Title: American and Florida History
1American and Florida History
2First Industrial Revolution
- Spread from Great Britain to the United States
- Production passed to factories powered by
machines, mostly in northern states. - Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin. Southern
states became major cotton producers. - Erie Canal built, as well as other canals,
railroads, and roads. - Robert Fulton developed the first commercially
successful steamboat
3Social reform movements
- Abolitionism (Harriet Tubman, William Lloyd
Garrison, John Brown, Frederick Douglass, Harriet
Beecher Stowe) - Temperance
- Womens rights (Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady
Stanton, Elizabeth Blackwell) - Movements to improve conditions for workers and
prisoners - Public education (Horace Mann)
4Famous writers
- James Fenimore Cooper
- Washington Irving
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Henry David Thoreau
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Herman Melville
- Walt Whitman
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
5North vs South
- Slavery existed in all 13 colonies, but
widespread slavery was only profitable in the
South. - After independence, the North and South differed
on tariffs, banking and currency, internal
improvements at federal expense, and slavery. - North was more commercial and industrialized,
while the South was more agricultural. - The Southern economy depended on slavery, but
most Southern whites did not own slaves.
6Missouri Compromise 1820
- Balance of power in Congress between slave and
free states was maintained, when Maine was
admitted along with Missouri. - Maine had been part of Massachusetts. Missouri
was a slave state. - Slavery in western territories was banned north
of 36 30 N. latitude
7Compromise of 1850
- California was admitted as a free state
- Abolition of the slave trade in the District of
Columbia - Western territories could decide whether to
permit slavery - Fugitive Slave Act
8Kansas-Nebraska Act 1854
- Missouri Compromise had banned slavery in these
areas. - Law allowed these territories citizens, however,
to decide whether to allow slavery upon
statehood. - Bleeding Kansas violent clashes between
opponents and supporters of slavery.
9Dred Scott case 1857
- Supreme Court decided that Dred Scott, a slave
from Missouri, did not become free by entering
Illinois, a free state. - The Court declared that slaves were property, not
citizens, and had no standing to sue. - The Missouri Compromise was declared
unconstitutional because Congress could not
prohibit slavery in western territories
10John Brown
- John Brown led a raid on Harpers Ferry,
Virginia, attempting to seize a federal arsenal
and begin a slave uprising in the South. - Brown was defeated and he was hanged.
- South saw this as proof that most Northerners
wanted to achieve abolition by force.
11Outbreak of the Civil War
- The new Republican Party opposed the expansion of
slavery. Its candidate, Abraham Lincoln of
Illinois, won the presidential election of 1860
because the Democratic party had split over the
issue of the expansion of slavery. - Southern states responded by seceding from the
Union, starting with South Carolina, followed by
Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia,
Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee,
and North Carolina
12Outbreak of the Civil War
- These eleven states formed the Confederate States
of America - War started with the Confederate attack on Fort
Sumter in Charleston, SC, in April 1861
13North and South
- Larger population
- Greater wealth and more natural resources
- Far more railroads and factories
- Controlled the navy , which blockaded the South,
and continued trading overseas - Motivation was to preserve the Union, which
didnt command everyones support
- Only needed to fight a defensive war.
- Hoped for British and French recognition and
assistance, since they depended on Southern
cotton - Excellent military leadership
- Stronger motivation to fight, since they were
defending their homeland and their independence.
14War strategies
- North
- Blockade the Confederate coast in order to
cripple the Southern economy - Seize control of the Mississippi valley in order
to cut the South in half. - Seize the Confederate capital of Richmond, VA
- South
- Capture Washington, DC and force the North to
surrender - Exhaust the North, wear it down through
determined and brave resistance, and force it to
surrender, since it was less motivated to fight.
15Civil War
- Battle of Gettysburg, July 1863. Robert E. Lees
invasion of the North failed - Battle of Vicksburg, July 1863. North captured
last remaining Southern position on the
Mississippi - Ulysses Grant then became commander in the North.
He invaded Virginia, while William Sherman
invaded through Georgia, cutting the Confederacy
in half. - Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox
Courthouse, VA, in April 1865.
16Consequences of the Civil War
- More Americans were killed than in any other war
in U.S. history - Southern way of life was lost, and bitterness and
resentment remained as a legacy in the South for
decades. - Modern technologies and techniques played a
decisive role trench warfare, repeating rifles,
submarines, ironclad ships, telegraphs,
railroads. - The principle that no state can leave the Union
became accepted, and a unified US went on to
become a great power. - Slavery was abolished, although racism survived.
17Reconstruction
- Lincoln wanted generous terms for the
Confederacy, but he was assassinated days after
the war ended. - Under President Andrew Johnson, Congress imposed
harsher terms as it was dominated by Radical
Republicans. - States were under federal army occupation. The
Freedmens Bureau was supposed to aid former
slaves, which led to resentment among Southern
whites. - Southern states adopted black codes, which denied
basic civil rights to blacks. Ku Klux Klan was
established a secret terrorist organization in
order to intimidate blacks through violence.
18Reconstruction
- Congress responded by passing the 13th Amendment
(abolition of slavery), 14th Amendment (former
slaves became citizens), and the 15th Amendment
(blacks could not be denied the right to vote). - Andrew Johnson was impeached because of his
conflicts with the Republican Congress.
19Society and economy 1870-1914
- After the Civil War, the United States became
fully industrialized and urbanized, and railroads
linked the entire country. - The United States had abundant natural resources
coal, iron, forests, copper, oil. - Railroads and mass production made consumer goods
widely available. - New technologies electric light bulb,
phonograph, typewriter, telephone, barbed wire,
automobile, skyscraper
20Society and economy 1870-1914
- Mass immigration, which provided a labor force
and market for industry. - Large corporations grew, and many monopolies and
trusts arose. - Workers and farmers formed unions and
organizations to defend their rights. - Susan B. Anthony began campaigning for womens
suffrage. Wyoming became the first state to grant
women the right to vote.
21Progressive reforms (T. Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson)
- Civil Service or Pendleton Act
- Introduction of the secret ballot.
- Direct election of senators
- Muckraking journalists exposed abuses and
corruption - Sherman and Clayton Antitrust Acts
- Federal Reserve Bank was established
- Safety of food and drugs
- Conservation of natural areas
22Imperialism
- 1890s. US became more interested in foreign
affairs, and some wanted to expand overseas, as
European powers were doing. - Cuba rebelled against Spanish rule, and many
Americans wanted to intervene on Cubans behalf. - U.S. declared war on Spain in 1898 after the
battleship Maine blew up in Havana. - Treaty of Paris. U.S. acquired Guam, Puerto Rico,
and the Philippines. Spain lost Cuba, which
became independent after U.S. occupation.
23Imperialism
- President Theodore Roosevelt believed that the
U.S. should be a world power and in intervening
in the Americas. Speak softly and carry a big
stick. - U.S. intervened in countries like the Dominican
Republic, Mexico, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Cuba - Panama became independent, and the U.S. gained
the right to build, operate, and own the Panama
Canal
24World War I
- President Woodrow Wilson declared American
neutrality, but the U.S. entered the war in 1917
because of Germanys practice of unrestricted
submarine warfare. - Zimmermann Telegram US discovered that Germany
was encouraging Mexico to enter the war against
the United States. - New technologies tank, poison gas, airplane,
submarines, machine guns
25- Massive mobilization of men and industry to fight
the war. - Wilsons peace plan was the Fourteen Points
peace without victory, self-determination,
disarmament, new international organization to
preserve peace. - Paris Peace Conference ignored most of the
Fourteen Points, but Wilson went along in order
to get his League of Nations established. - The Central Powers were punished harshly. They
lost territory and were forced to pay
reparations. - U.S. Senate rejected the League because most
Americans did not want to commit themselves to
automatic involvement in foreign wars.
261920s
- 18th Amendment Prohibition of the manufacture
and sale of alcoholic beverages - 19th Amendment women won the right to vote.
- Much greater influence of automobiles.
- Jazz, motion pictures, aviation, household
appliances, and radio became part of daily life. - Tremendous economic boom, with much investment in
the stock market.
27Great Depression
- Much stock speculation involved investing in
stock with borrowed money. - Stock market crash of October 1929 led to
financial ruin for many, the failure of many
banks, business failures, and very high
unemployment. Foreign trade collapsed. - Depression was more severe in Germany, which
relied on American bank loans to pay its war
debts.
28Origin of World War II
- Italy was fascist, under Benito Mussolini.
- Japan, under Emperor Hirohito, was increasingly
militaristic. - Both dictatorships saw aggressive nationalism and
expansion as the solution to their economic
problems. Japan invaded China, and Italy invaded
Ethiopia. - The humiliation of the harsh peace treaty, loss
of territory, the economic collapse, and the
failure of democratic governments led to the rise
to power of Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party in
Germany in 1933.
29Origin of World War II
- Nazi Germany began rearming. It remilitarized the
Rhineland in 1936, annexed Austria in 1938,
seized the Sudetenland in 1938, and occupied the
rest of Czechoslovakia in 1939. - Italy and Germany intervened in the Spanish Civil
War (1936-1939), and the Soviet Union under
Stalin aided the other side. - Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939,
beginning World War II. Germany then conquered
much of the rest of Europe.
30United States and World War II
- President Franklin Roosevelt sympathized with the
Allies and feared an Axis victory. U.S. supplied
Allies with war materials. - Isolationists did not want to get involved.
- U.S. opposed Japanese expansionism in Asia, and
restricted exports to Japan. - In 1941, Japan attacked the Pearl Harbor naval
base in Hawaii in order to disable the U.S. fleet
so that it could have a free hand in the Pacific.
31World War II in Europe
- Allies agreed to concentrate on defeating Germany
before Japan. Allied leaders Roosevelt, Stalin,
and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill - U.S. invaded North Africa, and then Italy in
1943. - Germany had invaded the Soviet Union in 1941,
violating the Nazi-Soviet nonaggression pact of
1939. Battle of Stalingrad was the turning point,
where Germany started losing. - D-Day (June 1944). Allies invaded France at
Normandy. - Germany was overrun by Allied armies from the
East and West, and surrendered in May 1945.
32World War II in the Pacific
- Japan conquered much of Southeast Asia and the
Pacific. - U.S. pursued island-hopping to push toward Japan.
- Japan surrendered after atomic bombs were dropped
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945.
33Consequences of World War II
- Germany and its capital Berlin were divided into
four occupation zones (United States, Soviet
Union, Great Britain, and France). Germany lost
its eastern territory to Poland and the Soviet
Union - Nazi Party was banned, and the German military
disbanded. - War crimes trials were held for German and
Japanese leaders. - Japan was under U.S. military occupation, under
General Douglas MacArthur. Japans new
constitution eliminated the political role of the
emperor and denied Japan the right to wage war. - United Nations was established to prevent future
wars.
34Consequences of World War II
- Millions were killed in Nazi concentration camps.
Holocaust. Millions of civilians were killed, and
cities destroyed. - United States and the Soviet Union became the
worlds leading powers., and their alliance soon
fell apart. - Soviets established communist governments across
Eastern Europe. - Mao Zedongs communist forces seized control of
China in 1949.
35Cold War
- Dominated U.S. foreign policy between 1945 and
1990. - Struggle and intense hostility between communist
bloc, led by the Soviet Union, and the U.S. and
its allies. Never became a hot war. - Nuclear arms race both sides built up their
arsenals until they developed the ability to
destroy each other. - Truman Doctrine or containment US policy was to
contain or halt the spread of communism
36- Marshall Plan (1947) After World War II, social
and economic chaos in Western Europe led to fears
that it could fall to communism. Marshall Plan
helped rebuild Western Europe economically and
assist its recovery - Soviets tried to prevent German economic
unification and to expel the western Allies from
West Berlin through a blockade. Berlin Airlift
(1948) Western Allies resupplied the city by air.
37Korea and Vietnam
- Korean War (1950-1953) North Korea invaded South
Korea, and US troops, along with other UN
members, defended the South. - War ended with a cease-fire, and Korea remains
divided. - US under Eisenhower and Kennedy began aiding
South Vietnam defend itself from communist forces
supported by North Vietnam. - Under Lyndon Johnson, US troops entered the
conflict. War grew immensely unpopular, and US
was divided. - US in 1973, under Nixon, signed an agreement with
North Vietnam, and withdrew its troops.
38Cuban Missile Crisis 1962
- Soviets decided to install nuclear missiles in
Cuba in order to defend Cuba from a feared US
invasion. US spy planes discovered them. Kennedy
decided to quarantine Cuba and demanded the
missiles withdrawal. - Worst crisis of the cold war.
- Soviets withdrew the missiles from Cuba, and US
withdrew its missiles from Turkey. US promised
not to invade Cuba.
39Richard Nixon 1969-1974
- US had not recognized the communist government of
China since 1949. Nixon went to China in 1972 in
order to gain leverage in its negotiations with
North Vietnam and the Soviet Union. Changed the
nature of the cold war. US and China established
relations in 1979. - Nixon resigned in 1974 after his involvement in
covering up the break-in at the Democratic Party
headquarters in the Watergate was discovered.
40Jimmy Carter 1977-1981
- Hosted negotiations at Camp David between Egypt
and Israel, who signed a peace treaty in 1979. - Shah of Iran was overthrown in 1979, replaced by
an Islamic theocracy under Ayatollah Khomeini. US
embassy in Iran was overrun, and the diplomats
were held hostage. - Soviets invaded Afghanistan in 1979.
- US was now seen as weak.
41Ronald Reagan 1981-1989
- US helped stop communist forces in El Salvador,
and tried to overthrow the communist government
in Nicaragua. - Iran-contra scandal Profits from selling arms to
Iran were used to fund Nicaraguan rebels. - 1983 Hundreds of US marines were killed in a
suicide bombing in Beirut, Lebanon. - 1983 US invasion of Grenada.
42End of the cold war
- Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev began to reform
the Soviet Union and ease tensions with the
United States. - Berlin Wall fell in 1989.
- Communist governments fell across Eastern Europe,
and replaced by democracies. - Yugoslavia fell apart, and some of its ethnic
groups went to war with each other.
43George H. W. Bush 1989-1993
- 1989. US invaded Panama to overthrow military
dictator Manuel Noriega. - 1990 Iraq under Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait.
- 1991 Operation Desert Storm. US and its allies
freed Kuwait from Iraqi control.
44Bill Clinton 1993-2001
- North American Free Trade Agreement.
- 1993 Failed intervention and withdrawal in
Somalia - Military Intervention in wars in Bosnia (1995)
and Kosovo (1999) - 1994 Invasion of Haiti to restore Aristide
45George W Bush 2001-2009
- Election decided by the Supreme Court after
disputed election in Florida - September 11, 2001 Islamic suicide hijackers
crashed planes into the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon - War on terror began. Invasion of Afghanistan
(2001) and overthrow of the Taliban. - 2003 Invasion of Iraq and overthrow of Saddam
Hussein.
46- New Deal (response to the Great Depression)
relief for farmers, regulation of banks, public
works, social security. - Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954)
ended segregation of public schools. - Civil rights movement (1950s-1960s). Led by Rev.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Civil Rights Act
(1964) prohibited racial discrimination in
housing, employment, and public accommodations. - Use of oil led to dependence on imports, which
left US vulnerable to shortages and price
increases. Also contributed to pollution
47- 19th century immigrants served as a labor force
for the Industrial Revolution. - Before about 1880, most immigrants were from the
British Isles, Scandinavia, Germany, and the
Netherlands. - After, most came from Southern and Eastern
Europe. - Large numbers of Chinese went to the Pacific
coast states, especially to work on the railroads.
48- Hispanics, mostly from Mexico, came in the first
half of the 1900s to work in California and the
Southwest, mostly in agriculture, and many
seasonally. - Problem of illegal immigration Millions have
come from Latin America to work without
permission to work or reside in the United States.
49African-Americans
- After the Civil War and the abolition of slavery,
African-Americans still suffered from
discrimination and inequality. - Booker T. Washington advocated self-improvement
and vocational education. Founded the Tuskegee
Institute - W.E.B. DuBois advocated continuous protests
against injustice. Founded the NAACP
50- Major Native American tribes in Florida 1)
Calusa and Tequesta (South) 2) Ais (Central) 3)
Timucuans (North Central and Northeast) 4)
Apalachee (Northwest) - Juan Ponce de Leon landed in northeastern Florida
on Easter Sunday 1513 and named it after Pascua
Florida (Spanish for Easter). Spain would rule
Florida for the next 250 years.
51- Spain sponsored several failed attempts at
colonizing Florida Juan Ponce de Leon in 1521,
Panfilo de Narvaez in 1527, Hernando de Soto in
1539, Tristan de Luna in 1559 in Pensacola. They
were looking unsuccessfully for treasure. - French Protestants established Fort Caroline in
1562, which led Spain to establish a permanent
settlement nearby. - Pedro Menendez de Aviles established Saint
Augustine in 1565, which became the first
permanent European settlement in the United
States. - Most of the French were killed. Spanish fort in
St. Augustine is the Castillo de San Marcos.
52Colonial Florida
- Spanish established Catholic missions and forts
in Florida. - In the 1700s, English colonists in South Carolina
and Georgia were hostile to Spain and attacked
Florida several times. Most of the missions were
burned. - Creek Indians moved into Florida at this time,
and were known as Seminoles. - British obtained Florida in 1763 in the Treaty of
Paris, in exchange for Havana.
53Colonial Florida
- British split Florida into two colonies. East
(Saint Augustine) and West (Pensacola). - Spain was an ally of the American
revolutionaries, and invaded and captured
Pensacola in 1781. Spain regained Florida in 1783
in the peace treaty. - Spain would again rule Florida until 1821.
- Andrew Jackson led an army into Florida in 1818
in an expedition against Seminoles. Spanish
Florida was also a haven for escaped slaves.
54Territorial Florida
- US military pressure led to the Adams-Onis Treaty
of 1819, where Spain agreed to cede Florida to
the United States, which occurred in 1821. Andrew
Jackson established the territorial government as
Floridas military governor. - Settlers came to Florida from the southern states
to establish plantations. Tallahassee became the
capital because it was midway between Pensacola
and St. Augustine.
55Seminole Wars and statehood
- Whites desired Indian lands, and resented the
Seminoles for giving sanctuary to fugitive
slaves. - Jackson wanted to remove them to the West. This
led to the Seminole wars. Many Seminoles were
able to seek refuge in the Everglades. - Florida became a state on March 3, 1845. William
D. Moseley became its first governor.
56Civil War
- Most white Floridians supported slavery and
opposed the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860.
As a result of his victory, Florida seceded from
the Union on January 10, 1861. - No decisive Civil War battles were fought in
Florida. Many ports were in Union hands, but the
interior remained Confederate. - Florida supplied the South with agricultural
supplies. Tallahassee was the only Confederate
capital east of the Mississippi which remained in
Confederate hands until the end of the war.
57- Reconstruction. Republicans held office in
Florida, and blacks were able to vote. - The Republican state government ensured that
Rutherford Hayes won Florida in the election of
1876. - Reconstruction then ended, and white Democrats
reestablished control of the state government - Economic development cattle ranches, phosphate
mining, paper mills, lumber, cigar manufacturing,
citrus farming, railroad building (under Henry
Plant and Henry Flagler)
58- With steamships and railroads, tourism began in
the 1870s as northerners came to Florida for its
warm climate. - The state offered land cheaply to those building
railroads. - Railroad builders like Flagler built lavish
hotels near their railroad lines. - Tampa served as the primary staging area for the
U.S. intervention in Cuba during the
Spanish-American War in 1898.
59- Early 20th century. With the automobile, Florida
was even more accessible to tourists. In South
Florida, land was developed and swamps were
drained. - Many military bases were built in Florida during
World War II, and many soldiers came to train.
Many veterans later settled in Florida after the
war. - In the 1950s, Cape Canaveral became the center of
US space exploration. Satellites and manned space
missions launch from the Kennedy Space Center. - 1960s to the present Major immigration to
Florida, especially from Cuba and Haiti. - Tremendous urban and suburban growth, especially
after the construction of Walt Disney World in
the 1970s.