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Georgia Performance Standard strands End of Course Test Study Guide SUSSH1.a Explain Virginia’s development, including the Virginia Company, tobacco cultivation, relationships with the Native Americans such as Powhatan, development of the House of Burgesses, Bacon's Rebellion, and the development of slavery. ANSWER: - Businesses are trying to increase the number of VA companies selling overseas and their volume of international business - Tobacco was cultivated annually. It was grown in warm climates with rich, well-drained soil. 4.2 million hectares of tobacco were under cultivation worldwide in 2000, yielding over 7 million tones of tobacco - The Indians had mixed feelings for the English. The first reaction from them was hostility. Soon though, they were offering food as well as treatment - The House of Burgesses was the establishment of a legislative assembly. This developed paths of colonization to Spain and France - The Bacon’s Rebellion built more prosperous, livable, and sustainable regions in the commonwealth of VA - Early on Africans were treated as indentured servants. Over time, their status in Colonial America evolved into that of property. SSUSH1.b What was the settlement of New England? 1620, about 102 people, including about fifty Pilgrims seek religious freedom and Set sail from England to America. Many of these Pilgrims were Separatists that wanted to establish their own church, independent of the Anglican Church, (The Official Church of England). The Virginia Company had allowed the Pilgrims to settle in Virginia in return for half of all there future profits. The colonists settled in Plymouth near Cape Cod Bay and believing because they settled outside the chartered area, they could establish laws for themselves. What was there relation with the Native Americans? Much like Virginia, the New England settlers depended on the Native American people for there trade and for learning ways of adapting to the new land. The Europeans caused loss of land and home, and brought with them the smallpox illness to the Native Americans. The conflict between the European settlers and the Native Americans was inevitable. In 1675, the Wampanoag people were hoping to clear all European settlers from there homeland, led by Metacomet or also known to the settlers as King Philip, they waged into a war on expanding settlements in Southern New England. The settlers found allies in the expanding Mohawks to the west, who attacked the Wampanoag people. A New England Indian fought on the settler’s side and killed Metacomet in 1676, which ended the King Philip’s War, causing a paved way for future expansion of colonial settlements in New England. What were the effects of the Pilgrims religious tension? A New England Colony, Rhode Island was established as a corporate colony and received a Royal "Charter of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations" in 1663. The Charter established complete religious freedom in Rhode Island, which was unusual at the time, and later formed the basis for similar provisions in the U.S. Constitution. The Puritans came to America to establish religious freedom, yet they had little tolerance for those who did not share their beliefs. By the mid–1600s, the Puritan ideal was under pressure to change. In 1662, church ministers agreed to the “HalfWay Covenant.” With this, children of church members were admitted as “half-way” members, allowing them to be baptized into the church but denying them the right to vote or take communion. A fear of witchcraft pervaded New England during the late 1600s. The hysteria over witchcraft reached a climax in the Puritan village of Salem. In 1692, dozens of men, women, and children were accused of witchcraft and placed in the Salem jail. Before the hysteria ended some ten months later, nineteen people were found guilty of practicing witchcraft during the Salem Witch trials and were hanged. What caused the loss of the Massachusetts charter? 1629, a group of non-Separatist Puritans formed their own joint-stock company, the Massachusetts Bay Company, and secured a charter from King Charles I for land north of the Plymouth Colony. The charter allowed for a civil government, called the General Court, which had the power to levy taxes and elect the governor and his assistants. This system was similar in structure to Parliament, Britain’s legislative body. In 1684, the Massachusetts Bay Colony lost its charter when Massachusetts openly violated the Navigation Acts, passed by England in 1660, 1663, and 1673, all meant to impose trade restrictions on the colonies. SSUSH1 .c Explain the development of the mid-Atlantic colonies including the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam and subsequent English takeover, and the settlement of Pennsylvania. A. Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam Capital of New Netherlands Built to protect & to trade beaver skins for West Indian Company B. English takeover of New Amsterdam 1644- British took over colony & renamed it New York Because of British & Dutch mixture, the colony tolerated several different religions Diverse population kept alive this center of trade & commerce British invited Dutch to remain there C. Settlement of Pennsylvania Territory between New England & Virginia Founded by Quakers; led by William Penn SSUSH1.d Explain the reasons for French settlement of Quebec. Answer: A. First permanent French settlement in North America B. Instructed their colonists to spread the Catholic faith in the New World C. Settled colonies to secure the valuable natural resources of North America and export them back to Europe SSUSH2.a Explain the development of mercantilism and the trans-Atlantic trade. Answer: A. Development of mercantilism Definition of mercantilism: an economic system whereby countries take actions to maintain the largest possible gold reserves by minimizing imports, maximizing exports, and developing colonies and maintaining a favorable balance of trade Purpose: bring wealth and self-sufficiency to the mother country utilizing the resources of its colonies A favorable balance of trade is when the value of a countries exports is greater than the value of its imports B. Trans-Atlantic trade Also known as triangular trade Controlled by England SSUSH2.b Describe the Middle Passage, growth of the African population and AfricanAmerican culture. Answer: The middle passage was the journey taken by millions of slaves. It refers to the transportation of the African people from Africa to the new world as part of the Atlantic slave trade and was also the middle portion of the triangular trade voyage. About 25-30 million Africans were taken to America, because of this a lot of them had lost there African culture and had to adopt a new one. SSUSH2.c Identify Benjamin Franklin as a Symbol of social mobility and individualism. Answer: As a scientist, he was a major figure in the Enlightenment and the history of physics for his discoveries and theories regarding electricity. As a diplomat during the American Revolution he secured the French alliance that helped to make independence of the United States possible. His colorful life and legacy of scientific and political achievement, and status as one of America's most influential Founding Fathers, has seen Franklin honored as a symbol of social mobility and individualism and this is just a couple of things he has done. SSUSH2.d Explain the significance of the Great Awakening. Answer: The First Great Awakening, occurring around 1730 to 1760, had a profound impact on the course of the United States, especially during the latter half of the Eighteenth Century. Although not widely spoken of in modern times, the Great Awakening was a movement rooted in spiritual growth which brought a national identity to Colonial America. The Awakening's biggest significance was the way it prepared America for its War of Independence SSUSH3.a Explain how the end of Anglo-French imperial competition as seen in the FrenchIndian War, and the 1763 Treaty of Paris, laid the groundwork for the American Revolution. Answer: British laws continued to erode the feeling of the colonists. They began their colonization as being loyal to the crown but as more laws and the restrictions were passed colonists began to feel a need for self- governance. SSUSH3.b Explain colonial response to such British actions such as the Proclamation of 1763 Stamp Act, and the intolerable acts seen in Sons and Daughters of Liberty, and Committees of Correspondence. Answer: A lot of tensions increased with the proclamation of 1763, and some of the Americans were forbidden from settling beyond the Appalachian Mountains in an effort to limit their conflicts with Native Americans. SSUSH3.c Explain the importance of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense to the movement for independence. Answer: Common Sense blamed the suffering of the colonies directly on George III, the British monarch. Since it was in the form of a simple pamphlet, it was easily spread and motivated people who were nonchalant before they read it. It sparked the colonists to strengthen and unite and advocated the American Declaration of Independence. SSUSH4. The student will identify the ideology, military, and diplomatic aspects of the American Revolution. Answer: Colonists did not want to pay taxes to Britain because their economy could not grow when Britain controlled them. In stead of being under the rule of a King they wanted to create a democracy. The Sugar, Quartering, and Stamp Acts and Taxation without representation truly began the American Revolution. In 1775 colonial leaders began to stockpile arms and ammunition, and then war erupted at Lexington and Concord. SSUSH4.a Explain the language, organization, and intellectual sources including the writing of John Locke and Montesquieu of the declaration of Independence and the role of Thomas Jefferson. Answer: Britain committed many wrongs again the US. Thomas Jefferson wrote the declaration of Independence. John Locke was a British philosopher who had many theories about independence. He strongly believed in the natural rights of people. The Declaration included a list of reason why we should separate from Britain and how it should be done. SSUSH4.b Explain the reason for and significance of the French alliance and foreign assistance and the roles of Benjamin Franklin and the Marquis de Lafayette. Answer: The significance of the French alliance and foreign assistance during the American Revolution was that it allowed greater freedom of movement of American forces because the French Navy required the attention of the British Navy; therefore, the British Navy was more focus on fighting French Navy on the sea instead of looking in to the Continental Army’s movement. Marquis de Lafayette also provided military expertise. SSUSH4.c Analyze George Washington as a military leader including the creation of a professional military and the life of a common soldier, crossing the Delaware River, and Valley Forge. Answer: The Continental Army owed much to Washington’s leadership. He realized that to preserve his Continental Army from destruction, he could not risk all on a major battle under unfavorable conditions it mean he is the intelligent military leader. Back in Pennsylvania, Washington’s army spent the harsh and hungry winter of 1777 to 1778 at Valley Forge outside of Philadelphia. Because of George Washington’s ability to motivate his troops, the army held together through the harsh winter in Valley Forge. SSUSH4.d Explain Yorktown, the role of Lord Cornwallis and the treaty of Paris, 1783. Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown in the last major battle of the revolutionary war, which lead to the signing of the Treaty of Paris and the end of the revolutionary war. SSHUS5.a Explain how weaknesses in the articles of confederation and Daniel shays’ rebellion lead to a call for a stronger central government. Southern states were trying to succeed from union which ultimately led the need for a stronger central government SSUSH5.b Q: Evaluate the major arguments of the anti-Federalists and Federalists during the debate on ratification of the Constitution put forth in the Federalists Papers concerning form of government, factions, checks and balances and the power of the executive including the roles of Alexander Hamilton and James Madison. Answer: Anti-Federalist argued not to ratify the Constitution because they said it gave too much power to the national government at the expense of the state governments, there was no bill of rights, the national government could maintain an army in peacetime, Congress, because of the `necessary and proper clause,' wielded too much power, and the executive branch held too much power. Federalists answered by saying; the separation of powers into three independent branches protected the rights of the people. Each branch represents a different aspect of the people, and because all three branches are equal, no one group can assume control over another. A listing of rights can be a dangerous thing. If the national government were to protect specific listed rights, what would stop it from violating rights other than the listed ones? Since we can't list all the rights, the Federalists argued that it's better to list none at all. SUSSH5.c Q: Explain the key features of the Constitution, specifically Great Compromise, separation of powers, limited government, and the issue of slavery. Answer: The Great Compromise is when Sherman suggested that each state would send an equal number of representatives to the Senate and one representative to the House for each 30,000 residents of the state. The separation of powers is the political doctrine which the executive, legislative and judicial branches of government are kept distinct, to prevent abuse of power. This is associated with the Checks and Balances The Constitution limited the government to keep it from intervening with anything other than what was necessary. SSUSH5.d Analyze how the Bill of Rights serves as a protector of individual and states rights. Individual: the Bill of Rights prohibits congress from making laws against your freedom of religion, right to bear arms, depriving you of life, liberty, or property, etc. States: the Bill of Rights protects the states in the 14th amendment. At first the Bill of Rights had banned slavery, but left the choice of racial segregation up to the states. SSUSH5.e Explain the importance of the Presidencies of George Washington and John Adams including the Whiskey Rebellion, non-intervention in Europe, and the development of political parties (Alexander Hamilton). George Washington: Washington’s presidency was very important for the fact that it began a significant leadership role of the U.S. It also set a standard for future presidents. While president he signed many important acts such as, Bank Act of 1971, Coinage Act of 1792, & Naval Act of 1794 and many more. He also signed the Whiskey Act of 1791, which taxed whiskey. This made many people mad, so they began to rebel. The rebellion then led to formation of political parties. And with Jefferson’s Republican Party they repealed the tax. Element: SSUSH6.a Q: Explain the Northwest Ordinance’s important in the westward migration of Americans, on slavery, public education, and the addition of new states. A: The first U.S governmental territory outside the original states was the Northwest Territory, which was created by the Northwest Ordinance. This law demonstrated to Americans that their national government intended to encourage westward expansion and that it would do so by organizing new states that would be equal members of the Union. The ordinance banned slavery in the Northwest Territory. This law made Ohio River the boundary between free and slave states regions between the 13 states and the Mississippi River. Additionally, the Northwest Ordinance mandated the establishment of public schools in the Northwest Territory. Element: SSUSH6.a Q: Explain the Northwest Ordinance’s important in the westward migration of Americans, on slavery, public education, and the addition of new states. A: The first U.S governmental territory outside the original states was the Northwest Territory, which was created by the Northwest Ordinance. This law demonstrated to Americans that their national government intended to encourage westward expansion and that it would do so by organizing new states that would be equal members of the Union. The ordinance banned slavery in the Northwest Territory. This law made Ohio River the boundary between free and slave states regions between the 13 states and the Mississippi River. Additionally, the Northwest Ordinance mandated the establishment of public schools in the Northwest Territory. Element: SSUSH6.b Q: Describe Jefferson’s diplomacy of obtaining the Louisiana Purchase from France and the territory’s exploration by Lewis and Clark. A: In the early 1800s, President Thomas Jefferson sent James Monroe to France to negotiate the purchase of the important port of New Orleans. At the time, the French ruler Napoleon controlled New Orleans and much of the land west of the Mississippi River. In 1803, Napoleon agreed to sell not only New Orleans to the U.S but the entire Louisiana Territory for $15 million. Jefferson sent Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to explore the Louisiana and the western lands all the way to the Pacific Ocean. Lewis and Clark charted the trails, mapped rivers and mountain ranges, wrote descriptions and collected samples of unfamiliar animals and plants, and recorded facts and figures about the various Native American tribes and customs west of the Mississippi River. SSUSH6.c Explain major reasons for the was of 1812 and the war’s significance of the development of a national identity Answer: The United States believed that Britain still not treating it as an independent country, and was actually providing Native Americans with guns to attack Americans settlers It led many Americans to believe that they were part of the United States and a part of some states that didn’t believe in unity The Erie Canal is a waterway in New York that runs about 363 miles (584 km) from Albany, New York on the Hudson River to Buffalo, New York at Lake Erie. Which was the first transportation system between the eastern seaboard (New York City) and the western interior (great lakes) of the United States? The development of the nation’s infrastructure shaped the United States into a great nation by connecting the eastern seaboard and western expanses of American as well as propels the industrial revolution and stimulates global trade, economics, and immigration. SSUSH6.d Describe the construction of the Erie Canal, the rise of New York City, and the development of the nation's infrastructure. Answer: The construction of the Erie Canal was made to connect Albany and buffalo New York. The lakes that were included were the Hudson and the Erie Lake. The building of the canal increased revenue in New York because it opened up another port. The development of the nation’s infrastructure was increased because the canal increased trading between states and countries. SSUSH6.e Describe the reasons for and impotence of the Monroe doctrine. The Monroe doctrine was needed because America didn’t want European powers come to the Western Hemisphere for the purpose of collecting debts. The Monroe Doctrine had originally been intended to keep European nations out of Latin America, but the Roosevelt corollary was used as a justification for U.S. intervention in Latin America. SSUH7.a a. Explain the impact of the Industrial Revolution as seen in Eli Whitney’s invention of the cotton gin and his development of interchangeable parts for muskets. Answer a: Eli Whitley Invented the Cotton Gin as a means of easily separating the seeds from the cotton, the Gin was mass produced using interchangeable parts, it increased the amount of cotton that the South produced increasing the demand for slaves. Whitney was one of the early founders of the "American system" of mass production, Identical parts were produced by machines, and then assembled by hand Whitney popularized the machine which produced interchangeable parts for guns. SSUHS7.b Describe the westward growth of the United States including the emerging concept of Manifest Destiny. Answer: the expansion of the United States moving west from 1807-1912; where Louisiana Purchase , Florida Purchase, purchase of Oregon, Republic of Texas, New Mexico, California, Alaska, Hawaii and others occurred. Manifest destiny: it was the destiny of the U.S. to expand its territory over the whole of North America and to extend and enhance its political, social, and economic influences. SSUH7.c Q: Describe reform movements, specifically temperance, abolitionism, and public school. Answer: reform movements: social movement that aims to make gradual change, or change in certain aspects of society, rather than rapid or fundamental changes. Temperance movement: social movement against the use of alcoholic beverages. Abolitionism: a movement in Western Europe and the Americas to end the slave trade and free slaves. Public school: giving education to everyone, no matter their economical situation. Element: SSUHS7.d Explain women's efforts to gain the suffrage including Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Seneca Falls Conference. Elizabeth Stanton is believed to be the driving force behind the Seneca Falls Convention. For the next fifty years, she played a leadership role in the women's rights movement. Element: SSUHS7.e Explain Jacksonian Democracy, expanding the suffrage, the rise of popular political culture, and the development of American nationalism. Jacksonian Democracy refers to the social and political ideas that shaped the period encompassing Andrew Jackson's presidency. The attempt to expand suffrage was a vicious struggle between those who supported and opposed expansion. The norms, values, and symbols that helped to acknowledge the political power system of a society. (For example, in the United States, the constitution, democracy, equality, the flag). The reason for the development of American nationalism is because of, aspirations for national independence in a country under foreign domination. SSUSH8 The student will explain the relationship between growing north-south divisions and westward expansion. Answer: Before the Civil War, there is three distinct regions emerged in the United States. First, the North, second the South, and lastly the West. The sharp divisions emerged between the economies and cultures of the North and South. Then in the West, settlers from both the North and South merged to create a distinct way of life. SSUSH8.a Explain how slavery became a significant issue in American politics including the slave of Nat Turner, and the rise of abolitionism (William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglas, and the Grimke sisters). Answer: Abolitionism: There was racial discrimination against African Americans in 1820. The slavery had largely ended in the North America. Most slaves were held in southern states. Prominent abolitionists included the African Americans, whites, men, and women. An abolitionist is some one who wants to abolish or get rid of slavery during the time period before the civil war. William Lloyd Garrison is a writer and editor. He was an important white abolitionist that founded regional and national abolitionist societies. Franklin Douglas was a former slave that worked for Garrison and traveled widely. They had given the eloquent speeches on behalf of equality for African Americans, women, Native Americans and immigrants. The Grimke sisters’ names are Sarah and Angelina. They were southern women who lectured publicly throughout the northern states talking about the evils of slavery they had seen growing up on a plantation. SSUSH8.b Explain the Missouri Compromise and the issue of slavery in western states and territories. The Compromise of 1820 was an agreement between the pro- and anti-slavery states regulating slavery in the western territories. It prohibited slavery in new states north of the border of the Arkansas territory, excluding Missouri. SSUSH8.c Describe the Nullification Crisis and the emergence of states’ rights ideology, including the role of John C. Calhoun and development of sectionalism. Answer: In 1832, states' rights theory was tested in the Nullification Crisis, after South Carolina passed an ordinance that nullified federal tariffs. The tariffs favored northern manufacturing interests over southern agricultural concerns. The South Carolina legislature declared them unconstitutional. Calhoun had formed a political party in South Carolina explicitly known as the Nullifier Party. SSUSH8.d Describe war with Mexico and the Wilmot Proviso. Answer: The Mexican war lasted from 1845 – 1846. America wanted to annex Texas. The Wilmot Proviso was an attempt to keep slavery from the states that were purchased from Mexico after the war. SSUSH8.e Question: Explain the Compromise of 1850 Answer: Political agreement that allowed California to be admitted as a free state by allowing popular sovereignty in the territories and enacting a stricter fugitive slave law SSUSH9 Question: Identify the key events, issues, and individuals relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War Answer: Key events: July 1863-Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg. Gettysburg the turning point of the war, 1865-Lee surrenders to Grant; Lincoln assassinated. Key issues were Missouri Compromise of 1850, Fugitive Slave Act, Personal liberty laws, Kansas-Nebraska Act Important individuals were Jefferson Davis-President of the Confederacy, Abraham Lincoln-President of the Union, Robert E. Lee- Confederate general, Stonewall Jackson-Confederate, Ulysses S. Grant-Union general and 18th President SSUSH9.a Question: Explain the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the failure of popular sovereignty, DredScott case, and John Brown’s Raid Answer: The 1854 Kansas-Nebraska law divided the Nebraska Territory into Kansas and Nebraska giving each territory the right to decide whether or not to allow slavery Failure of popular sovereignty: Many of the states and people dealing with the Kansas-Nebraska Act started to take the matter of popular sovereignty into their own hands by going out and killing each other to determine the outcome rather than voting on it Dred Scott case: Supreme Court case which Dred Scott sued for his freedom. Between 1834 and 1838 he lived mostly on free soil while still remaining enslaved, but still the Supreme Court said he could not sue in Missouri because he had no rights John Brown’s Raid: An attempt by white abolitionist John Brown to start an armed slave revolt by seizing a U.S. Arsenal at Harpers Ferry in Virginia in 1859 SSSUSH 9.b Describe President Lincoln’s efforts to preserve the Union as seen in his second inaugural address and the Gettysburg speech and in his use of emergency powers such as his decision to suspended habeas corpus. Lincoln opened the Gettysburg Address by referring to the nation that was founded on the premise that all men are created equal thus showing the importance he put in the union. He wanted to keep the union together without war as he stated in his second inaugural speech. SSUSH9.c C. Describe the role of Ulysses Grant, Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, William T. Sherman, and Jefferson Davis. Answer: Ulysses Grant- He was a U.S. president (republican). He served in the military as a northern general and won a major battle known as the battle of Vicksburg (which split the confederacy). Robert E. Lee- He was a major general of the confederacy. He also served as the commander at WestPoint before the war. He fought in many important battles of the Civil War (Battle of Bull Run, Gettysburg, and Antietam) “Stonewall Jackson”- He was a Southern general during the Civil War. Fought in the 1st battle (Battle of Bull Run) where he got his nickname. William T. Sherman- He was a Northern general who was best known for his path of destruction in Georgia (March to the sea), in which he burned towns and destroyed railroads. He eventually served as lieutenant-general when Grant was president. Jefferson Davis- He was the President of the Confederacy during the Civil War. He appointed Robert E. Lee and Johnston to generals in the Civil war. SSUSH9.d D. Explain the importance of Fort Sumter, Antietam, Vicksburg, Gettysburg, and the battle for Atlanta. Answer: Fort Sumter- It began the Civil War. Antietam- the North started to have hope of winning the War. This was also the battle in which General Lee began fighting an offensive war. Vicksburg- This battle marked the division of the Confederacy (Grant took the Mississippi River) and the turnover of the war from southern victories to northern victories. Gettysburg- This battle was General Lee’s second and last invasion of the North. A northern victory in this battle brought new hope to winning the war. Battle for Atlanta- North destroyed Atlanta which was the South’s transportation hub. SSUSH10.a Compare and contrast Presidential Reconstruction with Radical Republican Reconstruction. Answer: While Congress was in recess, the president began implementing his plans which was soon called Presidential Reconstruction. Radical Republican Reconstruction was when the Radical Republicans gained sufficient power to override any potential vetoes made by president. SSUSH10.b Explain efforts to redistribute land in the South among the former slaves, provided advanced education such as Morehouse College, and Freedmen’s Bureau. Answer: During the Reconstruction period, African Americans made progress in many areas. Many African American children were able to attend free schools for the first time. African Americans started newspapers, served in public office, and attended new colleges and universities established for them. Morehouse College was founded in Atlanta in 1867 as the Augusta Institute. A former slave and two ministers founded it for the education of African American men in the fields of ministry and education. The Freedmen’s Bureau helped former slaves solve everyday problems. SSUSH10.c Question: Describe the significance of the 13th, 14th, and the 15th amendments. Answer: 13th amendment states that neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall exist in The United States; formally abolishing slavery in the United States. 14th amendment states that all people who are citizens or naturalized in the United States have the right to freedoms in the bill of rights; this expanded the protection of civil rights ALL Americas. “separate but equal” 15th amendment states that the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude; blacks could not be denied voting in the south or anywhere else. SSUSH10.d Question: Explain black codes, the Ku Klux Klan, and other forms of resistance to racial equality during reconstruction. Answer: Black codes were laws passed in the state and local level to limit the civil rights and liberties of African Americans. (in both the South and the North) The Ku Klux Klan aka the KKK was a group of men known for wearing white robes and riding in on horses. They would terrorize many blacks with violence that at times would lead to lynching. The whole group started to stop blacks from having any real rights, mainly when it came to voting. One Example of other forms of resistance to racial equality during reconstruction is Jim Crow Laws. They claimed that they would keep everything “separate but equal” for both blacks and whites. SSUSH10.e Question: Explain the impeachment of Andrew Johnson in relationship to Reconstruction. Answer: Johnson was impeached on February 24, 1868 (during reconstruction) in the U.S. House of Representatives on 11 articles of impeachment. The House's primary charge against Johnson was violation of the Tenure of Office Act, passed by Congress the previous year. This was because he fired the Edwin M. Stanton, the Secretary of War, from office and replaced him with Adjutant General Lorenzo. The Tenure of Office Act denied the president from removing anyone who held office from a past president without the advice and consent of the senate; all he could do was suspend the officer until senate met again. SSUSH11.a Explain the impact of the railroads on other industries such as steel and on the organization of big business. The impact of railroads on the steel industry is quite obvious. Seeing as how railroad track is made of steel, the building of the trans-continental railroad forced the industry to produce enough steel to make the track. Railroads have a significant impact on every other industry as well. They are the main means of transportation of goods. SSUSH11.b Describe the impact of the railroads in the development of the west including the transcontinental railroad, and the use of Chinese labor. Railroads had a very significant impact in the development of the West. First off, once the trans-continental railroad was built it allowed people from the East to be easily transported to West which made migration to this area more intriguing. Secondly, it allowed for a country wide transfer of goods, so a company from the East could easily expand their goods/services to the West therefore expanding business. The use of Chinese labor for the creation of the Railroad was no different than slavery, except that the Chinese volunteered to work and were not forced to work SSUSH11.c Identify John D. Rockefeller and the standard oil Company and the rise of trusts and monopolies. Answer: John D. Rockefeller was the founder of the Standard Oil Company. He was also a philanthropist and on of the richest Americans in history. The Standard Oil Company was an Ohio oil corporation founded by John D. Rockefeller. It took control of most other oil refineries in the U.S. A rise of trusts would turn into an organization with tremendous power. There would be a board of trustees that were given control of all properties and affiliates. The arrangement would lead to a monopoly. SSUSH11.d Describe the inventions of Thomas Edison including the electric light bulb, motion pictures, and the phonograph, and their impact on American life. A: The electric light bulb replaces highly poisonous and flammable gas lights, making cities and such, much safer places to live. Motion pictures overtook the stage for top entertainment. It was affordable by most eeryone. It changed ideas, values, and some of the most important aspects of our culture. The phonograph is able to record and replay sounds. It can preserve speeches and songs. SSUSH12.a Describe Ellis Island, the change in immigrant’s origins to southern and eastern Europe, and the impact of this change on urban America. Answer: Ellis Island in New York Harbor was the gateway for millions of immigrants to the United States as the site of the nation's busiest immigration station. Most of the people who came through the island came from Southern or Eastern European countries. Many of the people after arriving with little or no money moved into ethnic ghettos that had people of the same culture as them. It was easier to integrate with people who were of the same religion, language, and race. These ethnic ghettos are now places like; little Italy in New York, China Town…. Etc. SSUSH12.b Identify the American Federation of Labor, Samuel Gompers Answer: The American Federation of Labor (AFL) was formed in 1886. Samuel Gompers, who served as president 1886-1895 and 1896-1924, provided conservative leadership. Instead of trying to reshape the fundamental institutions of American life, as some of the more radical union activists were trying to do, the AFL focused on securing for its members higher wages, better working conditions, and a shorter workweek. Element: SSUSH12.c Describe the growth of the western population and its impact on the Native Americans with reference to Sitting Bull and Wounded Knee. Answer: Many settlers moved onto Native American lands, sometimes taking it by force. Consequently, the Native Americans distrusted the whites. The U.S. Army arrested Sitting Bull for spreading the Ghost Dance. They killed him when the people rose to stop them. The massacre at Wounded Knee was the last time the Native Americans on the Great Plains went against the government. Element: SSUSH12.d Describe the 1894 Pullman Strike as an example of industrial unrest. Answer: The Pullman Strike began May 11, 1894 in Chicago. It was a conflict of severe economic depression and social unrest. Pullman Palace Car Company factory workers walked out after negotiations over declining wages failed. These workers appealed for support to the American Railway Union (ARU), which argued unsuccessfully for arbitration. On June 20, the ARU gave notice that beginning June 26 its membership would no longer work trains that included Pullman cars. The strike compromised railroad traffic nationwide. SSUSH13.c Describe the rise of Crow, Plessy v. Ferguson, and the emergence of the NAACP. Jim Crow was not a person, yet affected the lives of millions of people. Named after a popular 19th-century minstrel song, that stereotyped African Americans, "Jim Crow" came to personify the system of government-sanctioned racial oppression and segregation in the United States. On June 7, 1892, 30-year-old Homer Plessy was jailed for sitting in the "White" car of the East Louisiana Railroad. Plessy could easily pass for white but under Louisiana law, he was considered black despite his light complexion and therefore required to sit in the "Colored" car. The NAACP (National Association for the Advancements of Colored People) was created to help and stop oppression of the black people in the United States. It emerged after people decided to band together in order to find ways to stop the “black codes, and Jim Crow laws” in the US. It was kind of like the sons of liberty all over again. SSUSH13.d Explain Ida Tarbell's role as a muckraker One of the first women to break the gender gap in American journalism was a determined woman who was diligent and scrupulous in her work, she was an achieving woman who played an important role in the history of journalism during the Progressive era. Element: SSUSH13.e Describe the significance of progressive reforms such as the initiative, the recall, and referendum direct election of senators, reform of labor laws and efforts to improve living conditions for the poor Answer: They attempted to exclude illiterates, African-Americans, and others from voting, and to reduce immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe through devices such as a literacy test. Many Progressives supported prohibition in order to destroy the political power based in saloons. At the same time, woman’s suffrage was promoted to bring a "purer" female vote into the arena. Initially the movement was successful at local levels; later it progressed to state and national levels. Progressives drew support from the middle class, and included many lawyers, teachers and business people. SSUSH14.a Explain the Chinese exclusion act of 1882 and anti-Asian immigration sentiment on the west coast. Answer: The Chinese Exclusion Act was a significant restriction on free immigration in U.S. history. The Act excluded Chinese "skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining" from entering the country for ten years under penalty of imprisonment and deportation. SSUSH14.b Describe the Spanish-American War, the war in the Philippines, and debate over American expansionism. Answer: -The Spanish-American War (April-July 1898) was a brief, intense conflict that effectively ended Spain's worldwide empire and gained the United States several new possessions in the Caribbean and the Pacific. Preceded by a naval tragedy, the destruction of USS Maine at Havana, Cuba, the Spanish-American War featured two major naval battles, plus several smaller naval clashes. -The Philippine–American War, sometimes known as the Philippine War of Independence or the Philippine Insurrection (1899–1902), was an armed military conflict between the Philippines and the United States, which arose from the struggle of the First Philippine Republic against United States annexation of the islands. The war was a continuation of the Philippine struggle for independence, following the Philippine Revolution and the Spanish-American War. -The Democratic views of Manifest Destiny and goes hand in hand with the aim of annexation and expansion. SSUSH14.c Explain U.S. involvement in Latin America, as reflected by Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine and the creation of the Panama Canal. ANSWER: The change in policy was deemed necessary because of a desire to avoid having European powers come to the Western Hemisphere for the purpose of collecting debts. It was feared that those nations might come as earnest creditors, but remain as occupying powers. This prospect was especially unwelcome at this time when the United States was pushing to build the Panama Canal. Roosevelt felt that the United States had a “moral mandate” to enforce proper behavior among the nations of Latin America. SSUSH15.a Describe the movement from U.S. neutrality to engagement in World War I with, reference to unrestricted submarine warfare. Answer: When Germany sunk our merchant ships with supplies going to our Allies Britain and France. SSUSH15.b Explain the domestic impact of World War I, reflected by the origins of the Great Migration, and the Espionage Act and socialist Eugene Debs. Answer: World War I had a big impact on America because after the war, African Americans started to migrate to the North for more jobs. By then, the Great Depression was going on so it caused more problems. While the men were overseas the women took over working in the factories so jobs were taken. SSUSH15.c Explain Wilson’s Fourteen Points, the propose League of Nations. ANS: In 1918, Woodrow Wilson proposed the Fourteen Points to the U.S. Congress. This proposal was expressed in a speech to maintain world peace. It was a plan designed to eliminate causes of war in the world. The Fourteen Points contained open diplomacy, freedom of seas, the beating down of economic barriers, and more. Under the Fourteen Points, the League of Nations was formed. The League of Nations was to resolve any unexpected future conflicts, preventing war from breaking out and keeping world peace. SSUSH15.d Explain the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, establishing Prohibition, and the Nineteenth Amendment, Establishing women suffrage. Answer: The 18th Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibited the manufacture, sale, transport, import or export of alcoholic beverages. This became known as prohibition. It was ratified on January 16, 1919. Along with the 18th Amendment, the Volstead Act was created as well. The Volstead Act allowed the Treasury Department to define what was legally considered am alcoholic beverage. The19th Amendment, it gave women the right to vote. This amendment prohibits any state and the government from denying a citizen the right to vote because of their sex. It was ratified on August 18, 1920. Woodrow Wilson supported the amendment and the next day the House of Representatives passed it. As for the Senate, they refused to debate it until October, but in the end women’s suffrage. SUSH16.a Explain how rising communism and socialism in the United States led to the Red Scare and immigrant restriction. Answer: With the rise of communism in the Soviet Union, people began to get scared. They got scared because, many immigrants were coming from Central and Eastern Europe, so no one could know who was a communist or a radical. Also the Authorities were finding bombs that were mailed to important officials. Typo- no SUSH16.b SUSH16.c Identify Henry Ford, Mass production, and the automobile. Henry Ford- the first to introduce to the world the motorized vehicle and soon make his own automobile company Mass Production- the production of goods in large numbers through the use of machinery and assembly lines Automobile- a motorized car, used to transport passengers from one place to another SUSH16.d Describe the impact of radio, and the movies. The Radio let people listen to not only music, but to news, weather, lectures, sermons, commercials, and people would listen to boxing matches. The Radio was a national sensation. The Movies gave people something to do each week or so. They started out as silent films and were an ideal form of entertainment for immigrants who spoke little English. Movies spoke directly to the desires, needs, fears, and fantasies of millions of people in the United States and around the world. SSUSH117.a Describe the causes including over production, consumption, and stock market speculation that led to the stock market crash of 1929 and Great Depression. During World War I, American farmers increased harvest yields and bought more land to meet demands caused by the war. Farmers contracted huge debts by doing this. After the war, demands for American crops fell sharply. Often, farmers would fail to sell huge crop surpluses and pay the money they owed banks and other institutions. The expansion of credit and the low income of factory workers caused Americans to buy things they needed or just wanted with money they did not have. Among the goods bought with credit were shares of stock. SSUSH17.b Explain the impact of the drought in the creation of the Dust Bowl. The intensive farming methods brought on by the war caused farmers to move farther into the plains and plow up most of the natural grasses. Without the grass to keep the soil in place, winds kicked up dust storms of up to 8,000 feet. These dust storms killed livestock and covered rivers, suffocating fish. SUSH17.c Explain the social and political impact of widespread unemployment that resulted in developments such as Hoovervilles. Answer: As more people became unemployed, many also became evicted from their homes. Seeking new work, they moved to the outskirts of major towns and resided with other sufferers in shantytowns. As things got worse, people began to seek help from the government. When the government provided no relief, people blamed President Hoover for the problem, and thus the shantytowns were nicknamed “Hoovervilles.” SSUSH18.a Describe the creation of the Tennessee Valley Authority as a works program and as an effort to control the environment. Answer: The Tennessee Valley Authority was a part of the government created by President Roosevelt to help protect and conserve the parts of the environment that were being affected by human waste. The TVA worked in all parts of the environment, understanding that each part of the environment that they worked on would in turn affect the rest of the “system.” SSUSH18.b Explain the Wagner Act and the rise of industrial unionism. The Wagner Act of 1935 created a system to arbitrate disputes between unions and employers. It prohibited employers from interfering with union activities and it also gave works the right to join unions and bargain collectively. The rise of industrial unionism evolved labor unions organizing method through which all workers in the same industry are organized into the same union – regardless of skill or trade – thus giving workers in one industry, or in all industries, more leverage in bargaining or strike situations. SSUSH18.c Explain the passage of the Social Security Act as a part of the second New Deal. The Social Security Act was established during President Roosevelt first term, and passed by Congress as part of the New Deal. The act was an attempt to limit what were seen as dangers in the modern American life, including old age, poverty, unemployment, and the burdens of widows and fatherless children. SSUSH18.d Identify Eleanor Roosevelt as a symbol of social progress and women’s activism. Answer: Eleanor Roosevelt was very influential. She supported women’s activism and convinced her husband (Franklin Delano Roosevelt) to give more women government jobs and positions. She also played a role in the civil rights movement and traveled to different states to try and witness what African Americans were going through. She joined the NAACP because she believed that everyone should have equal rights and she fought to try and make that happen. SSUSH18.e Identify the political challenges to Roosevelt’s domestic and international leadership; include the role of Huey Long, the “court packing bill,” and the Neutrality Act. Answer: Roosevelt faced many challenges to his domestic and International leadership. He was being told by the liberals that he hadn’t gone far enough to socialize our economy, while the conservatives believed he had made the federal government too powerful and large. Huey Long, the Louisiana state senator wanted to replace Roosevelt as president, Long was at first a supporter of the New Deal. Congress passed the Neutrality Acts to prevent Roosevelt from entering America into WW2. In 1937 Roosevelt proposed a bill called the Court Packing Bill, to give president the power to appoint an extra Supreme Court justice over the age of 70 years old. He was hoping this bill would add more powers to support his New Deal. SSUSH19.a Explain A. Philip Randolph's proposed march on Washington, D.C. and President Franklin D. Roosevelt's response. Answer: The march on Washington Movement was organized by Asa Philip Randolph in 1941 and was formed as a tool to organize a mass march on Washington, D.C.; it was designed to pressure the US government into desegregating the armed forces and providing fair employment opportunities for African Americans. Roosevelt’s response was the formation and signing of the “Fair Employment Practices Committee.” Its purpose was to prohibit racial discrimination in the national defense industry. It was the first federal action that promoted equal opportunity and prohibited employment discrimination in the United States. SSUSH19.b Explain the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the internment of JapaneseAmericans. Answer: The attack on Pearl Harbor was a surprise military attack on the US Naval Base in Hawaii in the early morning of Dec 7th, 1941. The attack was intended as a preventive action in order to keep the US pacific Fleet from influencing the war the Japanese were planning in Southeast Asia, against Britain and the Netherlands, as well as US in the Philippines. Within hours of the attack, hundreds of Japanese Americans leaders were rounded up and brought to high security camps. Later thousands of Japanese American, including U.S. citizens, were forced from their homes and relocated to interment camps. In 1942 approximately 110,000 Japanese Americans were introduced to these camps. SSUSH19.c Explain major events including the lend-lease program, the Battle of Midway, D-Day, and the fall of Berlin. Answer: lend-lease- program- Lend-Lease was the program outlined by the Neutrality Acts allowed the United States to provide Allied Nations defense supplies without actually going to war with the Axis Powers. The Battle of Midway- the Battle of Midway, fought over and near the tiny U.S. midPacific base at Midway atoll, represents the strategic high water mark of Japan's Pacific Ocean war. D-Day- June 6, 1944, 160,000 Allied troops landed along a 50-mile stretch of heavily-fortified French coastline to fight Nazi Germany on the beaches of Normandy, France to defeat Hitler. Fall of Berlin- On April 16-17, the Soviets struck in a quick and furious way. As the Americans and British forces were rapidly advancing from the west, German's immensely outnumbered army fought desperately to beat back the rapidly approaching Soviet Army. It took the Red army six days to smash their way to the outskirts of Berlin. In three days, on April 25, a band of Soviet soldiers cut off the German capital from the rest of Nazi-controlled Germany. SSUSH19.d Describe war mobilization, as indicated by rationing, war-time conversation, and the role of women in the war industries Answer: War mobilization- the rationing of local items such as rubber, nylons, cans, sugar, ect. , for the war effort. War-time conversion- all the items had to be converted into war supplies. Role of women- took over the jobs of all the men who went to fight in the war. SSUSH19.e Describe Los Alamos and the scientific, economic, and military implications of developing the atomic bomb. Answer: Los Alamos is a United States Department of Energy (DOE) national laboratory, The laboratory is one of the largest science and technology institutions in the world that conducts multidisciplinary research for fields such as national security, outer space, renewable energy, medicine, nanotechnology, and supercomputing. To develop an atomic bomb, it would involve billions of dollars in research and materials. The atomic bomb was significant in regards to the military because it made the U.S. very powerful and superior above other countries. Other countries wouldn’t want to conflict with the U.S. in fear of an atomic bomb attack. SSUSH20.a Describe the creation of the Marshall Plan. Answer: In June 1947, the American general George Marshall went to Europe. Marshal said every country in Europe was so poor that it was in, “danger of turning Communist!” Also Europe was ‘a breeding ground of hate’. To commit to Europe, He said that America should give $17 billion of aid to get Europe’s economy going and stop Communism. The Truman Doctrine was the Cold War strategy of containment versus the Soviet Union and the expansion of communism. The containment policy was supposed to stop the rise of communism. SSUSH20.b Explain the impact of the new communist regime in China, the outbreak of the Korean War, and how these events contributed to the rise of Senator Joseph McCarthy. Answer: Mao Zedong wanted the Chinese population to achieve an “ideal society” essentially derived from Marxism. To execute his plan, he believed that violence was necessary and a Civil War began between the Chinese Communist Party and the Nationalists, resulting in the Communist party gaining power and the mass murdering of tens of millions of people. Civilian casualties of the Korean War that were either dead, wounded, or missing- totaled between three or four million during the three years of war. Americans saw the wars overseas as a frightening warning to the states. By exposing these events, Senator McCarthy got Americans to be emotionally involved and supportive of his anti-communism campaign. SSUSH20.c Describe the Cuban Revolution, the Bay of Pigs, and the Cuban missile crisis. Answer: The Cuban Revolution can be described as a revolt led by Fidel Castro to overthrow the dictator of Cuba, Fulgencio Batista, on January 1, 1959 by the 26th of July Movement. The Bay of Pigs Invasion was an unsuccessful attempt by the United states-backed Cuban exiles to overthrow the government of the Cuban dictator Fidel Castro. The Cuban Missile Crisis was the closest the world ever came to a nuclear was. American armed forces were at their highest state of readiness ever and Soviet field commanders in Cuba were prepared to use battlefield nuclear weapons to defend Cuba if it was invaded. However, President John F. Kennedy and Premier Nikita Khrushchev were able to avert the war. SSUSH20.d Describe the Vietnam War, the Tet offensive, and growing opposition to the war. Answer: The Vietnam War was the longest military battle in the history of the United States. It lasted from 1954 to April 30, 1975. It was fought between the communist North Vietnam and the US supported South Vietnam. Over 1.4 million military personnel and an estimated 2 million civilians were killed in the war. The war ended with the defeat of South Vietnam. Ultimately Vietnam was unified. The Tet Offensive was a series of battles in the Vietnam War. On Jan. 31, 1968, the Vietnamese Communists launched a major offensive throughout South Vietnam. It took weeks for U.S. and South Vietnamese troops to retake all of the captured cities, including the former imperial capital of Hue. Although the offensive was not militarily successful for the Vietnamese Communists, it was a political and psychological victory for them. It contradicted claims by the U.S. government that the war had already been won. Demonstrations, marches, and acts of civil disobedience in protest to US involvement in the Vietnam War (1954–75), were beginning around 1965. Anti-war sentiment arose from the question of the morality of participation in what many regarded as a civil war; the growing human and environmental costs; and doubts that the US war effort would succeed. SSUSH21.a Describe the baby boom and the impact as shown by Levitton and the Interstate Highway Act. Levittown, Long Island became known as "Fertility Valley" because many of the returning servicemen weren't just buying their first home, they were starting their family and having children in such significant numbers that the generation of new babies became known as the "Baby Boom." In the U.S., the baby boom was an increase in the birth rate between 1946 and 1964. The hardships of the Great Depression and World War II led many unmarried couples to delay marriage and many married couples to delay having children. The war's end, followed by a period of economic prosperity (the 1950s and early 1960s), brought a surge in population. The Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, popularly known as the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act was enacted on June 29, 1956, when Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the bill into law. Appropriating $25 billion for the construction of 41,000 miles (66,000 km) of Interstate Highways over a 20-year period. This was necessary because of the increase of people driving automobiles. SSUHSH21.b Describe the impact television has had on American culture, including the presidential debates (Kennedy/Nixon, 1960), news coverage of the Civil Rights movement. Television made its impact on Americans in the fifties and led to be the dominant mass media. From the fifties and on TV was watched in home around America at increasing lengths threw the fifties a trend that has still not stopped. The invention of TV gave presidents yet another tool to use to win the elections. The TV led and end to all radio debates for presidents. The TV rarely helps a president win an election but brings new ideas to the American people, deflect attacks from there opponents, and exploit opponents weakness. With the help of TV civil rights leaders were able to exploit the violence of segregation. SSUHS21.c Analyze the impact of technology on American life including the development of the personal computer and the cellular phone. Some of the technologies that have impacted our society is the car, planes, medicines, and of course the computer and cell phones. With the advancements in cars and the invention of the airplanes we can now travel what would take hours to minutes and days to hours. With cars and planes it has made people who couldn't afford to travel outside their homes the ability to travel. With the advancements in medicines we can cure anything from a runny nose and cough to cancers and to spinal injuries. Modern medicine technologies now make it possible to use robotics and cameras so a doctor and patients are not in the same room and he can still treat something life threatening. Computers have brought information to our finger tips. We can also use webcams to see and talk to people in other country. We can send info via email and personal networks like Facebook and Myspace. With the invention of the cell phone we can now communicate on the go. It also now allows us to access the internet like a computer. With the invention of the cell phone we no longer have to go next door to use a phone and dialing a number can be as simple as pushing one button. SSUSH21.d Describe the impact of competition with the USSR as evidenced by the launch of Sputnik I and President Eisenhower’s actions? Answer: The Soviet Union’s launch of the Sputnik satellite in 1957 inspired the United States to work toward placing a manned spacecraft in orbit. SSUSH22.a Explain the importance of President Truman’s order to integrate the U.S. military and the federal government? Answer: In July 1948, President Truman issued Executive Order 9981, declaring that all that served in the armed services should receive equal treatment and opportunityhe order desegregation or separation of ethnic or racial groups of military facilities as soon as possible. Desegregation was slow in the 1940’s and by 1951; most of the units in Korea were integrated. SSUSH22.b Identify Jackie Robinson and the integration of baseball. Answer: Jackie was born in Cairo, GA in 1919. He was the first baseball player to break Major League Baseball’s color barrier that segregated the sport for more than 50 years. SSUSH22.c Explain Brown v. Board of Education and the efforts to resist the decision. Answer: Segregation of white and Negro children in the public schools of a State denies to Negro children the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. SSUSH22.d Describe the significance of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Letter from a Birmingham Jail and his I have a dream speech. Answer: Letter from a Birmingham Jail- King wrote this letter from the city jail in Birmingham, Alabama. He was confined after being arrested for his part in a planned non-violent protest against racial segregation. King's letter is a response to a statement made by eight white Alabama clergymen. King defended the apparent impatience of people in the civil rights movement. He upheld the general use of nonviolent civil disobedience against laws, saying that human rights must take precedence over such laws. I have a dream speech- This speech is a very important and popular speech that Martin Luther King Jr. has given. The reason why it was so significant was because MLK Jr. stood up for not only his rights, but everyone around him. It brought greater attention to the Civil Rights Movement. This speech went Nationwide and it was popular in magazines, newspapers, etc. He called it for racial equality and to put an end to discrimination. It was a defining moment of the American Civil Rights Movement. SSUSH22.e Describe the causes and consequences of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Answer: Civil Rights Act of 1964- (Cause) The bill was introduced by John F. Kennedy. It was intended to put an end to discrimination based on race, color, religion or national origin. It came to President John F. Kennedy’s attention that 57% of African American housing came to be unacceptable. African American life expectancy was 7 years less than whites and the African American infant mortality was twice as great as whites. African Americans found it all but impossible to get mortgages from mortgage lenders. Kennedy made it clear to the world that he would find a way to help the African Americans. (Consequences) Ironically, the African American community was most vocal in criticizing the act. There were riots by African Americans in north-eastern cities because the act did not go far enough. Lyndon Johnson was dismayed at this lack of public support among the African American community. Voting Rights Act of 1965- (Cause) The bill was to ensure that African Americans had the right to vote. It was based on the Fifteenth Amendment and restated the prohibitions that African American’s should have the right to vote. President Lyndon B. Johnson introduced the VRA because people were trying to make various legal strategies to prevent blacks and other minorities from voting. (Consequences) The 1965 SCLC march to Selma, Alabama, was designed to create a scenario that would force the federal government to pass a more aggressive voting rights bill. The harsh reaction of Selma sheriffs to the protesters, and the murder of several of them; carried around the world by television, it caused a dramatic reaction to the indiscriminate use of police dogs, fire hoses, and excessive force and violence against the nonviolent civil rights protesters. SSUSH23.a Describe the Warren Court and the expansion of individual rights as seen in the Miranda decision. Answer: Chief Justice Earl Warren of the Supreme Court ruled on the decision of an individual’s rights as seen by the Miranda decision. Element: SSUSH23.b Describe the political impact of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy including the impact on Civil Rights legislation. Answer: JFK’s assassination devastated the society and led to the murder of the man who assassinated JFK, Lee Harvey Oswald, before he could be tried for what he did. Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as President not even 3 hours after JFK’s death. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed 2 years after Kennedy was assassinated, which is what Kennedy was trying to do for a while. SSUSH23.c Explain Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society including the establishment of Medicare. Answer: As the 36th President of the United States Lyndon Johnson formed the Great Society program that was proposed in the United States. The main goal was the elimination of poverty and racial justice. It also expressed the situations between education, medical care, and transportation. The Great Society also went through a mid-crisis when racial segregation persisted throughout the south. In 1965 they authorized the Medicare Act; it provided federal funding for many of the medical cost for older Americans. It gave benefits for those over the ages of 65. SSUSH23.d Describe the social and political turmoil of 1968 to include the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F Kennedy, and the events surrounding the Democratic National Convention. Answer: There were two political assassinations in 1968. First was the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1968 April 4. Then two month later the assassination of Presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy occurred. During the Democratic National Convention many events occurred. The Democratic National Convention was held on August 26-29th, and was brought about by police of the Vietnam War. It started many riots including a protest march on March 23 in Illinois. Other events proceeded to the tense national mood which a little time after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. an artist and cultural icon was shot. Then it also caused Columbia University to shut down by Student Protesters. SUSH24.a Compare and Contrast the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) tactics, including sit-ins, freedom rides, and changing composition. Answer: The student non-violent coordinating committee (SNCC) and the southern Christian leadership conference (SCLC) are both black non-violent protesters. They both won’t to get rid of separatism completely. SNCC was student protesters that went to lunch halls at colleges and would not leave (sit-ins). SCLC was lead by the church leaders and was followed by the community and had boycotts (Montgomery bus boycotts) and other non- violent protest. SSUSH24.b Describe the National Organization of Women and the origins and goals of the modern women’s movement. Answer: The National Organization for Women (NOW) is the largest feminist organization in the United States. It was founded in 1966 and has a membership of 500,000 contributing members and 5,987 chapters in 47 U.S. states (exceptions are Hawaii, North Dakota, and Maine) and the District of Columbia. NOW was founded on June 30, 1966, in Washington, D.C., by 28 women and men attending the Third National Conference of the Commission on the Status of Women. NOW's priority issues concern U.S. domestic policy. The six core issues that NOW addresses are abortion rights/reproductive issues, violence against women, constitutional equality, promoting diversity/ending racism, lesbian rights, and economic justice. According to NOW's bylaws, NOW's focus is on domestic American issues; however, NOW does some work on other issues of importance to women and children globally. These issues include genocide in Africa. NOW is also a coalition member with other feminist groups whose mission is global feminism. SSUSH24.c Analyze the anti-Vietnam war movement. Answer: The anti-Vietnam war movement was a movement vs. the war in Vietnam. The movement wasn’t really backed up by the government and was usually influenced by the US in other countries. One of the most famous incidents was Muhammad Ali’s refusal to join the army during that time of war. SSUSH24.d Analyze Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers movement. Answer: a: Cesar Chavez was an immigrant worker that worked on the farms in California. He protested to gain rights for the framers working on the fields without benefits. b. The UFW movement was a movement started by Chavez in order to successfully help his friends and co-workers to gain some benefits and rights as they we’re treated unfairly. SSUSH24.e Explain Rachel Carson and Silent Spring, Earth Day, the creation of the EPA, and the modern environmentalist movement. Answer: Rachel Carson was born in 1907; she was a scientist, ecologist, and a writer. In 1963 she testified before Congress trying to protect human health and the environment. Silent Spring was a book written by Rachel Carson about how uncontrolled pesticide use was harming and even killing animals and people. The meaning behind the title was that a spring season was quiet because there were no birds singing as a result of pesticide use. Earth Day is a day meant to broaden the meaning of “environment,” help bring clean water and sanitation to the world, and promote local engagement. Earth Day was founded by a peace activist, John McConnell, in 1969. The first Earth Day was on April 22, 1970. The creation on the EPA was created on December 2, 1970. It was viewed at the proclamation of a new era in the efforts to protect the environment. The EPA administers federal environmental laws dealing with air and water pollution, drinking water quality, radioactive wastes, pesticides, solid wastes, and noise pollution. The modern environmental movement was passed in 1961 and pledged $50 million over the next decade. It focused more on environmental planning, land acquisition, and easements along state highways to insure scenic values. SSUSH24.f Describe the rise of the conservative movement as seen in the presidential candidacy of Barry Goldwater (1964) and the election of Richard M. Nixon (1968). Answer: The rise of the conservative movement arose in the 1920s. It was the belief that traditional institutions work best and that society should avoid radical change. Barry Goldwater was known as “Mr. Conservative.” He brought the concepts of small government, free enterprise and a strong national defense into national public debate. In 1960 Richard M. Nixon was nominated for President, but lost against John F. Kennedy. He was nominated again by his party in 1968 and went to defeat Hubert H. Humphrey. While President his first goal was reconciliation, he also improved relations with U.S.S.R and China. Nixon appointed Justices of conservative philosophy to the Supreme Court. SSUSH25.a Describe President Richard M. Nixon's opening of China, his resignation due to the Watergate scandal, changing attitudes toward government, and the Presidency of Gerald Ford. Answer: Between Feb. 21 and Feb. 28 1972 Pres. Nixon visited the People Republic of China. It was the first time that a president had gone to china. The purpose of his visited was to mitigate the tension between Taiwan and China. It was then recognized that there is only one China, but U.S. kept official relations in Taiwan until1979 broke relations with China and established full diplomatic relations. Nixon later resigned as President of the United States for fear of being removed from office due to his involvement in the Watergate Scandal. This political scandal was the breaking into of the Democratic National Committee headquarters, which the actual purpose has yet to be established. The resignation and the scandal led to many government conspirators along with their theories and also s shady feeling of our government that still in America to this date. When the President resigns the Vice President assumes responsibility as the new President, and when Nixon resigned Gerald Ford became president. Gerald ford was the first person to ever become president who was neither elected President nor Vice President due to him being appointed by Nixon through the 25th amendment. SSUSH25.b Explain the impact of Supreme Court decisions on ideas about civil liberties and civil rights including such decisions as Roe v. Wade (1973 and the Bakke decision on affirmative action. Answer: In the Roe v. Wade case the court decided that a woman’s right to abortion is part of the constitutional right to privacy. In the Bakke decision of affirmative action it made it not ok to discriminate against minorities at colleges. SSUSH25.c Explain the Carter administrations efforts in the Middle East including the Camp David Accords, his response to the 1979 Iranian Revolution and Iranian hostage crisis Answer: Carter helped negotiate a historic peace agreement between Israel and Egypt, but he failed because, Iranian Radicals held Americans hostage. He allowed the Shah to enter the U.S. to seek medical treatment. The Camp David Accords agreements provided the framework for a peace treaty in which Egypt formally recognized the nation of Israel, becoming the first Arab nation to do so. SSUSH25.d Describe domestic and international events of Ronald Reagan's presidency including Reaganomics, the Iran-contra scandal and the collapse of the Soviet Union. Answer: Reaganomics was the economic program name after Ronald Regan Reaganomics is based on “supply-side economics." Significant tax cuts can lead to greater economic activity, since people have more money to spend and invest, which in turn can lead to greater tax revenues for the government. Iran Contra Scandal began in 1985, when President Reagan’s administration supplied weapons to Iran, a sworn enemy, in hopes of securing the release of American hostages held in Lebanon. November 1986 Reagan appeared on national television and stated that the weapons transfers had indeed occurred, but that the United States did not trade arms for hostages. Reagan publicly portrayed the USSR as an "evil empire" and supported antiCommunist movements worldwide. Reagan manipulated the USSR economic system through sabotage and other negative activities towards USSR state and its economy creating cracks which resulted into USSR breaking apart. SSUSH25.e The relationship between Congress and President Bill Clinton including the North American Free Trade Agreement and his impeachment and acquittal. Answer: The people do not like Clinton because of his deceptive stories toward Congress. Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's largest free-trade area. It basically extended to Mexico the provisions of a 1988 Canada-U.S. free-trade agreement, calling for elimination of all trade barriers over a 15-year period, granting U.S. and Canadian companies access to certain Mexican markets, and incorporating agreements on lab our and the environment. President of the United States Bill Clinton was impeached by the House of Representatives on December 19, 1998, and acquitted by the Senate on February 12, 1999. The charges, perjury and obstruction of justice, arose from the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the Paula Jones law suit. The trial proceedings were largely party-line, with no Democratic Senators voting for conviction and only five Democratic Representatives voting to impeach. SSUSH25.f Analyze the 2000 presidential election and its outcome emphasizing the role of the Electoral College. Answer: The Electoral College is the body of electors who formally elect the United States president and vice president. In the 2000 presidential election with candidates George W. Bush and Albert Gore Jr., Gore received more votes from the population. Although this may be the case, George W. Bush gained more electoral votes deeming him to become president. SSUSH25.g Analyze the response of the President George W. Bush to the attacks of September 11, 2001 on the United States, the war against terrorism, and the subsequent American interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq. Answer: -The response to the attack was to protect the citizens of the United States and around the world, then find who is responsible for the terrorist acts. -The war against terrorism was when Bush unofficially declared war on 9/11, but 3 days later Congress officially declared war. -The United States invaded Afghanistan and Iraq and found out that Afghanistan was responsible for harboring terrorists. This being said, the U.S. went to find Al Qaeda. -The US thought assumed Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.