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Review Sheet for Final Exam: Know this and you will be OK! Early Republic: Washington – Hamilton v. Jefferson debate, Hamilton’s Financial Plan, Whiskey Rebellion, French Rev./Britain v. France, Jay’s Treaty, Farewell Address Adams – Quasi War, Alien and Sedition Acts, Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, problems with TJ, problems with Federalists TJ- Election of 1800, his vision vs. Federalist vision for the country, Louisiana Purchase, Lewis and Clark, Embargo Act, impeachment of Federalist judges, Marbury v. Madison Madison- War of 1812, Native American issues Monroe: Monroe Doctrine, Adams-Onis Treaty, Supreme Court cases: McCulloch v. Maryland and Gibbons v. Ogden, nationalism JQ Adams: Election of 1824 (why was it so important and why so shady?), birth of the tariff on imported goods Jacksonian Era: Andrew Jackson: nullification (remember the cartoon?), Native American issues, Bank War, birth of the Whig party, how did he change the Presidency? Whig party: ideology, leaders, etc. Martin Van Buren: economic woes William Henry Harrison: 1840 election John ‘His Accidency’ Tyler: ineffectiveness, Texas becoming a state, political tension during term James K. Polk: Expansionist, Mexican War, Mullet Zachary Taylor: California, Compromise of 1850, iced milk and cherries: a bad choice Millard Fillmore: ineffective, did have running water in the White House Franklin Pierce: ineffective, Kansas Nebraska Act, Bleeding Kansas Reforms 2nd Great Awakening: Main difference between 1st Great Awakening and the 2nd Great Awakening? What did this movement encourage people to do? What was the ‘burned over’ district? What were some of the new denominations (like Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians) Lyman Beecher Women’s Rights Elizabeth Cady Stanton Lucretia Mott Why was the Seneca Falls Convention so important? Why did so many women want to join the abolition movement? What were some things that women weren’t allowed to do back in the 1800s? Susan B. Anthony Utopianism Oneida Community- rules? New Harmony Temperance What was it all about? What were the two reasons why they didn’t like alcohol? (think about families) ‘Drunkard’s Progress’ political cartoon Health Reform Why would health care need to be reformed back then? What were some of the medical procedures performed back then? What were some foods/drinks that were invented because of this movement? Prison Reform Dorothea Dix Auburn System What were prisons like before they were reformed? Who would be locked up together in the old system? Abolitionism William Lloyd Garrison Why did they want to free slaves? Harriet Beecher Stowe Frederick Douglass How did the South feel about this? How did they differ from each other? Immigration: where they settled, why they came here, and what types of jobs did they get? Irish German Post Civil War differences: Italians, Chinese, Japanese, Polish, Russian, Greek, etc. N.I.N.A. 1800s Economics: Key terms, important people, acts, etc. Market Revolution Free Enterprise/Capitalism Banking Difference between North and South Industrial Revolution Samuel Slater Cotton Gin Textile Mills Sectionalism What was produced in the Northwest? Northeast? “New” Immigrants: who were they?, Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives Push/Pull factors… Railroads… key figures, why they became so powerful, and why they helped modernize and bring together the whole country. Steel: role of Andrew Carnegie, Bessemer Process, why steel became so important, US Steel Oil: role of Standard Oil, Rockefeller’s incredible wealth, why oil became so important JP Morgan: how he financed most of the first major corporations, how ruthless he could be… Urban Renewal: Parks, Public sanitation and sewers, improved transportation, electric lights Inventions: light bulb, automobile, telephone, internal combustion engine, and the race for patents and eventual monopolies. Transportation: Terms, Impact, etc. Canals: where were they built, how did they affect things? Roads/Turnpikes: What did they do? Steamboats: Who invented them, how did they change transportation? Railroads: North/South Distribution Slavery: issues, problems Why so many slaves? Southern society? Uncle Tom’s Cabin: impact, what was it about?, who was bothered by it? Nat Turner’s revolt – know about his confession Denmark Vesey’s revolt Civil War I. Political- 1. Why did the Republican Party scare the South? 2. 1860 Election a. Candidates? i. Republican – ii. Democrat (more than one!) iii. Otherb. Importance of the Cooper Union speech – how did it help Lincoln’s chances? c. Why did the Democrats split, and how did that help Lincoln? d. Why did Lincoln scare Southerners if he was moderate? 3. How did secession hurt the Democrats? 4. Opposition during the war – a. Peace Democrats aka Copperheads – how were they able to affect Lincoln’s policies? 5. How did Lincoln explain his actions regarding habeas corpus and restricting freedom of the press? 6. How did military outcomes affect political ones? II. Military stuff a. Advantages/disadvantages: i. Union (3 or 4): ii. Confederate (3 or 4): b. Battles: i. Ft. Sumter – beginning of the conflict ii. First Bull Run/Manassas – Confederate victory, proved war would not last 90 days iii. Peninsula Campaign aka McClellan messed up vs. what was going on out west with Grant and Sherman: iv. Antietam: 1. What was at stake for Lincoln? 2. What was at stake for the Confederacy? 3. How did McClellan miss another opportunity? 4. Relation to the Emancipation Proclamation? v. Chancellorsville: 1. Lee’s greatest and costliest victory – lost Stonewall Jackson 2. Lee felt invincible, so that led to another invasion of the North vi. Gettysburg 1. Why there? 2. Why important? vii. Vicksburg: 1. Strategic importance? 2. Importance for Grant? viii. Sherman’s March to the Sea: how was it different? ix. Appomattox 1. How did Grant taking command change things? 2. Why did Lee surrender? III. Other things a. Economic impact: i. Union – not much, but led to an explosion of different industries and innovations ii. Confederacy: a lot of bad things like 9,000% inflation due to overprinting of paper money, destruction of RRs, property destroyed, etc. b. Social impact – some places lose all war age male populations i. What to do with freed slaves? ii. How to treat former Confederates? iii. Over 600K deaths! Primary Sources (be able to at least summarize them and know their importance): A. Cooper Union Speech B. Lincoln’s First Inaugural C. Stephens’ Cornerstone Speech D. Second Confiscation Act E. Emancipation Proclamation F. Gettysburg Address: G. 2nd Inaugural Address: H. Various political cartoons gone over in class and in readings. Reconstruction Carpetbagger: Northerners who went South to assist with Reconstruction, usually swindled the people in the South Scalawag: Southerners who either cooperated with Reconstruction, were Republican/Unionist Johnson's Plan: Blanket amnesty (forgive everyone no matter what they did)... as long as you weren't a prominent Confederate, you were allowed back in the Union. He also allowed for personal pardons. Wanted states to ratify 13th Amendment. He didn't necessarily want the blacks to vote yet. This is called Presidential Reconstruction. Every state was ready for readmittance by late 1865. Former Confederates were voted back into Congress, Radical Republicans didn’t allow them to take their positions. Lincoln's Plan: 10% of the white male population would give oaths of allegiance... then they could elect a new state legislature and create a new state constitution that outlawed slavery. May have allowed blacks the right to vote. (not sure because he died before he could take action) Congress' Plan: Make states ratify the 13th and 14th Amendments. If you were prominent Confederate, you can't vote until 1872. Also wanted blacks to vote. Very strict. 3 states held out until 1877. This is called Congressional Reconstruction. Radical Republicans: wanted blacks to vote, wanted to punish the South for their treason. Didn't like Andrew Johnson.... by 1866 they had a 4 to 1 majority in the Senate, and a 31 advantage in the House. Freedman’s Bureau: set up for freed blacks and poor whites. It set them up with jobs, food, and temporary shelter. It’s often considered the one successful part of Reconstruction. 13th Amendment: outlawed slavery 14th Amendment: gave blacks citizenship along with anyone born in the US, equal protection under law 15th Amendment: gave universal suffrage for any male citizen over 21. (blacks could vote) Grant: surrounded by corruption, his Secretary of War was impeached... the Credit Mobiler scandal resulted from Congressmen accepting stock in exchange for nicer legislation for railroads Johnson's impeachment: got impeached for violating the Tenure of Office Act... he fired Edwin Stanton, his Secretary of War... got acquitted by 1 vote. Johnson’s Impeachment: House of Representatives impeached Andrew Johnson, the Senate then voted not to convict him by 1 vote. Congressional Reconstruction... Congress plan Presidential Reconstruction... Johnson's plan Grant's laws... protect civil rights (felony if you do so), protect voting rights (federal offense), crack down on groups like the KKK (KKK law) Bulldozing... where Southern Democrats pushed blacks away from the polls... resulted in 250,000 lost votes. Civil Rights Cases... Supreme Court declared parts of Grant's laws unconstitutional... also pretty much said that segregation was OK. Election of 1876... Hayes (Republican) vs. Tilden (Democrat) Controversy over the election: 3 Southern states had really close results, and alot of voting 'irregularities' happened there. Votes had to be ratified by both houses of Congress... but Senate was Republican and the House was Democrat... no way to resolve it. Congress sent a panel (called an Election Commission) of 5 Senators, 5 Representatives, and 5 Supreme Court Justices to investigate the 3 states. There were 7 Democrats, 7 Republicans, and 1 Independent (who happened to be a closeted Republican) They vote 8 to 7 for Hayes. Congressional Democrats threaten a filibuster (where you waste time so you can't hold a vote). Some Republicans and moderate Democrats meet in secret for a compromise. Compromise of 1877: Hayes agrees to 3 things: Pull troops out of the remaining states (Florida, South Carolina, and Louisiana), rebuild the levees along the Mississippi, and choose a Southerner for Postmaster General (that way the South actually can control something for themselves) Hayes becomes President Problems: Ends Reconstruction, leaves Southern blacks exposed to the 'Jim Crow laws' like segregation, poll taxes, literacy tests, and grandfather clauses. Blacks didn't officially regain their Civil Rights until 1964, and Segregation didn't end until 1954 (Brown vs. Board of Education)