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United States History
Unit One
Immigration, Encounters, Independence
S
Standards
Identify the reasons for European exploration and
colonization in North America.
Analyze the economic, social, and political growth of the 13
colonies.
Analyze the causes of the American Revolution.
Trace the development of the American republic.
Describe the form of government established by the
Constitution
Understand how the Constitution is a “living document”.
Analyze the concept of Manifest Destiny and its effect on the
United States and its people.
Analyze the economic, social, and political effects of
immigration on the United States
S
1. Why did Europeans immigrate to North America? (pgs.
21-26)
S Joint stock companies
S Puritans
S Quakers
S Indentured servants
S Summary
S Notes
Colony of Jamestown
2. How did colonies thrive/survive economically? What types of
governments formed in the colonies? (pgs. 28-30)
S
S
Mercantilism
S
Purpose of the Navigation Acts
S
Self Determination
S
Summary
Notes
Tobacco Field
3. Describe the causes and the consequences of the
French and Indian War. (pgs. 37-39, 46-51)
S
Proclamation of 1763
S
The Sugar Act
S
The Stamp Act
S
Boston Massacre
S
Boston Tea Party
S
The Intolerable Acts
S
Continental Army
S
Olive Branch Petition
S
Notes
S
Summary
Boston Massacre
4. What political ideals motivated the colonists to rise up
against King George III? (pgs. 52-53)
S
John Locke’s beliefs about
government
S
Thomas Paine
S
Unalienable rights
S
Concept of political equality
S
July 2, 1776
S
Summary
Notes
5. How did the inferior Continental Army defeat the British
and win independence? (pg. 59 – 63)
S
S
Battle of Trenton
S
Battle of Saratoga
S
Valley Forge
S
Marquis de Lafayette
S
Battle at Yorktown
S
Treaty of Paris
S
egalitarianism
S
Summary
S
Notes
6. What principles did the delegates at the Constitutional
Convention strive to infuse into the new government? (pgs.
68-71)
S
Division of power
S
Federalism
S
Checks and balances
S
Civil liberties
S
Relevance
S
Summary
S
Notes
7. What was the concept of Manifest Destiny? What other reasons
did Americans look to migrate West? (pgs. 130 – 138)
Louisiana Purchase
Oregon Trail
James K. Polk
Texas Independence
Santa Fe Trail
Actions that instigated war with
Mexico
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
The Gadsden Purchase
Summary
S
Notes
49ers
John O”Sullivan wrote of the unique mission of Americans, but
also a belief in America as the vessel of the progress of
civilization. “Away, away with all these cobweb tissues of rights
of discovery, exploration, settlement, contiguity….Our claim is
by the right of our manifest destiny to overspread and to possess
the whole of the continent which Providence has given us for the
development of the great experiment of liberty and federative
self government entrusted to us.”
America in the 19th Century
8. What was the United States’ government’s policy in regard
to Native Americans? (pgs. 204-208)
S
Sand Creek Massacre
S
The Battle of the Hundred Slain
S
The Battle of Little Big Horn
S
The Battle of Wounded Knee
S
Summary
S
Notes
Between 1869-76 there were more than 200 conflicts between indians and the
United states army. The Plains Indians who had horses were bold and could
win isolated victories, as when Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse massacred
General Custers troops totally in the battle of Little Big Horn 1876.But every
victory lead to a more intense warfare from the whites. The Apache chief
Geronimos capitulation in 1886, the murder of Sitting Bull in 1890 and the
Massacre at Wounded Knee in the same year marks the indians final defeat.
They who survived were put on Reservations, areas that the whites found
worthless.
9. Where did immigrants to the United States in the
19th century generally come from and what were
their reasons for coming to America? (pgs. 254-259)
S Ellis Island
S Angel Island
S Melting Pot
S Nativism
S
Summary
S
Notes
Between 1880 and 1920, America experienced a sea of social
change. More than 20 million immigrants flocked to these
shores, infusing America with new vitality and raising new
questions about the constitutional rights of labor and minority
groups.
10. What effect did World War I have on immigrants and
minorities in America? (pgs. 391-393)
S
liberty measles –
S
Espionage and Sedition Acts
S
Eugene V. Debs
S
No Conscription League
S
The Great Migration
S
Causes of the Great Migration
Summary
S
Notes
The Great Migration was the movement of 1.3 million African
Americans out of theSouthern United States to the North, Midwest and
West from 1910 to 1930. Precise estimates of the number of migrants
depend on the time frame. African Americans migrated to escape
racism and seek employment opportunities in industrial cities. Some
historians differentiate between the First Great Migration(1910–40),
numbering about 1.6 m
11. What were the characteristics of the Great Depression?
(pgs. 472-474)
S
Shantytowns
S
Soupkitchens
S
Breadlines
S
Lynchings
S
Deportation
S
Foreclosure
S
Dust Bowl
S
Okies
S
Notes
S
Summary
For eight years dust blew on the southern plains. It came in a
yellowish-brown haze from the South and in rolling walls of
black from the North. The simplest acts of life — breathing,
eating a meal, taking a walk — were no longer simple.
Children wore dust masks to and from school, women hung
wet sheets over windows in a futile attempt to stop the dirt.
farmers watched helplessly as their crops blew away.
Driving Question – What factors have made
immigration a significant issue throughout the
history of our country? Why is immigration
still a hot button issue today?