The document provides a detailed outline summarizing American history from early exploration through the American Revolution and Critical Period. It covers major explorers and their discoveries, reasons for colonization by European powers, the establishment and growth of the 13 colonies, social and economic developments in the colonial period, causes of tensions with Britain leading to the American Revolution, and challenges faced by the new nation under the Articles of Confederation.
The document provides an overview of the peopling and early history of North America. It describes how the continents were once joined in a supercontinent called Pangaea before drifting apart. Various groups migrated across a land bridge between Asia and North America around 35,000 years ago to populate the Americas. Corn was domesticated in Mexico around 5,000 BC, allowing for settled farming communities and the rise of early civilizations like the Aztecs, Mayans, and Incas. Europeans began exploring and colonizing the Americas around 500 years ago, bringing both old and new world plants, animals, and diseases, radically transforming the populations and environments of both regions.
The document summarizes England's growing imperial ambitions in North America in the late 1500s and early 1600s. It discusses early failed English colonization attempts and the founding of Jamestown in 1607. It then outlines the development of the early English colonies in North America, including the establishment of joint-stock companies, the growth of tobacco cultivation, the introduction of slavery from the West Indies, and the founding of other colonies like Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia through the 1700s.
The document provides a detailed overview of early English and American history from the 1500s to the 1700s. Some key points:
1) England established colonies in North America for economic and strategic reasons like obtaining raw materials and bases to attack Spanish ships. The first permanent English colonies were Jamestown in 1607 and Plymouth in 1620.
2) The colonies developed their own governments and societies but remained under control of the English crown. Tensions grew as the colonies sought more autonomy while England pursued a mercantilist economic policy.
3) Conflicts between the English and French colonies culminated in the French and Indian War, which Britain won in 1763. However, the war left Britain
This document provides an overview of the discovery and settlement of the New World between 1492-1650. It discusses the motivations for European exploration, including wealth, religion, knowledge, and glory. Key explorers and their voyages are outlined, such as Columbus, Cortes, Pizarro and others. Spanish and Portuguese empires in the Americas are described. The establishment of the English colonies of Jamestown and Plymouth are summarized. The founding of other colonies like Massachusetts Bay, Maryland, the Carolinas and others are briefly mentioned. Differences between the New England and Chesapeake colonies are contrasted. The document also touches on issues like cultural exchange with Native Americans and disease impacts.
The document summarizes the history of French colonization in North America between the 16th and 18th centuries. It describes how the French focused on the fur trade with Native Americans and established colonies in Canada and Louisiana. It also discusses the alliances and tensions between the French, Native Americans, and other European powers like the British and Dutch in the region.
The Puritans sought to establish a pure church in the New World and fled religious persecution in England. They established authoritarian religious communities with strict moral codes in the Massachusetts Bay colony in the 1630s. Conflict arose between the Puritans and Native Americans over differing concepts of land use and ownership. This led to the Pequot War of 1637 and ultimately King Philip's War of 1675-76, a devastating conflict that killed thousands on both sides.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels, ships, or large domesticated animals. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of North America beginning in the 15th century, including early colonization efforts by Spain, Portugal, France and England. It details the establishment of the original 13 colonies and their systems of government, relations with Native Americans, slavery, and conflicts leading up to the American Revolution.
The document provides an overview of the peopling and early history of North America. It describes how the continents were once joined in a supercontinent called Pangaea before drifting apart. Various groups migrated across a land bridge between Asia and North America around 35,000 years ago to populate the Americas. Corn was domesticated in Mexico around 5,000 BC, allowing for settled farming communities and the rise of early civilizations like the Aztecs, Mayans, and Incas. Europeans began exploring and colonizing the Americas around 500 years ago, bringing both old and new world plants, animals, and diseases, radically transforming the populations and environments of both regions.
The document summarizes England's growing imperial ambitions in North America in the late 1500s and early 1600s. It discusses early failed English colonization attempts and the founding of Jamestown in 1607. It then outlines the development of the early English colonies in North America, including the establishment of joint-stock companies, the growth of tobacco cultivation, the introduction of slavery from the West Indies, and the founding of other colonies like Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia through the 1700s.
The document provides a detailed overview of early English and American history from the 1500s to the 1700s. Some key points:
1) England established colonies in North America for economic and strategic reasons like obtaining raw materials and bases to attack Spanish ships. The first permanent English colonies were Jamestown in 1607 and Plymouth in 1620.
2) The colonies developed their own governments and societies but remained under control of the English crown. Tensions grew as the colonies sought more autonomy while England pursued a mercantilist economic policy.
3) Conflicts between the English and French colonies culminated in the French and Indian War, which Britain won in 1763. However, the war left Britain
This document provides an overview of the discovery and settlement of the New World between 1492-1650. It discusses the motivations for European exploration, including wealth, religion, knowledge, and glory. Key explorers and their voyages are outlined, such as Columbus, Cortes, Pizarro and others. Spanish and Portuguese empires in the Americas are described. The establishment of the English colonies of Jamestown and Plymouth are summarized. The founding of other colonies like Massachusetts Bay, Maryland, the Carolinas and others are briefly mentioned. Differences between the New England and Chesapeake colonies are contrasted. The document also touches on issues like cultural exchange with Native Americans and disease impacts.
The document summarizes the history of French colonization in North America between the 16th and 18th centuries. It describes how the French focused on the fur trade with Native Americans and established colonies in Canada and Louisiana. It also discusses the alliances and tensions between the French, Native Americans, and other European powers like the British and Dutch in the region.
The Puritans sought to establish a pure church in the New World and fled religious persecution in England. They established authoritarian religious communities with strict moral codes in the Massachusetts Bay colony in the 1630s. Conflict arose between the Puritans and Native Americans over differing concepts of land use and ownership. This led to the Pequot War of 1637 and ultimately King Philip's War of 1675-76, a devastating conflict that killed thousands on both sides.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels, ships, or large domesticated animals. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of North America beginning in the 15th century, including early colonization efforts by Spain, Portugal, France and England. It details the establishment of the original 13 colonies and their systems of government, relations with Native Americans, slavery, and conflicts leading up to the American Revolution.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels or large ships. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of the Americas starting in the 15th century with Portugal, Spain, England and France. It discusses early English colonies like Jamestown and the development of the Southern colonies through the 1700s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels, ships, or large domesticated animals. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of North America starting in the 15th century with Prince Henry, Bartolomeu Dias, and Vasco da Gama, leading up to early colonial settlements by Spain, Portugal, England, France, and the Netherlands. It concludes by outlining the growth of the Thirteen Colonies and events leading up to the American Revolutionary War.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels, ships, or large domesticated animals. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of North America beginning in the 15th century, including early colonization efforts by Spain, Portugal, France and England. It details the establishment of the original 13 colonies and their systems of government. Finally, it outlines key events of the American Revolutionary War, from the Intolerable Acts through the Treaty of Paris.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels, ships, or large domesticated animals. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of North America beginning in the 15th century by Portugal, Spain, England and France, along with early colonization efforts by these nations. It outlines the establishment and growth of the original 13 colonies in North America through the colonial period.
The document discusses the diversity of colonial societies in North America and Latin America between 1530 and 1770. It covers demographic changes from disease, the transfer of plants and animals between the Old World and New, and the economies, societies, and religions that developed in the Spanish, Portuguese, French, and British colonial regions. It also addresses imperial reforms, conflicts between colonists and imperial powers, and concludes with comparisons of the political, economic, environmental, and cultural impacts across the different colonial regions.
1) European exploration and conquest in the Americas began in the late 15th century, with Christopher Columbus arriving in the Caribbean in 1492 while seeking a route to Asia. Over subsequent decades, Spanish conquistadors like Hernan Cortes and Francisco Pizarro conquered the Aztec and Incan empires and claimed territory for Spain.
2) Meanwhile, other European powers established colonial holdings in North America, including the French in Canada and the English at Jamestown and Plymouth. Conflicts between these powers eventually led to the French and Indian War in the 1750s, resulting in British control of most of eastern North America.
3) The growth of plantation agriculture in the Americas drove the rise of the Atlantic slave
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then summarizes European exploration of the Americas beginning in the late 15th century led by Portugal and Spain, followed by England, France, and other nations in the 16th-17th centuries. Finally, it outlines the establishment and development of the original 13 British colonies in North America from the early 1600s through the American Revolutionary War in the late 1700s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then summarizes European exploration of the Americas beginning in the late 15th century led by Portugal and Spain, followed by England, France, and other nations in the 16th-17th centuries. Finally, it outlines the establishment and development of the original 13 British colonies in North America from the early 1600s through the American Revolutionary War in the late 1700s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then summarizes European exploration of the Americas beginning in the late 15th century led by Portugal and Spain, followed by England, France, and other nations in the 16th-17th centuries. Finally, it outlines the establishment and development of the original 13 British colonies in North America from the early 1600s through the American Revolutionary War in the late 1700s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then summarizes European exploration of the Americas beginning in the late 15th century led by Portugal and Spain, followed by England, France, and other nations in the 16th-17th centuries. Finally, it outlines the establishment and development of the original 13 British colonies in North America from the early 1600s through the American Revolutionary War in the late 1700s.
The document summarizes the founding and development of the early English, French, and Dutch colonies in North America. It discusses their motivations for colonization as trade and fur trapping for the French and Dutch, and plantation farming of cash crops like tobacco for the English. It also describes the founding of important colonies like Jamestown, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, and Pennsylvania for religious freedom by various Protestant groups escaping persecution in Europe. Problems faced by early colonies included lack of food and gold for Jamestown and religious intolerance leading to new colonies being founded.
Theme 3 spanish empire in the americaskarissmiller
- Diego Vasicuio was a native priest in Peru in the late 16th/early 17th century who was forced to do hazardous labor by the Spanish. He continued traditional rituals in his 90s and was tried for heresy.
- Martin Ocelotl was a priest in the Aztec Empire who continued traditional practices after it fell but eventually converted to Catholicism in his 20s, though he still engaged in old ways and was later tried for witchcraft.
- The Spanish Empire extended across much of the Americas and encountered significant resistance from native populations. While some natives converted and assimilated, others fiercely maintained their traditions and identities in the face of Spanish repression. Disease also devastated native populations
Spanish Conquest in America and Competing in North America 58033000
Spain and Portugal were the first European nations to colonize the Americas in the 15th and 16th centuries. Christopher Columbus' voyages for Spain in 1492 led to Spanish conquest and colonization of the Caribbean islands. Explorers like Hernan Cortes then conquered powerful civilizations like the Aztecs and Incas for Spain, establishing the first Spanish colonies in Mexico and South America. Other European powers like England, France, and the Netherlands soon established their own colonies in North America through the 17th century, competing for territory and resources. This led to conflicts between the colonial powers and also disrupted indigenous populations through warfare and disease.
The document provides an overview of the encounters between Europeans and Native Americans from 1300 to 1700. It discusses the major empires that existed in Central and South America prior to European arrival, including the Aztecs, Mayans, and Incas. It describes their social structures, systems of government, religious practices, and ways of life. It then details the initial European voyages of exploration, the Spanish conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires, and the establishment of European colonies in the Americas.
This document summarizes the history of the Maharlika (Philippines) prior to Spanish colonization. It describes how the Tagean royal family ruled the Maharlika as Maharajahs and Rajahs after retreating from the Madjapahit Empire. Under Maharajah Luisong Tagean, the Maharlika was a rich kingdom with 720,000 metric tons of gold. It then outlines how the Spanish conquistadors led by Legaspi colonized the islands in 1565, forcibly subjugated the population, imposed taxation and tributes, and systematically extracted the kingdom's gold and other resources over 333 years of colonial rule.
American colonies prelude to revolutionPaige Ellis
1) In the late 17th and early 18th centuries, British officials began cracking down on piracy as the pirates increasingly targeted British vessels for plunder. By 1730, a campaign had virtually wiped out pirates threatening British trade.
2) In the 1750s-60s, poverty grew in American urban ports as imperial wars killed many men and flooding of poor immigrants depressed wages. Rural and frontier areas also saw growing poverty due to harsh conditions.
3) Most 18th century emigrants to America were enslaved Africans, with the slave trade devastating West Africa and enriching European empires. The voyage over the Atlantic killed about 20% of slaves due to horrible conditions on the ships.
The document summarizes the planting and early development of English colonies in North America between the early 1600s to the mid-1600s. It discusses how England began establishing colonies like Jamestown in the early 1600s after rivaling with Catholic Spain. The first colonies struggled greatly, with many settlers dying of disease and starvation. Relations with native tribes like the Powhatan were tense and included violent conflicts over land and resources. The colonies eventually began growing tobacco as their cash crop which led to the rise of the plantation system using indentured servants and African slaves. Other colonies like Maryland were founded with different religious or economic purposes. By the mid-1600s, the English colonies were becoming established in North America but relied heavily on tobacco
The document discusses the history of globalization and Western colonialism from the 15th century onward. It describes how European powers like Portugal, Spain, France, and Britain established global trading networks and colonies that incorporated regions in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Oceania into a growing international economic system dominated by Western interests. This system led to the exploitation of resources and populations in colonized lands, creating imbalances and inequalities between Western colonizers and colonized peoples that lasted into the 20th century. The document analyzes the cultural, economic and political impacts of this new globalized world order driven by Western colonial expansion.
1. Native Americans lived under constant oppression from European colonial powers who sought to gain control of new territories. They were frequently deceived, slaughtered, and saw their populations decimated by disease.
2. One of the largest impacts on Native American populations was epidemic diseases brought by European colonists, against which they had no immunity. Many tribes were also displaced and relocated west of the Mississippi River through acts like the Indian Removal Act in the 1830s.
3. Native Americans faced loss of land, culture, sovereignty, and way of life under the policies and expansion of European colonialism and later American manifest destiny, being relegated to reservations with little autonomy.
The document provides information on the settling of North America between 33,000 BC and 1783 AD. It discusses the peopling of the Americas via the Bering Land Bridge around 35,000 years ago and the emergence of many Native American tribes across the continents. It then covers the earliest European arrivals including the Vikings in 1000 AD and Columbus' voyage in 1492, which led to the Columbian Exchange and devastating diseases for Native populations. The summary discusses the founding of Jamestown in 1607 and the early struggles of the English colony along with the rise of tobacco agriculture. It also mentions the founding of Maryland for Catholics in 1634 and the spread of slavery from the West Indies to the southern colonies.
The document provides information on the settling of North America between 33,000 BC and 1783 AD. It discusses the peopling of the Americas via the Bering Land Bridge around 35,000 years ago and the emergence of many Native American tribes across the continents. It then covers the earliest European arrivals including the Vikings in 1000 AD and Columbus's voyage in 1492, which led to the Columbian Exchange and devastating diseases for Native populations. The summary focuses on the planting of the English in America between 1500-1733, including the founding of Jamestown in 1607 and the establishment of the New England colonies by the Puritans in the 1600s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels or large ships. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of the Americas starting in the 15th century with Portugal, Spain, England and France. It discusses early English colonies like Jamestown and the development of the Southern colonies through the 1700s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels, ships, or large domesticated animals. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of North America starting in the 15th century with Prince Henry, Bartolomeu Dias, and Vasco da Gama, leading up to early colonial settlements by Spain, Portugal, England, France, and the Netherlands. It concludes by outlining the growth of the Thirteen Colonies and events leading up to the American Revolutionary War.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels, ships, or large domesticated animals. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of North America beginning in the 15th century, including early colonization efforts by Spain, Portugal, France and England. It details the establishment of the original 13 colonies and their systems of government. Finally, it outlines key events of the American Revolutionary War, from the Intolerable Acts through the Treaty of Paris.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then contrasts Native Americans with early Europeans, noting Native Americans had less dense populations and no wheels, ships, or large domesticated animals. The document goes on to summarize European exploration of North America beginning in the 15th century by Portugal, Spain, England and France, along with early colonization efforts by these nations. It outlines the establishment and growth of the original 13 colonies in North America through the colonial period.
The document discusses the diversity of colonial societies in North America and Latin America between 1530 and 1770. It covers demographic changes from disease, the transfer of plants and animals between the Old World and New, and the economies, societies, and religions that developed in the Spanish, Portuguese, French, and British colonial regions. It also addresses imperial reforms, conflicts between colonists and imperial powers, and concludes with comparisons of the political, economic, environmental, and cultural impacts across the different colonial regions.
1) European exploration and conquest in the Americas began in the late 15th century, with Christopher Columbus arriving in the Caribbean in 1492 while seeking a route to Asia. Over subsequent decades, Spanish conquistadors like Hernan Cortes and Francisco Pizarro conquered the Aztec and Incan empires and claimed territory for Spain.
2) Meanwhile, other European powers established colonial holdings in North America, including the French in Canada and the English at Jamestown and Plymouth. Conflicts between these powers eventually led to the French and Indian War in the 1750s, resulting in British control of most of eastern North America.
3) The growth of plantation agriculture in the Americas drove the rise of the Atlantic slave
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then summarizes European exploration of the Americas beginning in the late 15th century led by Portugal and Spain, followed by England, France, and other nations in the 16th-17th centuries. Finally, it outlines the establishment and development of the original 13 British colonies in North America from the early 1600s through the American Revolutionary War in the late 1700s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then summarizes European exploration of the Americas beginning in the late 15th century led by Portugal and Spain, followed by England, France, and other nations in the 16th-17th centuries. Finally, it outlines the establishment and development of the original 13 British colonies in North America from the early 1600s through the American Revolutionary War in the late 1700s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then summarizes European exploration of the Americas beginning in the late 15th century led by Portugal and Spain, followed by England, France, and other nations in the 16th-17th centuries. Finally, it outlines the establishment and development of the original 13 British colonies in North America from the early 1600s through the American Revolutionary War in the late 1700s.
This document provides an overview of Native American groups in North America prior to European contact, including their similarities in diet, tools, and lack of writing systems. It then summarizes European exploration of the Americas beginning in the late 15th century led by Portugal and Spain, followed by England, France, and other nations in the 16th-17th centuries. Finally, it outlines the establishment and development of the original 13 British colonies in North America from the early 1600s through the American Revolutionary War in the late 1700s.
The document summarizes the founding and development of the early English, French, and Dutch colonies in North America. It discusses their motivations for colonization as trade and fur trapping for the French and Dutch, and plantation farming of cash crops like tobacco for the English. It also describes the founding of important colonies like Jamestown, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, and Pennsylvania for religious freedom by various Protestant groups escaping persecution in Europe. Problems faced by early colonies included lack of food and gold for Jamestown and religious intolerance leading to new colonies being founded.
Theme 3 spanish empire in the americaskarissmiller
- Diego Vasicuio was a native priest in Peru in the late 16th/early 17th century who was forced to do hazardous labor by the Spanish. He continued traditional rituals in his 90s and was tried for heresy.
- Martin Ocelotl was a priest in the Aztec Empire who continued traditional practices after it fell but eventually converted to Catholicism in his 20s, though he still engaged in old ways and was later tried for witchcraft.
- The Spanish Empire extended across much of the Americas and encountered significant resistance from native populations. While some natives converted and assimilated, others fiercely maintained their traditions and identities in the face of Spanish repression. Disease also devastated native populations
Spanish Conquest in America and Competing in North America 58033000
Spain and Portugal were the first European nations to colonize the Americas in the 15th and 16th centuries. Christopher Columbus' voyages for Spain in 1492 led to Spanish conquest and colonization of the Caribbean islands. Explorers like Hernan Cortes then conquered powerful civilizations like the Aztecs and Incas for Spain, establishing the first Spanish colonies in Mexico and South America. Other European powers like England, France, and the Netherlands soon established their own colonies in North America through the 17th century, competing for territory and resources. This led to conflicts between the colonial powers and also disrupted indigenous populations through warfare and disease.
The document provides an overview of the encounters between Europeans and Native Americans from 1300 to 1700. It discusses the major empires that existed in Central and South America prior to European arrival, including the Aztecs, Mayans, and Incas. It describes their social structures, systems of government, religious practices, and ways of life. It then details the initial European voyages of exploration, the Spanish conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires, and the establishment of European colonies in the Americas.
This document summarizes the history of the Maharlika (Philippines) prior to Spanish colonization. It describes how the Tagean royal family ruled the Maharlika as Maharajahs and Rajahs after retreating from the Madjapahit Empire. Under Maharajah Luisong Tagean, the Maharlika was a rich kingdom with 720,000 metric tons of gold. It then outlines how the Spanish conquistadors led by Legaspi colonized the islands in 1565, forcibly subjugated the population, imposed taxation and tributes, and systematically extracted the kingdom's gold and other resources over 333 years of colonial rule.
American colonies prelude to revolutionPaige Ellis
1) In the late 17th and early 18th centuries, British officials began cracking down on piracy as the pirates increasingly targeted British vessels for plunder. By 1730, a campaign had virtually wiped out pirates threatening British trade.
2) In the 1750s-60s, poverty grew in American urban ports as imperial wars killed many men and flooding of poor immigrants depressed wages. Rural and frontier areas also saw growing poverty due to harsh conditions.
3) Most 18th century emigrants to America were enslaved Africans, with the slave trade devastating West Africa and enriching European empires. The voyage over the Atlantic killed about 20% of slaves due to horrible conditions on the ships.
The document summarizes the planting and early development of English colonies in North America between the early 1600s to the mid-1600s. It discusses how England began establishing colonies like Jamestown in the early 1600s after rivaling with Catholic Spain. The first colonies struggled greatly, with many settlers dying of disease and starvation. Relations with native tribes like the Powhatan were tense and included violent conflicts over land and resources. The colonies eventually began growing tobacco as their cash crop which led to the rise of the plantation system using indentured servants and African slaves. Other colonies like Maryland were founded with different religious or economic purposes. By the mid-1600s, the English colonies were becoming established in North America but relied heavily on tobacco
The document discusses the history of globalization and Western colonialism from the 15th century onward. It describes how European powers like Portugal, Spain, France, and Britain established global trading networks and colonies that incorporated regions in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Oceania into a growing international economic system dominated by Western interests. This system led to the exploitation of resources and populations in colonized lands, creating imbalances and inequalities between Western colonizers and colonized peoples that lasted into the 20th century. The document analyzes the cultural, economic and political impacts of this new globalized world order driven by Western colonial expansion.
1. Native Americans lived under constant oppression from European colonial powers who sought to gain control of new territories. They were frequently deceived, slaughtered, and saw their populations decimated by disease.
2. One of the largest impacts on Native American populations was epidemic diseases brought by European colonists, against which they had no immunity. Many tribes were also displaced and relocated west of the Mississippi River through acts like the Indian Removal Act in the 1830s.
3. Native Americans faced loss of land, culture, sovereignty, and way of life under the policies and expansion of European colonialism and later American manifest destiny, being relegated to reservations with little autonomy.
The document provides information on the settling of North America between 33,000 BC and 1783 AD. It discusses the peopling of the Americas via the Bering Land Bridge around 35,000 years ago and the emergence of many Native American tribes across the continents. It then covers the earliest European arrivals including the Vikings in 1000 AD and Columbus' voyage in 1492, which led to the Columbian Exchange and devastating diseases for Native populations. The summary discusses the founding of Jamestown in 1607 and the early struggles of the English colony along with the rise of tobacco agriculture. It also mentions the founding of Maryland for Catholics in 1634 and the spread of slavery from the West Indies to the southern colonies.
The document provides information on the settling of North America between 33,000 BC and 1783 AD. It discusses the peopling of the Americas via the Bering Land Bridge around 35,000 years ago and the emergence of many Native American tribes across the continents. It then covers the earliest European arrivals including the Vikings in 1000 AD and Columbus's voyage in 1492, which led to the Columbian Exchange and devastating diseases for Native populations. The summary focuses on the planting of the English in America between 1500-1733, including the founding of Jamestown in 1607 and the establishment of the New England colonies by the Puritans in the 1600s.
The document provides information on the settling of North America between 33,000 BC and 1783 AD. It discusses the peopling of the Americas via the Bering Land Bridge around 35,000 years ago and the emergence of many Native American tribes across the continents. It then covers the earliest European arrivals including the Vikings in 1000 AD and Columbus's voyage in 1492, which led to the Columbian Exchange and devastating diseases for Native populations. The summary discusses the founding of Jamestown in 1607 and the early struggles of the English colony along with the rise of tobacco agriculture. It also mentions the founding of Maryland for Catholics in 1634 and the spread of slavery from the West Indies to the southern colonies.
1. The document provides a detailed overview of the colonial history of North America from the 15th century through the 1700s, covering major events like the founding of Jamestown, religious dissent in New England, slavery, wars with Native Americans, and the rise of elected assemblies challenging British control.
2. It discusses the founding of colonies by various European powers and the introduction of slavery, as well as religious movements like the Great Awakening that helped shape American identity.
3. By the 1700s colonial populations had grown significantly, and the lower houses of colonial assemblies had gained power at the expense of royal authority, setting the stage for the American Revolution.
Early colonization of America began around 1000 AD when Vikings arrived in Massachusetts. Over subsequent centuries, various European powers established colonies across North America, including Spain founding colonies in Florida, New Mexico, California and Texas. England also established colonies, with the first permanent English settlement at Jamestown in 1607. By the late 1600s, there were 13 English colonies along the eastern coast of North America which developed diverse economies and ways of life depending on their location and climate. Tensions later arose between the English and French colonies in North America, culminating in the French and Indian War from 1754-1763, in which Britain defeated France and gained control over most of France's North American territories.
Imperialism between 1800-1914 saw Western European powers dominate much of Africa, Asia, and other regions through colonialism. Key motivations for imperial expansion included economic interests in raw materials and new markets, as well as political and military ambitions to increase national prestige. Western nations established colonies, protectorates, and spheres of influence globally. This resulted in new patterns of global trade and economic dependency, as well as profound cultural impacts as Western ideals spread. Resistance occurred but Western military superiority prevailed. Decolonization movements in the early 1900s sought independence.
The document provides background information on the early settlement of North America from 33,000 BC to 1783 AD. It discusses the peopling of the Americas via the Bering Land Bridge, the earliest Native American civilizations like the Incas, Mayans, and Aztecs. It then covers the earliest settlers in North America including the development of corn agriculture, tribes like the Pueblo and Mound Builders, and the Eastern woodland tribes. The document also summarizes the first European arrivals like the Vikings and the voyages of Columbus. It discusses the Spanish conquest of Mexico and the spread of the Spanish empire across North and South America. Finally, it provides an overview of the planting and settling of the English
This document provides an overview of early American history from the first human migrations across the Bering Strait around 12,000 BC through the colonial period. It describes how hunters arrived in North America and the demise of large mammals. The Archaic Period that followed forced people to find new food sources without big mammals. Sedentary communities then developed, and corn cultivation transformed the Southwest. Corn spread across North America and stimulated population growth. Urban centers like Cahokia emerged but then collapsed by 1200 AD. European colonization began with Columbus reaching the Americas in 1492 and the establishment of Spanish, French, Dutch, and English colonies in the 1500s-1700s. Cash crops like tobacco and slavery became dominant in the Southern colonies
Europeans began exploring overseas in search of new trade routes to Asia in order to gain wealth and power. Christopher Columbus reached the Americas in 1492 while seeking a western route to Asia, beginning European colonization of the region. The first English colonies in North America were established at Jamestown in 1607 and Plymouth in 1620 by the Virginia Company and Pilgrims respectively. Tensions arose between European powers as they competed for territory and resources in North America, culminating in the French and Indian War which began in 1754.
The document discusses several topics related to the history and development of the American colonies:
1) It describes the English Civil War and Restoration period in England in the mid-17th century and how this led to the establishment of several colonies in America, known as the Restoration Colonies, including North and South Carolina.
2) It provides details on the founding and economies of North Carolina, South Carolina, and the development of the plantation system and slave codes in the Southern colonies.
3) It briefly mentions the founding of the College of William & Mary and characteristics of the Middle Colonies before discussing the founding of New Netherlands by the Dutch and its eventual takeover and renaming to New York by the
Colonization - Early American Culture slides.pptxnataliemorgan26
The document summarizes early colonization efforts in North and South America by European powers between the 15th-18th centuries. It discusses how Spain relied on conquistadors to explore the New World for land and wealth, granting them encomiendas over indigenous peoples. It also describes how Portugal focused on sugar plantations using African slaves, and how the fur trade drove French, English, and Dutch colonization of North America. The document outlines the founding of colonies like Jamestown, Plymouth, and Massachusetts Bay, and discusses challenges faced by early settlers as well as the spread of slavery.
The first permanent English settlement in North America was established at Jamestown, Virginia in 1607 by the Virginia Company. The early years at Jamestown were difficult, with many colonists dying from disease and starvation due to poor site selection and a lack of food production. Relations with local Native Americans also deteriorated as the English began raiding their food supplies. The establishment of Jamestown began the English colonization of North America and disruption of Native American societies along the Eastern seaboard through disease, warfare, and loss of ancestral lands.
1 2,3,4 Europ Conquest And Colonizationbrandyberlin
Five European nations established colonies in the Americas during the early modern period: Spain, Portugal, France, Britain, and the Netherlands. Spain conquered large empires in Central and South America through conquistadors like Cortes and Pizarro. Britain established colonies along the eastern seaboard for economic and religious reasons, including the Plymouth and Jamestown settlements. France focused on fur trading in Canada and adopted local customs. The colonization had massive consequences, including the deaths of most indigenous peoples from disease and violence, the introduction of crops and animals through the Columbian Exchange, and the rise of the transatlantic slave trade.
The document provides an overview of the motives and means of European exploration and expansion in the 15th-17th centuries. It discusses the 3 G's that drove exploration - God, Gold, and Glory. Portugal was an early leader in sailing eastward to India for the spice trade. Spain sailed westward seeking routes to Asia and settled in the Americas seeking gold, agriculture, and to convert natives to Catholicism. England's involvement grew due to strategic interests and the availability of colonists following the Protestant Reformation. Jamestown established England's first successful colony in North America in 1607. Puritans established the Plymouth colony in 1620 seeking religious tolerance. The economies of the colonies varied by region, with the Southern
The document provides background information on the colonization of North America, including:
- Indians originated in Asia around 25,000 years ago and were the original inhabitants of North America. Christopher Columbus' voyages in the late 15th century led to the naming of the region as the "New World".
- Reasons for European exploration between the 14th-17th centuries included seeking trade routes to Asia, expanding trade networks, increasing national power, and spreading Christianity. Key early explorers included Columbus, Vespucci, Cabot, Drake, Cartier, and Champlain.
- The founding of the 13 British colonies in North America began in the early 17th century, starting with the May
The document discusses the rise of European exploration beginning in the 15th century. It summarizes the key motivations as seeking new trade routes (God, Glory, Gold), escaping Muslim control of existing routes, and hopes of converting natives to Christianity. It then outlines some of the major explorers including Portugal's Prince Henry and Bartolomew Diaz, followed by Vasco de Gama who found the sea route to India. Christopher Columbus's voyages seeking a western route to Asia inadvertently led to the European discovery and later colonization of the Americas.
1) In the late 16th and 17th centuries, pirates operated independently from governments and as democracies, attacking Spanish ships for their gold and silver with the support of Queen Elizabeth I of England.
2) By the late 17th century, as Spanish ships declined and pirates began attacking British ships, they lost government support and were eliminated from areas like the Bahamas and Carolinas by 1730.
3) In the late 18th century, Chief Kamehameha of Hawaii exploited European contact and technology to conquer the Hawaiian Islands and become their new monarch, presiding over a period of recovery and prosperity.
1) In the late 16th and 17th centuries, pirates operated independently from governments and as democracies, attacking Spanish ships for their gold and silver with the support of Queen Elizabeth I of England.
2) By the late 17th century, as Spanish ships declined and pirates began attacking British ships, they lost government support and were eliminated from many areas by 1730.
3) In Hawaii in the late 18th century, increased maritime contact with Europe brought new trade opportunities as well as germs, livestock, and weapons. The chief Kamehameha exploited these influences to conquer the islands and become their monarch.
Before the arrival of Europeans, native populations in North America developed diverse social, political, and economic structures based on their environments and interactions. The three major civilizations were the Mayans, Aztecs, and Incas, who practiced advanced agriculture, built large cities, and developed complex societies. European expansion starting in the 15th century resulted in the Columbian Exchange and drastic population changes on both sides of the Atlantic. The Spanish established large empires in Central and South America but oppressed native populations, while other European powers like England began exploring North America in search of resources and new markets. Contact between Europeans, Africans, and Americans challenged the worldviews of all groups.
King Charles V ruled two vast empires from 1519-1556 which involved constant warfare. He fought to suppress Protestantism and faced threats from France, German princes, and the Ottoman Empire. In 1556, an exhausted Charles divided his empire between his brother and son. The Spanish Empire expanded greatly due to the conquests of the Aztecs and Incas by conquistadors like Cortes and Pizarro. The discovery of silver in the Americas had widespread impacts, making Spain powerful but also causing inflation that contributed to its later decline.
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The fashion industry is dynamic and ever-changing, continuously sculpted by trailblazing visionaries who challenge norms and redefine beauty. This document delves into the profiles of some of the most iconic fashion personalities whose impact has left a lasting impression on the industry. From timeless designers to modern-day influencers, each individual has uniquely woven their thread into the rich fabric of fashion history, contributing to its ongoing evolution.
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This PowerPoint compilation offers a comprehensive overview of 20 leading innovation management frameworks and methodologies, selected for their broad applicability across various industries and organizational contexts. These frameworks are valuable resources for a wide range of users, including business professionals, educators, and consultants.
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1. Short Outline of APUSH STUDY GUIDE<br />(Note this is only a skeleton outline. The real full edition is coming up.)<br />Exploration<br />I. Prehistory<br />A. Bering Land Bridge<br />B. Hundreds of independent tribes<br />C. Civilizations – Mayans – Central, Incas – South, Aztecs – Mexico<br />D. Mount Builders – Ohio<br />II. Early Discoverers<br />A.Vikings – Leif Ericsson – Greenland – Northern Canada – 1000 AD<br />B.Italian Christopher Columbus – for Spain – 1492 - Guanahani<br />III. Spanish/Portuguese Exploration<br />A.Reasons for exploring<br />a.Wealthy nations – gold based<br />b.Renaissance – optimism/humanism – we can do anything<br />c.Trade routes<br />d.Printing press – ideas spread<br />e.Mariner’s compass – exploration possible<br />f. Religion – Spain wish to spread Christianity to “savages”<br />B.Spain – peace w/ Isabella and Ferdinand uniting plus no Moors/Muslims<br />a.Conquistadores – Spanish – gold/glory – fighting tradition<br />C.Portugal <br />a.Looking water route to Asia – brought slavery from Africa<br />D.Treaty of Tordesillas – 1494 – Pope divides New World<br />a.Brazil to Portugal – Rest to Spain<br />IV. Explorers – conquest – weapons + disease + use rival tribes<br />A.Ponce de Leon – fountain of youth<br />B.Pizarro – defeated Incas<br />C.Cortez – defeated Aztecs/Montezuma<br />V. Spanish<br />A. Encomienda System – Spaniard gets land and all inhabitants become laborers<br />B. Missions – Junipero Serra – San Diego + 21 missions<br />a. Spread religion – centers of trade/education<br />b. “Black Legend” – missionaries kill Indians – disease kind of true<br />VI. Exchange of goods<br />A.Improved diet of Europeans – corn, tobacco, tomato, avocado – balanced<br />B.Cattle, horses, germs to New World<br />Colonization<br />I. England<br />A. Buccaneers – Protestantism and Plunder – Sir Francis Drake<br />B. Roanoke Island – 1585 – “lost colony” – forgotten during war – CROATOAN<br />C. Reasons for Colonization<br />1. Enclosure – small farmers forced out<br />2. Unemployed farmers<br />3. Primogeniture – oldest son<br />4. Joint Stock Company – investment<br />5. Peace with Spain<br />6. Adventure<br />II. South – Rivers, plantations, seasons – suitable for farming – started by single males<br />A.Virginia - Jamestown – Virginia Company – Starving Time – Pocahontas – John Smith<br />a.“He who shall not work shall not eat” – John Smith<br />b.wrong type of explorers/colonists – age, gender, motivation – gold<br />c.John Rolfe – Tobacco – “bewitching weed”<br />B.Maryland – Catholic haven<br />C.West Indies – Sugar – absentee slave owners – mostly male slaves<br />D.Carolinas – linked to W. Indies – Charles<br />a.N. Carolina – less aristocratic, independent, some outcasts, religious<br />E.Georgia – buffer zone and philanthropic experiment – new start for criminals<br />III. Northern Colonies – Protestant, shipping, fishing, small farms, harsh winters, harbors<br />A.Protestant Reformation – Puritanism – Church of England not reformed/true<br />a.Puritans – Separatists – Holland – Mayflower – landed N. of Virginia<br />i.Brought “strangers” – useful labor<br />ii.Mayflower Compact – government by majority<br />iii.Plymouth Colony – not large or important economically<br />b.Non-Separatists – change English religion from within – interact<br />i.Massachusetts Bay Colony – City on a Hill – 11 ships, 1000<br />ii.Church and state – theocracy<br />iii.Protestant work ethic – follow your calling – God likes effort<br />c.Anti-Puritan – Anne Hutchinson – meetings, questioned teaching/banish<br />d.Rhode Island – Roger Williams “new and dangerous opinions”<br />i.Believed – pay Indians for land, separate church/state, outcasts<br />e.Connecticut – Thomas Hooker – women’s rights – Fundamental Orders<br />f.New Hampshire – fishing<br />IV. Middle Colonies – fertile soil, industry, shipbuilding, some aristocrats, plantations/small – farms<br />a.New York – Old Netherlands – Dutch company – aristocratic<br />b.Delaware – New Sweden<br />c.Pennsylvania – William Penn – pacifist, bought Indian land<br />V. New England Confederation – 1643 – united colonies of New England against Indians/runaways/internal disorder<br />Colonial Society in the Mid-Eighteenth Century<br />I. Social Structure/Family Life<br />A. South – gap wide between rich and poor – hierarchy of wealth and status<br />1. Planter aristocracy w/ slaves mimicking feudalism of Europe<br />2. However, these planters were hardworking, involved in day-to-day affairs<br />3. Few cities – poor transportation<br />4. Women more powerful – men die leaving property to widows<br />a. Weaker gender – see Eve’s failure<br />b. Divorce rare – courts could order you to reunite<br />B. North– not as much disease due to weather, reproduction high – fertile people/not soil<br />1. Early marriage = high birth rates, several mothers – death during childbirth<br />a. Habits of obedience, strong links to grandparents<br />b. Women’s role not as powerful – no property rights<br />II. Farm and Town Life<br />A. Towns in New England united – geography/fear of Indians force close relations<br />1. Puritanism makes unity important<br />2. More than 50 families in town requires education<br />3. Puritans ran churches democratically – led to democratic government<br />4. New England way of life – climate, bad soil, Puritanism made people self-reliant<br />a. Seasons led to diversified agriculture and industry to survive<br />b. Dense forests led to shipbuilding<br />c. Not diverse at first – immigrants not attracted<br />B. Southern settlement random by independent individual<br />III. Immigration – melting pot from the beginning<br />A. Germans – left for war, religion, bad economy – settle in Pennsylvania – not pro-British<br />B. Scotts-Irish – Scottish kicked out of Ireland because not Catholic – settled in mountains<br />1. Lawless, individualistic – lived in Appalachian hills – whiskey making<br />2. Not wanted by Germans or New Englanders – forced to hills<br />C. Other groups embraced – French, Dutch, Swedes, Jews, Irish, Swiss<br />D. Largest immigrant group – slaves<br />IV. Economy – triangle trade in South – natural resources to England > weapons/textiles to Africa >slaves to Indies/South > sugar to America > England<br />A. Economy – Agriculture #1 but, putting out system at home – manufacturing/lumbering<br />B. South – staple crops of indigo, rice, tobacco<br />V. Great Awakening – people swaying from the lord – God all powerful – must return to church<br />A. Started by Jonathan Edwards – Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”<br />B. Powerful, angry, animated speaking spread across colonies – United colonies ***<br />VI. Education – New England – colleges for lawyers, priests – theology and dead languages<br />A. Independent thinking not encouraged – discipline severe – stuck in the classics<br />VII. Colonial Folkways – life not romantic, pretty boring<br />A. Food pretty high protein, homes poorly made<br />B. pleasure came from working together – quilting, raising barn, painting, funerals, weddings<br />C. Lotteries, horse racing, holidays celebrated, but not Christmas in New England<br />Causes of the American Revolution<br />I. Revolution Questions<br />a. Necessary – Coming of Age/Time Had Come or America would have remained obedient had England not made mistakes<br />b. A true revolution or merely transfer of power from one wealthy group to another<br />c. Capitalist motivation to keep money in America instead of taxes going overseas<br />II. Decades before 1754 – proud to be Englishmen<br />a. Colonists annoyed at Navigation Acts, Brits annoyed with chaotic legislatures<br />b. Grown apart - could govern selves better than overseas<br />III. Causes<br />a. Sprit of self-reliance – decades of colonial legislatures, economically indep.<br />b. Religious annoyance – haven’t forgotten being kicked out<br />c. England trying to improve trade/industry at America’s expense<br />d. Colonists should pay for expense –no “taxation without representation”<br />e. Enlightenment – well-read Jefferson, Adams<br />f. Mercantilism clashes with capitalism – trade w/ everyone<br />IV. Irritants<br />a. America forced to take in British criminals<br />b. Northern colonies that wanted to stop slave trade could not<br />c. Royal governors looked down noses at colonists<br />V. British Debt – Americans seen as Englishmen must bear cost/taxes<br />a. Centuries of fighting/French and Indian War costly<br />b. Troops needed to remain in America to protect against Indians<br />VI. Types of Protests<br />a. Speeches – James Otis/Patrick Henry<br />b. Harassment – burning governors homes/tar and feathering tax collectors<br />c. Boycotts – refuse to buy British goods<br />d. Committees of Correspondence – method of colonies talking<br />e. Propaganda/Pamphlets – Common Sense – Thomas Paine<br />VII. Catalysts<br />a.1763 – Proclamation of 1763 – Colonists can’t move west of Appalachian<br />b.1764 – Sugar Act – duties on sugar, textiles, coffee, wine<br />c.1764 – Currency Act – colonists can’t make paper money – how to trade?<br />d.176 5 – Stamp Act – all legal documents - $ goes back to England – a first<br />e.1765 – Quartering Act – colonists house and feed British troops<br />f.1765 – Virginia Resolutions – Patrick Henry – only Virginia can tax<br />g.1767 – Townshend Acts – more taxes<br />h.1770 – Boston Massacre – 5 killed after harassment – propaganda wins<br />i.1772 – Gaspée ship attacked and burned (Tax enforcement ship)<br />j.1773 – Boston Tea Party – Sons of Liberty mad Tea Act not enforced<br />k.1774 – Coercive Acts/Intolerable Acts – punish Boston<br />l.1774 – First Continental Congress – colonial militia<br />m.1775 – Concord and Lexington – fight starts after Brits try to get weapons<br />n.1776 – Declaration of Independence – 12 of 13 endorse, 55 sign <br />Critical Period – 1776-1787<br />I. State Constitutions<br />a.Kept some of old provincial assemblies<br />1.Colonial self-government for 150 years<br />2.“their just powers from the consent of the governed”<br />b.Methods – written constitutions<br />1.Written by provincial assemblies<br />2.Mass. – town meetings, state conventions<br />c.Format – Dec. of independence + citizen rights + executive/legislative<br />1.Weaken powers of governor<br />2.White males with property eligible to vote<br />d.Anti-slavery<br />1.Dec. of Indep. Mentions slavery – South forced out<br />2.Mass. 1783 – slave sued “all men are created equal” – freed<br />II. Continental Congress<br />a.1777 – Articles of Confederation – ratified in 1781<br />b.Until ratified – Continental Congress governed<br />1.Lost power as war progressed – most talented returned to state<br />c.Successes – army, navy, marines, appointed George Washington, supplied army<br />d.Failure – financing war – taxes optional, money worthless “not worth a Continental”<br />III. Articles of Confederation - failures<br />a.States jealous of others/competitive – 9 of 13 states to pass<br />b.Taxes voluntary<br />c.Fear of strong executive – no one to enforce laws<br />d.Individual trade agreements w/ foreign nations & states – nobody wants to trade with U.S. – fearful of stability<br />e.Still left England in possession of frontier<br />IV. Articles of Confederation – successes<br />a.Precedent – something to work with<br />b.Northwest Ordinance<br />1.land-locked states feared other states would get too big<br />1.Easily pay war debts – too much representation<br />2.Maryland refuses – leads protest<br />2.Virginia finally gives land claims to federal government – others follow<br />3.Land could be sold to make money for fed government<br />4.Add-A-State Plan – Northwest Ordinance 1787<br />1.Population + legislature + 60,000 men can vote + religious freedom<br />c.Peace treaty with England<br />V. Shay’s Rebellion – 1787 – debtors can’t pay and rebel – proved to wealthy that something must be done – catalyst for Constitutional Convention<br />a.Post-war depression made life worse<br />b.Jefferson – “a little rebellion every now and then is a good thing<br />Making a Nation – 1788-1820<br />I. Constitutional Convention – 55 delegates meet in Philadelphia – Washington – Presid.<br />A. Virginia Plan – large state plan – representation based on population<br />B. New Jersey Plan – small state plan – every state receives equal rep<br />1. Great Compromise – House + Senate<br />2. Slaves = 3/5 of the population for House rep counting purposes<br />C. Bill of Rights – Citizens’ rights to prevent oppressive government – 1791<br /> D. Hesitancy to ratify – Anti-Federalists believe states should have more power – Federalists believe strong executive necessary <br />1. Federalist Papers convince New York/Virginia – Rhode Island last<br />II. Finalizing the Executive<br />A.Judiciary Act – 1789 – created Supreme Court, federal and district courts<br />B.Hamilton’s Plan – if government benefits wealthy, they’ll invest in government<br />a.Assume all debt of states – Virginia already paid off debt – get D.C.<br />b.Debt good – more people owed, more have stake in success of government<br />c.Tariff taxes + duties on whiskey<br />d.National Bank – Jefferson wanted states to control $, Hamilton wins<br />i.First National Bank – 1791-1811 – Philadelphia<br />C.Whiskey Rebellion – proves executive tough – sent in thousands to put down<br />D.Alien and Sedition Acts – Adams oversteps power of president – punishes Democratic Republicans – Alien – 5-14 years, jail/Sedition – jail for libel<br />a.Virginia/Kentucky Resolutions – states can ignore bad laws – sets states/federal government conflict<br />E.Strengthening Supreme Court – Marbury vs. Madison<br />a.Supreme Court can say laws are unconstitutional – gives power<br />III. Foreign Policy<br />A. Barbary Pirates<br />1. Been paying bribes to Tripoli, African Barbary pirates to not steal stuff<br />2. Sent Navy to Tripoli to fight pirates – finally got peace treaty – America values Navy<br />B. Louisiana Purchase – wanted New Orleans, got all of Louisiana Territory <br />1. Napoleon couldn’t have American empire – lost in Haiti – Toussaint L’Ouverture<br />2. Doubled size, 3 cents per acre<br />3. Created Constitutional Conflict – loose/strict interpretation<br />a. Says nowhere in Constitution about buying land – Jefferson hypocrite?<br />4. Lewis and Clark explore – sets off wave off Westward movement<br />5. Increases nationalism – pride for U.S.<br />6. Federal government power now shifting west – away from New England/Virg<br />C. Monroe Doctrine – follows Washington’s Farewell<br />1. US stay out of Europe; Europe stays out of Americas – our sphere of influence<br />IV. American System – Henry Clay’s idea federal government pays for roads, canals, business<br />A. Protects American business through high tariffs – 25% - buy US goods vs. better/cheaper European goods<br />V. Avoiding conflict – Missouri Compromise – draws slave line – keeps slavery in U.S.<br />War of 1812 – 1812-1815<br />I. Causes Foreign– France and England attacking American merchant ships/impressment<br />A.French Revolution turns violent – Jefferson’s Democratic-Republicans favor<br />B.Washington stays out – Neutrality Proclamation 1793 – U.S. just beginning<br />C.Jay’s Treaty – Britain won’t attack in future, but won’t pay for past attacks<br />D.Washington’s Farewell Address – stay out of foreign alliances – policy for next 100 years<br />E.Adams next president – XYZ Affair – American ambassadors not bribed<br />F.Jefferson deals with France<br />a.Embargo Act – don’t trade with anyone – totally fails/destroys econ.<br />b.Nonintercourse Act – Trade w/ everyone but Britain/France<br />c.Macon’s Bill No. 2 – Madison – trade again w/Britain France if either remove trade barrier against US<br />II. Causes Domestic<br />A.British forts along frontier <br />B.Helping Native Americans fight colonists moving west<br />a.Wipe out Canada – Indians will have no home base/British support<br />b. Tecumseh tries to unite Indians – big battle lost at Tippecanoe<br />III. Federalists opposed to war<br />A.Take Canada – a ton more farmers to join Democratic Republicans<br />B.Hurting trade<br />C.Supported Britain<br />D.Later have Hartford Convention and threaten to have New England break away<br />a.Signals end of Federalist Party – bad idea to talk of new country during wartime<br />IV. Importance<br />A.Peace Treaty changes nothing – status quo ante bellum – same as before<br />B.Gives war hero – Andrew Jackson<br />C.Gives national song – Star Spangled Banner<br />D.Unites Americans against common enemy<br />E.American beginnings of strong navy – USS Constitution – Old Ironsides<br />Jacksonian Democracy<br />I. Definitions<br />A. Series of reforms – altering federal government and bringing vote to people<br />B. Andrew Jackson and Democratic Party running country<br />C. Contradiction – period of slavery and horrible treatment of Native Americans – Jackson also develops “monarchical” attributes<br />D. Attractive candidate - Andrew Jackson attractive – war hero, man’s man, self-made wealth, westerner – “old hickory” “man of the people”<br />II. Causes – economic shift + no longer belief that aristocracy of old should rule all<br />A.Causes by economic and social changes - shift in power<br />a.Transportation + immigration takes power from plantation aristocracy and New England elite<br />b.Cotton increase power of Southern economy<br />c.Westward movement – taking of Native American/Hispanic land<br />B.Non large property holding whites get worried<br />a.Immigrants, nonslaveholding Southerners, westerners nervous that they will be abused by growing capitalists<br />C.Who should rule? Old aristocracy/new wealthy/majority of other whites<br />D.During Era of Good Feelings – Supreme Court and Federal government choices looked like power was moving toward an elite few in Federal Government<br />III. Reforms – radical shift to create equality for all white men - take power from moneyed elite and ignore class -meritocracy<br />A.Political – voters, campaigns, election process<br />1.End state property requirements for voting<br />2.Electors chosen by people not state legislatures<br />3.Changed elections – buttons, kissing babies, parades, bbqs, free drinks, and smear campaign – Jackson marriage illegal – wife died soon after<br />4.Spoils system – give government jobs to people who helped get elected<br />i.“Kitchen cabinet” – old friends<br />5.Increased power of executive – ignored Supreme Court, vetoed laws<br />B.Economic changes – men should be economically independent<br />1. Southerners want low tariffs and more states rights<br />a. Jackson makes high tariffs first to increase national economy – lowers during second term<br />2. Westerners want cheaper land + relief from debt collectors and banks<br />a. Vetoed Second National Bank – supported “pet banks” in states<br />3.Interstate roads good – roads within states not good<br />IV. Opposition – for nonwhites a total disaster<br />A.Wealthy planters feared him – federal government getting too much power<br />a.Threaten nullification of tariffs – secession<br />B.Whigs – named for anti-king movement of Revolutionary War – King Andrew<br />C.Racial treatment - Western movement assumed Hispanics and Native Americans inferior races – “manifest destiny” policy pushed<br />a.Trail of Tears – even Europeanized Cherokees kicked out<br />D.Allowed slavery to continue – white supremacy<br />a.Fought abolitionists – allowed gag rule on slavery in Congress<br />E. Propagandists – supported wealthy but said they acted for commoners<br />Creating an American Culture – 1790-1860<br />I. Religion – by 1850 ¾ claim to be religious, but not most far from Puritan form<br />A. Deism – God is great clockmaker – founding fathers<br />B. Unitarianism – God is a loving creator, father figure, and people control destiny<br />C. Second Great Awakening – attempt to return to conservative religious practice<br />1. Effects – more converted, some churches destroyed, others created<br />a. Methodists/Baptists – poor attracted/non-traditional<br />2. Camp Meetings – traveling preachers, thousands gather, get “saved”<br />D. Mormon – Joseph Smith – organized, group dynamic – new message from God<br />1. Feared by neighbors – voted as unit, polygamy, n ot individualistic<br />2. Brigham Young moved to Utah – MO and Ohio kicked out<br />II. Education Reform – creation of public schools/state sponsored universities<br />A.Before – public schools seen as for poor only – convinced that education benefits society<br />B.Little Red Schoolhouse – not effective, multiple grades one room, poorly trained teachers<br />C.Horace Mann – longer school term, better teacher training/pay<br />D.Universities start for women + state supported universities<br />E.Create common school texts to be shared across nation – Webster’s Speller<br />III. Reform Movements – inspired by Great Awakening – on earth you should try to combat evil<br />A.Women – considered keepers of nation’s morals – led movement<br />a.Gained more power – especially on frontier – supply and demand<br />B. Some say those involved for self-centered reasons – they get to create society to benefit self<br />C.Temperance – excess drinking affecting labor, family, crime, and rowdy social occasions<br />a.Choices – temperance (moderate use) or legislation<br />i.Women’s usage actually decreases<br />D.Jails – not just punishment but help “penitentiaries” (penance) or “correctional facilities”<br />E.Mentally ill – Dorothea Dix – better treatment living conditions at mental hospitals<br />IV. Transcendentalists – avoid conformity, get to know nature, think about world, Civil Disobedience<br />V. Literature – Begins to be dark – looks at faults of human soul – Edgar Allen Poe<br />VI. Utopian Movements – design perfect societies where everyone works together<br />A.Over 40 attempted – failed – uncommon sexual practices + lazy people <br />a.People end up desiring independence and market economy/free enterprise<br />B.Oneida – free love, male birth control<br />C.Shakers – religious group, eugenic selection of parents<br />VII. Alexis de Tocqueville – What then is this American?<br />A. America successful because based on meritocracy not birth<br />Sectionalism 1820-1860<br />I. The South – low immigration, huge income disparity, replicated Medieval Europe<br />A.Cotton Kingdom – 1788 – South dying, overworked land, unmarketable products<br />a.Slavery increased – Eli Whitney – Cotton Gin<br />i.Increased labor also improved Northern shipping industry<br />b.½ cotton in world from the South, England 75% from South<br />i.England economy depended on Southern cotton<br />B.Planter Aristocracy – “cottonocracy” – oligarchy – few control many<br />a.Biggest planters controlled social, political, economic life<br />b.Received finest education – statesmen who served public<br />i.Public education suffers<br />c.Women bought into system – controlled households<br />C.Poor whites – accepted system, dream of moving up, needed racial superiority<br />D.Scotch Irish – Appalachian Mountains – “white trash” – civilization ignored<br />E.Nature of Slavery<br />a.One 20th century view – slavery ending, owners paternalistic, blacks naturally inferior – need to be taken care of<br />1.Not true – economically still expanding, not dying<br />2.1954 Slavery compares to concentration camps<br />3.Paternalistic – selfish method just to get more labor<br />4.Slaves fake laziness as method of coping/rebel<br />b.Black women must balance as white caregiver, laborer, family anchor<br />II. The North – industry, manufacturing, heavy immigration – urbanized<br />A. Immigration – 95% came to the North<br />a. Irish – NY/Boston – low skilled labor – left due to potato famine<br />b. German – left due to crop failures, democracy failure of 1848 revolution<br />1. Midwest – contributed - gave US literature, kindergarten, Xmas tree<br />III. The West – young attracted, adventurous opportunities – life actually sucks<br />A.Gradually destroyed land – overworked, just moved on – pushed out Indians, animals<br />B.Frontier – belief that you can always start out fresh out West<br />C.More equality for women, supply and demand, they can leave if not treated properly<br />D.Squatters – simply move to land, build house, claim property – hard to kick off<br />Westward Expansion<br />I. Gradual Expansion of Frontier – Each addition adds to slavery issue, moves frontier, Indian problems<br />A.Proclamation of 1763 – Colonists not west of Appalachians – annoys colonists<br />B.Treaty of 1783 – Britain gives US land to Mississippi<br />C.1803 - Louisiana Purchase – Napoleon realizes he can’t keep French empire - $15 mil<br />i.Brings up issue of constitutionality of president purchasing land<br />ii.Lewis and Clarke – ecology, Native Americans, surveying, claiming Oregon<br />1.Open up westward movement<br />D.1820s-1830s – Texas – Mexico encourages movement – $.12 per acre – become Catholic<br />i.After Santa Anna – Alamo – country Republic of Texas<br />ii.Not annexed right away – fear it would be broken into many slave states<br />E.1847 – Utah – Mormons – organized voting bloc/feared for organization – kicked out<br />F.1846 – Polk – 54 40 or Fight! – extend America into Canada above Washington<br />i.America can’t fight Mexico and Britain – agree to make boundary above Wash.<br />G.1946-1848 – Mexican War – looks like land grabbing – Zachary Taylor creates catalyst<br />i.Defeats Mexico City – Guadalupe Hidalgo gives Southwest – 1848 Gold discover<br />II. Transportation<br />A.Turnpikes – toll roads – 1812-1825<br />B.Cumberland Road – federal road – 1806-1850 connects Midwest to Virginia<br />C.Canal Building – 1825-1840 – Erie Canal starts<br />i.1 ton of goods now for 1 cent per mile not 20 cents per mile<br />ii.Takes away farming from Northeast – moves to Midwest<br />iii.People can now move to Midwest and get supplies still to Atlantic Ocean<br />D.Steamboat – 1810-1840 – up and down rivers – not mercy of wind<br />E.Railroads – bought by federal government, made privately<br />i.Faulty creation, corruption, accidents of both railroads and steamship building<br />F.Mail – 1896 – finally mailbox delivery – before if rural must go to post office<br />G.Morse/Telegraph – 1844 – “What hath God wrought?” DC > Baltimore – Samuel Morse<br />III. Towns – build city infrastructure first, people come later<br />A.Balloon frame + nails – quick building<br />B.Wagons – families come out – Oregon Trail – leave Independence, MO – near St. Louis<br />C.Passing of frontier after Civil War<br />D.Buffalo slaughter – 15 million down to 1 thousand – sport – destroys Native American lives<br />E.Mining towns – boom bust – Northwest Territories – become ghost towns – no other source of income – minerals gone, town gone<br />i.Women gain equality here first – state voting first – have power supply/demand<br />F. Cattle drive big until fenced in – changes American landscape<br />Causes of the Civil War<br />I. Slavery – not on the minds of Northern soldiers when war started, but clearly an issue that pervaded all of the social, political and economic causes<br />a.Would there have been a split without slavery – no – root of all conflicts<br />b.Conflicts existed from birth of nation<br />II. Economic – two competing industries – industrial north vs. agrarian south – free labor vs. slave labor<br />i.Tariff battle for almost a century – south wants low, north high<br />1.Believed in nullification of Congressional laws<br />a.Goes back to Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions regarding Alien and Sedition Acts<br />2.South needed low tariffs because they existed on King Cotton<br />ii. Recession of 1857 causes bigger divide<br />III. Political<br />a.Representation in Senate/Congress<br />i.Every new state could ruin balance – both sides feared other side would try to mandate their society on the other federally<br />ii.Ostend Manifesto – slavery in Cuba as well as slavery in West? – bad news<br />b.State power vs. Federal power<br />i.Southern states still felt states were sovereign – goes back to Federalist/Anti-Federalist battle<br />c. Free Soil Party – 1847 – no slavery in territories<br />IV. Social – North sees south as aristocratic medieval country, South sees North as corrupt immigrant urban<br />a.Abolitionists – slavery moral wrong – Second Great Awakening<br />b.Anti-aristocratic ethos – common man better than gentry south<br />V. Catalysts – events that made both sides look evil, and created larger tension<br />a.Compromise of 1850 – CA admitted, popular sovereignty, DC no slaves, tougher/enforced fugitive slave act<br />b.Uncle Tom’s Cabin – Stowe – first glimpse of Europe and North of life in South – kept England out of war – queen allegedly cried<br />c.Fugitive Slave Act – force Northerners to return blacks to South<br />d.Kansas-Nebraska Act – 1854 split territories– dissenters create Republican Party<br />i.Popular Sovereignty – let states decide for themselves – ignore 1820 compromise<br />ii.Bleeding Kansas – Jayhawkers vs. Bushwhackers fight for control<br />1.Pottawatomie Creek Massacre – Brown hacks bodies - radical<br />iii.Caning of Sumner – Senate violence after anti-South speech<br />e.Realignment of Parties<br />i.Whigs die<br />ii.Republicans – Northern party to outlaw slavery Free Soil + anti-slavery Whigs and Democrats<br />f.Dred Scott – Justice Taney – slaves aren’t human/can’t sue – Comp. 1820 illegal<br />g.Lecompton Compromise – bad Constitution proposal where your only choices were limited slavery or full slavery – anti-slavery people don’t even vote<br />h.Lincoln Douglas Debates – run for Senator – Lincoln proves more logical for why slavery should not be expanded – loses Senate, but gains prominence<br />i.John Brown – Harper’s Ferry – tries to take over South – idiot or martyr?<br />j.Election of 1860 – S.C. threatens and does secede after Lincoln elected<br />The Civil War-1861-1865<br />I. The Union Home front<br />A. Mobilization and Finance<br />1. First conscription – can buy way out, Lincoln asks for more troops before Congress meets<br />2. Increased tariffs, income tax, sold bonds, printed currency “greenbacks”<br />3. War profiteers – industry/manufacturing make a lot of money – some corrupt<br />B. Suspension of Civil Liberties/Ignoring the Constitution<br />1. Lincoln thought better to save United States than follow Constitution<br />A. Blockade, increased army, $2 million to 3 men for army purchases – none of this in Constitution <br />2. Needs to keep Border States<br />A. Suspends habeas corpus – don’t tell why arrested<br />B. “supervised” voting – colored ballots – march past armed guards<br />C. Newspapers/editors influenced/pressured<br />C. Election of 1864 – Republican Party becomes Union Party for a bit<br />1. “Bayonet vote” – some soldiers return to vote - others vote on front<br />2. Sherman captures Atlanta – gives boost to cause<br />II. Southern Home front – President Jefferson Davis declared martial law – suspended habeas corpus<br />A. Confederate Constitution – can’t have strong fed. government when some states still want to threaten secession<br />B. Mobilization and Finance – must have conscription – leads to class conflict – poor serve<br />1. Tariffs hard to collect due to blockade – money made through bonds<br />2. Prints a lot of money with no value – extreme inflation<br />III. Foreign Affairs/Diplomacy – must gain European support (South) keep Europe out (USA)<br />A. Trent Affair – Union takes two diplomats off ship for Britain – looks bad<br />B. Some Canadians working with South to bomb Northern cities<br />C. Napoleon III takes opportunity to ignore Monroe Doctrine and take over Mexico<br />IV. Military strategy – Mississippi River, Capitals, Blockade “Anaconda”, Attrition, Wait<br />V. Ending Slavery – Confiscation Act – army seizes property of South – slaves<br />A. Emancipation Proclamation – after Antietam – frees none – only in seceding states<br />B. Freedmen’s Bureau – government sponsored agency – goes South to educate blacks<br />C. Thirteenth Amendment – frees slaves<br />VI. Major effects – slavery banned, secession issue finally ended, industry can now expand<br />A. Industry/North decides future path of nation – no longer aristocracy/agrarian<br />B. Role of Central Government expanded<br />1. 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments – first amendments that don’t take power away<br />2. Taxation – printing currency – National Banking System<br />3. Standing army<br />4. Freedmen’s Bureau – American sponsored welfare program – precedent<br />C. Labor Saving Devices – change occupations – move to petroleum/coal jobs<br />1. Labor moves west looking for jobs<br />D. Women – took jobs of men – government workers<br />1. Fighting – spies, impersonating men<br />2. Nurses – Clara Barton – start Red Cross later<br />3. Raised money for cause – soldiers – organized bazaars/fairs/made goods to sell<br />Reconstruction – 1865-1877<br />I. Presidential Plans – tough to be successful with Radical Republicans demanding revenge<br />A. Lincoln – if lived – impeached like Johnson or more sensitive to the South?<br />1. Believed South never legally withdrawn – 10% plan + create new state gov’t<br />2. Congressional fear that South would return to aristocracy and re-enslave blacks<br />a. Wade-Davis Plan – 50% sign oath + emancipation guarantees<br />1. Lincoln pocket vetoes and allows states to choose either plan<br />3. Congress is a majority moderate Republicans with some Radical Republicans<br />B. Johnson – surprised Congress – followed 10% plan and some states reentered<br />1. State constitutions only have to 1) repeal secession, 2) repudiate debts, 3) ratify 13th<br />2. Johnson pardoned many aristocrats<br />II. Congressional Reconstruction<br />A. December 1865 – Southern delegates arrive in D.C. – many of same Confederate leaders<br />1. Republicans outraged at seeing these elected Confederate aristocrats return<br />a. December 4, 1865 – Congress closes doors – fears too much Democrat power<br />1. Can’t be enemies one minute – peers the next<br />2. South actually has more power – more electors/Reps due to cancelled 3/5<br />3. If Southern Dems. Join with Northern Dems. – They control government and can repeal laws passed during Civil War and re-enslave blacks<br />B. Pass through 14th Amendment – gives freedmen (former slaves) citizenship +<br />1. Any state that refuses black voting rights – loses reps<br />2. Former Confederate leaders can’t run for U.S. Congress<br />3. repudiates Southern debts<br />C. Andrew Johnson “Sir Veto” starts vetoing Radical Republican Congress laws<br />1. 1866 election veto proofs Congress – they now have 2/3 to overrule<br />D. Military Reconstruction – Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner – lead Radicals<br />1. 5 Military Districts run by Union General + 20,000 soldiers – Supreme Court allows<br />2. Blacks must be allowed to vote – 15th Amendment makes voting permanent<br />3. Because only forced on them, as soon as soldiers leave “white redeemers” return South<br />III. Realities of Radical Reconstruction<br />A. Benefits – Blacks in South AND North can now vote – Union League organized blacks<br />1. New Southern constitutions written<br />2. Black participation in Congress – 14 black Congressmen, 2 black senators<br />3. Improved Southern infrastructure – schools, public works, property rights for women<br />IV. Impeachment of Johnson – Congress passes laws they know he will have to disobey<br /> A. Tenure of Office Act – Senate approval before any Presidential firings<br /> B. Johnson impeached after firing Secretary of War Stanton – he was spying for Radical Republican<br />1. Almost impeached, but luckily Senate didn’t because 1) replacement bad 2) would hurt country, 3) Johnson said he’d stop vetoing<br />V. Overall Assessment of Reconstruction<br />A. Theory – failed because North cared about helping Republican Party and free slaves quickly<br />B. Fails because most Northerners stop caring<br />C. Fails -US beliefs in personal property, self-government, state control conflict with Reconstruction<br />D. Opinions – North wronged South through Reconstruction – just as bad as Civil War<br />1. Or…Noble attempt to give equal rights to slaves – blacks received unprecedented freedoms initially<br />VI. Reconstruction ends - Hayes-Tilden corrupt election 1876 – Hayes wins but agrees to pull out troops from South<br />Industrialization and Corporate Consolidation<br />I. Industrial Growth in America - Reasons<br />A. Natural Resources – coal, oil, iron<br />B. Immigration – steady flow both Asia and Europe<br />C. Capitalist mentality supported by laissez faire government<br />D. Ingenuity – 440,000 patents in 1800s – inventions – Edison’s invention factory<br />B. Railroads – 1865 – 35,000 Miles > 1900 – 200,000 miles<br />A. Land claiming – railroad companies given land claims – size of Texas<br />B. Success of town based on railroad stop – no railroad > “ghost town”<br />C. Transcontinental – Leland Stanford Union Pacific meets Central Pacific<br />D. Corruption – money from government not used appropriately – Credit Mobilier<br />1. Abuse of Chinese, other immigrant labor<br />2. Faulty tracks just to make a dime<br />E. Improvements – steel – safer/stronger – standardized size – standardized time<br />F. “Stock watering” – make stock in railroads look better than it is – bribed judges<br />D. Steel – Andrew Carnegie – monopolized then gave away $450 million by death<br />A. America producing 1/3 of world’s steel thanks to Bessemer process<br />B. Carnegie - $1.4 billion more than US worth in 1800<br />E. Oil – Rockefeller – kerosene first pushed – then automobile<br />A. Consolidation – own supply and distribution<br />1. 95% of oil refineries<br />2. Rockefeller – uses illegal rebates and spies to control industry<br />II. Laissez Faire Conservatism – no government intervention in economy<br />A. Gospel of Wealth – Lord gave money to wealthy class – must be morally responsible<br />B. Social Darwinism – wealthy deserve it – inherently better<br />1. Poor by own shortcomings – “Acres of Diamonds” – poor deserve it<br />III. Effects on worker – Business becomes depersonalized – feel like merely a cog in a machine – hurts creativity<br />A. Free enterprise/farming replaced by corporation<br />B. Factory controls life – whistle and artificial discipline – become subservient<br />C. Gibson Girl – advertising campaign encourages women to work in offices<br />D. 2/3 dependent on wage – unemployment not based on effort, but larger economic issues<br />VI. Union Movement<br />A. Manual laborers vulnerable – employers can always bring in cheaper immigrant labor<br />B. Machines displace workers<br />C. Corporations make labor organization impossible<br />1. Control legal process – best lawyers, politicians corrupt<br />2. employs “scabs”/strike breakers – Gould “I can hire one half to kill the other half<br />3. Force workers to take ironclad oath – won’t join a union<br />4. Create company town – employees in debt to company stores<br />D. Knights of Labor – replaced National Labor Union – began as a secret society<br />1. Open to everyone – regardless of gender/race<br />2. Overzealous – talked about social reform/changing society – goals to unrealistic<br />E. Haymarket Square – Chicago – dynamite injures cops – anarchists linked to unions<br />1. Leads to massive riot – destroys reputation of Knights of Labor<br />F. American Federation of Labor – Samuel Gompers – “bread and butter” unionism<br />1. More realistic – wages, hours, working conditions<br />2. Used walkout and boycott to get way<br />3. By 1900 view of labor starts to change – not seen as chaos starters<br />VII. Industrialization Judgment – were capitalists “Captains of Industry” or “Robber Barons”<br />A. Class tension never as big a deal in America as in Europe<br />B. Creates belief in upward mobility<br />C. But…destroyed traditional farmer’s values/spiritual lives for capitalism<br />D. Two classes resulted – owners of labor class and the labor class<br />The Gilded Age<br />I. Cities – offer jobs, entertainment, plumbing, electricity, phones, department stores, architecture<br />1. Immigration – ant foreignism – Nativists Movement – Know-Nothing Party<br />A. Pre 1880 – immigrants came from Germany, British Isles – high literacy<br />B. Post 1880 – New Immigrant – Mediterranean, Slavic – poor literacy, arrive impoverished<br />C. Reasons for leaving – population explosion, persecution, exaggerated letters – streets paved with gold<br />II. City Problems – waste disposal of packaged products, sewage<br />A. Criminals, sanatoriums – homeless roaming the streets<br />B. Slums – dumbbell tenement – one toilet, poor ventilation, disease spreads – easy to build<br />III. Machine Politics – Boss System – a political machine “machine politics” controls who gets elected<br />A. Boss Tweed – help immigrants in exchange for votes – government leaders then have to give them kick-backs/money from government projects<br />B. Provides services/infrastructure for cities, but above the law – controls judges/politicians<br />IV. Politics – existed for benefit of interest groups – conservative leaders who want to avoid conflict<br />1. Conservative Presidencies – 1876-1992 – “Forgettable Presidents” – laissez faire policies<br />A. Rutherford B. Hayes – ended Reconstruction in exchange for votes – election 1876<br />B. Garfield – Killed by civil servant – eventually led to civil service reform – who gets what background jobs<br />C. Chester Arthur – elected due to strong boss system of New York<br />2. Tariff Controversy - $145 million budget surplus per year due to high tariffs<br />A. Solution – 1) pork-barrel bills or 2) lower tariffs – politicians and industry both interested<br />3. Railroad regulation – hesitant to intervene – building industry – American Dream<br />A. Wabash Case – 1886 – states can’t regulate interstate railroads<br />B. Interstate Commerce Act – creates Interstate Commerce Commission – supposed to regulate commerce, but hard to enforce – at least it’s a step to regulate monopolies<br />4. Trusts – competition hurts prices so companies unite to control prices/earnings – hurts customer<br />A. Vertical Integration – control all areas of production – oil from ground to gas station<br />B. Horizontal Integration – competitive companies from same industry form a trust<br />C. Agrarian Discontent - Land not as productive – grasshoppers, overused soil, droughts<br />1. Land easy to tax – other industries can had profits/parts of company<br />2. Trusts – barbed wire, fertilizer, harvester trusts push prices too high – hurts farmers<br />3. Railroads control price of transportation<br />4. ½ population farmers, but can’t organize – consolidation not part of American independence ethos<br />5. Rising expenses plus lower prices for goods = can’t pay back debts – want free silver<br />V. Crisis of 1890s – common man fights back – tired of being abused<br />1. Populism – People’s Party (Populists) came from Farmer’s Alliance – big gains in 1892 election<br />A. Free coinage silver – 16 to 1 ration<br />B. Graduated income tax based on wealth<br />C. Government ownership of utilities – railroad, telephone, telegraph – think Monopoly<br />D. Direct election of Senators/ One term presidents<br />E. Initiatives and Referendums for civilians to control municipal issues<br />F. Shorter workday<br />G. Immigration Restriction<br />H. Solicited black vote – black participation only increased anti-voting laws in South<br />VI. Election 1892 – free silver, William Jennings Bryan –Messiah- Democrat – Cross of Gold – great speaker<br />A. Populists have no party since Bryan’s silver views are theirs<br />B. Republicans create massive war chest from all industrialists/bankers who fear free silver<br />C. Millions show up to vote<br />D. Shift in politics – next 30 years, people become apathetic politically, Republicans dominate<br />E. Third Phase of Party System eras…<br />Foreign Policy 1865-1914<br />I. Purchase of Alaska – Russia realizes too hard to keep, and might lose in a battle with Britain<br />A. Why America? Buffer zone. <br />B. America agrees – 1) Russia helped Civil War, 2) oil, gas, gold, fish<br />C. William Seward – “Seward’s Folly” and “Seward’s Icebox” – started anti-imperialism<br />II. New Imperialism – Secretary of State James Blaine – goal open markets to U.S. traders<br />A. Minor incidents bring US to verge of conflicts<br />1. Chile – 2 US Sailors killed, Canada – seal hunting, Italy – lynching of Italians<br />2. Venezuela – disputed land with British Guiana<br />a. President Cleveland says Britain breaking Monroe Doctrine<br />III. Spanish American War – Spanish misrule of Cuba, America supports Cuban nationalists<br />A. Yellow journalism – exaggerates brutality of General Weyler<br />B. U.S.S. Maine sunk in Havana harbor; yellow press blames it on Spanish<br />C. Cuban independence guaranteed with Teller Amendment <br />1. Platt Amendment says US can still intervene<br />D. Philippines – first time American taking heavily populated territory<br />1. Starts our imperialism<br />IV. Arguments about Imperialism<br />A. Against – Hypocrisy – America claims government chosen by people, but…<br />1. America will now be involved in Asian conflicts<br />B. Reasons for Imperialism<br />1. White Man’s Burden – white civilized men help out heathen brothers<br />2. Missionary - Spread Protestantism to Catholics, Democracy to autocracies<br />3. Capitalism – natural resources + markets<br />4. Social Darwinism – Europeans strongest for a reason <br />5. Manifest Destiny – god made us chosen ones – continuation of City on a Hill<br />V. John Hay – Open Door Note – after China defeated by Japan, Europe moves in to carve up China<br />A. Hay sends Open Door Note to European powers asking/demanding equal access to Chinese markets<br />B. Boxer Rebellion – Chinese nationalists “Kill Foreign Devils”<br />1. 200 whites/missionaries killed<br />2. America joins in FIRST European alliance to overthrow rebels<br />VI. Theodore Roosevelt – traveler, adventurer, tough guy image, not afraid to use war<br />A. Gained fame through the Rough Riders attack on San Juan Hill at Cuba<br />B. Election of 1900 tried to pit anti-Imperialist Bryan vs. enslaver of Malayans Roosevelt<br />1. Roosevelt won – economy doing well at home<br />C. Big Stick Policy – military force used when necessary – “speak softly and carry a big stick”<br />D. Panama Canal – 1) needed for trading, 2) needed to move military easily<br />1. Panama breaks from Columbia in revolution, America looks bad<br />2. Panama Canal land bought for $10 million<br />3. “Cowboy Diplomacy” – America looks bad<br />E. Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine – America will help Latin American countries in debt pay off European debtors – “Bad Neighbor Policy” – look like an Empire<br />F. Taft – Dollar Diplomacy – foreign investment will keep Latin America on our side<br />G. Wilson – Moral Diplomacy – let nation’s citizens decide on leader – gave money to Mexican resistance because they had a corrupt leader<br />The Progressive Era<br />I. Definition – the middle class feels those above are abusing the system and those below are becoming a Socialist threat – must have government become an “agency of human welfare”<br />II. Progressive Roots<br />A. Jane Addams – Hull House – starts Settlement House movement<br />1. Neighborhood activities, counseling, childcare, education for the poor<br />B. Protestant Clergymen – “Social Gospel” – “Christian Socialists” – God says must help society<br />C. Greenback Labor Party 1870s and Populists 1890s – demanded social help<br />D. Nation becoming frustrated with monopolies<br />E. Prided individualism to justify inaction no longer makes sense in machine age<br />F. How the Other Half Lives – Jacob Riis – shows life of poor<br />III. Muckrakers – publishers make money off exposing ills of society – term given by Teddy Roosevelt<br />A. Magazines – McClure’s, Cosmopolitan, Colliers<br />1. Lincoln Steffens – Shame of the Cities – business and cities have corrupt alliance<br />2. Ida Tarbell – Standard Oil Company – how monopolistic practices destroy small companies<br />IV. Municipal, State, National Reform – how to solve problem that elected officials who make laws are corrupt<br />A. Initiative – propose laws, Referendum – people vote on laws, Recall – chance to remove bad officials<br />B. Laws to limit election, political gifts<br />C. Direct election of Senators to avoid “Millionaire’s Club”<br />D. Public commissioner and city manager – outside position to regulate how city is being run<br />E. Stop monopolies at city level – stop selling of streetcars and utilities to private companies<br />V. Social Problems<br />A. Try to stop prostitution – force police to enforce laws<br />B. Safety, sanitation and child labor laws<br />1. Prompted by Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911 – women trapped in factory and die<br />C. Temperance/Prohibition of Alcohol – some states and counties passing “dry laws”<br />1. Alcohol blamed for crime, unemployment, prostitution, wasting of wages, hurts family<br />D. Women’s Suffrage – western states pass first – Suffragettes still seen as women who want to be men<br />E. Blacks – WEB Dubois demands immediate equality – NAACP pushes for laws<br />1. Booker T. Washington work with system – get educated in manual labor<br />2. Marcus Garvey – preaches black solidarity – “back to Africa” movement – black pride<br />VI. Progressive Presidents<br />A. Theodore Roosevelt – a “Square Deal” for all Americans – 3 C’s<br />1. Control of Corporations – sides with strikers in 1902 coal strike – a first<br />a. Trustbuster – 1st railroad then others – brings 44 indictments – goes to Supreme Court<br />2. Consumer Protection – after Upton Sinclair’s – The Jungle - Meat Inspection Act<br />a. Pure, Food and Drug Act – can’t change or alter goods or labels on goods<br />3. Conservation of Natural Resources – saves America’s forests<br />a. Newlands Act – sell land and with money pay for irrigation<br />b. Saved 125 million acres of forest – actually implemented National Parks law<br />c. More efficiently balanced corporate interests with those of nature – Sierra Club<br />4. Set precedents – social reform, used publicity to increase presidential power<br />B. Taft – bigger trustbuster than Roosevelt – 90 indictments vs. 44<br />1. Ballinger-Pinchot controversy – Ballinger selling public land, Pinchot complains then fired<br />2. Payne-Aldrich Tariff – actually signs bill that increases tariffs on most items – angers support<br />C. Wilson’s New Freedom – assault on “the triple wall of privilege” – tariff, banks, trust<br />1. Tariffs – Underwood Tariff Bill – pressured reps. to pass, graduated income tax revenue<br />2. Banking – Federal Reserve Act 1913 – 12 regional banks run by government - $ now easily increased<br />3. Anti-Trust Act of 1914 – Clayton Anti-Trust Act – allows for labor protests – tries to control sneaky tricks of trusts – one man runs 4-5 different companies – controls costs<br />The First World War<br />I. Problems of neutrality – Wilson says be neutral in thought/deed<br />A. Submarines – British navy blockades German ports, u-boats only way to fight back<br />1. Lusitania – part cruise ship, part munitions transport<br />2. At first Germany gives Sussex Pledge, don’t shoot without warning, but then…<br />B. Economic ties – America was in a recession – JP Morgan and bankers loan money<br />1. Military orders from France and Britain huge<br />C. Psychological and ethnic ties – align with British – control propaganda/Kaiser embodies autocrat<br />1. Germany’s strike on neutral Belgium – makes Germans look like Huns<br />2. Wilson an anglophile<br />3. 11 million w/ ties to Germany/Austria-Hungary – recent immigrants<br />II. Preparedness and pacifism – Teddy Roosevelt pushes for war – cries of America to stay out<br />1. Russia turns communist and drops out, now America can fight for “democracy”<br />2. 1915 – Council of National Defense – look into how to mobilize for war/launched shipbuilding<br />3. Most labor unions support war, except for “Wobblies”<br />III. Mobilization <br />A. Fighting the war – army ranked 15th – Americans feared government intervention<br />1. Doughboys – conscription – no draft dodgers to buy selves out – 18-45 register<br />2. Work or fight<br />3. America’s biggest contribution through food/munitions – only two big battles<br />B. Financing the war – no forced rationing- propaganda – Herbert Hoover controls food admin.<br />1. Voluntary – farm production increased<br />2. Victory Loan Drives “Halt the Hun” – 1/5 of all money, $21 billion<br /> a. Extreme peer pressure to buy war bonds<br />3. Rest of money from taxes<br />C. War boards – government tries to takes over production<br />1. Bernard Baruch – War Industries Board – not effective – companies want laissez faire<br />D. Propaganda, public opinion, civil liberties <br />1. George Creel – Committee of Public Information – sell America on war and war aims<br /> a. Four-minute men to give speeches, posters, billboards, booklets, movies<br /> b. World expects too much – inspired with passion to want to buy bonds/participate<br />E. German-Americans targeted – blamed for diarrhea, sickness, spying – some tarred<br />1. Espionage Act – Sedition Act – anything against America can be jailed<br />2. Targeted anti-war socialists, and union leaders (IWWW)<br />3. Pardons given once war over, but civil liberties still broken<br />IV. Wilson's Fourteen Points – Wilson idealist – “make the world safe for democracy” – goal to prevent war<br /> 1. No treaties, freedom of seas, reduce military<br /> 2. Self-determination – let peoples decide their fate<br /> 3. Create League of Nations to settle international disputes<br />A. Treaty of Versailles – Idealist Wilson vs. Imperialist Europeans who want revenge<br />1.Punishes Germany – unrealistic reparations, demilitarize, accept full blame<br />B. Ratification fight – League of Nations – Senate can’t lose war declaration power<br />1. America’s history of avoiding entangling alliances<br /> a. Senate – Henry Cabot Lodge – afraid of Article X – must fight in war<br />2. Strong German sentiment in Mid-West makes Wilson’s tour unsuccessful <br />3. America’s refusal makes League powerless and America looks pathetic not agreeing to what they proposed<br />V. Postwar demobilization – America wants to return to normalcy – keep economy going, go America<br />1. Red scare – Russian communism spreading – Crusade against left-wingers – anti-Americans<br />1. Palmer Raids – Mitchell Palmer arrest anyone considered radical<br />2. Labor strife – government goes back to laissez faire – helping corps. – Unions dramatically decrease in size; down to 3 million by mid 1920s<br />1920s America – Roaring Twenties/Jazz Age<br />I. Red fear- radical ideas – Russia – anti-union/pro business<br />A. Strikes – labor = Bolsheviks, Left wing = un-American<br />B. Sacco/Vanzetti – Mass. murder, Ital, atheists, anarchists, draft dodgers<br />C. A. Gen. Palmer – “Fighting Quaker” – bomb – paranoid dude<br />D. Buford “Soviet Ark” – 249 deported – not nice<br />II. Race/Immigration Issues<br />A. KKK – anti Jew, foreign, Catholic, pacifist, bootlegger, birth control – crabby dudes<br />1. 1925 - March on Washington<br />2. Died w/ corruption of leaders<br />B. Immigration – new immigration bad, we like Northern Europeans, white, white people – first time America restricts immigration<br />1. Emergency Quota Act – 1921 – 3 % of 1910 numbers<br />2. Immigration Act of 1924 – 2% of 1890 #s – no Japanese<br />III. Social Lives<br />A. Prohibition – 1919 18th Amendment, Volstead Act enforces<br />1. South likes (conservative, don’t want drunk blacks), N. Eastern cities no<br /> 2. Joke – can’t legislate personal lives – tough to enforce – speakeasies, home brew<br />B. Consumerism – war + Mellon’s nice taxes + machines + oil + assembly line + electricity + buy on credit/installment<br />1. Car symbol of all – advertising, rubber, glass follows – 1930 20 mill.<br />a. Freedom, roads, women free, death toll “demon machine”<br />C. Entertainment<br />1. Watching Sports – Babe Ruth - baseball, Jack Dempsey – boxing<br />2. Airplanes – “flying coffins” – WWI, but others famous<br />a. Charles Lindbergh – Lucky Lindy – New York/Paris $25K<br />3. Radio – 1920 Pittsburg – announces election – national programming – home<br />4. Hollywood- movies – nickelodeons – 1927 Jazz Singer, 1915 Birth of Nation<br />a. $100,000 salaries, Americanization – vulgar pop culture<br />D. Battle of Morals – change, move to cities<br />1. Feminism – Sanger – birth control, 1923 Equal Rights Amendment failed<br />2. Religion – Modernism – God nice guy<br />3. Sexuality – “struck sex o’clock” – flappers – danced, knees, dark movies<br />4. Scopes Monkey Trial – Tennessee – old Bryan vs. young Darrow - $100 fine<br />E. Music – jazz, blues – Big Bands<br />1. Racial pride – Harlem Renaissance – Langston Hughes – poetry<br />a. Marcus Garvey – African Homeland – United Negro Improvement Association – support black communities – pay for improve<br />F. Literature – not all white Protestants, energy – resented old ideals<br />1. Mencken – journal – mocked old ideals – American Mercury<br />2. Fitzgerald – jazz age – This Side of Paradise/Gatsby<br />3. Hemingway – anti-pro-government-propaganda – Farewell to Arms<br />4. Poetry – T.S. Eliot – Wasteland, Hughes, e. e. Cummings – dared to be diff.<br />The Great Depression<br />Complaints: Left – didn’t go far enough to remake society, Right – created welfare state<br />I. Wall Street Crash – started business depression home/abroad unprecedented<br />A. 5000 banks collapse, 25% unemployed nationwide<br />B. Hoover’s reaction – “rugged individualism” – local government and indiv. Take care of selves<br />C. Depression Economy – Hoover actually pioneered New Deal – just didn’t market it properly<br />1. Created public works projects - $2.25 billion – Hoover Dam<br />2. Reconstruction Finance Corporation – gave loans to needy<br />2. Fought against anti-union behavior<br />3. But…didn’t have help from Congress – couldn’t pass a lot<br />4. Set important precedent that FDR would take further<br />D. Hawley Smoot Tariff – 38% to 60% - world responds with similarly high tariffs – out of control<br />II. Moods of Despair<br />A. Bonus Army – Bonus Expeditionary Force – demand payment of 1945 retirement money<br />1. 20,000 march on Washington – set up Hoovervilles – 2 die<br />2. Riots put down by General Douglas MacArthur – tear gas – injured – Hoover looks bad<br />III. Franklin D. Roosevelt – 1921 paralyzed, wife Eleanor – “conscience of New Deal” – <br />A. Loved by liberals – golden speaking voice – “traitor to his class”<br />B. New Deal – for “forgotten man” – Brain Trust – relief, recovery, reform<br />C. 100 days – “alphabet agencies”- based on Progressive Movement<br />1. Unemployment insurance, old age insurance, minimum wage, conservation, child labor<br />2. Created jobs – CCC, CWA, FERA<br />D. Critics – either too autocratic or not going far enough<br />1. Father Charles Coughlin – Catholic Priest<br />2. Huey Long – Kingfish – “Share our Wealth” “Every Man a King” – assassinated<br />3. Court packing – Supreme Court sees practices as socialist – add 6 judges because tired<br />a. Seen as dictator – destroying checks and balances – but courts start changing > liberal<br />4. Some graft and abuses, depression still exists in 36 (hey that rhymes)<br />5. Capitalists – thought they were being punished<br />a. Many say his programs saved capitalism, just got rid of abusers<br />E. Rise of CIO – labor strikes – Roosevelt passes minimum wage, max hour work week<br />1. CIO emerges – 4 million members by 1940s – 200,000 blacks<br />2. Seemed like civil war between AFL and CIO<br />F. Recession of 1938 – eventually runs out of new programs – depression still exists<br />1. “Spendocracy” – Keynes – run massive deficit spending – Keynesian<br />2. National debt - $19 billion to $40 billion<br />IV. American People in the Depression<br />A. Social values, women, ethnic groups – start working together – everyone suffering<br />1. Eleanor Roosevelt – women first time have influence – Mary Dewson<br />a. Frances Perkins – first cabinet –Secretary of Labor<br />2. But women take women’s jobs to not take away job from male “breadwinners”<br />3. Birth rates drop, men’s #1 role in family diminishes<br />B. South – 1938 – worst section of nation – economics, schools, housing, income – blacks worst<br />C. Indian Reorganization Act – slowed loss of Indian lands – encourages self- government<br />1. Some thought it demeaning – “back to the blanket” – treated like museums<br />D. Mexican-American Deportation – 1-2 million deported to free up jobs for “real” Americans<br />Foreign Policy in the 1930s<br />I. Hoover/Stimson Diplomacy Japan<br />A. Japan alleges provocation – invades Manchuria – Japan quits League of Nations<br />1. Interventionist Sec. of State Stimson encourages embargo/Isolationist Hoover disagrees<br />2. 1932 - Stimson doctrine – US would not recognize new territorial acquisitions<br />3. League proves useless World War II technically begins<br />II. Good Neighbor Policy – economic imperialism difficult with slowing economy – alters Roosevelt Corollary<br />A. Hoover takes troops out of some S. American nations – treat Southern neighbors more fairly<br />III. London Economic Conference – summer 1933<br />A. American wants to stay isolated so doesn’t meet with other nations to work on ending Depression<br />1. Led to extreme nationalism among European countries <br />IV. Disarmament<br />A. Washington Naval Treaty 1921, limits fleet size; angers Japan<br />V. Congress Legislates Neutrality – World War I blamed on munitions makers wanting money<br />A. Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, 1937 – America could not sell/transport to belligerents, sail on their boats, or make loans – only effects American-declared wars<br />1. Ended freedom of the seas – also won’t even help victims – considered belligerent<br />2. Some even ask for Constitutional Amendment<br />VI. Aggressors: Japan, Italy, and Germany – nations swept up in nationalism, militarism – dictators rule<br />VII. Appeasement – avoiding World War II at all costs – gives into demands of leaders<br />A. Germany – Ignore Treaty of Versailles – Austria > Czechoslovakia – Munich Conference <br />B. Japan invades China – Roosevelt’s Quarantine Speech decried by isolationists<br />VII. Rearmament – cash and carry policy first – to stop Germany’s blitzkrieg (lightning fast war)<br />A. Lend-lease – US would be arsenal of democracy – send guns, not sons – lend arms and then they can return later – led to America’s rearmament<br />B. Destroyers for bases – give old destroyers in exchange for bases around world<br />VIII. Atlantic Charter – Atlantic Conference 1941 – Churchill and Roosevelt meet for first time<br />A. Discuss how to make world safer for democracies at end of war<br />B. People can choose own government, can take no territory without consent of people<br />C. Looked at as non-isolationist – Roosevelt making treaties with other nations<br />IX. Pearl Harbor – 1940 embargo on Japan bound supplies – taking oil hurts Japan<br />A. Broke Japanese code – knew war was coming – thought in Malaya or Philippines<br />B. December 8, 1941declared war on Japan after “date that will live in infamy” short by one vote<br />The Second World War<br />I. Organizing for War – Total War – Government controls everything, citizens willing to help<br />A. Mobilizing production – massive military orders pulled US out of Depression<br /> 1. War Production Board – government takes over manufacturing<br /> a. Stops production of nonessentials – cars<br /> b. Wartime rationing after supply of rubber cut off by Japan’s invasion of Malaya<br />B. Full employment led to inflation<br /> 1. Office of Price Administration – regulated prices<br />C. Labor unions increase in size<br /> 1. Women – Rosie the Riveter, African-Americans enter workforce in masse<br /> 2. Some strikes led to Government taking over industry – Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Law<br />D. Propaganda – buy war bonds, support rationing, work harder<br /> 1. Posters, movies, demonize/dehumanizes Japanese<br />E. Roosevelt works with businesses – in capitalism “you have to let business make money”<br />F. Internment of Japanese Americans – Executive Order 9066<br /> 1. Moved for protection, but mostly fear of spying or aiding invasion<br /> 2. Constitutionality upheld by Korematsu vs. U.S. case – acceptable during wartime<br /> 3. 1988 - $20,000 to each camp survivor<br />II. The war in Europe, Africa, and the Mediterranean; D Day <br />A. Strategy – take Africa > go through Italy to set up Southern Front – Russia holds Eastern Front > Create Massive Western Front > D-Day Normandy “Beginning of the End”<br />III. The war in the Pacific: Hiroshima, Nagasaki <br />A. Priority; take out Germany first <br /> B. Island hopping – take island at a time to provide landing bases – get closer to prepare for invasion<br /> 1. Firebombing Tokyo and other cities<br />C. Manhattan Project – secret plan to create Nuclear Bomb<br /> 1. Hiroshima/Nagasaki Fat Man/Little Boy bombed<br /> a. Save Japanese civilians/American soldiers lives if invasion<br /> b. Warning to Russia – starts arms race<br />IV. Diplomacy <br />A. War aims – work with Russia – Russia holds off Germany until America/Britain can hold front – hesitant friends – realize communism will be problem after war<br />B. Wartime conferences: Teheran, Yalta, Potsdam – Big Three – Stalin, Roosevelt, Churchill<br /> 1. Casablanca Conference. – invade Italy/unconditional surrender; <br /> 2. Teheran – set up U.N.<br /> 3. Yalta – divide Germany into four sections <br /> 4. Potsdam – hot to govern Germany, attack Japan next<br />V. Postwar atmosphere; the United Nations <br />A. America riches & most powerful country in the world; homeland not damage by war<br />B. Russia takes over Germany’s Eastern holdings, promises to let them have free elections, but…<br /> 1. Threat of WWIII with Russia almost immediate<br />C. Hiroshima and Nagasaki – first shots of Cold War – attempt to frighten Soviets unnecessary<br />D. Racial/gender inequality returns<br />E. Economy falters at first – potentially huge unrest – would US return to Depression?<br /> 1. What to do about returning men – industries drop output at first<br /> 2. Massive inflation? No, military spending prevents it<br /> 3. Organized labor has more power<br /> 4. War industry buildings sold cheaply to private industries<br />Truman and the Cold War<br />I. Postwar Domestic Adjustments<br />A. Initial faltering economy – inflation rises, GDP down, strikes<br />1. Taft-Hartley Act – put limits on labor unions<br />a. Outlawed closed shop, labor leaders take non-Communist oath<br />2. Sold war factories cheaply to private companies<br />3. G.I. Bill – paid for school for soldiers; home, farm, and small business loans<br />B. GDP growth lasts next two decades – Americans – 6% of population controlled 40% of earth’s $<br />1. Middle class doubles, home ownership increases<br />2. Not touched by war – America dominates ruined global landscape<br />3. Rising education level, better technology, workforce leaves agriculture<br />4. Move to suburbs – massive baby boom<br />II. Civil Rights - war generated new militancy among blacks, generation of college grads<br />A. 1948 – Truman ends segregation in federal civil service, equality of treatment in military<br />B. Election of 1948 – Democrats against Truman because of civil rights stance<br />1. Form Dixiecrats – States Right – nominated Governor Strom Thurmond of S. Carolina<br />2. Vice-President Henry Wallace enters election for Progressive Party – pro-Soviet platform<br />3. Harry delivers 300 “give ‘em hell Harry” speeches – Republican Dewey should have won<br />a. Chicago Tribune ran newspaper – Dewey Defeats Truman – but…farmers, workers, blacks not interested with Republicans<br />III. Containment in Europe and the Middle East<br />A. Truman Doctrine - $400 million for Greece and Turkey – help fight Communism<br />1. Bigger issue – protect any “free peoples” from outside Communist pressure<br />a. Problem – any tyrant can claim Communist threat and get help<br />B. Marshall Plan – 1) make capitalism attractive, resist Communism 2) help rebuild Europe<br />1. $12.5 billion – reverse of Versailles – helps nations rebuild – became economic miracle<br />C. Berlin crisis – Berlin divided among four allied powers – France, England, Britain, Russia<br />1. Becomes East and West Berlin – Russia wants Eastern Europe as “satellite nation”<br />2. 1948 – Soviets cut off train/highway access – Allies respond w/ massive airlift<br />a. Symbolic importance – America determined to protect interests<br />D. NATO – 12 original say an attack on one is an attack on all – isolationists defeated<br />1. Officially ended American isolationism, helped unite Europe, militarizes Western Europe for Cold War<br />E. 1949 – Truman announces Soviets had tested nuclear bomb<br />1. US in 1952 gets Hydrogen bomb, then Soviets get hydrogen bomb next year<br />IV. Revolution in China<br />A. American backed Jiang Jieshi defeated by Communist Mao Zedong and banished to Taiwan<br />1. Looks like America “lost” China to Communism – US looks for someone to blame<br />V. Korean War – Korea divided into Russia and US spheres of influence at 38 degrees<br />A. N. Korea invades and then pushed back by MacArthur and UN soldiers, drives to China border<br />1. China then attacks and pushes forces back to start – 38 degrees<br />B. NSC-68- Truman quadruples defense spending <br />1. Belief that American economy can handle any expenditure on defense<br />C. MacArthur calls Truman a communist appeaser because he has to fight limited war<br />1. Wants to drop nukes and invade China<br />2. Truman has to fire MacArthur – returns a hero<br />Eisenhower and Modern Republicanism<br />I. Modern Republicanism – keep social/economic programs but push for military build-up<br />A. Ike allowed McCarthy because his targets were Democrats<br /> 1. Master of manipulating media , blames people at random<br /> 2. Majority of polled Americans approved of McCarthy – made it hard to criticize<br /> 3. Army hearings destroy him in front of 20 million on TV – dies alcohol 3 yrs. Later<br />II. Civil Rights Movement<br />A. The Warren Court – Congress resists change, Ike not interested – go to courts<br />1. Brown v. Board of Education reverses Plessy vs. Ferguson - unanimous<br />2. Confronted important social issues instead of refusing to hear<br />3. Little Rock 9 Eisenhower uses 101st airborne to force Arkansas’ governor to allow the 9 black students into school<br />B. Montgomery Bus Boycott – year long successful boycott after Rosa Parks refuses seat<br />1. Martin Luther King – Southern Christian Leadership Conference – gains status<br />2. Proved blacks could unite<br />C. Greensboro sit-in – spontaneous sit-in at Woolworth’s – later fad spread all over South in pools, restaurants, public places<br />III. John Foster Dulles – churchgoer – push back Communist advances, “liberate captive people”<br />1. Also try to balance budget by reducing military spending<br />A. Massive retaliation – build-up of Strategic Air Command + nukes to level cities<br />1. “More bang for the buck” – turned out to be extremely expensive<br />a. Eventually Ike warns against “military-industrial complex”<br />2. Problem – can’t use massive nuclear attack threat on minor issues – Hungary<br />B. Southeast Asia – Ho Chi Minh wants independence – America can’t let go Communist<br />1. French forces fail at Dien Bien Phu – America must support France for help in Eur.<br />a. Loss forces compromise – divide country and elect in a year<br />b. South Vietnam U.S. backed leader Diem takes money but doesn’t help<br />c. America firmly involved backing losing horse<br />C. Empires die out – Middle East and Latin America push for independence – democracy<br />1. Iranians seen as supporting USSR, so US sponsors coup and puts in dictator – shah<br />a. Arab world angered at US intervention<br />2. Egyptians not given US money for dam, they end up nationalizing Suez Canal<br />a. Britain and France go to war against Egypt without US help<br />b. Demonstrates reliance of west on oil – power shifts to Middle East<br />D. Khrushchev – tensions only get fiercer after failed attempts at summits<br />1. Khrushchev shallowly promises disarmament to UN<br />2. Ike looks stupid when U-2 plane crashes after US says we don’t fly spy missions<br />IV. American people – homogenized society – buys same thing/has same values – keeping up with the Joneses<br />A. White collar jobs outnumber blue collar jobs<br />B. Women – return to female jobs – domestic – baby boom<br />1. Cult of domesticity – later refuted by Betty Friedan’s Feminine Mystique<br />2. Ozzie and Harriet and Leave it to Beaver – TV shows with perfect suburban fams<br />C. Consumer culture – Diner’s Club 1st credit card, McDonalds<br />1. Rapid TV growth – movie attendance sinks<br />2. Cultural and social growth destroyed by consumerism and TV media<br />3. Popular music turns to “crossover” Elvis Presley – black, country, British<br />4. Americans buy mass-produced, standardized products – where’s the difference<br />V. Space Race – Sputnik USSR satellite – USSR ahead of US<br />1. Fear – USSR education stronger, could now attack US from space w/ missile<br />a. Education – too easygoing – substitute square roots for square dancing<br />b. Authorized loans for college<br />Kennedy's New Frontier; Johnson's Great Society<br />I. New Domestic Programs – New Frontier to “get the country moving again”<br />A. Tax cut – though at odds with companies over Steel threats, he regained favor with tax cuts to business – seen as a Republican measure<br />1. Additional tax cuts pushed through by Johnson after Kennedy assassinated<br />B. War on Poverty – Johnson – Great Society – “rights revolution” – helped Americans/hurt budget<br />1. Proposed $1 Bill(Later $2 bill. dollar package – focused on Appalachian mountains and poor<br />a. Economic and welfare programs – similar to New Deal<br />b. Michael Harrington’s The Other America – shows 20% of population in poverty<br />2. Two new cabinet offices – Housing and Urban Development, Department of Transportation<br />3. Big Four Feats – education, aid to elderly/indigent, immigration reform, voting<br />a. Education – loans straight to kids, not schools – Project Head Start<br />b. Medicare/Medicaid<br />II. Civil Rights and Civil Liberties<br />A. The New Left and the Counterculture – divides America’s into two morals<br />1. Negative attitude toward authority – America not free of racism, sexism, imperialism, povert<br />2. 1950s – “Beat” poets - Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, Rebel without a Cause<br />3. UC Berkeley – Free Speech Movement, sexual revolution, lived in communes<br />4. Turned into violence and cynicism<br />B. Republican Party – reaction to “flower children” – silent majority<br />1. Republicans in South – Kennedy – anti-Catholic – Bible belt<br />2. 1968 – American Independent Party – George Wallace – South really doesn’t want integration – can no longer follow Democrats<br />3. Blacks move to cities, Democrats begin appealing to urban areas, Republicans elsewhere<br />C. The Supreme Court – Warren’s Court – After 1953<br />1. Cases affect sexual freedom, criminals’ rights, religious rights, structure of political representation<br />a. Griswold v. Connecticut – Condoms OK – people have privacy in lives<br />b. Gideon v. Wainwright – Defendants have right to legal counsel<br />c. Miranda/Escobedo – right to remain silent, can’t get confession from torture<br />d. New York Times v. Sullivan – public figures only win libel if malice intended<br />e. Engel v. Vitale – prayer illegal in schools<br />f. Reynolds v. Sims – redraw district lines to better represent population<br />III. Foreign Policy – Cold war still dominates thinking<br />A. Bay of Pigs – plan made under Eisenhower to have CIA help Cuban exiles retake gov’t from Castro<br />1. Fails miserably when Cubans don’t side with Cuban exiles<br />2. America looks like idiots for sponsoring a revolution – Kennedy held responsible<br />B. Cuban Missile Crisis – closest America gets to WWIII – US tells USSR to get missiles out of Cuba<br />1. Puts in “quarantine” – can’t do blockade because it’s an act of war<br />2. If Russia doesn’t back down > Cuba invaded > Berlin invaded > World War III<br />3. Khrushchev - Russia eventually back down for America’s promise to take out missiles Turkey<br />4. Created direct phone line between leaders – too close to death<br />C. Vietnam Quagmire – no-win situation – escalation not possible, N. Vietnamese won’t quit<br />1. Can’t escalate because might bring in China or Russia, but can’t win without escalation<br />2. American public – due to media – getting tired of unwinnable wore and empty promises<br />3. Victory confusing – based on body counts and not land taken (land gets retaken later)<br />4. People begin dodging draft, tons of protests, Veterans not welcomed back<br />5. Tet Offensive actually a victory but media portrayal makes it look like government has no touch w/ reality – they had just promised a huge victory<br />6. Destroys Johnson’s policies<br />The Nixon Years<br />I. Election of 1968 – most heated political season in history<br />A. Democratic convention has mass riots – mobs bait officers – feces, shouts<br />1. Eventually police riot breaks out<br />2. Robert Kennedy had been killed – leaves pro-war Humphrey in power<br />B. Republicans – victory in Vietnam and strong anticrime policy<br />C. George Wallace – segregation campaign – gets 45 electoral votes from South<br />C. Nixon wins – doesn’t win one city – Democrats vote cities, blacks vote cities<br />II. Johnson remembered – Vietnam failure, but done more for Civil Rights than Lincoln<br />III. Nixon-Kissinger Foreign Policy<br />A. Vietnam – escalation and then pull-out troops<br />1. Asians and others have to fight own wars<br />2. Vietnamization – train Vietnamese to fight war for selves<br />3. Bomb Cambodia to clear out Vietnamese<br />B. China – restoring relations – road to getting out of Vietnam requires help of China<br />1. China starting to clash with Soviets – take opportunity<br />2. 1972 makes journey to China<br />C. Soviet Union – détente – relaxed tension – slowing of arms race<br />1. Soviets need U.S. food and are afraid of US supported Chinese<br />a. $750 million in wheat, corn<br />3. Anti-ballistic missile treaty – limited nations to defensive weapons<br />a. SALT – freeze number of missiles for 5 years<br />IV. New Federalism- Expands welfare programs – not liked by Conservatives<br />A. Increases for food stamps and Medicaid<br />B. Supplemental Security Income for disabled<br />C. Poverty rate reduced to 11% - lowest in modern history<br />D. Attack on racial discrimination – affirmative action – protection for groups not just individuals<br />1. Supreme Court prohibits intelligence or other tests that hurt women/blacks<br />E. Environmental Protection Agency – dealt with smog, pesticides and pollution<br />V. Supreme Court – Roe v. Wade – prohibited states from passing laws against abortion<br />A. Warren Court of previous two decades had changed face of nation - reformist<br />1. Rights of accused, legality of contraception, sue for libel if you could prove malice, support black people in civil rights cases, redraw district lines<br />VI. Watergate Crisis and resignation<br />A. Nixon paranoid – believes liberals of Kennedy/Johnson destroyed political career<br />B. Wins 1972 election by landslide but actions come back to haunt him<br />1. Plumbers supposed to seal “leaks” after Pentagon Papers show fault in previous presidents<br />2. Group caught in Watergate Hotel at Democratic Party<br />3. CREEP – committee to reelect president has tons of money to play “dirty tricks” on opposition<br />C. Reports Woodward and Bernstein uncover story – eventually traced to Nixon<br />D. Nixon resigns before impeachment – later pardoned by Ford – only<br />E. John Dean states that Nixon had bugged rooms to record conversations<br />1. Eventually Nixon tapes asked for, but denied – minutes “lost”<br />The United States since 1974<br />I. The New Right and the Resurgence of Conservatism – response to counterculture of 1960s<br />A. Most concerned about social issues – not economics<br />1. Denounced homosexuality, pornography, abortion, feminism, affirmative action<br />2. Wanted prayer and tougher penalties on criminals<br />3. Milliken v. Bradley – says you don’t have to bus kids across lines, whites move to suburbs<br />II. Ford and Rockefeller – Ford seen as dumb, pardoning Nixon seen as “buddy deal”<br />A. Tries to continue Détente at Helsinki Accords – finalized boundaries of East – gave freedoms<br />III. Jimmy Carter<br />A. Double-digit inflation – more than 10% per year – oil prices from OPEC killed them<br />1. High lending rate – 20% - don’t want to be repaid with cheap money<br />2. Calls to improve energy conservation<br />3. Eventually escapes to Camp David where he meets with advisors, then chastises Americans<br />B. Iranian Hostage Crisis – hostages taken because US aided in revolution – putting Shah in power<br />1. Nightly news show Iranians burning US flags – failed economic sanctions and commando escape attempt<br />C. Camp David Accords – Israel and Egypt agree to withdraw to pre-1967 territory to avoid conflict<br />IV. Ronald Reagan – former actor, California governor, helps wealthy, return to good old days – US pride<br />A. Reaganomics – trickle-down – supply-side economics – help out wealthy<br />B. Defense buildup – method of bankrupting Soviet Union – can’t keep up with us, eventually kills them<br />1. Money taken from school lunches for huge weapons programs – military industrial complex<br />C. Disarmament Treaties – “Star Wars” – Strategic Defense Initiative – blowing up nukes in space<br />1. “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” – glasnost “openness”, “perestroika” restructuring<br />a. INF treaty – bans all intermediate missiles in Europe<br />D. Iran-Contra – America sells weapons to Iranians covertly and gives money to Contra rebels Nicaragua<br />1. Violates congressional ban on sending weapons to Contras – President ignores<br />2. Daily TV congressional hearings show President probably knew but everyone pleads 5th<br />V. Society – two nations – affluence and inequality – poverty rates highest among minorities<br />A. Feminist revolution – Working moms, athletics, anti-sexual discrimination cases – still “glass ceiling”<br />1. Sandra Day O’Connor First Justice, women leaders of companies<br />2. Women authors<br />B. African-Americans – Clarence Thomas Judge<br />C. New immigration – Asia/Mexico – urban coastal cities and Southwest (Mexicans) dominated<br />1. Concentration of Mexicans unprecedented<br />2. Ethnic pride – some people anti-American and/or hold their groups as most important<br />D. Urban problems – minorities centralized, money not put into rebuilding, drugs, welfare, poor schools<br />1. Pollution, traffic – endangering species<br />The Following are 3 outlines that basically convey three topics we did not talk about so much in APUSH. The topics are US treatment of Native Americans, Civil Rights Movement, and the most neglected topic of all, Women’s Rights movement. So I will now give brief outlines on them, and don’t worry, this is only a skeleton outline to give you guys ideas on what to write for each period of time if an essay question so happens to ask you on the topic. The bigger study guide with greater analysis is coming up. It won’t be as long so don’t worry. Also for the love of god please print double sided otherwise all of you printing will kill a whole tree, so please try to save paper. Good Luck Studying! Good Luck on the Test! <br />Native American Treatment<br />17th and 18th Century - disease<br />A. New England – lived separate – Squanto interpret saved > Thanksgiving<br />1. King Phillip > relative Squanto’s tribe > unites New England<br />2. Pennsylvania/William Penn & Rhode Island/Roger Williams buy land<br />3. 1704 Deerfield Massacre – raid/tomahawk/kidnap<br />4. Albany Plan of Union – Franklin – union 1754 w/ Iroquois against other tribes<br />B. Virginia – “starving time” > stealing > Indian Raids<br />C. Spanish – encomienda – slavery, missions - California<br />D. French – worked with – fur trappers<br />E. French and Indian War – 1757-1763 – Proclamation Line of 1763 – no west of Appalachia.<br />19th Century<br />A. War of 1812 – 1795-1809 48 million acres sold to government<br />1. Battle of Tippecanoe – Tecumseh – united – treaties others Indians – defeated<br />a. British helped > Native Americans warpath > kill settlers > war begins<br />B. Andrew Jackson – move > west Mississippi<br />1. 94 Treaties – some peaceably, some fought<br />2. Seminoles – Florida swamps – Chief Osceola – 1830s<br />3. Cherokees – Americanized – Georgia<br />1. Clothes, farms, factories, schools – Sequoya – alphabet<br />2. Worcester v. Georgia – Marshall saved lands<br />3. Jackson “Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.”<br />a. Trail of Tears – 1838 – 15,000 – 1500 died<br />C. 1850-1900 – 420,000 > 250,000 left<br />D. Indian Wars – 1850 > 1890 – buffalo basis of life, slaughtered by whites<br />1. White settlers move onto lands, forts to protect travel<br />2. 1868-1869 – gather onto big reservations – forced out of wilderness<br />a. Many resisted – “Wild West” – Custer’s Last Stand – Sioux – Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse Chief Joseph “From where the sun now stands I will fight no more, forever.”<br />3. Wounded Knee – kids, women slaughtered – signaled the end<br />20th Century – by 1990 – 2 million Native Americans in US total– but worst health, income, unemployment, suicide<br />A. Snyder Act – 1924 – citizenship<br />B. FDR – Indian New Deal – no sell lands, rebuild culture<br />C. WWII – 25,000 soldiers – Windtalkers – code<br />D. Eisenhower – termination – no fed. Involvement > but states don’t help<br />1. “relocation” – urbanization > 45% urban by 1970 > but displaced, Indian ghettos<br />E. Lyndon Johnson – “The Forgotten American” - $510 mil. – Indian aid programs<br />F. Richard Nixon – Indians run reservations, positions in Bureau of Indian Affairs<br />Education – 1970s/1980s – bilingual – good>pride – bad> compete jobs<br />1. Education peaked 1970s then declined<br />2. study tribal history, culture & language also<br />G. Indian Power –AIM – American Indian Movement <br />1. Violence – occupy buildings – want $/recognition for treaties– 1969>1971 – Alcatraz<br /> H. State courts – return land – 1970s-1980s<br /> I. 1850-1900 – 420,000 > 250,000<br /> J. Multibillion $ gambling industry – 1990s<br />Stages: 1) Part of wilderness to be cleared, 2) “wards” of the state, taken care of – reservations, 3) relocated to cities, 4) given autonomy over reservations<br />Civil Rights Movement (1955-1960)<br />Events<br />Murder of Emmett Till-boy from Chicago<br />Whistle @ white women…murdered by women’s husband and brother<br />Emmett=martyr<br />Open-casket funeral…huge media coverage<br />Mrs. Till & Mose Wright (uncle) spoke against whites<br />Murders convicted not guilty…all white jury<br />Montgomery Bus Boycott (Dec.1, 1955)<br />Non-violent<br />Rosa Parks-white section >SC integrating buses<br />Little Rock, Arkansas<br />Desegregation of schools-state vs. federal<br />National Guard vs. U.S. Army<br />“Little Rock 9”-good AA students<br />Escorted by “101st Hall Monitors”(U.S. Air Force)<br />1st integrated school<br />Sit-ins-Greensboro, NC…Nashville, TN…big media… Purpose-be arrested<br />Jim Lawson non-violent workshop…rules on sitting, clothes etc<br />Both black and whites worked together<br />Freedom Rides…integrate buses on state line<br />Washington D.C. >deep south<br />SNCC-main org.<br />JFK sends federal troops<br />March on Washington…250,000-300,000 b&w together<br />“I have a dream”<br />No riots – fed government expected chaos<br />Birmingham-“Bombingham”…AL<br />Media=big…spraying water<br />Church bombing…4 kids killed<br />Mississippi Burning…shows S problems<br />Get AA to vote (3 guys…two white, one black, one Jew)…KKK kills them<br />Kennedy passes-Voting Rights Act of 1965<br />Verify 15th Amendment<br />Black Power Movement…Malcolm X founded ideology…ghettoized<br />Black panthers…stop being “victims”<br />Olympics-black fists<br />People<br />Martin Luther King-minister from church…non-violent civil rights activist…killed 1968<br />JFK-35 pres…not elected as civil rights activist…brother Robert Attorney G. more active than JFK killed in 1963 (end of CRM)<br />Malcolm X-fighting back…Islam…black supremacy…big media…killed by Islam (blacks)<br />II. Phases – NAACP lawsuits, legislative branch won’t budge – senate filibuster<br />A. Go to courts – Brown v. Board, but not enforceable<br />B. Executive branch finally steps in Ike>Little Rock, Kennedy>Freedom Rides, Johnson>Civil Rights Act<br />1. Before governors and states had ruled, finally federal government stops allowing South to have separate rules<br />III. Cooperation – Early part, blacks and whites worked together in SNCC, CORE<br />A. Conflicts between conservative SCLC and NAACP, the big moneymakers and SNCC & CORE the actual activists<br />B. By late 1960s, Black Power movement emerges wanting not<br />Women’s Rights<br />POLITICAL<br />Women followed England’s example<br />Running in front of horses<br />1848 – Seneca Falls<br />Declaration of Sentiments<br />Organizations:<br />1869 – NWSA<br />fighting in Congress<br /> b. 1869 - AWSA<br />a. fighting in states<br /> c. 1966 – NOW<br />a. equality in workplace<br /> 3. Federal Acts<br /> a. 1893 – CO lets women vote<br />