Midterm Study Guide
4 voyages
Sailed for Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand
“Gold, God and Glory”
Columbian Exchange
Voyage 1
Ferdinand and Isabella outfit
Ships: Niña, Pinta, Santa Maria
Niña and Pinta have 18 men each
Santa Maria had 52 men
10000 mile trip
Some men are from prisons
Left Aug 3, 1492
Land spotted Oct 12, 1492
Santa Maria gets caught on rocks and sinks
Columbus thinks he is in India and wants the men to build a colony
Voyage 2
Leave Sep 23, 1493
3 large caravels, 14 frigots, and 1500 men
12 missionaries
La Navidad is not doing well
Natives are slaves and Columbus fills 5 ships with them
Voyage lasts 3 years
Voyage 3
6 ships
Sees South America coast
Spies find him mistreating natives
Put on trial, found guilty, put in prison
Voyage 4
Leaves May 9, 1502
Hurricane hits and he has to return
Dies a year later
Caused by the discovery of the Americas by Columbus
Natives to Europeans - maize, potatoes, tobacco, fruits, vegetables
Europeans to Natives - horses, cattle, smallpox
Smallpox killed over 90 percent of the natives
Caused the death of many natives
Maize/corn
Cortes meets Moctezuma, king of Aztecs
Moctezuma thinks Cortest may be the god Quetzalcoatl
Moctezuma invites Cortes and men into Tenochtitlan, the capital
Tenoctitlan has 100,000 warriors and canals
Spaniards observe
Human sacrifice
Zoos
Aztec ball game
Spaniards want to go home
Cortes orders sails burned and attacks Tenoctitlan
Royalty
Nobility
Military leaders, priests, lords, land owners, judges
Warriors
Commoners
Farmers, artisans, merchants
Slaves and Serfs
The capital of the Aztecs
Located in present-day Mexico City
100,000 warriors and canals
Human sacrifice, zoos, violent Aztec ball game
Caused by the introduction of tobacco
As other Europeans established American colonies, they also imported enslaved Africans in large numbers
During the colonial era, more Africans than Europeans crossed the Atlantic to the Americas
Slave traders sent between 10 million and 15 million enslaved people from Africa
Between 10 percent and 15 percent died on the voyage across the Atlantic Ocean, called the Middle Passage
Virginia Company
Patent given to start a colony in Jamestown, VA
Dec 1606 (144 colonists and 3 ships)
Jobs to complete
Self sufficient
Mine for gold/silvers
Plant grapes/make wine
Plant mulberries/make silk
Took many colonists, but no farmers/hunters
Arrived Apr 1607
39 had died at sea
Seached for 1 month for a location
Settled in a bad location (swamp)
Man died (by the summer 46 more had died) leaving 59/144
Second wave arrives
Captain John Smith leads the colonists
Befriends the Inidans
Passes law “Don’t work, don’t eat”
Jailed at first, but let out and moved colony, made colonists hunt and plant, and negotiated with Indians
3rd wave
John Smith leaves
New wave of 600 come (sick, cannot fight)
Natives break off truce and colonists move back to swamp
Starving Time - resorted to cannibalisms due to no hunting and farming
Founded by Lord Baltimore in 1634
Second plantation colony (cash crop tobacco)
Fourth English colony
Refuge for Catholics
1st colony to grant religious toleration (still had the death penalty for Jews and atheists)
Longer lifespan
Cool climate
Strong family unit
Very religious
High literacy rate
Unfit soil for farming - merchants, ship builders, fishermen, traders
Religiously and culturally diverse
Combination of agriculture (PA cash crop oats) and business
Cool climate
Strong family unit
Disease
Short life span
Men greatly outnumbered women
Cash crops - tobacco, rice
Slaves and indentured servants
Founded for economic reasons
Families are few
Poor education
Hot, humid climate
Fertile soil - more agriculture and “hard” work
Caused by the development of mercantilism
A ship loaded with barrels of rum would start out from a New England port like Boston and cross the Atlantic to West Africa
Rum traded in West Africa for hundreds of captive Africans --- ships would set out on the Middle Passage --- slaves aboard these ships would be traded in West Indies for sugar cane
Ship returns to a New England port where sugar would be sold to make rum
Colonies exist to make the “mother” country money and in return, the “mother” country provides military protection
Led to the Triangular Trade
Implemented by England to establish a mercantilist policy in the colonies
3 rules for colonial trade
Trade to and from the colonies could be carried only by English or colonial-built ships, which would be operated only by English or colonial crews
All goods imported into colonies, except for some perishables could pass only through ports in England
Specified goods from the colonies could be exported only to England (for example tobacco)
Effects
Positive
New England shipbuilding prospered
Chesapeake tobacco had a monopoly in England
English military forces protected the colonies from potential attacks by French and Spanish
Negative
Colonial manufacturing was severely limited
Chesapeake farmers received low prices for their crops
Colonists had to pay high prices for manufactured goods from England
Enforcement
Was often relaxed and British agents were known for their corruption
Salutary neglect: rules put in but are not enforced
Marked the beginning of modern Europe and influenced the development of Western Civilization
Began as an attempt to reform the Catholic church and resulted in the destruction of religious unity of Western Europe
Protestantism was adopted by the growing nation–states of the North
Influenced the development of nationalism, capitalism, democracy, and science
Causes:
Corruption of the Roman Catholic Church
Simony: sale of church offices
Nepotism: working in a position above a family member
Sale of indulgences: buying forgiveness of sins
Decline of morality among clergy
Impact of Renaissance humanism
Humanist “glorification of humanity” which contradicted the church’s emphasis on salvation
Declining Prestige of the Papacy
Babylonian captivity: 14th Cent. Popes were subservient to French King; took up residence in Avignon and lost prestige in Christendom
Great Schism(divide): beginning in 1378 when French and Anti-French cardinals elected 2 popes (1 in Rome and 1 in Avignon)
Influence of Religious Reformers
Wycliffe, Huss, Lutheran, Calvin
Stressed personal communication with God
Diminished importance of sacraments
Weakened influence of the clergy
Resentment of the Secular Rulers over the power of the Popes and Clergy
Invention of the Printing Press - allowing dissenters to spread their ideas throughout Europe and making the Bible available to the common people
Results:
Northern Europe and most of Germany adopted Protestantism
Religious wars break out between Protestant and Catholics
Growth of the Protestant Faith leads to Catholics establishing the Reformation (Spanish Inquisition
Proposed by John Calvin and adopted by Puritans
The idea that it has been determined before birth whether you are going to heaven or hell and you cannot change that
Men/women are sinful by nature
Only a few (the “elects”) will be saved from sin
God has known from the beginning who will be saved
Everyone must live a “pure” life
Cause
Britain upset with the colonists and their protesting over the Townshend Acts — so Britain sent troops to Boston to help keep the peace
The colonists do not want the British troops in Boston — so the situation between the colonists and British soldiers become very tense
March 5, 1770
British soldiers and colonists confront each other in Boston
Sodiers competing with colonists for jobs in Boston (rope walk)
Soldier gets job, thinks he’s too good for cleaning, and colonist gets mad
Make wandering night groups
Colonists find a sentry at night and call him names
7 British soldiers called by Captain Preston
Crowd has grown to 700 and start throwing snowballs with rocks, have ladles and sticks
Town bell rings for a fire
Crowd yells fire and soldiers think captain yells fire
Engraving by Paul Revere
Effects
Result 5 Americans were killed “Boston Massacre” (first is Mulatto)
Captain is tried and acquitted
The trial results in the Impartial Administration Act
Passed to pay for war debt and military protection
Passed in 1765
All legal documents including newspapers, diplomas, decks of cards, dice, almanacs, etc. had to have a stamp
Stamps ranged in price from 2 pence to 6 pounds
Law managed to offend editors, lawyers, students, gamblers, etc.
Effect
“No taxation without representation” was chanted
Colonists are protesting because they dislike virtual representation and are demanding direct representation
The law produced a rebellious nature in the American colonies
Colonists began to protest, demonstrate and riot as a result of the stamp and sugar acts
Colonists used crowd politics - Led by Sons of Liberty (Samuel Adams)
Act is repealed
Rapid growth
1700: 250000
1750: 1.5 million
Immigrants and high birthrates
Variety of people
Immigrants coming in
Social class and mobility
Upper, middle, lower, slave
Could move between classes
1790: the est. population was 4 million
1860: the est. population was 32 million with half of the people in territories/states that did not exist in 1790
Natural Increase
Birth rates dropping in North
People living longer, especially in North - late 50s, in South - late 30s/early 40s
Immigration
Britain - Protestant
Germany - middle class, Protestant, productive
Ireland - Catholic, worked in factories, poor
Indentured servants - served 7 years in exchange for paid trip, food, and shelter, and burned down Jamestown in Bacon’s Rebellion
Led to slavery as indentured servants ran out of time, and the colonists wanted cheap, replaceable labor
Slaves were introduced in 1619
1670 - 3,000 slaves
1750 - 10,000 slaves
Half of Virginia and two-thirds of South Carolina were slaves
1861 - 4 million slaves in the Chesapeake colonies alone
Located mostly in the Middle and Chesapeake colonies
One of the bloodiest wars in New England’s history
War named after Mettacom (who is Massasoit’s son and was called King Philip)
War starts in 1675 in Plymouth when the colonists seize and hang 3 Wampanog Indians for murdering a “praying town” Indian
Result ---UPRISING --Wampanog Indians were initially the only Indians fighting –then other tribes join in
Puritans responded to the attacks by attacking Indians (even tribes that were neutral)
Puritans saw it as their mission to destroy the Indians ---(Puritans even attacked the Praying Towns and slaughtered the Indians there)
The war turned in favor of the Puritans and what is left of the Pequot tribe and the Mohegans join in their fight against the Indians
Puritans begin to fight like Indians and win the war in 1677
Puritan philosophy – NO POW’s therefore prisoners were executed or sold into slavery
Political parties made an appearance as early as Washington’s first administration
Parties arise in a democracy when people with similar interests and ideas band together to advance their program by peacefully gaining control of the government
The bitter struggle over financial matters during Washington’s administration resulted in the formation of 2 political parties: Federalists and Democratic-Republicans
Federalists
Led by Hamilton and John Adams
Were mostly wealthy and well educated
Favored a strong central government
Supported Hamilton’s Financial Program
Tended to favor Britain in foreign affairs
Strongest in the north
Favored a loose interpretation of the Constitution
In power = more military spending
Democratic-Republicans
Led by Jefferson and Madison
Common people
Favored the state’s rights
Opposed Hamilton’s Financial Program
Tended to favor France in foreign affairs
Strongest in the south
Favored a strict interpretation of the Constitution
In power = less military spending
Constitutional Convention
Spokesman for Propertied Class
National Bank
Jefferson argued that the Constitution did not give Congress the power to create a bank
Hamilton (secretary of Treasury) argued that the document’s “necessary and proper” clause authorized Congress to do whatever was necessary to carry out its duties
Washington supported Hamilton on the issue and the bank was established
The Bank of the United States was privately owned by shareholders
As a major shareholder of the bank, the federal government could print paper currency and use federal deposits to stimulate business
Universal Male Suffrage
Every propertied man has the right to vote
Those who don’t have property will waste their vote
Hardly any representatives were sent that represented the common person that made up 90% of the country’s population
Several Revolutionary leaders were also absent: John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, Samuel Adams, etc
Consisted of 55 delegates from 12/13 colonies
Represented the wealthy, propertied class
Men who were knowledgeable in law, history and government
President - George Washington
Secretary - James Madison
Spokesman for Propertied Class - Alexander Hamilton
Lent prestige and wisdom - Ben Franklin
Came to the conclusion that the Articles could not be revised - they need to start over
Achievements
Brought the American Revolution to a successful conclusion
Negotiated and signed the Treaty of Paris 1783
Kept the states united in name, if not always in fact
Passed the Land Ordinance of 1784 and 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Weaknesses
Congress was practically unable to enact laws because:
Passage of a bill required 9/13 colonies in favor
Delegates from more than 10 colonies were rarely present at one time
No provisions for a chief executive (all law enforcement was left to individual states)
No central courts existed to handle disputes between citizens of different states
Amendments required a unanimous vote (13/13)
Congress had no power to levy taxes
Congress could issue money, but so could each state
Congress had no power to raise an army (could request help from states)
Congress had no power to control interstate commerce (each state established its own tariffs and regulations)
Congress had no power to control foreign commerce
Congress commanded little respect abroad and was ineffective when dealing with foreign governments
Executive
President, VP, and Cabinet
Enforces laws
Legislative
Congress (House and Senate)
Makes laws, declares war, regulates commerce
Judicial
Supreme Court
Acts as the highest legal court
Government with 3 branches
Legislative Branch - bicameral
House of Rep (large state plan) based on states population
Senate (small state plan) based on equal representation (ea. state 2 representatives)
Added to address slave population in the Great Compromise
Said that slaves counted as 3/5 of a person when calculating population for representation
First introduced in the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
The right to nullify, or invalidate, any federal laws deemed unconstitutional
A movement characterized by fervent expression of religious feelings among masses of people between the 1730s–1740s
Only took place in the Middle and New England Colonies (among the middle class; Chesapeake did not have a middle class)
Anti-foreign feeling
Nativism grew within the US because of large numbers of Irish and German immigrants moving to the US
Americans feared that immigrants would:
Outnumber and out-vote them (vote Democrat)
Take away their jobs
Cause the growth of Catholicism
Directed towards Irish in the 1860s
Changed to xenophobia (strong hatred of foreigners) around WWI to Germany and added Japan in WWII
American expansionists who felt it was their God-given right to expand the US
Promoted by:
Land-hungry Americans who wanted more land
Patriots who feared Great Britain would take land
Eastern merchants who wanted to begin trading with Asia and needed ports on the West Coast
Democratic-minded individuals who wanted to spread democracy
Nationalists who supported American greatness
Abraham Lincoln’s request for President James K. Polk to identify the exact spot where American blood was spilled right before the Mexican War
Caused by border disputes over Texas among other things
Mexico responded to US sending troops to disputed area by sending Mexican troops
Fire was exchanged and blood was shed
President Polk claimed that “American blood had been shed on American soil” and went to Congress and asked for a declaration of war
Abraham Lincoln felt that the war was unconstitutional and throughout the war called for “spot resolutions”
General Zachary Taylor won victory after victory in Northern Mexico and later becomes President
General Winfield Scott captured Vera Cruz and Mexico City and later becomes US Head of Military
Captain John C. Fremont led American settlers to drive Mexican authorities out of California and established CA (Bear Republic), later becomes the first Republican presidential candidate
Mexican War proved to be the training ground for many Civil War generals - Lee, Grant, Sherman, etc
For Mexico, the war was a disaster
Mexico sued for peace and had to concede the loss of its northern lands
Mexico had little choice but to agree to US terms
Passed in 1854
Stephen Douglas, a Sen. From Illinois secured the passage of a bill that:
Divided the remaining LA Purchase into the territories of KS and NB
Authorized people in the territories to follow popular sovereignty
Repealed the MO compromise
It passed because it was understood the KS would be slave and NB free — but what happened was everyone followed popular sovereignty and created a war in Kansas
Spoils System and Rotation of Office Holders
Jackson believed in appointing people to federal jobs based on their party loyalty
Therefore, if you helped him win the election, Jackson believed he owed you a federal job, even if you were not qualified
Because Jackson owed so many supporters jobs, he advocated a rotation of office
Every couple of years a new person would be rotated into a job
Jackson believed that “no man had any more intrinsic claim to office than another”
Promoted government corruption
In 1830, Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act
By 1835, most eastern tribes had reluctantly moved west to reservations
Cherokees challenged this law and won the case, but the act was passed anyway
Led to the Trail of Tears
Gave the President the power to use the army and navy if necessary to enforce that South Carolina follow the Tariff of Abomination
South Carolina was very upset over this, so Henry Clay will step in and write a compromise (Compromise Tariff of 1833)
Jackson took his re-election as a pronouncement by the people to revoke the National Bank’s charter
So, in 1832, Jackson vetoed the renewal of the National Bank’s charter, saying that it enriched the wealthy at the common people’s expense
The majority of voters approved of Jackson’s action
Jackson creates pet banks/wildcat banks, which are state banks
Jackson will order governemnt funds withdrawn from the National Bank and distributed to these state banks
The problem is that there are no rules for how loans are to be given out and state banks printed too much paper money
Caused many banks to go bankrupt and leads to the Specie Circular forcing people to pay in gold and silver
Cherokees challenged the Indian Removal Act
Ruled that the laws of Georgia had no force within Cherokee territory
The decision was not enforced because President Jackson did not support it
Known as the “Great Compromiser”
Led the War Hawks with John C. Calhoun
Led the Whigs with John Quincy Adams
Ran for president multiple times
Proposed his American System consisting of tariffs, a national bank, and internal improvments
Wrote the Missouri Compromise
Wrote the Compromise Tariff of 1833
Used his influence to provide John Q. Adams votes to win the presidential election
The issue at hand is that at this time there is the same number of slave states and free states
Compromise (written by Henry Clay):
Missouri would be a slave state
Maine would be a free state
What is left of the Louisiana Territory north of the 36°30′ line (Mason-Dixon Line) would prohibit slavery
This compromise passed
New western states adopted state constitutions that allowed all White males to vote and hold office
Free black men could vote too
They omitted any religious or property qualifications for voting
Most eastern states soon followed suit, eliminating such restrictions
As a result, throughout the country, all White males could vote regardless of their social class or religion
Voting for president rose from about 350,000 in 1824 to more than 2.4 million in 1840 mostly as a result of changes in voting laws
In addition, political offices could be held by people in the lower and middle ranks of society
However, this could also mean that those who aren’t knowledgeable or qualified can make important decisions
Property owners (Whigs) didn’t like this because they felt that the poor and uneducated could cast an “inaccurate” vote
Germans - middle class, Protestant, productive workers
Irish - Catholic, poor, worked in factories, suffered from nativism
The Hartford Convention caused the Federalist Party to disappear
Convention held in Hartford - advocated states rights doctrine and nullification
Demanded that the Constitution be changed to a 2/3 vote to declare war and hinted if this did not happen that the Federalist would secede
Almost immediately after Hartford Conventions demands are made, the US learns of Jackson’s victory at New Orleans
Nationalism increases within the US and this group is seen as traitors
Formed during the 1830s by the union of diverse factions that opposed the policies of President Andrew Jackson and the Democratic Party
Many supported Henry Clay, a proponent of internal improvements, protective tariffs, and a national bank
Caused by Adams’s passage of the Tariff of Abomination and was based off of the Virginia and Kentucky Resolution
John C. Calhoun was the leading spokesman against the Tariff of Abomination
He wrote the South Carolina Exposition and Protest
The federal government was created by the states to serve the states
States have the power to declare laws passed by Congress as unconstitutional or null and void
Calhoun also believed that states could terminate their compact with the Union and secede
Would lead to SC being the first state to secede from the US
Caused by the South Carolina Exposition and Protest
In 1832, South Carolina was upset over the 1828 Tariff (Abomination)
They decided to nullify the tariff and then threatened to secede if the federal government attempted to collect the tariff duties within South Carolina
Jackson accepted the challenge and told South Carolina that nullification went against the Constitution, and that he would take steps against South Carolina if they nullified the law
Caused the passage of the Force Bill
“Midnight Judges” were appointed by Adams hours before he left office (at midnight)
Jefferson takes issue with this appointment because the judges are Federalists and he refuses the appointments
The case goes to the Supreme Court and is heard by Chief Justice John Marshall
They decided to keep the appointments but also established judicial review
Judicial review: the legal power of a court to determine if a decision contradicts or violates the Constitution
Judicial review led to the repeal of the Judiciary Act of 1801, removing the Midnight Judges
The Second Great Awakening was largely driven forward by middle-class women who were its earliest converts
More than one hundred women crisscrossed the country as itinerant preachers, holding meetings in barns, schools, or outside in fields
They were the first group of women to speak publicly in America
By the beginning of the new century, women's clubs in towns and cities across the nation were working to promote suffrage, better schools, the regulation of child labor, women in unions, and liquor prohibition
1812 Temperance Movement was launched mostly by women – made up around 65% of membership
Millerites/Seventh Day Adventists
William Miller – founder
In the 1830’s Miller preached that God would return on Oct 22, 1844
When Christ did not return, he decided he had misinterpreted the Bible
Latter Day Saints/Mormons
Joseph Smith –founder
Smith was killed in the “burned out district” in New York for his practice of polygamy
Mormons were persecuted because of polygamy belief – so Brigham Young led them to Utah to settle
Unitarians
Located mostly in New England area
Emphasized reason not revelation
Rejected idea of the trinity
Played a big role in the Abolitionist Movement
1800 Napoleon comes to power in France
Napoleon wants to invade the US
Failed Invasion of US leads to Napoleon selling territory to US
Jefferson sent Livingston and Monroe to France with an offer to buy New Orleans and Florida
Napoleon had just gotten the news of his defeat in Haiti
Napoleon offers Livingston and Monroe: New Orleans and all of the LA Territory for $15 million
Leads to constitutional issues and Jefferson changing his interpretation
Roads built
Robert Fulton - steamboat (1820: 69 steamboats, 1825: 720)
Erie Canal - “Clinton’s Big Ditch,” 364 mi from Albany to Buffalo, reduced $100 per ton to $8, caused more canals to be built
Railroads
4 voyages
Sailed for Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand
“Gold, God and Glory”
Columbian Exchange
Voyage 1
Ferdinand and Isabella outfit
Ships: Niña, Pinta, Santa Maria
Niña and Pinta have 18 men each
Santa Maria had 52 men
10000 mile trip
Some men are from prisons
Left Aug 3, 1492
Land spotted Oct 12, 1492
Santa Maria gets caught on rocks and sinks
Columbus thinks he is in India and wants the men to build a colony
Voyage 2
Leave Sep 23, 1493
3 large caravels, 14 frigots, and 1500 men
12 missionaries
La Navidad is not doing well
Natives are slaves and Columbus fills 5 ships with them
Voyage lasts 3 years
Voyage 3
6 ships
Sees South America coast
Spies find him mistreating natives
Put on trial, found guilty, put in prison
Voyage 4
Leaves May 9, 1502
Hurricane hits and he has to return
Dies a year later
Caused by the discovery of the Americas by Columbus
Natives to Europeans - maize, potatoes, tobacco, fruits, vegetables
Europeans to Natives - horses, cattle, smallpox
Smallpox killed over 90 percent of the natives
Caused the death of many natives
Maize/corn
Cortes meets Moctezuma, king of Aztecs
Moctezuma thinks Cortest may be the god Quetzalcoatl
Moctezuma invites Cortes and men into Tenochtitlan, the capital
Tenoctitlan has 100,000 warriors and canals
Spaniards observe
Human sacrifice
Zoos
Aztec ball game
Spaniards want to go home
Cortes orders sails burned and attacks Tenoctitlan
Royalty
Nobility
Military leaders, priests, lords, land owners, judges
Warriors
Commoners
Farmers, artisans, merchants
Slaves and Serfs
The capital of the Aztecs
Located in present-day Mexico City
100,000 warriors and canals
Human sacrifice, zoos, violent Aztec ball game
Caused by the introduction of tobacco
As other Europeans established American colonies, they also imported enslaved Africans in large numbers
During the colonial era, more Africans than Europeans crossed the Atlantic to the Americas
Slave traders sent between 10 million and 15 million enslaved people from Africa
Between 10 percent and 15 percent died on the voyage across the Atlantic Ocean, called the Middle Passage
Virginia Company
Patent given to start a colony in Jamestown, VA
Dec 1606 (144 colonists and 3 ships)
Jobs to complete
Self sufficient
Mine for gold/silvers
Plant grapes/make wine
Plant mulberries/make silk
Took many colonists, but no farmers/hunters
Arrived Apr 1607
39 had died at sea
Seached for 1 month for a location
Settled in a bad location (swamp)
Man died (by the summer 46 more had died) leaving 59/144
Second wave arrives
Captain John Smith leads the colonists
Befriends the Inidans
Passes law “Don’t work, don’t eat”
Jailed at first, but let out and moved colony, made colonists hunt and plant, and negotiated with Indians
3rd wave
John Smith leaves
New wave of 600 come (sick, cannot fight)
Natives break off truce and colonists move back to swamp
Starving Time - resorted to cannibalisms due to no hunting and farming
Founded by Lord Baltimore in 1634
Second plantation colony (cash crop tobacco)
Fourth English colony
Refuge for Catholics
1st colony to grant religious toleration (still had the death penalty for Jews and atheists)
Longer lifespan
Cool climate
Strong family unit
Very religious
High literacy rate
Unfit soil for farming - merchants, ship builders, fishermen, traders
Religiously and culturally diverse
Combination of agriculture (PA cash crop oats) and business
Cool climate
Strong family unit
Disease
Short life span
Men greatly outnumbered women
Cash crops - tobacco, rice
Slaves and indentured servants
Founded for economic reasons
Families are few
Poor education
Hot, humid climate
Fertile soil - more agriculture and “hard” work
Caused by the development of mercantilism
A ship loaded with barrels of rum would start out from a New England port like Boston and cross the Atlantic to West Africa
Rum traded in West Africa for hundreds of captive Africans --- ships would set out on the Middle Passage --- slaves aboard these ships would be traded in West Indies for sugar cane
Ship returns to a New England port where sugar would be sold to make rum
Colonies exist to make the “mother” country money and in return, the “mother” country provides military protection
Led to the Triangular Trade
Implemented by England to establish a mercantilist policy in the colonies
3 rules for colonial trade
Trade to and from the colonies could be carried only by English or colonial-built ships, which would be operated only by English or colonial crews
All goods imported into colonies, except for some perishables could pass only through ports in England
Specified goods from the colonies could be exported only to England (for example tobacco)
Effects
Positive
New England shipbuilding prospered
Chesapeake tobacco had a monopoly in England
English military forces protected the colonies from potential attacks by French and Spanish
Negative
Colonial manufacturing was severely limited
Chesapeake farmers received low prices for their crops
Colonists had to pay high prices for manufactured goods from England
Enforcement
Was often relaxed and British agents were known for their corruption
Salutary neglect: rules put in but are not enforced
Marked the beginning of modern Europe and influenced the development of Western Civilization
Began as an attempt to reform the Catholic church and resulted in the destruction of religious unity of Western Europe
Protestantism was adopted by the growing nation–states of the North
Influenced the development of nationalism, capitalism, democracy, and science
Causes:
Corruption of the Roman Catholic Church
Simony: sale of church offices
Nepotism: working in a position above a family member
Sale of indulgences: buying forgiveness of sins
Decline of morality among clergy
Impact of Renaissance humanism
Humanist “glorification of humanity” which contradicted the church’s emphasis on salvation
Declining Prestige of the Papacy
Babylonian captivity: 14th Cent. Popes were subservient to French King; took up residence in Avignon and lost prestige in Christendom
Great Schism(divide): beginning in 1378 when French and Anti-French cardinals elected 2 popes (1 in Rome and 1 in Avignon)
Influence of Religious Reformers
Wycliffe, Huss, Lutheran, Calvin
Stressed personal communication with God
Diminished importance of sacraments
Weakened influence of the clergy
Resentment of the Secular Rulers over the power of the Popes and Clergy
Invention of the Printing Press - allowing dissenters to spread their ideas throughout Europe and making the Bible available to the common people
Results:
Northern Europe and most of Germany adopted Protestantism
Religious wars break out between Protestant and Catholics
Growth of the Protestant Faith leads to Catholics establishing the Reformation (Spanish Inquisition
Proposed by John Calvin and adopted by Puritans
The idea that it has been determined before birth whether you are going to heaven or hell and you cannot change that
Men/women are sinful by nature
Only a few (the “elects”) will be saved from sin
God has known from the beginning who will be saved
Everyone must live a “pure” life
Cause
Britain upset with the colonists and their protesting over the Townshend Acts — so Britain sent troops to Boston to help keep the peace
The colonists do not want the British troops in Boston — so the situation between the colonists and British soldiers become very tense
March 5, 1770
British soldiers and colonists confront each other in Boston
Sodiers competing with colonists for jobs in Boston (rope walk)
Soldier gets job, thinks he’s too good for cleaning, and colonist gets mad
Make wandering night groups
Colonists find a sentry at night and call him names
7 British soldiers called by Captain Preston
Crowd has grown to 700 and start throwing snowballs with rocks, have ladles and sticks
Town bell rings for a fire
Crowd yells fire and soldiers think captain yells fire
Engraving by Paul Revere
Effects
Result 5 Americans were killed “Boston Massacre” (first is Mulatto)
Captain is tried and acquitted
The trial results in the Impartial Administration Act
Passed to pay for war debt and military protection
Passed in 1765
All legal documents including newspapers, diplomas, decks of cards, dice, almanacs, etc. had to have a stamp
Stamps ranged in price from 2 pence to 6 pounds
Law managed to offend editors, lawyers, students, gamblers, etc.
Effect
“No taxation without representation” was chanted
Colonists are protesting because they dislike virtual representation and are demanding direct representation
The law produced a rebellious nature in the American colonies
Colonists began to protest, demonstrate and riot as a result of the stamp and sugar acts
Colonists used crowd politics - Led by Sons of Liberty (Samuel Adams)
Act is repealed
Rapid growth
1700: 250000
1750: 1.5 million
Immigrants and high birthrates
Variety of people
Immigrants coming in
Social class and mobility
Upper, middle, lower, slave
Could move between classes
1790: the est. population was 4 million
1860: the est. population was 32 million with half of the people in territories/states that did not exist in 1790
Natural Increase
Birth rates dropping in North
People living longer, especially in North - late 50s, in South - late 30s/early 40s
Immigration
Britain - Protestant
Germany - middle class, Protestant, productive
Ireland - Catholic, worked in factories, poor
Indentured servants - served 7 years in exchange for paid trip, food, and shelter, and burned down Jamestown in Bacon’s Rebellion
Led to slavery as indentured servants ran out of time, and the colonists wanted cheap, replaceable labor
Slaves were introduced in 1619
1670 - 3,000 slaves
1750 - 10,000 slaves
Half of Virginia and two-thirds of South Carolina were slaves
1861 - 4 million slaves in the Chesapeake colonies alone
Located mostly in the Middle and Chesapeake colonies
One of the bloodiest wars in New England’s history
War named after Mettacom (who is Massasoit’s son and was called King Philip)
War starts in 1675 in Plymouth when the colonists seize and hang 3 Wampanog Indians for murdering a “praying town” Indian
Result ---UPRISING --Wampanog Indians were initially the only Indians fighting –then other tribes join in
Puritans responded to the attacks by attacking Indians (even tribes that were neutral)
Puritans saw it as their mission to destroy the Indians ---(Puritans even attacked the Praying Towns and slaughtered the Indians there)
The war turned in favor of the Puritans and what is left of the Pequot tribe and the Mohegans join in their fight against the Indians
Puritans begin to fight like Indians and win the war in 1677
Puritan philosophy – NO POW’s therefore prisoners were executed or sold into slavery
Political parties made an appearance as early as Washington’s first administration
Parties arise in a democracy when people with similar interests and ideas band together to advance their program by peacefully gaining control of the government
The bitter struggle over financial matters during Washington’s administration resulted in the formation of 2 political parties: Federalists and Democratic-Republicans
Federalists
Led by Hamilton and John Adams
Were mostly wealthy and well educated
Favored a strong central government
Supported Hamilton’s Financial Program
Tended to favor Britain in foreign affairs
Strongest in the north
Favored a loose interpretation of the Constitution
In power = more military spending
Democratic-Republicans
Led by Jefferson and Madison
Common people
Favored the state’s rights
Opposed Hamilton’s Financial Program
Tended to favor France in foreign affairs
Strongest in the south
Favored a strict interpretation of the Constitution
In power = less military spending
Constitutional Convention
Spokesman for Propertied Class
National Bank
Jefferson argued that the Constitution did not give Congress the power to create a bank
Hamilton (secretary of Treasury) argued that the document’s “necessary and proper” clause authorized Congress to do whatever was necessary to carry out its duties
Washington supported Hamilton on the issue and the bank was established
The Bank of the United States was privately owned by shareholders
As a major shareholder of the bank, the federal government could print paper currency and use federal deposits to stimulate business
Universal Male Suffrage
Every propertied man has the right to vote
Those who don’t have property will waste their vote
Hardly any representatives were sent that represented the common person that made up 90% of the country’s population
Several Revolutionary leaders were also absent: John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, Samuel Adams, etc
Consisted of 55 delegates from 12/13 colonies
Represented the wealthy, propertied class
Men who were knowledgeable in law, history and government
President - George Washington
Secretary - James Madison
Spokesman for Propertied Class - Alexander Hamilton
Lent prestige and wisdom - Ben Franklin
Came to the conclusion that the Articles could not be revised - they need to start over
Achievements
Brought the American Revolution to a successful conclusion
Negotiated and signed the Treaty of Paris 1783
Kept the states united in name, if not always in fact
Passed the Land Ordinance of 1784 and 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Weaknesses
Congress was practically unable to enact laws because:
Passage of a bill required 9/13 colonies in favor
Delegates from more than 10 colonies were rarely present at one time
No provisions for a chief executive (all law enforcement was left to individual states)
No central courts existed to handle disputes between citizens of different states
Amendments required a unanimous vote (13/13)
Congress had no power to levy taxes
Congress could issue money, but so could each state
Congress had no power to raise an army (could request help from states)
Congress had no power to control interstate commerce (each state established its own tariffs and regulations)
Congress had no power to control foreign commerce
Congress commanded little respect abroad and was ineffective when dealing with foreign governments
Executive
President, VP, and Cabinet
Enforces laws
Legislative
Congress (House and Senate)
Makes laws, declares war, regulates commerce
Judicial
Supreme Court
Acts as the highest legal court
Government with 3 branches
Legislative Branch - bicameral
House of Rep (large state plan) based on states population
Senate (small state plan) based on equal representation (ea. state 2 representatives)
Added to address slave population in the Great Compromise
Said that slaves counted as 3/5 of a person when calculating population for representation
First introduced in the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
The right to nullify, or invalidate, any federal laws deemed unconstitutional
A movement characterized by fervent expression of religious feelings among masses of people between the 1730s–1740s
Only took place in the Middle and New England Colonies (among the middle class; Chesapeake did not have a middle class)
Anti-foreign feeling
Nativism grew within the US because of large numbers of Irish and German immigrants moving to the US
Americans feared that immigrants would:
Outnumber and out-vote them (vote Democrat)
Take away their jobs
Cause the growth of Catholicism
Directed towards Irish in the 1860s
Changed to xenophobia (strong hatred of foreigners) around WWI to Germany and added Japan in WWII
American expansionists who felt it was their God-given right to expand the US
Promoted by:
Land-hungry Americans who wanted more land
Patriots who feared Great Britain would take land
Eastern merchants who wanted to begin trading with Asia and needed ports on the West Coast
Democratic-minded individuals who wanted to spread democracy
Nationalists who supported American greatness
Abraham Lincoln’s request for President James K. Polk to identify the exact spot where American blood was spilled right before the Mexican War
Caused by border disputes over Texas among other things
Mexico responded to US sending troops to disputed area by sending Mexican troops
Fire was exchanged and blood was shed
President Polk claimed that “American blood had been shed on American soil” and went to Congress and asked for a declaration of war
Abraham Lincoln felt that the war was unconstitutional and throughout the war called for “spot resolutions”
General Zachary Taylor won victory after victory in Northern Mexico and later becomes President
General Winfield Scott captured Vera Cruz and Mexico City and later becomes US Head of Military
Captain John C. Fremont led American settlers to drive Mexican authorities out of California and established CA (Bear Republic), later becomes the first Republican presidential candidate
Mexican War proved to be the training ground for many Civil War generals - Lee, Grant, Sherman, etc
For Mexico, the war was a disaster
Mexico sued for peace and had to concede the loss of its northern lands
Mexico had little choice but to agree to US terms
Passed in 1854
Stephen Douglas, a Sen. From Illinois secured the passage of a bill that:
Divided the remaining LA Purchase into the territories of KS and NB
Authorized people in the territories to follow popular sovereignty
Repealed the MO compromise
It passed because it was understood the KS would be slave and NB free — but what happened was everyone followed popular sovereignty and created a war in Kansas
Spoils System and Rotation of Office Holders
Jackson believed in appointing people to federal jobs based on their party loyalty
Therefore, if you helped him win the election, Jackson believed he owed you a federal job, even if you were not qualified
Because Jackson owed so many supporters jobs, he advocated a rotation of office
Every couple of years a new person would be rotated into a job
Jackson believed that “no man had any more intrinsic claim to office than another”
Promoted government corruption
In 1830, Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act
By 1835, most eastern tribes had reluctantly moved west to reservations
Cherokees challenged this law and won the case, but the act was passed anyway
Led to the Trail of Tears
Gave the President the power to use the army and navy if necessary to enforce that South Carolina follow the Tariff of Abomination
South Carolina was very upset over this, so Henry Clay will step in and write a compromise (Compromise Tariff of 1833)
Jackson took his re-election as a pronouncement by the people to revoke the National Bank’s charter
So, in 1832, Jackson vetoed the renewal of the National Bank’s charter, saying that it enriched the wealthy at the common people’s expense
The majority of voters approved of Jackson’s action
Jackson creates pet banks/wildcat banks, which are state banks
Jackson will order governemnt funds withdrawn from the National Bank and distributed to these state banks
The problem is that there are no rules for how loans are to be given out and state banks printed too much paper money
Caused many banks to go bankrupt and leads to the Specie Circular forcing people to pay in gold and silver
Cherokees challenged the Indian Removal Act
Ruled that the laws of Georgia had no force within Cherokee territory
The decision was not enforced because President Jackson did not support it
Known as the “Great Compromiser”
Led the War Hawks with John C. Calhoun
Led the Whigs with John Quincy Adams
Ran for president multiple times
Proposed his American System consisting of tariffs, a national bank, and internal improvments
Wrote the Missouri Compromise
Wrote the Compromise Tariff of 1833
Used his influence to provide John Q. Adams votes to win the presidential election
The issue at hand is that at this time there is the same number of slave states and free states
Compromise (written by Henry Clay):
Missouri would be a slave state
Maine would be a free state
What is left of the Louisiana Territory north of the 36°30′ line (Mason-Dixon Line) would prohibit slavery
This compromise passed
New western states adopted state constitutions that allowed all White males to vote and hold office
Free black men could vote too
They omitted any religious or property qualifications for voting
Most eastern states soon followed suit, eliminating such restrictions
As a result, throughout the country, all White males could vote regardless of their social class or religion
Voting for president rose from about 350,000 in 1824 to more than 2.4 million in 1840 mostly as a result of changes in voting laws
In addition, political offices could be held by people in the lower and middle ranks of society
However, this could also mean that those who aren’t knowledgeable or qualified can make important decisions
Property owners (Whigs) didn’t like this because they felt that the poor and uneducated could cast an “inaccurate” vote
Germans - middle class, Protestant, productive workers
Irish - Catholic, poor, worked in factories, suffered from nativism
The Hartford Convention caused the Federalist Party to disappear
Convention held in Hartford - advocated states rights doctrine and nullification
Demanded that the Constitution be changed to a 2/3 vote to declare war and hinted if this did not happen that the Federalist would secede
Almost immediately after Hartford Conventions demands are made, the US learns of Jackson’s victory at New Orleans
Nationalism increases within the US and this group is seen as traitors
Formed during the 1830s by the union of diverse factions that opposed the policies of President Andrew Jackson and the Democratic Party
Many supported Henry Clay, a proponent of internal improvements, protective tariffs, and a national bank
Caused by Adams’s passage of the Tariff of Abomination and was based off of the Virginia and Kentucky Resolution
John C. Calhoun was the leading spokesman against the Tariff of Abomination
He wrote the South Carolina Exposition and Protest
The federal government was created by the states to serve the states
States have the power to declare laws passed by Congress as unconstitutional or null and void
Calhoun also believed that states could terminate their compact with the Union and secede
Would lead to SC being the first state to secede from the US
Caused by the South Carolina Exposition and Protest
In 1832, South Carolina was upset over the 1828 Tariff (Abomination)
They decided to nullify the tariff and then threatened to secede if the federal government attempted to collect the tariff duties within South Carolina
Jackson accepted the challenge and told South Carolina that nullification went against the Constitution, and that he would take steps against South Carolina if they nullified the law
Caused the passage of the Force Bill
“Midnight Judges” were appointed by Adams hours before he left office (at midnight)
Jefferson takes issue with this appointment because the judges are Federalists and he refuses the appointments
The case goes to the Supreme Court and is heard by Chief Justice John Marshall
They decided to keep the appointments but also established judicial review
Judicial review: the legal power of a court to determine if a decision contradicts or violates the Constitution
Judicial review led to the repeal of the Judiciary Act of 1801, removing the Midnight Judges
The Second Great Awakening was largely driven forward by middle-class women who were its earliest converts
More than one hundred women crisscrossed the country as itinerant preachers, holding meetings in barns, schools, or outside in fields
They were the first group of women to speak publicly in America
By the beginning of the new century, women's clubs in towns and cities across the nation were working to promote suffrage, better schools, the regulation of child labor, women in unions, and liquor prohibition
1812 Temperance Movement was launched mostly by women – made up around 65% of membership
Millerites/Seventh Day Adventists
William Miller – founder
In the 1830’s Miller preached that God would return on Oct 22, 1844
When Christ did not return, he decided he had misinterpreted the Bible
Latter Day Saints/Mormons
Joseph Smith –founder
Smith was killed in the “burned out district” in New York for his practice of polygamy
Mormons were persecuted because of polygamy belief – so Brigham Young led them to Utah to settle
Unitarians
Located mostly in New England area
Emphasized reason not revelation
Rejected idea of the trinity
Played a big role in the Abolitionist Movement
1800 Napoleon comes to power in France
Napoleon wants to invade the US
Failed Invasion of US leads to Napoleon selling territory to US
Jefferson sent Livingston and Monroe to France with an offer to buy New Orleans and Florida
Napoleon had just gotten the news of his defeat in Haiti
Napoleon offers Livingston and Monroe: New Orleans and all of the LA Territory for $15 million
Leads to constitutional issues and Jefferson changing his interpretation
Roads built
Robert Fulton - steamboat (1820: 69 steamboats, 1825: 720)
Erie Canal - “Clinton’s Big Ditch,” 364 mi from Albany to Buffalo, reduced $100 per ton to $8, caused more canals to be built
Railroads