UNIT 5 TEST - WESTWARD EXPANSION

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US History

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68 Terms

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Manifest Destiny
the idea that white Americans had the divine right (given by God) to settle the entire continent of North America
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Autonomy
the ability to make your own decisions without being controlled by anyone else
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Annex
to take possession of an area of land or a country and add it to a larger area, usually by force
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Peculiar
strange or odd; unusual
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Chattel
a personal possession
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Imminent
ready to take place or happening soon
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Servitude
slavery or anything resembling it
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Reside
to live, have your home, or stay in a place
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Cannonade
a period of continuous heavy gunfire
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Bombardment
a continuous attack with bombs, shells, or other missiles
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Genocide (general)
a crime committed with the intent to destroy a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group, in whole or in part
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Massacre
the act of an instance of killing a number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty
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Genocide (UN)
Genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group, as such killing members of the group, causing serious bodily or mental harm to members, deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about physical destruction, imposing measures instead to prevent births, forcibly transferring children of the group to another group
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Florida annexation
from Spain in 1819
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Florida annexation cause (wars)
pressure from Latin American Independence wars
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Florida annexation cause (cost)
the cost of maintaining the military in Florida by Spain
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Republic of Texas
a Mexican territory during the years 1835 to 1836
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Main population of the Republic of Texas
Americans told by the Mexican government to immigrate to the territory
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Texas annexation year
1845
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Texas annexation cause
tensions between the Mexican government and Texans
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Texas annexation effect
Mexican and US governments cutting diplomatic ties
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Oregon Territory discovery year
1846
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Oregon Territory discoverers
Lewis and Clark expedition for the Americans and James Cook for Great Britain
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Oregon Territory ceding cause
American immigration
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Mexican American War year
1848
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Mexican American War effect
Mexico cedes 55% of the territory
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Mexican American War end
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
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Mexican Texas centralization
Antonio Lopex de Santa Anna centralized Government power, restricted immigration to Texas, and enforced prohibition of slavery
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Battle of the Alamo dates
February 23rd, 1836 to March 6th, 1836
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Texas Independence date
April 1836
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Texas annexation
1845 by US (28th state)
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Heroic Anglo Narrative
interpretation describing “heroic white defenders fighting the tyranny of Mexican dictator Santa Anna”
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Tejano School
interpretation describing the role of Texas settles of Mexican descent (Tejanos) at the Alamo and in Texas
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Southern Revival School
interpretation emphasizing the importance of slavery in the Battle of the Alamo
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Genocide term creator
Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin
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Genocide word
Greek prefix genos (race or tribe) and Latin suffix cide (killing)
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Genocide UN
recognized as a crime under international law by the UN in 1946
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Genocide definition year
defined in 1948 in the Convention on Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
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David Stannard identifiers
immediately after the first human contact
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Richard White identifiers
instances of what can be called genocide
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Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz identifiers
in the convention, any one of the five acts
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Gary Clayton Anderson identifiers
for genocide to occur, a legitimate government
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David Stannard stance
US purposefully committed acts of genocide against Native Americans
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Richard White stance
US committed specific genocidal acts, but not a sustained period
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Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz stance
US had policies of genocide over time against Natives
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Gary Claryton Anderson stance
No sustained policy of genocide was promoted by government
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Attempt at Assimilation
Five Civilized Tribes adopted European customs, Cherokee tribe created nation and government but the Supreme Court did not recognize it, settlers raided Chrokee and moved them out of their land
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Involuntary Exchange of Lands
Cherokee in Georgia were promised rights, settlers wanted more land, gold was found in Georgia and settlers rushed in, 1830 Indian Removal act by Andrew Jackson, Native land east was exchanged for Native land west, Natives moved to Oklahoma
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Native Americans and Supreme Court
Georgia went to Supreme Court to settle issues with Natives, Supreme Court curled in Johnson v. M’Intosh that Natives had right to live on land but they didn’t own it, Natives tried to sue Georgia, Supreme Court said Natives couldn’t sue because “domestic dependent nation”, Supreme Court ruled that states don’t have power over Natives, but ruling was ignored
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Two Illegal Treaties
Five Civilized Tribes forced to sign treaties and move, treaties weren’t valid because signers weren’t official representatives, Seminole fought back in Florida and when negotiations offered, leader was tricked and jailed, Cherokee refused and got 16,000 members to petition to stay
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Betrayal and a Forced March
Chrokee refused because treaties were unlawful, forced out by the military, many died from disease/starvation when captured, when all captured forced to walk west, trail known as Trail of Tears, death of nearly 4000 Cherokee people
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The court ruling in the case Worcester v. Georgia made it clear that Native policy was a federal concern. True or False
False
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What was westward expansion?
A significant push toward the west coast of North America began in the 1810s
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Which country ceded Florida to the US
Spain
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Which country ceded Oregon to the US
Great Britain
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Who was the first president of Texas
Samuel Houston
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Who won the Mexican American War
the United States
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What year was Florida added to the US
1819
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Why did the Mexican Government encourage American immigration into Texas
to protect the area from Natives and to better control the land
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What caused the American colonists and the Hispanic Texans to rebel against the Mexican government
the prohibition of slavery by Mexico and other strict regulations
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Did Texas want to join the United States, True or False
True
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What happened as a result of the Mexican American War
Mexico ceded 55% of its territory to the US
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The ruling in the Supreme Court Case Cherokee Nation v. Georgia showed that Natives were not capable of taking care of themselves. True or False
True
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Cherokee Nation v. Georgia
Cherokee argued they had sovereign rights to sue, Supreme Court denied and said Cherokee is an dependent nation and could not sue
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In 1834, Congress established Indian Territory. This was originially descrubed as land west of the Mississippi River. True or False
True
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The Indian Removal Act required the president to make treaties with all Native Maerican nations living east of the Mississippi River. True or False
True
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Who won the Battle of the Alamo
The Mexican Army, led by dictator Santa Anna
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What battle led to Texas gaining its independence
the Battle of San Jacinto one month after the Battle of the Alamo