Title: Important People, Events
1ImportantPeople, Events Ideas
- Preview, review, check comprehension and
reinforce mastery of 8th Grade standards
2First Great Awakening
- Colonial Era
- Religious movement
- Leaders
- Jonathan Edwards (MA) George Whitfield of Great
Britain - Ideas influencing American Revolution
Declaration of Independence - All men are created equal
- Every one has an equal chance to be saved
- Man will be judged by his moral behavior, not
birthright
3All men are created equal
- First Great Awakening belief
- Previously people generally believed in the
divine right to rule birthright - Declaration of Independence
- The lack of equal treatment by Britain fueled the
Revolutionary War
4Natural Rights
- Extensively written idea from John Locke
- Rights people are born with regardless of
birthright - right to life, liberty, and property Locke
- Among these are the right to life liberty and
the pursuit of happiness Declaration of
Independence
5French Revolution
- Inspired by the American Revolution
- French citizens rebelled against the nobility,
killing 100s by guillotine - Americans were split over supporting the ideals
or actions of the French citizens - George Washington declared the U.S. would remain
neutral (Neutrality Proclamation) when Britain
threatened war with France - Citizen Genet Frenchmen came to the U.S. to
get support, recruited privateers and suggested
overthrowing President Washington b/c of the
Neutrality Proclamation
6Federalism
- Concept introduced/created by James Madison
- Have a central government to make, enforce and
judge laws only pertaining to all states and
foreign countries - Any issues within the state (not involving other
states or countries) would be in the power of
state government
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7English Parliament
- Bicameral i.e. 2 houses
- Political influence
- power to govern is shared with the people
- King does not have absolute power
- Influenced U.S. Legislature
- Congress is also bicameral
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8Magna Carta
- Great Charter
- Year 1215
- King John was forced to sign the charter
(contract) agreeing to give the nobility certain
rights some power to govern - First time a king had to share power with the
people
9English Bill of Rights
- After the Glorious Revolution
- King James was ruining England
- Nobility asked the kings sister her husband
(William and Mary of Orange) to leave the
Netherlands and be their king.if they would
agree to protect their rights - List of rights the king could not deny the
nobility and citizens of England - Signed by King William
10Mayflower Compact
- Before anyone was allowed to get off the
Mayflower (pilgrims ship) they signed a
contract/agreement - Once on land (at Plymouth) everyone will obey the
laws that the majority decides MAJORITY RULES
11Declaration of Independence
- Written in 1776
- Stated
- All men are created equal
- Right to life, liberty, and pursuit of
happiness - People have a right to overthrow a government
that abuses their natural rights and set up a new
government - Birth Certificate of our nation
- Written by Thomas Jefferson, a slave owner
12Articles of Confederation
- 1st government of the U.S.
- No executive or legislative branches
- States had power, not the U.S.
- Failed to keep the country united as tensions
rose between states - Shays Rebellion protestors shut down court
houses and the U.S. government was unable to send
help gtgt no army, no executive branch
13Northwest Ordinance
- Under Articles of Confederation
- Organized the territory west of the Appalachian
Mts., north of the Ohio River, and South of the
Great Lakes - Townships Sections sold at 1 an acre
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rritory.jpg
14Constitution
- Outlines the U.S. Government
- Supreme law of the land
- Replaced the Articles of Confederation
- Details purpose and limitations to Federal (U.S.
government) - Governs issues between states foreign countries
- Established the 3 branches of government
- Legislative Congress (Capitol Building)
- Executive President (White House)
- Judicial Supreme Court (Supreme Court Building)
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15Great Compromise
- Constitutional Convention (meeting to write the
Constitution) - Two plans for the U.S. legislature
- New Jersey Plan Congress is 1 house with all
states, regardless of population, having equal
power - Virginia Plan 2-house Congress with more
populated states having more votes/power - Compromise Congress today
- Senate (NJ Plan) states are equal, each having 2
senators 2 votes - House of Representatives (VA Plan) number of
representatives is based on the states
population with a minimum of 1 representative
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16Three-fifths Compromise
- Constitutional Convention - after establishing
the House of Representatives
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17Bill of Rights
- Inspired by the 1689AD English Bill of Rights
- Anti-Federalists refused to accept the
Constitution as the government for the U.S.
without adding a list of rights the government
cannot violate - Became the first 10 Amendments to the
Constitution
18Federalist Papers ( authors)
- Authors
- Alexander Hamilton
- James Madison
- John Jay
- Point for writing them
- Promote ratifying the Constitution
- Explain how the Constitution protects state
governments yet provided a much needed strong
central government
19Jefferson's Statute for Religious Freedom
201st Amendment Rights
21Enumerated Powers
22Elastic Clause
23Checks Balances
24Simple Majority
25State Constitutions
26Jefferson vs. Hamilton
27Democratic-Republican vs. Federalist party
28Alien Sedition Acts
29National Bank
30Shays' Rebellion
31Whiskey Rebellion
32Voting system
33Washington's Farewell Address
34Marbury v Madison
35French Revolution
36Citizen Genet
37Louisiana Purchase
38Lewis and Clark
39Jacksonian Politics
40Spoils System
41Indian Removal Policy
42Worcester v. Georgia
43Washington Irving
44James Fenimore Cooper
45Major Battles of the War of 1812
46Monroe Doctrine
47Mexican-American War
48Henry Clay's American System
49Immigration during 1st Industrial Revolution
50Leaders of Women's Rights Movement
51Suffrage
52Transcendentalism
53American Writers
54Antebellum South
55North vs. South economies
56African-American culture
57Cotton Gin
58Nat Turner
59Plantation System
60Rights' of Blacks (pre Civil War)
61Manifest Destiny
62Lewis Clark
63Trail of Tears
64Pioneer Women
65Mexican-American Influences
66Lone Star Republic
67John Quincy Adams
- Won election of 1824 against Andrew Jackson by
house vote - controversial - Defended the Amistead passengers who were
kidnapped, forced into slavery mutinied during
the middle passage
68Abolitionists
69John Brown
70Underground Railroad
71William Lloyd Garrison
72Frederick Douglass
- Runaway slave
- Educated respected
- Autobiography
- Played an important role in convincing people to
support the abolitionist movement
73Free States
- Northern states that banned slavery
- ME, MA, NH, VT, NJ, PA, OH, MI, IN, IL, WI, MN,
IA
74Slave States
- Southern states that allowed slavery
- TX, MO, AK, LA, MS, AL, GA, FL, SC, NC. TN, KY,
VA, MD, DE
75Missouri Compromise
- 1820
- Maine added as free state, Missouri as a slave
state - 36º30 south of line slave, north of it free
76Popular Sovereignty
- Right of the people in state or territory to
decide for or against slavery - Allowed slavery to expand
77Compromise of 1850
- CA added as a free state
- UT NM territories organized popular
sovereignty - Stricter Fugitive Slave Laws northerners would
have to help slave catchers
78Daniel Webster vs. John C. Calhoun
- Regarding Compromise of 1850 debate
- Calhoun, South Carolina
- if there were more free states than slave states
then the south could not remain in the Union - Requested that the south be allowed to separate
from the Union peacefully - Webster
- speech to keep the union together helped get the
Compromise of 1850 approved
79Kansas-Nebraska Act
- Proposed by Stephen A Douglas
- Wanted to organize northern LA Territory
- Wanted to build transcontinental railroad
- Replaced MO Compromise of 1820
- Allowed slavery north of 36º30
- Pleased the South
- Angered Northerners
80Lincoln-Douglas Debates
- Made Lincoln a well known politician
- Lincoln ran against Stephen A Douglas for
Illinois Senate seat - Neither of them felt blacks were equal to whites
- Douglas Tried to gain support by accusing
Lincoln of - saying whites blacks are equal
- That Lincoln Republicans want to make every
state a free state - Lincoln debated the issue of slavery
- right to eat the breadhis own hand earned
- entitled to all the natural rights in the Dec.
of Independence - Freeport Doctrine contradiction between popular
sovereignty the Dred Scott Decision
81Freeport Doctrine
- 2nd Lincoln-Douglas Debate held in Freeport, IL
- Lincoln pointed out contradiction of Popular
sovereignty the Dred Scott Decision - Douglas it matters not what the Supreme court
decides about slavery because slavery could not
exist a day or an hour anywhere without the
support of the local government - Issue of slavery is in the hands of the people
82'House Divided'
- Lincoln-Douglas Debates
- Lincoln stated that the nation cannot survive
half slave, half free
83Mason-Dixon Line
- Surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon
- Drew southern boundary of PA
- Line represents separation between free and slave
states
84Nullification
- Idea that a state can declare federal laws null
and void if it does not benefit their state - 1828 1832 SC passed law declaring tariffs
passed by Congress null and void - President Andrew Jackson would not tolerate SCs
nullification law - Not put to rest until after the Civil War
85States Rights
- Right of a state to govern itself especially
regarding enumerated powers of the federal
government - Emphasis of the nullification crisis
86Lincoln's Inaugural Addresses
- South had already seceded from the Union
- Declared that states cannot lawfully get out of
the Union - Vowed no bloodshed unless forced to (North would
not be the first to shoot) - North South are not enemies, but friends
87Secession
- withdraw from an organization or political body
(city, county, state) - Not found in the Constitution/unconstitutional
- Southern States if Congress passes laws banning
slavery then they have not choice but to secede - South Carolina was the first to secede from the
Union immediately after Lincolns election in
1860 - By 2/1/1861 MS, FL, AL, GA, LA, TX
88Northern states
- Free States
- Elected Lincoln in 1860
- Union
- Yanks
- Blue
89Confederate States of America (CSA,
Confederates, Johnny-Reb, Gray)
90Border StatesSlave States that didnt Secede
91Antietam
- CSA General Robert E. Lee led an offense into MD
a Border State - Major Victory for the Union
- Bloodiest single-day of battle in U.S. history
(more casualties on this 1-day than any other
single day of battle) - USA General McClellan chickened out of pursuing
Robert E. Lees retreat Lincoln fired him
92Emancipation Proclamation
- Lincoln waited for major Union Victory
- Following Battle of Antietam Sept.1862
- Any rebelling state that stops fighting rejoins
the Union on or before January 1, 1863 can retain
slavery - All Slaves are free in any state that continues
to rebel/fight after January 1, 1863
93Gettysburg Address
- After the Bloodiest Battle of the Civil War
- Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers
brought forth on this continent a new nation,
conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the
proposition that all men are created equal
Consecrate the land to the fallen soldiers We
are met on a great battle-field of that war. We
have come to dedicate a portion of that field as
a final resting-place for those who here gave
their lives that that nation might livefrom
these honored dead we take increased devotion to
that cause for which they gave the last full
measure of devotion that we here highly resolve
that these dead shall not have died in vain that
this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of
freedom and that government of the people, by
the people, for the people, shall not perish from
the earth.
94High Water Mark'
- A flood or the tide will leave a mark at its
highest point the highest level of damage - Could mean
- Highest/deepest advance by the CSA into the Union
Army lines which was during Pickett's Charge of
the Battle of Gettysburg - i.e. the worst the war got, which was the Battle
of Gettysburg
95'Turning Point'
- The point or change in the course of an event
where the outcome appears inevitable - Gettysburg Union Victory was inevitable
- Vicksburg argued to be the turning point by many
because Ulysses S. Grant rises as a competent
leader
96Ulysses S. Grant
- Union General
- Many Victories in the West (MS/LA Mississippi
River) - Lincoln, after many incompetent commanders, found
a man who could lead the Union to victory - Nicknamed the Widow Maker
- CSA General Robert E Lee surrendered to Grant at
Appomattox Courthouse, VA - Later elected President corruption in his
administration, esp. the Tea Pot Dome Scandal
97Jefferson Davis
- Elected president of the Confederate States of
America (which was never acknowledge as an actual
independent nation)
98Robert E. Lee
- General of the Confederate Army in VA
- Most talented officer of the War
- West Point Graduate
- Declined Lincolns request to lead the Union out
of loyalty to VA, his home state - Credited for numerous victories which prolonged
the war - Considered an American Hero by both sides for his
military tactics - Major defeats
- Antietam offensive attack
- Gettysburg offensive attack
- Appomattox Courthouse Union offense led by
Ulysses S Grant - Right-Hand Man
- General Thomas Stonewall Jackson
99African-American Soldiers
- After Battle of Antietam Emancipation
Proclamation - Lincoln allowed regiments to be formed
- 1st most heroic 54th Massachusetts Infantry
- Led by Col. Robert Gould Shaw, survivor of the
Battle of Antietam
100Total War
- Target civilian and military resources food,
equipment anything needed to survive - Shermans March to the Sea
- 60 mile wide path of destruction
101Civil War resources advantages/disadvantages
- North
- Population
- Money
- Factories
- Farms
- Iron ore
- Railroad
- Shipbuilding
- Navy
- South
- Military Leadership
- Familiarity w/ land
102Appomattox Courthouse
- Village outside of Appomattox, VA actually named
Appomattox Courthouse - Confederate General Robert E Lee
- Surrenders to
- Union General Ulysses S Grant
- End of the Civil War
103Reconstruction Plans
- Lincolns
- 1864 Congress WADE-DAVIS Bill 50 of voters to
swear loyalty to the U.S. bill died pocket
veto - A state could be readmitted into the Union when
10 of voters swore an oath of allegiance to the
Union. - New state constitutions written
- High-ranking Confederate officers and government
officials would be granted a full pardon. - Except for slavery, private property would be
protected - Johnsons
- Congress
104Reconstruction Plans
- Lincolns
- Johnsons
- Pardon southern whites, except Confederate
leaders, rich Confederate supporters and union
soldiers that defected to the Confederacy (not
carried through). - New state governments had to swear loyalty to the
Union and ratify the 13th Amendment. - Congress
105Reconstruction Plans
- Lincolns
- Johnsons
- Congress
- Radical Republicans
- wanted to punish South
- Believed readmitting states was a power of
Congress, not the President - Established Freedmans Bureau
- Passed 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments
- Passed a Civil Rights Act, granted blacks full
citizenship and civil rights - Reconstruction Act of 1867
- Military rule over the former Confederate states
- Ratification of the 14th Amendment
10640 acres and a mule
- January 1865, following Shermans March to the
Sea - Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman's Special Field
Orders, No. 15 - Proposed
- dividing conquered plantations along coast into
40 acre parcels - Giving each family a parcel and a mule for
plowing - Goal provide means for self-sufficiency after
the war - Plan revoked by President Andrew Johnson
107Freedmen's Bureau
- Help find employment legal aid to freed slaves.
- Built hospitals
- Greatest contributions
- Set up schools for African-Americans
- Legalized marriages
- Helped connect families with members who had run
away or been sold off
108Hiram Revels
- First African-American elected to Congress
- Other Reconstruction Era Congressmen
- Benjamin Turner
- Robert DeLarge
- Josiah Wells
- Jefferson Long
- Joseph Rainey
- Robert Elliott
10913th, 14th, 15th Amendments
- 13th banned slavery in the U.S.A.
- 14th defines citizenship as anyone born in the
United States -- states cannot deny former
slaves their citizenship and rights as citizens - 15th the right of citizens to vote regardless
of race, color, or previous condition of
servitude ended the grandfather clause
110Ku Klux Klan
- Kuklos Greek for circle, wheel, cycle, often
referring to unity - established 1868
- Opposed Reconstruction granting rights to African
Americans - Undermined 14th and 15th Amendments
- Terrorized blacks, carpetbaggers scalawags to
keep them from voting and exercising their rights
as citizens
111Jim Crow
- Segregation Laws
- Jump Jim Crow a 1830s song-and-dance routine
caricaturizing African-Americans - Along the lines of when he says jump, you ask
how high - Supported by the Supreme Court in
- PLESSY V. FERGUSON
112Indian Wars
- After Civil War United States turned military
attention to the Great Plains - Buffalo Soldiers Native-American nickname for
African-American Soldiers - George Armstrong Custer
- Sitting Bull
113Second Industrial Revolution
- Electricity
- Oil Fuel engines (gas, diesel, etc.)
- Steel Bessemer Process
- U.S. became world leader in industry
- Monopolies Corporations
- Growth of Labor Unions
114Robberbarons
- Robber as in thief Baron as in nobility
- These men gained wealth by bankrupting and taking
over their competitors - Were richer than nobility and some kings queens
of Europe - Many were Captains of Industry
- Rockefeller - OIL
- Carnegie - STEEL
- Vanderbilt - RAILROADS
115Urbanization
- Growth of City populations work
- City Parks NYC Central Park designed by
Frederick Law Olmsted - Old Immigrants (before 1880s) North Europe
- Britain, Germany, Ireland, Scandinavia
- New Immigrants (1880s) South East Europe
- Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Greece, Italy, Poland,
Russia, Slavic nations - Settlement Houses, ex. Hull House founded by Jane
Addams to help poor, esp. immigrants
116Laissez-faire
- let do aka leave it alone
- economic principle
- No (or minimal) state/federal regulation of
business business growth - economy will balance out on its own
- FREE ENTERPRISE
117Big Business
- Development of large corporations
- Horizontal Integration
- Owning all business in a particular field,
example Rockefeller owned practically all oil
refining factories - Vertical Integration
- Owning all business in the production of an item,
example Carnegie Steel owned iron ore mines,
coal fields, railroads for transport, and steel
mills
118Labor Movements
119Progressives
120Nativism
121Grangers
122Inventors Edison, Bell, Wright Bros.
12316 Other
Non-slaveholding Whites 47