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Transcript
6th Period Review
Colonial History
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Jamestown: first successful English colony. Created by the Virginia Company of
London
Virginia House of Burgesses: Created by the Virginia Company in an effort to
encourage craftsmen to settle in the area
Mayflower Compact: document signed before leaving the boat. It was a set of rules
and regulations that everybody agreed upon and the first piece of legislation in the
new world
Harvard: focused on religion
Fundamental Orders of Connecticut: had the features of a constitution and the first
document of its kind in the new world
Massachusetts Education Law: first step to government directed public education
Maryland Act of Toleration: a law that forced religious toleration among the Christian
sects in Maryland
Bacon’s Rebellion: a revolt because the colonists didn’t appreciate the tolerance of
the Indians
Zenger Trial: established freedom of the press
French and Indian War: the French fought the British
Treaty of Paris: Ended the French Indian war and established the boundary
Appalachia
1789
• January 7 the first presidential election was held– George Washington won
the election and was sworn into office April 30, 1789
• January 21 First American novel The Power of Sympathy or the Triumph of
Nature Founded in Truth printed in Boston
• January 23 Georgetown University was founded in Washington DC ,
became the first Catholic college in the United States
• March 4 1st United States Congress announces United States Constitution
to be in effect
• April 21 John Adams took office as Vice President of United States
• August 7 Department of War started
• August 21 proposal for the Bill of Rights is adopted by the House of
Representatives
• Judiciary act of 1789 established the federal judiciary and the United States
Marshall Service
• Congress wanted to add a 12th amendment, the first ten created the Bill of
Rights
• Started National army
1793
• February 25 first Presidential Cabinet meeting held
• Giles resolutions are introduced in the House of Representatives
asking the House to condemn Alexander Hamilton’s handling of
loans
• March 4 George Washington sworn into office in Philadelphia for his
second term
• April 22 George Washington signed Neutrality Proclamation
• Philadelphia, Pennsylvania over 4,000 people died of yellow fever
1797
• March 4 John Adams signed in as second president
• XYZ affair created more tension between France and the United
States
• First ship of the United States Navy the USS United States is
commissioned
1803
Wars 1865-1975
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1865: End of the Civil War General Lee surrendered at Petersburg and ended the
Civil War.
1898: Start of the Spanish American War: Caused by American intervention in the
Cuban War of Independence. Led to the Philippine-American War.
1917: America Declares War on Germany: United States makes an entrance to
World War I on side of the allies.
1918: Allied Victory of WW I: Germany defeated in 1918
1941: U.S. Entrance to WWII: Japanese Attack Pearl Harbor, led to U.S. joining Ally
powers.
1945: End of WWII: Allied Powers defeat Axis powers. Japan and Germany
defeated.
1950:Korean War Begins: U.S. and UN assist in Korea to prevent the growth of
Communist Power
1953: Armistice in Korea: Korea and the United States agreed on a ceasefire in
Korea.
1954: 1954 Accords: France backs out of Vietnam to be replace with the U.S.
1973: U.S. backs out of Vietnam: Nixon orders to cease combat by U.S. forces in
Vietnam
Wars 1865-1975
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1865: End of the Civil War General Lee surrendered at Petersburg and ended the
Civil War.
1898: Start of the Spanish American War: Caused by American intervention in the
Cuban War of Independence. Led to the Philippine-American War.
1917: America Declares War on Germany: United States makes an entrance to
World War I on side of the allies.
1918: Allied Victory of WW I: Germany defeated in 1918
1941: U.S. Entrance to WWII: Japanese Attack Pearl Harbor, led to U.S. joining Ally
powers.
1945: End of WWII: Allied Powers defeat Axis powers. Japan and Germany
defeated.
1950:Korean War Begins: U.S. and UN assist in Korea to prevent the growth of
Communist Power
1953: Armistice in Korea: Korea and the United States agreed on a ceasefire in
Korea.
1954: 1954 Accords: France backs out of Vietnam to be replace with the U.S.
1973: U.S. backs out of Vietnam: Nixon orders to cease combat by U.S. forces in
Vietnam
Political Parties - 1792
Democractic-Republican
Party
Federalist Party
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Led by Alexander Hamilton
Strong central government
Articles of Confederation were weak
and ineffective
National government needed to be
strong to work right/function and
control uncooperative states
Supported the new Constitution
Leaned away from democracy
(mobocracy) and thought
talented/experienced men should rule
More sympathetic to separating the
church and state
Mainly lived on the Eastern seaboard
Merchant/rich people
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Led by Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison
Weaker central government
Liked the Articles of Confederation
Thought national government
threatened state power and rights of
the common man
Opposed the new Constitution
– Didn’t like how their personal
liberties weren’t protected
– Created the Bill of Rights
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Sympathetic towards France
Lived in more western areas of the
country
Mainly illiterate/poor farmers/debtors
Political Parties - 1792
Democractic-Republican
Party
Federalist Party
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Alexander Hamilton
Strong central government
Articles of Confederation were weak
and ineffective
National government needed to be
strong to work right/function and
control uncooperative states
Supported the new Constitution
Leaned away from democracy
(mobocracy) and thought
talented/experienced men should rule
More sympathetic to separating the
church and state
Mainly lived on the Eastern seaboard
Merchant/rich people
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•
•
•
•
Led by Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison
Weaker central government
Liked the Articles of Confederation
Thought national government
threatened state power and rights of
the common man
Opposed the new Constitution
– Didn’t like how their personal
liberties weren’t protected
– Created the Bill of Rights
•
•
•
Sympathetic towards France
Lived in more western areas of the
country
Mainly illiterate/poor farmers/debtors
Political Parties - 1792
Democractic-Republican
Party
Federalist Party
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Alexander Hamilton
Strong central government
Articles of Confederation were weak
and ineffective
National government needed to be
strong to work right/function and
control uncooperative states
Supported the new Constitution
Leaned away from democracy
(mobocracy) and thought
talented/experienced men should rule
More sympathetic to separating the
church and state
Mainly lived on the Eastern seaboard
Merchant/rich people
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison
Weaker central government
Liked the Articles of Confederation
Thought national government
threatened state power and rights of
the common man
Opposed the new Constitution
– Didn’t like how their personal
liberties weren’t protected
– Created the Bill of Rights
•
•
•
Sympathetic towards France
Lived in more western areas of the
country
Mainly illiterate/poor farmers/debtors
Political Parties - 1792
Democractic-Republican
Party
Federalist Party
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Alexander Hamilton
Strong central government
Articles of Confederation were weak
and ineffective
National government needed to be
strong to work right/function and
control uncooperative states
Supported the new Constitution
Leaned away from democracy
(mobocracy) and thought
talented/experienced men should rule
More sympathetic to separating the
church and state
Mainly lived on the Eastern seaboard
Merchant/rich people
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison
Weaker central government
Liked the Articles of Confederation
Thought national government
threatened state power and rights of
the common man
Opposed the new Constitution
– Didn’t like how their personal
liberties weren’t protected
– Created the Bill of Rights
•
•
•
Sympathetic towards France
Lived in more western areas of the
country
Mainly illiterate/poor farmers/debtors
Political Parties - 1792
Democractic-Republican
Party
Federalist Party
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Alexander Hamilton
Strong central government
Articles of Confederation were weak
and ineffective
National government needed to be
strong to work right/function and
control uncooperative states
Supported the new Constitution
Leaned away from democracy
(mobocracy) and thought
talented/experienced men should rule
More sympathetic to separating the
church and state
Mainly lived on the Eastern seaboard
Merchant/rich people
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison
Weaker central government
Liked the Articles of Confederation
Thought national government
threatened state power and rights of
the common man
Opposed the new Constitution
– Didn’t like how their personal
liberties weren’t protected
– Created the Bill of Rights
•
•
•
Sympathetic towards France
Lived in more western areas of the
country
Mainly illiterate/poor farmers/debtors
Political Parties - 1792
Democractic-Republican
Party
Federalist Party
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Alexander Hamilton
Strong central government
Articles of Confederation were weak
and ineffective
National government needed to be
strong to work right/function and
control uncooperative states
Supported the new Constitution
Leaned away from democracy
(mobocracy) and thought
talented/experienced men should rule
More sympathetic to separating the
church and state
Mainly lived on the Eastern seaboard
Merchant/rich people
•
•
•
•
•
Led by Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison
Weaker central government
Liked the Articles of Confederation
Thought national government
threatened state power and rights of
the common man
Opposed the new Constitution
– Didn’t like how their personal
liberties weren’t protected
– Created the Bill of Rights
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•
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Sympathetic towards France
Lived in more western areas of the
country
Mainly illiterate/poor farmers/debtors
Sectionalism in 1833
• Wilmot Proviso
– Said that slavery shouldn’t exist in a territory that
we got from Mexico in the Mexican war
– We had gotten a TON of land from Mexico
throught the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo –
Arizona, New Mexico, bits of Texas and Nevada
– Northern states liked the bill
– Southern states opposed it with a passion
– Senate refused to pass the bill (mainly because
of the Southern opposition) but House of Reps
was ok with it
– Started the problem of slavery
Sectionalism in 1833
• Wilmot Proviso
– Said that slavery shouldn’t exist in a territory that
we got from Mexico in the Mexican war
– We had gotten a TON of land from Mexico
throught the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo –
Arizona, New Mexico, bits of Texas and Nevada
– Northern states liked the bill
– Southern states opposed it with a passion
– Senate refused to pass the bill (mainly because
of the Southern opposition) but House of Reps
was ok with it
– Started the problem of slavery
Sectionalism in 1833
• Wilmot Proviso
– Said that slavery shouldn’t exist in a territory that
we got from Mexico in the Mexican war
– We had gotten a TON of land from Mexico
throught the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo –
Arizona, New Mexico, bits of Texas and Nevada
– Northern states liked the bill
– Southern states opposed it with a passion
– Senate refused to pass the bill (mainly because
of the Southern opposition) but House of Reps
was ok with it
– Started the problem of slavery
1812
• War of 1812
• Madison Reelected
• Treaty of Ghent
1812
• War of 1812
• Madison Reelected
• Treaty of Ghent
1820
• Missouri Compromise
• Irish Immigration began
1820
• Missouri Compromise
• Irish Immigration began
1820
• Missouri Compromise
• Irish Immigration began
AGRICULTURE IN
AMERICAN HISTORY
1619
• The first African
slaves were
brought to Virginia.
Start of slavery
which was a way
that the
agricultural
industry
blossomed in
America.
1793
• The cotton gin was
invented this year.
This made the
production of
cotton once it was
picked, faster and
easier.
1834
1862
• John Lane began
to manufacture
plows with steel
saw blades. The
McCormick reaper
is patented.
• A change from
hand power to
horses occurred
this year and
characterized the
first American
agricultural
revolution
1867
1877
• The National
Grange is
organized. It
helped advance
social needs of
farm life.
• Big cattle boom
which resulted in
an acceleration of
the Great Plains
and caused range
wars between
farmers and
ranchers.
1878
1886
• The invention of
the steam roller
mill. Washburn
Crosby Mill was
the first important
American mill.
• Blizzards, drought,
overgrazing,
disastrous to
northern Great
Plains cattle
industry.
1892
WWI
• The first gasoline
tractor was built by
John Froelich.
• U.S. was a critical
supplier to Allied
Nations. The
agricultural market
expanded with the
rapid expansion of
farms.
1920’s
1933
• Surpluses became
an agricultural
issue and there
was a long term
depression and
prices dropped.
• The Agricultural
Adjustment Act
created the
Agricultural
Adjustment
Administration
who wanted to
raise prices.
1961
• The Agricultural
Act was extended
and enlarged.
Used food
surpluses for the
needy.
Agriculture in American History
1619
• Farm bill
1793
• Ministry of agriculture formed
1862
• USDA founded
1867
• National grange organized
1877
• Granger movement
1798 Alien and Sedition Acts
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Under the threat of war with France, Congress in 1798 passed four laws in
an effort to strengthen the Federal government. Known as the Alien and
Sedition Acts, the legislation sponsored by the Federalists was also
intended to quell any political opposition from the Republicans, led by
Thomas Jefferson.
The first of the laws was the Naturalization Act, passed by Congress on
June 18. This act required that aliens be residents for 14 years instead of 5
years before they could become US citizens.
Congress passed the Alien Act on June 25, authorizing the President to
deport aliens "dangerous to the peace and safety of the United States"
during peacetime.
The third law, the Alien Enemies Act, was enacted by Congress on July 6.
This act allowed the wartime arrest, imprisonment and deportation of any
alien subject to an enemy power.
The last of the laws, the Sedition Act, passed on July 14 declared that any
treasonable activity, including the publication of "any false, scandalous and
malicious writing," was a high misdemeanor, punishable by fine and
imprisonment. By virtue of this legislation twenty-five men, most of them
editors of Republican newspapers, were arrested and their newspapers
forced to shut down.
1853
• Fugitive Slave Act of 1853 not only
requiring free states to return slaves to
their "owners," but also making it a federal
crime not to assist in doing so. Under the
Fugitive Slave Act, hosting a fugitive slave
on one's property became dangerous.
Civil War
• Habeas corpus was suspended. In 1866, it was put in
place again.
• Lincoln suspended civil law in territories where
resistance to the North's military power would be
dangerous
• Among the 13,000 people arrested under martial law
was a Maryland Secessionist, John Merryman.
Immediately, Roger Taney, Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of the United States issued a writ of
habeas corpus commanding the military to bring
Merryman before him. The military refused to follow
the writ. Justice Taney, in Ex parte Merryman, then
ruled the suspension of habeas corpus
unconstitutional because the writ could not be
suspended without an Act of Congress. President
Lincoln and the military ignored Justice Taney's ruling.
By: Kayla Rinaldi, Marlo
Moses, and Jae Dobbs
• Immigration Act of 1882 was passed by
the United States Congress. They passed
a new immigration act that made a .50 tax
would be imposed on all immigrants
landing at the United States ports.
• The money was supposed to cover the
expenses of regulating immigration and for
the care of immigrants after landing.
• Chinese Exclusion Act.
• The Chinese Exclusion Act was a United
States Federal law that was signed by
Chester A. Arthur on May 6th, 1882.
• The Act made changes to the Burlingame
Treaty of 1868.
• The changed that the United States
Congress made allowed the United States
to suspend Chinese Immigration. They
• Immigration Act of 1907.
• This Act updates the 1882 and 1891
Immigration Acts.
• The updates and changes that were made
are that the head tax was raised to $5.
• Also people unaccompanied children
under 17 years old.
• Immigration Act of 1917.
• The United States Congress passed this
Act with an overwhelming majority
overriding President Woodrow Wilsons
veto.
• It added to the number of unwanted people
from entering the United States including
“homosexuals,” “idiots,” “criminals,” and
“insane people.”
• This Act also stopped all Immigrants over
• Immigration Act of 1924.
• During the Harding administration, a stop
gap immigration measure was passed in
1921. It was passed to help slow the flood
of Immigrants from entering the United
States.
• A more detailed law was passed in 1924
by President Coolidge. It provided for the
following;
•
-A quota for immigrants entering the
United Sates was set at 2% of the total of
• Immigration Act of 1929, also known as the
Johnson Reed Act.
• It was a law that limited the annual number
of immigrants who could be admitted from
any country to 2% of the number of people
who lived in the United States.
• Their purpose was to further restrict the
Southern and Eastern Europeans who
were wanting to come to the United States.
Also wanting to restrict the Middle
Easterners, East Asians and Asian Indians.
• Immigration Act of 1952. Also known as
Nationality Act and McCarren –Walter Act.
• This Act prohibited immigration into the
United States and it codified under Title 8
of the United States Code.
• It monitors immigration and citizenship in
the United States
• Immigration Act of 1965
Business and Enterprise in
America
Slater’s Textile Factory
•Samuel Slater built the first US textile factory
in Pawtucket, Rhode Island
•Powered by a water mill
•Spun cotton into thread
•Many children from ages 8-14 ran the mill
•Invented the factory system dubbed The
Rhode Island System that was spread
throughout the US and used by others
including Francis Cabot Lowell
First Bank of the United States
•First Bank of America was also created
•Proposed by Alexander Hamilton
•It was due to expire in 20 years
•Chartered by Congress
•Created to meet financial requirements and needs of
America
•Could not buy government bonds
•Private business
Clay’s American System
•Introduced by Henry Clay, John C.
Calhoun, and John Quincy Adams
•Supported by Whig Party
•THREE MAIN PARTS:
•
Tariff to protect American Industry
•
National Bank
•
Subsidies granted by Federal
Government to fund roads and other
improvements inside of America
•Helped protect from foreign competition
The
Tariff…of…ABOMINATIONS!!!!
•A tariff passed on imports
•Passed because of Southern free traders being all pissed and
junk at a bunch of recently increased duties
•Led to the whole Nullification Crisis where people weren’t wanting
to follow Federal laws so they just didn’t
•First event that involved sensationalist views
Controversy Over Reestablishment of Bank of US
•So basically that Andrew Jackson
dude that Mrs. Bischoff hates really
didn’t like the Bank of the US so
when he was president he killed the
Second Bank of America after the
First Bank had been re-chartered
after 20 years
Republican Congress and National
Banking Acts
•When the South secedes, Republicans gain complete control of
Congress
•They pass a program that raised tariffs to the highest they have
ever been in order to promote economic growth
•When the National Banking Acts of 1864 and 1865 passed, they
created a national banking system
•Other banks could join this system but only if they invested a third
of their money in government securities
•If they joined the bank then they would be able to issue US
Treasury notes as currency
•This system created a system of uniform bank notes
Munn vs. Illinois
•Merchants in Illinois were freakin’ out
because the railroad rates were really
high
•So they enacted the Illinois State
Constitution of 1870 that said something
about the public being able to control
rates if it effected public interest