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☰ Search Explore Log in Create new account Upload × U.S. History Goal 1 The New Nation GOAL 1 Abigail Adams Adams-Onís Treaty Alien & Sedition Acts Battle of New Orleans Democratic-Republican Party Election of 1800 Embargo Act (1807) Federalist Party Hamilton’s Economic Plan Jay’s Treaty John Marshall Judiciary Act of 1789 Laissez-faire Loose Interpretation Louisiana Purchase Marbury v. Madison (1803) Pinckney’s Treaty Proclamation of Neutrality Strict Interpretation Treaty of Ghent Treaty of Greenville (1796) Virginia & Kentucky Resolutions War Hawks War of 1812 Washington’s Farewell Address Whiskey Rebellion XYZ Affair GOAL 1 – The New Nation Following the constitution only as it is written. Gives the state government more power “Read between the lines” when following the constitution. Gives the federal government more power Established court system “Hands-off” government; little government regulation or involvement in business Whisky producers refused to pay increased taxes; federal government sent in troops; showed the power of the federal government Led by Thomas Jefferson, believed in a strict interpretation of the constitution, strong state power, had more support from the southern states Led by Alexander Hamilton, believed in strict interpretation of the constitution, more federal power, had more support from the northern states Nationalistic economic plan focused on a national bank, reducing debt, taxes, creating a mint, and manufacturing Increased the time an immigrant must reside in the US before he/she could become a citizen from 5 to 14 years; prison & fines for speaking out against the government Response to the Alien & Sedition Acts; showed the power of the states over the federal government Jefferson beats incumbent Adams; Adams pushes through the “midnight judges” – last minute court appointments Established the supreme court’s rights of judicial review, to decide whether or not something in unconstitutional Chief justice of the supreme court for over 30 years, un which time he increased the power of the federal government greatly through his decisions Large land purchase made by Jefferson for $15 million from France; doubled the size of the United States United States gained a large portion of land (now Ohio) from Native Americans Wife of John Adams; supporter of women’s rights; famous for a letter to her husband in which she asked him to “…remember the ladies… Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the Husbands… (we) will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which he have no voice or representation” President Washington declared the U.S. neutral into the conflict between Great Britain and France (French Revolution) U.S. treaty with Great Britain in which the British agreed to leave their forts and trade was encouraged between the two nations U.S. treaty with Spain in which gave the U.S. access to the Mississippi River and Port of New Orleans for trade; set the northern boarder of Florida U.S. treaty with Spain; Spain ceded Florida to the United States Warned against forming political parties and creating permanent foreign alliances French officials demanded a bride from the U.S. in order for U.S. officials to be able to meet with the French foreign minister, led to anti-French feelings in the U.S. U.S. stopped trade with European nations because of impressments of U.S. sailors; failed because it hurt the U.S. economy Senators from the South and West of the U.S. who pushed for War with Britain due to issues such as impressments and Native American relations with the British War between U.S. and Great Britain over issues such as impressments, war hawks, and native American relations with the British Ended the War of 1812; no distinct winner, but could be considered a moral victory for the U.S. – “Second war for independence”; established a restoration of pre-war status quo Battle which occurred two weeks after the signing of the Treaty of Ghent; insignificant to the outcome of the War of 1812, but made Andrew Jackson a war hero Goal 1 - The New Nation (1789-1820) 1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.11.12. 13. 14.15. 16.17.18.19.2220.21. 22.23.24.25.26.27. 28.29.30.31.32.33.34. 3 35.36.37.38.39.40.41.42.43.44.45.46.47.48.49.50. 51.52.53.54.55.56.57.58.59.60.61.62.63. 64.65.66. 67. 68.69. 4 70.71.72.73.74.75.76.77.78.79.80.81.82.83.84.85. 86.87.88.89. 90.91.92.93.94.95.96.97. 98.99.100. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. 107. 108. 109. 110. 111. 112. 113. 114. 115. 116. 117. 118. 119. 120.121. 122. 123. 124. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 130. 131. 132. 133.134. 135. 136. 137. 138. 139. 140. 55 666 141. 142. 143. 144. 145. 146. 147. 148. 149. 150. 151. 152. 153. 154. 155. 156. 157. 158. 159. 160. 161. 162. 163. 164. 165. 166. 167.168. 169. 170. 171. 172. 173. 174. 7 175. 176. 177. 178. 179. 180. 181. 182. 183. 184. 185. 186. 187. 188. 189. 190. 191. 192. 193. 194. 195. 196. 197. 198. 199. 200. 201. 202.203. 204. 205. 206. 207. 208. 209. 88 9 210. 211. 212. 213. 214. 215. 216. 217. 218. 219. 220. 221. 222. 223. 224. 225.226. 227. 228. 229. 230. 231. 232. 233. 234. 235. 236. 237.238. 239. 240. 241. 242. 243. 244. 245. 246. 247. 248. 249. 250. 251. 252. 253. 254. 255. 256. 257. 258. 259.260. 261. 262. 263. 264. 265. 266. 267. 268. 269. 270. 271. 272.273. 274. 275. 276. 277. 278. 279. 280. 281. 282. 283. 284. 285. 286. 287. 288. 289. 290. 291. 292. 293. 294. 295.296. 297. 298. 299. 300. 301. 302. 303. 304. 305. 306. 307. 308.309. 310. 311. 312. 313. 314. 315. 10 11 316. 317. 318. 319. 320. 321. 322. 323. 324. 325. 326. 327. 328. 329. 330. 331. 332. 333. 334. 335. 336. 337. 338. 339. 340. 341. 342. 343. 344. 345. 346. 347. 348. 349. 350. 351. 352. 353. 354. 355. 356. 357. 358. 359. 360. 361. 362. 363. 364. 365.366. 367. 368. 369. 370. 371. 372. 373. 374. 375. 376. 377. 378.379. 380. 381. 382. 383. 384. 385. 386. 387. 388. 389. 390. 391. 392. 393. 394. 395. 396. 397. 398. 399. 400. 401.402. 403. 404. 405. 406. 407. 408. 409. 410. 411. 412. 413. 414.415. 416. 417. 418. 419. 420. 421. 12 422. 423. 424. 425. 426. 427. 428. 429. 430. 431. 432. 433. 434. 435. 436.437. 438. 439. 440. 441. 442. 443. 444. 445. 446. 447. 448. 449.450. 451. 452. 453. 454. 455. 456. 457. 458. 459. 460. 461. 462. 463. 464. 465. 466. 467. 468. 469. 470. 471. 472.473. 474. 475. 476. 477. 478. 479. 480. 481. 482. 483. 484. 485.486. 487. 488. 489. 490. 491. 492. 13 493. 494. 495. 496. 497. 498. 499. 500. 501. 502. 503. 504. 505. 506. 507. 508. 509. 510. 511. 512. 513. 514. 515. 516. 517. 518. 519. 520.521. 522. 523. 524. 525. 526. 527. 528. 529. 530. 531. 532. 533. 534. 535. 536. 537. 538. 539. 540. 541. 542. 543.544. 545. 546. 547. 548. 549. 550. 551. 552. 553. 554. 555. 556.557. 558. 559. 560. 561. 562. 563. 1114 564. 565. 566. 567. 568. 569. 570. 571. 572. 573. 574. 575. 576. 577. 578.579. 580. 581. 582. 583. 584. 585. 586. 587. 588. 589. 590. 591.592. 593. 594. 595. 596. 597. 598. 599. 600. 601. 602. 603. 604. 605. 606. 607. 608. 609. 610. 611. 612. 613. 614.615. 616. 617. 618. 619. 620. 621. 622. 623. 624. 625. 626. 627.628. 629. 630. 631. 632. 633. 634. 115 635. 636. 637. 638. 639. 640. 641. 642. 643. 644. 645. 646. 647. 648. 649.650. 651. 652. 653. 654. 655. 656. 657. 658. 659. 660. 661. 662.663. 664. 665. 666. 667. 668. 669. 670. 671. 672. 673. 674. 675. 676. 677. 678. 679. 680. 681. 682. 683. 684. 685.686. 687. 688. 689. 690. 691. 692. 693. 694. 695. 696. 697. 698.699. 700. 701. 702. 703. 704. 705. 706. 707. 708. 709. 710. 711. 712. 713. 714. 715. 716. 717. 718. 719. 720. 721.722. 723. 724. 725. 726. 727. 728. 729. 730. 731. 732. 733. 734.735. 736. 737. 738. 739. 740. 741. 742. 743. 744. 745. 746. 747. 748. 749. 750. 751. 752. 753. 754. 755. 756. 757.758. 759. 760. 761. 762. 763. 764. 765. 766. 767. 768. 769. 770.771. 772. 773. 774. 775. 776. 777. 778. 779. 780. 781. 782. 783. 784. 785. 786. 787. 788. 789. 790. 791. 792. 793.794. 795. 796. 797. 798. 799. 800. 801. 802. 803. 804. 805. 806.807. 808. 809. 810. 811. 812. 813. Across Down 1. Courts decide whether something is constitutional or not 2. The U.S. stopped the trade with the British 10. When interpreting the constitution the federal government gets more power 3. Leader of the Democratic Republicans 12. Gave a farewell address warning against political parties and foreign alliances 4. Involved three French officials demanding a bribe from the U.S. to speak with the French foreign minister 5. Spain ceded Florida to the United States 13. Group of senators from the south and west that wanted war with the British 6. Agreement that encouraged trade between the U.S. and Britain 14. When interpreting the constitution the state governments get more power 7. Leader of the Federalists 15. Opened the Mississippi River to the U.S. for trade 8. British and French troops took U.S. ships and sailors 9. Bought from France for $15 million, it doubled the size of the United States 11. Ended the War of 1812 and returned everything to status quo Goal 1 – The New Nation (1789-1820) 1.01 – Major domestic issues and conflicts experienced by the nation during the Federalist Period. What was the impact of the major domestic issues and conflicts experienced by the nation during the Federalist Era? How did the U.S. government emerge out of competing processes of conflict and compromise? How did the Federalist Period contribute to the long-standing debate in America about the role of government and the distribution of power? How is the U.S. Constitution a document subject to change and interpretation? Hamilton Secretary of Treasury under President George Washington A Federalist who supported a strong national government Had a loose interpretation of the constitution, meaning that the federal government should be able to interpret the constitution, which gave the federal government more power Made an Economic Plan to make the United States stronger, which included a national bank Supported by businesses and the wealthy, primarily in the northeast Supported the British Jefferson Secretary of State under President George Washington A Democratic-Republican who supported strong state governments Had a strict interpretation of the constitution, meaning he believed that only what was written in the constitution should be allowed. This limited the power of the federal government and gave the states more power. Argued that Hamilton’s Economic Plan was unconstitutional Supported by farmers and the “common man” primarily in the South Election of 1816 - Jefferson and Burr get the same number of votes Jefferson wins Made the Louisiana Purchase, nearly doubled the size of the United States Supported the French Judicial System Judiciary Act of 1789 - started the Judicial Branch of the U.S. government o Created the Supreme Court o State courts could appeal to federal courts when constitutional issues were involved Judiciary Act of 1801 o On John Adams’ last day as president, he pushed through the “midnight judges” – last minutes appointments in the Supreme Court o The Supreme Court case Marbury v. Madison, led by Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that the court could abolish legislative acts by declaring them unconstitutional – this established judicial review o John Marshall – Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (1801-1835); strengthened the Federal Government Federal Power v. State Power Federal Power o Whiskey Rebellion – a tax was put on the manufacturing of whiskey. Farmers refused to pay and the federal government sent in troops to enforce the law o Alien & Sedition Acts – limited the rights of freedom of speech and immigration o Marbury v. Madison (Chief Justice John Marshall) State Rights o Virginia & Kentucky Resolutions – a response to the Alien and Sedition Acts which said that states could ignore any act of Congress they considered unconstitutional 1.02 – Political freedoms available to the following groups prior to 1820: women, wage earners, landless farmers, American Indians, African Americans How did the distribution and economic power reflect the social structure and geographic diversity of the Federalist Era? How effective were the political, social, and economic institutions of the emerging republic in creating a democratic foundation for the United States? How can individual rights and the government’s view of the “common good” create conflict or stability? Women Could not own property or vote and they had very few roles/jobs outside the home Formed clubs (reading groups, church organizations, temperance groups, antislavery groups, social welfare) Abigail Adams (wife of President John Adams) was a women’s advocate who once her husband asking him to “remember the ladies” Slaves Slavery was a regional institution – There was emancipation in the North, but opportunities were limited for African Americans The invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney increased the need for slaves in the South 1808 – Slave trade was outlawed Thomas Jefferson believed slavery was a “necessary evil” – he thought it was morally wrong, but economically necessary for the South Native Americans The general policy of the United States was to forcibly remove them from their lands and push them west Tecumseh – a Native American who united many tribes in efforts to stay strong. He sides with Britain in the War of 1812 Westward expansion hurt the Native Americans 1.03 – Commercial and diplomatic relationships with Britain, France, and other nations. How did the U.S. confront internal and international conflicts during this era? How does a nation’s involvement in international conflicts affect its identity? Should a nation form trade agreements with nations it disagrees with politically? George Washington It was decided unanimously that George Washington would by the first president of the United States Proclamation of Neutrality – stay out of European affairs Washington’s Farewell Address – He warned against forming permanent alliances and political parties Foreign Policy Proclamation of Neutrality (1793) – President Washington states that the United States would not intervene in the warfare that went on in Europe Jay’s Treaty (1795) – Chief Justice John Jay negotiated a treaty with Britain having them leave their forts in the Northwest Territory. It also encouraged trade Pinckney’s Treaty (1795) – Spain gave up rights to their land east of the Mississippi River (opens up the river for trade), and set the northern border of Florida. This gave the U.S. the right of deposit in New Orleans – they could use the port for New Orleans XYZ Affair (1797) – French officials demanded a $250,000 bribe to speak with French Foreign Minister Talleyrand. This created anti-French feelings in the United States Louisiana Purchase (1803) – Jefferson paid $15 million for a huge area of land west of the Mississippi River (despite his strict constructionist beliefs) Embargo Act (1807) – Because of the impressments of sailors the U.S. decided to stop trading with Europe. This ended up hurting the American economy and was eventually lifted Adams-Onís Treaty (1819) – Spain ceded Florida to the United States War of 1812 Causes o Impressment – British and French were taking U.S. sailors and forcing them into foreign military service after taking the boats and cargo o War Hawks – Democratic-Republicans from the West and the South who pushed for war with Britain o Native American Relations with the British Treaty of Ghent (1814) – War ended with an armistice and everything went back to status quo – issues like impressments and shipping rights still remained. While no one “won” the war, it showed that the U.S. had substantial power Battle of New Orleans (1815) – Andrew Jackson was made a hero with his victory over the British; however, the battle was unnecessarily fought, as the Treaty of Ghent had already been signed. This led to increased feelings of nationalism Goal 2 Expansion and Reform (1801-1850) GOAL 2 49ers Abolitionists Alamo American System Cotton Gin Education Reform Election of 1824 Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) Indian Removal Act (1830) Manifest Destiny McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) Mexican American War Missouri Compromise Monroe Doctrine Mormons Nationalistic Writers Oregon Territory Pet Banks Prison Reforms & Rehabilitation Tariff of Abominations Technological Innovations Temperance Movement The Liberator Transcendentalist Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo Utopian Communities Wilmot Proviso Women’s Rights Movement Worcester v. Georgia (1832) GOAL 2 – Expansion & Reform People who rushed west to search for gold during the gold rush of 1848-1849 People who wanted to end the practice of slavery; Grimké Sisters, Fredrick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman Henry Clay’s plan to increase nationalism – included a national bank, internal improvements and protective tariffs Invented by Eli Whitney, this machine increased the need for claves in southern states Horace Mann made public education more accessible and even more mandatory in some states Considered a “corrupt bargain” by Andrew Jackson – John Q. Adams wins the white house and appoints opponent Henry Clay to be Secretary of State Supreme court case which established federal supremacy over the states in interstate commerce Supreme court case which said that states can not tax the national bank; shows power of the national government over the states Belief the God wanted the United States to rule from coast to coast, Atlantic to Pacific; expansion Battle between the Texans and Mexicans over Texas Independence. Texans lost badly but used this battle as motivation to win their independence War between the U.S. and Mexico over Texas annexation, Texas border disputes, and Manifest Destiny Ended the Mexican-American War; gave the United States the southwest territory of the U.S. (Mexican Cession) Decided the issue of slavery in the Louisiana Territory; allowed Maine to enter as a free state, Missouri as a slave state, and divided the rest of the Louisiana Territory along to 36”30 line, the north to be free, south to be slave The U.S. warned European nations to stay out of the affairs of the Western Hemisphere Religious group who moved west to avoid persecution (Joseph Smith, Brigham Young) Land acquisition associated with the “54°40’ or Fight!” referring to the boundary the U.S. desired Smaller, local banks established by Andrew Jackson after he dissolved the 2nd US bank Dorothea Dix led this reform movement to improve treatment of the mentally ill and prisoners A large protective tariff created to protect northern businesses; with the increase in prices or northern goods, the south protested leading to the South Carolina Nullification Crisis Reform movement aimed at making the manufacturing, sale, and consumption of alcohol illegal Group of ideas in literature, religion, culture, and philosophy protesting against culture and society, focused of a simple life “Perfect” societies created to escape the evils of society (Oneida, Brook Farm, New Harmony) Abolitionist newspaper written by William Lloyd Garrison Washington Irving, Nathaniel Hawthorne, James Fennimore Cooper, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Edger Allen Poe Tractor (John Deere), Steel Plow (Cyrus McCormick), Morse Code (Samuel Morse), Steamboat (Robert Fulton), Sewing machine Attempted to prevent the spread of slavery into any territory gained from Mexico; did not pass Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Seneca Falls Convention U.S. supreme court case whish said that the Cherokee were their own nation and therefore did not have to follow the laws of the state – President Andrew Jackson disagreed with this decision and proceeded to force the Cherokee off the land anyway Forced Native Americans off their land; lead to the Trail of Tears Goal 2 – Expansion and Reform (1801-1850) 22 111 33 4 5 666 7 888 9 110 111 12 113 114 Across Down 1. What Jackson’s followers claimed after he lost the election of 1824 to John Quincy Adams 2. Tax on foreign goods that upset the south so much that South Carolina tried to nullify it and threatened to secede 3. Religious group who moved west to escape persecution 4. Invented by Eli Whitney, this increased the need for slaves in the south 9. Led education reform 10. Land given to the United States after the MexicanAmerican War 5. Woman who led reforms of prisons and treatment of the mentally ill 6. ex-slave who was a leader in the abolitionist movement 11. The U.S. warned European countries not to intervene in affairs of the Western Hemisphere 12. Writes who believed in a simple life, away from society, back to nature 13. Said that Maine was free, Missouri is slave, and the rest of the territory would be divided along the 36’30 line 14. 800 mile journey the Cherokee was forced to travel after being removed from their native land 7. Battle in Texas’ fight for independence when Mexico severely beat the Texans 8. Communities that attempted to be perfect Goal 2 – Expansion and Reform (1801-1850) 2.01 – Effects of territorial expansion and the admission of new states to the Union What tactics can citizens use to influence government? How can expansion lead to conflict and change? What affect did territorial expansion have on the development of the new nation? 2.02 – Describe how the growth of nationalism and sectionalism were reflected in art, literature, and language How did the art, literature, and language of 1801-1850 reflect a collective sense of nationalism and sectionalism? How did the U.S. develop and express its unique style through the arts during the early 1800s? Are art and literature effective formats for communicating political and social discontent? Causes of American Expansion in the 1830s and 1840s Economic Factors – exhaustion of good soil and the Panic of 1837 (economy went down) pushed people West Manifest Destiny – the belief that God’s destiny for the United States was to rule from coast to coast 49ers – the gold rush in 1849 brought thousands of people searching for fortune Native American Policy o The Indian Removal Act (1830) – forcible removal of Native Americans o Worcester v. Georgia (1832) – John Marshall ruled that the Cherokee nation was not subject to the laws of the state. Jackson refused to enforce the ruling stating that “John Marshall had made his decision, now let him enforce it” o Trail of Tears – Cherokees and other Native American tribes from the southeast were forced to march 1200 miles to Oklahoma territory Expressions of Nationalism Painting – Hudson River School artists painted American landscapes Authors o Noah Webster – created the 1st American dictionary o James Fennimore Cooper – author of Last of the Mohicans o Nathaniel Hawthorne – author of The Scarlet Letter o Washington Irving – author of Sleepy Hollow, Rip Van Winkle o Edger Allen Poe – wrote poetry, horror stories, The Raven Transcendentalism – writers, philosophers, poets, etc. who believed in the expression of personal feelings and individualism o Ralph Waldo Emerson – poet, preacher, essay writer o Henry David Thoreau – wrote Walden about simple life, and Civil Disobedience Expansion of United States Territory Lewis and Clark – sent to explore the Louisiana Territory Texas Annexation o Texans declared independence from Mexico (1821) o The Alamo (1836) – Texans were greatly defeated by the Mexicans o Texans was admitted to the United States in 1845 Mexican-American war was fought over border disputes between Mexico and the U.S. o Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo – California and New Mexico added to the U.S., Mexican border set at Rio Grande, U.S. pays Mexico $15 million o Wilmot-Proviso – wanted to restrict slavery in the new territories, but southerners felt this was an attack on their lifestyle Oregon Territory – “54 40 or fight!” – the war cry for those wanting war with England of Oregon’s border. A treaty set the border at 49th parallel in 1849 Gadsden Purchase (1853) – U.S. Bought New Mexico and Arizona from Mexico for $10 million. With this purchase, the contiguous 48 states were formed Slavery & the Effects of Territorial Expansion Missouri Compromise – drafted by Henry Clay, this admitted Maine as a free state and Missouri as a slave state, the rest of the territory would be split by the 36’30 line, North=free, South=slave Nationalism – pride in one’s nation – including wanting to make it larger/more expansive Sectionalism – pride in one’s region – fighting for you lifestyle (South=slavery) Regional differences: slavery/economy/population 2.03 – Economic and social issues that led to sectionalism and nationalism How were nationalism and sectionalism reflected in economic and social issues of the era? How do economic and social conditions and issues contribute to the differences in sectionalism and nationalism? How do economic and social conditions effect innovation and change? Industrial Revolution Reorganizing of society & economy. Machines replace hand tools which decreases the cost for many items. Unskilled laborers replace artisans, and more factories mean more jobs in cities Interchangeable Parts – invented by Eli Whitney, this increased the production of goods in factory systems Inventions/Inventors Cotton Gin – invented by Eli Whitney increased the need for slaves in Plantation System Sewing Machine – invented by Elias Howe, made production of goods faster and cheaper Steel Plow – invented by John Deere, increased farm efficiency Telegraph – invented by Samuel Morse, improved communications (faster and further) Steamboat – invented by Robert Fulton, reduced travel time; agriculture and industrial expansion 2.04 – Political events, issues, and personalities the contributed to sectionalism and nationalism In what ways were nationalism and sectionalism reflected in the politics and issues of the time period? How was the issue of slavery affected by territorial expansion? How did the politics of industrialization lead to conflict and change? To what extent were the leadership and personalities of the early 1800s responsible for the changes that occurred? Era of Good Feelings Period following the War of 1812 in which people were pleased with the way that the country was developing. There were not many Federalists during this time, all DemocraticRepublicans McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) – showed the power of the federal government, saying that states could not tax the national bank Monroe Doctrine (1823) – the U.S. would oppose any nation which tried to intervene in the affairs of the Western Hemisphere Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) – showed the power of the federal government in interstate commerce (steamboats) Election of 1824 – Jackson received more electoral and popular votes than Adams and Clay, but not a majority. The house chose Adams to be president because of Clay’s support. Adams and Clay agreed on Clay’s American System o American System – Clay’s plan to seal the rift between regions of the United States by making the regions work together and rely less on foreign trade. It included the Tariff of 1816, the 2nd Bank of America, and Internal Improvements such as the Erie Canal o Jackson’s followers accuse Clay and Adams of a “corrupt bargain’ when Clay was named Secretary of State under Adams. This split the Democratic-Republicans Education Horace Mann – an educator who greatly advanced the cause of universal, free public school. Mann also advocated for other reform movements but his preferred cause was education. His theory was while “other reforms were remedial; education is preventative” Temperance Movement – fought to make alcohol illegal Women’s Rights Women were considered interior to men; they were not allowed to vote, obtain higher education, or control their own property. The women’s rights movement sought to change that Seneca Falls Convention – 1st major convention addressing women’s rights, in Seneca Falls, NY Leaders of the women’s rights movement included : Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, Susan B. Anthony Religious Revival 2nd Religious Awakening – a religious revival among Protestants in the 1830s. It had its biggest impact among women. Many people involved in the religious revival were also involved in abolition Mormons – were founded by Joseph Smith, who claimed to have translated the book of Mormon sent by the Angel Moroni. They were forced to flee west because of their radical belief Brigham Young – because the leader of one sect of the Mormon church after the death of Joseph Smith Utopian Communities Brook Farm, New Harmony, Oneida Housed many Transcendentalists and others with “enlightened thought” emphasizing individualism and the mysteries of nature Tried to form islands of perfection within the U.S. Jacksonian Democracy (1829-1837) Jackson’s election signaled the rise of the common man – elected by farmers and eastern workers Native American Policy included the Indian Removal Act and disagreement over Worcester v. Georgia South Carolina Nullification Crisis (1832) o South Carolina opposed the Tariff of Abominations. SC threatened to secede from the Union Jackson was reelected in 1832 and he began a war over the U.S. bank o Jackson opposed the U.S. Bank because it was seen as a tool for the rich and opposed the poor o Jackson removed government money from the bank and put it in smaller pet banks Money circulation increased, inflation rose, states borrowed money for internal improvements Panic of 1837 resulted when people went to trade in paper money for specie circulation – bankers called in loans, gold supplies depleted, banks couldn’t make payments – bank failures were forced Whig Party (est. 1834) - a reaction to the authoritarian policies of Andrew Jackson. “King Andrew,” had enraged his political opponents with his actions regarding the Bank of the United States, Native Americans, the Supreme Court and his use of presidential war powers 2.05 – Major reform movements and evaluate their effectiveness What characteristics define a perfect society? How is change influenced by the actions of citizens? To what extent was the debate over slavery essential to the reform movements? Abolition – movement to abolish slavery Prison Reform/Rehabilitation Dorothea Dix investigated and reported treatment of the insane which led to the creation of humane institutions Prisons were reformed to help with rehabilitation of criminals 2.06 – Role of religion in the debate over slavery and other social movements How did both sides of the abolitionist movement use religion to support their viewpoints? How did differing religious beliefs contribute to an increase in the sectional divisiveness of the country? In what ways did religious influence impact the effectiveness of social movements in the first part of the 19th century? Slavery’s Economic Base The cotton gin increased the need for slaves and allowed cotton to become the dominant southern crop Both the North and the South profited from the cotton industry 80% of the worlds cotton came from the South Slavery’s Social Base A small number of whites owned slaves, but they held most political and social power in the South The gap between the rich and poor widened – social pyramid placed the 4 million slaves at the very bottom, beneath all whites The legal importation of slaves ended in 1808, but slaves were still bought or sold at auctions Abolitionists Responses to Slavery William Lloyd Garrison – a militant who argued that there should be no compromise on the issue of slavery, there should be immediate emancipation (freeing of all slaves). He published the newspaper The Liberator which attacked slavery and the governments handling of it Grimké Sisters – southern sisters who toured New England lecturing against slavery Frederick Douglass – an escaped slave who became a powerful abolitionist giving influential speeches Harriet Tubman – a former slave who helped lead the Underground Railroad, a series of secret passages and safe houses by which slaves traveled to escape North towards Canada Southern Defenses of Slavery Slavery was ordained by God and permitted in the bible Slavery was essential to the southern economy – a “necessary evil” It was preferable to the “wage slavery” of the North It was beneficial to the blacks that had traded the barbarism of Africa for the blessings of Christianity in America Goal 3 Crisis, Civil War, & Reconstruction (1848-1877) GOAL 3 13th Amendment 14th Amendment 15th Amendment Abraham Lincoln Anaconda Plan Antietam Appomattox Courthouse Black Codes Bleeding Kansas Carpetbaggers Compromise of 1850 Confederacy Copperheads Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) Election of 1860 Emancipation of Proclamation First Battle of Bull Run/Manassas Fort Sumter, S.C. Freeman’s Bureau Fugitive Slave Act Gettysburg Gettysburg Address Grandfather Clause Hayes-Tilden Compromise of 1877 Jefferson Davis Jim Crow Laws John Brown & Harpers Ferry John Wilkes Booth Johnson’s Reconstruction Plan Kansas-Nebraska Act Lincoln-Douglas Debates Popular Sovereignty Radical Republicans Robert E. Lee Scalawags Sharecroppers Sherman’s March to the Sea Tenant farmers Tenure of Office Act Ulysses S. Grant Uncle Tom’s Cabin Underground Railroad Vicksburg Whiskey Ring Writ of Habeas Corpus GOAL 3 – Crisis, Civil War, & Reconstruction Harriet Tubman led escape slaves along this route to freedom Five part compromise which included provisions for the status of slavery in some territories, as well as the Fugitive Slave Act, requiring any escaped slaves in to returned to their owners The right of a territory to decide whether they would allow slavery or not Part of the Compromise of 1850, all escaped slaves were required to be returned to their owners Book written by Harriet Beecher Stowe describing the evils of slavery. It increased tensions between the North and South Territories of Kansas with the decision to allow popular sovereignty to decide the issue of slavery Violence erupted in Kansas with the decision to allow popular sovereignty to decide the issue of slavery Supreme court which said that slaves were property; declared the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional Series of debates between senatorial candidates Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas. Lincoln argued to stop the further spread of slavery; Douglas argued popular sovereignty John Brown led a group of rebels to the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry in order to arm slaves to revolt against their owners. This attempt failed and many of the rebels were killed. Lincoln was elected president without the vote of the South, this caused the south to secede from the Union Site of the first shots of the Civil War President of the Union during the Civil War President of the Confederacy during the Civil War Southern states the seceded from the Union during the Civil War Union’s plan to defeat the Confederacy by cutting off their supplies and “strangling” them First major battle of the Civil War Bloodiest battle of the Civil War Turning point of the Civil War in the western theatre (Mississippi) – month long Turning point of the Civil War in the eastern theatre (Pennsylvania) – 3 day battle Lincoln’s 2-minute address at the dedication of a cemetery to those who died at the battle of Gettysburg. He motivated Union soldiers to keep fighting Considered an act of “total war,” Sherman and Union troops marched from Atlanta northwards up towards the Atlantic, burning and destroying everything in their path Successful Confederate general Successful Union general Lincoln suspended peoples’ rights to know why they were being imprisoned during the Civil War Northerners who wanted peace during the Civil War All slaves in Confederate territory were freed – was a moral victory for the Union Site of the end of the Civil War Assassinated Abraham Lincoln Organization designed to help newly freed slaves Congressman during reconstruction who wanted to punish the South as they entered the Union A plan for Reconstruction that considered to be too lenient for the South Ended Reconstruction – Hayes became president under the agreement that the military was removed from the South Can’t fire someone in the same tern that they were appointed – the reason Johnson was impeached White southern republicans who supported Reconstruction Northerners who moved south during Reconstruction, sometimes for personal gain, something for aid Laws restricting the rights if African Americans Using someone else’s land in return for a share of your crops Pay rent for land, but get to keep your crop Laws enforcing segregation Scandal during Grant’s administration Voting restriction which said you could only vote if your grandfather had Abolished slavery Defined citizenship Voting could not discriminate based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude Goal 3 – Crisis, Civil War, and Reconstruction (1828-1877) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 111 12 13 14 15 1616 117 18 119 20 Across Down 3. President of the Union during the Civil War; his election caused the South to secede 1. People in control of Congress who wanted to punish the South during Reconstruction 5. Issued by President Lincoln, this document freed the slaves in Confederate controlled states 2. Allows a state/territory to vote on whether or not they will allow slavery 4. Time period of rebuilding after the Civil War 8. Laws which legalized segregation 6. A person who wants to get rid of slavery 11. assassinated President Lincoln 7. Important Union general in the Civil War 14. A voting restriction which said that you could only vote if your grandfather have voted 15. Book written by Harriet Beecher Stowe which described the evils of slavery 16. Northerners who did not support the Civil War 17. Required all Northerners to return escaped slaves to their owners in the South 8. Led an unsuccessful raid at Harpers Ferry to arm slaves for a revolt 9. Important Confederate general in the Civil War 10. The Union’s plan to block off Southern ports and strangle the Confederacy in order to win the Civil War 11. President of the Confederate during the Civil War 18. White southerners who supported the Radical Republicans 12. Discriminatory group who used violence which formed shortly after the end of the Civil War 20. President during Reconstruction who had a lenient plan for the South 13. A secret network that led escaped slaves north towards freedom 19. People who moved South during Reconstructio Goal 3 – Crisis, Civil War, & Reconstruction (1848-1877) 3.01 – Economic, social, and political events from the Mexican War to the outbreak of the Civil War How did the issues of sectionalism lead to the Civil War? How did political, economic, and social differences develop into the sectionalism that split the North and the South? To what extent did differing opinions on slavery as well as the institution’s expansion become a deciding factor in instituting a Civil War? Political Parties Know-Nothings – an early nativist group opposed to the immigration of Irish and Germans into America. Whenever a member was asked about the group, he would say, “I know nothing.” They accepted into their group only native-born Protestants Free Soil Party – a short-lived political party which opposed the extension of slavery into the territories and supported national internal improvement programs Issue of Slavery Abolitionist Movement – movement aimed at eliminating slavery Slave Codes – law each state had defining the status of slaves and the rights of masters Underground Railroad – a network of people who helped fugitive slaves escape to the North and to Canada Harriet Tubman – a runaway slave from Maryland who helped lead other escaped slaves to freedom through the Underground Railroad Compromise of 1850 – a series of laws to settle the major disagreements between the free states and slave states. It’s most controversial piece was the Fugitive Slave Law which said that any escaped slave found in the North must be returned to his/her owner Harriet Beecher Stowe (Uncle Tom’s Cabin) – the “little lady who started this big war” – Uncle Tom’s Cabin unveiled the evils of slavery and caused much tension between the North and the South Kansas-Nebraska Act – the states of Kansas and Nebraska would each be allowed to vote on the issue of slavery (popular sovereignty) Bleeding Kansas – after the Kansas-Nebraska Act established the idea of popular sovereignty, three political groups occupied Kansas: pro-slavers, free-states and abolitionists. Violence broke out immediately between these opposing groups and continued until 1861 Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) – Supreme Court case that said slaves were property, not people, and therefore could go into a free state and still be a slave. This made the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1858) – Lincoln believed that slavery was immoral, but a necessary evil. Douglas believed in the idea of popular sovereignty, that people of a territory should have the right to vote on the issue of slavery o Freeport Doctrine – advanced by Stephen Douglas, it said that local authorities had the right to enforce federal jurisdiction as it saw fit John Brown and Harpers Ferry (1859) – John Brown and his group of men attempted to raid an arsenal in hopes of supplying slaves with weapons to begin a revolt. It ended with 8 men dead and the debate over slavery continued 3.02 – Causes of the Civil War How did the issues of sectionalism lead to the Civil War? To what extent was slavery the primary cause of the Civil War? What did a federal union of states mean politically and socially before and after that Civil War? Sectionalism – distinct identities based on ethnicity, color, customs, laws, economics, or culture – we see this especially between the North and South prior to the Civil War Election of 1860 – Abraham Lincoln was elected president, despite the fact that he was not even on the ballot in the South. This was the final straw for the South, who decided to secede from the Union. SC seceded first. Four border states remained between the North and South The United States became split in two. The Union or states that stayed loyal to the United States were primarily northern states without slavery. The Confederacy was made up of the states which seceded from the United States The first shots of the Civil War were fired by Confederate troops at Fort Sumter, SC Jefferson Davis became the president of the Confederacy 3.03 – Political and military turning points of the Civil War and assess their significance to the outcome of the conflict Why are the Battle of Gettysburg and the Siege of Vicksburg considered the military turning point of the Civil War? How did the political actions of President Lincoln affect the outcome of the war? Was it inevitable that the North would win the war? Strengths and weaknesses of the Union (North) Strategies – Anaconda Plan – Preserve the Union Major political and military leaders – Abraham Lincoln, George McClellan, Ulysses S. Grant, William T. Sherman Military readiness – under prepared, soldiers needed training, poor leadership Economy and industrialization – 22 million people, 23 states, 85% of the nation’s factories, 90% skilled workers, enough money for war, tariffs on imports, trains, railroads, 10+ major cities Strengths and weaknesses of the Confederacy (South) Strategies – to outlast the North, defend their home soil, and preserve their way of life (agriculture = slavery) Major political and military leaders – Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis (President), Stonewall Jackson Military readiness – stronger military leaders and soldiers who were accustomed to the outdoor life, guns, terrain, etc. Economy and industrialization – 9 million people, 11 states, farming & agriculture, not enough money for war, no loans or direct taxes, no duties or taxes on imports (North was blocking their ports), only 1 major city Leaders of the Civil War Ulysses S. Grant – General in the Union Army George McClellan – General in the Union Army who ran against President Lincoln in the Election of 1864 (McClellan lost) Robert E. Lee – head of the Confederate Army Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson – Confederate War General The Civil War Copperheads – citizens in the North who opposed the Civil War and advocated peace Anaconda Plan – the Union’s plan for victory in the Civil War, which included blockading the Confederacy’s main ports First Battle of Bull Run/Manassas (July 1861) – the first major battle of the Civil War – a victory for the Confederacy Antietam (September 1862) – the bloodiest single day in American history, 26,000 people died Emancipation Proclamation (January 1863) – Lincoln ordered all slaves behind Confederate lines be freed. This order was merely symbolic as it freed very few slaves, but gave a moral causes to the war Vicksburg (April-July 1863) – Grant attacked one of the two confederate holdouts on the Mississippi River. The South surrendered to Grant and it became the turning point in the West. Gettysburg (July 1863) – considered to be the turning point of the Civil War. The Union won this 3 day battle and the South would never invade the North again Gettysburg Address (November 1863) – a speech given by Lincoln at the dedication of a cemetery at Gettysburg. Lincoln reminded the nation what they were fighting for, “a government of the people, by the people, and for the people.” Sherman’s March (1864) – Sherman’s army marched from the Atlantic, north to the sea, with a theory of “total war” destroying everything in its `10-mile-wide path In 1864, Lincoln suspended the Writ of Habeas Corpus – the right to know why you are being jailed. It caused more than 13,000 confederate sympathizers to be jailed without a trial Appomattox Courthouse – where the Confederates surrendered to the Union at the end of the Civil War in 1865 On April 14th, 1965, five days after the Confederacy surrendered, John Wilkes Booth shot and killed President Lincoln at Ford’s Theater in Washington, DC 3.04 – Political, economic, and social impact of Reconstruction on the nation and identify the reasons why Reconstruction came to an end How are civil liberties challenged during times of conflict and change? How have changes during Reconstruction made a lasting impact on America? To what extent did the Civil War and Reconstruction positively impact the lives of former slaves, women, and landless tenants in the U.S.? To what extent did the federal government wield its power over the states during and after the Civil War? Reconstruction Plans Congressional Reconstruction o Led by Thaddeus Stevens and the Radical Republicans – a group of Republicans who wanted strict rules for allowing the Southern states entry back into the Union o They wanted to abolish slavery, give all men the right to vote, ratify the 14 th amendment, ban those who supported the Confederacy from voting, put the South under military rule, and require new state constitutions o Scalawags – mostly southern whites who supported Radical Reconstruction o Carpetbaggers – Northern Republicans who cane to the South to make money and aid in Reconstruction Presidential Reconstruction o Led by President Andrew Johnson, this plan was more lenient of the South o He wanted to abolish slavery, pardon southerners who swore allegiance to the Union, hold a constitutional convention, allow states to hold elections to rejoin the Union, and repay the Confederate debt Johnson’s Impeachment Johnson was impeached when he violated the Tenure of Office Act which said that the president could not fire any officeholder that had received Senate confirmation until the Senate had approved a successor During Reconstruction Freeman’s Bureau – set up to help former slaves Sharecroppers – farmers who paid landowners with a share of their crop Tenant Farmers – rent was paid to a landowner for the use of their land, the tenant farmer would then keep and/or sells produced (more freedom than sharecroppers) End of Reconstruction The Hayes-Tilden Compromise of 1877 ended Reconstruction after the muchdebated Election of 1876 ended by putting Republican Hayes into office as President in return for removing all troops from the South, ending the period of Reconstruction Black Codes – a way to inhibit the freedom of ex-slaves. The codes controlled almost all aspects of life and prohibited African Americans from the freedom that had been won during Reconstruction Jim Crow Laws – laws legally segregating African Americans Grandfather Clause – put voting restrictions on those who had not voted before said that you could only vote if your grandfather had been allowed to vote Ku Klux Klan – formed in 1866, the purpose was to “defend the social and political superiority” of whites against what they called the “aggressions of an inferior race.” They used fear and violence to achieve their goals. Congress passed a series of anti-KKK laws, but was unable to enforce them 3.05 – Degree to which the Civil War and Reconstruction proved to be a test of the supremacy of the national government Which changes of the Civil War and Reconstruction Era were short-lived and which have had a lasting impact? To what extent did the Civil War and Reconstruction establish the supremacy of the national government? To what extent have the issues surrounding the Civil War yet to be resolved? 10th Amendment- the government powers not listed in the Constitution for the national government are powers that the states, or the people of those states, can have 13th Amendment – outlawed/abolished slavery in the United States 14th Amendment – stated that all citizens have certain rights, and defined citizenship 15th Amendment – stated that no one could be denied the right to vote based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude Civil Rights Act of 1866 – the act declared that all persons born in the United States were now citizens, without regard to race, color, or previous condition. As citizens they could make and enforce contracts, sue and be sued, give evidence in court, and inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property Goal 4 the Great West and the Rise of the Debtor (1860-1894) GOAL 4 A Century of Dishonor Assimilation Bimetallism Comstock Lode Dawes Severalty Act Exodusters Gold Rush Gold Standard Homestead Act Indian Wars Interstate Commerce Act Inventions Morrill Land Grant Act (1862) Munn v. Illinois (1877) Populist Party Sod houses The Grange Transcontinental Railroad Wabash v. Illinois (1886) Williams Jennings Bryan GOAL 4 – The Great West & the Rise of the Debtor In 1848-1949, millions of people moved west in search for gold Large deposits of ores (gold, silver, minerals) were found in Nevada Heads of household were given 160 acres of land in the west for free, as long as they met certain conditions (built a house, farmed at least 6 months out of the year, lived there for 5 years, ect.) States sold land to railroad companies in order to earn money to create “land-grant colleges” Houses built out west made of dirt, grass, mud, sticks; sometimes built into the side of a hill Built by Irish and Chinese Immigrants, this railroad connected the east coast of the United States to he west coast of the United States, meeting at Promontory Point, Utah. African Americans who moved west after the abolition of slavery to avoid persecution and start a new life Sand Creek Massacre, Battle of Little Big Horn The forcing of a different culture of society upon a person or peoples Attempted to assimilate the Native Americans, divided up plots of land on which they were forced to live Helen Hunt Jackson’s novel which described years of mistreatment of Native Americans An organization created to help farmers fight unjust economic practices National Farmers’ Alliances, Southern Alliance. Colored Farmers Alliance The idea that the United States’ money should be backed by gold; this was good for businessmen, but bad for farmers in debt The idea that the United States’ money should be backed by gold and silver; this was good for farmers who had debts to pay, as it put more money into circulation Political party, also known as the “people’s party” which was formed mostly by farmers. It supported bimetallism and reforms which would help farmers. Led by William Jennings Bryan Supreme court case which established the state’s power in regulating the railroads Supreme court case which established the federal government’s power to regulate the railroads Reestablished the right to the federal government’s to regulate the railroads Leader of the Populist Party, he ran for president in 1896 at which point he delivered his famous “Cross of Gold” speech. He lost the election to William Jennings Bryan Barbed Wire, Refrigerator car, Windmill Goal 4 – The Great West and Rise of the Debtor (1860s-1896) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Across 1. Gave people 160 acres of land to build a house and farm in the West Down 2. Connected the eastern part of the United States to the West and allowed for better transportation of people and goods 4. People nicknamed the “49ers” rushed to the West for this 7. The idea that money should be backed by gold and silver farmers (farmers supported this idea) 3. Speech given by William Jennings Bryan describing how the U.S. should not follow the gold standard 8. The idea that all money should be backed by gold 5. An animal necessary to Native Americans survival that was killed off by settlers 9. An organization which fought for farmers’ rights 6. Act that forced the assimilation of Native Americans 10. Book by Helen Hunt Jackson which described the treatment of Native Americans in the U.S. 7. The invention that closed the open range Goal 4 – the Great West and the Rise of the Debtor (1860-1896) 4.01 – Compare and contrast the different groups of people who migrated to the West and describe the problems they experienced Who migrated West and what problems did they experience? How did the experiences of the settlers impact their successes or failures? Why did different groups of people have such varied experiences as they migrated? Comstock Lode/Gold Rush – people rushed West starting in 1849 (the 48ers) in hopes of becoming rich off of gold and other ores. The Comstock Lode, a huge silver-mining area in Nevada, yielded about $300 million in silver and gold ore, starting in 1859 Homestead Act – created in 1862, it was signed into effect by President Lincoln, selling land in the West to people for little money. Settlers had to live on their land for 5 years, build a house, and farm on the land at least 6 months out of the year Morrill Land Grant Act (1862) – gave millions of acres of land to states. They were to sell this land and use the money to create colleges (land-grant colleges) Oklahoma Land Rush – in 1889, the Oklahoma Land Rush opened the Oklahoma Territory to occupation by white settlers, displacing the natives. The nickname “Sooners” came from the land rush, as everyone tried to get there sooner than everyone else Settlers in the West would often build sod houses, or soddies, which were houses built of mud and grass, sometimes right into the side of a hill Unique Experiences of: Women – were given more freedoms in the west, including voting Cowboys – led a harsh, outdoor life. 1/5 of cowboys were African American or Mexican Farmers – had a different time adjusting to the climate of the West and were often forced to move back East if their farms were not successful African Americans who moved West called themselves Exodusters, after the book of Exodus in which the Jews fled Egypt Chinese Immigrants – came in through the West coast (Angel Island) and were involved with the building of the Pacific side of the transcontinental railroad Irish Immigrants – came into the United States through the East coast (Ellis Island) and were involved with the building of the Atlantic side of the transcontinental railroad 4.02 – Impact that settlement in the West had upon different groups of people and upon the environment How did the environment of the West impact the success of the settlers? How did the migration of people bring about the change in the West? What cause individuals or groups to migrate? Was the impact of settlement in the West positive or negative? How do individuals adapt to their surroundings? Transcontinental Railroad Built by primarily Irish and Chinese immigrants, this cross-continental railroad connected the East coast and the West coast, coming together at Promontory Point, Utah African Americans Buffalo soldiers – former slaves, freeman, and black Civil War veterans who formed the first black peacetime regiment in U.S. history Native Americans Dawes Severalty Act – attempted to “civilize” the Native Americans, forcing dominant white culture on to the Native Americans. The act gave 160 acres of land to each Native American household, hoping that by owning their own land, the Native Americans would become self-sufficient. However, the Native Americans were given bad land and many ended up selling it or having it taken over by the whites o Assimilation – policies attempted to transform Native Americans into “citizens” by stripping them of their lands, cultures, languages, religions, and other markers of their ethnic identity o White settlers often attacked the buffalo, which was essential to the Native American’s livelihood Reservation System – government assigned land for Native American tribes that they were often forced onto Conflicts with Native Americans o Sand Creek Massacre – the Cheyenne had attacked settlers near Denver. As a result, the U.S. army was ordered to set up at Sand Creek. The U.S. army attacked and killed about 500 Cheyenne, mostly women and children o Battle of Little Big Horn – after much conflict between the Sioux and settlers in the West a peace treaty was signed giving land to the Sioux. In 1876, rumors of gold caused the U.S. army to sent General Cluster to look for it. Fighting ensued and 2000 Sioux warriors killed Custer and his men – this became known as “Custer’s Last Stand” o Wounded Knee – the last of this Indian Wars, this battle occurred as the U.S. army tried to arrest Sitting Bull. He hesitated and was killed by U.S. soldiers, causing his followers to surrender. Many of Sitting Bull’s followers died as soldiers opened fire Helen Hunt Jackson’s A Century of Dishonor – described how Native Americans were mistreated by the U.S. government Goal 5 Becoming an Industrial Society (1877-1900) GOAL 5 Andrew Carnegie Boss Tweed Captains of Industry Chinese Exclusion Act Crédit Mobilier Scandal Dumbbell Tenements Ellis Island Eugene Debs Farmers Alliances Gilded Age Gospel of Wealth Inventions J. P. Morgan Jacob Riis John D. Rockefeller Labor Unions New Immigrants Old Immigrants Pendleton Civil Service Act Political Machines Robber Barons Samuel Gompers Settlement Houses Sherman Antitrust Act Thomas Nast U.S v. E.C. Knight, Co. (1895) Vanderbilt Family Whiskey Ring Scandal Yellow-Dog Contract GOAL 5 – Becoming an Industrial Society Elevator, Electric Trolleys, Telephone (Alexander Graham Bell), Typewriter, Bessemer (Steel) Immigrants from the Southern and Eastern parts of Europe who moved to the U.S. knowing little of the culture or language Immigrants from the Northern and Western parts of Europe who were more educated and spoke English Author of How the Other Half Lives, a book describing the living conditions of urban immigrants family Entrance port for the majority of European immigrants in New York Community centers developed to aid primarily urban immigrant families made famous by leaders such as Jane Addams Urban housing developed based on the idea that more windows made for better ventilation and sanitation Law in effect from 1882-1943 excluding almost all immigrants from China from entering into the United States Captain of Industry or Robber Barron in the steel industry Andrew Carnegie’s idea that people should be able to make as much as they can/want to, buy they must give back to the community Banker who dominated corporate finance and industrial consolidation during his time Captain of the Industry of Robber Barron who controlled much of the oil industry Family in control of much of the railroads Time period in which the extreme wealth of a few masked the poverty and corruption in the majority of society Big businessmen and industrialists who were seen as making positive contributions to society Big businessmen and industrialists who through unfair business practices amassed immense personal wealth Organization of workers who have banded together to achieve common goals in key areas such as wages, hours, and working conditions Laws which placed most federal government employees on the merit system which therefore marked the end of the “spoils system” Law which aimed to regulate businesses to stop monopolistic practices, but was instead aimed at labor unions Lead by a “boss”, this corrupt organization depends on the support of immigrants who received jobs and services in return for political votes Leader of the Tammany Hall political machine in New York City Cartoonist who frequently made Boss Tweed the subject of his drawings, showing the corruption of political machines Illegal manipulation of contracts by a construction and financial company associated with the building of the Union Pacific Railroad during President Grant’s administration Illegal diversion of tax revenues in a conspiracy among government agents, politicians, whiskey distillers, and distributors during President Grant’s administration Also known as the “Sugar Trust Case,” was a United States Supreme Court case the limited the government’s power to control monopolies Founded the American Federation of Labor (AFL) Union leader, on of the founding members of the International Labor Union and the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) Agreement between an employer and an employee in which the employee agrees, as a condition of employment, not to be a member of a labor union Goal 5 – Becoming an Industrial Society (1877-1900) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 9 110 11 112 13 114 Across Down 1. Invention to refine steel production 4. Time period nicknamed by Mark Twain that described how the evils of society were covered by a thin layer of gold 1. A list of people not to hire 2. Kept Chinese immigrants from coming to the United States 5. Big business men who owned a large portion of the oil industry 3. Cartoonist who drew pictures of Boss Tweed 6. Big business men who ran a steel company bearing his name 7. The “boss” of Tammany Hall political machine in New York City 9. Replacement workers who took the place of striking workers 8. Family who controlled a large portion of the railroad industry 10. Author of How the Other Half Lives, a book describing the living conditions of the urban poor 11. Large company that eliminates competition in the market 12. Employees stop working in order to gain better pay and working conditions 13. Group workers join in order to fight for better pay, working conditions, ect. 14. Invention by Alexander Graham Bell Goal 5 – Becoming an Industrial Society (1877-1900) 5.01 – Evaluate the influence of immigration and industrialization on urban life How did immigration and industrialization shape urban life? How did the rapid industrialization of the Gilded Age create economic, social, and political change in the U.S.? Did immigration and rapid industrialization have a positive or negative impact on the economy? Arriving in America 10 million immigrants between 1865 and 1890 from Northwest and Central Europe. These “old immigrants” were English-speaking and had a history of voting 10 million immigrants between 1890 and 1920 from Southern and Eastern Europe. Were considered the “new immigrants” Most immigrants came into the U.S. through “The Golden Door” – New York City at Ellis Island. A small number of immigrants (mostly from Asia) came through Angel Island in San Francisco Where Immigrants Settled Immigrants often moved to urban areas previously established by settlers from their homeland Some immigrants moved West, but only 2% of immigrants moved to the South Ghettos, areas in which one ethnic or racial group dominated, formed in many urban areas. Immigrants found comfort in living in a community with a familiar language and traditions Chinese Excluded A quarter million (250,000) Chinese immigrants came to the U.S. to work on the railroads Chinese immigrants accepted low wages, which made them valuable employees. American labor unions fought to exclude Chinese immigrants from the work force Congress responded to the demands of labor unions by passing the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882. Until 1943, Chinese immigrants were not allowed to move to the United States Expanding Cities Because of mechanization the need for labor on farms decreased. Between 1880 and 1920, 11 million Americans left their farms and moved to urban areas to seek out better opportunities How Cities Grow In the late 1800s, motorized methods of transportation made commuting easier. Trains, cable cars, electric trolleys, and the automobile (1910) allowed people to live in suburbs and commute into a large city to work When cities couldn’t expand farther out, they started building up. Engineering advances and the invention of the elevator allowed buildings to stand more than 50 feet tall. In 1885 the first skyscraper was built. It was 10 stories tall Factory Work In many industries, workers were not paid by the hour, but by how much they produced. This system of piecework meant that the fastest workers earned the most money Most piecework was performed in sweatshops, where employees worked long hours for low wages in poor conditions Urban Living Conditions Some factory workers lived in housing specifically built for them by factory owners Tenements were low-cost apartment buildings housed as many families as the owner can pack in Poverty, overcrowding, and unsanitary conditions were common. Fires were a constant worry. With so many buildings packed together, a small fire can quickly spread Great Chicago Fire (1871) – 18,000 buildings burned, 250 people died, and 100,000 people left homeless Dumbbell tenements were created in order to let every room have a window and allow more air flow. The thought was that this would reduce the spread of disease in cities The Social Gospel Movement A social reform movement developed by the churches which provided social services for the poor The movement focused on ideals of charity and justice and they fought for labor reform Settlement Houses Led by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Star, young educated women and men would move into a house in the midst of a poor neighborhood. They would settle in, and then eventually offer social services Settlement house founders believed that money alone could not really help the poor. The houses offered cultural events, classes, child care, clubs, camps, job-help, legal help, and health care Inventions & Inventors Indoor electric lighting was invented in 1865. (Thomas Edison later invented the light bulb) Oil started being used for power. (Edwin L. Drake discovered oil in PA) Samuel F.B. Morse perfected the telegraph and Morse code which grew with the railroad Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1876. By 1900, 1.5 million telephones were in use Typewriter created jobs for women Entertainment Amusement Parks – started with “trolley parks” and they often involved music, skill games, vaudeville productions, bathing beaches, exciting rides. Coney Island’s Luna Park Spectator Sports – By 1860, baseball clubs were starting in many cities. In 1869, the Cincinnati Red Stockings was formed. By the 1870s, players were being paid. Football and basketball soon followed. 5.02 – Explain how businesses and industrial leaders accumulated wealth and wielded political and economic power What characteristics were vital to the success of industrial leaders of the Gilded Age? How did Captains of Industry accumulate wealth and power? Should an individual by allowed to accumulate as much wealth as possible? Bessemer Process The Bessemer Process made it possible to mass produce steel and remove the imperfections Steel is lighter, stronger, and more flexible than iron (which was previously used for building) Robber Baron vs. “Captains of Industry” Both are powerful industrialists who established large businesses in the 1800s Robber Barons implies that someone got their money by stealing from the public – they ruthlessly drove their competitors into the ground. They paid their workers meager wages and live in unhealthy conditions. ”Captains of Industry” suggests that the business leaders served their nation in a positive way. It implies that they raised productivity, created jobs, and established museums, libraries, and universities John D. Rockefeller created the Standard Oil Company in 1870. His practices may have been questionable at first, but by the time of his death, he had given over $500 million to charities Andrew Carnegie was extremely successful in the steel business. He preached a “gospel of wealth,” that people should make as much money as they can, but then give it away. More than 80% of Carnegie’s wealth went to some form of education. As with Rockefeller, many people questioned and disapproved of his methods of gaining such wealth Social Darwinism Carnegie suggested that the wealthy were the most valuable group in society. The idea came from Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution (natural selection, survival of the fittest). The theory that only the most wealthy and “fit” would succeed was deemed Social Darwinism Most Americans believed that the government shouldn’t interfere with the private business and as a result, the government didn’t tax government profit or regulate relations with workers (When the government does not interfere with business it is known as laissez-faire “hands off” government Oligopolies and Monopolies A market dominated by just a few large companies is called an oligopoly (cereal companies, cars, etc.) A monopoly is when a company has complete control over a market or service. A company is so big and powerful that is would have driven all competition out. Laws were passed in the late 1800s to prevent certain monopolistic practices o Carnegie Steel became so wealthy and powerful that Carnegie decided to buy all of the companies that performed all of the phrases of steel production, from the mines to the furnaces and mills. He even bought the shipping and rail lines for transport. Gaining control of all aspects of a product’s development is known as vertical integration (consolidation) o The Standard Oil Company, owned by Rockefeller, became so large and powerful that is decided to buy all of its competitors’ oil refineries. Bringing together many firms within the same business is called horizontal integration (consolidation) In order to get around monopoly laws when integrating (consolidating) the Standard Oil Company, Rockefeller formed a trust. The trust allowed the companies to come together under a “board of trustees” who controlled operations, but not officially merge (which avoided the laws against a monopoly) In an attempt to limit the control a business could have over an industry, President Benjamin Harrison passed the Sherman Antitrust Act in 1890, outlawing any combination of companies that restrained interstate trade or commerce. The act was not successful at first, as it went after labor unions instead of monopolies Pullman (1894): After the Panic of 11893, George Pullman (inventor of the Pullman Sleeper Railroad Car) decided to lay off workers and cut pay by 25%. The American Railroad Union (led by Eugene V. debs) went on strike, and instead of bargaining, Pullman shut down his factory. By 1894, 260,000 workers had joined the strike. The strike ended when President Grover Cleveland sent in 2,500 troops to regulate the union strikes. The Gilded Age A term coined by Mark Twain to describe the post-Reconstruction era – “Gilded” means ‘covered with a thin layer of gold.’ This was a golden period for America’s industrialists – the term suggests that a thin layer of gold covered the poverty and corruption in society The wealth of the industries helped to mask the problems faced by immigrants, laborers, and farmers, as well as the abuse of power to business and government 5.03 – Assess the impact of labor unions of industry and the lives of workers What social, economic and political factors led to the need for the formation of labor unions? To when extent were labor unions effective in meeting the political, economic and social needs of laborers? How effective were labor unions in improving the lives of American workers? Working Conditions Factory workers were ruled by the clock and discipline was strict. Workers were fined or fired for things such as being late, talking, or not working hard enough Work places were often unsafe. The noise was deafening, lighting and ventilation were poor, workers were often fatigued, and equipment was not dept up with Child Labor: by the end of 1880s, 20% of children between age 10 and 16 were employed. Children often left school at the age of 12 or 13 to work (more often girls than boys). Children as young as 6 or 7 sometimes worked as well Socialism In 1890, 9% of Americans held 75% of the nation’s wealth Some poor families became interested in the idea of socialism, a philosophy that favors public instead of private property and income. Socialists believe that society, not just private individuals should take charge of a nation’s wealth Most Americans opposed socialism because it threatened the deeply rooted ideals of private property, free enterprise, and individual liberty Labor Unions Unions sprung up to organize workers in certain trades, helping them to express their demands, such as better working conditions, increased wages, and shorter working hours In 1869, the Knights of Labor formed to organize all working men and women (black & white). The Knights were able to pursue broad social reforms such as equal pay for equal work, an 8 hour workday, and an end to child labor. They often formed strikes to assert their demands The American Federation of Labor, a craft union, formed (by Samuel Gompers) allowing in only skilled workers devoted to a specific craft. The AFL attempted to force employers to participate in collective bargaining, a process in which workers negotiate as a group with employers. Workers acting as a group had more power than a single worker acting alone. Most employers disliked unions and attempted to take measures to stop unions by: o Forbidding union meetings o Firing union organizers o Forcing “yellow dog contract” – workers promised never to join a union or go on strike o Prohibiting collective bargaining Strikes Rock the Nation Railway workers began to strike in 1877 when the B&O Railroad announced a wage cut of 10%. They clashed with the local militia and violence spread from West Virginia to Pittsburg, Chicago, St. Louis, and other cities. This became known as The Great Railroad Strike Haymarket Riot (1886): A group of workers started a national demonstration demanding an 8 hour workday. Police had to break up a fight between strikers and scabs (workers who came to replace strikers). A bomb was thrown and a police officer died. Unionists and anarchists (radicals who oppose all government) who participated in the riot became heroes to many union workers Homestead (1892): Andrew Carnegie’s partner, Henry Frick, attempted to cut the wages of workers at Carnegie Steel. This steel union called a strike and one anarchist attempted to assassinate Frick. The public saw this as too much violence and stopped supporting the unionists. 5.04 – Describe the changing role of government in economic and political affairs How did the government’s role in economic and political affairs change during this era? To what extent did industrialization affect the relationships between government, business, and the worker? How did technological advancement affect industrialization and the role of the government? To what extent was the government’s changing role necessary and positive to this era? Results of City Growth – the Rise of the Political Machine Clashing interests between different community groups (the middle/upper class, immigrants, migrants from the countryside, workers, etc.) led to the rise of the political machine A political machine was an unofficial organization set up to keep a particular group in power Political machines were run by a “boss” and worked through an exchange for favors Jobs were given out to citizens in exchange for votes for the machines political candidates William Marcy “Boss” Tweed was one of the most notorious bosses in NYC. Boss Tweed and his associates once got access to the city’s treasury and illegally used the money for construction projects and then kept some for themselves Thomas Nast, a famous political cartoonist, helped bring Tweed down by exposing him to the public through political cartoons depicting Tweed as a thief and a dictator. Tweed’s followers were often uneducated and could not read, but they were able to understand Nast’s cartoons The Business of Politics In the late 1800s, businesses operated largely without regulation. This laissez-faire (hands-off) approach is supported by the belied that is the government doesn’t interfere when the strongest businesses will succeed, bringing success to the nation as a whole In the Credit Mobilier scandal, stockholders in the Union Pacific’s railroad tracks at 2-3 times the price it would actually cost. The government was paying for the Union Pacific’s construction with grants and loans – so the stockholders ended up pocketing $23 million Whiskey Ring Scandal – IRS collectors and other officials accepted bribes from whiskey distillers who wanted to avoid paying taxes on their product, which lost the federal government millions of dollars Civil Service Reforms Rutherford B. Hayes was elected president (1877) and refused to follow the spoils system. Instead he appointed qualified leaders to the Cabinet and fired employees who were not needed These actions became to reform Civil Service, strengthened the government, and weakened Republicans James A. Garfield was elected president in 1880, but his term was cut short when he was murdered by a lawyer who was expecting a job from Garfield. The murder caused an outcry against the spoils system After Garfield’s death, Vice President Chester Arthur became president and passed the Pendleton Civil Service Act, which created a Civil Service Commission. This classified government jobs and tested applicants’ fitness for them with a merit exam. The Pendleton Civil Service Act therefore ended the spoils system (as Jackson had created) Goal 6 the Emergence of the United States in World Affairs GOAL 6 Alfred T. Mahan Anglo-Saxon Superiority Annexation of Hawaii Big Stick Diplomacy Boxer Rebellion Causes of the Spanish American War Dollar Diplomacy Jingoism Missionary (Moral) Diplomacy Open Door Policy Panama Canal Platt Amendment Roosevelt Corollary Rough Riders Seward’s Folly Splendid Little War Teller Amendment Treaty of Paris (1898) White Man’s Burden Yellow Journalism GOAL 6 – The Emergence of the United States as a World Peace Author of The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, describing the necessity of a strong navy for a powerful nation Poem by Josiah Strong making a parody of the “duty” white men felt to civilize indigenous peoples The belief that whites were better than peoples of color Extreme burst of national pride following a period of yellow journalism Nickname given to the purchase of Alaska from Russia United States gained this territory after it’s queen was overthrown by Hawaiian and American businessmen Nickname given to the Spanish-American War because of its short duration Led by Theodore Roosevelt, these men charged up San Juan Hill in victory in Cuba William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer led this type of sensationalized journalism which attracted readers using bold titles and outlandish pictures Sinking of the USS Maine, DeLome Letter, Cuban Rebellion against Spain, burning of US owned sugar plantations by Cubans seeking assistance Passed before the Spanish-American War, the US told Cuba that it would not annex it Ended the Spanish-American War, the United States gained the territories of Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico Cuba agreed to add this amendment on to their constitution, allowing the United States to set up a military base, agreeing not to go into debt, and allowing the United States to intervene in Cuban affairs anytime that felt it necessary Once controlled by the United States, this connects the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ensured that the United States would be able to trade with China Chinese rebelling against foreign influence in China killed many foreigners Added on the Monroe Doctrine, saying that the United States would intervene in affairs of Latin America if necessary Roosevelt’s type of foreign policy, emphasizing a strong military Taft’s type of foreign policy, emphasizing economic aid Wilson’s type of foreign policy, emphasizing the spreading of American morals and ideals Goal 6 – The Emergence of the United States in World Affairs (1890-1914) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Across Down 3. An extreme burst of national pride the followed the explosion of yellow journalism 1. Term that describes how Caucasians believed that it was their job to go and save people “lesser” than they 7. Land purchased from Russia for its resources nicknamed “Seward’s Folly” 2. US ship that exploded in Havana, Cuba 4. Created a shorter route from the Atlantic to the Pacific 9. Amendment that told Cuba that the United States would not annex it 11. Led the Rough Riders up San Juan Hill 5. Amendment that gave the U.S. a military base in Cuba and allowed the U.S. to intervene in Cuban affairs when they saw necessary 12. Roosevelt’s foreign policy 6. Wilson’s foreign policy 13. Ended the Spanish-American War 8. Taft’s foreign policy 16. Nickname for the Spanish-American War 10. Group of soldiers that attacked San Juan Hill 17. Wrote The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 14. Island nation that the U.S. purchased from Spain at the end of the Spanish-American War. It stayed in U.S. hands until 1946 15. Island nation annexed for its sugar plantations and its use as a naval por Goal 6 – the Emergence of the United States in World Affairs 6.01 – The United States’ increasing role in world affairs How did the government’s role in economic and political affairs changes as America became more imperialistic? To what extent did industrialization affect the relationships between government, business, and the worker? How did technological advancement lead to the United States’ increased involvement in world affairs? To what extent was the government’s changing role necessary and beneficial as America became more imperialistic? Imperialism- When a stronger nation attempts to create an empire by dominating weaker nations – economically, politically, culturally, and/or militarily - The United States and other powerful countries such as Russia, Germany, Britain, France, and Japan were seeking out spheres of influence, or areas of economic and political control, in China - Alfred T. Mahan wrote the book The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, which argued that the nation’s economic future rested on gaining new markets (to sell goods) aboard through increasing the size of the Navy - Leaders like Josiah Strong drew on the ideas of Social Darwinism to justify the takeover of new territories. He said that Anglo-Saxons were superior to the societies they conquered, and idea coined, Anglo-Saxon superiority. Those who used this argument believed that they were doing a noble thing for the “heathen”, uncivilized peoples of the world by introducing them to Christianity and modern society - Conflicts in Cuba attracted the interest of American journalists. Following a surge of yellow journalism in which journalists such as William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer sensationalized headlines and stories about foreign affairs in Cuba, there was an intense burst of national pride and the desire for an aggressive foreign policy. This burst of pride came to be known as jingoism 6.02 – U.S. Military, Economic, and Political Involvement and Influence How did America and the world change as the U.S. increase its role in world affairs? In what extent have the effects of U.S. actions and policies been beneficial or detrimental to other countries? Why did the United States take an active role in world affairs in the late 19s and early 20s country? The Spanish-American War - Before the war: The war began after Cuban rebels began pushing back against their rulers, Spain. Cubans repeatedly urged the United States to intervene and help them. The United States continued to refuse help. To get the attention of U.S. business owners, Cuban guerrillas burned down American sugar plantations. With pressure from American business owners, plus the mysterious explosion of the USS Maine (which the U.S. blamed on Spain) and the insults aimed at President McKinley unearthed in the DeLome Letter, Congress eventually authorized force (war) against Spain Cubans insisted on adding the Teller Amendment to Cuba’s war resolution against Spain. This amendment stated that the United States would not annex Cuba - “The Splendid Little War” The “Splendid Little War” was fought on two sides of the world, in the Philippines and in Cuba and Puerto Rico, all three island territories under the rule of Spain Theodore Roosevelt led a group of soldiers nicknamed the Rough Riders in a charge up San Juan Hill, which became the most famous battle of the SpanishAmerican War - Treaty of Paris III The war ended with the Treaty of Paris III in which the United States paid $20 million to return for Cuba’s independence, and the United States’ acquisition of the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico. In order to protect American interests, the United States installed a military government in Cuba for the next three years - After the War: Two years after Cuba won its independence; the United States military government in Cuba allowed Cube to draft a constitution. The United States insisted on including the Platt Amendment which stated that Cuba government could not enter any foreign agreements, it must allow the U.S. to have a naval base in Cuba, and it gave the U.S. permission to intervene in Cuba whenever the U.S. deemed necessary. The United States established (and still maintain) a military bade in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba - Dilemma in the Philippines After the Spanish-American War ended, the United States gained the Philippines from Spain. President McKinley felt like he had to annex the island nation but the Filipinos declared themselves an independent republic. For three years, the United States and the Philippines fought a war over control of the islands. After the death of more than 200,000 Filipinos, fighting slowed. The United States continued to occupy the Philippines until 1946 U.S. Gained Territories Abroad - Seward’s Folly – in 1867, Secretary of State, William H. Seward purchased Alaska from Russia. Many people were against the purchase, which is why it became known as “Seward’s Folly” - Annexation of Hawaii – in 1898, after a power struggle between Hawaiian royalty and planters, Congress approved the annexation of Hawaii in order to protect its world trade. With the help of pineapple planter, Santo Dole, Queen Liliuokalani was removed from her throne and Hawaii was declared a republic - The Panama Canal was built under T. Roosevelt’s administration in order to provide a shorter route between Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. This would provide for taster and cheaper global shipping as well as increased navy speed in a time of war. After much controversy between France (who owned the land), Columbia (who ruled over Panama), and Panama itself, the United States recognized Panama an independent country (under the protection of the U.S.) and the U.S. was granted a permanent 10-mile-wide strip of land on which to build the canal 6.03 – Policies and actions of the United States government impacting other countries To what extent have the actions and policies of the U.S. affected other countries in the world? How has the media shaped U.S. foreign policy? As the U.S. becomes increasingly involved in world affairs, should its selfperception be impacted by world opinion? How intrusive should a nation be in the affairs of another? Diplomacy – how a country deals with foreign affairs Roosevelt’s “Big Stick Diplomacy In 1904, President Roosevelt issued messages to Congress called the Roosevelt Corollary which added on to the Monroe Doctrine saying that the U.S. did not want any more territories, they would only protect smaller/weaker nations and intervene if problems arose Roosevelt’s main concern in Asia was keeping an open door trade with China. The Open Door Policy ensured that the United States would have equal access to China’s market. China, however, was reluctant to have any foreign influence. This led to the Boxer Rebellion in which 300 foreigners and Christian Chinese were killed Dollar Diplomacy President William Howard Taft’s approach to foreign policy was to “substitute dollars for bullets,” meaning that instead of fighting smaller/weaker nations, the United States should maintain orderly societies abroad by investing in their economies Missionary (Moral) Diplomacy Under President Woodrow Wilson, the United States took a moral and legalistic approach to diplomacy. The United States would interfere with other countries when they felt a moral or legal responsibility to Because of Wilson’s decision to intervene in Mexico, rebel leader, Pancho Villa, went on a terrorizing streak through border towns in Mexico and the U.S. burning down towns and killing their residents Anti-Imperialism Anti-Imperialism League – opponents of the U.S. policy in the Philippines established the Anti-Imperialist League. Many people argued that is the United States took over nations, those nations’ citizens should be entitled to the same rights as U.S. citizens Many people were against the idea of Anglo-Saxon Superiority and saw it as racism. They therefore did believe in taking over a smaller, “weaker” nation because they were “uncivilized” Many southerners feared that by taking over other nations, the U.S. would be forced to absorb people of different races into the United States Still others believed that imperialism was too expensive and not worth the costs it took to expand Goal 7 the Progressive Movement in the United States (1890-1914) GOAL 7 16th Amendment 17th Amendment 18th Amendment 19th Amendment Booker T. Washington Clayton Antitrust Act Disenfranchisement Election of 1912 Elkins Act Federal Reserve Act Ford’s Innovations Great Migration Hull House Inventions of the Progressive Era Jim Crow Laws Mann Act Muckrakers Northern Securities v. U.S. (1904) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) Robert La Follette Sherman Antitrust Act Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire W.E.B. Du Bois GOAL 7 – The Progressive Movement Authors and Journalists who uncovered evils of society to encourage reform. Examples: Ida Tarbell (History of the Standard Oil), Upton Sinclair (The Jungle), Jacob Riis (How the Other Half Lives) Many young women were killed at a textile plant fire after having no way to get out of the building Famous settlement house started by Jane Addams to help poor, urban, immigrant families Gave permission to levy an income tax Direct election of senators by the people The Volstead Act – started Prohibition – made the manufacturing and sale of alcohol illegal Women’s suffrage – gave women the right to vote Law aimed to limit monopolies, but was instead aimed at labor unions Supreme court dissolved a railroad company monopoly Made it illegal for railroad officials to give, and sippers to receive rebates for using particular railroads Made the Interstate Commerce Commission more powerful to regulate telephone and telegraph rates Governor of Wisconsin who increased the power of the states Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson all ran in this Election. Roosevelt and the Progressive (Bull Moose) Party split the republican vote, paving the way for Wilson (D) to win the presidency Created a decentralized private banking system which divided the nation into 12 districts and established a regional bank in each district Strengthened the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, made some monopolistic practices illegal and protected the rights of labor unions and farm organizations Supreme Court case which established the “separate but equal” doctrine Civil Rights reformer who started the Tuskegee Institution for the vocational training of African Americans, gave the Atlanta Compromise Speech. Was reassuring to whites because he did not push for radical change Radical early civil Rights Leader who pushed for African Americans to get educated in order to advance in society and gain equality. He led the Niagara Movement and was a founding member of the NAACP Movement of African Americans from the Jim Crow south to northern cities to escape racism and gain job opportunities To take away the vote with strategies such as literacy tests, poll taxes, and grandfather clauses Rules that enforced segregation in the South Electricity, Mail order catalogues, Kodak camera, Movie camera, Airplanes, skyscrapers $5 day, Assembly line, Model T Goal 7 – The Progressive Movement in the United States (1890-1914) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Across 7. Early civil rights activist who advocated for African Americans to “cast their buckets where they are” 9. Tall buildings built a as result of the Bessemer Process 10. Test of reading that prevented many African Americans from voting Down 1. What the 18th Amendment passed 2. Early radical civil rights activist who pushed for education for African Americans 3. The 19th Amendment gave women this right 4. Payment to vote which prevented many African Americans from voting 5. Book by Upton Sinclair that describes the terrible working conditions in the meat-packing industry 6. Winner of the election of 1912 8. Innovator who created the $5 day, assembly line, and Model Goal 7 – the Progressive Movement in the United States (1890-1914) 7.01 – Explain the conditions that led to the rise of Progressivism How did the political, economic, and social conditions of the Gilded Age lead to the Progressive Era? How did the scientific and technological advances create a mass consumer culture? To what extent did an emerging mass consumer culture define what it means to be an American? What tactics were most effective in bringing about the social, economic, and political reforms of the Progressive Era? How did conditions of the Gilded Age lead to the Progressive Era? Political Conditions Many new reform movements were an outgrowth of earlier reform movements, such as the Populist Political corruption and grafts kept public services (pure water, schools, health care) inadequate Social Conditions Many new reform movements sprung up in the Northeast and Midwest. They had their roots in movements such as nativism, prohibition, purity, charity, Social Gospel, and settlement houses. Reformers were reacting to rapid industrialization, immigration, and urbanization Economic Conditions Industrial workers were over-worked yet underpaid Many progressives argued that charity would not by enough to improve the lives of industrial workers Four Goals of Progressivism Reformers never completely agreed on problems or solutions, though their progressive efforts shared at least one of the following goals: 1 Protecting Social Welfare – to soften some if the harsh conditions of industrialization Florence Kelley – advocate for improving the lives of women of children Triangle Shirtwaist Fire – 146 young girls were killed when a fire broke out in the building they were working in. The disaster pushed people to demand reform of working conditions Pure Food and Drug Act – 1906 halted the sale of contaminated foods and medicines and called for truth in labeling 2 Promoting Moral Improvement – some reformers felt morality, not the workplace, help the key to improving the lives of poor people Prohibition – banning alcoholic beverages to cure society’s problems (temperance movement) Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) led the crusade for prohibition; members advanced their cause by entering saloons, singing praying, and urging saloonkeepers to stop selling alcohol. Carrie Nation played a large role in this movement 3 Creating Economic Reforms Muckrakers – journalist who wrote about the corrupt side of business and public life in mass circulation o Upton Sinclair wrote The Jungle exposing the harsh treatment of workers in the meatpacking industry o Jacob Riis wrote How the Other Half Lives hoping to gain support in the reform of tenement houses o Lincoln Steffens uncovered political corruption in St. Louis and other cities o Ida Tarbell wrote the book The History of the Standard Oil Company in which she investigated and revealed the abuses committed by the Standard Oil Trust 4 Fostering Efficiency – many progressive leaders put their faith in experts and scientific principles to make society and the workplace more efficient (forced on research) Scientific Management – studies to see just how quick each task could be performed Introduction of the assembly line caused a high worker turnover rate, often due to injuries by fatigue worker 7.02 – Economic and political gains in the Progressive Period How effective was the Progressive Movement in addressing the political, economic, and social needs of all Americans? To what extent did progressive reforms successfully combat the social and economic ills created by a rapidly industrializing society? How successful were the Progressive Ear Presidents in leading reform efforts? Progressives thought that government should increase their responsibility for the well-being of people, which would require more social welfare programs. Reform at the Municipal (City) Level Settlement houses such as Jane Addam’s Hull House was built to improve urban slum/ghettos Some mayors led movements for city-supported welfare services which provided things like public baths, parks, work-relief programs, playgrounds, free kindergartens, lodging for homeless. Reform at the State Level Robert M. LaFollette of Wisconsin led the way to regulating big business. He made the railroad industry, a major target. He also instituted a direct primary in which people voted on nominees for upcoming elections Initiatives, a process in which citizens can propose a new law to go directly on the ballot. Referendums, which allowed citizens to approve or reject a law passed by the legislature, and Recall procedures, which permitted voters to remove public officials from office, were also instituted in many states Reform at the Federal Level The Sherman Antitrust Act (1890) was enforced strongly by the Roosevelt administration The Pure Food and Drug Act (1906) banned interstate shipping of impure food and mislabeling food 16th Amendment (1912) Allowed the federal government to collect income taxes 17th Amendment (1913) Direct election of senators. Before this, each states’ legislature chose its own U.S. Senator Federal Reserve Act (1913) Created the Federal Reserve System of banks to supervise private banks and ensure a flexible money supply 18th Amendment (Volstead Act) (1919) Banned the production, sale, or import of alcohol (prohibition) 19th Amendment (1920) Granted women full suffrage (the right to vote) Theodore Roosevelt After the Spanish-American War he became the Governor of NY, then vice president, and then after the assassination of McKinley, he became the youngest president at the age of 42 He saw presidency as a “bully pulpit” = he could influence the news and media and shape legislation If big business victimized workers, then he would make sure that the common people received a Square Deal – his program of progressive reforms designed to protect people from bid businesses Roosevelt’s real goal was federal regulation of railroads Congress passed Elkins Act (1903), made it illegal for railroad officials to give, and shippers to receive, rebates for using particular railroads Progressivism as Taft Becomes 27th President Progressive Movement – in early 20th-century reform movement seeking to return control of the government to the people, to restore economic opportunities, and to correct the injustices of American life William Howard Taft – handpicked by Roosevelt ran for president in 1908 against William Jennings Bryan. Taft had campaigned on a platform of lowing tariffs Payne-Aldrich Tariff (1909) passed by Taft = a set of tax regulation. It failed to significantly reduce tariffs of manufactured goods-increasing many rates. This angered progressives who believed Taft had abandoned progressivism The Republican Party Splits Taft’s actions made it impossible to hold together the wrong wings of the Republican Party. (Progressives want change and Conservatives did not) Problems within the Republican Party = mass defeat in 1912 & helped Democrats gain control of the House of Representatives for the first time in 18 years Bull Moose Party aka Progressive Party (another 3rd-party) led by Theodore Roosevelt Platform: direct election of senators and adoption in all states of the initiative, referendum, and recall. Advocated women’s suffrage, workmen’s comp, 8 hour workday, minimum wage for women, federal law against child labor, and the federal trade commission to regulate businesses Democrats Win in 1912 Woodrow Wilson – Democrat reformer and NJ governor Wilson only captured 42% of popular vote, he won overwhelming electoral victory and a Democratic majority in Congress He endorsed a progressive platform, called the New Freedom, which demanded even stronger antitrust legislation, banking reform, and reduced tariffs Wilson Financial Reforms > Antitrust Measures Trust – a corporation made up of many companies that receive certificates entitling them to dividends on profits earned Clayton’s Antitrust Act (1914) – strengthened Sherman Antitrust Act 1890 It intended to prevent the creation of monopolies by making it illegal to establish trusts that interfered with free trade It prohibited corporations from acquiring the stock of another if doing so would create a monopoly Federal Trade Commission Act (1914) – set up the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) This “watchdog” agency was given the power to investigate possible violations of regulatory statues, to require periodic reports from corporations, and to put an end to a number of unfair business practices 7.03 – Effects of racial segregation on United States’ society To what extent were the social, political, and economic standing of African Americans positively affected by progressive efforts? What did it mean to be black in America at the turn of the century? Why did multiple perspectives develop for addressing racial injustice during the Progressive Era? De jure segregation – racial separation (segregation) created by the law De facto segregation – when segregation is a result of custom and culture, it is a fact, but not a law Roosevelt and Civil Rights Roosevelt failed to support civil rights of African-Americans, although, he did not support of hew individual African Americans Roosevelt invited Booker T. Washington to White House (symbolic gesture) Washington respected by powerful whites, but faced opposition from AfricanAmericans like W.E.B. DuBois, for his accommodation of segregationists and for blaming black poverty on blacks- urging them to accept discrimination At a Niagara Falls convention in 1909, DuBois and others founded the NAACP – National; Association for the Advancement of Colored People Restrictions on Civil Rights Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) – Supreme Court case saying segregation was permissible if facilities were equal (Separate but equal) Wilmington race riot (1898) Jim Crow Laws – laws requiring segregation Disenfranchisement – keeping African Americans from voting Literacy Tests – reading tests designed to keep African Americans from voting Poll Taxes – a fee that people must pay before being permitted to vote Grandfather Clause – laws exempting men from certain voting restrictions if they had already voted or if they ancestors who had voted prior to blacks being granted suffrage Great Migration – many African Americans moved North after Reconstruction, when civil rights became restricted 7.04 – Impact of technological changes on economic, social, and cultural life What was the economic and social impact of the technological changes of the Progressive Era? How was American culture redefined during the Progressive Era? Does society cause government to change or does government cause society to change? Electricity – General Electric Company was formed in 1892 to take over Thomas Edison’s electric light business. Electricity became available to consumers to power household appliances Mail Order Catalogs – a rise in goods being purchased through the mail Kodak Camera – took still pictures Movie Camera – took moving pictures Wright Brothers – had the first successful airplane flight in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina Henry Ford’s Innovations : $5 day – Ford paid his workers more than the average manufacturers, but foreign workers had to enroll in English and civics classes and let investigators, inspect their homes. Graduation ceremonies occurred in which workers shed their ethnic identities and became “Americans” Assembly Line – a manufacturing process in which each worker does one specialized task in the construction of the final product. Ford did not invent the assembly line, but he made it more efficient Model T – Ford’s first successfully marketable lightweight, gas-powered car Skyscrapers – the Bessemer Process (steel production) and the invention of the elevator allowed for the building of high-rises in cities Goal 8 the Great War and its Aftermath (1914-1930) GOAL 8 Alliances Allies Archduke Franz Ferdinand Central Powers Fourteen Points Imperialism Isolationism/Neutrality League of Nations Lusitania Militarism Modern Warfare Nationalism Propaganda Rationing Selective Service Act Treaty of Versailles U-Boat Submarine Warfare War Industries Board Woodrow Wilson Zimmermann Telegram GOAL 8 – The Great War and its Aftermath He assassination was the immediate spark of WWI in Europe The building up of nations militaries Forming agreements with other countries that if one should go to the war, the other will support them A larger, more powerful country taking over a smaller, weaker country Pride in one’s nation British boat sunk by a German U-boat (a cause of the US’s entry into WWI) German submarines continued with unrestricted warfare even after promising to warn foreign ships (long term causes of the US entry into WWI) A note written from the Germans to Mexico promising an alliance and returning land from the U.S. if Mexico helped Germany defeat the U.S. into WWI United States, Great Britain, Russia, France, Italy Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire President of the U.S. during WWI. He ran for re-election in 1916 and won using the slogan “He kept up out of war”. Created the Fourteen Points Required young men to register for the draft When a country keeps to itself (the policy the United States attempted to follow at the onset of WWI in Europe) Trench Warfare, “No Man’s Land”, Mustard Gas, Tanks, Airplanes, Telephones Woodrow Wilson’s plan for the end of WWI which aimed to create a lasting peace. This included the League of Nations Ended WWI – punished Germany by having them accept blame for WWI and pay $33 billion in war reparations. Included League of Nations. The US refused to ratify this treaty and made their own peace with Germany Organization to keep the peace through discussion of problems instead of war Government agency created to oversee production of goods during the war Tactics used to convince people to support the war effort Individuals limit the amount of goods they use so that supplies can be provided for the military Goal 8 – The Great War and Its Aftermath (1914-1930) 11 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Across Down 8. President of the United States during World War I 1. Austria-Hungary, Germany 9. Woodrow Wilson’s plan for peace at the end of WWI 2. An underlying cause of WWI, when countries became allied with each other 10. An underlying cause of WWI, pride of a country 11. An underlying cause of WWI, when countries build up their military 3. Organization proposed by Wilson and included in the Treaty of Versailles designed to talk out international problems 12. An underlying cause of WWI, when larger, more powerful countries took over smaller, weaker nations 4. Ship sunk by German U-boats which killed 128 Americans 5. United States, Great Britain, France, Italy, Russia 13. Note from Germany to Mexico attempting to persuade Mexico to help the Germans beat the Americans in WWI 6. Type of submarine the Germans used in unrestricted submarine warfare 7. New type of fighting in WWI which led to much disease and death Goal 8 – the Great War and its Aftermath (1914- 1930) 8.01 – Why the United States remained neutral at the beginning of World War I but later became involved Why was the U.S. unable to maintain a policy of neutrality during World War I? What factors combined to draw the world and ultimately the U.S. into World War I? Is it possible for a nation to remain neutral during a conflict in another part of the world? 8.02 – Political and military turning points of the war and their significance to the outcome of the conflict How were certain political and military events significant to the outcome of the war? To what extent did the military, political, and diplomatic turning point of World War I help to determine the outcome of the war? How did the United States’ entry affect the nations already involved in the conflict? Causes of World War I Short-Term Cause Archduke Ferdinand, hair to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and his wife were killed on a visit to Bosnia. Austria-Hungary declared war to Serbia (thinking they were behind the attack) Other countries became involved due to alliances Long- Term Cause Militarism – nations of Europe had been building up their armies and weapons Alliances – European countries had created a system of alliances to keep a balance of power Imperialism – European countries had been competing for influence about the world Nationalism – countries wanted to gain power and took actions that were in their own interest Changing Warfare The Start of World War I Allies – Russia, France, great Britain Central Powers – Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire President Woodrow Wilson issues a statement declaring the United States a neutral or isolationist country in order to protect trade At home in the U.S. U.S. Becomes Involved in World War I U-Boat submarine Warfare – German submarines were attacking unarmed Ally merchant and passenger ships without warning. Several Americans were killed in the attacks Election of 1916 – Woodrow Wilson was reelected president under the slogan “he kept us out of war” Zimmerman Telegram – a telegram from Germany to Mexico was intercepted. Germany attempted to convince Mexico to declare war on the U.S. in return for land April 6th 1917the U.S. entered in WWI with President Wilson saying we must “Make the world safe for democracy” The War’s Conclusion Trench Warfare – armies dug long trenches in which they hid, they would stand and shoot out the top short distances away from each other o “No Man’s Land” – an unoccupied region between the two armies Mustard gas – an efficient way to kill a large number of people Tanks, airplanes U.S. Entry into War Russian and Bolshevik Revolutions – with the shift from autocracy to a republic, then to communism, the United States was more willing to ally with Russia in WWI In 1917, The American Expeditionary Force (aka doughboys) led by General John J. Pershing was the 1st set of American troops to arrive in Europe. The Allies only used the group as reinforcements; therefore, they had little impact during the battles African American troops served in segregated units and were often not allowed to fight in battle Selective Service Act – started the draft for young men to serve in the military The war opened up many jobs of minorities o Many African Americans moved North for factory jobs (the Great Migration) o Women were able to work more, which had a hand in the 19th amendment War Industries Board, War labor Board, and Food & Fuel Administration all focused on the American economy supporting the war effort Wilson’s 14 points – stated support for open peace covenants, no secret agreements, freedom of the seas, free trade, disarmament, adjustment of colonial claims, a League of Nations, and the rights of minorities o League of Nations – a proposal of a group of countries that would keep peace, presented to Senate in what became known as his “peace without victory’ speech. Under the League of Nations, an attack on one was considered an attack on all The United States does not join the League of Nations because they did not want to be tied to all of the other countries (isolationism) “The Big Four” - these were the four men that were responsible for creating the peace after WWI. They were President Woodrow Wilson of the United States, the Prime Minister of Great Britain, the Premier of Italy, and the Premier of France Treaty of Versailles – France was given territory; the German Rhineland area would be demilitarized. England and the U.S. would protect France. Germany was give full responsibility for the war and was forced to billions of dollars in war reparations. This would become a cause of World War II 8.03 – Asses the political, economic, social, and cultural effects of the war on the United States and other nations How did the war impact American’s society, economic, political, and cultural institutions? To what extent did World War I change U.S. society and affect other nations? How did the industrial and technological advancements in this ear impact America and the rest of the global community? How are civil liberties challenged during times of conflict? 18th Amendment – prohibition 19th Amendment – women’s suffrage Committee on Public Information – muckraker George Creel was appointed by President Wilson to head this war propagation committee which promoted the war domestically while publicizing American war aims abroad Food Administration – Herbert Hoover headed this organization during WWI, designed to conserve food at home so that it may be provided to allied troops War Industries Board – established to mobilize the nation’s resources for war while protecting the economy’s basic structure and character for the peace that was to follow Espionage and Sedition Acts – provided the government with powers over the rights of free speech and press Eugene V. Debs – started the American Railway Union. He became a socialist leader who opposed World War I and was imprisoned for 10 years during the war under the Espionage Act Industrial Workers of the World – a labor union organized to opposition to capitalism and conservation unionism. It believed in revolutionary industrial unionism and ‘One Big Union’ that combined commitment to industrial unionism, direct action, and building a union controlled by its members Schenck v. United States (1919) – the case was opened against the Espionage Act, but the Supreme Court decided that in a time of war, extraordinary conditions may allow Congress the right to forbid printed materials or speech aimed at hindering the war effort. The test for “a clear and present danger” was formulated to deal with questions regarding freedom of speech Palmer Raids – because of a fear that Russian communists were going to attempt to overthrown the American government, thousands of Russians and socialists in the U.S. were arrested and held without triad. This was also known as the “Red Scare”. People had an increased feeling on nativism United Mine Workers – The Coal Miners Strike (1919) with their leader, John L. Lewis, pushed for a raise and shorter worker hours. The court ordered the miners back to work and an arbitrator put an end to the dispute Washington Naval Conference – international conference called by the United States to limit the naval arms race and to work out security agreements in the Pacific area Dawes Plan – American investors loaned Germany $2.5 million to pay back Britain and France with annual payments on a fixed scale Goal 9 Prosperity and Depression (1919-1939) GOAL 9 Back to Africa Movement Black Tuesday Bonus Army Bootleggers Buying on Margin Dust Bowl Easy Credit FDR’s “Fireside Chats” Flappers Harlem Renaissance Hawley-Smoot Tariff Herbert Hoover Hoovervilles Jazz Ku Klux Klan Lost Generation NAACP New Deal Programs Prohibition Sacco and Vanzetti Scopes Trial Social Security Speakeasies Teapot Dome Scandal United Negro Improvement Association GOAL 9 – Prosperity & Depression The secretary of the interior secretly leased oil-rich public land to private companies in return for money and land Established the highest protective tariff in U.S. history, worsening the depression Buying stocks without the money to back them October 29, 1929, the day the stock market crashed President of the United States during the Great Depression A reason for the start of the Great Depression; people could “buy not, pay later” using installment plans Shantytowns nicknamed for President Herbert Hoover, who did not believe in direct relief during the Great Depression World War I veterans who went to Washington demanding payment of benefits they believed they were entitled to that they did not receive Nickname for the mid-west during the Great Depression; dry conditions led to poor agricultural production Musical style born in New Orleans, uses lots of bass; famous musicians include Louis Armstrong, Bessie Davis Discontented authors who left America because they did not like the changing and modernization of society; included F. Scott Fitzgerald and Earnest Hemingway 18th Amendment; prohibited the manufacturing, sale, and consumption of alcohol Illegal clubs which sold alcohol Illegal manufacturers of alcohol Weekly radio shows done by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in which he addressed the American people and discussed the state of America Discriminatory and often violent hate group targeting anyone who was not a white protestant African American literacy awakening, led by authors such as Langston Hughes and Zora Neal Hurston Started by Marcus Garvey, this movement encouraged African Americans not to attempt to integrate into white society, but to join together and revive the powerful societies that their ancestors had belonged to in Africa Organization started by Marcus Garvey that encouraged African Americans to untie and build a separate society Started with the help of W.E.B. Du Bois, Organization that aimed for nothing less than full equality among the races Italian immigrants who were charged, convicted, and killed for the murder of two men. Many people thought they were mistreated because of their beliefs and others thought it was because they were immigrants Court case in which a biology teacher was tried for challenging a Tennessee lay that outlawed the teaching of evolution; a fight over the role of science and religion in public schools Women of the 1920s who cut their hair short, wore make-up & short skirts, and went out dancing and drinking; challenging the norms of society FDR New Deal program that provided an income to the elderly, disabled, and unemployed Programs created by FDR to help the nation recover from the Great Depression, provided jobs, and stimulate the economy; included: Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA), Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), Public Works Administration (PWA), Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), Works Progress Administration (WPA), National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act) Goal 9 – Prosperity and Depression (1919-1939) 1 2 4 3 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1112 113 14 15 16 17 18 19 19 2 21 20 22 Across Down 3. Illegal clubs where people could go to drink alcohol 4. Court case which argued the role of church versus state in education 6. Part of the country that was dry and could not grow crops 7. The idea of buying something you can’t afford now, but paying for it later 13. New type of music which was born in New Orleans 15. Racially/culturally discriminatory group which re-surged in the 1920 16. The Harlem Renaissance’s best-known poet 17. Author of The Sun Also Rises and A Farewell to Arms 18. Organization formed to promote racial equality and specifically protect African Americans’ right 19. A time period of flourishing African American literature, art, politics, and music 20. Constructed dams and power plants in the Tennessee Valley region; gave people jobs 21. Agency created in 1933 to insure individuals’ bank accounts, protecting people from bank failure 22. Neighborhoods of shacks built of cardboard and scrap 1. FDR’s popular radio show 2. Time period when the manufacturing, sale, and consumption of alcohol was illegal 3. Places where the poor and unemployed could get a free meal 5. An agency established as part of the New Deal that put young unemployed men to work building roads, parks, planting trees, etc. 8. President during the Great Depression 9. Group of writers who disliked the change in America, so they moved to Europe 10. Movies with sound 11. People who produced and sold alcohol illegally 12. Founder of the “Back to Africa” Movement 14. Women of the 1920s who immersed themselves in modern culture – short skirts, short hair, make-up, dancing, etc. Goal 9 – Prosperity and Depression (1919-1939) 9.01 – Cycle of economic boom and bust in the 1920s and 1930s How did the economic, social, and political events of the early 1900s lead to the economic cycles of the twenties and the thirties? How did the variations in the economy in the 1920s cause major changes in that decade and in the 1930s? How did early government reactions to the economic bust serve to worsen its effects? Industrialization – when a society changes and becomes based more heavily on industry Laissez-faire – the government’s “hands-off” approach to business and economy Mechanization – jobs began using more machines and needed less human labor. Ex: assemble line Rugged Individualism – the belief that all individuals, or nearly all individuals, can succeed on their own and that government help for people should be minimal 9.02 – Prosperity for different segments of society during this period How were different groups of people affected by the business cycles of the 1920s and 1930s? How do economic changes impact society? Why and how does economic prosperity vary so much from one segment of society to the next? Leading the up the Great Depression Urbanization – cities spread both up and down with increasing population Installment Plan – people could buy one easy credit and then pay off their debt in smaller amounts of a monthly basis instead of paying one lump sum Overproduction – more goods were produced than necessary, therefore lowing the prices Hoovervilles – homeless men, women, and children were forced to take up residence in shacks as a result of the Great Depression. Angry, cold and hungry Americans, who had no other place to reside, nicknamed the shacks in honor of President Herbert Hoover Breadlines & Soup Kitchens – people received free food – almost 25% of the nation was unemployed Bonus Army (1932) – a gathering of 12,000 to 15,000 World War I veterans who, with their wives and children, converged to Washington, D.C., demanding President Hoover give immediate bonus payments for wartime services, to alleviate the economic hardship of the Great Depression Dust Bowl – a term born in the hard times from the people who lived in the drought-stricken region during the Great Depression. Farmers suffered greatly Harding Administration (1921-1923) Warren G. Harding – Republican President (1921-1923) who ran under the slogan “Less government in business and more business in government.” While in office, the Teapot Dome Scandal occurred. Harding’s secretary of the interior Albert B. Falls secretly leased oil-rich public land to private companies in return for money and land. Falls was later found guilty of bribery and became the first American to be convicted of a felony while holding at Cabinet post In the early 1920s, Republicans focused on a “Return to Normalcy.” The ceased to promise progressive reforms and instead aimed to settle into traditional patterns of government Coolidge Administration (1923-1929) After the death of President Harding, VP Calvin Coolidge took the office. He helped restore people’s faith in their government and in the Republican Party. The next year, Coolidge was elected president Speculation – the buying of stocks and bonds on the chance of a quick profit, while ignoring the risks. Many began buying on margin – paying a small percentage of stock process as a down payment and borrowing the rest Hoover Administration (1929-1933) Herbert Hoover – 1928 campaign pledge: “A chicken in every pot and a car in every garage.” Hoover tried to reassure the nation. He opposed any federal form of welfare, or direct relief to the needy. He said that handouts would weaken people selfrespect and “moral fiber.” He believed individuals, charities, and local organizations should help. His response shocked and frustrated Americans. “Black Tuesday” – October 29, 1929 – the bottom fell out of the market and the nation’s confidence collapsed. By mid-November, investors lost about $30 billion; an amount equal to the costs we spent on the war Hawley-Smoot Tariff – passed the 1930 established the highest protective tariff in U.S. history. This was supposed to protect American farmers, but ended up hurting them. By reducing the flow of goods into the U.S.; the tariff prevented other countries from earning American currency to American goods (World trade declined) 9.03 – Social, intellectual and technological changes of lifestyle in the U.S. How do technological and social changes impact American traditions? To what extent should the federal government attempt to effect economic and social change? What should the role of the federal government be in the economic and social lives of its citizens? What long time effects did the New Deal have on the United States? Technology – radio, electricity, automobiles, and airplanes modernized America Music – The Jazz Age – grew out of African American music of the South (blues), was largely improvised with an off-beat, syncopated, rhythm o Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington – influential musicians Movies – movie attendance skyrocketed in both silent films and “talkies” o The Jazz Singer in 1927 was the first film with a sound, a “talkie” Literature o Lost Generation – a group of American writers disenchanted by the popculture of the United States. They left the U.S. for Europe (primarily Paris). Authors included F. Scott Fitzgerald and Earnest Hemingway o Sinclair Lewis – a writer who was the first American to win the Nobel Peace Prize in literature. He was among the eras most outspoken cities Prohibition – the time period after the 18th Amendment and Volstead Act in which the manufacturing, production, sale, and consumption of alcohol was illegal o Speakeasies – bars that operated illegally o Bootleggers – suppliers of illegal alcohol 9.04 – Challenges to traditional practices in religion, race, and gender 9.05 – Impact of the New Deal reforms in enlarging the role of the federal government in American life How were government programs in the 1920s and 30s a challenge to traditional practices in religion, race, and gender? How does conflict promote change in a nation’s identity? To what degree did American experience social progress during the 1920s and 30s? How was America changed the 1920s and 30s? How did the role of the federal government change during the 1920s and 30s? Is it appropriate for the government to be involved in social and economic change? To what degree did America change positively or negatively during the 1920s and 30s? Why did citizens allow the federal government to increase its power during the Great Depression, and how did it impact the future of the nation? Women FDR’s New Deal African Americans Social Security – started by the Social Security Act, it was one of the New Deal’s most important achievements. It provided financial security in three major parts: old age insurance for retirees 65 or older and their spouses, unemployment compensation system, and aid for families with dependent children and the disabled Suffrage – the 19th Amendment first gave omen the right to vote in 1920. Women began working out of the home more, attending more social clubs, and having a greater voice in society Flappers – American women of the 1920s were more rebellious, energetic, and bold, wearing shorter skirts, bobbed hair, and heavy make-up. While not many women actually adopted the flapper lifestyle, many did adapt new fashion ideas from them, modernizing the American woman Eleanor Roosevelt was an outspoken advocate for women’s rights Blacks were still feeling the effects of segregation because of things like Jim Crow Laws and the result of the Supreme Court case Plessy v. Ferguson African Americans also felt resistance and violence from groups such as the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) which was formed against anyone who was not a white protestant. In just one year, KKK membership grew from 100,000 to 4 million Many African Americans joined in Great Migration, moving from the South to the North for better job opportunities and to escape the violence of the South. While the North did offer some relief, it was not the land of equality many hoped for Harlem Renaissance – the African American literacy awakening of the 1920s, celebrating African American culture o Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston were two famous authors United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) – led by Marcus Garvey, the UNIA aimed to build up African Americans’ self respect and economic power. Garvey in his Back to Africa Movement urged African Americans to return to “motherland Africa” to create a self-governing nation o Some African American leaders criticized Garvey because of his call for the separation of races The Nation Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), led by W.E.B. DuBois, fought to protect the rights of African Americans Immigrants Italian immigrants Sacco and Vanzetti were convicted, sentenced to death, and killed within 4 months of being arrested for the robbery and murder of a man. Many Americans believed they were arrested mainly because they were immigrants with radical beliefs The National Origins Act was passed in 1924, reducing the quota of immigrants allowed in to 2 percent of the 1890 census. It also specifically excluded the Japanese. President Harding believed that restricting immigrating helped the cause of social stability Religion Religious traditionalists pushed Christians toward the idea of fundamentalism, which argued that God inspired the Bible, so it cannot contain contradictions or errors, it is literally true o Aimee Semple McPherson and Billy Sunday were two influential fundamentalists The Scopes Trial – after a small town teacher taught the theory of evolution in his biology class, he was taken to court and the case became a battle between two of the counties greatest lawyers – William Jennings Bryan (Fundamentalist) and Clarence Darrow (supporter of free speech) over constitutional rights and the changing beliefs and values of the United States. As expected, since Scopes had clearly violated Tennessee law, William Jennings Bryan and the fundamentalist won “Brain Trust” – FDR carefully picked advisers who began to formulate a new set of policies designed to alleviate the problems of the Depression. This became known as the New Deal. – a phrase taken from a campaign speck in which Roosevelt had promised “a New Deal for the American people” Its policy is focused on three general goals” relief for the needy, economic recovery, and financial reform Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) – put 2.5 million young, unmarried men to work maintaining forests, beaches, and parks. They earned $30 a month and had free housing, food, job training, and healthcare Agriculture Adjustment Act (AAA) – tried to raise farm prices through subsidies, government financial assistance. The AAA used taxes to pay farmers not to raise certain crops, in hopes that lowering the production would cause prices to go up Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) – established by the GlassStegall Banking Act of 1933, the FDIC was established to insure bank deposits up to %5,000 dollars. The FDIC prevented banks from closing, and it still protects our money today Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) – set up after the Federal Securities Act (which required companies to release information about their finances if they sell stock), the SEC was set up by Congress to regulate the stock market. The commission still exists today National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) – sought to raise prices and balance the unstable economy through extensive planning. Codes were made to establish fair business practices; it controlled working conditions, production prices, and established a minimum wage Public Works Administration (PWA) – preceded by the NIRA, the PWA completed projects ranging from dams to bridges on highways Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) – helped farmers and created jobs by reactivating a hydroelectric power plant used during WWI. It provided cheap power, flood control, and recreational activities in the entire Tennessee Valley Works Progress Administration (WPA) – provided work for more than 8 million citizens. It improved thousands of schools, playgrounds, hospitals, airfields, and also supported creative works of artists and writers National Labor Relations Board (Wagner Act) – legalized union practices such as collective bargaining and closed shops (workplaces only open to union members). The NLRB enforced the Wagner Act Fair Labor Standards – set the maximum work hours for the week at 44 hours, to drop to 40 hours after 2 years. It also set a minimum wage ($.25, which would eventually be raised). It set rules for the employment of those under 16, as well as banned hazardous work for those under the age of 18 Goal 10 WWII and the Beginning of the Cold War (1930-1963) GOAL 10 Adolf Hitler Baby boom Battles in Europe Battles in the Pacific Bay of Pigs Berlin Airlift Berlin Wall Blitzkrieg Cuban Missile Crisis Douglas MacArthur Eisenhower Doctrine Fidel Castro Four Freedoms G.I. Bill Iron Curtain Island Hopping Japanese Internment Kellogg-Briand Pact Korean War Korematsu v. United States (1944) Lend-Lease Act Levittown Limited Test Ban Treaty Manhattan Project Marshall Plan N.A.T.O. Neutrality Acts Non-Aggression Pact Nuremberg Trials Pearl Harbor Rationing Rosie the Riveter Selective Services Act Totalitarian Leaders Truman Doctrine U-2 Incident United Nations V-E Day, V-J Day War Bonds War Production Board Warsaw Pact Yalta & Potsdam GOAL 10 – World War II & the Beginning of the Cold War Benito Mussolini (Italy), Adolf Hitler (Germany), Emperor Hirohito (Japan), Joseph Stalin (Russia) Totalitarian leader who promised to lead Germany out of their depression and restore the country to the great nation it once was Agreement to outlaw law – but it could not be entered Series of laws enacted by the United States which aimed to keep the United States out of World War I Agreement between the Soviet Union and Germany that they would not attack each other Speech given by FDR describing what American should fight for Allowed the US to let countries who were important to its national security borrow supplies needed for war Site of Japanese attack on the United States which drew the US into WWII War strategy – “lightening war” Battle of Britain, Stalingrad, D-Day (Operation Overlord), Battle of the Bulge Battle of Midway, Iwo Jima, Okinawa Let the United States in the Pacific during WWII and the Korean War Battle strategy used in WWII to take over an island and then use it as a strategic base on their way to Japan Locations for the allies to discuss that would happen at the end of WWII Victory in Europe Day & Victory in Japan day for the Allies Led by J. Robert Oppenheimer, this secret project created the atomic bombs War crimes trials that convicted Nazi leaders of the atrocities committed during the Holocaust Requiring young men to register for the draft Government organization that oversaw the production of goods for war Individuals cut back on the goods that use so that more supplies can be used in the war effort Money invested in the government to support the war that has a small return over time Program to give returning GIs housing loans and free college education Suburbs built primarily for GIs; inexpensive because nearly all the houses were the same Population spike after WWI Image used to encourage women to leave the home and work in factories to help the war effort Rounding up of everyone of Japanese decent in the US and forcing them to live in camps for national security Supreme Court case which said its legal to take away civil rights during times of emergency Winston Churchill’s symbolic divide between the Communist East and Democratic West. United States policy to stop the spread of communism (containment) Plan to give economic aid to Western Europe after WWII so that nations would not fall in communism Allies sent food and supplies into West Berlin despite a Soviet Blockade War fought to contain communism at the 38th parallel after the Communist North invade the non-Communist South Added to the Truman Doctrine, saying that the United States would give aid to countries in the Middle East U.S. spy plane was shot down over the Soviet Union Communist leader of Cuba Embarrassing failure of an attempt by the U.S. to overthrow the Communist government of Cuba Wall dividing the city of Berlin between the Democratic West and Communist East Nuclear standoff between the USSR and US – the Cold War began to heat up Agreement not to test nuclear weapons in the atmosphere Group created to discuss problems between countries in an attempt to avoid war North Atlantic Treaty Organization – a military alliance to the United States joined Military alliance between the Soviet Union and their communist satellite nations Goal 10 – World War II and the Beginning of the Cold War (1930s-1963) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 24 25 26 27 Across Down 3. Regulated industries during the war to create war materials 1. The secret undertaking to create the atomic bomb 4. The closest the US and USSR came to nuclear war, when the USSR had nuclear weapons in Cuba and the US had nuclear weapons in Turkey 2. Law which said the U.S. could let countries important to the U.S. security “borrow” war materials 5. Term the describes the prevention of the spread of communism 6. Military alliance between the Soviet Union and their satellite nations 7. Laws passed by the United States in an attempt to stay out of WWII 9. United State’s plan to contain communism 8. Tactics to convince people to support the war 11. Military alliance of the United States and European nations 10. Nazi leader of Germany 14. Famous lady on a propaganda poster encouraging women to work in war industries 12. Creator of the atomic bomb 16. Important turning point in the war in the Pacific 13. Increase in population after WWII 21. Plan to give money to nations in order to support them in their resistance of communism 15. War crimes trials which convinced Nazi leaders 22. Attacked by the Japanese, brought the U.S. into WWII 23. Embarrassing attempt by the U.S. to overthrow the communist government of Cuba 25. Required men to register for the draft 27. U.S. strategy to take over strategic islands in the Pacific on the way to Japan 16. Wall that separated democratic West Berlin and communist East Berlin 17. War the “Forgotten War” 18. Also known as Normandy or Operation Overlord; an invasion of France by the Allies to overtake Axis troops 19. More powerful than the atomic bomb 20. Money given to the government to support the war 24. Victory in Europe Day Goal 10 – WWII and the Beginning of the Cold War (1930-1963) 10.01 – World War II and reasons for the United States’ entry into the war What factors combined to draw the world and ultimately the U.S. into World War II? Was U.S. involvement in the World War II inevitable? Were the reasons for the U.S.’s entry into the World War II justifiable? Concepts Which Led to Conflict Isolationism – America’s longstanding reluctance to become involved in European alliances and wars Totalitarianism – a type of government in which all social, political, economic, intellectual, and cultural activities are controlled by the rulers of a state Militarism – belief or desire of a government or people that a country should maintain a strong military capability and be prepared to use it Nationalism – a love and pride for one’s country Appeasement – the policy of granting concessions to potential enemies in order maintain peace Fascism – authoritarian nationalist political ideologies or mass movements that are concerned with notions of cultural decline Political Leaders Allies o Joseph Stalin – Russia (Communist) o Winston Churchill – Great Britain (Democracy) o Franklin D. Roosevelt – United States (Democracy) Axis Powers o Emperor Hirohito – Japan (Militarism) o Benito Mussolini – Italy (Fascist) o Adolf Hitler – Germany (Fascist) Political Events Kellogg-Braid Pact (1928) – made war illegal. This failed because there was no way to enforce the law Neutrality Acts (1935) – passed by the United States prior to their entry into WWII, these acts forbade giving any type of aid to countries at war Quarantine Speech (1937) – a speech by FD which called for an international “quarantine of aggressor nations” through economic pressure Munich Pact (1938) – it permitted immediate occupation by Germany of the Sudetenland, a region of Czechoslovakia Non-Aggression Pact (1939) – an agreement between Germany and USSR not the attach each other. It was supposed to last 10 years but lasted less than 2 Four Freedoms (1941) – a speech by FDR that stated that people all over the world should have (1) Freedom of Speech (2) Freedom of Religion (3) Freedom of Want (4) Freedom of Fear Lend-Lease Act (March 1941) – this act basically repealed the Neutrality Acts, allowing the United States to aid any country that they saw as essential to U.S. security Pearl Harbor – in December of 1941, Japan attacked a U.S. military base in Pearl Harbor, HI. This became the immediate cause of the U.S.’s entry into WWII 10.02 – Identify military, political, and diplomatic turning points of the war To what extent did the military, political, and diplomatic turning points of World War II determine the outcome and aftermath of the war? How were America and the world different because of the events of World War II? What changes in society resulted from the treatment of various groups of people? Propaganda – methods used to convince the public to support war efforts Blitzkrieg – German method of war which included surprise air and land attacks Ally Leaders General George Patton – U.S. general involved with the invasion of Italy Douglas MacArthur - commanding general of the U.S. military in the Pacific Chester Nimitz – U.S. admiral who used the method of island hopping (U.S. strategy of attacking some islands and leaving others as they made their way across the Pacific Ocean to Japan) Major Battles/Important Events in WWII Battle of Britain (Aug. 1940) – German attack on Britain – mostly by air Battle of Midway (June 1942) – after this Ally victory over Japan, the Japanese were unable to launch any more offensive actions in the Pacific Stalingrad (Sept. 1942) – Germans surrendered to the Allies in Russia and it became a major turning point of the war in the East D-Day (Operation Overlord) (June 1944) – the Allied troops began the liberation of Western Europe Battle of the Bulge (Dec. 1944) – a battle in between Germany and the Allies in which after much back and forth, with the help of the United States, and the Allies defeat the Germans Iwo Jima (Nov. 1944) – Americans attacked Japan by air and by land Okinawa (April 1945) – 100,000 Japanese v. 180,000 Allies. After months of fighting 7,200 Japanese surrendered. Over 50,000 Americans died Casablanca, Tehran, Yalta, Potsdam – Conferences between the big world powers discussing the end of the war and how to secure lasting peace Manhattan Project – led by J. Robert Oppenheimer, this was the project which developed the atomic bomb which was dropped twice on Hiroshima and Nagasaki V-E Day, V-J Day – Victory in Europe and Victory in Japan Days Genocide/Holocaust – the systematic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews by the Nazi regime Nuremburg Trials – Trials of the Nazi commanders for the crimes on humanity of the Holocaust. 12 were sentenced to be hanged, showing that leaders must he help responsible for their actions 10.03 – Effects of the war on American economic How and why did World War II impact the economic, social, cultural, and political life of the U.S.? How did that war bring about innovation and change on the home front? How are civil liberties challenged during times of conflict? Should civil liberties be denied during a time of war? War Efforts at Home Selective Services Act – draft for young men to sign up to serve in the military in WWI. This was the first peacetime draft War Production Board – government agency that oversaw production of goods in WWII Rationing – conserving food and goods to help war efforts War Bonds – helped rail money for the government and the war Rosie the Riveter - media propaganda creation devised to encourage women to fill in for men while they were fighting World War II WACS – a division of the military in which women served Effects of WWII on American Society G.I. Bill – provided money for colleges and loans to buy homes for people in the military Levittown – suburban neighborhoods. Homes were built quickly and for less money Baby Boomers – the population greatly increased after WWII due to an interested economy and men returning home from war. The United States saw increased conformity during this time Restrictions on Civil Liberties Civil Liberties – freedoms that protect individuals from the government to a certain extent (examples: freedom of speech, religion, etc.) Japanese Internment – during WWII in the U.S., Japanese were forced to live in prison-like camps because of U.S. fear of spies and cooperation with the Japanese government Korematsu v. United States (1944) – court case which said that internment camps were legal and furthermore they were needed for the security of the U.S. 10.04 – Changes in the direction of foreign policy related in the beginning of the Cold War How did the events of World War II help facilitate the onset of the cold War and influence American foreign policy throughout for the 20th century? To what extent was American’s decision to drop to atomic bomb a viable option to end the war in the Pacific? What impact did the World War II have on the economic, social, cultural, and political life of the United States? Containment – the United States’ policy to stop the spread of communism Iron Curtain – in 1946, Churchill made a speech in which he said that the Soviet Union had created an Iron Curtain of communist domination and the oppression Truman Doctrine (1947) – stated that the policy of the USA must be to contain communism through supporting people who are resisting communist oppression Marshall Plan (1947) – tried to strengthen European nations by giving them money to create strong democracies and economies so the nations would not support communism (Soviet Union) Berlin Airlift (1948-1952) – drops of goods by the U.S into Soviet controlled East Berlin after WWII Korean War (1950-1953) – Post WWII Korea was split along the 38th parallel. The North was communist and the South was anti-communist. The North invaded the South and the U.S. immediately called for UN police action. Russia supported the North, allies the South. A three year was ensured, and in the end the line remained drawn Hydrogen Bomb (1953) – after receiving word that the USSR had created an atomic bomb, the U.S. felt the need to build a bigger/better/more powerful bomb Eisenhower Doctrine (1957) – Eisenhower continued Truman’s policy of containment, adding the Middle East in the protection from the spread of communism U-2 Incident (1960) – a US spy plan was shot down over Russia, showing the strength and abilities of the USSR Bay of Pigs (1961) – the U.S. made a failed attempt to overthrow the Cuban government by supporting Cuban rebels who were against communist leader, Fidel Castro Berlin Wall (1989) – after WWII, the Soviets built a wall to split East and West Germany. It stopped people from fleeing from the East to the West. The wall symbolized the division of the Cold War. 10.05 – Organizations established to maintain peace How effective have organizations been in maintaining peace in the world? How has the status of being a superpower affected the relations between the U.S. and other nations? To what degree have peace-keeping organizations between successful in their purpose? United Nations – the United States, Great Britain, and the USSR agreed to create the UN so that nations could settle their differences peacefully. They bet at Casablanca, Tehran, Potsdam, and Yalta among other places O.A.S. – Organization of American States (North and South American) – promoted cooperation between democratic nations N.A.T.O. – North Atlantic Treaty Organization – group of U.S. and European allies who agreed to a policy of collective security (attack on one = attack on all) Warsaw Pact – the Soviet Union’s response to NATO – a military alliance between the USSR and its satellite nations Goal 11 Recovery, Prosperity, and Turmoil (1945-1980) GOAL 11 24th Amendment 25th Amendment 26th Amendment AFL-CIO Alger-Hiss American Indian Movement (AIM) Biological Weapons Black Power Movement/Black Panthers Brown v. Board of Education C.O.R.E. César Chávez Civil Rights Act of 1964 Counterculture Détente Environment Protection Agency Fair Deal Fall of Saigon, 1975 Freedom Riders Gloria Steinem Gulf of Tonkin Resolution Ho Chi Minh House Un-American Activities Committee Julius and Ethel Rosenberg Kent State Little Rock Nine Malcolm X March to Washington Martin Luther King, Jr. Montgomery Bus Boycotts My Lai Incident NASA National Defense Education Act National Highway Act National Organization of Women New Frontier Paris Peace Accords Phyllis Schlafly Roe v. Wade (1973) Rosa Parks S.A.L.T. I and II S.N.C.C. Sam Ervin/Senate Watergate Committee Sit-ins Taft-Hartley Act Technological Innovations Tet Offensive The Feminine Mystique Thurgood Marshall U.S. v. Nixon (1974) Voting Rights Act of 1965 War Powers Act (1973) Watergate Scandal GOAL 11 – Recovery, Prosperity, and Turmoil Government organization created to seek out people who were disloyal to the United States Prominent US government figure who was found guilty of and jailed for being a communist Couple charged, convicted, and executed by the espionage – leaking atomic secrets to the Soviets Amended the National Labor Relations Act, establishing control of labor disputes by enlarging the National Labor Relations Board Truman’s domestic program which built on FDR’s New Deal. Believed that federal government should guarantee economic opportunity and social stability Labor unions created in 1955 by the merger of the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations Authorized the building of highways throughout the nation, which would be the biggest public works project in nation’s history Permanent relaxation in international affairs during the Cold War Strategic Arms Limitation Talks – two rounds of talks and agreements between the US and USSR concerning nuclear arms Congress of Racial Equality, and interracial organization that tried to bring change though peaceful confrontation Court case that overturned Plessy v. Ferguson (separate but equal) and said that school must by integrated Civil rights leader appointed to the Supreme Court in 1967. He ruled over many important civil rights cases for many decades Women who challenged segregation on buses in 1955 which led too the boycott of the bus system Boycott of the public bus system in Montgomery, Alabama after Rosa Parks was asked to give up her seat Leader of the Civil Rights Movement who advocated non-violent means if achieving equality. He was assassinated in 1968 President Eisenhower sent in troops to protect 9 African American students entering into Central High School in Little Rock, AR Organization of young African Americans who wanted immediate change. Later because associated with the Black Power Movement Method of protesting segregation where people would sit in a restaurant until they were served Protesters tested desegregation laws by riding buses into the South – troops were sent to protect them 20,000 people came to Washington, DC to protest civil rights – where Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his “I have a dream” speech Called for equal rights in jobs, schools, voting, and public services Allowed federal officials to register voters where locals would not allow; eliminated literacy tests Important figure in the Black Power Movement who later changed his views away from violent protest. Assassinated in 1965 Militant group who fought for civil rights. They called for African Americans to unite – Black Nationalism. (Marcus Garvey) Movement by young people who wanted to resist the mainstream of dominant culture. This included changing music – rock & roll Written by Betty Friedan, told housewives if was okay to yearn for more than their accepted role as a wife and mother Fought for fair pay and equal opportunities for woman A women’s rights advocate who started Ms. Magazine Opposed the women’s movement, believed women belonged in the home with their family Legalized abortion Leader in the Latino Rights Movement Fought for treaty rights and better conditions/opportunities for Native Americans Enforced the Clean Air Act and the Clear Water Act Leader of Northern Vietnam Gave the president expanded powers to conduct war in Vietnam Agent Orange, Napalm Turning point of the Vietnam conflict when the US decides they do not want to fight anymore after a series of attacks by North Vietnam American troops killed 400 women and children Students were killed by the national guard while protesting the Vietnam War The US withdrew from the Vietnam War in 1973 Congress limited powers to conduct war The capital of South Vietnam fell to the North. Vietnam became united and communist Radio, Color TV, Nuclear Power, Computers Government agency created for space exploration Gave money to improve science and math in schools Peace Corps, Great Society, HUD, Head Start, VISTA, Medicare, National Endowment for the Humanities People in Nixon’s reelection campaign were cause breaking into the Democratic Party’s headquarters. Nixon tried to stop the investigation and cover it up Let the investigation and found that Nixon had tape-recorded many of his oral office conversations Nixon was told to turn over the takes. He did with 8 ½ minutes missing Abolition of poll taxes (1964) Provisions for the succession of the president and vice president 18 year old can vote (1971) Goal 11 – Recovery, Prosperity, and Turmoil (1945-1980) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 13 1 1 1 2 14 15 16 17 18 1 9 2 0 21 2 2 2 3 24 25 24. US space agency Across 1. Strategy for ending US involvement in Vietnam; involved the gradual withdrawal of troops and replacement with South Vietnamese forces 25. Married couple charged, convicted, and sentenced to death for leaking atomic secrets to the Soviets 3. Gave the president unlimited powers to send troops to war Down 4. Once of the most famous civil rights activists, assassinated by James earl Ray 2. Book by Betty Friedan that told women they did not have to be satisfied being a house wife 5. A type of peaceful protest where people refuse to leave an establishment 6. A historic bus trip taken by African Americans to the south to test the Supreme Court’s decision to ban segregation on interstate bus routes 7. A massive surprise attack by the Vietcong on South Vietnamese towns and cities 9. Lyndon B. Johnson’s program to reduce poverty and racial injustice 8. Limited the president’s rights to send troops into battle without Congress’ approval 15. More than 200 unarmed citizens, including women and children, were killed by US troops in Vietnam 10. A controversial civil rights leader who turned to the Nation of Islam and preached that whites were cause of the black condition 16. Supreme Court case that said that “separate but equal” was unconstitutional – forced integration 11. Nine African American students who volunteered to integrate into Little Rock’s Central High School 18. First satellite sent in to orbit (by USSR) 12. Government organization to protect the environment 19. Scandal involving President Nixon, caused hid resignation 13. Harry Truman’s economic program (an extension of the New Deal) 22. 1960s culture of the young people who rejected mainstream American society 14. Famous music festival that attracted more than 400,000 young people in 1969 15. Government program to provide health care to the elderly 16. A militant African American political organization formed to fight police brutality and provide services in the ghetto 17. The time period where tensions were eased between the US and USSR 20. National student activist group that pushed for integration 21. Agency that investigated communist activity in the United States 23. Supreme Court case that legalized abortion Goal 11 – Recovery, Prosperity, and Turmoil (1945-1980) 11.01 – Effects of the Cold War on economic, political, and social life in America How does a nation’s involvement in international conflict affect politics and society at home? To what extent did the effects of the cold War impact economic, political, and social life in America? Did the Cold War ultimately have a positive or negative impact on the United States? Social Effects “Duck and Cover” was suggested method of personal protection against the effects of a nuclear detonation which the United States government taught to citizens during the Civil War Fallout Shelters – an enclosed space specially designed to protect occupants from radioactive debris from a nuclear explosion House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) – created in 1938 to investigate alleged disloyalty and subversive activities on the part of private citizens, public employees, and those organizations suspected of having Communist ties Hollywood Blacklist – communities were said to be placing subversive messages into Hollywood films. The most famous group of blacklisted individuals was known as The Hollywood Ten, they refused to answer any questions from HUAC and were jailed by the government and blacklisted by Hollywood Economic Effects (Truman) Fair-Deal – Harry Truman’s domestic program which built on Roosevelt’s New Deal. Truman believed that the federal government should guarantee economic opportunity and social stability AFL-CIO – a voluntary federation of labor unions created in 1955 by the merger of the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations Economic Effects (Eisenhower) Taft-Hartley Act – amended much of the National Labor Relations (Wagner) Act of 1935, the federal law regulating labor relations of enterprises engaged in interstate commerce. The act established control of labor disputes by enlarging the National Labor relations Board National Highway Act – authorized the building of highways throughout the nation, which would be the biggest public works project in the nation’s history Political Effects Alger Hiss – a prominent U.S. government figure who was accused of, found guilty of, and jailed for being a communist. He fought for his innocence until his death Julius and Ethel Rosenberg – Ethel and Julius Rosenburg was executed for espionage in Sing Sing Prison on 19 June 1953. They have been convicted of giving American atomic secrets in the Soviets during World War II. Though the government was convinced of their guilt, many people were not and the debate over their guilt or innocence did not stop with their deaths National Security Act (1947) – mandated a major reorganization of the foreign policy and military establishments of the U.S. Government. The act created the National Security Council (NSC) Détente – a permanent relaxation in international affairs during the Cold War. It is a term usually associated with the relations between American, Russia, and China S.A.L.T. I and II – Strategic Arms Limitation Talks - two rounds of talks and agreements between the US and USSR concerning nuclear arms China became communist 11.02 – Major events of the Civil Rights Movement How did the Civil Rights Movement change America? To what degree has equality been achieved in America? How did the philosophical shift toward more militant tactics impact the outcome of the Civil Rights Movement? C.O.R.E – Congress on Racial Equality, an interracial organization that tried to bring change through peaceful confrontation Brown v. Board of Education, Topeka, Kansas (1954) - court case that overturned Plessy v. Ferguson (separate but equal) and said that schools must be integrated Thurgood Marshall – a civil rights leader appointed toe the Supreme Court in 1967. He ruled over many important civil right cases for many decades Montgomery Bus Boycotts – Rose Parks challenged segregation on buses in 1955 which led to the boycott of the bus system Martin Luther Kin, Jr. - leader of the civil rights movement who advocated non-violent means of achieving equality. He was assassinated in 1968 Little Rock Nine – President Eisenhower sent in troops to protect 9 African American students entering into Central High School in Little Rock, AR. S.N.C.C. – organization of young African Americans who wanted immediate change. They later became associated with the Black Power Movement Sit-ins – method of protesting segregation where people would sit in a restaurant until they were served Freedom Riders – protesters tested desegregation laws by riding buses into the South – troops were sent in to protect them (Freedom Summer) 24th Amendment – outlawed poll taxes March on Washington – 200,000 people came to Washington, DC to protest civil rights- where Martin Luther King Jr. gave his “I have a dream” speech Civil Rights Act of 1964 – called for equal rights in jobs, schools, voting, and public services Voting Rights Act of 1965 – allowed federal officials to register voters where locals would not allow; eliminated literacy tests Malcolm X – Important figure in the Black Power Movement who later changed his views away from violent protest. He was assassinated in 1965 Black Power Movement/Black Panthers – militant group who fought for civil rights. They called for African Americans to unite – Black Nationalism (Marcus Garvey) 11.03 – Major social movements: Women, young people, and the environment To what extent did social movements in America impact women, young people, and the environment? How effective are challenges to authority in bringing about change? How is America different because of the social movements which took place between 1945-1980? Latinos – César Chavez – leader in the Latino rights movement American Indian Movement (AIM) – fought for treaty rights and better conditions/opportunities for Native Americans Environmental Protection Agency – enforced the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act Counterculture – movement by young people who wanted to resist the mainstream of dominant culture. This included changing music – rock & roll Elvis Presley & British Invasion (Beatles) – music of the 1950s-1960s which was part of the counterculture and would influence music for years to come Haight-Ashbury – district of San Francisco which was a popular place for hippies to live Women Betty Friedan – author of The Feminine Mystique which told housewives it was okay to yearn for more than their accepted role as a wife and mother National Organization for Women (NOW) – fought for fair pay and equal opportunities for women Gloria Steinem – a women’s rights advocate who started Ms. Magazine Phyllis Schlafly – opposed the women’s movement Equal Rights Amendment – would have made discrimination based on sex illegal, but it was never ratified Roe v. Wade (1973) – legalized abortion 11.04 – Causes of the United States’ involvement in Vietnam What impact did the Vietnam War have on the United States? What political, social, and economic factors led to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam conflict? How does a government’s response to political events and situations affect the nation? Domino Theory – the idea that if one country fell to communism, another and another would fall after that Ho Chi Minh – leader of Northern Vietnam Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – gave the president expanded powers to conduct war in Vietnam Robert McNamara – Sec. of State of Kennedy who established U.S. strategy in Vietnam Agent Orange and Napalm were chemical weapons used in the Vietnam War Tet Offensive – turning point of the Vietnam conflict when the U.S. decides they do not want to fight anymore after a series of attacks by North Vietnam My Lai Incident – American troops killed 400 women and children Vietnamization – switching out U.S. troops for Vietnamese Kent State and Jackson State – students were killed by the national guard while protesting the Vietnam War 26th Amendment – 18 year old have the right to vote Paris Peace Accords – the U.S. withdrew from the war in 1973 War Powers Act (1973) – Congress limited powers to conduct war Fall of Saigon (1975) – the capital of the South fell to the North. Vietnam united and became communist 11.05 – Impact of technological innovations that have impacted American life How do technological changes alter the lives of individuals? How does innovation impact a nation? How technological innovation has had the greatest impact on American life? Radio & TV in 1950s – spread information and increased advertising Sputnik – first satellite launched into orbit by the USSR NASA – government agency created for space exploration National Defense Education Act – gave money to improve science and math in schools John Glenn – first man to orbit the earth (1962) Neil Armstrong – first man to walk on the moon (1964) Computers began to be present in the government – Silicon Valley, California became an important hub for high-tech development ICBMs – intercontinental ballistic missiles; rockets invented to deliver bombs Nuclear Power – became popular in the 1960s as more people became concerned with the pollution associated with coal and gas 11.06 – Political events and the action ad reactions of the government official and citizens. Asses the social and political consequences How does a government’s response to political events and situations impact the nation? What social and political consequences resulted from the actions of the government between 1945 and 1980? Why is change so difficult for some people? 25th Amendment – created provisions for the succession of the president and vice president Kennedy New Frontier – Kennedy’s program to help the poor, invest in space programs, and improve the economy Peace Corps – program to send volunteers to other countries as teachers, health workers and to do other public works projects Johnson Great Society – Johnson’s programs to help the poor, funds education, healthcare, regulate housing and protect the environment HUD – Housing and Urban Development :oversee housing to help the poor Head Start – preschool program for low-income children VISTA – volunteers to help poor areas Medicare – healthcare for the elderly ( >65 years old) National Endowment for the Humanities – gives money to artists and academics Election of 1968 Robert Kennedy – was killed after winning the California primary in 1968 1968 Democratic National Convention – democrats had to decide who to nominate to run in the presidential election – Humphrey was nominated but the party was majorly split - weakening it and allowing Nixon (Republican) to win Nixon Watergate Scandal – people in Nixon’s reelection campaign were caught breaking into the Democratic Party’s headquarters. Nixon tried to stop the investigation and cover it up. Nixon was reelected and the story began to come out Bob Woodward/Carl Bernstein of the Washington Post uncovered a lot of the wrongdoings Sam Ervin/Senate Watergate Committee led the investigation and found that Nixon had tape recorded many of his oval office conversations U.S. v. Nixon (1974) – Nixon was told to turn over the tapes. He did with 18 ½ minutes missing Goal 12 the United States since the Vietnam War (1973-present) GOAL 12 Al-Qaeda Americans with Disabilities Act Axis of Evil Bill Clinton Bush Doctrine Camp David Accords Colin Powell Department of Energy Department of Homeland Security Fall of the Berlin Wall Famine/Somalia and Ethiopia Geraldine Ferraro Graying of America Helsinki Accords Immigration Policy Act INF Treaty Iran-Contra Affairs Iranian Hostage Crisis Jimmy Carter NAFTA Nelson Mandela New Democrat No Child Left Behind Nuclear Proliferation Osama bin Laden Patriot Act Persian Gulf Wars U.C. Regents v. Bakke (1978) Ronald Reagan Saddam Hussein Sandra Day O’Connor Stagflation Strategic Defense Initiative (Star Wars) Supply-Side Economics (Reagonomics) Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Taliban Regime Texas v. Johnson (1989) Three Mile Island Tiananmen Square Title IX Trickle-down Theory War in Iraq William Rehnquist WIN (Ford) Yasser Arafat GOAL 12 – The United States since the Vietnam War Led an attempt for Palestinians to regain their lands that they claimed as taken by the Jews after WWII Recognized the borders of Europe as the had been at the end of WWII, thus recognizing Soviet domination of the Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania) President Jimmy Carter had Israel and Egypt meet to negotiate a peace treaty Under Carter, in November 1979, Iranians broke into the US embassy in Tehran, Iran and kidnapped 52 people. The hostages were beaten and tortured and kept for 444 days before being released President Regan’s proposal in 1983 to build a satellite shield to space to intercept missiles from the USSR Under Reagan, the United States sold weapons to Iranian terrorists and gave the money to Nicaraguan freedom fighters (Contras) even though Congress said not to Signed by Reagan and Gorbachev in 1987, it eliminated all nuclear-armed ground ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges between 500 and 5500 kilometers In 1989, anti-communist revolts in eastern Europe spread to East Germany where protesters tore down the Berlin Wall China’s government stopped a mass student protest to be more democratic by bringing in tanks and killing thousands of protests Civil rights leader and first black president of South Africa Leader of Iraq leads attacks on Iran and later invaded by the US in 1991 for its oil and relations with Kuwait, Iraq invaded again in 2003 for suspected Weapons of Mass Destruction. Hussein was captured and executed in late 2006 Iraq invaded Kuwait, U.S. allies with Kuwait and pushes Iraq out of Kuwait in a matter of weeks The United States give humanitarian aid to countries with widespread poverty. In Somalia, the United States sent in troops to help distribute food and stabilize the country. After the death of about a dozen US soldiers, President Clinton withdrew the troops Said the bussing was a legal way to promote integration Law which said any federally funded program could not discriminate based on sex. This impacted many educational institutions, particularly sports team First female to run for Vice President with a large party Strict constructionist Supreme Court Justice First woman appointed to the Supreme Court Justice Protected the flag burning under the 1st amendment Public places more accessible for the disabled When inflation and unemployment increase and the economy was stalled. This caused a recession in the 1970s “Whip Inflation Now” – Ford’s plan to reduce inflation based on people’s voluntary conservation of fuel and money Nuclear reactor meltdown in Pennsylvania which released radiation and let to improvements in nuclear plants Coordinates federal programs to research new energy sources and promote conservation Cut taxes to give business people and in investors more money to hire more employees, produce more good and help the economy The idea that when government helps companies, they will produce more and thereby hire more people and raise salaries. The people, in turn, will have more money to spend in the economy North America Free Trade Organization – meant to open the trade between the US, Mexico, and Canada President from 1979-1981 during the Oil Crisis and the Iran Hostage Crisis President 1981-1989 during the Iran-Contra Affair, the end of the Iran Hostage Crisis; he also came up with the “Star Wars” Strategic Defense Initiative which was never launched Reagan ran up the national debt on defensive spending Looks at how American (especially the baby boomer population) is rapidly aging Clinton’s “Centralist” coalition Elected in 1992 after the Republican Party was split and Ross Perot took 19% of the Republican vote Clinton’s presidency is remembered by the Whitewater and Lewinsky scandals. Al Gore served as Clinton’s vice president The immigration policy that looks at grandfathering current immigrants into the United States Court case which decided that the use of quotas in affirmative action programs was not allowed United States federal law (Act of Congress) was reauthorized a number of federal programs aiming to improve the performance of U.S. schools by increasing the standards of accountability for states, school districts, and schools The spread of nuclear weapons The terrorist organization of the Taliban government in Afghanistan and throughout other countries; was behind the September 11, 2001 attacks on the NY World Trade Center Twin Towers and the Pentagon Terrorist leader of Al-Qaeda Passed shortly after 9/11/2001 in order to increase domestic surveillance on order to protect Americans. Imposes on civil rights Secretary of State under George W. Bush Government of Afghanistan U.S invaded Iraq to find weapons of mass destruction (none were found); now working to stabilize the government Created in response to the attacks of 9/11/2001 in order to coordinate government agencies in the protection of the U.S. U.S. had the right to treat countries that harbor to give aid to terrorist groups as terrorists themselves; helped justify the invasion of Afghanistan Coined by G. W. Bush if his 2002 State of the Union Address to describe governments that he accused of helping terrorism and seeking weapons of mass destruction Goal 12 – the United States Since the Vietnam War (1973-present) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Across 3. Allows the government to tap phone lines Down 1. Government agency created to coordinate national efforts against terrorism 5. Iraq’s leader who invaded Kuwait 2. The aging of America 6. President Reagan authorized the sale of weapons to Iran and in turn gave some of the money made to the Contras in Nicaragua 8. Black anti-apartheid leader who was elected president of South Africa in 1944 10. Program of citizen action in which Ford tried to get Americans to cut back on their use of oil and gas to save energy 4. The location of a nuclear reactor meltdown where low-level radiation escaped 7. Where Chinese students demanded freedom of speech and some were killed by the government 9. A series of agreements that promised greater cooperation between the nations of Eastern and Western Europe 12. An economic condition marked by inflation and high employment 11. Entitled women to equal programs as men 14. “Reaganomics” that rested heavily on the theory that if people paid fewer taxes, they would save more money 15. Authorized by President Bush, this war attempted to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi control 21. Trade treaty between Canada, US, and Mexico 16. US space shuttle that exploded in 1986, killed the entire crew 22. Supreme Court case surrounding the issue of flag burning and 1 st amendment rights 17. Education reform under George H. Bush 18. Iranian revolutionaries kidnapped 52 Americans and kept them hostage for 444 days 19. Nickname for the Strategic Defense Initiative, a plan to create a missile defense system for the United States 20. Meeting initiated by Carter at which Egypt and Israel signed a treaty Goal 12 - the United States Since the Vietnam War (1973-present) 12.01 – Significant events in foreign policy since the Vietnam War How have significant events in foreign policy since the Vietnam War impacted America and America’s role in the world? To what degree is the self-perception of the U.S. impacted by world opinion? What impact does the media have in shaping United States foreign policy? Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) – in 1948, led by Yasser Arafat in an attempt for Palestinians to regain their lands that they claimed was taken by the Jews after WWII Helsinki Accords (1975) – recognized the borders of Europe, as they had been at the end of World War II, thus recognizing Soviet domination of the Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania) Camp David Accords (1977) – President Jimmy Carter had Israel and Egypt meet to try and create peace in the Middle east After WWII the U.S. gave aid to Iran. Muslim leaders did not want Iran to become like the West, so in February 1979 Ayatollah Khomeini, an extremely traditional religious leader of Islam, overthrew the Shah (King) of Iran and intuited extremely strict laws from the Koran, outlawing anything western Strategic Defense Initiative (Star Wars) – President Regan’s proposal in 1983 to build a satellite shield in space to intercept missiles from the USSR Iranian Hostage Crisis – under Carter, in November 1979, Iranians broke into the U.S embassy in Tehran, Iran and kidnapped 52 people. The hostages were beaten and tortured and kept fro 444 days before being released Apartheid – the legal separation of people by race in South Africa. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s the United States put embargoes on goods to try and make apartheid end. (It did in 1994). Nelson Mandela became the president of South America Iran-Contra Affair (1980s) – under Reagan, the United States sold weapons in Iranian terrorists and gave the money to Nicaraguan freedom fighters (Contras) even though Congress said not to Mikhail Gorbachev – the late 1980s Soviet leader who encouraged Eastern European Communist governments to loosen restrictions on their citizens INF Treaty – signed by Reagan and Gorbachev in 1987, it eliminated all nuclear-armed ground ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges between 500 and 5500 kilometers Tiananmen Square (1989) – China’s government stopped a mass student protest to be more democratic by bringing in tanks and killing thousands of protesters Fall of the Berlin Wall – in 1989 anti-communist revolts in Eastern Europe spread to East Germany where protesters tore down the Berlin Wall Saddam Hussein – leader of Iraq, who attacks Iran because of Ayatollah Khomeini’s fundamentalist beliefs. Iraq (Hussein) is later invaded by the U.S. in 1991 for its oil and relations with Kuwait. (1st War on Iraq/Persian Gulf War/1st Gulf War), and then again in 2002 for suspected Weapons of Mass Destruction. Hussein was captured and executed in late 2006 Famine/Somalia and Ethiopia – the United States gave (and still gives) humanitarian aid to countries with widespread poverty. In Somalia, the United States sent in troops to help distribute food and stabilize the country. After the death of about a dozen U.S. soldiers, President Clinton withdrew the troops from Somalia. 12.02 – Impact of recent constitutional amendments, court rulings, and federal legislation of United States’ citizens How have recent constitutional amendments, court rulings, and federal legislation impacted the lives of U.S. citizens? Have recent government actions increased civil rights and liberties of citizens? To what extent did federal legislation promote equality in the last part of the 20 th century? Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (1971) – said that bussing was a legal way to promote integration Title IX – law which said any federally funded program could not discriminate based on sex. This impacted many educational institutions, particularly sports teams Geraldine Ferraro – first female to run for Vice President with a large party William Rehnquist – strict constructionist Supreme Court Justice Sandra day O’Conner – the first women appointed to the Supreme Court (by Ronald Reagan) Texas v. Johnson (1989) – protected flag burning under the 1st amendment Clarence Thomas – an extremely conservative judge appointed to the Supreme Court by George Bush (senior) Americans with Disabilities Act – made public places more accessible for the disabled 12.03 – Impact of economic, technological, and environmental changes in the United States How has America been impacted by economic, technological, and environmental changes? What is the price of innovation and change? What is the role of citizens in caring for and protecting the environment? Department of Energy – coordinates federal programs to research new energy sources and promote conservations Stagflation – when inflation and unemployment increase and the economy is stalled. This caused a recession in the 1970s WIN – “Whip Inflation Now´- Ford’s plan to reduce inflation based on people voluntary conservation of fuel and money Three Mile Island – Nuclear reactor meltdown in Pennsylvania which released radiation and led to improvements in nuclear plants Supply-Side Economics (Reagonomics) – cut taxes to give business people and investors more money to hire more employees, produce more goods, and help the economy “Trickle-Down” Theory – the idea that when government helps companies, they will produce more and thereby hire more people and raise salaries. The people, in turn, will have more money to spend in the economy Challenger disaster NAFTA – North American Free Trade Organization – meant to open up trade between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada U.S. v. Microsoft – case looked at whether or not Microsoft (founded by Bill Gates) had violated anti-trust laws 12.04 – Impact of social, political, and cultural changes in the United States To what event have recent social, political, and cultural changes in the U.S. affected life in America? Have the differences in political ideologies created a more divisive society? What factors have contributed to shaping the social, political, and cultural identity of America? New Federalism – Reagan’s plan to put more government control into the hands of the states Jimmy Carter – President from 1979-1981 during the Oil Crisis and the Iran Hostage Crisis Ronald Reagan – President 1981-1989 during the Iran-Contra Affair, the end of the Iran Hostage Crisis; he also came up with “Star Wars” Strategic Defense Initiative which was never launched. Reagan ran up the national debt on defensive spending New Right Coalition – “Christian Coalition - an extremely conservative group of churches that join the Republican party Stonewall Riots – series of violent conflicts between GLBT groups and New York City Police in June 1969. They are often considered to be the catalyst for the Gay Rights Movement Graying of America – looks at how America (especially the baby boomer population) is rapidly aging Bill Clinton – elected in 1992 after the Republican Party was split and Ross Perot took 19% of the Republican vote. Clinton’s presidency is remembered by the whitewater and Lewinsky scandals. Al Gore (who ran for president in 2000) served as Clinton’s vice president New Democrat – Clinton’s “Centralist” coalition John McCain – likely the Republican nominee in the 2008 Presidential election Immigration Policy Act – the current immigration policy that looks at grandfathering current immigrants into the United States 12.05 – Impact of growing racial and ethnic diversity in American society To what extent is America more racially and ethnically diverse today than at the turn of the 20 th century? Have the changes in American society improved life in the U.S.? What impact that recent immigration had on the social, economic, and political culture of the U.S.? Affirmative Action – policies aimed at a historically non-dominant group (typically, minority men or women of all races) intended to promote access to educate or employment. It also serves to encourage public institutions such as universities, hospitals, and police forces to be more representative of the population (This is called reverse discrimination at times) Regents of the University of California v. Bakke (1987) – court case which decided that the use of quotas in affirmative action programs was not allowed Green Card – an identification document issued by the United States of America affording non-citizens of the country some of the rights its citizens enjoy, sometimes with the prospect of naturalization No Child Left Behind – United States federal law (Act of Congress) that reauthorized a number of federal programs aiming to improve the performance of U.S. schools by increasing the standards of accountability for states, school districts, and schools 12.06 – Impact of twenty-first century terrorist activity on American society How has the nation changed since the events of 9/11? Hoe does society balances the desire to increase freedoms while maintaining national security? How far should the government go to secure protection for its citizens? Nuclear Proliferation – the spread of nuclear weapons Terrorist Attacks on the U.S. – The World Trade Center 1993, U.S. Embassies in Tanzania and Kenya Bombed in 1997, and USS Cole attacked in 2000 Osama bin Laden was the terrorist leader of Al-Qaeda (the terrorist organization of the Taliban government in Afghanistan and spread throughout other countries) which was behind the September 11, 2001 attacks on the NY World Trade Center Twin Towers and the Pentagon The Department of Homeland Security was created in response to the attacks of 09/11/2001 in order to coordinate government agencies in the protection of the U.S. Patriot Act – passed shortly after 09/11/2001 in order to increase domestic surveillance in order to protect American, Imposes on Civil Rights In 2002, led by President George W. Bush, the United States entered into the 2nd War on Iraq, intended to bring down Saddam Hussein because he may have Weapons of Mass Destruction. We are still in war today Colin Powell – Secretary of State under George W. Bush Bush Doctrine – foreign policy under George W. Bush and John McCain created after the September 11th attacks which said that the United States had the right to treat countries that harbor or give aid to terrorist groups as terrorists themselves – this helped justify the invasion of Afghanistan “Axis of Evil” – term coined by G. W. Bush in his 2002 State of the Union Address to describe governments that he accused of helping terrorism and seeking weapons of mass destruction Matchings Land Acquisitions Adams-Onis Treaty Alaska Purchase Annexation of Hawaii Gadsden Purchase Jay’s Treaty Louisiana Purchase Oregon Territory Pinckney’s Treaty Texas Annexation Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo Treaty of Paris _________________________ (1794) British agree to leave their forts in the Northwest Territory _________________________ (1795) Spanish agrees on the northern border of Florida and the Mississippi River is opened up for the U.S. trade _________________________ (1803) U.S. purchase a large chunk of land from France; doubles the size of the United States _________________________ (1819) Spain ceded Florida to the United States _________________________ (1845) After a long fight for independence from Mexico, the United States agreed to annex this state into the Union _________________________ (1846) U.S. and Britain agreed on the boundary of this territory after many people in the United States had rallied with the cry “54°40’ or fight!” _________________________ (1848) Mexican Cession after the Mexican-American War, the United States gains its current southwestern portion of the U.S. _________________________ (1853) U.S. purchased a tiny amount of land from Mexico _________________________ (1867) U.S. gains this island nation for its sugar plantations and excellent location as a naval base _________________________ (1867) “Seward’s Folly” was purchased from Russia _________________________ (1898) Ends the Spanish-American War; the United States gains the territories of the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico Influential Legislation 13th Amendment 14th Amendment 15th Amendment 16th Amendment 17th Amendment 18th Amendment 19th Amendment 21st Amendment 24th Amendment Alien & Sedition Acts Chinese Exclusion Act Civil Rights Act of 1964 Clayton Antitrust Act Dawes Severalty Act Emancipation of Proclamation Espionage & Sedition Acts Gulf of Tonkin Resolution Fugitive Slave Act Homestead Act Immigration Act 1965 Indian Removal Act Interstate Commerce Act Judiciary Act of 1789 Kansas-Nebraska Act Lead-Lease Act Missouri Compromise Monroe Doctrine Morrill Land Grant Act Neutrality Acts Pendleton Civil Service Act Pure Food and Drug Act Sherman Antitrust Act Selective Service Act Truman Doctrine Voting Rights Act War Powers Act Women’s Suffrage _________________________ (1789) Law that established the federal court system _________________________ (1789) Reduced the political power of recent immigrants to the U.S. Hemisphere _________________________ (1820) Maine entered the U.S. as a free state; Missouri a slave state; Unorganized territory divided along the 36”30 line _________________________ (1823) Warned European nations to stay out the affairs of the Western _________________________ (1830) Forced Native Americans off of their land _________________________ (1850) Part of the Compromise of 1850, all escaped slaves had to be returned to their owners _________________________ (1854) Gave the territories of Kansas and Nebraska the right to vote on whether or not there would be slavery in their territories _________________________ (1862) Gave land to states to sell in order to create agriculture colleges _________________________ (1862) Gave heads of household 160 acres of land out west _________________________ (1863) Freed slaves behind Confederate lines in the Civil War _________________________ (1865) Abolished slavery _________________________ (1868) Defined citizenship _________________________ (1870) Voting rights could not be withheld based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude _________________________ (1882) Kept Chinese immigrants from entering the United States _________________________ (1883) Ended the Spoils System, government jobs given on merit _________________________ (1887) Forced the assimilation of Native Americans _________________________ (1887) Federal government’s right to regulate railroads _________________________ (1890) Law intended to prevent the creation of monopolies, but was used against labor unions instead _________________________ (1906) Halted the sale of contaminated foods and drugs _________________________ (1913) Established the Federal Income Tax _________________________ (1913) Established direct election of senators _________________________ (1914) Strengthened the Sherman Anti-Trust Act _________________________ (1917) Required men to register for military service (draft) _________________________ (1917-1918) Imposed harsh penalties on anyone interfering with or speaking against the US during WWI _________________________ (1919) Established prohibition _________________________ (1920) Women’s suffrage _________________________ (1933) Repealed prohibition _________________________ (1935) Prevented the U.S. arms sales and loans to nations at war in an attempt to keep the United States out of WWII _________________________ (1941) Allowed the US to ship arms and military supplies to countries in WWII without immediate payment _________________________ (1947) Provided aid to countries that were resisting communism _________________________ (1964) Law that banned discrimination on the basis of race, sex, national origin, or religion in pubic places _________________________ (1964) Outlawed poll taxes _________________________ (1964) Gave the president unlimited power to send troops to Vietnam _________________________ (1965) Limited the number of immigrants allowed to settle in the U.S _________________________ (1965) Law that made it easier for African Americans to register to vote by eliminating literacy tests _________________________ (1968) Law that banned discrimination in housing _________________________ (1973) Limited the president’s right to send troops to war without Congress’ permission U.S. Presidents Abraham Lincoln Andrew Jackson Andrew Johnson Bill Clinton Franklin Delano Roosevelt George Washington Harry S. Truman Herbert Hoover James K. Polk James Monroe John F. Kennedy John Quincy Adams Richard Nixon Ronald Reagan Rutherford B. Hayes Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson Ulysses S. Grant William Howard Taft William McKinley Woodrow Wilson _________________________ No Political Party (1789-1797) Warned against political parties and foreign entanglements _________________________ Democratic-Republican (1801-1809) Strict constructionist who purchased the Louisiana Territory _________________________ Democratic-Republican (1817-1825) Established the Monroe Doctrine, warning other countries to stay out of the affairs of the Western Hemisphere _________________________ Democratic-Republican (1825-1829) Winner of the Election of 1824. It was called a “corrupt bargain” when the speaker of the house was appointed to be Vice President _________________________ Democrat (1829-1837) Credited as the president who started the “Spoils System” _________________________ Democrat (1845-1849) Acquired more land in the U.S. than any other president _________________________ Republican (1861-1865) President during the Civil War who issued the Emancipation Proclamation, freeing the slaves in the Confederate States _________________________ Democrat (1865-1869) President during Reconstruction. His plan was said to be too lenient on the Southern states _________________________ Republican (1869-1877) Star general of the Union in the Civil War, he later became President even though he did not win a majority of the white vote. His presidency was marked with scandal – Credit Mobilier & Whiskey Ring _________________________ Republican (1877-1881) Became president as a result of the Hayes-Tilden Compromise of 1877, effectively ending Reconstruction with the removal of federal troops from the South _________________________ Republican (1897-1901) President during the Spanish-American War during the United States growth as an imperialistic nation _________________________ Republican (1901-1909) Utilized “Big Stick” diplomacy in dealing with foreign affairs. He led the Bull Moose Party in the Election of 1912 _________________________ Republican (1909-1913) Utilized “Dollar Diplomacy” in dealing with foreign affairs _________________________ Democrat (1913-1921) Won the Election of 1912 when there was a split in the Republican Party. He was president during WWI, but was reelected to a second term using the slogan “he kept us out of war”. Creator of the League of Nations _________________________ Republican (1929-1933) Dispersed the Bonus Army using military force after WWI _________________________ Democrat (1933-1945) Created the New Deal to bring the United States out of the Great Depression _________________________ Democrat (1945-1953) President who dropped the atomic bomb _________________________ Democrat (1961-1963) Young, popular president assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald _________________________ Republican (1969-1974) President involved with the Watergate Scandal _________________________ Republican (1981-1989) President during the IranContra Affair, when the U.S. sold weapons to Iran and gave the money to Nicaragua _________________________ Democrat (1993-2001) The 2nd president to be impeached (for lying under oath) Major Supreme Court Cases Brown v. Board of Education Dred Scott v. Sanford Gibbons v. Ogden Korematsu v. U.S. Marbury v. Madison McCulloch v. Maryland Munn v. Illinois Northern Securities v. U.S. Plessy v. Ferguson Regents of CA v. Bakke Roe v. Wade Schenck v. U.S. Texas v. Johnson U.S. v. American Tobacco U.S. v. E.C. Knight and Co. U.S. v. Nixon Wabash v. Illinois Worcester v. Georgia _________________________ (1803) Established judicial review – the right of the courts decide whether or not something is unconstitutional _________________________ (1819) Federal laws are superior to state laws; you can not tax the national bank _________________________ (1824) Only the federal government can regulate trade _________________________ (1832) Native Americans do not have to abide by state laws _________________________ (1857) Slaves are property, not people _________________________ (1877) States can regulate certain businesses within their borders _________________________ (1886) States can not regulate interstate commerce _________________________ (1895) Limited government control over monopolies _________________________ (1896) Established the “separate but equal” doctrine _________________________ (1904) Dissolved railroad company trust during the Progressive Era _________________________ (1911) Trust busting to break up large company in N.C. _________________________ (1919) First Amendment rights are not absolute (WWI letters) _________________________ (1944) Government can suspend civil liberties during times of war _________________________ (1956) Separate is not equal. Desegregation in school _________________________ (1973) Abortion is legal _________________________ (1974) Evidence involving possible criminal activity can not be withheld, even by a president _________________________ (1978) Race can be a consideration in admissions, but organizations may not set quotas _________________________ (1989) Government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because it is offensive (Flag burning) Influential Literature in US History The American Dictionary A Century of Dishonor Civil Disobedience and Waldon The Feminine Mystique Harlem The History of the Standard Oil Company How the Other Half Lives The Influence of Sea Power Upon History The Jungle The Last of the Mohicans The Liberator Silent Spring Uncle Tom’s Cabin _________________________ (1826) Written by James Fennimore Cooper, this book discusses the closing of the frontier and the culture clashes related to westward expansion _________________________ (1828) Written by Noah Webster, this was the first of its kind written to help common man to learn and understand the American English _________________________ (1831) Written by William Lloyd Garrison, this newspaper supported the abolition of slavery _________________________ (1845-1849) Written by Henry David Thoreau, these books were a transcendentalist trying to live off the land and protest government action in the Mexican American War _________________________ (1852) Written by Harriet Beecher Stowe, this novel explores the daily lives of slaves and played a key role in the evens leading to the Civil War _________________________ (1881) Written by Helen Hunt Jackson, this is a novel written showing the treatment of Native Americans throughout the history of the United States _________________________ (1890) Written by Alfred T. Mahan, this novel details the role of sea power throughout history and discusses the various factors needed to support a strong navy _________________________ (1890) Written by Jacob Riis, this novel, by a famous muckraker, explains the working and living conditions of immigrants and poor Americans _________________________ (1904) Written by Ida Tarbell, this book uncovers the corruption and terrible working conditions of the Standard Oil Co. owned by Rockefeller _________________________ (1906) Written by the Upton Sinclair, this novel explores the terrible conditions of the meat packing industry and the lives of the immigrants that worked in them. It later let to the passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act _________________________ (1930) Written by Langston Hughes, this poem from the Harlem Renaissance proclaims that all African Americans should embrace their heritage proudly _________________________ (1962) Written by Rachel Carson, this novel opens people’s eyes to the environmental issues at stake in the 1960s _________________________ (1963) Written by Betty Freidan, this novel explores the lives of the 1950s housewife. The author claims she understands their thoughts of being unsatisfied with childbearing and homemaking Influential Women Throughout US History Abigail Adams Betty Freidan Dorthea Dix Carrie Nation Eleanor Roosevelt Florence Kelley Harriet Tubman Harriet Beecher Stowe Ida Tarbell Ida Wells Jane Addams Phyllis Schlafly Rosa Park Lucretia Mott Elizabeth Cady, & Susan B. Anthony _________________________ Created the Hull House (a settlement house) to give the poor shelter and food _________________________ Reformed prisons and treatment of the mentally ill _________________________ African American civil rights advocate; spoke out against lynching _________________________ Campaigned against women working out of the home; believed women should be happy being housewives _________________________ First women’s advocates that met at Seneca Falls to discuss women’s rights and the plan to achieve full suffrage rights _________________________ Wrote The Feminine Mystique and explained to women that she understood why they were dissatisfied with being housewives _________________________ Wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin and explained the lives of slaves to those around the United States that have never seen it first hand _________________________ Wrote to her husband to “remember the ladies”; believed that women should not be bound by laws in which they had no voice _________________________ Advocate for the Temperance Movement; famous for walking it to saloons and private bars to preach to those inside _________________________ Conductor of the Underground Railroad, helping thousands or run away slaves escape to the North _________________________ Great Women’s Rights advocate during her husband’s presidency and the Great Depression _________________________ Leader of the Civil Rights Movement starting the Montgomery Bus Boycott _________________________ Great advocate for children’s rights during the Progressive Era _________________________ Muckraker who wrote about The History of the Standard Oil Co. and brought attention to the corruption of big business United States Involvement in War US INVOLVEMENT IN WAR War of 1812 (1812-1814/1815) Causes of the War Who was involved? Main Events/People Resolution Mexican-American War (1846-1848) Causes of the War Who was involved? Main Events/People Resolution US INVOLVEMENT IN WAR Civil War (1860-1865) Causes of the War Who was involved? Main Events/People Resolution Spanish-American War (1898) Causes of the War Who was involved? Main Events/People Resolution US INVOLVEMENT IN WAR World War I (1914-1918) Causes of the War Causes of US Entry Who was involved? Main Events/People/ US Involvement Resolution Allies: Central: World War II (1941-1945) Causes of the War Causes of US Entry Who was involved? Allies: Central: Main Events/People/ US Involvement Resolution US INVOLVEMENT IN WAR The Cold War (1945-1991) Causes of the War Who was involved? Causes of the War Who was involved? Main Events/People Resolution Korean War (1950-1953) Main Events/People Resolution Vietnam Conflict (1961-1973) Causes of the War Who was involved? Main Events/People Resolution US INVOLVEMENT IN WAR 1st Persian Gulf war (1991) Causes of the War Who was involved? Main Events/People Resolution War with Afghanistan (2001-?) Causes of the War Who was involved? Causes of the War Who was involved? Main Events/People Resolution War with Iraq (2003-?) Main Events/People Resolution Download 1. Social Science 2. 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