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African Slave Trade, Black Death, Hispaniola, Christopher Columbus, indigenous peoples, plantation system, Smallpox, Bartolomé de Las Casas, Columbian Exchange, John Rolfe, Starving Time, chattel slavery, mercantilism, joint-stock corporation, indentured servants, headright system, Jamestown, encomienda system, Mayflower Compact, House of Burgesses, Pilgrims, Puritans, Maryland Toleration Act (1649), yeoman, Plymouth Colony, Great Migration (Puritan Transplantation), John Winthrop, Anne Hutchinson, Congregationalists, Navigation Acts, Roger Williams, Bacon’s Rebellion, Massachusetts Bay Company, Governor William Berkeley, salutary neglect, Middle Passage, Triangular Trade, slave codes, Quakers (Society of Friends), Glorious Revolution, Royal African Company, natural rights, John Locke, Enlightenment, Benjamin Franklin, Great Awakening, George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards, patriarchy, Iroquois Confederacy, Regulators Movement, Albany Plan of Union (1754), women’s roles in colonial America, cash crops, Peace of Paris (1763), Seven Years’ War (French and Indian War), George Washington, Edward Braddock, Pontiac’s Rebellion, Proclamation of 1763, John Dickinson, Quartering (Mutiny) Acts, Coercive (Intolerable) Acts, Loyalists (Tories), Thomas Jefferson, Declaratory Act, Townshend Duties, Boston Massacre, Committees of Correspondence, John Adams, Virginia Resolves, Writs of Assistance, women in resistance, virtual representation, Lexington and Concord, Olive Branch Petition, Common Sense, Patrick Henry, Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania, Sugar Act (1764), Stamp Act Congress, impressment, King George III, Samuel Adams, Sons of Liberty, Tea Act (1773), Boston Tea Party, First Continental Congress, Minutemen, republic, Declaration of Independence, sovereignty, democracy, Alexander Hamilton, Federalists, Anti-Federalists, Articles of Confederation, Great Compromise, Northwest Ordinance of 1787, Shays’ Rebellion, confederation, noble savage, Constitutional Convention, Federalist Papers, civic virtue, Revolutionary War, Yorktown, Federalist No. 10, checks and balances, ratification, James Madison, Three-Fifths Compromise, separation of powers, Land Ordinance of 1785, mobocracy, majority rule and minority rights, Treaty of Paris (1783), women in the Revolutionary War, bicameral legislature, financing the war, limited government, Saratoga, French alliance, Virginia Plan, New Jersey Plan, Judiciary Act of 1789, Founding Fathers, Washington’s Farewell Address, Treaty of Greenville, Adams presidency, Bank of the United States, Jay’s Treaty, XYZ Affair, Revolution of 1800, republican motherhood, Democratic-Republican Party, Necessary and Proper Clause, Pinckney’s Treaty, Proclamation of Neutrality, nullification, federalism, Hamilton’s Financial Plan, Whiskey Rebellion, Alien and Sedition Acts, protective tariff, implied powers, assumption of state debts, Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, Bear Flag Republic, Manifest Destiny, Mexican-American War, Oregon Country, Zachary Taylor, “54°40′ or Fight”, overland trails, mining frontier, farming frontier, Far West, gold rush, silver rush, John Tyler, James K. Polk, Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, Election of 1844, Rio Grande boundary dispute, Spot Resolutions, John C. Frémont, gag rule, Alamo, Texas Revolution, Antonio López de Santa Anna, Stephen F. Austin, Great American Desert, Sam Houston, mountain men, Webster–Ashburton Treaty, foreign commerce, Matthew C. Perry, Treaty of Kanagawa, Mexican Cession, Conscience Whigs, Wilmot Proviso, free soil movement, California Gold Rush, Henry Clay, Preston Brooks, Charles Sumner, popular sovereignty, Lecompton Constitution, collapse of the Second Party System, personal liberty laws, Irish immigration, German immigration, Constitutional Union Party, Bleeding Kansas, Compromise of 1850, William H. Seward, Whig Party, Fugitive Slave Act, Stephen A. Douglas, Kansas–Nebraska Act, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), Lincoln–Douglas debates, Abraham Lincoln, John Brown’s Raid on Harpers Ferry, Election of 1860, Freeport Doctrine, nativism, Know-Nothing Party, James Buchanan, Republican Party, John A. Sutter, secession, Roger B. Taney, Gadsden Purchase, causes of the Civil War, Fort Sumter, Confederate States of America, Jefferson Davis, Alexander H. Stephens, Robert E. Lee, Andrew Johnson, Ex parte Merryman, Thaddeus Stevens, Ex parte Milligan, conscription, Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address, Bull Run, Stonewall Jackson, Winfield Scott, Anaconda Plan, George B. McClellan, Emancipation Proclamation, Thirteenth Amendment, New York City Draft Riots, Radical Republicans, Ulysses S. Grant, Gettysburg Address, William Tecumseh Sherman, Sherman’s March to the Sea, 54th Massachusetts Regiment, Homestead Act, Morrill Land Grant Act, greenbacks, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Monitor vs. Merrimack, Shiloh, David Farragut, Vicksburg, Appomattox Court House, Trent Affair, Alabama Claims, Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), Jim Crow laws, veto and pocket veto, Solid South, Reconstruction, Freedmen’s Bureau, sharecropping, Wade–Davis Bill, carpetbaggers, Black Codes, Panic of 1873, Redeemer governments, crop-lien system, segregation, Booker T. Washington, Fourteenth Amendment, Fifteenth Amendment, poll taxes, literacy tests, Ku Klux Klan, Slaughterhouse Cases, Civil Rights Acts of 1866 and 1875, Jeffersonian Democracy, Embargo Act, Marshall Court, Battle of New Orleans, Francis Scott Key, Gibbons v. Ogden (1824), Fletcher v. Peck (1810), McCulloch v. Maryland (1819), Marbury v. Madison (1803), War of 1812, War Hawks, Treaty of Ghent, Hartford Convention, Barbary Wars, Adams–Onís Treaty, Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819), Monroe Doctrine, Tecumseh, Prophet Tenskwatawa, Samuel Slater, Eli Whitney, mercantile industry, Panic of 1819, Market Revolution, Waltham–Lowell System, Industrial Revolution, internal improvements, Erie Canal, railroad expansion, Missouri Compromise (1820), Elections of 1824 and 1828, Jacksonian Democracy, Worcester v. Georgia (1832), Tariff of Abominations, Indian Removal Act, Specie Circular, Force Bill, Trail of Tears, American System, Second Bank of the United States, Five Civilized Tribes, sectionalism, South Carolina Exposition and Protest, John C. Calhoun, corrupt bargain, Alexis de Tocqueville, pet banks, Kitchen Cabinet, Nicholas Biddle, Shakers, Romanticism, Temperance Movement, William Lloyd Garrison, American Anti-Slavery Society, Frederick Douglass, Seneca Falls Convention, Lucretia Mott, Horace Mann, Walt Whitman, Declaration of Sentiments, Hudson River School, Grimké sisters, Penny Press, Susan B. Anthony, Prigg v. Pennsylvania (1842), Mormonism, Dorothea Dix, Underground Railroad, abolitionism, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Charles Grandison Finney, suffrage, Brook Farm, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Second Great Awakening, Transcendentalism, Oneida Community, King Cotton, Nat Turner’s Rebellion, Dawes Act (1887), Indian boarding schools, Wounded Knee (1890), Transcontinental Railroad, Sand Creek Massacre, Frederick Jackson Turner, Exodusters, Ghost Dance, Comstock Lode, open range, Sitting Bull, George A. Custer, Battle of Little Bighorn, laissez-faire, Bessemer Process, Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), Robber Barons, Knights of Labor, American Federation of Labor, trusts and monopolies, Social Darwinism, Henry Ford, Gospel of Wealth, Eugene V. Debs, Homestead Strike, Pullman Strike, Gilded Age