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Clovis People
migrants to the US approximtely 11,000 yers ago
from mongolia and northeast asia
Archaic Period
8000 BC - 3000 BC
humans were hunter-gatherers
humans hunted animals to extinction
Incas
largest empire in the Americas in Peru
Pachacuti expanded the empire in the 1400s by allying with other leaders and w/ a network of pave roads
Olmec People
first complex society in the americas
1000 BC
Mayans
800 CE
Central America + Yucatan
written language, numerical system, calendar, advanced agriculture, and trade
Mexica (Aztecs)
Tenochitlan: large and advanced city
military + taxes
sacrificed humans for their live hearts
animism was a big religious practice
Eskimos
in arctic cirlce
hunted seals and fished
Tribes of the Pacific Northwest
fished salmon
conflict between tribes
chinook
Southwest Civilizations
agriculture w/ irrigation
pueblos
maize
Great Planes Tribes
sedentary farming (corn + grains) in the south
many nomadic
Eastern Tribes
woodland indians
large trading networks
grew grain
Cahokia: major city
Northern tribes used more exploitive farming techniques
tribes were matrilineal.
South: Cherokee, Seminole
Languages
Algonquian (Atlantic seaboard)
Iroquioan (Upstate NY): Mohawks
Muskogean (Southeast seabord)
Reasons why europeans came to americas/were succesful
dispersed power of the middle ages prevented europe earlier than the 15th century
renaissance: wealth funded exploration; higher demand for good
weaponry military advantage and disease
Sciences, compass, navigation, and ship building
increased inflation in europe
high rents
mercantilismn
religious wars
Columbus
italian explorer sent by spanish to find faster route to asia
motive: gold
landed in hispaniola (haiti and dominican republic)
multiple voyages
Taino (Awarak): tribe that met columbus
Encomienda System
system of forced labor on natives in hopes to find gold and for agriculture
Spanish conquistadors come for glory
caste system: peninsulares, ceroles, mestizo, natives
Cortez
defeat of the aztec empire (montezuma)
Bartoleme de las Casas
calls out spanish and portuguese treatment of natives
leads to the papal bowl: natives can’t be put into encomienda if they are christianized; leads to start of african slave trade in supplying the new world
Juan Cabrillo
discovers san diego
Junipero Serra
Franciscan (brown robes)
founded the mission system
“El Camino Real”
San Diego De Alcala: first mission
Spanish Conquistadors
goals: spread catholic faits, european education, trading posts, gold/agriculture
natives forced to live in missions
long lasting effects: culture, famine, and rebellion
spanish + brutal
Native rebellions against spanish
Pope Rebellion/Pueblo Revolt (new mexico) 1680: Native resistance (Natives win back southwest - 12 years spanish return)
Kumeuau Rebellion: Mission San Diego 1775
French in north america
ohio river valley
fur traders and jesuits
did not use force or violence
interested in knowing native cultures
low numbers
natives became reliant on european goods
Jamestown
founded by Jogn Smith and funded by joint stock companies
searched for gold
faced famine and disease (malaria)
powhatan/algonquian helped
cash crop: tobacco
class and economic struggle
tobacco labor: indentured servants + african slaves
Tobacco prices plummet due to high supply
natives attack settlers because former indentured servants encroach on native land
Chesapeake Government
House of Burgesses
William Berkeley - corrupt governor
barred lower class from expanding west
Bacon’s Rebellion
class struggle
slaughter of natives
led to aftican slavery due to fear of another uprising/end of indentured servitude
jamestown was burnt to the ground
Slavery grows
plantation colonies of the south primarily grow tobacco and rice
first slaves come from the barbados
afircans are seen as best source of labor
The middle passage: route from africa to the americas
Portuguese were the chiefs of the slave trade
13 colonies
New England (puritan, subsistence): maine, new hampshire, vermont, massachusetts, connecticut, and rhode island
Middle Colonies (divers, bread basket): New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware
Southern Colonies (sparse, slavery): Maryland, Virginia, North & South Carolina, and Georgia
New England: Puritans
english settlers seeking freedom from religious repression
craft/subsistence economy
founded plymouth (massachusetts bay colony)
John Winthrop: “be as a city upon a hill”
intolerant of other religions
War w/ Natives: "King Philip’s War” aka Metavom’s Rebellion
Roger Williams (Rhode Island) and Anne Hutchinson dissented w/ the Puritans’ intolerance
Witch Trials (Salem)
Maryland
named after Queen Maru
Catholic Haven (later were tolerant of protestants)
Dutch Colonies
New Netherlands
New Amsterdam (NYC)
Fur trade with the Iroquois
Pennsylvania
Quakers
against slavery
william penn
tolerant
large # of german immigrants and more scots-iirish
“fair” to natives
Thirteen Colonies Prosper
provide raw resources to england
as profits increase, england tightens their grasps
increased desire for self dependency
Navigation Acts
laws passd by England to force the colonies to trade only with england
causes unrest in the colonies
Salutary Neglect: british didn’t enforce the law
Impacts of the Englightenment
philosophers: question government and authority
ideas of freedom and individual rights (John Locke_
consent of the goerned
Montesquieu: checks and balances/branches of government
Voltaire: freedom of speech
The Great Awakening
decline of puritan way of life: religious tolerationan increase in wordliness
spiritual awakening: importance of individual in emotion and religion (de-emphasize church authority)
Old lights vs. New Lights
Stress Pietism (outward expression of devotion/spirituality)
George Whitefield (famous preacher)
French and Indian War
English/French rivalry in north americ
french: looked to make profits off the fur trade; good relations with natives
english: established colonies to make raw resources and house colonists (bad relations with natives due to territorial fights and westward expansion)
Colonist complain to england about french encroachment
Ohio River Valley: Point of tension between French and English
The War
Britain suffers great losses in the beginning
Guerrilla tactics used by the French and Indian Allies
Washington and Braddock turned the tide of the war: by the end they have superior numbers
Defeat France in Quebec
Treaty of Paris of 1763
England gains Canada and most of North America (East of the Mississippi)
Native American losses
end of the war meant more losses for Native Americans (who continued to fight despite war ending)
Pontiacs Rebellion
Proclamation of 1763: no colonists shall inhibit territory west of thew Appalachian mountains (ignored by colonists)
Legacy of the War
British begin enforcing the Navigation Acts
Royal Navy interdicts colonial ships trading with the French
Colonists are angry over the end of Salutary Neglect
Parliament passes higher import duties on tobacco and sugar and higher excise levies to pay off war debt (British pay 5x colonial taxes)
To collect taxes, British bureaucracy doubles and increases in power (intrusive); smugglers arrested and cargo seized
British opposition parties (The Country Party and Radical Whigs) demanded greater representation (trade better than tax)
Era of Isolationism
post WW1
economic policies: not isolationist
military intervention: isolationist
Sec of State Charles Evans Hughes (Harding Admin): key figure in negotiating peace treaties after WW1
Washington Naval Arms Conference of 1921
focused on decrease tensions between nations engaged in naval arms race (GB, US, and Japna)
5-power act: halting construction of battleships for ten years + protect the open door policy in china
The Kellog-Briand Act
1928
14 nations outlaw war as a policy
condemn militarism
no mechanism of enforcement
The Dawes Plan
offered Germany substantial loans from American Banks
circular loans: money loaned to germany used to pay reparations to GB and France in turn owed the US debt
reduced amount of reperations
plan to promote financial stability
Charles G. Dawes: won the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts
Fordrey-McCumber Act of 1822
republican tariffs
added to debt problem because other nations struggled to make money needed to pay them
Economic Expansion in Latin America
US investment in Latin American more than doubled between 1924 and 1929
American corps invested in infrastructure to weaken appeal of revolutionary forces and increase access to Latin America’s riches
loans given to Latin American countries - could not pay off loans due to tariffs
Accusations of American Imperialism: rising resentment of American business and military presence
Hoover and the World Crisis
world financial crisis that began in 1929 produced nationalism that threatened the weak international agreements
Hoover promised to recognize new Latin American govs if any older govs collapses
removed troops from Haiti - backing off from Roosevelt Corrolary
Refused to forgive debts owed by nations - upholding policies of republican predecessors
Rise of Fascism
1929: Mussolini solidifies power in Italy
1933: Hitler solidifies power in Germany
fascism spreading in Europe
Japanese imperialism
Japan invades Manchuria and later mainland China: Sino-Japanese War
Hoover warns Japan to stop aggression but does not implement any sanctions cus US was the main supplier of oil to japan
Depression Diplomacy
FDR’s “Bombshell”
US repudiates currency stabilization (international gold standard)
end to reciprocal loan system: forbid American banks to give loans to any nations in default on its debt
every nation (except finland) stop paying their debts
Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act (1934): lowered tariffs and advanced principles of free trade; increased American exports by 40%
America and the Soviet Union
1933: FDR recognize the SU in hopes of increasing trade between two countries
relations sour when US stayed neutral in the face of Japanese aggression: the USSR had interests in Manchuria
The Good Neighbor Policy
Inter-American Conference: worked to expand Hoover initiatives in Latin America
focused on free trade and not to intervene in affairs of Latin America
Decreased military force but used economic influence to grow american dominance
The Rise of Isolationism
majority of americans want to focus on domestic issues of GD + remembered horrors of WW1: emboldened isolationism
Disarmament agreements, league of nations, and treaty of versailles fail - increased international tension
Italy invades Ethiopia - pleads for help, gets none
Neutral state of US, GB, and France assured fascist victory in Spanish Civil War
"Quarantine” Speech
unpopular speech by FDR
said aggressive nations should be prevented from spreading war - american intervention may be inevitable
Neutrality Acts
The Neutrality Act 1935: imposed embargo on arms trading w/ countries at war, declared Americans traveling on ships of belligerent nations at their own risk
1936: expaned to ban loans to belligerents
1937: adopted “cash-and-carry” provision: could purchase non war supplies for immediate cash payment; foreign nation would have to transport goods
Hitler’s Aggression
Hitler took back the Rhineland (remilitarizes it) and in 1938 marched into Austria (Anschluss) and demanded Czechoslovakia cede the Sudetenland
Munich Conference
1938
GB and France try to appease Hitler by recognizing Germany’s newly acquired lands in return for a promise to stop aggression
supported by FDR but vocally opposed by Winston Churchill
Failure of “Appeasement”
1939 Hitler makes a non-aggression pact with SU
invades czechoslovakia and poland (Sep 1st 1939)
GB and France declare war and US declares neutrality
Move towards Intervention
Cash-and Carry ammended in 1939 to allow for sale of armaments
Phony War: months pass before military action will take place in 1940
Fall of France: 1940 - shifting public opinion: Germany now seen as a threat to US
still maintain neutrality
England is last democracy fighting nazis
Calls for Isolation
American First Committee: large proportion of the Republican party that urged isolationism
Gerald P. Nye: senator from North Dakota, headed a congressional investigation into the profits of munitions makers during WW1: “merchants of death”
Election of 1940
Republican Candidate: Wendell Willkie
FDR won easily
Lend Lease Act
allowed sale and lending of armaments to GB
used navy to patrol atlantic for subs to protect US ship carrying goods to GB
abandoned cash and carry
Burke Wadsworth Act
1940
aka the Selective Training and Service Act
first peacetime draft in US history
Consolidation of the Allied powers
GB and US create the Atlantic Charter in 1941 tying the nations together in an effort to stop Nazi’s
US supplied materials not troops
Germany invaded USSR: US extends lend-lease to Soviets
informal naval engagements between US merchant ships and Nazi uboat
Four Freedoms Speech
FDR highlights the peril we face through inaction
4 freedoms: speech, worship, from want, and from fear
Japanese aggression
Japanese military advances in China - upset balance of political and economic power: Roosevelt suggested that aggressors be “quarantined”
Japan signs Tri-Partite Pact w/ Germany and Italy in 1940: creates the axis powers
Japan occupies part of French Indochina, Roosevelt retaliated w/ trade restrictions and embargoes on aviation fuel and scrap metal - escalated also to include oil shipment
The US enters the war
Dec 7, 1941: Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor
Day of Infamy Speech: FDR addresses congress and asks for a declaration of war
Congress voted to declare war on Japan - Germany and Italy declare war on US and US subsequently declare war on them
First years of the war
After Peal Harbor, America was psychologically ready for war - unity of opinion
US surrenders the Philippines, Guam, Wake Island
Dark times: faltering allies (SU and GB) + mounting losses in the pacific
The Silent Service
US submarines
go after cargo ships to cut off Japan’s supplies
the offense and defense in the Pacific while fleet is repaired at Pearl Harbor
Island Hopping Campaign
General MacArthur launches offensive from south - plan to take one island at the time
Island hopping campaign: main US strategy for the pacific
Admiral Nimitz will move from Hawaii to West
Battle of the Coral Sea
first aerial battle where all aircraft launch from carriers
carriers vs. carriers
US stops Japanese aggression toward Australia
Midway
turning point battle for the Pacific front
last offensive of the Japanese
US code breakers discover Japanese offensive
Japanese lose 4 carriers, US loses one (USS Yorktown)
Guadalcanal
first significant victory in US island-hopping strategy
gets us a foothold in the pacific
Stalingrad
Hitler turns on Stalin and invades USSR
orders attack on Stalingrad simply b/c of the name of the town and the Caucasus Oil Fields
winter settled in
lost more than 1 Million Germans - turning point battle in the European theater
Dispute over the Second Front
Stalin demands US and UK invade France
FDR waits: decides the battle in North Africa and the invasion and defeat of Italy need to happen first
Soviets angered over decision: believe would make soviets take brunt of attack
postponed invasion of France for over a year
Collapse of Mussolini
southern invasion led to collapse of fascists in italy
ties up eight german divisions to fight south of rome later pushed north of rome
Battle of Monte Cassino
The Holocaust
as early as 1942: Washington had evidence that Hitler’s forces were rounding up Jews and non-Jewish poles, gypsies, queer people, and communists and murdering them
The US refused to let Jews enter the US: 90% of the available quota remained unused
anti-semitism
Assistant Secretary Breckinridge Long of the State Department blocked entry
calls to bomb railway lines as well as the infrastructure of the concentration camps (denied by the War Department)
believed the way to stop the holocaust was not w/ direct intervention but to defeat the nazis on the battlefield
Economic Prosperity
war-induced economic recovery: ended great depression
# of employed civilians by gov increased 4-fold
volunteer business executives lead government agencies: “dollar men”
Henry J. Kaiser: shipyards in west coast
War spending
gov spending rose to 100 billion $ in 1945
The Revenue Act of 1942: taxed the wealthy, corporations, and average citizens - tax collection rose to $35.1 billion
paying taxes seen as patriotic
War in the West
west benefited the most from gov expansion.
Pacific coast became a major industrial center for shipbuilding, aircraft; launching the stage for the war w/ Japan
Los Angeles and Oakland experience population boom due to availability of jobs
of all funds on war effort, 10% went to Cali
Labor and the War
union gains
labor shortage gave them leverage
wage increased
gov allowed workers to automatically join unions in return to mandate “no strike promise”
set stage for powerful middle class
income increased for workers - nowhere near the increase in corporate profits
Roosevelt set up the National War Labor Board: regulate labor conditions + authority to seize plants
Regulating the Economy/Resources
office of Price Administration: freeze prices and wages to fight inflation
on the homefront: people worked on civilian defense committees, collected old materials, served on rationing and draft boards, planted “victory gardens”
limitations on consumption: rationing and regulation (rationing books)
Mobilizing Production
war production board: ineffective cause couldn’t conduct direct military purchases
replaced by Office of War Mobilization: awarded defense contracts, evaluated military and civilian requests for scarce resources, oversaw conversion of industry to military production
by 1944: US has 2x the production of axis powers
Women and Children At War
dramatic increase in female employment
'“Rosie the Riveter” : famous Norman Rockwell Painting
women taking men’s role
limited child care
teenagers work - less school attendance
increase in crime (unsupervised youth)
beginning of the “baby boom”
Wartime science and technology
National Defense Research Committee: heavily funded
radar and sonar: allies advanced beyond axis capabilities
sonar: limited U-Boat effectiveness
Anti-Aircraft tech: UK radar very effective (Battle of Britain)
Ultra: UK project to break German “Enigma” code
Magic: US project to break the Japanese “purple” code
African Americans during the war
A.A. leaders pointed out parallels between German anti-semitism and american racism
Double-V campaign: victory over Nazis and victory over racism
A. Phillip Randolph
in response to threat of “March on Washington,” FDR issued executive order 8802 declaring no discrimination in employment based on race - established fair employment practices commission
NAACP grew
Congress of racial equality
League of United Latin American citizens
built on patriotic contributions to challenge discrimination
Native Americans and the war
Navajo “code talkers” : speak in native language
japanese could not decode
The military
armed forces increase to 15 million
more than half of the men that registered failed to meet military physical standards
tried to screen out queer people
Minorities in the military
Segregated A.A. : often had most menial jobs
Tuskegee Airmen
Japanese Americans - segregated units
most decorated: 442nd regiment
“go for broke”
Mexican and Native American were never officially segregated
Many women enlisted - led to permanent status in military
limited type of duty
Wartime life and culture
rise in theater and movie attendance
magazine and news circulation
hotel, casino, dance halls
fighting for future prosperity
United Service Organization (USO): provide services to soldiers and their families to raise morale - entertainment
Migration
families followed service members
lure of high-paying jobs caused migration
CA = center of defense industry so had the highest wartime migration
African Americans migrated to defence centers
Zoot-Suit Riot
LA male Latinos in “Pachuco” gangs dressed in “zoot suits”
target of white hostility toward mexican americans
Jul 1943: rumors a pachuco gange had beaten a white sailor set off a four day riot
Executive Order 9066
issued by Roosevelt in 1942
gave the war department authority to relocate Japanese Americans from the west coast and intern them in relocation camps (fear of spies)
The “War Relocation Authority” rounded up 112000 Japanese Americans (most of which were citizens) and sent them to internment camps
J. Americans in Hawaii were not interned - Hawaiian economy could not function without them
season work, college, and enlistment = way out of camps
Korematsu v. US
Fred Korematsu sues US gov over Japanese Internment/violation of civil liberties
Supreme Court sides w/ US gov: wartime powers
Strategic Bombing
focus on industrial and military targets forcing the Luftwaffe further into Germany
weakened Germans + damaged Germany’s ability to replace war materials
Chinese americans and the war
Chinese exclusion act repealed
China major ally
The liberation of France
invasion of france on D-Day (Jun 6 1944) under General Eisenhower’s command
millions of troops cross the English channel: Operation Overlord
major offensive — opens a western front focused on the liberation of France
US, UK, and France attack from South West and USSR from the east - ultimate target = Berlin
Battle of the Bulge
last ditch effort by Germans to stop ally advances — fails
Germany has problems with supply lines (gasoline)
Germany defeated
April 30th 1945
Hitler kills himself
VE Day (victory over europe)