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@cfeeley13 (Quizlet), from 1763-1991
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Significance: British began to tighten control over the colonies, road to revolution.
a. Proclamation of 1763
b. Sugar Act
c. Quartering of Soldiers ( would become 3rd Amendment)
Significance: Statement of purpose, appealed to French and Spanish. Represented governments enlightenment ideals.
a. Lexington and concord
b. Battle of Bunker Hill
c. “Common Sense”
Significance: Recognition of the need to have a more powerful federal government
a. Creation of political parties
b. Call for a Bill of Rights
c. George Washington
Significance: Proved the strength of the constitutional system
a. Alien & Sedition Acts
b. "Midnight Judges"
c. Beginning of the end for the Federalist Party
Significance: Judicial Review established the power of the judicial branch
a. Lousiana Purchase
b. Elastic Clause
c. U.S. control of the Mississippi River
Significance: 2nd War of American Independence
a. Battle of New Orleans made Andrew Jackson a hero
b. Boosted northern manufacturing
c. Hartford Convention marked the end of the Federalist Party
Significance: US acquired the Mexican Cession and made slavery a hot issue
a. Compromise of 1850
b. Wilmot Priviso
c. "Popular Sovereignty"
Significance: The Nation finally faces the divisions caused by slavery
a. Lincoln's Election
b. Confederate States of America
c. Fort Sumter
Significance: End of Slavery
a. Andrew Johnson is president
b. Radical Republicans take over Congress and Reconstruction
c. Freedmen's Bureau
d. 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments
Significance: End of Reconstruction
a. Removal of Federal troops from the South
b. Poll taxes and literacy tests prevent Black voting
c. Plessy v Fergusson (segregation legal)
Significance: U.S. struggles to maintain neutrality then enters the war
a. "Lusitania" and submarine warfare. Freedom of the "open seas"
b. "War to end all Wars"
c. Wartime suppression of civil liberties
Significance: End of WWI
a. Woodrow Wilson's 14 Points and League of Nations
b. U.S. rejects the treaty and retreats into isolationism
c. Roots of WWII
d. Post-War depression and Red Scare
e. 18th & 19th Amendments
Significance: Started the world-wide Great Depression
a. FDR elected in 1932
b. New Deal increased federal involvement in everyday life
c. Democratic Party gains strength from new coalition
Significance: U.S. enters WWII
a. Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
b. Japanese-American internment
c. Women and minorities prove their worth in the war effort
Significance: U.S. emerges as a global super power
a. Atomic bomb developed and used
b. United Nations—the U.S. abandons isolationism
c. Yalta Conference—the beginning of the Cold War
Significance: The Federal government turns against segregation
a. Montgomery Bus Boycott
b. Lynching of Emmett Till
c. Dien Bien Phu marks the beginning of U.S. involvement in Vietnam
Significance: Beginning of new era of federal involvement in Civil Rights
a. Sit-ins in Greensboro
b. RFK is appointed Attourney General
c. “New Frontier” optimism marked by Peace Corps formation
Significance: Outlawed segregation in public facilities and banned discriminatory practices in hiring
a. LBJ uses “JFK legacy” to push civil rights reforms
b. Escalation in Vietnam
c. “Great Society”
Significance: Marked the end of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s
a. 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago
b. Height of US troop numbers in Vietnam
c. Tet Offensive
d. Nixon elected president
Significance: End of the longest war in American history
a. War-Powers Resolution
b. Détente
c. Watergate
Significance: Collapse of the Soviet bloc and European communism
a. Solidarity in Poland
b. Gorbachev and Perestroika
c. Iran-Contra Affair