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Mr gagnier’s awesome review

Mr gagnier’s awesome review. Part 1. Colonial America 1620-1763. Themes: How did we choose to become independent? Why did we choose representative democracy? What are the elements of the developing American character? How did mercantilism impact colonial American development?.

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Mr gagnier’s awesome review

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  1. Mrgagnier’s awesome review Part 1

  2. Colonial America 1620-1763 Themes: • How did we choose to become independent? • Why did we choose representative democracy? • What are the elements of the developing American character? • How did mercantilism impact colonial American development?

  3. Colonial America 1620-1763 Major Events: • 1619- House of Burgesses • 1639- Fundamental Orders of Connecticut • 1649- Maryland Act of Toleration • 1651- The Navigation Act • 1662 Half-Way Covenant • 1675- King Phillip’s War (Metacom’s Rebellion) • 1692- Salem With Trials • 1733- John Peter Zenger • 1740- The Great Awakening • 1754- French and Indian War • 1763- Proclamation of 1763

  4. Colonial America 1620-1763 • The one thing you MUST write about • Salutary Neglect!!!! • This is the key to understanding the movement of America from loyal British citizens to independent Americans with a different set of cultural values and norms.

  5. Revolution and constitution 1763-1800 Themes: • End of Salutary Neglect • Virtual Representation • Revolution vs. Evolution • Liberty vs. Order following the 1783 Treaty of Paris • Hamilton/Jefferson Debates

  6. Revolution and constitution 1763-1800 Road to Revolution: • 1764- Sugar Act • 1765- Quartering Act • 1765- Stamp Act • 1766- Declatory Act • 1767- Townsend Duties • 1770- Boston Massacre • 1773- Tea Act/Tea Party • 1773- Intolerable Acts Major Events: • 1763- Pontiac’s Rebellion • 1763- Proclamation of 1763 • 1764-1775: See next panel • 1776- Dec of Independence • 1777- Battle of Saratoga • 1783- Treaty of Paris • 1785- Shays’s Rebellion • 1789- Constitution • 1794- Whiskey Rebellion • 1798- XYZ & Alien/Sedition • 1800- Revolution of 1800

  7. Revolution and constitution 1763-1800 • The one thing you MUST write about • If the topic is 1763-1783: • The creation and demonstration of an AMERICAN IDENTITY as shown in the Stamp Act boycotts and the Declaration of Independence • If the topic is 1783-1800: • The balance of LIBERTY vs ORDER that led to the Constitution as shown with the transition from Articles of Confederation to Constitution

  8. Launching the New Ship of State 1800-1845 Themes: • Political Parties to the Jeffersonian ideal • War and Quasi-War • Was the Era of Good Feelings an appropriate term? • What was the impact of the Marshall Court?

  9. Launching the New Ship of State 1800-1824 Major Foreign Events: • 1807- Embargo Act • 1809- Non-Intercourse Act • 1810- Macon’s Bill #2 • 1812- War of 1812 • 1814- Treaty of Ghent • 1817- Rush-Bagot Agreement • 1819- Adams-Onis Treaty • 1823- Monroe Doctrine Major Domestic Events: • 1803- Louisiana Purchase • 1803- Marbury v. Madison • 1810- Fletcher v. Peck • 1816- Hartford Convention • 1819- Panic of 1819 • 1820- Missouri Compromise

  10. Launching the New Ship of State 1800-1824 • The one thing you MUST write about • If the topic is 1800-1824: • The rise of nationalism as evidenced by the Supreme Court, American System, the 2nd Great Awakening, the Monroe Doctrine, and development of American Culture in the Hudson River School and American Literature • If the topic is 1824-1845: • The growth of sectionalism that will lead to the Civil War as shown by the Corrupt Bargain, Missouri Compromise, Tariff Crisis, Gag Rule, Bank Wars, and the Election of 1844

  11. Jacksonian democracy at flood tide 1824-1845 Themes • How did a series of conflicts conceal the growing North/South divide? • How did Jacksonian Democracy involve so many new voters, but seemingly ignore their wishes • Reform, Transcendentalism and the 2nd Great Awakening • Manifest Destiny

  12. Jacksonian democracy at flood tide 1824-1845 • Major Domestic Events: • 1824- Corrupt Bargain • 1828- Nullification Crisis • 1830- Indian Removal Act • 1835- Texas Revolution • 1837- Panic of 1837 • 1845- Texas Annexed • 1845- 1st use of Manifest Destiny

  13. Jacksonian democracy at flood tide 1824-1845 • The one thing you MUST write about • The growth of sectionalism that will lead to the Civil War as shown by the Corrupt Bargain, Missouri Compromise, Tariff Crisis, Gag Rule, Bank Wars, and the Election of 1844

  14. Mrgagnier’s awesome review Part 2

  15. The road to civil war 1845-1860 Themes: • How did territorial expansion lead to sectional tension? • Was the war mostly one of economic, social or political issues? • Is there validity to the Southern claims of states rights? • How does the Southern view of negative liberty help explain their position?

  16. The road to civil war 1845-1861 Major Foreign Events: • France retakes Mexico • Confederate efforts to court Britain and France through ‘cotton diplomacy’ Major Domestic Events: • 1848- Mexican War/Cession • 1849- Wilmot Proviso • 1850- Compromise of 1850 • 1852- Uncle Tom’s Cabin • 1854- Kansas/Nebraska Act • 1854- Bleeding Kansas • 1856- Caning of Sumner • 1857- Panic of 1857 • 1859- Harper’s Ferry • 1860- Election of 1860 • 1861- Secession

  17. The road to civil war 1845-1861 • The things you MUST write about • The Wilmot Proviso rents open the division of North and South, demonstrating the sharp divisions • The Panic of 1857 shows that the South feels economically ‘decoupled’ from the North and that trade with Europe will sustain their economy. (We don’t need the North!!) • The thing you CAN write about: • Trace the development of North/South conflict from tariffs to bank wars to acquisition of land to the election of 1860

  18. The civil war and reconstruction 1861-1877 Themes: • Lincoln’s Position • “If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it; and if I could do it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that.” • Changing role of the Federal government • Negative Liberty (Freedom from..) • Positive Liberty (Freedom to…) • Presidential vs. Radical Reconstruction • Cotton Diplomacy

  19. The civil war and reconstruction 1861-1877 Major Foreign Events: • Naval blockade • 1861- Trent Affair • 1862- Laird Ram construction • 1863- French overthrow Juarez • 1863- End of Br/Fr courtship • 1867- French withdrawal (Mexico) Major Domestic Events: • 1861- Bull Run • 1862- Antietam • 1863- Emancipation Proclamation • 1863- Gettysburg • 1863- Fall of Vicksburg • 1864- Sherman’s March to the Sea • 1865- Appomattox • 1865- Lincoln assassinated • 1865- Freedman’s Bureau • 1865- 13th Amendment • 1866- 14th Amendment • 1866- Civil Rights Act • 1867- Military Reconstruction Act • 1868- Grant elected (Scandals) • 1870- 15th Amendment • 1875- Civil Rights Act • 1877- End of Reconstruction

  20. The civil war and reconstruction 1861-1877 • The one thing you MUST write about • The changing role of Federal government from negative liberty to positive liberty.

  21. The gilded age1877-1900 Themes: • Subversion of government power to corporations and trusts • Growth of corruption- Boss Tweed • Expansion of Manifest Destiny to include new markets • The Muckrakers and Yellow Journalism

  22. The gilded age1877-1901 Major Foreign Events: • 1898- Annexation of Hawaii • 1898- Spanish American War • 1898- Teller Amendment • 1899- Open Door Note • 1899- Filipino Insurrection • 1900- Boxer Rebellion • 1901- Platt Amendment Major Domestic Events: • 1877- Great Railroad Strike • 1881- Garfield shot • 1881- Tuskegee opens • 1881- Chinese Exclusion Act • 1881- Garfield assassinated • 1882- Pendleton Act • 1886- Haymarket Square • 1886- AFL founded- Samuel Gompers • 1887- Interstate Commerce Act • 1887- Dawes Act • 1890- Sherman Anti-Trust Act • 1891- Populist Party founded • 1892- Homestead Strike • 1893- Frederick Jackson Turner • 1894- Pullman Strike • 1896- Plessy v. Ferguson • 1896- ‘Cross of Gold’ speech

  23. The gilded age1877-1900 • The one thing you MUST write about • The purpose of gaining POLITICAL AND MILITARY power was the want to gain ECONOMIC hegemony

  24. Mrgagnier’s awesome review Part 3

  25. The Progressive Era1901-1914 Themes: • The growing power of big business creates a public backlash • The Muckrakers point out the abuses of corporate America • Roosevelt’s Square Deal lays out the 3 C’s • Control Corporations • Consumer Protection • Conservation of the Environment • Big Stick to Dollar Diplomacy to Moral Diplomacy • New Nationalism vs. New Freedom

  26. The Progressive Era1901-1914 Major Foreign Events: • 1903- Big Stick diplomacy • 1903- Hay-Bunau-Varilla (Panama) • 1904- Roosevelt Corollary • 1910- Mexican Revolution • 1912- Nicaragua intervention • 1914- Veracruz Incident Major Domestic Events: • 1901- McKinley out/Roosevelt in • 1902- Northern Securities Trust • 1902- Anthracite Coal Mine Strike • 1903- Elkins Act • 1906- The Jungle • 1906- Pure Food and Drug Act • 1906- Meat Inspection Act • 1906- Hepburn Act • 1907- Panic of 1907 • 1908- Taft elected • 1910- Muller v. Oregon • 1911- Department of labor created • 1911- Triangle Shirtwaist fire • 1912- Roosevelt bolts Republicans • 1912- Wilson Elected • 1913- Underwood Tariff (LOWERS tariffs) • 1913- 16th Amendment • 1913- 17th Amendment • 1914- FTC formed • 1914- Clayton Anti-Trust Act

  27. The Progressive Era1901-1914 • The one thing you MUST write about • The traditional American distrust of ‘monarchical’ power rises again in the form of the Populists and Progressives and the role of Federal government continues to evolve • Laissez-Faire changes to ensuring rights changes to ensuring outcomes

  28. The Big One and the roaring 20’s1914-1929 Themes: • Neutrality to War • 14 Points and the Treaty of Versailles • Return to Conservatism • Nativism and the rise of the klan • The dichotomous decade • Modernism vs. Fundamentalism • Prohibition and the Jazz Age • Scopes/Sanger and Religion • Booming economy vs The Lost Generation • Credit expansion/margin buying • Gatsby

  29. The Big One and the roaring 20’s1914-1929 Major Foreign Events: Major Domestic Events:

  30. The Big One and the roaring 20’s1914-1929 • The one thing you MUST write about • The First World War ends with the failure of the Versailles Treaty and sets the stage for World War II. • The Dichotomous decade of the 1920s is marked by conflict on many levels, mostly revolving around modernism vs fundamentalism • Religion v Science • Credit v Savings • Roaring 20s v Lost Generation • Wets v Drys

  31. Economic malaise and conservative resurgence1968-1992 Themes: • The growing environmental movement • Detente • Arab Oil Embargo helps to create stagflation • Growing violence in the Civil Rights movement creates white backlash • Watergate finally destroys American faith in government • Mid to late 1970s marked by unemployment, inflation and foreign policy triumph and disaster • Deregulation, debt and the Evil Empire

  32. Economic malaise and conservative resurgence1968-1992 Major Foreign Events: • 1972- Nixon to Beijing/Russia • 1972- SALT I • 1975- Saigon falls • 1977- Panama Canal • 1978- Camp David Accords • 1979- Iran Hostage Crisis • 1980- Summer Olympic Boycott • 1981- Hostages released • 1983- Beirut bombing • 1983- Grenada • 1986- Iran-Contra Affair • 1991- Desert Storm • 1991- Dissolution of USSR Major Domestic Events: • 1969- Stonewall Riots • 1969- Woodstock • 1970- Kent State • 1970- Earth Day/EPA • 1971- Pentagon Papers • 1972- Clean Water Act • 1973- Roe v Wade • 1974- Nixon resigns • 1981- Reaganomics!! • 1986- Tax Reform Act • 1990- Clean Air Act • 1992- LA Riots

  33. Economic malaise and conservative resurgence1968-1992 • The one thing you MUST write about • The pendulum of liberal vs. conservative begins the swing to conservatism in reaction to the Vietnam protests, civil rights, and the Roe v. Wade decision. ‘Identity politics’ becomes the norm in America as the Southern Strategy turns southern whites to the Republican party.

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