Exam 2
Week 6 Lecture
How Cotton Transformed the South
· New cotton found in Mississippi (Petit Gulf)
-didn’t need to be planted by water
-grown anywhere and quickly replaced tobacco and rice
-newest and most popular cash crop
· Cotton was in high demand in Europe and the US
-cotton is used to make cloth
-increase in demand because of the faster machines
-more products could be made in less time
· From 1835 to 1861 (Civil War)
-cotton was 55% of American exports
· Very Important to ALL of America not just the South
Results of the Adoption of Cotton Production in the South
1. The Creation of New States
-began around same time natives were kicked from their land (East of Mississippi to the West)
-auctioned off land formerly the Natives to Euro-Americans for cheap
-Created: Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Missouri, and Arkansas
-Expanded Georgia (the state)
2. The “Second Middle Passage”
-expansion led to slaves being sold from Upper South to Lower South
-brought people to live in harsher conditions on plantations in the Lower South
-large numbers of enslaved people from one region to another (conditions worsening)
-still affects everyday life such as voting
Life Harder for Those in Slavery
· Planters/enslavers made lots of money but at the cost of competition and needing lots of manual labor
-more slaves the more cotton that could be produced to make profit
· Cotton production increased 600% per slave (1820 -1860)
· Slaves faced more work and harsher punishments
· Plantations only been around for 40 years
-ideal of “ long held traditions” were not even a century old
· Designed laws to protect slavery and their plantation economy
The Enslaved Population of the South
· South population was 700,000 people (1760)
-grown to 4 million (1860)
-almost half didn’t work on plantations but instead artisans
-52% had houses far enough away from owners to have/build communities
Family and Religion
· Enslaved families and marriages didn’t count under law
· Quilt making, wood carving, storytelling, and dancing happened in communities
· Shouldn’t be Christian because you shouldn’t enslave people who share the same religion as you
· “Slave bible” (90% Old Testament and 50% New removed)
Week 7 Lecture
The Louisiana Purchase (1803)
· US government bought territory West of the Mississippi from the French
-sold claim to land not the land itself
· Led to the creation of the Indian Territory
-chunk of land West of the Mississippi
-destination for Natives during the Indian Removal
The War of 1812 (1812-1815)
· The war between USA/some native nations and Britain/Canda/many native nations
1. The Shawnee Nation (Ohio) and the United Indigenous Front Against American Expansion
· Two brothers from the Shawnee Nation
-Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa
- Tenskwatawa was a religious prophet
· Led a war to prevent American expansion
· Tecumseh traveled up and down the borderlands of the USA east of the Mississippi to convince Indigenous nations to band together and fight the USA
-to create their own indigenous state
· Joined the British once 1812 started
2. The “Upper Creek” Muscogee in Alabama
· Remained politically independent
· Upper Creek with Tecumseh (AL)
· Lower Creek with America/neutral (GA)
-Upper won many battles
-America brought in militia (won 20 million)
· America won and killed over 500 Muscogee
Result of the War of 1812
· No winners
-Natives lost the most
· British and US met to discuss treaty
-Natives not invited
-no more supplies to natives (along the Western border)
-loss of European ally
· Easier to force Natives
Indian Removal in GA
· Called “Indian Removal”
-now known as “ethnic cleansing”
· Started before Removal Act of 1830
-loss of land though treaties
-1821 Treaty of Idnian Spring
-formation of Dekalb County
· Removed and moved to Alabama
-William MacIntosh had gained from the removal
-William was mixed with European and Native
-GA “pay” debt of the signers and then force them to pay
Cherokee Resistance to Indian Removal
· GA announced the seize of Cherokee land (1820)
-enforced GA laws on Cherokee land
-US Supreme Court sided with the Cherokee
-“own territory” therefore GA couldn’t enforce laws there
-Andrew Jackson ignored the ruling
-forced Cherokee to move West (1838) aka the Trail of Tears
-1/4 removed
Result of Indian Removal
· Some negotiated (Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio)
· More favor in gov then no favor
· Separation of powers/abuse of powers
Texas
· Early 19th Mexico claimed Texas
· New President
-forced Catholicism and outlawed slavery
-got revolted in 1836
-Texas free from Mexico
· Republic of Texas expulsed indigenous nations
-pushed closer to Indian Territory
· Texas brought slavery back (1845)
-couldn’t remove Comanche
California
· Mexican American War (1846-1848)
-previously part of Mexico
· Gold Rush brought the whites
-William Tecumseh Sherman (banking)
· Euro-Americans seized land that was Mexican Ranchers (in violation of treaty)
-segregated Chinese immigrants
-denied public education and the right to testify
· Euro-Americans treated natives the worst
1. Women subjected to sexual violence
2. People sold as slaves or forced in mines
-written into state law
3. Rewarded murder of Native Americans
-classified as genocide
-government and private citizens massacred (9,000-16,000 people)
· 100,000-150,000 (before 1848)
· 30,000 (after 1861)
-70,000 killed in 13 years
The Plains
· Peak of Indigenous power (Comanche, Lakota, Arapaho, and Cheyenne)
-fear of indigenous power
Week 8 Lecture
Causes of the Civil War (1861-1865)
· Western expansion made slavery the #1 political issue
1. The American Party “Know Nothings”
-nativist, anti-immigrant party
-doesn’t support Catholic or foreign politicians
-many were Protestants
-torn on the issue of slavery
2. The Republican Party
-Northern party committed to not expand slavery
-wanted all new states to be free
-as a whole not against slavery
-many members were
The Civil War (1861-1865)
· Start due to Lincoln (1860)
-Republican and scared slave owners
· South: Maryland, Kentucky, & Missouri
-formed the Confederate States of America
-750,000 people killed
· 500,000 of 4 million escaped
· 100,000 joined the U.S. army
· Emancipation Proclamation (1863)
-wasn’t issued out of kindness but as a response to the fight of enslaved
-only applied to the Confederate
-territory conquered by the U.S. Army were still enslaved
-only applied to everyone under the 13th amendment (1865)
General Sherman, Georgia, and African Americans
· General Sherman captured Atlanta (9/21/1864)
· Seized land belonging to the Confederacy and burned crops (ruin morale)
· Asked formerly enslaved what they wanted
-they wanted land
-he set aside 400,000 acres of land
-from Charleston to Jacksonville
· Aka 40 acres and a mule
Reconstruction
The Spring/Summer of 1865
· Civil War ended (4/9/1865)
-VP became president (Andrew Jackson)
-Democratic from Tennessee
-gave pardons and gave back land
· Lincoln assassinated on (4/14/1865)
· Freed people gained no land
-became sharecroppers (gave up 50%)
-either black or white
· “Black Codes” made freed slaves lives hard
-Johnson did nothing to stop them
-issue of “states’ rights”
Johnson vs. Congress
· Congress mainly Republican and a Democrat as president
1. The Civil Rights Acts of 1866
-all Americans had equal rights and equal protection under law, and anybody born on US soil is a citizen (besides Natives)
-designed to get rid of “Black Codes”
-Johnson vetoed but got overridden by 2/3 votes
2. The Fourteenth Amendment
· Johnson and Congress clashed on the 14th
· Gave all native born/naturalized people automatic American citizenship and that states couldn’t take away the rights of any citizens
· Was passed!
3. The Military Reconstruction Act of 1867
· Allowed military rule in the South
-dissolving the state legislature
· Direct rule from Washington
· Johnson vetoed but Congress overrode it
4. Johnson’s Impeachment
· Congress impeached Johnson but couldn’t get 2/3 majority to remove him (1868)
· Johnson backed out and allowed Congress to do what they felt
Republican Rule in the South
· South states held elections, rewrote state constitutions, and formed state legislators
-African Americans included
-not women until (1920)
· refused military rule and black participation
-formed the KKK
-racism and violence
-disbanded after reconstruction in (1867)
The End of Reconstruction
· federal government removed troops in Confederate states ending military rule (1877)
· passed Jim crow laws
· laws to prevent black voting
-black protested (North and South)
-took to court with 1866 Civil rights Act as a basis
· Gained: mobility, education, legally recognized families, marriages, automatic citizenship, and no longer property by law
· Not Gained: political rights, no land, economic independence, and equal protection under the law
Week 9 Lecture
The End of Reconstruction
Changed Production
Mechanization of production- use of machine power over physical labor or elemental power (water and wind)
· Now used machines powered by fossil fuels to produce more, more efficiently
· Coal powered steam engine
-factor equipment, trains, and ships
· Novel overproduction of goods
· Not much living in subsistence (edge of survival)
Changed How We Work
Factory system- places where several machines were placed to produce a good/product
· Workers now worked at the pace and place of where the machines were
· No more working at home
· No more working at their own pace
· Factory owners who wanted to produce more would speed up the machines and the working them
· Still present in our everyday lives
-going to school/work mainly not at home
· Time became important because machines needed to be worked by humans
-led to shifts at work
· Bad working conditions and bad living conditions
Changed How We Work
· Having to go to work led to people moving closer to factories
Urbanization- growth of cities (grew 7x bigger)
· Lived in tenements (that were overcrowded)
STARTED to Change Gender Roles
· Working class all went to work
· Middle class only men went while women stayed home
-women head of home affairs
-teach husbands morality
-led to less equality for men
Reform Movements
1. Temperance Movement
· limited consumption of alcohol
· middle class women telling working class men not to drink
· all native middle class women telling foreigners not to open pubs
Women’s Christian Temperance Movement (1874)- supported female suffrage in 1879
2. Women’s Suffrage
Suffrage- the right to vote
· Middle class women who wanted women suffrage
National American Women’s Suffrage Association (1890)
3. Civil Rights
· Middle class African American women wanted Civil Rights and to fight oppression
· Ida B. Wells
National Association of Colored Women (1896)- organized Black women to fight for women’s suffrage, desegregation, and equal rights
Immigration in Industrialized, Urban America
· 25 million immigrants arrived in US (1870-1920)
· Eastern and Southern Europe: Italy, Poland, and Eastern European Jews
· Most Catholic or Jewish (minorities in Protestant majority)
· Asia: Japan, China, and Korea
Industrialization and Urbanization was Important
1. Immigrants came for work (industry or construction projects)
· Bridges and sewer systems
· Famous New York buildings: Empire State Building
2. Immigrants made up large parts of urban populations
3. Steamships(powered by a steam engine powered by coal)
· Made going back home easier (for immigrants)
· 25% of immigrated went back to their home country
· 75% of immigrants stayed
Chain migration- immigrants bringing their families from their homelands
Flashcards are a learning tool that consists of a set of cards, each containing a prompt on one side and the correct answer or definition on the other. They are commonly used for memorization, review, and self-testing.
Benefits of Flashcards:
Active Recall: Encourages learners to actively retrieve information, enhancing memory retention.
Spaced Repetition: Can be used in a spaced repetition system to optimize learning intervals and improve long-term retention.
Versatility: Useful for various subjects and can be tailored to fit specific learning needs.
Engagement: Making and using flashcards can keep learners engaged and motivated.
Week 6 Lecture
How Cotton Transformed the South
· New cotton found in Mississippi (Petit Gulf)
-didn’t need to be planted by water
-grown anywhere and quickly replaced tobacco and rice
-newest and most popular cash crop
· Cotton was in high demand in Europe and the US
-cotton is used to make cloth
-increase in demand because of the faster machines
-more products could be made in less time
· From 1835 to 1861 (Civil War)
-cotton was 55% of American exports
· Very Important to ALL of America not just the South
Results of the Adoption of Cotton Production in the South
1. The Creation of New States
-began around same time natives were kicked from their land (East of Mississippi to the West)
-auctioned off land formerly the Natives to Euro-Americans for cheap
-Created: Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Missouri, and Arkansas
-Expanded Georgia (the state)
2. The “Second Middle Passage”
-expansion led to slaves being sold from Upper South to Lower South
-brought people to live in harsher conditions on plantations in the Lower South
-large numbers of enslaved people from one region to another (conditions worsening)
-still affects everyday life such as voting
Life Harder for Those in Slavery
· Planters/enslavers made lots of money but at the cost of competition and needing lots of manual labor
-more slaves the more cotton that could be produced to make profit
· Cotton production increased 600% per slave (1820 -1860)
· Slaves faced more work and harsher punishments
· Plantations only been around for 40 years
-ideal of “ long held traditions” were not even a century old
· Designed laws to protect slavery and their plantation economy
The Enslaved Population of the South
· South population was 700,000 people (1760)
-grown to 4 million (1860)
-almost half didn’t work on plantations but instead artisans
-52% had houses far enough away from owners to have/build communities
Family and Religion
· Enslaved families and marriages didn’t count under law
· Quilt making, wood carving, storytelling, and dancing happened in communities
· Shouldn’t be Christian because you shouldn’t enslave people who share the same religion as you
· “Slave bible” (90% Old Testament and 50% New removed)
Week 7 Lecture
The Louisiana Purchase (1803)
· US government bought territory West of the Mississippi from the French
-sold claim to land not the land itself
· Led to the creation of the Indian Territory
-chunk of land West of the Mississippi
-destination for Natives during the Indian Removal
The War of 1812 (1812-1815)
· The war between USA/some native nations and Britain/Canda/many native nations
1. The Shawnee Nation (Ohio) and the United Indigenous Front Against American Expansion
· Two brothers from the Shawnee Nation
-Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa
- Tenskwatawa was a religious prophet
· Led a war to prevent American expansion
· Tecumseh traveled up and down the borderlands of the USA east of the Mississippi to convince Indigenous nations to band together and fight the USA
-to create their own indigenous state
· Joined the British once 1812 started
2. The “Upper Creek” Muscogee in Alabama
· Remained politically independent
· Upper Creek with Tecumseh (AL)
· Lower Creek with America/neutral (GA)
-Upper won many battles
-America brought in militia (won 20 million)
· America won and killed over 500 Muscogee
Result of the War of 1812
· No winners
-Natives lost the most
· British and US met to discuss treaty
-Natives not invited
-no more supplies to natives (along the Western border)
-loss of European ally
· Easier to force Natives
Indian Removal in GA
· Called “Indian Removal”
-now known as “ethnic cleansing”
· Started before Removal Act of 1830
-loss of land though treaties
-1821 Treaty of Idnian Spring
-formation of Dekalb County
· Removed and moved to Alabama
-William MacIntosh had gained from the removal
-William was mixed with European and Native
-GA “pay” debt of the signers and then force them to pay
Cherokee Resistance to Indian Removal
· GA announced the seize of Cherokee land (1820)
-enforced GA laws on Cherokee land
-US Supreme Court sided with the Cherokee
-“own territory” therefore GA couldn’t enforce laws there
-Andrew Jackson ignored the ruling
-forced Cherokee to move West (1838) aka the Trail of Tears
-1/4 removed
Result of Indian Removal
· Some negotiated (Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio)
· More favor in gov then no favor
· Separation of powers/abuse of powers
Texas
· Early 19th Mexico claimed Texas
· New President
-forced Catholicism and outlawed slavery
-got revolted in 1836
-Texas free from Mexico
· Republic of Texas expulsed indigenous nations
-pushed closer to Indian Territory
· Texas brought slavery back (1845)
-couldn’t remove Comanche
California
· Mexican American War (1846-1848)
-previously part of Mexico
· Gold Rush brought the whites
-William Tecumseh Sherman (banking)
· Euro-Americans seized land that was Mexican Ranchers (in violation of treaty)
-segregated Chinese immigrants
-denied public education and the right to testify
· Euro-Americans treated natives the worst
1. Women subjected to sexual violence
2. People sold as slaves or forced in mines
-written into state law
3. Rewarded murder of Native Americans
-classified as genocide
-government and private citizens massacred (9,000-16,000 people)
· 100,000-150,000 (before 1848)
· 30,000 (after 1861)
-70,000 killed in 13 years
The Plains
· Peak of Indigenous power (Comanche, Lakota, Arapaho, and Cheyenne)
-fear of indigenous power
Week 8 Lecture
Causes of the Civil War (1861-1865)
· Western expansion made slavery the #1 political issue
1. The American Party “Know Nothings”
-nativist, anti-immigrant party
-doesn’t support Catholic or foreign politicians
-many were Protestants
-torn on the issue of slavery
2. The Republican Party
-Northern party committed to not expand slavery
-wanted all new states to be free
-as a whole not against slavery
-many members were
The Civil War (1861-1865)
· Start due to Lincoln (1860)
-Republican and scared slave owners
· South: Maryland, Kentucky, & Missouri
-formed the Confederate States of America
-750,000 people killed
· 500,000 of 4 million escaped
· 100,000 joined the U.S. army
· Emancipation Proclamation (1863)
-wasn’t issued out of kindness but as a response to the fight of enslaved
-only applied to the Confederate
-territory conquered by the U.S. Army were still enslaved
-only applied to everyone under the 13th amendment (1865)
General Sherman, Georgia, and African Americans
· General Sherman captured Atlanta (9/21/1864)
· Seized land belonging to the Confederacy and burned crops (ruin morale)
· Asked formerly enslaved what they wanted
-they wanted land
-he set aside 400,000 acres of land
-from Charleston to Jacksonville
· Aka 40 acres and a mule
Reconstruction
The Spring/Summer of 1865
· Civil War ended (4/9/1865)
-VP became president (Andrew Jackson)
-Democratic from Tennessee
-gave pardons and gave back land
· Lincoln assassinated on (4/14/1865)
· Freed people gained no land
-became sharecroppers (gave up 50%)
-either black or white
· “Black Codes” made freed slaves lives hard
-Johnson did nothing to stop them
-issue of “states’ rights”
Johnson vs. Congress
· Congress mainly Republican and a Democrat as president
1. The Civil Rights Acts of 1866
-all Americans had equal rights and equal protection under law, and anybody born on US soil is a citizen (besides Natives)
-designed to get rid of “Black Codes”
-Johnson vetoed but got overridden by 2/3 votes
2. The Fourteenth Amendment
· Johnson and Congress clashed on the 14th
· Gave all native born/naturalized people automatic American citizenship and that states couldn’t take away the rights of any citizens
· Was passed!
3. The Military Reconstruction Act of 1867
· Allowed military rule in the South
-dissolving the state legislature
· Direct rule from Washington
· Johnson vetoed but Congress overrode it
4. Johnson’s Impeachment
· Congress impeached Johnson but couldn’t get 2/3 majority to remove him (1868)
· Johnson backed out and allowed Congress to do what they felt
Republican Rule in the South
· South states held elections, rewrote state constitutions, and formed state legislators
-African Americans included
-not women until (1920)
· refused military rule and black participation
-formed the KKK
-racism and violence
-disbanded after reconstruction in (1867)
The End of Reconstruction
· federal government removed troops in Confederate states ending military rule (1877)
· passed Jim crow laws
· laws to prevent black voting
-black protested (North and South)
-took to court with 1866 Civil rights Act as a basis
· Gained: mobility, education, legally recognized families, marriages, automatic citizenship, and no longer property by law
· Not Gained: political rights, no land, economic independence, and equal protection under the law
Week 9 Lecture
The End of Reconstruction
Changed Production
Mechanization of production- use of machine power over physical labor or elemental power (water and wind)
· Now used machines powered by fossil fuels to produce more, more efficiently
· Coal powered steam engine
-factor equipment, trains, and ships
· Novel overproduction of goods
· Not much living in subsistence (edge of survival)
Changed How We Work
Factory system- places where several machines were placed to produce a good/product
· Workers now worked at the pace and place of where the machines were
· No more working at home
· No more working at their own pace
· Factory owners who wanted to produce more would speed up the machines and the working them
· Still present in our everyday lives
-going to school/work mainly not at home
· Time became important because machines needed to be worked by humans
-led to shifts at work
· Bad working conditions and bad living conditions
Changed How We Work
· Having to go to work led to people moving closer to factories
Urbanization- growth of cities (grew 7x bigger)
· Lived in tenements (that were overcrowded)
STARTED to Change Gender Roles
· Working class all went to work
· Middle class only men went while women stayed home
-women head of home affairs
-teach husbands morality
-led to less equality for men
Reform Movements
1. Temperance Movement
· limited consumption of alcohol
· middle class women telling working class men not to drink
· all native middle class women telling foreigners not to open pubs
Women’s Christian Temperance Movement (1874)- supported female suffrage in 1879
2. Women’s Suffrage
Suffrage- the right to vote
· Middle class women who wanted women suffrage
National American Women’s Suffrage Association (1890)
3. Civil Rights
· Middle class African American women wanted Civil Rights and to fight oppression
· Ida B. Wells
National Association of Colored Women (1896)- organized Black women to fight for women’s suffrage, desegregation, and equal rights
Immigration in Industrialized, Urban America
· 25 million immigrants arrived in US (1870-1920)
· Eastern and Southern Europe: Italy, Poland, and Eastern European Jews
· Most Catholic or Jewish (minorities in Protestant majority)
· Asia: Japan, China, and Korea
Industrialization and Urbanization was Important
1. Immigrants came for work (industry or construction projects)
· Bridges and sewer systems
· Famous New York buildings: Empire State Building
2. Immigrants made up large parts of urban populations
3. Steamships(powered by a steam engine powered by coal)
· Made going back home easier (for immigrants)
· 25% of immigrated went back to their home country
· 75% of immigrants stayed
Chain migration- immigrants bringing their families from their homelands
Flashcards are a learning tool that consists of a set of cards, each containing a prompt on one side and the correct answer or definition on the other. They are commonly used for memorization, review, and self-testing.
Benefits of Flashcards:
Active Recall: Encourages learners to actively retrieve information, enhancing memory retention.
Spaced Repetition: Can be used in a spaced repetition system to optimize learning intervals and improve long-term retention.
Versatility: Useful for various subjects and can be tailored to fit specific learning needs.
Engagement: Making and using flashcards can keep learners engaged and motivated.