US History A - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 259
About This Presentation
Title:

US History A

Description:

Title: US History A Author: Nan Hudson Last modified by: Thomas Callahan Created Date: 12/11/2005 3:42:01 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:132
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 260
Provided by: NanH151
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: US History A


1
US History A
  • Final Exam Review

2
Be familiar with these dates
  • 1607 Jamestown established
  • 1763 End of French and Indian War
  • 1775 American Revolution begins
  • 1776 Declaration of Independence
  • 1783 American Revolution ends
  • 1788 Constitution ratified

3
Be familiar with these dates
  • 1803 Louisiana Purchase
  • 1812-1815 War of 1812
  • 1830 1850 Age of Reform
  • 1846-1848 War with Mexico
  • 1861-1865 Civil War
  • 1865-1876 Reconstruction
  • 1876-1900 New Industrial Age
  • 1876-1915 Age of Immigration

4
  • Site of the first permanent English settlement

5
Jamestown
  • Site of the first permanent English settlement

6
  • These people migrated to New England in order to
    escape religious persecution.

7
Puritans
  • These people migrated to New England in order to
    escape religious persecution.

8
  • City where the British killed 5 colonists and
    where the colonists poured the taxed tea into the
    Harbor.

9
Boston, Massachusetts
  • City where the British killed 5 colonists and
    where the colonists poured the taxed tea into the
    Harbor.

10
  • Site where the first shots of the American
    Revolution were fired.

11
Lexington
  • Site where the first shots of the American
    Revolution were fired.

12
  • Agreement made by Puritans on board their ship in
    which they agreed to obey their own laws.

13
Mayflower Compact
  • Agreement made by Puritans on board their ship in
    which they agreed to obey their own laws.

14
  • He brought settlers to the colony of Georgia

15
James Oglethorpe
  • He brought settlers to the colony of Georgia

16
  • British policy in the 1700s of not interfering in
    the American colonies politics and economy as
    long as they were beneficial to the interests of
    the British.

17
Salutary Neglect
  • British policy in the 1700s of not interfering in
    the American colonies politics and economy as
    long as they were beneficial to the interests of
    the British.

18
  • Religious movement that emphasized equality of
    people so that religion became more democratic
    and indirectly led to the American Revolution

19
Great Awakening
  • Religious movement that emphasized equality of
    people so that religion became more democratic
    and indirectly led to the American Revolution

20
  • This is the term used to describe the horrible
    slave voyage to the Americas.

21
Middle Passage
  • This is the term used to describe the horrible
    slave voyage to the Americas.

22
  • An economic theory under which a country
    increases its wealth exporting more goods than it
    imports.

23
Mercantilism
  • An economic theory under which a country
    increases its wealth exporting more goods than it
    imports.

24
  • This ended the French and Indian War which was
    won by Britain and stripped France of all her
    claims in the New World

25
Treaty of Paris 1763
  • This ended the French and Indian War which was
    won by Britain and stripped France of all her
    claims in the New World

26
  • The purpose of this was to stop westward
    expansion by the colonists and calm the Indian
    uprisings.

27
Proclamation of 1763
  • The purpose of this was to stop westward
    expansion by the colonists and calm the Indian
    uprisings.

28
  • This pamphlet was written by Thomas Paine to help
    convince the American colonists that a complete
    break with Britain was required.

29
Common Sense
  • This pamphlet was written by Thomas Paine to help
    convince the American colonists that a complete
    break with Britain was required.

30
  • This was a statement of the reasons for the
    separation from Britain. It also stated that the
    purpose of government was to secure the people
    their God given rights.

31
Declaration of Independence
  • This was a statement of the reasons for the
    separation from Britain. It also stated that the
    purpose of government was to secure the people
    their God given rights.

32
  • This American victory was the turning point of
    the Revolutionary War.

33
Saratoga
  • This American victory was the turning point of
    the Revolutionary War.

34
  • Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness

35
Unalienable Rights
  • Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness

36
  • Site of an American victory in 1781 as well as
    the place where Cornwallis surrendered

37
Yorktown
  • Site of an American victory in 1781 as well as
    the place where Cornwallis surrendered

38
  • This was the first internal tax and the first
    direct tax levied by the British on goods and
    services. It required the purchase of stamps
    that were to be put on printed materials.

39
Stamp Act
  • This was the first internal tax and the first
    direct tax levied by the British on goods and
    services. It required the purchase of stamps
    that were to be put on printed materials.

40
  • Originally it required colonial governments to
    furnish barracks and other provisions for royal
    troops but was extended to require the billeting
    of soldiers in tavern and inns at the expense of
    the colonists.

41
Quartering Act
  • Originally it required colonial governments to
    furnish barracks and other provisions for royal
    troops but was extended to require the billeting
    of soldiers in tavern and inns at the expense of
    the colonists.

42
  • Confrontation between British troops and colonial
    shipyard workers which resulted in the deaths of
    four colonists. Used by Sam Adams as a propaganda
    tool.

43
Boston Massacre
  • Confrontation between British troops and colonial
    shipyard workers which resulted in the deaths of
    four colonists. Used by Sam Adams as a propaganda
    tool.

44
  • A large group of Boston rebels disguised
    themselves as Native Americans and dumped the
    entire cargo of an East India Company ship into
    the harbor.

45
Boston Tea Party
  • A large group of Boston rebels disguised
    themselves as Native Americans and dumped the
    entire cargo of an East India Company ship into
    the harbor.

46
  • Reason the American colonists objected to
    Parliaments taxes.

47
Taxation without Representation
  • Reason the American colonists objected to
    Parliaments taxes.

48
  • Keeps each branch of government from getting too
    much power.

49
Checks and Balances
  • Keeps each branch of government from getting too
    much power.

50
  • These people are the advisors to the President.

51
Cabinet
  • These people are the advisors to the President.

52
  • A tax on imports.

53
Tariff
  • A tax on imports.

54
  • Body with equal representation from each state.

55
Senate
  • Body with equal representation from each state.

56
  • Presidents power to reject a proposed law.

57
Veto
  • Presidents power to reject a proposed law.

58
  • This is an addition or change to the Constitution.

59
Amendment
  • This is an addition or change to the Constitution.

60
  • He was an inventor, served as American ambassador
    to France and was a leader and compromiser at the
    Constitutional Convention.

61
Benjamin Franklin
  • He was an inventor, served as American ambassador
    to France and was a leader and compromiser at the
    Constitutional Convention.

62
  • Weak government written as a reaction to the
    harsh rule of the British that had been
    overturned in the Revolutionary War.

63
Articles of Confederation
  • Weak government written as a reaction to the
    harsh rule of the British that had been
    overturned in the Revolutionary War.

64
  • These are the first ten amendments to the
    Constitution that guarantee personal liberties.

65
Bill of Rights
  • These are the first ten amendments to the
    Constitution that guarantee personal liberties.

66
  • He attended all the sessions of the
    Constitutional Convention, took copious notes and
    is called the father of the Constitution.

67
James Madison
  • He attended all the sessions of the
    Constitutional Convention, took copious notes and
    is called the father of the Constitution.

68
  • This agreement called for a two house legislature
    with representation based on population is one
    house and equal representation in the other house.

69
Great Compromise
  • This agreement called for a two house legislature
    with representation based on population is one
    house and equal representation in the other house.

70
  • This body which is made up of members from each
    state ( for each state is the total of
    Representatives and Senators) actually elects the
    President.

71
Electoral College
  • This body which is made up of members from each
    state ( for each state is the total of
    Representatives and Senators) actually elects the
    President.

72
  • Natural born citizen
  • At least 35 years old
  • Resident at least 14 years

73
Qualifications to be President
  • Natural born citizen
  • At least 35 years old
  • Resident at least 14 years

74
  • This branch of the government administers and
    carries out the law and is headed by the
    President.

75
Executive Branch
  • This branch of the government administers and
    carries out the law and is headed by the
    President.

76
  • This grants to Congress the power to make all
    laws which shall be necessary and proper for
    carrying to execution the foregoing powers.

77
Elastic Clause
  • This grants to Congress the power to make all
    laws which shall be necessary and proper for
    carrying to execution the foregoing powers.

78
  • This is the branch of government which enacts or
    makes the laws.

79
Legislative
  • This is the branch of government which enacts or
    makes the laws.

80
  • This is the highest court of the land that today
    is made up of 9 justices.

81
Supreme Court
  • This is the highest court of the land that today
    is made up of 9 justices.

82
  • He was the nations greatest hero and most
    respected public figure he was also expected to
    be the nations first President.

83
  • He was a lawyer, a Federalist and the son of a
    banker who spoke for a government controlled by
    the wealthy and educated and created the National
    Bank.

84
Alexander Hamilton
  • He was a lawyer, a Federalist and the son of a
    banker who spoke for a government controlled by
    the wealthy and educated and created the National
    Bank.

85
  • Belief that the government should not do anything
    that is not specifically stated in the
    Constitution.

86
Strict Construction
  • Belief that the government should not do anything
    that is not specifically stated in the
    Constitution.

87
  • Something said or done that becomes an example,
    rule or tradition to be followed.

88
Precedent
  • Something said or done that becomes an example,
    rule or tradition to be followed.

89
  • This is the name for those who favored the
    Constitution and a strong central government.

90
Federalists
  • This is the name for those who favored the
    Constitution.

91
  • This is a states refusal to recognize a federal
    law.

92
George Washington
  • He was the nations greatest hero and most
    respected public figure he was also expected to
    be the nations first President.

93
Nullification
  • This is a states refusal to recognize a federal
    law.

94
  • Incident in which the French demanded a bribe
    before agreeing to meet with the American
    ambassadors.

95
XYZ Affair
  • Incident in which the French demanded a bribe
    before agreeing to meet with the American
    ambassadors.

96
  • This enables the federal courts to determine if a
    states laws are in keeping with the federal
    Constitution.

97
Judicial Review
  • This enables the federal courts to determine if a
    states laws are in keeping with the federal
    Constitution.

98
  • Name the Native American woman who guided Lewis
    and Clark.

99
Sacajawea
  • Name the Native American woman who guided Lewis
    and Clark.

100
  • He was an inventor, the founder of the University
    of Virginia, author of the Declaration of
    Independence and President.

101
Thomas Jefferson
  • He was an inventor, the founder of the University
    of Virginia, author of the Declaration of
    Independence and President.

102
  • He was the hero of the Battle of New Orleans,
    helped to defeat the Spanish in Florida and
    President.

103
Andrew Jackson
  • He was the hero of the Battle of New Orleans,
    helped to defeat the Spanish in Florida and
    President.

104
  • This was unrest in 1794 caused by opposition to a
    tax on distilled corn liquor its suppression was
    the first demonstration of the power of the
    federal government.

105
Whiskey Rebellion
  • This was unrest in 1794 caused by opposition to a
    tax on distilled corn liquor its suppression was
    the first demonstration of the power of the
    federal government.

106
  • Statement passed in 1798 that attacked the Alien
    and Sedition Acts as unconstitutional.

107
Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
  • Statement passed in 1798 that attacked the Alien
    and Sedition Acts as unconstitutional.

108
  • In 1804 they led an expedition from St. Louis, up
    the Missouri River and across the Rocky Mountains
    to the Oregon territory and the Pacific Ocean.

109
Lewis and Clark
  • In 1804 they led an expedition from St. Louis, up
    the Missouri River and across the Rocky Mountains
    to the Oregon territory and the Pacific Ocean.

110
  • An 1819 treaty between the United States and
    Spain in which Spain ceded Florida to the United
    States.

111
Adams-Onis Treaty
  • An 1819 treaty between the United States and
    Spain in which Spain ceded Florida to the United
    States.

112
  • This is the 1803 acquisition by the United States
    of French territory extending from the
    Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains for 15
    million.

113
Louisiana Purchase
  • This is the 1803 acquisition by the United States
    of French territory extending from the
    Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains for 15
    million.

114
  • A series of laws enacted in 1820 to maintain the
    balance of power between slave states and free
    states.

115
Missouri Compromise
  • A series of laws enacted in 1820 to maintain the
    balance of power between slave states and free
    states.

116
  • These laws were an attempt by the Federalist to
    weaken the Democratic-Republican party which drew
    a lot of its support common people.

117
Alien and Sedition Acts
  • These laws were an attempt by the Federalist to
    weaken the Democratic-Republican party which drew
    a lot of its support common people.

118
  • This group wanted war with Britain because of a
    desire to acquire Canada for the United States.

119
War Hawks
  • This group wanted war with Britain because of a
    desire to acquire Canada for the United States.

120
  • This describes the efforts of reformers to end
    slavery.

121
Abolitionist Movement
  • This describes the efforts of reformers to end
    slavery.

122
  • This was an organized campaign to eliminate
    alcohol consumption.

123
Temperance Movement
  • This was an organized campaign to eliminate
    alcohol consumption.

124
  • Refers to the forced movement of the Cherokee by
    Jackson in 1838 1839 to Oklahoma in violation
    of a Supreme Court order.

125
Trail of Tears
  • Refers to the forced movement of the Cherokee by
    Jackson in 1838 1839 to Oklahoma in violation
    of a Supreme Court order.

126
  • He was a statesman from South Carolina who held
    many offices in the federal government. He ran
    for President in 1824 and was a staunch supporter
    of states rights.

127
John C. Calhoun
  • He was a statesman from South Carolina who held
    many offices in the federal government. He ran
    for President in 1824 and was a staunch supporter
    of states rights.

128
  • She was a former slave who spoke to white
    audiences in her work as an abolitionist and
    womens rights advocate.

129
Sojourner Truth
  • She was a former slave who spoke to white
    audiences in her work as an abolitionist and
    womens rights advocate.

130
  • The freeing of enslaved persons.

131
Emancipation
  • The freeing of enslaved persons.

132
  • His experiences as a slave made him into the
    nations most influential African American
    abolitionist.

133
Frederick Douglass
  • His experiences as a slave made him into the
    nations most influential African American
    abolitionist.

134
  • As a school reformer and supporter of public
    education, he devised an educational system in
    Massachusetts that was later copied by many
    states.

135
Horace Mann
  • As a school reformer and supporter of public
    education, he devised an educational system in
    Massachusetts that was later copied by many
    states.

136
  • Members of this political party were chiefly
    small farmers, city workers and newly emerging
    business leaders who opposed an all-powerful
    federal government and the national bank.

137
Jacksonian Democrats
  • Members of this political party were chiefly
    small farmers, city workers and newly emerging
    business leaders who opposed an all-powerful
    federal government and the national bank.

138
  • Declaration in 1823 that the United States would
    oppose efforts by any outside power to control a
    nation in the Western Hemisphere.

139
Monroe Doctrine
  • Declaration in 1823 that the United States would
    oppose efforts by any outside power to control a
    nation in the Western Hemisphere.

140
  • This was a network of escape routes and safe
    houses that provided protection and
    transportation for slaves fleeing north to
    freedom.

141
Underground Railroad
  • This was a network of escape routes and safe
    houses that provided protection and
    transportation for slaves fleeing north to
    freedom.

142
  • This conflict between the United States and
    Mexico ended in a US victory and the addition of
    substantial territory.

143
Mexican War
  • This conflict between the United States and
    Mexico ended in a US victory and the addition of
    substantial territory.

144
  • This violent uprising in August 1831 saw the
    deaths of 57 white people in attacks on four
    plantations. It was eventually suppressed by
    local militia and 20 slaves were hanged.

145
Nat Turners Rebellion
  • This violent uprising in August 1831 saw the
    deaths of 57 white people in attacks on four
    plantations. It was eventually suppressed by
    local militia and 20 slaves were hanged.

146
  • He was the 7th President of the United States who
    supported minimal government and the spoils
    system, vetoed rechartering of the national bank
    and pursued a harsh policy toward Native
    Americans.

147
Andrew Jackson
  • He was the 7th President of the United States who
    supported minimal government and the spoils
    system, vetoed rechartering of the national bank
    and pursued a harsh policy toward Native
    Americans.

148
  • This was the argument that the United States was
    fated to expand from sea to shining sea.

149
Manifest Destiny
  • This was the argument that the United States was
    fated to expand from sea to shining sea.

150
  • The South opposed this 1828 tariff saying that it
    was economically discriminatory because raising
    the price of manufactured goods would cause
    foreign markets to stop buying cotton.

151
Tariff of Abominations
  • The South opposed this 1828 tariff saying that it
    was economically discriminatory because raising
    the price of manufactured goods would cause
    foreign markets to stop buying cotton.

152
  • This is the practice of placing your friends in
    important positions when you take office.

153
Spoils System
  • This is the practice of placing your friends in
    important positions when you take office.

154
  • Association of seven seceding Southern states
    formed in 1861.

155
Confederate States of America
  • Association of seven seceding Southern states
    formed in 1861.

156
  • The purpose of this forced entry of a federal
    arsenal was to get weapons to arm slaves. The
    leader was hanged.

157
John Browns Raid
  • The purpose of this forced entry of a federal
    arsenal was to get weapons to arm slaves. The
    leader was hanged.

158
  • This refers to the violence that occurred in 1856
    between those for slavery and those who were
    against slavery in the Midwest.

159
Bleeding Kansas
  • This refers to the violence that occurred in 1856
    between those for slavery and those who were
    against slavery in the Midwest.

160
  • President of the Confederate States of America
    who ordered the attack on Fort Sumter, the first
    violent act of the Civil War.

161
Jefferson Davis
  • President of the Confederate States of America
    who ordered the attack on Fort Sumter, the first
    violent act of the Civil War.

162
  • This was the American policy of letting the
    people in a territory decide whether slavery
    would be allowed there.

163
Popular sovereignty
  • This was the American policy of letting the
    people in a territory decide whether slavery
    would be allowed there.

164
  • This law written in 1854 called on the citizens
    of the two territories involved to decide the
    issue of slavery there.

165
Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • This law written in 1854 called on the citizens
    of the two territories involved to decide the
    issue of slavery there.

166
  • This law which was part of the Compromise of 1850
    ordered all citizens of the United States to
    assist in the return of runaway slaves.

167
Fugitive Slave Act
  • This law which was part of the Compromise of 1850
    ordered all citizens of the United States to
    assist in the return of runaway slaves.

168
  • Resolution introduced at the beginning of the
    Mexican War intended to prohibit slavery in any
    territory taken from Mexico. It passed the House
    but not the Senate.

169
Wilmot Proviso
  • Resolution introduced at the beginning of the
    Mexican War intended to prohibit slavery in any
    territory taken from Mexico. It passed the House
    but not the Senate.

170
  • Author of the popular and inflammatory
    anti-slavery novel,
  • Uncle Toms Cabin.

171
Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Author of the popular and inflammatory
    anti-slavery novel,
  • Uncle Toms Cabin.

172
  • Although it started as a social club in
    Tennessee, this organization quickly evolved into
    one that used terrorist style tactics to defend
    the social and political superiority of whites
    against the aggression of an inferior race.

173
Ku Klux Klan
  • Although it started as a social club in
    Tennessee, this organization quickly evolved into
    one that used terrorist style tactics to defend
    the social and political superiority of whites
    against the aggression of an inferior race.

174
  • Commander of the Union forces who used the
    Anaconda Plan to achieve defeat of the South and
    accepted Lees surrender in 1865.

175
U. S. Grant
  • Commander of the Union forces who used the
    Anaconda Plan to achieve defeat of the South and
    accepted Lees surrender in 1865.

176
  • Term used to describe the domination of
    post-Civil War southern politics by the
    Democratic Party.

177
Solid South
  • Term used to describe the domination of
    post-Civil War southern politics by the
    Democratic Party.

178
  • He was a Maryland actor with strong southern
    sympathies who conspired to kidnap Lincoln and
    exchange him for Confederate prisoners of war.
    He later shot Lincoln to death.

179
John Wilkes Booth
  • He was a Maryland actor with strong southern
    sympathies who conspired to kidnap Lincoln and
    exchange him for Confederate prisoners of war.
    He later shot Lincoln to death.

180
  • Federal governments effort between 1865 and 1877
    to repair the damage to the South caused by the
    Civil War and to restore Southern states to the
    Union.

181
Reconstruction
  • Federal governments effort between 1865 and 1877
    to repair the damage to the South caused by the
    Civil War and to restore Southern states to the
    Union.

182
  • This insulting nickname was used for white
    southern Republicans following the Civil War.

183
Scalawag
  • This insulting nickname was used for white
    southern Republicans following the Civil War.

184
  • This Constitutional amendment that was ratified
    in 1870, guaranteed African Americans voting
    rights.

185
15th Amendment
  • This Constitutional amendment that was ratified
    in 1870, guaranteed African Americans voting
    rights.

186
  • This was the first major federal relief agency in
    United States history set up to give out
    clothing, medical supplies, and meals to both
    black and white refugees of the Civil War.

187
Freedmans Bureau
  • This was the first major federal relief agency in
    United States history set up to give out
    clothing, medical supplies, and meals to both
    black and white refugees of the Civil War.

188
  • Union general in the Civil War who was known for
    his destructive march from Atlanta to Savannah in
    1864.

189
William T. Sherman
  • Union general in the Civil War who was known for
    his destructive march from Atlanta to Savannah in
    1864.

190
  • In this system, farmers did not own their land
    but rented it from a planter and that gave them
    the right to choose what crops to plan and when
    to work.

191
Tenant Farming
  • In this system, farmers did not own their land
    but rented it from a planter and that gave them
    the right to choose what crops to plan and when
    to work.

192
  • Constitutional amendment ratified in 1865 that
    abolished slavery.

193
13th Amendment
  • Constitutional amendment ratified in 1865 that
    abolished slavery.

194
  • This three-day battle was the greatest battle
    ever fought in North America a Union victory
    that was the turning point in the Civil War.

195
Battle of Gettysburg
  • This three-day battle was the greatest battle
    ever fought in North America a Union victory
    that was the turning point in the Civil War.

196
  • Constitutional amendment ratified in 1868 that
    guaranteed citizens equal protection of the law.

197
14th Amendment
  • Constitutional amendment ratified in 1868 that
    guaranteed citizens equal protection of the law.

198
  • This was an insulting nickname for a Northern
    Republican who moved to the South after the Civil
    War because they rushed south to profit from the
    misery left by the war.

199
Carpetbagger
  • This was an insulting nickname for a Northern
    Republican who moved to the South after the Civil
    War because they rushed south to profit from the
    misery left by the war.

200
  • System of farming in which a farmer works some
    portion of a planters land and receives a split
    of the crop at harvest time as payment.

201
Sharecropping
  • System of farming in which a farmer works some
    portion of a planters land and receives a split
    of the crop at harvest time as payment.

202
  • Presidential decree, effective January 1, 1863,
    that freed slaves in the Confederate-held
    territory.

203
Emancipation Proclamation
  • Presidential decree, effective January 1, 1863,
    that freed slaves in the Confederate-held
    territory.

204
  • After leaving Atlanta, Union troops cut a nearly
    300-mile long path of destruction across Georgia,
    destroying bridges, factories and railroad lines.
  • This became known as?

205
March to the Sea
  • After leaving Atlanta, Union troops cut a nearly
    300-mile long path of destruction across Georgia,
    destroying bridges, factories and railroad lines.
  • This became known as?

206
  • A famous speech by President Lincoln on the
    meaning of the Civil War, given in November, 1863
    at the dedication of a national cemetery.

207
Gettysburg Address
  • A famous speech by President Lincoln on the
    meaning of the Civil War, given in November, 1863
    at the dedication of a national cemetery.

208
  • These laws enacted by southern states that had
    been restored to the Union established virtual
    slavery for the freed people.

209
Black Codes
  • These laws enacted by southern states that had
    been restored to the Union established virtual
    slavery for the freed people.

210
  • What was Lincolns stated purpose of the Civil
    War prior to the Emancipation Proclamation?

211
To preserve the Union
  • What was Lincolns stated purpose of the Civil
    War prior to the Emancipation Proclamation?

212
  • What was the most important advantage of the
    South in the Civil War?

213
Fighting a defensive war
  • What was the most important advantage of the
    South in the Civil War?

214
  • Policy toward business generally followed by the
    federal government before 1880.

215
Laissez Faire
  • Policy toward business generally followed by the
    federal government before 1880.

216
  • A strong sense of loyalty to a region.

217
Sectionalism
  • A strong sense of loyalty to a region.

218
  • Pride in ones country.

219
Nationalism
  • Pride in ones country.

220
  • The right to vote.

221
Suffrage
  • The right to vote.

222
  • To end slavery.

223
Abolition
  • To end slavery.

224
  • To withdraw from the union.

225
Secession
  • To withdraw from the union.

226
  • Multifamily dwellings where poor people, who made
    up most of a citys population, lived.

227
Tenements
  • Multifamily dwellings where poor people, who made
    up most of a citys population, lived.

228
  • President of Tuskegee Institute, author of Up
    from Slavery, encouraged blacks to learn a skill.

229
Booker T. Washington
  • President of Tuskegee Institute, author of Up
    from Slavery, encouraged blacks to learn a skill.

230
  • Site of the 1849 Gold Rush.

231
California
  • Site of the 1849 Gold Rush.

232
  • Site where the Confederates fired on a Union ship
    thus starting the Civil War.

233
Fort. Sumter, SC
  • Site where the Confederates fired on a Union ship
    thus starting the Civil War.

234
  • Border between Canada and the United States.

235
49th Parallel
  • Border between Canada and the United States.

236
  • Border between Mexico and the United States.

237
Rio Grande River
  • Border between Mexico and the United States.

238
  • Thomas Edison
  • Samuel Morse
  • Alexander Graham Bell
  • Eli Whitney
  • Charles Goodyear

239
American Inventors
  • Thomas Edison
  • Samuel Morse
  • Alexander Graham Bell
  • Eli Whitney
  • Charles Goodyear

240
  • Ulysses S. Grant
  • George McClellan
  • William T. Sherman

241
Union Generals
  • Ulysses S. Grant
  • George McClellan
  • William T. Sherman

242
  • Stephen F. Austin
  • Sam Houston
  • Davy Crockett

243
Fought for Texans Independence
  • Stephen F. Austin
  • Sam Houston
  • Davy Crockett

244
  • Robert E. Lee
  • Stonewall Jackson

245
Confederate Generals
  • Robert E. Lee
  • Stonewall Jackson

246
  • William Lloyd Garrison
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Frederick Douglass

247
Abolitionists
  • William Lloyd Garrison
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Frederick Douglass

248
  • Patrick Henry
  • Thomas Paine
  • Samuel Adams
  • James Otis
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • Paul Revere

249
Patriots
  • Patrick Henry
  • Thomas Paine
  • Samuel Adams
  • James Otis
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • Paul Revere

250
  • Andrew Carnegie
  • Cornelius Vanderbilt
  • John Rockefeller

251
Robber Barons
  • Andrew Carnegie
  • Cornelius Vanderbilt
  • John Rockefeller

252
  • This was an organization of workers formed to
    protect the interests of its members.

253
Labor Unions
  • This was an organization of workers formed to
    protect the interests of its members.

254
  • John Quincy Adams
  • James Monroe
  • Andres Jackson
  • James Madison

255
United States Presidents
  • John Quincy Adams
  • James Monroe
  • Andres Jackson
  • James Madison

256
  • Frederick Douglass
  • Harriett Tubman
  • Dred Scott
  • Nat Turner

257
Slaves and Former Slaves
  • Frederick Douglass
  • Harriett Tubman
  • Dred Scott
  • Nat Turner

258
  • James Oglethorpe
  • William Penn
  • Lord Baltimore

259
Colonial Founders
  • James Oglethorpe
  • William Penn
  • Lord Baltimore
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com