1 / 22

U.S. History Review

U.S. History Review. A Quick Journey through Time. How did our nation G R O W ?. Back to the RENAISSANCE. Europe came out of the Middle Ages with the “re-birth” of learning… The desire for Asian goods led to the Age of Discovery (necessitated developments in navigation)

Download Presentation

U.S. History Review

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. U.S. History Review A Quick Journey through Time

  2. How did our nation GROW?

  3. Back to the RENAISSANCE • Europe came out of the Middle Ages with the “re-birth” of learning… • The desire for Asian goods led to the Age of Discovery (necessitated developments in navigation) • Exploration led to the “discovery” of the New World – the Americas

  4. Colonization • Spanish conquistadors, French explorers and English colonists dominated the European interests in North America during the 1500s and 1600s • Eventually, the English established themselves on the east coast -- though the colonies were controlled by Great Britain • Dissatisfaction with this situation led to the REVOLUTIONARY WAR and the American Colonies DECLARING their INDEPENDENCE from Great Britain in 1776

  5. A New Nation • The American Colonies needed a government • The ARTICLES of CONFEDERATION served this purpose during the war • They were not effective afterward – • No real central authority – states had power • No power to tax - $ for military • No ability to regulate trade

  6. A New Government • After the war, in 1787, a Constitutional Convention was called to revise the Articles of Confederation • Instead, they drew up an entirely new document: • The United States CONSTITUTION

  7. The Constitution • Ours is the longest living foundation for a national government in the world today! • Federal system • Three branches of government • Separation of Powers/Checks & Balances • Bill of Rights

  8. Manifest Destiny & Internal Conflict • As the nation grew, so did the idea that America must span the continent “from sea to shining sea” • Economic differences between the Southern (agriculture-oriented/slave) states and the Northern (industry-oriented) states polarized the nation and led to the CIVIL WAR (1861-1865)

  9. Reconstruction & Change • Policy following the Civil War focused on the rights of former slaves and jump-starting the economy again • INDUSTRIALIZATION in the Northeastern states led to URBANIZATION • Agriculture in the South and West declined • The POPULIST MOVEMENT focused on the rights of farmers while…

  10. Imperialism & War • Expansion of America’s economy to other parts of the world – overseas colonies • As we expanded our influence, we sought to remain NEUTRAL • Until we were drawn into the FIRST WORLD WAR (1917)

  11. Post-war Boom then… BUST! • The Roaring Twenties/Jazz Age • 19th Amendment • Prohibition • Flappers & Speakeasies • Stock Market Crash (1929) • Speculation • Bank failures • Great Depression (1930s) • Dust Bowl • High unemployment

  12. FDR’s New Deal • President Franklin D. Roosevelt introduced Government Programs aimed at • Relief • Recovery • Reform • No more “laissez-faire” capitalism • Helped stimulate the economy some but…

  13. …more WAR • The American Great Depression spread to Europe in the 1930s & led to the growth of fascist dictatorships (Germany & Italy) • World War II began in Europe in 1939 • The U.S. entered the conflict after the bombing of Pearl Harbor (Hawaii) in 1941

  14. World War II • The U.S. joined the war on the side of the ALLIED POWERS • Great Britain • France • USSR • They fought against the AXIS POWERS • Nazi Germany • Italy • Japan

  15. America as a Super Power • WWII ended with the defeat of Nazi Germany and the dropping of an atomic bomb on Japan in 1945 • Conflicting political and social ideologies led to the division of Europe following the war • While the U.S. helped France and Britain rebuild Western Europe, the USSR took control of Eastern Europe

  16. A Cold War • The Soviet Union (USSR) – a communist dictatorship AND • The United States – a capitalist democracy Were at odds and entered a nearly 40-year conflict that polarized the world

  17. Containing Communism • The Truman Doctrine (1947) committed the U.S. to a fight against the spread of communism in the world • This led to a stalemate war in Korea (1950-53) • The Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) • and a “failure” in Vietnam (1964-1973)

  18. On the Domestic Front in the 60s • The U.S. experienced dramatic social change during the Civil Rights Movement led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. • Brown vs. the Board of Education led to integration in the schools • The Hippie Movement & anti-Vietnam war slogans abounded & led to troop withdrawal

  19. The 1970s • Watergate – President Nixon’s dilemma And • An economic recession led to widespread distrust of the government

  20. The 1980s & Reaganomics • President Ronald Reagan introduced an economic stimulus package (Supply-side economics) that helped the U.S. economy grow • The same policy dramatically increased the U.S. deficit

  21. The Fall of Communism • After years of military spending at the expense of their citizens, the Soviet economy was nearing collapse • In 1989, following the overthrow of several communist regimes in Eastern Europe, the Berlin Wall was opened • By 1990, the USSR had officially shifted gears and the Cold War was over!!!

  22. The 1990s and a New Millennium • Unfortunately, conflict in the world was NOT over and the U.S. was now the lone Super Power • Saddam Hussein’s aggressive takeover of Kuwait led to the short-lived, successful Gulf War • The Soviet retreat from Afghanistan left a vacuum of power into which warlords rose and sectarian violence grew • U.S. involvement in the Middle East led to terroristic acts – the worst of which was 9/11 – and the current war in Iraq

More Related