Title: Map of the Louisiana Purchase
1Map of the Louisiana Purchase
2Map of the Louisiana Purchase
3Lewis and Clark Expedition
- Meriwether Lewis
- William Clark
- From the Mississippi River to the Pacific
Ocean
4Acquisition of Florida
- From Spain 1819
- Given to the US through a treaty
- Made a US territory in 1821
5Map of Florida
6Acquisition of Texas in 1845
- Was an Independent Republic in 1836a country
of its own - Then added to the United States
7Map of Texas in 1836
The map shows the boundaries of Texas as
understood by Texans in 1836 and by the United
States when it annexed Texas in 1845.
8Map of Texas
9Acquisition of Oregon 1846
- Oregon Territory
- Divided between US and Great Britain
- 1840s Oregon Trial
10Map of Oregon Territory
11Acquisition of California
- US at war with Mexico 1846
- Rio Grande Border dispute (Texas)
- 1848 Mexico surrenders
- US gains California and the Southwest territory.
12California
- Many people wanted to go to California for the
chance to find GOLD!
13Map of California and the SW
territory
14Westward Expansion USI.8b
15Why Go West?
- How do economic and geographic factors influence
human migration (the movement of people)?
16USI.8bWhat do I need to understand?
- Westward migration was influenced by geography
and economic opportunity (the chance to make
money).
17What factors influenced westward migration?
18PopulationGrowth
- The growing population in
the eastern states. - Crowded
- People wanted more space between themselves and
their neighbors.
19Need for Land
- Availability (Lots of it)
- Cheap
- Fertile
20Economic Opportunity
- Gold
- Logging
- Farming
- Freedom
21Gold California Gold Rush
22Logging Jobs money
23Farming to make money
24Freedom For runaway slaves
25Cheaper Faster Transportation
26Erie Canal Linked the Great Lakes w/ rivers
27Steamboats
28Knowledge of overland trails
29Knowledge of overland trails
30Belief in Manifest Destiny
- The right and duty to spread across the continent
all the way to the Pacific Ocean - expansion was good
- for the country
31NewTechnologies USI.8c
32Inventions
- Why do people invent and how do inventions affect
peoples lives? - How do inventions reflect and influence
historical events?
33USI.8cWhat do I need to understand?
- Prior to the Civil War, most industrialization in
America was in the North. - However, the equipment produced in the North had
an impact on the farming society in the South.
34How did the inventions affect the lives
of Americans?
35New Technologies
- Cotton Gin
- Eli Whitney
- Increased production of cotton
- Increased need for slave labor to cultivate and
pick cotton
36Cotton Gin
37New Technologies
- Reaper
- Cyrus McCormick
- Jo Anderson (slave)
- Increased the productivity of the American Farmer.
38 39New Technologies
- Steamboat
- Robert Fulton
- Provided faster river transportation
- Connected Southern plantations and farms to
Northern industries
40 41New Technologies
- Steam Locomotive
- Provided faster land transportation
42Are all people created EQUAL?
Reform
USI.8d
43Abolitionist Movement USI.8d
Reform
44Abolitionist Movement
- What motivates people to change their society?
- How can people change society effectively?
45USI.8dWhat do I need to understand?
- The abolitionists worked to end slavery.
46What were the main ideas expressed by the
abolitionists?
47Vocabulary
- Abolitionist
-
- Someone who fought to end slavery
48Key ideas behind the Abolitionist Movement
- Many abolitionists believed that slaves should be
freed immediately
49Key ideas behind the Abolitionist Movement
- Abolitionists believed that slavery was wrong
- Morally wrong
- Cruel and inhumane
- Violated principles of democracy (created equal)
50Harriet Tubman
Abolitionists leaders included men and women
- A slave, she escaped in 1849 and became one of
the most successful conductors on the
Underground Railroad.
51William Lloyd Garrison
- The Liberator
- Took a stand for immediate and complete abolition
of slavery
52Frederick Douglass
- A fugitive slave
- Established a newspaper and gave speeches
against slavery.
53Suffrage Movement USI.8d
Reform
54Suffrage Movement
- What motivates people to change their society?
- How can people change society effectively?
55USI.8dWhat do I need to understand?
- The suffrage movement helped women gain equal
rights.
56Vocabulary
- Suffrage
-
- the right to vote
57What were the main ideas expressed
during the suffrage movement?
- All men and women are created equal
58Key ideas behind the suffragist movement
- Women were deprived of basic rights
- Right to vote
- Educational opportunitiesespecially higher
education (college)
59Key ideas behind the suffragist movement
- Women were deprived of basic rights
- Equal opportunities in business
- Limited rights to own property independently
60Leaders of the Suffrage Movement
- The movement was led by strong women who began
their campaign before the Civil War and continued
after the war ended.
61Isabel Sojourner Truth
- Wanted emancipation and womens rights
62Susan B. Anthony
- Lectured on womens rights
63Elizabeth Cady Stanton
- Called the first womens right convention in the
United StatesSeneca Falls, N.Y. - Stanton served as the president of the National
American Woman Suffrage Association
64Elizabeth Cady Stantonand Susan B. Anthony
- Stanton often served as the writer and Anthony as
the strategist in this effective working
relationship