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U.S. HISTORY Goal 1-6 Review Content Issues: Whiskey Rebellion The new national government demonstrated its power by forcefully stopping the whiskey rebellion Content issues: Farewell address Form no political Parties in the United States Enter into no Foreign Entanglements Enter into no permanent Alliances • Treaty of Grenville Miami Confederacy gave up most of the land in area that would become Ohio; ended Native American resistance in Ohio Content: Tecumseh Joined the British army in the war of 1812 to stop westward expansion. Tecumseh worked to unite other Indian tribes to oppose white western expansion in the early 1800s. That dream was crippled when U.S. troops defeated warriors led by Tecumseh's brother. Tecumseh was later killed while fighting on the British side at the Tecumseh's growing American Indian confederation battled Americans forces in the war of 1812 with the British to halt westward expansion by American colonist. Tecumseh and the Shawnees did not hold any claim on the land, but they believed that Indian land was owned in common by all of the tribes, and therefore, no land could be sold without all the tribes in agreement. Goal 1. Federalist believed in a central banking system Democratic Republicans – believed in state banks Goal 1 Content issues: Thomas Jefferson Believed in a strict interpretation of the constitution Content clues: Sectionalism Written in response to the Alien and Sedition Acts Southern's protesting the right to protest against the national government Content issue: Voting election of 1804 No enslaved persons No women No landless farmers Content issues: women’s suffrage - the right to vote • Remember the Ladies, and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors. • Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the husbands. Remember all men would be tyrants if they could. • If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or representation. Content Issues: Pinckney’s Treaty Spain gave up all claims to land east of Mississippi River, except Florida. Pinckney’s Treaty gave the U.S. the right to navigate the Mississippi River On the acquisition of Louisiana, in the year 1803, the attention of the government of the United States, was early directed towards exploring and improving the new territory. Adams-Onís Treaty The Adams-Onís Treaty of 1819 (formally titled the Treaty of Amity, Settlement, and Limits Between the United States the Florida Purchase Treaty) was a historic agreement between the United States and Spain that settled a border dispute in North America between the two nation. Content issues: The XYZ Affair France attempts to bribe American officials The United States officials refused the terms Adams made public the blackmail attempt The XYZ Affair resulted in tense bitterness on both sides, and led to an undeclared naval war between the U.S. and France that lasted several years. Jay’s treaty The "Jay Treaty" was ratified by Congress in 1797. John Jay negotiated this treaty with Great Britain. Under Jay's Treaty, the British agreed to leave areas in the Northwest Territory which they had been required to return earlier, under the Treaty of Paris. This treaty did not, however, oblige the British to observe American neutral rights. Samuel Worcester, a missionary, defied Georgia through peaceful means to protest the state's handling of Cherokee lands. Worcester filed a lawsuit against the state that went all the way to the Supreme Court, where the Cherokee won the case. President Andrew Jackson would not up hold the supreme court ruling and forced the Cherokees to move from their homelands despite Chief Justice John Marshall ruling supreme court ruling. The US wanted an end to what they saw as European dominance in the area of economics and exports. The Monroe Doctrine (1823) explicitly stated that the U.S. would not tolerate European colonialism in the western hemisphere . Goal 2 President Andrew Jackson created the spoils system by giving his unqualified supporters positions in federal government, this system was later overturned by Pendleton civil service reform act. Content Issues: Andrew Jackson Destroyed the bank of the United States Created the spoils system Forced the Cherokee to leave Georgia on the trail of tears Overruled Worster vs. Georgia President, Jackson greatly expanded the power of white men by eliminating the voting requirement for white men his presidential tenure was known as the period of the common man. Andrew Jackson opened his inauguration to regular (Common people) folks “I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies ... The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the Government, to whom it properly belongs." Andrew Jackson Content Issues: William Lloyd Garrison, attacked southern slave owners by condemning slavery on moral grounds and demanding immediate emancipation and racial equality Content Issues: Quakers and the Inner light The abolitionist movement contributed to the ongoing conflict between the North and the South. Intensified the sectional conflict between the North and the South was largely centered around the issue of slavery. The extension of slavery into the western territories, became a central issue and a major cause of the Civil War. Reformers led by Dorothea Dix led the way to more modern treatment of the mentally ill. Dorothea Dix was an extremely influential reformer of the period. Her work led to prison reform and improved treatment of the insane. In 1843 Dix sent the following report to the Massachusetts legislature. Content Issue: Horace Mann was a pioneer in the reform of the American public educational system. Horace Mann had a vision to establish the most comprehensive and complete educational system possible for the children and teachers. His educational reforms had a profound effect on the United States public education system. Education Led by Horace Mann, the great educational reformer, a movement was led to create mandatory public education in America. After several centuries of struggle his ideas were eventually implemented throughout America. Elizabeth Cady Stanton 1848 Convention, and for the next fifty years played a leadership role in the women's rights movement. Along with her friend Susan B. Anthony, Stanton was for many years the architect and author of the movement's most important strategies and documents. Content Issues: Second Great Awakening Women led the temperance movement temperance advocates were women Christian women played a role in helping those people who have become consumed by immoral acts redeem themselves. Content Issues: Internal Improvements Henry Clay wanted to link the Mississippi with the Great Lakes Create a trancontential railroad transportation network for shipping goods Build canal, roads, ships and trains that would connect the country. Content Issues: Cotton Gin made it profitable for southern planters to extend enslavement further south and west Cotton Gin caused an increase in the amount of enslaved persons needed to labor in cotton fields Content Issues Hudson River school Each painting focused on the beauty, size, and abundance of the U.S. landscape Express the feelings of Nationalism To promote the imagery of the United States Wilmot's Proviso Goal 2 David Wilmot proposal led to northern and southern sectional lines. The Pennsylvania representative was so adamantly against the extension of slavery to lands ceded by Mexico, he made a proposition that would divide the Congress. On August 8, 1846, Wilmot introduced legislation in the House that boldly declared, "neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall ever exist" in lands won in the MexicanAmerican War. Content issues: John C. Calhoun Increased Northern and Southern sectional tensions over the issue of Enslavement Nullification doctrine suggesting southern states could nullify federal laws that abridge states rights leading to southern succession Emerson’s Essay, ‘SelfReliance’: to believe your own thought...that is genius. Essay on selfreliance, as well as essays on compensation individualistic idealism Civil Disobedience argues that people should not permit governments to overrule or their consciences, and that people have a duty to avoid allowing governments to make them the agents of injustice. Thoreau was motivated in part by his disgust with slavery and the MexicanAmerican War. Content Issues: Expansion 0f Slavery While slavery was developing in the South of the United States, the North continued to develop its industry, especially in cotton textiles. By 1860 there were some 1,800,000 hired workers employed in industry and transport and some 800,000 farm laborers. Content Issues: Texas Annexation Major Problems Texas would be free or Slave state Southerns wanted controlling interest in congress to increase their slave power More slave states than free states Content issue: Kansas-Nebraska Act In 1854, Congress decided to extend popular sovereignty to the unsettled areas of the Louisiana Purchase, now know as the Kansas and Nebraska territories. This act led to violence and a pre-cursor to the Civil War as pro-abolition and pro-slavery forces flooded Kansas to sway the vote, in what became known as Bloody Kansas. Content Issues: Popular Sovereignty Stephen Douglas in the free western territory Lincoln and the problem of Enslavement Lincoln becomes the Republican party candidate Content Issues: Lincoln–Douglas debates Cause the split of the democratic party Formed the Republican party Lincoln became a public figure on the issue of slavery South seceded from the union 1860 when Lincoln became president. Lincoln first reason for fighting the Civil War was to: Preserve the Union Content Issues: Lincoln election caused southern - succession Southerns did not vote for Lincoln Southern plantation (Solid South) owners form the confederate states of America Firing in the Union fort Sumter begins the war * Content issues: * Battle at Gettysburg, PA, was the turning point of the civil war. * It was the last offensive movement for the south or Confederacy The Massachusetts 54th Colored Infantry during the Civil War, fought in a disciplined manner in the U.S. Army. President Lincoln realized that the country would need every ablebodied man they could muster. Once the Emancipation Proclamation was signed at the start of 1863, recruiting of black soldiers began. Led by Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, the 26-year old scion of a white abolitionist family in Boston, the 54th stormed the Confederate Fort Wagner in a bold attack that generated heavy casualties, but galvanized Northern admiration for black soldiers First & Second battles of Bull Run Vicksburg Gettysburg Anancadonda Plan – cut of supplies to confederacy from the Mississippi river Content issues: The Klan's first incarnation was in 1866. Founded by veterans of the Confederate Army, its main purpose was to resist Reconstruction, and it focused as much on intimidating freed slaves, denying them citizenship rights throughout the southern states the Fourteenth Amendment was added to the United States Constitution during reconstruction. Requiring southern states ratification before reentrance into the union. The Fourteenth Amendment Known as "Reconstruction Amendments" along with the Thirteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, the Fourteenth Amendment forbids any state to deny to any person "life, liberty or property, without due process of law" or to "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of its laws Content issues: Amendment XIII Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation Ratified December 6, 1865 Content Issues 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution: Voting Rights (1870) Passed by Congress February 26, 1869, and ratified February 3, 1870, the 15th amendment granted African American men the right to vote. The Constitution of the United States 13th, 14th & 15th Civil rights Amendments 1865 – 1868 these rights sought to protect newly freedmen (s) rights. Reconstruction was an attempt to achieve national reunification and reconciliation after the Civil War and to improve the The Freedmen's Bureau established schools for the Freedmen. There are many examples of schools being funded by the Freedmen Bureau which provided food clothing and farm tools for newly freedmen persons during reconstruction in the south. Content: General Grant's armies converged on Vicksburg, investing the city and entrapping a Confederate army under Lieutenant General John Pemberton. On July 4, Vicksburg the south surrendered after prolonged siege operations. This was the With the loss of Vicksburg the Confederacy was On January 25, 1877, Congress determined the presidential election between Rutherford B. Hayes and Samuel Tilden. Tilden won the popular vote but lost through the Compromise of 1877. With drawl of federal troops from the south Northern congressmen wanted to invest in westward expansion. Reconstruction ended and southern politicians were in control of the southern politics resulting in the compromise of 1877 Content: Exodusters The Exodusters were freed African Americans from the south. Exodusters were sharecroppers who where cheated out of their crops and suffered poverty because they didn't make enough profit were in great debt. African Americans left the south due to oppressive conditions imposed by Democratic southern politicians, plantation owners, and the Ku Klux Klan. Content Issue: Western Expansion Manifest Destiny was a phrase that expressed the belief that the United States was destined to expand from the Atlantic seaboard to the Pacific Ocean. Manifest Destiny advocated for or justify other territorial acquisitions. Advocates believed that expansion was not only good, but that it was obvious ("manifest") and certain ("destiny"). American expansion into the west was good for democracy because people in the western frontier actively participated in the political process Western settlement through military activity and railroad sponsorship. Native peoples who already inhabited western lands faced catastrophe changes associated with white settlers desire to expand west for religious freedom and economic opportunity resulting in native American assimilation and loss their cultural way of life. Content Issues: Settlement into the Western Territories The Central Pacific started building the Transcontinental Railroad eastward from Sacramento, demand for Chinese workers increased greatly. The CP figured they needed 5,000 Chinese immigrants workers to build the railroad, but thousands more were required. Content issues Mormons and Irish migration west was due to religious persecution in the mid-1800,s These groups moving west Chinese, Blacks, Irish and Mormons were used as cheap labor sources. Content Issues: The U.S. government opened the great plains to western settlement and as a result native American lands were acquired by white settlers who wanted protection from the U.S. military leading to many wars and massacres of Native Americans. Grangers and populist wanted bimetallism The idea of “Free Silver” (the open coinage of silver backed dollars, as opposed to those backed by more expensive gold) Grangers populist organizations in order to push for regulation of the railroads and their rates. In 1837 John Deere made a plow out of a steel saw blade. This plow was the answer to western farmer's problems. The steel plow tore apart the dirt more easily allowing for irrigation ditches to be easily allowing for the creation of dry farming. Content Issues: The power of voters expanded Regulation of railroads the Interstate commerce Acts Government control of Big Business Content Issues: The foundation of the College of Engineering traces its roots to the Morrill Act of 1862. This act provided for a land grant institution in each state and territory. the Agriculture College and Experiment Station. Content Issues: Western expansion was achieved by the transcontinental railroad Native American genocide Homestead Act Morrill Land Grant Act Content Issues: The Grange and later the populist party fought for regulation of big business by government power created an Interstate Commerce Commission to oversee the conduct of the railroad industry With this act, the railroads became the first industry subject to Federal regulation. Content Issues: Nativists believe there are right and wrongs type of people immigrating to America Nativist oppose immigration on the grounds it takes jobs away from Americans American businessmen support immigration for cheap labor Content Issues: Western Expansion had the greatest impact on the exploitation of Native Americans Native Americans were forced to assimilate into white society Content issues: Oregon Territory 54-40 fight or flight Mexican Cession Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo Gadsden purchase set the borders of the US Louisiana Purchase – native American lands Content Issues: Expansion of slavery The next year in the Senate Calhoun and Daniel Webster opposed each other over slavery and states' rights in a famous debate. In 1844 President John Tyler appointed Calhoun secretary of state. In later years he was reelected to the Senate, where he supported the Texas Annexation and defeated the Wilmot Proviso, Free labor Freeland, and Content Issue: Cheap labor Northern factories used immigrants to work in factories for low wages The south used black sharecroppers as cheap labor after the civil war Content Issue: Reasons for immigration Immigration and the Industrial Revolution Business leaders wanted cheap labor Immigrants wanted better living conditions for their children schools colleges overall a better quality of life. Content Issues: Robber Barons: Rockefeller, Carnegie, Vanderbilt and Morgan created monopolies and trusts Supported Social Darwinism to defend their enormous wealth. Content Issues: Collective Bargaining union Arbitration Labor unions did not make significant gains Working conditions were horrible and required strikes Robber Barons used newspaper articles about violent strikes to turn public opinion against labor unions Content Issues: The Pendleton Act provided the following reforms: A Civil Service Commission would be formed to administer tests to qualified applicants for government jobs; Competitive exams would be used to hire some government workers; Government employees would no longer be forced to make campaign contributions to political parties. Content Issues: These theories justified U.S. capitalist industrial wealth in the second half of the 19th century Social Darwinism Laissez-faire economic policies The ideas expressed in The Gospel of Wealth Content Issues: John D. Rockefeller Standard Oil Trust Company Richest of the Robber Barons Muckraker- Ida Tarbell – Trust Buster Clayton Anti-Trust Act ended Trust and Monopolies in America Monopolization — Rockefeller is remembered for buying up all of the components needed for the manufacture of oil barrels in order to prohibit his competitors from getting their product on the market Standard Oil followed the path of horizontal integration until the Sherman Anti-Trust act repealed monopolies Gospel of wealth, industrialist Andrew Carnegie argued that individual capitalists were duty bound to play a broader cultural and social role and thus improve the world. “The man of wealth must become a trustee and agent for his poorer brethren, bringing to their service his superior wisdom, experience, and ability to administer.” Content Issue: Jane Adams Hull House Social Gospel some Industrialist used their wealth to help the poor Society being made better by applying Christian principles Content Issues: Founder Samuel Gompers (AFL) Craft Unions American Federation of Labor (AFL) focused its efforts on craft unions Late 18th and early 19th century unions experience a decline in the growth of unions due to violent strikes that depicted unions as institutions of anti-American activity. Unions unsuccessfully attempted collective bargaining between business and workers with the U.S. government serving as the mediator. Collective bargaining became a causality of violent strikes that plagued the era. Content Issues: Josiah Strong Christian Minster/Preacher To spread western civilization and Christian ideas Social Darwinism promoted a belief that America was superior over South American nations. Content issues: To open New Markets in the Western Hemisphere U.S. Imperialism Senator Alfred T. Mahan - Imperialist Creation of a Powerful US Navy Content Issues: Cuba is an Independent country After Spanish American War Platt Amendment gives U.S. political control over Cuba Dollar diplomacy is used in Cuba to create over seas investment Puerto Rico, Philippines and Guam were acquired by the US after the Spanish American War by the Treaty of Versailles Content Issues: The use of Hawaii as Naval station for U.S. US planters wanted control of economic interest Queen Liliuokalani is overthrown by the US Content Issues: William Howard Taft Dollar Diplomacy Newly acquired U.S. territories used to create a profit Increase the trade balance in favor of the U.S.