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apush events and places

Woodward’s American Nations: framework for examining american history by viewing the country as a federation of eleven nations

  • Each designed by a shared culture established by each nation’s founding population

Jamestown: first permanent English settlement in North America

  • Capital of the virginia colony from 1607 to 1698

  • Chesapeake bay colony

Virginia Company: english stock company chartered by king james 

  • Goal of establishing a colony in the region of Virginia 

  • Led to the founding of jamestown in 1607

Headright system: land grant system where settlers received amounts of land (50 acres) depending on the amount of people they brought to the colony 

  • Encouraged immigration and use of indentured servants

Indentured servitude: working as a servant to pay off debt 

Bacon’s Rebellion: colonial uprising in virginia in 1676 led by Nathaniel Bacon 

  • Disgruntled farmers and former indentured servants against the government 

  • Perceived inaction against Native Americans and favoritism towards the wealthy

  • Attacked jamestown, burned buildings

  • Highlighted deep class tensions

    • Pre-event to later revolutionaries sentiment 

First Great Awakening: revival in mid-18th century, swept protestantism in british colonies

  • changed fabric of religion in early america 

Articles of Confederation: first US constitution 

  • 1777 to 1789, loose confederation of states with a weak central government

Northwest Ordinance: chartered government for Northwest 

  • Method for admitting new states

  • Bill of rights guaranteed

Checks and balances: provided each branch with individual powers to check other branches

  • Prevented any one branch from being too powerful

3/5th Compromise: 3 out of every 5 slaves was counted when determining a state’s total population

  • Used for legislative representation and taxation

Great Compromise: resolved a debate between large and small states for equal representation

  • proposed at constitutional convention

  • Senate would have equal representation 

  • House is based on population

Ratification Debates: federalists vs antifederalists

  • Bill of rights added for antifederalists

Federalist Papers: 85 essays by Hamilton, Madison and Jay

  • Argued for strong central government and need for checks and balances

Federalists vs. Democratic-Republicans: beginning of America’s first political party

  • Federalists led by Alexander Hamilton supported a strong central government, closer ties with Britain, loose interpretation of the constitution

  • Democratic-republians led by Jefferson advocated for states’ rights, strict interpretation of the Constitution, closer ties with france

Washington’s Farewell Address: warned against political parties, foreign alliances, dangers of sectionalism

  • Shaped US foreign policy and national unity

Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions: argued that the states had the right and duty to declare unconstitutional acts of congress that the constitution did not authorize 

  • Argued for states rights

  • Strict construction of the constitution

Louisiana Purchase: granted the US the sole authority to obtain the land from the indigenous 

  • Doubled size of US 

  • New land for farming and expansion 

  • Influenced westward growth

Judicial Review: power of courts to review laws and executive actions to determine constitutionality 

  • Came from Marbury v Madison

Marbury v. Madison: established judicial review

Hartford Convention: meetings that discussed grievances and proposed secession

  • Led to decline of federalist party

Era of Good Feelings: during Monroe’s presidency marked by political unity and lack of strife 

  • Beginning of tensions from slavery and economic policies

American System: henry clay’s economic plan

  • Based on market economy

Corrupt Bargain: Alleged deal where Adams chosen over Jackson, and then Clay appointed as Secretary of State

  • Jackson’s supporters revolt that John Quincy Adams got elected by the House

Tariff of Abominations: 1828  high tariff that angered South

  • High duties on imports to protect northern industries 

  • Hurt southern economy by raising cost of goods

Nullification Crisis: conflict between South Carolina and the federal government of the US, tried to nullify federal tariffs 

  • South carolina declared tariff of abominations unconstitutional 

  • Threats to secede and nullify federal law 

  • Jackson responded with the Force Bill and a compromise tariff

Worcester v. Georgia: court ruled that georgia could not enforce laws on a white missionary living on cherokee land 

  • Established the principle of tribal sovereignty 

  • Recognized american tribes as distinct political entities with rights separate from state governments 

    • Jackson ignored this and forced removal 

Indian Removal Act: authorized Jackson to grant lands west of the Mississippi in exchange for Indian lands 

  • Caused trail of tears and displacement of thousands 

Trail of Tears: forced removal of cherokee people from their land 

Panic of 1837: financial crisis that began a major depression till the mid-1840s 

  • Triggered by Jackson and destruction of national bank

  • Widespread bank failures, unemployment, severe depression

Texas Revolution: between mexico and texas that resulted in texas’s independence from mexico and founding of the republic of texas 

Annexation of Texas: 1845, led to tensions with Mexico, Texas gets added to the US by appropriation

  • Start of mexican-american war, as mexico and many northern states opposed addition due to slavery

Mexican War: independence from mexico by the “Tejas” portion 

  • Fought exclusively in texas, new mexico, california and northern and central mexico 

Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo: 1848 treaty ending the mexican-american war, gave the US western lands

  • Established rio grande as texas-mexico border

  • Added ⅓ of present US territory (California and New Mexico)

Mexican Cession: ceded 55% of its territory, including California, Nevada, Utah…

  • Fulfilled manifest destiny, ended mexican american war

Whigs: political party opposing jackson, supported congress over presidency 

  • Modernization, protective tariffs, infrastructure improvements

Manifest Destiny: idea that expansion was wanted by God

Wilmot Proviso: proposal to ban slavery in territory acquired from mexico after MA war

  • Failed in the senate

  • Deepened sectional divide

Popular Sovereignty: idea that residents of a territory should decide for themselves that slavery should be allowed 

  • Context of kansas-nebraska act

  • Intended as a compromise to settle slavery debate

Compromise of 1850: five laws passed to ease tensions over slavery and territory

  • California admitted as a free state 

  •  Stronger fugitive state law 

  • Abolition of slave trade 

  • Territories of new mexico and utah

  • Border dispute resolution between texas and new mexico

Fugitive Slave Law: escaped slaves be returned to their owners even if found in slave states

  • Impose heavy penalties who helped runaway slaves 

  • Fiercely resisted in the North and increased tensions

Uncle Tom’s Cabin: anti slavery novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe

  • Brutal realities of slavery

  • Profound impact on public opinion and turning against slavery

Kansas-Nebraska Act: created territories and allowed settlers to decide about slavery for themselves

  • Overturned missouri compromise

Bleeding Kansas: period of violent conflict in Kansas

Dred Scott v. Sanford: ruled that Dred Scott was not a citizen

  • Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in territories 

  • Also nullified Missouri Compromise 

Lincoln-Douglas Debates: seven debates during illinois senate race of 1858

  • Douglas: popular sovereignty, douglas won

  • Lincoln: slavery should not expand into new places 

    • Helped lincoln secure republican nomination for president in 1860

Harper’s Ferry: john brown’s raid to try to start an armed slave rebellion by seizing a federal arsenal 

  • Unsuccessful, Brown was captured tried and executed 

  • Brown became a martyr for abolitionist cause for Northerners 

  • Southerners saw the North was willing to use violence to end slavery

Election of 1860: lincoln won without carrying a single southern state 

  • Opposed expansion of slavery into territories 

  • Southern states were afraid that slavery was threatened 

  • Contributed to secession of southern states from union

Transcontinental RR: central from west, union from east 

  • Central: irish, german, italian, built west from omaha, nebraska 

  • Union: chinese, built east from sacramento, california  

FJT Frontier Hypothesis: argument that the settlement and colonization of the rugged American frontier is decisive in forming the culture of American democracy and distinguishing it from European nations

  •  Many people did not fit his model of the democratizing American 

  • Frontier’s influence is so significant that it is inseparable from american identity 

Homestead Act: 160 acres if improved and lived on for five years

  • Encouraged western expansion and settlement

Populism: : heavy focus, political end/effects, explain how the populist grew out of discontented farmers, west fell behind, new western political party having extreme influence on economics in the US

  • emphasize the common people and often opposite the “elite”, anti-establishment, anti-political sentiment 

  • Economic reforms to increase money supply and relieve debt 

  • Greenback, inflationary vs deflationary

  • Soft – greenback currency, favored by debtors, farmers, capitalists b/c loans can be paid faster, increased prices for commodities

  • Hard – back by gold, favored by bankers, creditors, investors b/c currency holds its value and increase the value of gold owned

Grange: : social organization that encourages families to band together to promote economic and political well-being of the community and agriculture 

  • Lower railroad rates, fairer treatment for farmers 

Chinese Exclusion Act: 10 year ban on chinese laborers immigrating to the US

  • Reflected anti-asian sentiment in the west

Dawes Severalty Act: Promise of land and citizenship contingent on behavior, provided land to railroad companies

  • Divided tribal lands into individual plots, natives would get US citizenship

  • Reduced native american land and weakened tribal culture

  • Promoted assimilation into US society 

Spanish-American War: brief conflict where US defeated Spain

  •  Cuban independence movement gained american sympathy 

  • Yellow journalism exaggerating spanish atrocities in Cuba

  • Sinking of the USS maine in havana harbor, believed to be spanish act of sabotage 

USS Maine: second class battleship sent to Havana to protect American interests during revolt of cubans against spanish

  • Explosion sparked the spanish american war and the US colonization of Philippines, PR, Guam

US Acquisitions - Philippines, Hawaii, PR, Guam: 

  • Philippines: treaty of Paris from Spain

  • Hawaii: strategic importance of Pearl Harbor, military outpost and coaling station, gateway to Eastern markets and rich commercial advantages 

  • PR: ceded under treaty of paris 

  • Guam: base for potential attacks from Japan

Suburbia: residential areas located on the outskirts of a city, lower population density, greater emphasis on private living spaces 

  • Promoted use of automobiles 

  • Vast expansion of america’s highways 

  • Negative effects on white women and minorities 

Levittowns: large suburban housing developments, first mass-produced suburb

  • Archetype for postwar suburbs 

  • Monotonous and uniform 

GI Bill: provided WW2 veterans with funds for college education, unemployment insurance and housing 

Interstate Highway Act: provided a national system of interstate and defense highways

apush events and places

Woodward’s American Nations: framework for examining american history by viewing the country as a federation of eleven nations

  • Each designed by a shared culture established by each nation’s founding population

Jamestown: first permanent English settlement in North America

  • Capital of the virginia colony from 1607 to 1698

  • Chesapeake bay colony

Virginia Company: english stock company chartered by king james 

  • Goal of establishing a colony in the region of Virginia 

  • Led to the founding of jamestown in 1607

Headright system: land grant system where settlers received amounts of land (50 acres) depending on the amount of people they brought to the colony 

  • Encouraged immigration and use of indentured servants

Indentured servitude: working as a servant to pay off debt 

Bacon’s Rebellion: colonial uprising in virginia in 1676 led by Nathaniel Bacon 

  • Disgruntled farmers and former indentured servants against the government 

  • Perceived inaction against Native Americans and favoritism towards the wealthy

  • Attacked jamestown, burned buildings

  • Highlighted deep class tensions

    • Pre-event to later revolutionaries sentiment 

First Great Awakening: revival in mid-18th century, swept protestantism in british colonies

  • changed fabric of religion in early america 

Articles of Confederation: first US constitution 

  • 1777 to 1789, loose confederation of states with a weak central government

Northwest Ordinance: chartered government for Northwest 

  • Method for admitting new states

  • Bill of rights guaranteed

Checks and balances: provided each branch with individual powers to check other branches

  • Prevented any one branch from being too powerful

3/5th Compromise: 3 out of every 5 slaves was counted when determining a state’s total population

  • Used for legislative representation and taxation

Great Compromise: resolved a debate between large and small states for equal representation

  • proposed at constitutional convention

  • Senate would have equal representation 

  • House is based on population

Ratification Debates: federalists vs antifederalists

  • Bill of rights added for antifederalists

Federalist Papers: 85 essays by Hamilton, Madison and Jay

  • Argued for strong central government and need for checks and balances

Federalists vs. Democratic-Republicans: beginning of America’s first political party

  • Federalists led by Alexander Hamilton supported a strong central government, closer ties with Britain, loose interpretation of the constitution

  • Democratic-republians led by Jefferson advocated for states’ rights, strict interpretation of the Constitution, closer ties with france

Washington’s Farewell Address: warned against political parties, foreign alliances, dangers of sectionalism

  • Shaped US foreign policy and national unity

Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions: argued that the states had the right and duty to declare unconstitutional acts of congress that the constitution did not authorize 

  • Argued for states rights

  • Strict construction of the constitution

Louisiana Purchase: granted the US the sole authority to obtain the land from the indigenous 

  • Doubled size of US 

  • New land for farming and expansion 

  • Influenced westward growth

Judicial Review: power of courts to review laws and executive actions to determine constitutionality 

  • Came from Marbury v Madison

Marbury v. Madison: established judicial review

Hartford Convention: meetings that discussed grievances and proposed secession

  • Led to decline of federalist party

Era of Good Feelings: during Monroe’s presidency marked by political unity and lack of strife 

  • Beginning of tensions from slavery and economic policies

American System: henry clay’s economic plan

  • Based on market economy

Corrupt Bargain: Alleged deal where Adams chosen over Jackson, and then Clay appointed as Secretary of State

  • Jackson’s supporters revolt that John Quincy Adams got elected by the House

Tariff of Abominations: 1828  high tariff that angered South

  • High duties on imports to protect northern industries 

  • Hurt southern economy by raising cost of goods

Nullification Crisis: conflict between South Carolina and the federal government of the US, tried to nullify federal tariffs 

  • South carolina declared tariff of abominations unconstitutional 

  • Threats to secede and nullify federal law 

  • Jackson responded with the Force Bill and a compromise tariff

Worcester v. Georgia: court ruled that georgia could not enforce laws on a white missionary living on cherokee land 

  • Established the principle of tribal sovereignty 

  • Recognized american tribes as distinct political entities with rights separate from state governments 

    • Jackson ignored this and forced removal 

Indian Removal Act: authorized Jackson to grant lands west of the Mississippi in exchange for Indian lands 

  • Caused trail of tears and displacement of thousands 

Trail of Tears: forced removal of cherokee people from their land 

Panic of 1837: financial crisis that began a major depression till the mid-1840s 

  • Triggered by Jackson and destruction of national bank

  • Widespread bank failures, unemployment, severe depression

Texas Revolution: between mexico and texas that resulted in texas’s independence from mexico and founding of the republic of texas 

Annexation of Texas: 1845, led to tensions with Mexico, Texas gets added to the US by appropriation

  • Start of mexican-american war, as mexico and many northern states opposed addition due to slavery

Mexican War: independence from mexico by the “Tejas” portion 

  • Fought exclusively in texas, new mexico, california and northern and central mexico 

Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo: 1848 treaty ending the mexican-american war, gave the US western lands

  • Established rio grande as texas-mexico border

  • Added ⅓ of present US territory (California and New Mexico)

Mexican Cession: ceded 55% of its territory, including California, Nevada, Utah…

  • Fulfilled manifest destiny, ended mexican american war

Whigs: political party opposing jackson, supported congress over presidency 

  • Modernization, protective tariffs, infrastructure improvements

Manifest Destiny: idea that expansion was wanted by God

Wilmot Proviso: proposal to ban slavery in territory acquired from mexico after MA war

  • Failed in the senate

  • Deepened sectional divide

Popular Sovereignty: idea that residents of a territory should decide for themselves that slavery should be allowed 

  • Context of kansas-nebraska act

  • Intended as a compromise to settle slavery debate

Compromise of 1850: five laws passed to ease tensions over slavery and territory

  • California admitted as a free state 

  •  Stronger fugitive state law 

  • Abolition of slave trade 

  • Territories of new mexico and utah

  • Border dispute resolution between texas and new mexico

Fugitive Slave Law: escaped slaves be returned to their owners even if found in slave states

  • Impose heavy penalties who helped runaway slaves 

  • Fiercely resisted in the North and increased tensions

Uncle Tom’s Cabin: anti slavery novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe

  • Brutal realities of slavery

  • Profound impact on public opinion and turning against slavery

Kansas-Nebraska Act: created territories and allowed settlers to decide about slavery for themselves

  • Overturned missouri compromise

Bleeding Kansas: period of violent conflict in Kansas

Dred Scott v. Sanford: ruled that Dred Scott was not a citizen

  • Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in territories 

  • Also nullified Missouri Compromise 

Lincoln-Douglas Debates: seven debates during illinois senate race of 1858

  • Douglas: popular sovereignty, douglas won

  • Lincoln: slavery should not expand into new places 

    • Helped lincoln secure republican nomination for president in 1860

Harper’s Ferry: john brown’s raid to try to start an armed slave rebellion by seizing a federal arsenal 

  • Unsuccessful, Brown was captured tried and executed 

  • Brown became a martyr for abolitionist cause for Northerners 

  • Southerners saw the North was willing to use violence to end slavery

Election of 1860: lincoln won without carrying a single southern state 

  • Opposed expansion of slavery into territories 

  • Southern states were afraid that slavery was threatened 

  • Contributed to secession of southern states from union

Transcontinental RR: central from west, union from east 

  • Central: irish, german, italian, built west from omaha, nebraska 

  • Union: chinese, built east from sacramento, california  

FJT Frontier Hypothesis: argument that the settlement and colonization of the rugged American frontier is decisive in forming the culture of American democracy and distinguishing it from European nations

  •  Many people did not fit his model of the democratizing American 

  • Frontier’s influence is so significant that it is inseparable from american identity 

Homestead Act: 160 acres if improved and lived on for five years

  • Encouraged western expansion and settlement

Populism: : heavy focus, political end/effects, explain how the populist grew out of discontented farmers, west fell behind, new western political party having extreme influence on economics in the US

  • emphasize the common people and often opposite the “elite”, anti-establishment, anti-political sentiment 

  • Economic reforms to increase money supply and relieve debt 

  • Greenback, inflationary vs deflationary

  • Soft – greenback currency, favored by debtors, farmers, capitalists b/c loans can be paid faster, increased prices for commodities

  • Hard – back by gold, favored by bankers, creditors, investors b/c currency holds its value and increase the value of gold owned

Grange: : social organization that encourages families to band together to promote economic and political well-being of the community and agriculture 

  • Lower railroad rates, fairer treatment for farmers 

Chinese Exclusion Act: 10 year ban on chinese laborers immigrating to the US

  • Reflected anti-asian sentiment in the west

Dawes Severalty Act: Promise of land and citizenship contingent on behavior, provided land to railroad companies

  • Divided tribal lands into individual plots, natives would get US citizenship

  • Reduced native american land and weakened tribal culture

  • Promoted assimilation into US society 

Spanish-American War: brief conflict where US defeated Spain

  •  Cuban independence movement gained american sympathy 

  • Yellow journalism exaggerating spanish atrocities in Cuba

  • Sinking of the USS maine in havana harbor, believed to be spanish act of sabotage 

USS Maine: second class battleship sent to Havana to protect American interests during revolt of cubans against spanish

  • Explosion sparked the spanish american war and the US colonization of Philippines, PR, Guam

US Acquisitions - Philippines, Hawaii, PR, Guam: 

  • Philippines: treaty of Paris from Spain

  • Hawaii: strategic importance of Pearl Harbor, military outpost and coaling station, gateway to Eastern markets and rich commercial advantages 

  • PR: ceded under treaty of paris 

  • Guam: base for potential attacks from Japan

Suburbia: residential areas located on the outskirts of a city, lower population density, greater emphasis on private living spaces 

  • Promoted use of automobiles 

  • Vast expansion of america’s highways 

  • Negative effects on white women and minorities 

Levittowns: large suburban housing developments, first mass-produced suburb

  • Archetype for postwar suburbs 

  • Monotonous and uniform 

GI Bill: provided WW2 veterans with funds for college education, unemployment insurance and housing 

Interstate Highway Act: provided a national system of interstate and defense highways

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