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United States of America 100 Years of History; 1776-1900

United States of America 100 Years of History; 1776-1900. U.S. History: Leader. Why start a new country?. Reasons for American Revolt: Increased Regulation Proclamation of 1763 Intolerable Acts Taxation without representation The stamp act. English stamps from the Stamp Act.

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United States of America 100 Years of History; 1776-1900

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  1. United States of America100 Years of History; 1776-1900 U.S. History: Leader

  2. Why start a new country? • Reasons for American Revolt: • Increased Regulation • Proclamation of 1763 • Intolerable Acts • Taxation without representation • The stamp act English stamps from the Stamp Act The Boston Tea Party • What they were seeking: • Freedom of religion • The right to self govern • Freedom of speech/press

  3. The Revolutionary War • The fight for independence began in Concord, Massachusetts, April 18, 1775 • Military Strategies Evolve: Guerrilla Warfare • Americans win the war for independence at the Battle of Yorktown October 19, 1781 • Britain eventually accepts defeat and signs the Treaty of Paris in September of 1783 Washington Crossing the Delaware River

  4. Independence and The American Revolution 1775-1781 • America formally declares independence from England on July 4th 1776. The Declaration Committee

  5. A Nation and Its Ideals Emerge under the Constitution • Equality, Rights, Liberty, Opportunity, Democracy are the foundation of the new country • The Articles of Confederation are first adopted but don’t give the central government a chance • The Constitution is finally ratified by all 13 states in 1790 The United States Constitution Paul Revere’s Midnight Ride The Liberty Bell

  6. An Expanding Nation: The first ten years • America Pushes Beyond its Colonial Borders • 1790-1800 Three new states are added, Vermont, Kentucky and Tennessee • Moving “West” • Farming Was King • George Washington: The peoples president • Defined what the American President was • Political Parties Emerge • Federalists (Hamilton) and Democratic-Republicans (Jefferson) “I walk on untrodden ground”, “There is scarcely any part of my conduct which may not hereafter be drawn into precedent.” - George Washington

  7. Americans Destiny: Manifest Destiny, an“obvious fate” Louisiana Purchase 1803 • “Nothing less than a continent can suffice as the basis and foundation for the nation whose destiny is involved in the destiny of mankind.”

  8. Change and Conflict in the American West • Mining and Ranching • Women’s Roles • Indian Wars Cowboys in the West General Custer in the field The Joining of the Trans-Continental Railroad in Utah

  9. Indian Wars Shatter Tribal Cultures Lakota Woman • Manifest destiny made no mention of the American Indian “Trail of Tears” • Indian Removal Act of 1830 sent all Indians east of the Mississippi west to the Oklahoma Territory • Eventually American Indians would be reduced to less than one percent of their original lands “Many if not most, of our Indian wars have their origin in broken promises and acts of injustice upon our part” - President Rutherford B. Hayes, 1877 Images of Planes Indians

  10. The Civil War: WHY? • Sectional Differences Divide the Union • The North • Increasingly urban/industrial, by 1860 35% of the population lived in cities • Dramatically increased Infrastructure for transport of goods (railroads) • No longer depended on massive manual labor so their need for slaves diminished.

  11. The Civil War: WHY? • Sectional Differences Divide the Union • The South • Maintained rural life and an agriculturally dominated economy • Required the use of slaves to support plantations • Abolition of slavery was a threat to the “Southern” way of life

  12. The Civil War: 1861-1865 President Abraham Lincoln • Union (North) • Great advantage in population, farmland, factories, manufactured goods, firearms production, and railroads. • Confederacy (South) • Advantage of defending own soil • Outstanding military leadership • Hoped for the Union to tire and allow succession from the union Confederate President Jefferson Davis

  13. Civil War: The outcome • 620,000 Americans are killed • Basics: The North wins, Slaves are emancipated and the United States is once again united….well, sort of. PROCLAMATON • The Confederate States are absorbed back into the United States. • 1863 - Lincoln is assassinated. Johnson takes over. • Reconstruction begins.

  14. Reconstruction; 1865-1877 • Reconstruction Amendments: • 13th outlawed slavery • 14th made former slaves citizens • 15th Suffrage for African-American men C.W. Amendments Reconstruction Cartoon Poster

  15. Reconstruction: The harsh race reality • The compromise of 1877 ended reconstruction • Southern “Redeemers” instituted Jim Crow Laws that segregated blacks and whites. • Redeemers also instituted poll taxes and literacy tests which severely limited the black male vote Jim Crow Poster after Reconstruction

  16. Innovation and Industry: The beginning of the industrial revolution • Steel, Oil, Railroads, and Electricity combine to spark the 2nd industrial revolution (Carnegie / Rockefeller) • Inventions such as the locomotive, electric light bulb, and telegraph change America forever • These innovations combined with a new zest for capitalism propelled the U.S. toward the 20th century at light speed • In some cases progress meant pain “The Gilded Age” • Labor Struggles… • Equality… Video: Steenstry

  17. Across into the 20th Century • It was a long an brutal 19th century but American was rapidly growing and on the move • As the 20th century rapidly approached, America was beginning to make its place on the world stage in: • Politics • Big Business • Immigration • Imperialism • Economics

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