Title: Semester Review Session
1Semester Review Session
2Pre-Columbian Indians Econ
- In North America small settlements
- Except Cahokia
- Agriculture
- Hunter-Gatherers
- Textiles
- Furs
3Tribes Nations
- Mound builders --Cahokia
- Eastern Woodlands agric, hunter-gatherers
- Great Plains didnt settle til 1600 with horse
arrival, stop farming in MN hunt buffalo - Southwest agric w/crop trio influenced by
Meso-Amer Indians - Pacific Northwest fish, hunter-gatherers,
totems, potlatch
4Natives v. Europeans Concept of Land
- Europeans
- Claims based on discovery, exploration or
settlement - Each colony could deal with Natives as they
wished - Extinguishing by Occupation most Euros felt
could get rights to Native land by purchase or
treaty - Treaties by colonial agents
- Natives
- Land is unique cant be owned/sold/transferred
only used - Part of nature inseparable
- Sustenance --existed to sustain beings on it
- Tribes each had right to use but none could own
5European Exploration
- Norsemen --1st that can prove but no legacy
- Portugal --led the way in exploration in order to
reach India by going around Africa - Spain -- after Reconquista, Spain united by
Ferdinand Isabella - Columbus Hispaniola
- Vespucci thru out Caribbean coastal S America
- Ponce de Leon FL
- Magellan circumnavigated
- Cortez Aztec
- Pizarro Inca
- Coronado SW
- De Soto lower MS area
6Treaty of Tordesillas
The Pope (not countries themselves) institutes
this agreement shows power role of church is
greater than nation-states. What is the LEGACY
of this treaty??
7Then English Exploration
- Reasons
- W/defeat of Spanish Armada in 1588, English naval
power grew! - Elizabethan Nationalism!
- Growing population
- Econ woes --lots of poor/landless
- New finance method innovated by Eng ( Dutch!)
Joint Stock Company - Cabot 1500s explored
- Drake sea dog raids on Spanish galleons
- Rolfe VA new strain of tobacco
- Raleigh lost colony of Roanoke
8Followed by France Netherlands
- Cartier NW Passage but found St. Lawrence
instead Quebec founded - Champlain established fur trade in region
- and then,
- Hudson English, but sailed for Dutch E. India
Co.
9Spanish Colonization
- In No. Amer, Spanish settlements developed slowly
due to limited mineral resources strong
opposition from the Natives - Econ Encomienda, Mission, Presidio, Pueblo
- FL St. Augustine 1565 oldest military outpost
- NM Santa Fe estbl. 1609. Pueblo Revolt in 1680
Spanish driven from era til early 1700s - TX After driven from NM, Spanish estbl. few
settlements in TX, like missions in San Antonio.
These grew in effort to resist French efforts to
explore lower MS River. - CA In response to Russian exploration from AK,
Spain estbl. settlements in San Diego (1769) and
San Francisco Los Angeles (1776). Missions
estbl there by Father Serra.
10New France
- Quebec other fur trade outposts in St. Lawrence
seaway - Couriers de bois runners of the woods
- Metis
- Jesuits
- Huguenots French protestants
11England greatest most varied impact on
colonization
- New England
- Plymouth Separatists, Mayflower Compact,
Squanto - Massachusetts Bay Non-separatists, Great
Migration, John Winthrop, NE Primer, Harvard,
Yale, town meeting, banished Anne Hutchinsons
antinomianism (faith alone not deeds) - Connecticut economic reasons, spread out from
MBC, Fundamental Orders of CT (representative
govt), blue laws - New Hampshire econ reasons, the last of the New
England colonies - Rhode Island bought land from natives, Roger
Williams, self-governing independent
12English Middle Colonies
- PA
- Penns proprietary colony, Quakers, Indians ?
--peace for 75 yrs! - Holy Experiment
- NJ
- Promised relig liberty land --struggled b/c
conflicts w/ Dutch - Characteristics Bread Colonies (export to
Europe West Indies), PA Dutch, Scots Irish,
Quakers, Zenger in 1735
13Plus the other Middle Colonies
- New Netherland (NY)
- Manhattan
- Mixed ethnic
- Patroonships --elites estblish
- Knickerbocker literature
- Leislers Rebellion
- New Sweden (NJ)
- Dutch Swedish investors trade purpose
- Log cabin
14Southern Colonies
- Chesapeake Colonies VA MD
- VA Jt Stock Co.
- Rolfe perfected tobacco cultivation
- MD Act of Toleration
- Tidewater
- Labor Shortages
- Colonies grew slowly b/c climate, disease, Indian
attacks, gender imbalance - Indentured Servants
- Headright System to attract settlers
- Slavery
- Bacon!
- Southern Colonies SC, NC, GA
- Restoration Colonies by Chas II of SC NC
proprietors loyal to king. - SC settled by Barbados immigrants
- Cash Crops Rice (and later indigo) in SC GA,
tobacco in NC - Tidewater Piedmont
- NC known as haven for runaway slaves, debtors,
fugitives - GA was LAST (1732) buffer for SC and debtor
home. - GA supposed to be no slavery.
15Why high demand for slaves?
- Reduced white indent serv migration (increased
wages in Engl) - Need dependent and less troublesome labor
force (think about Bacons Rebellion!) - Still need CHEAP labor Royal African Co.
monopoly ends - Remember Slave Laws too MA was the first to
recognize slavery as lawful!! And VA colony made
law making perpetual (condition of servitude
based on condition of mother)
16Br. Colonials the Indians
- Initial trade ideas (Squanto) goods (fur,
slaves) but then war. - Frontier of Exclusion --saw as savage, need to
spread west for growing pop. - Powhatan Confederacy in VA, defeated after long
series of wars - NE Confederation colonials organized to protect
against foreign Natives threat. - King Philips War NE Conf. helped unify to
fight. Metacomet unite lots of NE tribes. Last
of NE natives resistance - Iroquois In 17th 18th c, withstood attacks
from opposing tribes Europeans (Beaver Wars and
French Indian War, respectively) Franklin
modeled their confederation in his Albany Plan
side w/Br over Colonials in Revolutionary War.
Always beat colonials (Chief J. Brant)--ouch!
17Early Political Institutions
- Majority rule in Plymouth Aboard Mayflower,
sign doc pledging to make decisions according to
majority rule. Form of colonial self-govt of
established powers duties of govt. - Representative govt in Jamestown VA Co. agreed
to this in order to encourage settlement. 1st
representative assembly in 1619 --House of
Burgesses - Representative govt in MA MBC had limited but
important democratic actions. All free men who
were members of the Puritan Church had right to
participate in elections. - Limited nature of colonial democracy While some
English colonies were partly democratic (esp. RI
NC), only male property owners could ever vote.
Women, landless, slaves, indent. servants had
almost NO rights.
1818th c. Colonial Society
- Polit self-govt w/ repres. Assemblies elected
by eligible voters most governors appt. by king
(except RI CT) - Econ agric!! Slavery in all by war. Little
gold/silver b/c required to pay for English
imports in specie. Issued paper , but lots
inflation. - Relig toleration, sort of. ALL allowed
different religions but w/varying degrees of
freedom. (i.e. MA only Protestants). RI PA
most tolerant - Social no hereditary aristocracy, social
mobility possible!, so patriarchal - Intellectual/Arts English culture dominated lang
traditions. But growing diversity w/Euro
African migration. Georgian architecture English
art, Ben Franklin
19Colonial Religion
- Puritans Predestination, strict, no real art
- Half-Way Covenant 2nd generation less zealous
but Puritan church wanted to keep its influence
membership. - Protestant dominated, state-supported churches,
- 1st Great Awakening
- --start in NE
- --J Edwards G Whitefield --sinners at hands
of an angry God - --emotionalism increased --Old v. New
Lights - --ministers lost authority as people studied
Bible on own - --mass movement colonial unity!
20Colonial Economic Policy
- Mercantilism --do you know a definition???!
- -positives for colonies N Engl shipbuilding
prospered Chesapeake estbl. Tobacco monopoly in
England military protection by Brit navy from
threats by French Spanish - -negatives for colonies manufacturing
limited farmers received low prices paid high
prices for Engl manufact goods therefore,
resentment developed slowly SMUGGLING resulted. - Navigation Acts
- Woolen Act
- Iron Act
- Hat Act
- Molasses Act
- James II appoint Andros to rule over Dominion of
New England (1685) to collect taxes, limit town
meeting activities, suspend local legislative
bodies. Andros is ousted when Glorious
Revolution in England occurred in 1688. - Salutary Neglect --Walpole 1713 (Treaty of
Utrecht)
21French Indian War
- Last of 4 World Wars btw Br Fr
- Iroquois aided Br
- Writs of Assistance --Otis
- British victory
- Treaty of Paris 1763
- Pontiacs Rebellion Proclamation of 1763
- Response Paxton Boys
- Br war debt impose revenue taxes on colonies
22Grrr GrenvillePhase 1 1764-1769
- Stricter enforcement of Navigation Acts to stop
smuggling raise for costs of protecting
colonies/war debt. - Accused smugglers tried in Admiralty Courts ?
--no juries king-appointed judges - The First Sugar Act 1764
- Quartering Act had to provide food living
quarters
23And then, the Stamp Act (1765)
- Direct tax!
- VA Resolves --Patrick Henry
- If this be treason Only VA could levy taxes.
no tax w/o representation - Sons of Liberty Violence!
- Stamp Act Congress only their elected officials
had right to approve taxes. Declaration of
Rights Grievances (moderate petition sent to
king) - Parliament repealed but issued Declaratory Act
(1766) - New PM --Pitt
24Phase 2 Comparatively Peaceful 1770-1772
- New Quartering Act
- NY legislature suspended
- Townshend Act
- Letters from a PA Farmer no distinction btw.
Interanl and external taxes. Said Parliament
couldnt tax AT AL without representation - MA Circular Letter propaganda spreading letter
- Association non-importation agreements
- Townshend Repealed
- Boston Massacre
25Final Phase 1773-1776
- NC Regulators
- Gaspee British customs patrol ship that
colonists hated and burned! - Tea Act Tea Parties
- Coercive Act
- Closed Boston port til paid back trials in
England, suspend MA charter, no town meetings,
new Quartering Act - Response Colonials call for Cont. Congress to
meet - Quebec Act
- Suffolk Resolves denounced Coercive Acts,
advised people to form own militias. - 1st Continental Congress (1774) all but GA
endorsed Suffolk Resolves. - Lexington Concord (April 1775) looking for
leaders weapons, Paul Reveres ride triggered
calling for 2nd Continental Congress
26War!
- 2nd Continental Congress organized Continental
Army all volunteers, led by GW - Oliver Branch Petition (July 1775)
- Common Sense invoked natural law, reasoning,
tis time to part - Declaration of Independence Based on RH Lees
resolution Enlightenment principles ? - British capture cities Phila, NYC
- Losses Hardships Valley Forge, econ woes
- Loyalists aka Tories Lots in NY, NJ, GA
uber-rich conservative most political leaders
Anglican clergy were loyalists emigrated to
CAN, GBr, Indies post war - Natives side with GBr, of course!
- Turning Point Saratoga the French, et. al.
27During Late War
- Final battles in South Yorktown surrender
- Women Molly Pitcher
- State Constitutions CT RI kept charts while
others adopted new constitutions these govs
were bicameral, weak executives, strong
legislatures w/frequent elections, property
qualifications for voting, Bills of Rights,
appointed judiciary - Primogeniture Entail abolished no more 1st
born son or direct descendents laws.
28Treaty of Paris 1783
- Br recognized US as independent
- Br evacuate posts in NW territory
- MS River boundary
- US fishing rights off CAN coast
- US pay debts to Brit merchants Loyalist
confiscated property claims
29Articles of Confederation
- Written by J. Dickinson adopted by 2nd
Continental Congress. The first govt of the US
(1777-1788) - Firm league of friendship among sovereign
independent states - Powers not given reserved to the states
- Amended by unanimous votes
- No executive or judicial branch
- Make treaties, declare war, borrow money print
currency, settle disputes between states over
western land claims
30During the Articles
- Won the war! ?
- Capital in NYC
- Newburgh Conspiracy
- Loyalist Exodus to CAN, Br, Indies
- Society of Cincinnati --elitist
- Big econ depression ?
- VA Statute of Religious Freedom
- Land Ordinance of 1785 ?
- NW Ordinance of 1787 ?
- Annapolis Convention no shows, call for new
meeting to revise the Articles - Shays Rebellion!! in MA, against high taxes,
debtor imprisonment lack of paper . Followed
Decl of Independence idea of people have right to
resist govt when it abuses its power.
31Constitutional Convention
- Assemblage of demagogues 55 rich white men
- Enlightenment influences
- VA Plan v. NJ Plan CT or Great Compromise
- Slavery
- 3/5th Compromise each slave worth 3/5 of person
for purposes of determining a states level of
tax representation - Keep slave trade for at least 20 more years, when
Congress could vote to end - Electoral College showed fear mob rule!
32Ratification Amendments
- W/only 12 states attending, needed 9 states to
ratify thru special state conventions. - Federalists v. Antifederalists factions
- Federalists rich/propertied, tidewater, like
strong central govt, hate Articles, fear
mobocracy - Anti-feds small farmers, backcountry, debtors,
states rights, fear strong central govt - Federalist Papers argued a large republic best
protected minority rights. - Delaware 1st
- Laggard States --VA, NY, NC, RI
33Federalist Era Washington Adams
- Domestic Policy
- 1st Cabinet
- Bill of Rights see handout
- Judiciary Act (1789) est. federal court system
- Hamiltons Report on Public Credit Report on
Manufactures - and Hamiltons Financial Plan BE FAT!
- Treaty of Greenville After Battle of Fallen
Timbers tribes surrender territory in OH Riv
Valley - Whiskey Rebellion attack excise tax collectors,
no bloodshed - Alien Sedition Acts
- Response KY VA Resolutions
34Hamiltonians v. Jeffersonians foundation of
2-party system
- Hamiltonians/Federalists
- Rich, tidewater, Society of Cincinnati, Northern
businessmen large landowners - Lost Interpretation
- BIG army navy
- Strong Central Govt
- Pro-British foreign policy
- Aid business, BUS, Tariffs
- Jeffersonians/Dem-Reps
- Skilled workers, small farmers, some plantation
owners - Strict interpretation
- Small peacetime army navy
- Pro-French
- Pro-agric, no BUS, no tariffs
35Federalist Era
- Foreign Policy
- French Revolution
- Neutrality Proclamation (1793)
- Citizen Genet pitched to the people to support
FR in war - Jays Treaty (1794) w/ GBr over ship seizures
but did nothing except reaffirm western fort
evacuation. - Pinckney Treaty (1795) New Orleans access from
Spain - WA Farewell Address no parties, no permanent
alliances, no involved Euro affairs, avoid
sectionalism - XYZ Affair FR tried to bribe US diplomats US
public anger call for war. Adams averted
crisis
36Jefferson
- Election 1800 We are all Republicans
- LA Purchase
- Trigger Napoleon war Haiti
- Constitutional predicament
- Consequences doubled size, removed foreign
presence, guaranteed westward expansion,
strengthened TJs agrarian vision of US - Lewis Clark strengthened US claims to OR
territory, improved relations w/some tribes,
developed maps routes for fur trappers future
settlers
37Marshall Court
- Only power remaining to the Fed Party.
- Strengthened central govt at expense of states
rights - Key Cases
- Marbury v. Madison judicial review
- McCulloch v. MD BUS constitutional
- Gibbons v. Ogden fedl govt control interstate
commerce
38Jefferson Cont
- Barbary Pirates Tripolitan War (1801-04),
demanded tribute - Challenges to US neutrality impressment by BR
( also FR) ships. - Chesapeake-Leopard Affair US ship attacked
sailors killed anti-Br feeling Jefferson
applied econ pressure to war cries - Embargo Act (1807) War alternative. No trade
at all. Hurt NE economy, no impact on Br.
Repealed in 1809
39Madison
- Commercial Warfare
- Nonintercourse Act trade w/all but Br Fr
- Macons Bill No 2 whichever 1st trade with
- Onset of War of 1812
- Violate neutral rights at sea troubles on
frontier (Battle of Tippecanoe) - War Hawks (Clay Calhoun)
- NE Opposition Hartford Convention
- During the War US invaded CAN, naval battles in
Great Lakes (USS Constitution), DC was torched,
Star-Spangled Banner
40Wars Legacy
- Treaty of Ghent armistice no changes to
pre-war boundaries - US gained some international respect
- Nationalism!!
- End of Federalist Party
- Natives lose land
- US factories more industrial self-sufficiency
- New generation of war heroes --A Jackson WH
Harrison
41Era of Good Feelings
- Pres. Monroe in 1816
- One party dominated across region
- Acquired FL, new states (like MO), defeated
Barbary Pirates, and Monroe Doctrine - Cultural Nationalism belief in young country
its unlimited prosperity patriotic themes in art
lit. - Economic Nationalism
- Tariff 1816 1st protective tariff
- American System BUS, tariff, internal
improvements Clay believed fed govt should
promote industry
42But not all good feelings
- Panic 1819 land speculation, state banks
closed, inflation, unemployment, debtor prisons - Westerners began calling for land reform
strongly opposed BUS debtor prisons - MO Compromise ME free, MO slave, 36 30 proposed
Tallmadge amendment (no new slaves in MO
emancipated at age 25) ignited controversy. - Though balanced preserved, sectional controversy
damaged natl feelings - After this crisis, Americans torn btw feelings of
natl sectl.
43Monroe Foreign Policy
- Rush-Bagot Agreement (1817) disarm Great Lakes.
- Treaty of 1818 49th parallel joint occupation
of OR Territory shared fishing rights off
Newfoundland - FL Seminole War Jackson Florida Purchase (aka
Adams-Onis Treaty) - Monroe Doctrine
- Spark worried about Spain Russia
- No further colonization non-intervention
- Backed by Br acceptance and Br navy.
44National Economy the Market Revl
- Population Growth doubling every 20 yrs. Irish
later German immigrants, non-white pop growing
too - Internal Improvements Roads, Steamboats,
Canals, Railroads - Industry mechanical inventions (Whitney),
patent laws protect, corporations to raise
capital, factory system, lots labor (Lowell
System of women dorms), tiny unions (Commwealth
v. Hunt), limited liability corporations, Charles
River Bridge decision. - Commercial Agric Cheap land easy credit,
Markets!! - Cotton growth in AL MS
45Effects of Market Revolution
- The specialization on the farm, growth of cities,
industrialization dvlpmt of modern capitalism
meant - End of self-sufficient households growing
interdependence among peoples - Standard of living increased
- Challenges to adapting to fast-changing econ
- Women no longer work alongside gained more
control over lives - Econ social mobility real wages improved for
urban workers, but gap btw. very rich very poor
increased generational social mobility much
better than in Euro, but rags to riches idea is
sooo rare. - Slavery cotton industry breathed new life into
slavery
46Sectionalism
- North NE old NW
- Bound together by improved transportation high
econ growth - Much more urban. New cities in NW (Chicago,
Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis) - Afr-Amer free, less than 1, but NOT econ or
polit equality. Often hired as strikebreakers - Nativists Know-Nothing Party
-
47Sectionalism
- South
- Agric King Cotton cash crops, cotton gin made
cotton cloth more affordable, depleted soil so
constant push west - Slavery, the peculiar institution no longer
justified as econ necessity, but used historical
religious arguments - Usurped Southern capital while Northerners used
capital to industrialize - Revolts Vesey plot (1822) in SC Turner (1831)
in VA. Resulted in tightened slave codes worse
treatment for free blacks, and strengthened
abolitionist opposition.
48Sectionalism
- White Southern Society
- Aristocracy dominated legislatures, lots
slaves on big plantations tiny portion of pop. - Farmers slaveholders w/a few slaves whom they
worked alongside - Poor Whites 3/4s of white pop! Butternuts
- Mountain People Lived in Appalachians Ozarks,
loyal to Union. - Cities so few w/a small portion of the pop.
49Sectionalism
- Southern Thought
- Code of chivalry feudal society of southern
gentlemen based on personal honor, defending
womanhood, paternalism of all deemed inferior
(esp. slaves) - Education valued by elites but no chance for
lower classes. Prohibited for slaves. - Religion churches split over slavery issue in
1840s.
50Age of Jackson 1824-1844
- Jacksonian Democracy
- A Jackson as symbol of the era.
- Equality equal opportunity for white males
--would allow for the self-made man - de Tocqueville no aristocracy, social mobility
made America unique - Corrupt Bargain (1824) JQ Adams wins
- Jackson victory in 1828
51Politics
- Universal white male suffrage
- Party nominating conventions
- Two-party system
- Rise of 3rd parties
- More elected offices
- Popular campaigning
- Spoils system
- Rotation of office
52Jackson Domestic
- Indian Removal Act (1830)
- Forced resettlement to allow common man expand
- Cherokee v. GA
- Worcester v. GA
- Trail of Tears
53Jackson Domestic
- Inaugural craziness!
- Kitchen Cabinet
- Nullification Crisis sectionalism, Force Bill
- Maysville Road Veto
- BUS War
- Veto
- Pet Banks
- Specie Circular