World War II Began The war began in Europe in September 1939, when Germany invaded Poland. Two days later, Great Britain and France declared war on Germany. The Major Axis Powers Were: The Major Allied Powers Were: Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union Germany, Italy, and Japan The United States Joined the War After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941, the United States could no longer stay neutral. The United States joined the Allies in Europe and in the Pacific to defeat the Axis Powers. The War in Europe The Allied Powers sought to stop Hitler. They attacked Egypt to protect the Suez Canal from German capture. The Allies also invaded Italy, launched an air war on Germany, and continued to free areas that had been controlled by Germany. The turning point was the attack on Leningrad in 1943, when the German army lost the battle. Germany, however, continued to fight. The Soviets pushed them out of Eastern Europe and British and American troops moved across France to the German border. Hitler committed suicide, and Germany surrendered in 1945. The American Journey The War in the Pacific America and Japan fought in several battles in the Pacific. The United States had its first major victory over Japan in the Battle of Midway. The Americans began a strategy of island hopping by capturing key islands, making them bases, then hopping to the next closest island, moving closer and closer to Japan. Japan refused to surrender and continued to fight. As a result, President Truman ordered the use of an atomic bomb on Hiroshima and a second bomb on Nagasaki three days later. The Japanese surrendered on August 15, 1945. 51 Take-Home Review Activity 26 Unscramble the Letters DIRECTIONS: Fifteen words from Chapter 26 are scrambled below. Read each clue to help you unscramble the letters and write the word on the line. 1. a strategy used by the United States to go on the defensive against Japan’s attacks and capture key islands in the Pacific DASLIN GPNOIHP 2. hatred of Jews MAMS-ITNITIES 3. the Nazi campaign to destroy Jews TOLSOUCAH 4. Germany’s description of a “lightning war” offensive against Poland in 1939 KIGLITRZEB 5. a detention center for prisoners NITNEEMTRN PAMC 6. a leader who controls a nation by force CITDARTO 7. to limit the goods and services people can buy NOITRA 8. the giving up of military weapons NERMAATSDIM 9. extreme nationalism and racism SAMCIFS DOIGEENC 11. Japanese suicide pilots who crashed planes loaded with explosives onto American ships MASKIKZEA 12. a policy Britain and France used to try to avoid World War II in which they accepted Germany’s demand to take over Sudetenland MENPATSAEPE 13. an act approved by Congress in 1941 that allowed the United States to sell, lend, or lease arms or other war supplies to nations who were important to the defense of the United States EDNE-SLEAL 14. TOMZINBIOLAI military and civilian preparation for war 15. describes a government in which a single party and its leader suppress all opposition and control all aspects of people’s lives 52 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 10. wiping out an entire group of people RANTOALAITTI The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 27 THE COLD WAR ERA The cold war was the conflict between the East and the West. The East was made up of Sovietcontrolled communist governments. The West was made up of capitalist democracies, such as the United States. After World War II, the United States worked to stop the spread of communism. Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin started his life as a peasant named Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili. When he was an adult, he changed his name to Stalin, which means “man of steel.” Reviewing Chapter 27 Postwar Politics Cold War Origins Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. • Europe was split by the iron curtain into the Soviet-controlled communist governments and the capitalist democratic governments. • President Truman developed a policy of containment to stop Soviet expansion into areas of strategic importance to the United States and to contain communism. • The Soviets tried to drive the West out of Berlin by cutting off needed supplies to the city. President Truman responded by airlifting the supplies into Berlin and eventually forcing the Soviets to back down. • The crisis in Berlin confirmed that the Soviet Union and the United States were in a cold war––not fighting, but building up military forces and arms in order to intimidate each other. ? DID YOU KNOW? • The government lifted war-time price controls, causing a rise in prices, or inflation. Labor unrest resulted from consumer prices rising faster than wages. • President Truman, a Democrat, presented the Fair Deal plan designed to solve the postwar economic problems. The plan did not get broad support, so only parts of it eventually passed into law. • The Republicans favored big business and tried to limit the power of unions by outlawing closed shops, or workplaces that hire only union members. • In his efforts to end racial discrimination, President Truman ordered federal departments to end job discrimination against African Americans. He also ordered desegregation in the armed forces. The Cold War Era 1945–1954 The Korean War • In 1950 Soviet-controlled North Korea invaded American-controlled South Korea. President Truman ordered limited use of United States military force to stop the invasion. • The Korean War became a stalemate, a situation in which neither side could win a victory important enough to end the fighting. A long period of negotiations finally ended in 1953, and the war was over. There was no winner. • The participation of the United States in the Korean War showed the Soviet Union that Americans were serious about their policy of containing communism. The American Journey The Red Scare • The Cold War brought about a Red Scare, or fear of communism, in the United States. Americans were worried that Communists would subvert, or sabotage, American society and weaken its government. • Senator Joseph McCarthy led the hunt for Communists from 1950 to 1954. McCarthy publicly alleged, or declared without proof, that many Americans were Communists. • Americans began to see McCarthy as a bully making unfounded accusations. The Senate voted to censure, or formally criticize, him for “conduct unbecoming a senator,” and McCarthy lost his power to damage others’ lives. 53 Take-Home Review Activity 27 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find in the hidden word search puzzle? Look for the words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, or spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. subversion cold war closed shops allege blacklist censure containment stalemate airlift inflation perjury A E N I R O T N S C C U O R G T A F I T U N L D E N S E I C A E B P O N D E T L L L D I V E S B E T R A E L N W E R E E E I N M I F A T R J D H A E A E L N A S S U S T A T N A D W M E I R H S E T T R D B W E O Y O T S I L K C A L B N I P G O R A W D L O C X T S N E K E R U S N E C N Z Some of the letters that remain uncircled after the word search is complete create a secret message. Starting at the top left corner and reading across, write down the uncircled letters in the blanks below to find the secret message. . 54 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. C Take-Home Review Activity 28 AMERICA IN THE 1950s The 1950s were a time of prosperity and progress in American society. Urban and rural poverty, however, caused some groups to be left out of the prosperity and critics to question the values of the times. Reviewing Chapter 28 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The 1950s ? DID YOU KNOW? The first digital computer was the ENIAC computer. It weighed more than 60,000 lb (27,000 kg) and had more than 18,000 vacuum tubes. Each month, technicians had to replace about 2,000 of the tubes. The Eisenhower Presidency A Time of Prosperity Problems • In 1952 Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president and the Republicans won control of Congress, starting a new political era. • The United States prospered economically under President Eisenhower’s moderate, or middle-of-the-road, approach to domestic policies. By the end of his second term in office the federal budget had a $300 million surplus, or excess. • As the Cold War with the Soviet Union continued, there was a new policy of planning to launch a massive retaliation if the Soviets attacked any nation. This led to a nuclear arms race, or buildup, between the United States and the Soviet Union. • After several foreign policy challenges that threatened to turn the Cold War into a real war, the Geneva summit meeting of 1955 was held. President Eisenhower, Soviet officials, and NATO leaders worked to develop of policy of peaceful coexistence. • The United States economy showed amazing growth due to government spending and technological advances, such as the computer. These advances resulted in greater productivity, or the ability to produce more goods with the same amount of labor. • The strong economy raised the standard of living, which is a measure of people’s overall wealth and quality of life, of many Americans. • Prosperous times also resulted in a baby boom, or greatly increased birthrate. • American culture changed with the great popularity of television as a source of entertainment and information. Television presented an image of perfect middle-class life. Its commercials fed the consumer culture. • Rock ’n’ roll emerged as an American art form that bonded teenagers but widened the gap between them and their parents. • More than 20 percent of Americans were poor. This percentage included some farm workers and minority groups living in urban ghettos. Workers unemployed by automation, or producing goods using mechanical and electronic devices, also struggled with poverty. • Social critics complained about American materialism, or focus on money and possessions. Some people believed that the sameness of corporate and suburban life was eliminating individuality. These critics felt that rebellion and isolation from American culture were good goals. • Some women challenged their roles as housewives and mothers and sought to gain the choices that men already enjoyed. • Many African Americans questioned their roles as secondclass citizens. After years of struggling for equality, African Americans reached a point where they were ready to demand full civil rights. The American Journey 55 Take-Home Review Activity 28 Complete the Crossword Puzzle DIRECTIONS: Use the following clues to complete the crossword puzzle. Across 6. a measure of people’s overall wealth and quality of life 8. a focus on accumulating money and possessions 10. Eisenhower’s middle-of-the-road approach to domestic policy 11. the ability to produce more goods with the same amount of labor 12. soaring birthrate Down 1. producing goods using mechanical and electronic devices 2. neighborhoods made up of mostly poor minority groups 3. excess amount 4. competition to build up weapons 5. the idea that an event can have a chain of effects 7. wealth 9. a meeting of government heads 1 2 3 4 5 7 6 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 8 9 10 11 12 56 The American Journey Take-Home Review Activity 29 ? THE CIVIL RIGHTS ERA DID YOU KNOW? The campaign for equal rights for all Americans gained momentum in the 1960s. Hundreds of marches, protests, demonstrations, and riots took place. Women, Native Americans, African Americans, and others took part to gain their civil rights. s 19 70 Reviewing Chapter 29 In the 1960s, a Puerto Rican cultural movement centered in New York City took place. Leaders of these young writers and artists were called nuyoricans. Many of them spoke and wrote in both English and Spanish. For people with physical disabilities, new laws gave them more job opportunities, better access to public facilities, and a greater role in society. For Hispanic Americans, César Chávez and the United Farm Workers Union helped to gain rights for migrant workers. Hispanics were able to vote because registration and voting was in other languages as well as in English. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed. It banned discrimination by race, sex, religion, or national origin. The African American struggle continued in the South and spread to the North. Sit-ins, riots, violence, and arrests occurred. Freedom Riders in the South were stoned, beaten, arrested, and jailed. 19 50 s Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated. Rioting erupted in more than 100 cities. The wave of urban riots ended, but racial tension remained. For Native Americans, the National Congress of American Indians helped them gain more control over their affairs. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 passed, asserting African Americans’ right to vote. Civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., organized a March on Washington in 1963. More than 200,000 people participated. King believed in change through nonviolent protest. In 1955 protesters boycotted The Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, against segregation on public buses in Montgomery, Alabama. Kansas (1954) called for the integration of public schools. The American Journey The National Organization for Women was created. In 1963 the Equal Pay Act passed, which made it illegal to pay women less than men for the same work. A court order integrated Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957. 57 Take-Home Review Activity 29 Unscramble the Letters DIRECTIONS: Complete each vocabulary puzzle square using the definitions below. Then rearrange the letters marked by a circle to answer the question. 1. refuse to use COBTYOT 2. bring races together NETRAETGI 3. the minimum income needed to survive PONTELVIREY 4. helps poor people pay medical bills MADDIECI 5. a person who comes from Latin America or Spain, or is descended from people from one of those places HAINICSP 6. helps senior citizens pay for medical bills CADEREMI 8. that which crosses state lines SINTERTEAT 9. the separation of people of different races EGRONIASEGT MITNEFSI 10. an activist for women’s rights What does NAACP stand for? O O 58 F L O The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 7. the refusal to obey laws BVCIESIOCEIDINDEL that are considered unjust Take-Home Review Activity 30 THE VIETNAM ERA The Vietnam era had a huge impact on America and on its future military and foreign policy. In a fight against Communist North Vietnam, the United States sent troops to aid South Vietnam throughout the 1960s and early 1970s. The longer the United States fought in Vietnam, the more Americans questioned and criticized involvement there. After Vietnam, Americans were much more likely to question United States military involvement in any foreign conflict. Chinese American Maya Lin was a young student at Yale University when she submitted a design for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Her design was chosen over those of many older, experienced architects. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial was built in Washington, D.C. It has become one of the most popular sites to visit in the city. Reviewing Chapter 30 The Vietnam War Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ? DID YOU KNOW? • Under President John F. Kennedy, America continued to be involved in the civil war in Vietnam. Kennedy sent special forces, the Green Berets, to train and advise South Vietnamese troops to fight the Communist Vietcong. • By 1965 American troops had joined the conflict. The fighting was difficult and there were heavy losses. • In the United States, frustration mounted as the war continued. Americans were divided over U.S. involvement. • By the end of the war, President Nixon called for South Vietnam to take a more active role in fighting the war. • A peace treaty was signed in 1973 that ended American involvement but not the conflict. • In 1975 Saigon fell to the Communists and South Vietnam surrendered. The war was finally over. The Rise of a Counterculture • Different groups opposed the war in Vietnam. Antiwar demonstrations were common throughout the United States. • Some college students protested by burning their draft cards or becoming conscientious objectors. They claimed that their moral or religious beliefs prevented them from fighting in the war. • Some university protests ended in violence. Student strikes followed this violence. • The antiwar protesters became critics of the values and institutions of American society. • President Johnson’s approval declined as the war lost support. Johnson decided not to run for another term. Richard M. Nixon won the election of 1968 and promised a return to “law and order.” The American Journey 59 Take-Home Review Activity 30 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find? Look for the words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, or spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. Dove escalate Hawk Germany Cuba B E O D E R E F B I exile Soviet Union coup blockade Vietnam L B D E X G E R M A N Y W C E P U O C V D T Q P O K J Y V A J E K J K Q B L W X C S Y O E A S P H C S N O I 60 A B U Y B T G A I K S A S X K C E T X S P K U N P C U E Z K X P W W A F C M N T M N X Y F H A M I U C U N O E P Q Y A M D I H R S R K I N U T E I K B C L V O S N L D G Z G H L A P C R P W G E A A W H D N E B A B G O X U H L J G T V J D T The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. B F Q L N U M D X T P C B N Y U M Take-Home Review Activity 31 SEARCH FOR STABILITY During the 1970s, many Americans changed their view of government as they began to distrust political leaders. While the United States made progress in foreign policy, there was controversy at home. The United States faced many political challenges. Reviewing Chapter 31 ? DID YOU KNOW? Canada helped four Americans escape capture during the Iranian hostage crisis. During the hostage-taking, the Americans hid in the Canadian Embassy and were eventually flown home. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Political Challenges Richard M. Nixon (1969–1974) Gerald Ford (1974–1977) Jimmy Carter (1977–1981) Challenge In the Watergate scandal, members of Nixon’s secondterm campaign broke into Democratic headquarters to install listening devices. Challenges Ford dealt with controversy over his pardon of former President Nixon and his offer of amnesty to men who had illegally avoided military service during the Vietnam War. Challenges His reversal on economic policies made Carter seem weak to many government leaders and other Americans. Carter’s foreign policy of “human rights above all else” was challenged by some as ineffective. Attempted Solution Nixon claimed executive privilege and refused to turn over damaging tapes about covering up the break-in. Results Rather than face impeachment, Nixon resigned three days after being forced to turn over the tapes. The Watergate crisis shook the country and damaged Americans’ faith in political leaders and institutions. The American Journey Attempted Solution Ford tried to convince Americans that the best policy was to forgive and move forward. Results Ford barely received the Republican nomination in 1976. His strengths were overshadowed by the effects of the Watergate scandal, and he lost the election. Attempted Solutions Carter tried to use American strength to promote peace all over. He worked hard to get the hostages in Iran released. Results Carter did not win a second term. Increasing Cold War tensions and his failure to improve the bad economy worked against him. 61 Take-Home Review Activity 31 Search for Hidden Words DIRECTIONS: How many words can you find? Look for the words listed below that may appear horizontally, vertically, diagonally, or spelled forwards or backwards. Circle as many as you can find. deficit détente underemployment shuttle diplomacy amnesty human rights embargo stagflation revenue sharing fundamentalist trade deficit H U T T L E D I P L O M A C Y N I X O N R R S S S E E S I G G N E D T O A V O I E I T T T D A N R I M P E A C H M E N V L H A E T T R A I A L U D K Z S D D E A G G N T C E B S A Z L G T H E Q U N T I F T A B S M O A K T K F Y J A M U N R L E G A N E Y H B I M D V L I T E E N A K I V T I K C L S G E Y K A Q S M A T I P N T I C I F E D E D A R T H A M I C M T K E K F S D W C Q X I N A D U O W A M N E S T Y U F O D E Q R R N H N T N E M Y O L P M E R E D N U I U R Y H A Z F E P V G U Y N Q P U J N F W N K R X Y R K G V W R Y A I I J G Some of the letters that remain uncircled after the word search is complete create a secret message. Starting at the top left corner and reading across, write down the uncircled letters in the blanks below to find the secret message. . 62 The American Journey Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. S Take-Home Review Activity 32 NEW CHALLENGES The last twenty years of the twentieth century saw the end of the Cold War, the collapse of the Soviet Union, changes in foreign relations, and a new global economy. There was fast growth in technology, such as the Internet, medicine, and industry. New challenges have come with all of these changes. Reviewing Chapter 32 President Ronald Reagan (1981–1989) • a Republican president with conservative ideas; wanted a return to “traditional American values” • made an agenda including less federal government rules, lower taxes, and less money spent on social programs Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. George H.W. Bush (1989–1993) • Reagan’s vice president, experienced in foreign affairs • continued Reagan’s conservative Republican agenda Bill Clinton (1993–2001) • called himself a “New Democrat” • promised to cut taxes and spending while reforming the welfare and health-care systems The American Journey Domestic Issues ? DID YOU KNOW? Hispanic Americans will become the largest minority group in the United States within the next 50 years, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Hispanic Americans made up 11.1 percent of the United States population in 2000. It is estimated that this amount will reach 21.1 percent by 2050. Foreign Issues • promoted deregulation • appointed conservative justices to the Supreme Court, including the first woman • cut taxes and spending on domestic programs and increased the military • sent aid to pro-democracy contras in Nicaragua to put down communist rebels • signed Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who encouraged glasnost (opening Soviet society to new ideas) and perestroika (local economic planning) • enacted few domestic programs to minimize spending because the federal debt and banking crisis required major government funding • signed START with Gorbachev • supported the fall of communist governments in eastern Europe • watched the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Union, ending the Cold War • sent troops to fight Iraq in the Persian Gulf War to protect oilproducing countries • proposed health-care reforms that failed in Congress • signed a bill for a welfare reform law • expanded and established children’s education programs • was impeached for committing perjury and obstructing justice concerning a personal scandal; aquitted on all charges • enacted the NAFTA to eliminate trade barriers among Canada, the United States, and Mexico • focused on expanding trade and resolving foreign conflicts, including brokering the Middle East Peace Accords and giving aid to Muslims and Croats in the Bosnian Civil War 63 Take-Home Review Activity 32 Organize Files DIRECTIONS: You are storing the documents listed in the box below on your computer. Decide which folder is the correct place for each document file. Write the document file names on the lines under the folder names. You will not fill all of the lines. bankruptcy deregulation global warming health-care coverage welfare reform perestroika federal debt U.S. Foreign Affairs 2. U.S. Domestic Policy 3. Global Factors 64 coup glasnost gross domestic product incumbent ozone Internet Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1. budget deficit world peace grassroots impeach line-item veto Star Wars The American Journey Answer Key Key Answer Activity 1 Activity 4 1. civilization 1. Diversity 2. migration 2. literacy 3. pueblo 3. triangular trade 4. artifacts 4. Iroquois Confederacy 5. drought 5. Cash crops 6. nomads 6. smuggling 7. theocracy 7. proprietary colony 8. culture 8. alliance 9. federation 9. Speculators 10. archaeology 10. charter colony 11. hieroglyphics Answer: apprentice 12. carbon dating Activity 5 13. Ice Age 14. terraces 1. minutemen 15. adobe 2. patriots 3. writs of assistance Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Activity 2 4. petition C M E M C M O N Q U A C E I S D I S G I T O A D D O L C S R E E R I A S S S N R E A N T C E B M C L M S E Q I V S A R E D G A A U I I I R U A S S A N T S F L R M T R O R E I S I O M S P A O C N N G N N C I T I S H R C U R A A A L L A A E R S T N O E X T T V C I L N P L L E V A R A C S I I R P E O R P R E S I D I O A O G E R E T Y G O L O N H C E T N A M R I P L A N T A T I O N B U T T E C W M P U E B L O D H O S E S F A R E T U B I R T B S E P I Answer: Conquistadors received grants from 5. committee of correspondence 6. resolution 7. loyalists 8. militia 9. preamble 10. nonimportation 11. boycott 12. effigy 13. repeal 14. revenue 15. propaganda Spanish rulers to explore. Activity 3 England: CT, DE, GA, MA, MD, NC, NH, NJ, PA, RI, SC, VA; Netherlands: NY; Spain: AZ, CA, NM, TX The American Journey 65 Answer Key Activity 6 Activity 9 I P B Q K P D R F S L N S D J D N S Z T R R A T I F Y P X U L M F G K I A P I A N Z I Y D P A N L N V J I U G M W X I U V M R H A A Y T R M H B X L I C T S T C T R J C T Q S U P D P T C G U E I V E S F T V S G R D B W S E U O R C H E X U H Y P A E M R N C N N D P E O Z N Q D E D A K C O L B R G B H L M E R C E N A R Y R M L Z W Z Y X F U B Y G T I G J H Z A F P Q M R B F E L Q A Q B Y O Y R J P F W C L W L J L P Z U Y R E E J D A A D E S K X K T J T N H E L O U E I S E I C A R U N E A P U R C D R H O A Y E S D E U D O U B I E N L T E E D T I H T E S A I E C U Z M T S E O C F R F F S T D E S H A K E U S I Z A T R S C I S V V W I G S E A O L M I L N W W I A H T S N G L O R A G F V V R H I S V A T T R N I D A S Q P R I O W H S R O E L G B T H G A J A Z U V I I A V Z H W E L W G L C Q T J K B A I R T A H O E M B A R G O D U C E N S N T Z Z N U C N Y N L T D W J R X I I L W U J N O O U E E X Activity 7 Across 1. federalism 5. compromise 6. proportional 7. ordinance 11. depression 12. article 13. ratify 14. Electoral 15. bicameral 16. Enlightenment Answer: The Louisiana Purchase doubled the size of the U. S. Down 2. antifederalists 3. amendment 4. republic 5. checks and balances 8. constitution 9. petition 10. manumission 11. depreciate Activity 11 Activity 10 Clue 1 technology Clue 6 disarmament Clue 2 canal Clue 7 Locks Clue 3 p Clue 8 demilitarized Clue 4 i Clue 9 s Clue 5 capital Clue 10 factory system Answer: capitalism 1. depression 2. shortage 3. dropped Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 4. rose 5. loans 6. collect 7. factories 8. farmers 9. taxes Activity 8 Answer: neutrality, tariff, caucus, partisan, precedents, cabinet, sedition, deport, speculator, nullify secretary of state 66 The American Journey Answer Key Activity 12 Across 1. boomtown 4. forty-niners 5. rancho 6. annex 9. empresario 11. vigilante 12. ranchero 14. decree 15. joint occupation 16. tejanos Down 2. Manifest Destiny 3. mountain men 7. emigrants 8. cede 10. Californios 13. rendezvous Activity 13 1. morse code 2. spiritual 3. cotton gin 4. prejudice 5. clippership Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 6. famine 7. tenant farmer 8. overseer 9. nativist 10. strike Activity 14 A R C G W U Y R O S L U P M O C M U Y M N O V N N T D K U B H H S D J D F Y E E E A K D S Y R D P Z U C G U D E V R D D Y P E I U R A O F J O S U G L H I T U Y K R L H N Y F G V N V P O N I C O C D T G A Z W R H V O D H O Z B H A A A Z J R T Q A W O I C U H V C S U N M T J Y O N G U Q T R K C U J J B W A E I Z V U E D W A C E S T M M N P S R R O N T N D F T P J L I O W Q L B B T I N O L D N S D F A P I R H N C M T I C P P B R E K F M A D U S S Y K X H S I M Q F A C X R K A Y X R G W T U P A A E F J I S O L A V I V E R H B J Z T N S Z X L N W C H X E K P D N M C J T E M P E R A N C E S R S M E L Q O I S T H Z H O R P D E C C C Y H I A N F T H G I P A T U G C W R C K B Q Q I L U E C S Z D X T S I N O I T I L O B A Answer: American artists turned to American themes. Activity 15 Across 3. secede 7. secession 10. arsenal 11. martyr Down 1. states’ rights 2. border ruffians 4. sectionalism 5. abstain 6. popular sovereignty 8. civil war 9. fugitive 11. telegraph 12. capital 13. fixed cost 14. credit 15. trade union 16. slave code 17. yeoman Answer: discrimination The American Journey 67 Answer Key Activity 16 Activity 18 Clue 1 Richmond 1. railroads Clue 2 border 2. goods Clue 3 o 3. supplies Clue 4 entrenched 4. track Clue 5 Potomac 5. grants Clue 6 Orleans 6. east Clue 7 Antietam 7. west Clue 8 draft 8. Promontory Point Clue 9 s Answer: time zones Answer: ironclads Activity 19 Activity 17 Across 3. commission 5. black codes 8. override 11. grandfather clauses 13. scalawags 14. sharecropping 15. lynching 16. radical 17. reconciliation 18. poll tax N N P R E G R E M T S E R M N O H D E L O O P R H G A I N O I I I L N B R O A U A U D J N B T L N A E A R O S R A C U O N A A Y U S D T C T E G O N P O D N N L E T I E R H D R C O O I T L L B D E V D O R P T L T L H H E N M A A I L A O I Y T O R I O N S E R R D D R O A I S O S T O C K S T E N A N L R N P O A D T R A S R A T F F I O Y C Z O Z O E F A T I N Y E C S W E A T S H O P S O X M A S S P R O D U C T I O N L F Q R E K A E R B E K I R T S Answer: Railroad barons controlled the nation’s railroad traffic. Activity 20 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Down 1. Reconstruction 2. freedmen 4. integrated 6. literacy test 7. carpetbaggers 9. impeach 10. corruption 12. cash crops 19. amnesty E Across 3. slum 7. realism 9. regionalism 11. sweatshop 13. ragtime 14. Gilded Age Down 1. tenement 2. yellow journalism 4. steerage 68 The American Journey Answer Key Key Answer 5. settlement house Activity 23 6. assimilate A F T N A T I O N A L I S M L L H O A O E N F I Y R A S E A 10. suburb L P T U W I O E O R B L A D D I A U T R W T V S O A G R T N 12. emigrate A R P O W T N A T S U A E S A 8. vaudeville 15. ethnic group N M A C R O E A Z E I G S I G C I C R C G G E O I A D T L A E S I A C E C F N N L N A A P S T F C L L N I O P O I E I O Y I I Y D A T I N R O H B C R S C S E T G P R F H E I A O P T E T I T S W A R V T G N S M 2. arbitration E H O T E T N E T N E E F T D M N S N O I T A R A P E R U S 3. primary S R E W O P F O E C N A L A B Activity 21 1. prohibition 4. barrio 5. suffragist Answer: The First World War was called The Great War. 6. discrimination 7. trustbuster Activity 24 8. trust Across 8. prohibition 10. productivity 11. lease 12. evolution 14. quota system 15. recession 16. deport 9. conservation 10. patronage Answer: Seventeenth Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Activity 22 The following numbers should be written on their corresponding places on the map: 1. Japan 2. Alaska 3. Panama 4. Midway islands 5. Hawaii 6. Cuba 7. Puerto Rico 8. China The American Journey Down 1. installment buying 2. mass media 3. anarchist 4. expatriate 5. capitalism 6. isolationism 7. gross national product 9. nativism 13. flapper 69 Answer Key Activity 25 Activity 27 1. EBRA C A E N I R O T N S C U O R G T A F I T U N L 3. TVA D E N S E I C A E B P O 4. NIRA N D E T L L L D I V E S B E T R A E L N W E R E E E I N M I F A T R J D 6. WPA H A E A E L N A S S U S 7. SEC T A T N A D W M E I R H S E T T R D B W E O Y O T S I L K C A L B N I P G O R A W D L O C X T S N E K E R U S N E C N Z 2. CCC 5. FDIC 8. SSA 9. NLRA 10. FLSA Activity 26 C Answer: An iron curtain descended between the East and West. 1. island hopping 2. anti-Semitism 3. Holocaust 4. blitzkrieg 5. internment camp 6. dictator 7. ration 8. disarmament 9. fascism 10. genocide 11. kamikazes 12. appeasement 13. Lend-Lease 14. mobilization 70 Across 6. standard of living 8. materialism 10. moderate 11. productivity 12. baby boom Down 1. automation 2. ghettos 3. surplus 4. arms race 5. domino theory 7. affluence 9. summit Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 15. totalitarian Activity 28 The American Journey Answer Key Key Answer Activity 31 Activity 29 1. boycott 2. integrate S H U T T L E D I P L O M A C Y N I X O N R R S S S E E S I G G N E D T I M P E 3. poverty line O A V O I E I T 4. Medicaid A C H M E N V L H A E T T R A I A L 5. Hispanic U D K Z S D D E A G G N T C E B S A 6. Medicare Z L G T H E Q U N T I F T A B S M O A K T K F Y J A M U N R L E G A N E Y H B I M D V L I T E E N A K I V T N 7. civil disobedience T T D A N R 8. interstate I K C L S G E Y K A Q S M A T I P 9. segregation T I C I F E D E D A R T H A M I C M T K E K F S D W C Q X I N A D U O W A M N E S T Y U F O D E Q R R N H N T N E M Y O L P M E R E D N U I U R Y H A Z F E P V G U Y N Q P U J N F W N K R X Y R K G V W R Y A I I J G 10. feminist Answer: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Activity 30 Answer: Nixon resigned to avoid an B E O D E R E F B I L B D E X G E R M A N Y W C E P U O C V D T Q P O K J Y V A J E K J B F Q L Y O E A S P H C S K S A S X K C E T X S C M N T M N X Y F H A M I U C U N O E P Q Y A M D I H R S R K I N U T E I L V O S The American Journey N L D G Z G H L A P C R P W G E A A W H D N E B A B G O X U H L J Activity 32 K B C P K U N P C U E Z K X P W W A F Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. N O I A B U Y B T G A I K Q B L W X C S N U M D X T P C B N Y U M impeachment trial. G T V J D T Answers may include: 1. U.S. Foreign Policy: glasnost, perestroika, coup, Star Wars 2. U.S. Domestic Policy: deregulation, federal debt, bankruptcy, grass roots, impeach, line-item veto, budget deficit, gross domestic product, incumbent, welfare reform, health-care coverage 3. Global Factors: ozone, Internet, global warming, world peace 71