AP US History Survival Guide - APUSH - Home



AP US History Survival & AP Exam Study Guide

Your Guide to Reading, Writing, Multiple Choice Exams, FRQ’s, & DBQ’s.

Mr. Trost

AP US History

Lynnwood High School

AP US History Exam Study Guide

Structure of the Examination

Part One, 80 multiple-choice questions. You have 55 minutes. You are not able to refer to the multiple-choice questions for facts and ideas to include in your essays.

Part Two, every student must answer the DBQ, which is question number 1. You are given 6 to 12 documents to analyze in order to answer a question relating to a particular historical circumstance, event, issue, or theme. For your second essay, you select either question 2 or 3 to answer a question covering the period from colonization to Reconstruction. For your third essay, you select from questions 4 and 5 to answer a question covering the period from Reconstruction to the present. You have a total of 130 minutes to write your three essays. Included in this 130-minute period are 15 minutes dedicated to the document-based question: to read the documents, analyze the documents, and outline your DBQ essay. It is recommended that you use 5 minutes to outline each essay, leaving you with 40 minutes to write the DBQ and 30 minutes to write your two essays selected from each pair. Takes three hours and five minutes: the 55 minute multiple-choice section. The 15 minute reading period for the document- based question, and the 115- minute essay section.

Specifications for the Examination

The specifications for the multiple-choice questions are arranged by topic as follows. 35 percent are political history and government questions, 35 percent are social history, 15 percent are diplomatic history, 10 percent are economic history, 5 percent are intellectual and cultural history. The chronological specifications are as follows: 15 percent from 1607-1789 period, 45 percent from the 1790-1916 period, 30 percent from the period of 1917 to the present, and 10 percent are a mix of questions from among these time periods, known as cross points. Few topics before 1607 appear in the multiple-choice questions.

The time period from which the DBQ will come will published annually in the AP Course Description for History, popularly known among AP teachers as the “Acorn Book.” This publication is sent each year to the AP coordinator for your school.

Political and government history; social history; diplomatic history; economic history; and intellectual or cultural history. Remember that since political history and social history constitute 70 percent of the specifications of the multiple-choice questions, more than one political or social history essay question may appear.

The instructions might direct you to write on one twentieth-century president and one late-nineteenth century president. Questions recently appeared, however, on the rise and decline of the Puritans, on the characteristics of religion in the colonial era, and on the election of 1968. You should be aware that the colonial era is defined as ending in 1789.

Grading The Examination

The US History AP examination is a tough, discriminating examination. It is designed to differentiate among the students who take the examination. The average score for the multiple choice section is 55 to 60 percent correct. You must prepare for the psychological shock of taking a test and feeling that you probably correctly answered only 6 out of every 10 questions.

Each multiple-choice question is worth 1.125 points for a total of 90 points for the 80 questions. The document-based essay and the second and third essays are each graded on a scale of 0-9. The DBQ essay is 45 percent of the essay portion and the other two essays are each 27.5 percent, or 55 percent of the essay portion. The DBQ score and the two essay scores are multiplied by a weighted factor to give a point total on a 90 point scale. the essay potential score of 0-90 and the 0-90 potential score on the multiple choice section add up to 0-180 scale.

AP Course Survival Skills

Getting The Facts

You need tools for studying and writing history: facts and concepts. No shortcuts exists for acquiring a body of factual information. You must work at it! You need facts about individuals, ideas, relationships, groups, conditions, and major societal forces to support the arguments you present. Because history suffers from too many facts, you as a student must select only the appropriate and significant ones to support your concepts.

Always cluster your facts around a concept. A concept is an idea, scheme, or design used to groups facts. Be able to elaborate upon each concept with at least three to five factual supports. Don’t just touch upon a concept or compile a list of facts.

Use concepts to organize your thoughts toward achieving high-level thinking skills of analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and interpretation. Most essay questions invite or force you to answer within the concepts raised in the question, ”The Populist Party foolishly sought political solutions to economic problems. Assess the validity of this statement.” What were those economic problems, what were the political solutions proposed, and how does the element of foolishness fit in?

One approach to answering the question is the following outline, which first describes the political solutions before addressing the economic problems. The question divides into two major conceptual areas: political and economic. The wording of the question asks you to comment on the foolishness of the political solutions and why these political solutions did not solve the farmers’ economic problems.

Example

I. Political Solutions

A. Sought political reforms designed to make government more responsive to the people.

1. direct election of the senators

2. referendum

3. Initiative

(Foolishness: they assumed that their demands would lead to a more sympathetic hearing for their problems, yet farmers were becoming a smaller percentage of the population. Farming was changing from a way of life to a business.)

B. Sought political reforms to break the close alliance between the government and the big business and the favoritism shown by the government for the rich and powerful.

1. Governmental ownership of railroads, telephones, and telegraphs.

2. Municipal ownership of public utilities.

3. Long haul, short haul discrimination.

4. Morgan rescue of the U.S. Treasury.

5. Income tax amendment

C. Political reforms to ease the farmers’ economic plight.

1. Reduce mortgage rates

2. Easement for debt

3. free silver.

4. stop favoritism of high tariff

( Please remember that this is only a conceptual outline. All or most of the following facts fit under the concept of free silver: Civil War inflation, greenbacks, Granger Movement, Greenback Party, bimetallism, demonetization of silver, Crime of ’73, Gresham’s law, Bland-Allison Act, cheap money, 16-1, cross of gold speech, Bryan vs. McKinley)

II. Economic Problems

Expansion of agriculture

Acreage cultivated doubled

Increased number of farms

Great increases in production

Increased number of tenant farmers

(Yet paradoxically the percentage of farmers relative to the rest of the population declined. There were too man marginal farmers, and their political, social, and economic status declined)

Application of machinery to farming

New sources of machines and power

costs too high for marginal farmers

Application of science to farming

New methods of fertilizing

Prior tradition of government aid for farmers: Morrill Act, Hatch Act.

(Farming changed from a way of life to a business. The farmers were victims of their own success. They grew too much, overproducing for the new expanded world market in which they now sold their goods.)

III. Conclusion.

Society was changing, the agriculturally based society and isolated island communities were disappearing, farmers becoming seen as hayseeds, Jefferson’s noble yeoman gone. Federal government had played a role in the expansion of agriculture, and therefore the farmers demand for governmental aid did not suggest a new departure. The new image (not reality) of laissez-faire however, worked against the farmers’ hopes for political solutions.

In addition, by the 1890’s the farmers problems were unsolved by political proposals. The 1890’s was a period of party realignment that ended the third party system emerging.

You may look at the concepts roughed out in this outline, and think that you could never duplicate it. You can with practice, practice, practice! Study to master both facts and concepts. After reading as assignment, think about the concepts involved. The key to answering any essay question is to organize it conceptually. The way to be prepared to organize an essay is to have already thought in terms of the concepts surrounding the topic. The first step in answering an essay question is to decide what concepts apply and how you are going to organize answer. Outline your answer conceptually and fill in the facts to support your concepts. Part of the judgment of your essay is the quality and quantity of factual support. Note that quality of facts is listed first because appropriate and significant facts count more that related facts.

A historian doing research builds from the empirical to the conceptual to the general. He (or she) assembles a collection of facts based upon detective work. Then he brainstorms through the material, conceptualizing it first one way, then another, ad selects the method that presents the story best. After sufficiently digesting and analyzing the facts and concepts, he recounts the history in his own words.

A student must answer an essay question in the opposite way that a historian researches history. Identify the concepts and generalization the question, then assemble the appropriate facts. Unlike the historian doing research, you select the facts and concepts. The essence of answering an essay is to provide a firm conceptual framework with adequate factual support.

When you encounter an essay question, decide what concepts are appropriate. “the North didn’t win the Civil War, the South lost it. Explain.” How many ways can a nation lose a war? The South could have lost for political, economic, diplomatic, or military reasons. Politically the south suffered a lack of cohesion, a bad governmental structure for waging war, poor leadership, division of goals and means, and the burden of simultaneously creating a new government. Economically the south suffered from a lack of resources, the overwhelming might of the north, too few banks, mismanagement of resources, too little industry, and structural defects such as a poor railroad system. Diplomatically the south proved unable to gain allies, to find an outlet for its cotton, or to receive, recognition as a nation. Militarily the south may have pursued outdated military strategy and tactics, lacked a unified command structure, and been hampered by to little attention to organization and discipline. You ideally should select at least three or five major concepts for answering the question with three to five facts supporting each concept. Which concepts you select is determined by which concepts you understand well enough to write about and which concepts you feel you have sufficient facts to support. A conceptually weak esay with excellent facts is also inadequate. Always ask yourself: What are m conceptual arguments and are they factually supported?

You might consider some of the following economic concepts for an essay question dealing with economics: competition, scarcity, supply and demand, resource allocation, opportunity cost, technology, invention, industrialization, interdependence, conservation, and land use patterns. A question concerning an increasing or decreasing economic role for the federal government should include a consideration of the simple question of who gained and who lost from the shift in policy. Which individuals, classes, sections, regions, leaders, parties, ideas, or forces won? The decision to create the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1887 was a victory for something over something even if it was a hollow victory. Think and analyze before you write. You otherwise run the risk of writing the following: “And so, to solve some kind of problem they created the ICC, and lived happily ever after.” What problem? Who is they? Lived happily ever after? Such writing is so easy to grade.

You might include some of the following concepts for a question concerning beliefs and ideas: values, sovereignty, equality, liberty, natural rights, attitudes, ideology, cultural conflict, liberty versus order, religion, myth, individualism, and moral beliefs.

Decide what political concepts apply to a political question. Three great ideas-liberty, equality, and fraternity-dominated both the French revolution and its subsequent historiography. One cannot write anything on the French revolution that ignores these ideas.

If a question asks for the causes of something, be aware of the diverse explanatory concepts that surround the general concept of causation. Differentiate between long- and short-run causes. Remember that most events have multiple causes, and assign relative weight or significance to a few. That is, identify one as the major cause, a second as the most important, and lump the rest together as contributing causes. Don’t forget failure as a cause, since the new in history often springs from the defects of the old. Certainly one of the causes of the adoption of the Constitution was the failure of the Articles of Confederation.

Reading A Textbook

Read your textbook assignments as soon as they are assigned. Many students make the mistake of thinking that since only reading is involved they can read two or three chapters at once. Reading a chapter is not the same as studying a chapter, and not the same as understanding a chapter. Look for generalizations, explanations, and interpretations as you read. Textbook authors do not hide their topic sentences; they are usually the first sentence in each paragraph.

Never simply begin reading a textbook. First look through the entire assignment—notice the chapter title, the subheadings, and all the picture caption, cartoons, graphs, and so forth. Become familiar with the topic before you read. Second, skim the assignment. You might even read one subsection at a time. Next, skim it again. This approach is preferable to reading the entire assignment twice. Concentrate when you read. Reading only words is a waste of time. If someone asks you what you have read when you finish you should be able to say more than simply “fifteen pages.” You might as well have read it backward!

Recent research on reading comprehension indicates that those who learn material keep going over and over it until they understand. Don’t get discouraged. Comprehension rates differ from student to student. Another technique is to read the first and last paragraphs of the assignment. Still another is reading the first sentence of each paragraph before or after reading the assignment. Teachers do students a disservice by calling it a “reading assignment.” For the student it is a “study and mastery assignment.”

Reading a Secondary Source

You will occasionally encounter a secondary source: a journal article, a monograph, or an interpretation. The author usually hits you between the eyes with his thesis: “this author believes that...””In this article I will prove that...””One cannot escape the conclusion that slavery was an unprofitable economic burden on the South.”

Ask yourself: what is the author trying to prove? Most secondary source arguments are so emphatically stated that they are overstated. What are the author’s assumptions? What is his point of view? How does this source compare to other sources you have read? Teachers assign secondary sources to illustrate a point of view on a disputed concept. Ask yourself what the concept is and what point of view is represented. This is the stuff from which essay questions spring. Be critical as you read; be an active participant in the study of history.

How to Write an Essay

The Essay As An Opportunity

An essay gives you the freedom to make a statement in a unique way, but first you must have an argument worth writing and reading. Avoid the temptation to write everything you know or to tell a pleasant story.

An essay allows you to demonstrate your ability to organize material. Everyday conversation is disorderly; writing should not be. Think through and organize your answers to practice essay questions. Take a second look at your creation the next day. While working on a project we frequently feel profound, but Monday’s masterpiece is often Wednesday’s drivel. If possible, give yourself time to reflect on your written work.

The words used in an essay must do more than just communicate. Don’t write about a subject; write to persuade. Be careful of abstract words such as democracy, progress, success, and individualism. Certain abstract words carry a wide range of definitions and connotations. Take the time to define an abstract word to yourself even if you do not incorporate the definition into your essay. It helps you focus on that aspect of the word the essay question intends.

Use adjectives to convey the amount of generality or specificity needed for a particular sentence. “Merchants led the revolt against Great Britain.” “Urban merchants extensively engaged in imperial trade led the revolt against the newly enforced British navigation acts.” The first of these two sentences is vague, the second specific. Now look at another sentence. “The U.S. has a democratic government.” You could have written that sentence in fourth grade! Is it a parliamentary democracy, representative democracy, direct democracy or imperfect democracy? Do you mean political, economic, social, or religious democracy? Do you mean democratic in results or in opportunity? Often a single adjective sufficiently describes a noun; for example, “fascist leaders,” or “marginal farmers.”

The third opportunity offered by essay tests is the opportunity to write. Watch the adults in your life. A major difference between those who are successful and those who are not is their ability to express themselves by written means. Learning how to write concisely gives you an advantage, and the only method of learning how to writ is to write. Mastering writing is hard work, and must be redone each generation. Even the children of Ph.Ds must learn punctuation and vocabulary usage. Concentrate on mastering the basics. Nothing you ever learn matches the supreme sense of self-confidence you feel knowing that you know how to write. Knowledge is power; mastering the communication of knowledge is exhilarating power.

Rules To Follow In Writing Essays

After you have decided what you want to write, the writing of an essay is a race among the amount of paper you have, the clock on the wall, the ink in your pen, and the muscles in your hand. First, know your history; second, organize your thoughts; third present your arguments; and fourth, support them.

Taking a test is scary. Allay those fears by adequate study. If you have studied, you know more than you think, and your initial sense of panic is unjustified. Budget your time, for you have plenty. Delay writing your essay for approximately one-fifth to one-fourth of the allotted time. (For a 35 minute test do not write at least 10 minutes.) If you have more than one essay, outline all your answers before you write a single essay. If you are given a choice, choose your questions carefully after reading the directions and the wording of each question. Think about the question. Do you understand it? Watch for absolute words-never all , only, every, and so forth. Quickly begin to jot down ideas and facts about all the questions you are answering. Don’t forget to number your answers correctly.

Make a conceptual arguments in your essay and check for grammatical errors and misspellings. Some students pound a single point, believing that constant restating adds to an essay. Avoid lengthy discussion of minor or peripheral material.

When you are finished, briefly read your essay and check for grammatical errors and misspellings. The omission of a single word may change the meaning of your essay. A student occasionally begins an essay with one argument, realizes, he has better support for the opposite viewpoint, and changes the remainder of the essay without changing the introduction. For example, he answers an essay on slavery as the sole cause of the civil war by agreeing with the statement in the introduction and proving that there were multiple causes in the body of his essay.

Organizing Your Essay

The first rule of organizing an essay is understanding that there are no standard patterns of organization to follow in cookbook fashion. The nature of the material, the purpose of the essay, and the potential grader determine the pattern of organization. Many teachers insist upon a five paragraph format-introduction, three well developed paragraphs, and a conclusion. The wording of some questions, however, does not fit the five paragraph pattern. “In the 1790’s, the infant United States was confronted y the hostile policies of the two European superpowers. Assess the validity of this statement.” You might organize your answer around at least three broad conceptual points, being careful to include both Great Britain and France. Or you could use a four paragraph format, one for each nation in the body of your essay, and incorporate some concepts within the introduction and the conclusion.

Organize your answer according to the key words in the question-list, compare, contrast, define, discuss, illustrate, explain, defend, differentiate, outline, summarize, and asses. An essay is written in the form of a thesis or argument defending a position or point of view. Substantiate concept with specific facts. Concrete details should fit in with one another and with the appropriate concepts. Stalin died March 5, 1953. Broke your train of thought. Didn’t it? An appropriate fact thrown into an essay in order to impress a grader with your depth knowledge usually has a opposite effect.

A question often permits choice in organization. “In the 1790s, Great Britain and France interfered with our domestic politics, violated our neutral rights, and prevented us from achieving our foreign policy goals. Assess the validity of this generalization.” One approach is to write three paragraphs in the body of your essay, one for each conceptual generalization concerning domestic politics, neutral rights, and foreign policy goals. Suppose you feel weak in one area, though, such is a violation of our neutral rights. Do you want a skimpy, two sentence paragraph sandwiched between two healthy paragraphs? An alternative is to organize the answer around the two countries rather than the three concepts.

In the first approach you discuss the concept itself, and trace it through British and French policies. Along the way you should introduce distinction between these nations and explain shifts in policy. This organization is an effective method to emphasize differences between something that initially seemed similar. For example, the degree of French interference in our domestic affairs far exceeded Great Britain’s. Be careful to remember to focus constantly on the concept.

In the second approach the focus is on the French rather then on French violations of our neutral rights or on French interference with our domestic politics. You should treat the three concepts in the same order within both your French and British paragraphs. If you begin the French paragraph with the violation of our neutral rights, begin the British paragraphs the same way. A disadvantage of this organization is that it may leave the grader wondering if you answered the question.

Answering an essay question requires a plan. In order to answer an essay you must first understand what is being asked. The first five to do in answering an essay are to read the question, read the question, read the question, read the question, read the question. Like reading problems in mathematics, the phrasing is that gives students trouble. Underline the key words or phrases in the question.

Outline an answer before writing. Use a topic, phrase, or sentence outline, whichever you prefer, but watch the time. If you are unorganized, jot down on scrap paper all the concepts and facts pertaining to the answer, and then organize the essay. The final picture doesn’t emerge by itself; you must outline because otherwise your essay will resemble the transcript of a monologue. In conversation you keep talking until the listener gets your point, but in writing you don’t have the advantage of watching facial expressions to determine if the reader understands.

The sequence of conceptual points should be carefully planned. Put conceptual assertions in their approximate order of difficulty, with the most complex or interesting either at the end, to finish your essay on a high note, or at the beginning, to get the grader’s attention.

Each one of your conceptual points should reveal something about the central topic. Your basic assumptions must be as explicit as possible. Be sure not to contradict assumptions.

Test generalizations by thinking of exceptions and counterarguments. The essay grader knows the counterarguments; therefore, you must address them. Either explain the counterarguments fully or put them in a subordinate clause. “The argument that slavery would have died naturally west f the 100th meridian is a hypothesis that assumes slavery was primarily tied to cotton culture. It was instead a racial institution...” This proves you understood, considered, and dismissed that argument because you had a better explanation.

The Beginning Paragraph

Introductory paragraphs are difficult to write. A good beginning paragraph has a clear, precise thesis that unequivocally states your main idea and what you are proving. It takes a position/attitude. In other words, it takes a stand and lets the reader know exactly where you stand. Precision is crucial in the beginning paragraph. Don’t be too broad, including ideas that the essay will not address, or too narrow, omitting ideas or limiting your eventual scope. Let your introduction lead into the body of your essay. You may state your thesis by rewording the question in the form of an argumentative statement, but you run the risk of simply restating the prompt. This is a risky maneuver and one you should avoid unless out of ideas.

History students frequently link their essay to inappropriate, if authoritative, historiography. If the question asks what caused the Civil War, do not build your essay around the remark that the Civil War began with the initial arrival of blacks in 1619 because you have assumed the responsibility for filling in the years between 1619 and 1861. Argue instead that the institution of slavery created political and economic differences too profound for compromise, or that the existence of blacks, emphasizing slavery as a racial system rather than a system of labor, was the root cause of the war. Either statement is more precise than the mere arrival of blacks. Historians who begin with the argument continue to develop it; students usually have difficulty filling in the intervening years. Constantly ask yourself: what does the question ask, what is my thesis, is my thesis manageable?

The Concluding Paragraph

The concluding paragraph is your last impression on the grader. A conclusion should strengthen your essay, not undermine it. Don’t hastily throw a conclusion together. Think about what you have written. If the essay is long, write a brief summary of your main points. Avoid a mere recapitulation of your essay, but don’t introduce new ideas. Another possible ending is to briefly elaborate on your thesis from your introduction.

You may introduce new material in a conclusion if you are not making a new conceptual point. After carefully describing specific causes of the Civil War, you might make some short comments on the causes of war in general. Move from the specific to the general. “The Civil War, like all wars, illustrates man’ inability to compromise. Emotion renders compromise either impossible to achieve or impossible to sustain. Moral righteousness and practical politics cannot coexist.”

Another exception to the rule against introducing new material is the essay that describes the aftermath or result of something. An essay describing the achievements of blacks during Reconstruction might end on a negative or positive note. For instance, racial equality was written into the Constitution but later ignored. “The civil rights laws represented a deferred promise of equal rights. The South slumbered until injustices awakened the North to effective intervention to give blacks minimum legal equality. What might have been in the 1860s was achieved by the bitter struggles of the 1960s. The second Reconstruction completed the promise of the first.”

End an essay strongly. Don’t confess that your essay probably is not worth reading. A conclusion is not the place for apologies for inadequate preparation, acknowledgement of exceptions to your thesis, or concession to opposing ideas. Deal with possible contradictions to your thesis in the body of the essay. Leaving objections out until the end suggests that you just thought of the points and threw them in, like a cook throwing a missing ingredient on top of a half-baked cake. Don’t end an essay with a smiley face, “The End,” or dramatic signature. These give the impression you are trying to get by on personality instead of knowledge.

AP US History FRQ & DBQ Writing Guideline Packet

To be a successful writer in AP US History you must follow certain guidelines. I have compiled a collection of tips, rules, and must do’s for you to use in the writing process and assist you in your quest to develop into an accomplished writer.

Use this as a checklist on every FRQ & DBQ we do in class to insure that you’ve done everything you must do. It will eventually become second nature and with practice become much easier. This will help all of you, even accomplished writers, become better at writing for all of your classes.

Answer the Prompt: This is the absolute number one rule. If you do not answer the prompt you will not score on the FRQ or DBQ standards. You are simply eliminated. Also, be sure you answer all parts of the prompt. Prompts often have multiple sections, so make sure to underline parts of the prompt like key words or areas to address.

Assume a Position/Attitude: Take a side. Of course you may discuss the virtues of both sides of an issue, that’s simply good debating, but you must ultimately choose a side and support it in your paper. If you do not choose a side you are simply being undecided and you will score either not at all or poorly.

What are you proving?: You must prove a point in your FRQs & DBQs. If you go back and read your thesis does it tell you exactly what you’re proving. Not your introductory paragraph, but your thesis. If it does not you need to alter your thesis to make it easier for your writer to follow what you are proving and easier for them to read. The less the reader has to work at reading your paper and searching for meaning the higher your score will be. Think about it, they read hundreds of papers and if you make them work hard they will dock you points for it. Know the system in which you will be tested and work the system.

Develop a Strong Thesis: A thesis statement in an essay is a sentence that explicitly identifies the purpose of the paper. This is the lynchpin to any good paper. It will tell the reader in one sentence what you are proving and what they are to look for in the paper. Do not list in your thesis, that’s what your introductory paragraph is for (paraphrasing what you will use to support your thesis.) Bottom line, if you have a weak thesis, you have a weak thesis you have a weak paper. Prove a point!!!

Dump Your Brain Out On Paper: When you first see the FRQ or DBQ question simply write down on a scratch sheet of paper everything you know about the subject. You may then use that to “steal” information for later while you are writing your outline or essay. This is extremely helpful when you are stuck while writing or to jog your memory about facts that you may not recall while writing. There also may be parts of this you simply don’t use and that’s ok. It gets your mind working and helps prevent writer’s block.

Outline, Outline, Outline: After reading, underlining important parts, and dumping your brain out on paper the next step is to create an outline. Start with your thesis and develop an outline like I showed you in class. Everything on it must support your thesis or it doesn’t belong. Use specific details, facts, and support information to prove your point. When done, it’s useful because you can look at the information on one page and see that it all fits. Your prewriting should not take more than 5 minutes for FRQ, reading the material and prewriting 15 minutes for DBQ so you do not leave yourself short of time to write the actual essay. Doing an outline well will help eliminate anxiety and allow you to concentrate on your writing.

Political, Economic, Culture (PEC): Readers are looking for you to address all three areas in your essay, because all three put together provide the reader with a sense that you completely understand and are able to analyze the topic from multiple perspectives.

Use Transitions: The use of strong transitions links ideas, sentences, and paragraphs together. They will greatly add to the flow and readability of your essay. It will make the essay more enjoyable to the reader, make it easier to read, and increase your score. Vary your use of these words and avoid using the same transitions over and over.

Be Specific (BS): In your thesis and within your answers. Site specific information to aid in your analysis and support your thesis. Develop a detailed outline, within the time frame, that you may use later to write from.

Translate, Organize, Thesis, Essay (TOTE): Translate: underline key words. What do they want to know? Put the questions in your own words. Organize: 5 minutes to brainstorm & outline. Thesis: 5 minutes, be specific and use words from your outline. Essay: 24 minutes to write.

Audience, Voice, Message, Significance (AVMS): Author. Voice- perspective or viewpoint. Message- What does it say? What does it suggest? Significance- Why is it important? These tips are extremely helpful when examining documents for your DBQs.

Defend, Analysis, Back to Question, Answer The Prompt: In your body paragraphs defend your position. Refer back to the question. These both make it easier for you to prove your point and remind the reader what you are proving. Briefly, and in some way, refer back to the question. This allows you and the reader to maintain focus on what you are proving, your analysis, and your supports. Consistently throughout the paper check back and make sure that you are answering all parts of the prompt and what it is asking, not what you want it to ask.

Avoid Direct Quoting: Use paraphrasing, and incorporate the quotes within your thoughts. The readers are looking for your ability to analyze, not dictate.

Avoid Laundry Listing: “In document A..., and document B...” Just say what you’re going to say and prove what you’re going to prove.

Never Stop Writing During the Exam.

Double Space so you can go back and edit.

If you make an error put one line through it, avoid scribbling it out.

Assume the readers know the documents.

AVMS Analysis

A – Author -- Identify the source of the document

V – Voice -- What is the author’s perspective?

Slave Owner? President? Criminal?

M – Message -- Brief summary of the contents

In your own words – do not quote!

S – Significance -- Why is the message important?

How does it prove your thesis?

1 AP Essay Rubric

|8 - 9 |Has a clear well-developed thesis that "answers" the prompt and which guides the essay throughout. |

| |Demonstrates understanding of the complexity of the topic. |

| |Effectively uses all or a substantial number of documents and interprets them correctly (DBQ); uses many accurate facts and details from |

| |the time period (FR). |

| |Effectively analyzes, interprets, and makes inferences from the information. |

| |Supports thesis with many relevant facts and interprets that information correctly. |

| |May contain insignificant errors that do not hinder argument or organization. |

|[pic] |

|5 - 7 |Has a thesis which addresses the essay prompt. |

| |Clearly explains the differences or similarities of the issue; some imbalance is acceptable. |

| |Effectively uses some of the documents (DBQ) or uses some facts to support interpretation (FR). |

| |Includes some outside facts with little or superficial interpretation. |

| |May contain minor errors that do not interfere with comprehension. |

|[pic] |

|2 - 4 |Has a limited, confused, or poorly developed thesis, may restate the prompt, or has weak organization and writing. |

| |Describes differences or similarities in a general or simplistic manner; may cover only part of the topic. |

| |Briefly cites documents (sometimes in a "laundry list") or quotes documents (DBQ), interprets documents or outside facts incorrectly (DBQ &|

| |FR), simply mentions facts without interpretation (FR). |

| |Contains few facts or contains facts that are irrelevant or inaccurate. |

| |May contain major historical errors. |

|[pic] |

|0 - 1 | |

| |Has no thesis or a thesis that does not address the topic. |

| |Shows inadequate or inaccurate understanding of the question. |

| |Contains little or no understanding of the documents or ignores them completely. |

| |Contains inappropriate facts or no outside facts. |

| |Includes numerous errors, both major and minor. |

TOTE Writing Process

T – Translate – Identify what the question is asking

Put it into your own words

O – Organize -- List the historical topics you remember

that are relevant to the question

Categorize topics

Key Words Only!

Include documents on DBQ’s

T – Thesis -- Answer all parts of the question in one paragraph

Be Specific and Concise

REVISE!!!

E – Essay -- Follow the outline you created

Describe the history you know

And Why it is significant to your thesis

Technical Essay Writing (TEW)

An Approach to Teaching Timed AP Essay Writing

One of the more difficult things to teach young students in AP US History, who often find themselves in their first Advanced Placement class, is effective essay writing within a time restricted environment. Sometimes even the brightest students are unable to write essay in the mid-range 5 – 7 category within the time limit. Technical Essay Writing is not a silver bullet approach to that difficulty, but it is an approach that has worked well for me and for my students, and I hope it gives you some success.

TEW for the Free Response Essay

In this testing situation, the student has 30 – 35 minutes choose between two essay questions, translate the question into familiar terms, frame an outline of specific history to write about, and then to construct an essay. No easy task for most 16 year olds. I find that this approach helps them to better manage their time while taking the test, and students end up writing more organized essays that meet the criteria for the grading rubric.

TOTE

Translate (1 minute) – The most common error we find on AP essays when we grade them in Texas is that the student fundamentally fails to answer the question. I have all of my students rewrite the question in their own words at the top of the essay, to continually remind them of what the essay question is asking for. If the student has trouble understanding the question, and is unable to “translate”, I simply have them rewrite it verbatim.

Outline (5 minutes) – I’m a broken record on this with my students. If the outline/brainstorm is well constructed, the rest of the essay writes itself. Here the students list as many specific events, people, court cases, etc. that pertain to the question as they can remember. By early December at least, they should be organizing the items on the outline as they write them down into useful categories. For the weaker writers, Economic, Social and Political will do. Although cliché, they need to start somewhere.

I also tell my students to use the category guidelines provided with many essay questions. For example, the following essay question from the 1995 DBQ:

“Analyze the changes that occurred during the 1960’s in the goals, strategies and support of the movement for African-American civil rights.”

Instead of using E, S, P on this essay, all student should use Goals, Strategies and Support. By using the categories provided in the question itself, you minimize the risk that students will ignore a major portion of the question (which is commonly done).

As writers become more advanced throughout the year, I encourage them to create their own more sophisticated categories when the question does not provide them.

The Outline technique is also a good 5-minute entry task for a class, as well as a diagnostic tool to assess whether or not students are mastering the material as you progress throughout a unit.

Thesis (5 minutes) -- The AP Graders are a quick read.

While they are carefully normed to standards and monitored for grading

inconsistencies, each reader spends on average about 3 – 4 minutes on

each essay. While I have participated many times in this process, and have faith in its accuracy, I also train my students to place the thesis in the first paragraph of the essay, and to specifically answer the question with details from their outline. It minimizes the risk that the reader will miss the student’s main argument, and ensures that the student will not forget to include a well-developed thesis later in the essay.

In this portion of TOTE, I encourage my students to spend a full five minutes writing a one-paragraph thesis to start their essay with. This is also a good entry task or practice exercise to help develop their writing skills. I remind them that the thesis sets the tone for the essay, and mentions specifically what they are going to discuss in the essay. It also allows me to coach them towards writing a thesis in a more specific and directed fashion instead of the general theses we so often read.

Essay (19 – 24 minutes) – Students are most nervous about this aspect of the essay test, but using the TEW writing method, the actual body of the essay is the easiest to write if they have made an accurate and complete outline.

At this point, the first paragraph of the body should be written straight from the outline of the first category. In the case of our civil rights question, again:

“Analyze the changes that occurred during the 1960’s in the goals, strategies and support of the movement for African-American civil rights.”

that first paragraph should discuss the Goals of the movement. Take the first key word in the outline and express it in full sentences format, explaining the idea completely, and then linking it back to the thesis. Repeat this process, in the exact order of the outline, thus wasting no time at all considering the order of what is to be written next. Repeat the process with new paragraphs for Strategies and Support. Their pencil never stops moving during this process, and students who have always struggled to write a timed essay well find they can generate 3 or more pages of good historical material on a Free Response.

Conclusions are fine and can add to the strength of an essay. That being said, I teach my students not to write them for two reasons. First, a common mistake is that the thesis and the conclusion disagree with each other or do not complement each other, leaving the reader confused as to the overall intent of the essay. Secondly, each reader is giving the essay an average of two minutes at the grading. It’s not that they don’t read the whole essay, but the part they will pay less attention to is the conclusion, as no new evidence is introduced.

This gives the students a few extra minutes at the end of the timed write that allows them to add to or rework their thesis, correct errors, proofread, etc.

IMPORTANT: The readers do not grade down for punctuation, grammar and misspellings, as long as they do not interfere with the comprehension of the essay. Poor handwriting is OK, as long as it is legible (you would be surprised what we can read). Rather than wasting time on spelling, the student should concentrate on making sure the ideas and content about the question are there. A single line through a sentence you want to admit instead of a mass of scribbles or erasing is more effective and less distracting. Students can even label the thesis or underline it to highlight for the reader, or, if they want to edit the order of paragraphs, they can number them in order. Be sure they write the label “thesis” in big letters if they feel the need to do that.

Some teachers tell their students to underline the thesis every time, and even to underline documents or specific pieces of evidence they want the readers to notice. I can’t say it will make a difference to every reader at the grading, but it surely doesn’t hurt to use these techniques.

Novels commonly found on the AP Exam

Uncle Tom’s Cabin  by Harriet Beecher Stowe – fictional description of slavery’s evils, wide readership, credited with influencing more to the abolitionist cause

Influence of Sea Power by Alfred T. Mahan – 1890’s book which predicts that the next major war between empires will be won or lost on the oceans

A Century of Dishonor by Helen Hunt Jackson – Early 1890’s novel criticizing government policies towards Native tribes.  She sent a red leather bound, signed copy to each member of Congress.

The Octopus by Frank Norris – exemplifies and criticizes the monopoly held by the railroads and how it strangled the American farmer.

How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis – photojournalism book portraying the horros of tenement housing and inner city conditions.  Sometimes criticized for staging some of the photos/muckraking/yellow journalism

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair – somewhat sensationalized account of the meatpacking industry in Chicago and the unsanitary conditions there.  Contributes to Teddy Roosevelt’s signing of the Meat Inpection Act, but fails to convince the populace of its socialist message.

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald – exemplifies and subtly criticizes the rampant materialism and greed of the 1920’s post World War I generation.

The Sun Also Rises by Hemingway – an anti-war book contributing to the popular belief that World War I was a tragedy that could not be repeated

The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck – story of a Dust Bowl family’s migration to California and the hardships of the Great Depression

Silent Spring by Rachel Carson – considered by many to be the beginning of the modern environmental movement, her book lamented the effects of pesticides on the animal population and the dangers of DDT in particular

AP US History and Related Websites

– The College Board Website – has some good lesson plans, test details, teaching tips and course syllabi. Generally good information, but the CB guards specific test material with fierce copyright protections. Downside: you must register to use the site, and some of the information is used for marketing research for publishers.

-- An independent site with a wealth of AP study guides, information about the test, document databases, and a forum for students and teachers to exchange ideas and issues on. Downside: Updates are sometimes infrequent, and a little of the test info is out of date. Information overload in the notecard section.

-- The Avalon Project – lots and lot of primary source documents. Great for having the students create their own DBQ assignment, or to use as a resource for document analysis exercises. Downside: Sometimes tedious picking through the extensive archive to find what you need or want.

- The American Memory Project. The Library of Congress maintains this site, so it is extensive, accurate and well organized. Get everything from sheet music to pamphlets to lesson plans on this site. Downside: As with many internet lesson plans, hard to find ones that are both valuable and interesting to kids.

– AP Site from Bishop Verot High School, Mr. J. Hamann, Instructor. Site has a nice concise description of the test, but most valuable is a list of recent DBQ topics for the past several years. Gives you an idea of the pattern of testing the College Board uses. Has some useful links to other AP related topics. Downside: None

- Orange High School History site – TONS of links to research sites, class sites, historical sites, you name it. A clearinghouse for history. Downside: about 1/5 of the links no longer work.

Test Tips for the Week of the Mock Exam

Sleep -- Sure, you laugh, but it’s probably the single best thing you can do. You might be able to pick up a couple more of pieces of information, or practice a few brainstorms, and you should – but all night study sessions and cram studying don’t work. There’s research to prove that too. The majority of the content you can learn for this test you already know (or don’t know) and a few hours of studying won’t change that. Get some sleep scheduled into your life.

Eat – Not junk food, brain food. Caffeine is a test enemy. So is sugar. Get a very good breakfast on test days – eggs, orange juice, or oatmeal and some potatoes. They will give your brain morning food to run on and you won’t caffeine/sugar high out in the middle of the test. Also start drinking more water than usual – your brain runs on it, as does everything else. The week after the test, it’s back to burritos and mountain dew. Oh, and one other thing – peppermint stimulates brain function – more studies prove that also.

The day of -- run through your notecards during breakfast, and take a look at the trigger question list you’ve made. Look over one or two of the more difficult brainstorm topics for you. Nothing much else will help you on the actual test day.

Tonight, Monday and Wednesday– Five brainstorms tonight and five Monday night, another five on Wednesday. Pick the themes you know the least. Try to brainstorm themes instead of questions. Use this list to help you:

Settlement

Religion

Economic Development

Slavery

1763-1775

Revolution – C, C, R

Articles of Confederation

Constitution

1790’s

Manifest Destiny

Jefferson and Madison

Transportation Revolution

Abolition

1800’s Reformers

War of 1812

Jacksonian Democracy

The Mexican War – C, C, R

1850’s

Civil War – C, C, R

AP Review/Notecard Terms

1600’s

Jamestown, Virginia

Plymouth Plantation

Mayflower Compact

John Smith/Powhatan

Cash crops

Indentured servants

The middle passage

West Indies

Anne Hutchinson

Roger Williams

Puritans/Separatists

Halfway Covenant

Bloody tenant of Persecution

Maryland Act of Toleration

Single Proprietorship/Royal/Charter

Lord Baltimore

Calvinism

The Iroquois Constitution

Triangular Trade

William Penn

Rice and Indigo

Harvard and Yale

Salem

Quakers

Bacon’s Rebellion

1700’s

Colonial Social Pyramid

Scots-Irish Immigrants

Jonathan Edwards

“Sinners in the hands of an Angry God”

The Great Awakening

Peter Zenger

George/Oglethorpe

French and Indian War

Albany Plan of Union

Treaty of Paris (1763)

Proclamation of 1763

Mercantilism

Navigation Acts/Salutary Neglect

Sugar Act/Boycott

Stamp Act/congress/riots

Quartering Act

NY Legislature Fired

Townsend Duties

Boston Massacre

Sons of liberty/Propaganda

Committees of Correspondence

Tea act

Boston Tea Party

The Coercive/Intolerable Acts

Lexington and Concord

Olive Branch Petition

Bunker Hill

Samuel Adams

Patrick Henry

Thomas Jefferson

Declaration of Independence

King George III

Loyalists/Tories

Thomas Paine

Common Sense

John Adams

Ben Franklin

George Washington

Trenton

Molly Pitcher

Saratoga/Treaty of Alliance

Yorktown

Treaty of Paris (1783)

Land Ordinance

Judiciary Act of 1789

Shay’s Rebellion

Articles of Confederation

Continental Congress

Large State/Small State Plan

Bicameral Legislature

Separation of Powers

Federalists

Anti-federalists

Alexander Hamilton

Northwest Ordinance

The Bill of Rights

3/5 Compromise

Checks and Balances

Jay’s Treaty

Pinckney’s Treaty

Hamilton’s Finances

Washington’s Neutrality Proclamation

Alien and Sedition Acts

XYZ Affair

Kentucky – Virginia Resolutions

1800’s

Revolution of 1800

War with Tripoli Pirates

Marbury vs. Madison

Louisiana Purchase

Manifest Destiny

“Outfederalizing and Federalists”

Lewis and Clark

The Embargo Act

1808 Slave import ban

Non-Intercourse Act

Impressment

War of 1812

The Hartford Convention

James Madison

Treaty of Ghent

McCulloch vs. Maryland

Rush-Bagot Treaty

Florida/Jackson/Seminole

Era of Good Feelings

Cumberland Road

Transportation Revolution

Second Great Awakening

Missouri Compromise

Fugitive Slave Act

Monroe Doctrine

American Colonization Society

Compensated Emancipation

Nat Turner

Elections of 1824 and 1828

The Spoils system

Brook Farm/Oneida Community

John C. Calhoun

“Nullification”

Indian Removal Act

Jacksonian vs. Jeffersonian Democracy

William Lloyd Garrison

Henry Clay

Trail of Tears

Texas War of Independence

Sam Houston

Alamo

Goliad

San Jacinto

Grimke Sisters

Amistad Case

Know Nothing Party

54 40’ or fight

Texas Annexation

Rio Grande/Nueces

Wilmot Proviso

Ostend Manifesto

Mexican-American War

Free Soil Party

Spot Resolutions

Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

Seneca Falls Convention

Temperance Union

Gold Rush

Dorothea Dix

Oregon Trail

Mormon Migration

King Cotton

Compromise of 1850

Gadsden Purchase

Popular sovereignty

“Bleeding Kansas”

Harriet Tubman/Underground Railroad

Pottawatomie Creek

Dred Scott vs. Sanford

John Brown/Harper’s Ferry

Uncle Tom’s cabin

Brooks-Summer incident

James Buchanan

Election of 1860

Secession

Northern/Southern Advantages

Border States

Fort Sumter

Mary Chesnutt

Anaconda Plan

Bull Run I/Manassas

Antietam

Emancipation Proclamation

EX Parte Milligan

Gettysburg

10% Plan

Horace Greeley

Monitor vs. Merrimack

Vicksburg

Atlanta/Total War

Prisoner Exchange

March to the sea

Blockade Runners

Technology vs. Tactics

Election of 1864

Copperheads

Andersonville

Appomattox

1865-1900

10% Plan

Radical Republicans

Thaddues Stevens

Conquered Province Theory

“Redeemer” Governments

Hiram Revels/Federick Douglas

Davis Bend/South Carolina Sea Islands

“40 acres and a mule”

Amnesty Act

Black Codes

Freedmen’s Bureau

Tenure of Office Act/Impeachment

1868/Grant/Bloody Shirt

Sharecroppers

Tenant Farmers

Carpetbaggers

Scalawags

Seward’s Folly/1867

Transcontinental Railroad/Labor

Promontory Point/Wedding of the Rails

Credit Mobilier

Election of 1876

Compromise of 1877

Boss Tweed/Samuel Tilden

Tenement Houses/Sweatshops

Growth of the cities

Knights of labor/Haymarket Square

A F of L/Sam Gompers

International Workers of the World (IWW)/”Wobblies”

Pinkertons

Booker T. Washington/Atlanta Compromise

Plessy vs. Ferguson

W.E.B. DuBois/NAACP

Robber Barons:

John D. Rockefeller

Andrew Carnegie

Cornelius Vanderbilt

Jay Gould

JP Morgan

William Randolph Hearst

Gospel of Wealth

Social Darwinism

Study Terms – 1900 – Present

AP US History

Boxer Rebellion

Great white Fleet

Roosevelt Corollary (Monroe Doctrine)

Panama Canal

Philippines Insurrection

Emiliano Aguinaldo

Open Door Policy/John Hay

Russo-Japanese War (TR’s involvement/significance)

The Jungle

Meat Inspection Act

Pure Food and Drug Act

8/8/8

Upton Sinclair

“Caveat emptor”

Muller vs. Oregon

The Square Deal

Trustbusting/Taft

Election of 1912

Wilson’s Neutrality

“Merchants of Death”

U-Boat war

Elections of 1916

Causes of US entry into WWI

Zimmerman Telegram

Lusitania sinking

Russian Revolution

Birth of a Nation (1915)

Committee for Public Information (Propaganda)/George Creel

Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Schenck vs. United States

16th amendment

Treaty of Versailles

Lodge vs. Wilson

18th amendment

Volstead Act

Speakeasies

Bootleggers

19th amendment

The First Red Scare

Palmer raids

Warren G. Harding

Teapot Dome Scandal

Calvin Coolidge

“Business is King”/Laissez-Faire

Xenophobia

Sacco and Vanzetti

Emergency Quota Act

National Origins Act

Scopes “Monkey” trial

Materialism

The Great Gatsby

Henry Ford

Specialized labor

Assembly line

Tin Lizzie

Lucky Lindy

Babe Ruth

The “it” Girl/Clara Bow

Inventions

Talkies/The Jazz Singer

Women in the workplace

Flappers

Harlem Renaissance

Langston Hughes

Washington Naval Conference

Kellog-Briand pact

Who didn’t prosper?

Herbert Hoover

Black Tuesday

Margin buying

Causes of Great Depression

Hoover Blankets

Hooverilles

Reconstruction Finance Corp.

The bonus army

Unemployment

Deflation

Election of 1932

FDR’s first inaugural address

Trickle-down theory (Keynesian economics)

The Brain trust

The New Deal (Three R’s)

Bank holiday/Glass Steagall Act

CCC

TVA

PWA

Bay of Pigs

Camp David Accords

Chiang Kai Shek

Cold War

Cuban Missil Crisis

Dien Bien Phu

Domino Theory

Douglas MacArthur

Dwight Eisenhower

Fidel Castro

George Kennan

Gulf of Tonkin Resolution

Henry Kissinger

Ho Chi Minh

Iran-Contra Affair

Iran Hostage Crisis

Jimmy Carter

John Foster Dulles

Joseph Stalin

Lyndon Johnson

Mao Zedong

Marshall Plan

Massive retaliation

Ngo Dinh Diem

NSC-68

Nikita Khrushchev

North Atlantic Treaty Organization

Peaceful coexistence

Richard Nixon

Strategic Air Command

Tet Offensive

Truman Doctrine

Yalta Conference

Alger Hiss

Black Power

Brown v. Board of Education (1954)

Civil Rights Act of 1964

Civil Rights Act of 1965

Earl Warren

Fair Deal

Federal Highway Act (1956)

Freedom rides

George Wallace

House Un-American Activities Committee

Hubert Humphrey

John Kennedy

Joseph McCarthy

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg

Lyndon Johnson

Malcolm X

Martin Luther King, Jr.

National Defense Education Act

Richard Nixon

Robert Kennedy

Rosa Parks

Sit-ins

Sputnik

Strom Thurmond

Taft-Hartley Act

Thomas Dewey

Thurgood Marshall

Betty Friedan

Equal Rights Amendment

George McGovern

Gerald Ford

H.R. Haldeman

Hippies

James McCord

John Dean

John Mitchell

New Left

National Organization for Women

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries

Reagan Revolution

Ronald Reagan

Saturday Night Massacre

Silent Majority

Spiro Agnew

Stagflation

Student for a Democratic Society

Warren Burger

Watergate scandal

Woodstock

Supreme Court Case Review

AP US History

MR. Trost

All of the following are court cases which have appeared on past AP US History exams. I have added some of the more modern ones which may be in this year’s exam. For each one, identify the ruling in the case and the significance. You will not need to know the specifies of the case itself, only the decision and the result.

Marbury vs Madison (1803)

McCulloch v Maryland (1819)

Gibbons v Ogden (1824)

Dred Scott v Sanford (1857)

Ex Parte Milligan (1866)

Reynolds v United States (1879)

The Civil Rights Cases (1883)

Plessy v Ferguson (1896)

Muller v Oregon (1908)

Weeks v United States (1914)

Schenck v United States (1919)

Olmstead v United States (1928)

Powel v Alabama (1932)

Korematsu v United States (1944)

Everson v Board of Education (1947)

Dennis v United States (1951)

Brown v Board of Education (1954)

Griswold v Connecticut (1965)

Miranda v Arizona (1966)

Roe v Wade (1973)

United States v Nixon (1974)

Gregg v Georgia ( 1976)

Novels commonly found on the AP Exam

Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe-fictional description of slavery’s evils, wide readership, credited with influencing more to the abolitionist cause.

Influence of Sea Power by Alfred T. Mahan – 1890’s book which predicts that the next major war between will be won or lost on the oceans.

A Century of Dishonor by Helen Hunt Jackson – Early 1890’s novel criticizing government policies towards native tribes. She sent a red leather bound, signed copy to each member of congress.

The Octopus by Frank Norris – exemplifies and criticizes the monopoly held by the railroads and how they strangled the American farmer.

How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis – photojournalism book portraying the horrors of tenement housing and inner city conditions. Sometimes criticized for staging some of the photos/muckraking/yellow journalism.

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair – somewhat sensationalized of the meatpacking industry in Chicago and the unsanitary conditions there. Contributes to teddy Roosevelt’s signing of the meat inspection act, but fails to convince the populace of its socialist message.

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald – exemplifies and subtly criticizes the rampant materialism and greed of the 1920’s post world war 1 generation.

The Sun Also Rises by Hemingway – an anti-war book contributing to the popular belief the World War 1 was a tragedy that could not be repeated.

Key words in essay questions

Enumerate- name over, one after another; list in concise form. Enumerate the great Dutch painters of the seventeenth century.

Evaluate- give the good points and the bad ones; appraise; give an opinion regarding the value of; talk over the advantages and limitations. Evaluate the contributions of teaching machines.

Contrast- Bring out the points of difference. Contrast the novels of Jane Austen and William Hakepeace Thackeray.

Explain- Make clear; interpret; make plain, tell “how” to do; tell the meaning of.

Explain how man, at times, trigger a full-scale rainstorm.

Describe- give an account of tell about; give a word picture of. Describe the pyramids of Giza.

Define- give the meaning of a word or concept; place it in the class to which it belongs and set it off from other items in the same class. Define the term “archetype”.

Compare- Bring out points of similarity and points of difference. Compare the legislative branches of the state government and the national government.

Discuss- talk over; consider from various points of view; present the different sides of. Discuss the use of pesticides in controlling mosquitoes.

Criticize- State your opinion of the correctness or merits of an item or issue; criticism may approve or disapprove. Criticize the increasing use of executive agreement in international negotiations.

Justify- Show good reasons for; give your evidence; present facts to support your position. Justify the American entry into World War II.

Trace- Follow the course of; follow the trail of; give a description of progress. Trace the development of television in school instruction.

Interpret- make plain; give the meaning of; give your thinking about; translate. Interpret the poetic line, “the sound of cobweb snapping is the noise of my life”.

Prove- establish the truth of something be giving factual evidence or logical reasons. Prove that in a full-employment economy a society can get more of one product only by giving up another product.

Illustrate- use a word picture, a diagram, a chart, or a concrete example to clarify a point. Illustrate the use of catapults in the amphibious warfare of Alexander.

Summarize- Sum up, give the main points briefly. Summarize the ways in which man preserves food.

Create Review Sheets Examining the Big Pictures

Make one sheet of paper for each of the following ideas.

First try to fill out the information by memory.

Then fill in the blanks with your notes and the book.

If you are really rough in one area, use APEX tutorials to review the material.

Colonial Society

New England Middle Southern (Chesapeake)

When

What Colonies

Why they settled

Key People

Government Organization

Religion

Economics

*Think about their relationship/connection to/or respect for the home country

British Control

How did they try to control the colonies? Why? Time Line

Mercantilism What is going on in Britain?

How does this correspond with

British Policy with the Colonies?

Salutary Neglect

Road to Revolution

Go through and describe the events that led to the Revolution

Post Revolution: New Nation

Look at the Articles of Confederation

Powers

Weaknesses

Accomplishments

Issues occurring with Western Territories, Foreign powers, Inter and intra state commerce

Why did these issues lead to the Constitution?

Federalist vs. Antifederalists

Bill of Rights

War of 1812

What is going on between England and France at the turn of the century?

Impressments

American Reaction

Causes

Results of the War

Connection to Democracy and Westward Expansion.

Study the Themes: Politics, Nationalism, Democracy, Sectionalism, & Westward Expansion

Themes:

Politics Nationalism Democracy Sectionalism Westward Expansion

Federalist vs. Antifederalist Judicial Jefferson Events, opinions led towards War of 1812

Hamilton vs. Jefferson Economic Jackson What events/people/compromises Natives

States’ Rights vs. Federal Power Political kept the Union together Louisiana Purchase

Adam’s Presidency Literature, art, & architecture Economic Lewis & Clark Cultural Reforms etc. Role of War of 1812

Treaties

Manifest Destiny

Industrial Revolution

*Make the connections with these themes

Include key terms (people, events, etc.) in chronological order

Think about how they impacted the theme

Explain how manifest destiny and expansion led to attempts to expand outside of the continental U.S. (steps towards imperialism)

Connect the themes to Sectionalism and the road to the Civil War

Mr. Trost

ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY

REVIEW ASSIGNMENTS FOR FINAL EXAMINATION

AND ADVANCED PLACEMENT EXAM

Rating the Presidents-Rate the top five and bottom five presidents in U.S. History.

Include evaluations and reasons.

History of African-Americans- Unit by Unit in outline form. Attach notes where needed.

History of American Women- Unit by Unit in outline form. Attach notes where needed.

International/Foreign Policy Continuum Lines (3)

Ten events for each line spanning U.S. History from the colonial period to the

present. Include line placements, descriptions, and reasons.

Domestic Continuum Lines (5)

Same directions as in #4. Remember there are five lines, ten events in each line.

Court Decisions-Twenty most important Supreme Court decisions in U.S. History

Outcomes and reasons for importance.

Time Period Identification-Include descriptions and controversies of each of the major

time periods studies in the course.

Literature by Unit or Time Period-Include five major works of literature for each time

periods with description and genre.

Personal Timelines- Your own timelines including major events and influences.

Social History-Lives of the poor and unknown throughout U.S. History-a review.

*Note: Items 4 and 5 ARE REQUIRED you may choose any five of the remaining eight items. You must complete a total of 7 of the 10 items listed.

With acknowledgement and appreciation to Dr. Paul Dickler, Neshaminy High School Langhorne, Pa.

CONTINUUM LINES

ADVANCED PLACEMENT U.S. HISTORY

1 INTERNATIONAL/FOREIGN POLICY

Isolationism-----------------------------------------------------------------Interventionism

Imperialism-----------------------------------------------------------------Anti-Imperialism

Use of-----------------------------------------------------------------------No Use of Military

Military Force Force

2 DOMESTIC CONTINUUMS

States Rights----------------------------------------------------------------National Power

Individual Rights-----------------------------------------------------------Majority Rule

Immigration-----------------------------------------------------------------Nativism

Laissez-Faire----------------------------------------------------------------Governmental control of

Business

Labor-------------------------------------------------------------------------Management

Women’s Rights

Look these up:

Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)

Equal Opportunity Act

Title IX

Title VII of the civil Rights Act of 1964—look up and read

Affirmative Action

The (un)Official

United States History

Cram Packet

This is not intended as a substitute for regular study ……. But it is a powerful tool for review.

1494: Treaty of Tordesillas – divides world between Portugal and Spain

1497: John Cabot lands in North America.

1513: Ponce de Leon claims Florida for Spain.

1524: Verrazano explores North American Coast.

1539-1542: Hernando de Soto explores the Mississippi River Valley.

1540-1542: Coronado explores what will be the Southwestern United States.

1565: Spanish found the city of St. Augustine in Florida.

1579: Sir Francis Drake explores the coast of California.

1584 – 1587: Roanoke – the lost colony

1607: British establish Jamestown Colony – bad land, malaria, rich men, no gold

Headright System – land for population – people spread out

1608: French establish colony at Quebec.

1609: United Provinces establish claims in North America.

1614: Tobacco cultivation introduced in Virginia. – by Rolfe

1619: First African slaves brought to British America.

Virginia begins representative assembly – House of Burgesses

1620: Plymouth Colony is founded.

Mayflower Compact signed – agreed rule by majority

1624 – New York founded by Dutch

1629: Mass. Bay founded – “City Upon a Hill”

Gov. Winthrop

Bi-cameral legislature, schools

1630: The Puritan Migration

1632: Maryland – for profit – proprietorship

1634 – Roger Williams banished from Mass. Bay Colony

1635: Connecticut founded

1636: Rhode Island is founded – by Roger Williams

Harvard College is founded

1638 – Delaware founded – 1st church, 1st school

1649 – Maryland Toleration Act – for Christains – latter repealed

1650-1696: The Navigation Acts are enacted by Parliament.

- limited trade, put tax on items

1660 – Half Way Covenant – get people back into church – erosion of Puritanism

1670: Charles II grants charter for Carolina colonies – Restoration Colony

1672: Blue Laws: Connecticut – death codes for disagreeing with parents or bible

1676: Bacons Rebellion – Virginia – Bacon wants frontier protection from royal Gov. Berkeley – put down

first uprising against British

1682: Pennsylvania is founded by William Penn. – Quaker – 1st library – center of thought

|North |South |

|Set up laws / codes |Dependent on crop – kills land |

|Brought families |Less urbanized |

|Less land = closeness |Poorer communication, transportation |

|Social and economic mobility |Indian problems |

|Puritan work ethic |Slower defense |

|Better relations with Indians | |

1686: Dominion of New England – royal Gov. Andros – attempt to unify Northern colonies to curb independence –

Suspended liberties – town meetings

Failed – Andros left

1689-1713: King William's War (The War of the League of Augsburg).

1692: The Salem Witchcraft Trials.

1696: Parliamentary Act.

1699-1750: Restrictions on colonial manufacturing.

1700’s – Enlightenment – reason, natural rights, diesm (god made universe but doesn’t control it)

John Locke, Adam Smith, Rousseau

|Colony Characteristics |

|Bi-cameral legislature White, male, landowners vote |

|Town meetings No British Troops |

|Mobocracy to oppose authority Legislature – governor is puppet |

|Courts / law Small, Balanced, Elected |

|No standing armies |

1702-1713: Queen Anne's War (War of the Spanish Succession).

1720 – 1740: Great Awakening – George Whitefield, Edwards, Gibbens – threatning

- salvation for all, extreme piety, Divine Spirit

1733: Georgia Colony is founded. – buffer state

Molasses Act – import tax on molasses, sugar, rum –

to curb trade with French West Indies – not strictly enforced

1735: Zenger Trial – victory for freedom of the press – truth is not libel

1740-1748: King George's War (War of the Austrian Succession).

1754-1763: The French and Indian War

Over Ohio River Valley – trade / settlement

French build forts – Fort Duquesne – and are friendly with the Indians

English Gov. Dunwittie has stock in Ohio Land Company – sends George Washington to expel the French

British declare war

1754 – Albany Plan of Union - for defense – fails and shows disunity of colonies

|Colonies Reject |Crown’s Rejection |

|Taxation by colony, crown, and colonial gov. |Colonies make own laws |

|Southern stated don’t want to participate in |Colonies have own protection |

|Northern wars |Colonies have right to declare war |

|Representation based on hom much money each | |

|colony gives | |

|British should be responsible for protection | |

|President not elected | |

1761 – writs of assistance – search warrents to enforce Navigation acts – James Otis opposes

1763: Treaty of Paris ends the French and Indian War - French loose all territory

Paxton Boys Rebellion – dissatisfied about frontier protection in PA

Proclamation of 1763 restricts settlement west of the Appalachians

Pontiac’s Rebellion – tribes organize against British movement

SALUTORY NEGLECT ENDS

1764: The Sugar – to raise revenue – England in debt

cut Molasses Act in half

objection – 1st direct tax – “No taxation without representation”

Currency Acts – prevents printing of colonial money

1765: The Stamp Act – tax on printed materials to “keep troops in colonies”

colonists don’t want standing army

Sons of Liberty enforce non-importation

Stamp Act Congress – Protests Stamp Act

We buy only from England, and deserve equal privileges

1766: Quartering Act – colonies must support troops

1767: The Townshend Acts – tax lead, paint, paper, glass, tea

colonies react by non-importation, Samuel Adams Circular letter

Governor of Mass suspends legislature

1770: The Boston Massacre.

Golden Hill Massacre in NY

1772: Samuel Adams organizes the Committees of Correspondence.

Gaspee Incident – British ship burned – attempted to collect taxes

1773: The Tea Act - reduces price to tea – gives England a monopoly

Boston Tea Party – dump tea into sea

1774: The Intolerable Acts – to punish Boston

Boston Port Act – closes ports

Massachusetts Government Act – no town meetings, no trial by jury, military rule, Quartering Act

Quebec Act – Quebec added to Ohio River Valley

- Britain supports people in Quebec Catholic, don’t have trial by jury, no election

The First Continental Congress convenes in Philadelphia

|First Continental Congress |

|Moderate – don’t want to split from England |

|Demand rights of Englishmen |

|Joseph Galloway – Plan of Union – council with delegates from colonies, president by Crown – rejected |

|Declaration of Rights and Resolves – reject Intolerable Acts, ultimatum – no trade |

|Establish Continental Association to enforce |

.

1775: Battles of Lexington and Concord

The Second Continental Congress convenes.

|Second Continental Congress |

|More radical |

|Issued “Declaration of Causes and Necessity of Taking up Arms” |

|Appoint George Washington as commander |

|Olive Branch Petition – last attempt to reconcile- rejected |

1776: R.H. Lee’s Resolution – “should be independent states”

|For Independence |Against Independence |

|Military advantages |No military |

|Loss of natural rights |Laws were broken – we are being punished |

|trial by jury, taxation without representation, |Democracy hasn’t worked before |

|quartering, charters, no assembly |No certain foreign support |

|Limited currency |Consequences of losing |

|Fighting for home rule |Not unified |

|British government impractical |Taxation for protection |

|Best time to unite | |

1776: American Declaration of Independence

Thomas Paine's Common Sense

Battles of Long Island and Trenton

1777: Battle of Saratoga – turning point in Revolution

Congress adopts the Articles of Confederation - Dickinson

|Articles of Confederation |

|Independent, free, sovereign states Union for defense |

|Have same duties and restrictions Delegates appointed annually |

|Each state one vote Freedom of speech and debate |

|Individual states can’t enter into alliances Can’t wage war without consent |

|with foreign states Money in treasury depends on value of land |

|Can’t enter alliance or hold treaties without Can’t control trade |

|consent of congress |

Vermont ends slavery.

1778: Treaty of Alliance between the United States and France – sends navy and army

1779: Spain declares war on England.

1781: British surrender at Yorktown - Cornwallis looses

1783: Treaty of Peace is signed – violated – Articles of Confederation weak

Independence recognized

Granted fishing rights

Loyalist restitution of property

Britain withdraws from forts (Not really)

Free Navigation of Mississippi

1785: Land Ordinance of 1785. – government responsible

over territory

Treaty of Hopewell - ends hostilities with Cherokee

1786: Shay's Rebellion – depression, no market, no hard

currency, farmers poor

want Mass. Government to print more money

rebellion put down by donations – Articles of Confederation fails- no army

Annapolis Convention – agreement between states - fails

1787: Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. – to revise Articles .

|Constitution |

|I. House of Representatives – sole power to impeach, bill for revenue |

|Senate – try impeachments |

|Congress – tax, excese, duties, commerce regulation, declare war, raise army |

|II. Executive – commander, make treaties with consent, appoint judges |

|III. Supreme Court – original jurisdication |

|IV. Protection against invasion, domestic and foreign |

|V. 2/3 of both houses to amend constitution |

Great Compromise – bi-cameral legislature (equality in Senate, popular in House)

3/5 Compromise

No importation of slaves after 1808

James Madison develops principles for the US Constitution

Northwest Ordinance – prohibits slavery in west, provides for states to be admitted on equal status

1789: George Washington is inaugurated first President.

Judiciary Act – establish courts beneath Supreme Court

French Revolution – don’t help France

1791: The Bill of Rights is ratified

|Bill of Rights |

|Freedom of speech, press, religion, assembly |

|Right to keep and bear arms |

|No quartering without consent |

|Against search and seizure |

|Not subjected to same offense twice, be deprived of life, liberty, or property |

|Right to speedy trial |

|Guaranteed trial by jury |

|No excessive bail, fines or cruel and unusual punishment |

|Rights not confined to what is written |

|Powers not delegated to U.S. are reserved to states |

First Bank of the United States is established

Hamilton’s Program – debt is good, tie interests of rich, promote home manufacturing, alliance with Britain

|Hamilton |Jefferson |

|People checked by elite |Government run by people |

|Strong central government |Central government too oppressive and expensive |

|National debt |British government corrupt |

|British government is model |Executive not perpetual |

|Executive in for life |Against standing army |

|Weak state government | |

1793: Eli Whitney invents the Cotton Gin.

1794: The Whiskey Rebellion – poor farmers don’t want to pay excise tax – Wash. uses troops to put down

1795: Jay Treaty - with Britain – US will not trade with ports opened during war time that were closed .

during peace time – Britain will leave forts (Not really) and will allow US to trade in Asia

Pinckney’s Treaty – with Spain – free navigation of Mississippi River, right of deposit in New Orleans.

1796: Washington's Farewell Address – strong central government and foreign neutrality

1796: John Adams (Federalist) elected ; Jefferson (Rep) VP

XYZ Affair: France attacks Am. Ships and makes unreasonable demands – no money, no war

1798: Alien and Sedition Acts – illegal to publish anything against government or president

1798-1799: Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions – gave states right to nullify if unconstitutional – anti-Alien and Sedition Acts

1799: Fries Uprising – oppose federal tax on property – put down

Logan Act – citizen can’t represent government - George Logan attempts to negotiate with France

1800: Convention of 1800 – Hamilton negotiate with France, we pay to Am. attacked by France

Thomas Jefferson elected – government changes to Democratic-Republican

1803: Louisiana Purchase – Federalists oppose – establish loose construction of the Constitution

Marbury vs. Madison - Supreme Court declares parts of the Judiciary Act of 1789 – Supreme Court could declare law unconstitutional and powers of Court only given in Constitution

1804: New Jersey ends slavery.

12th Amendment – separate ballots for President and Vice President

Essex Junto – Federalist organization in New England attempts to seceed

1804-1806: Lewis and Clark Expedition.

1805: Tipoli war ends – defeat of Barbary pirates

1807: Robert Fulton builds his first steamboat.

US ship Leopard sunk by Br. for refusal to be searched

Embargo Act – stop exports – no war, no impressment – Federalist object to cut off trade

1808: African Slave Trade ends.

1809: Nonintercourse Act – resumes trade with all but France and Britain

1810: Fletcher vs. Pack - action of state can be declared unconstitutional

1811: Charter for Bank of U.S. rejected

Battle of Tippecanoe: Harrison defeats Indian Tecumseh who made alliance with Indians for defense

1812-1814: The War of 1812 – to protest trade, stop impressment, protect mercantilism

War Hawks – want Canada to join

Federalist against war

1814: Treaty of Ghent – ends war with a status-quo

Era of Good Feelings begins

Hartford Convention – Federalists against War of 1812 and mercantile practices of Madison

1816: 2nd Bank of U.S. created

1st protective tariff

American Colonization Society founded – to relocate free blacks to Liberia

Election of Madison (Rep) vs. King (Fed)

Henry Clay’s American System – federally founded domestic improvements and protective tariff

1817 – Veto of Bonus Bill by Madison – Bonus bill for domestic improvements

Rush- Bagot Disarmament – between US and Br. – to get fishing rights

1818: Convention of 1818 – enforcement of fishing rights – N. Louisiana boundary at 49 parallel

1819: Transcontinental Treaty - Get Florida from Spain – Jackson invades, remove Spanish threat

Panic of 1817 – land speculation, banks can’t pay loans of Bank of US = bank runs

McCulloch vs. Maryland – Enforced constitutionality of 2nd Bank of US and “the power to tax is the power to destroy”

Dartmouth College vs. Woodward- Broad interpretation of contract

1820: Missouri Compromise – Main admitted as free state and Missouri a slave state but no slavery north

Missouri

Land Act – reduce price of land – encourage development

1822: Cumberland Road Bill – to build road – Monroe vetoes

1823: Monroe Doctrine declared – No future colonization of this hemisphere

Treaty with Russia – get everything under 54 parallel

1824: Election John Quincy Adams (Rep) defeats Andrew Jackson (Rep), Clay (Rep)

- Jacksons “Corrupt Bargain”

Gibbons vs. Ogden – interstate trade controlled by fed. courts

1825: The Erie Canal is opened.

1826: Panama Conference (PAN American) - Congress doesn’t send ambassador to avoid slavery issue

1828: Tariff of Abominations – protective – South opposes

South Carolina Exposition and Protest – by Calhoun –

reaffirms right of state to nullify

Election of 1828: Jackson promises to limit executive

power, internal improvements, lower debt

1828: Removes appointies – trusts friends – “kitchen cabinet”

1829: Maysville Road Bill Veto – only within Kentucky

Webster (nationalist) – Hayne (states rights) Debates – began over Tariff of Abominations

1830s: The Second Great Awakening.

1830: Baltimore and Ohio Railroad begins operation.

1831: The Liberator begins publication. – abolitionist become vocal

Nat Turner Rebellion

Cyrus McCormick invents the reaper.

1831-1838: The Trail of Tears--Southern Indians are removed to Oklahoma.

1832 – Tariff of 1832 – raises tariffs again – Calhoun resigns

Force Bill – allows president to do what is necessary to enforce tariff

Ordinance of Nullification – South Carolina nullifies tariff –

Clay negociates and reduces tariff

Veto of Bank of U.S. re-charter

Department of Indian affairs established

Seminole War with Indians begins

Cherokee Nation vs. Georgia – Federal government has control, not Georgia

Agreement with Britain to open West Indies ports

1833: Roger Taney removes federal funds from Bank of U.S. by order – thinks bank is unconstitutional

1835-1836: Texas War for Independence – “Lone Star Republic”

1836: The Gag Rule

Specie Circular – western land must be paid by hard currency

Election of 1836 – Harrison (Whig) defeated by Van Buren (Democrat)

1837: US recognizes the Republic of Texas.

Oberlin College enrolls its first women students.

Charles Bridge vs. Warren Bridge- only strict interpretation of contract

Panic of 1837 – in part due to Jackson’s withdrawal of funds from Bank of U.S.

- Van Buren does nothing

1938 – 1839: Aroostook “War” – bloodless – boundary dispute between Maine and New Brunswick

1840: Independent Treasury System – constructs vaults to hold federal money

Election of 1840 – Harrison (Whig) defeats Van Buren

- Harrison catches pneumonia and dies, VP John Tyler becomes president

|Democrats |Whigs |

|Jackson, Calhoun, Van Buren, Benton |Clay, Webster, John Quincy Adams, Harrison |

|“Republicans” |“Federalists” |

|Against monopolies and privilege |For national power; Bank of US |

|Decrease tariff |Increase in tariffs |

|For state rights |Internal Improvements |

1841: Independent Treasury Act Repealed

Tyler vetoes re-charter of Bank of U.S.

Preemption Bill – to distribute money from sale of western lands to states – bill defeated

1842: Tariff Bill – raised tariffs back to 1832 status

Dorr Rebellion: Rhode Island – rebellion against land qualifications for voting – Tyler puts down

1839: Webster – Ashburton Treaty – ends boundary dispute

1843: Oregon Trail - migration

1844: Election of 1844 –Polk (Dem) defeats Clay (Whig) and Birney (Liberty – anti-slavery)

1845: Taxes annexation Bill – by Tyler – permits admission of Texas and Florida

Annexation of Texas

1846: Elias Howe invents the sewing machine.

1846-1848: Mexican-American War- Gen. Taylor provokes Mexicans by moving into disputed

Rio-Grande / Neuces River

- Three part plan to take over Mexico – decide against

Slidell Mission –Slidell sent to negotiate – rejected by Mexico

1846,1847: Wilmont Provisto – no slavery in new states formed from Mexican land – rejected

54” 40’ or Fight – Get Oregon below 49th parallel

Reestablish Independent Treasury System – vaults

Walker Tariff Bill – lowered tariff

1847 – Polk Doctrine – resurrection of Monroe Doctrine concerning admitting new states into union

Obtain Oregon below 49 parallel

1848: Trist Mission – Trists negotiates Treaty of Guadelupe Hidalgo

- Get territory of Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming

Gold is discovered at Sutter's Mill in California.

Women's Rights Convention is held in Seneca Falls, NY – headed by Mott and Stanton

Election of 1848 – Taylor (Whig) defeats Cass (Dem. – father of pop. sovereignty) and

Van Buren(Free-Soil – abolitionists) – Taylor dies (1850) – Milard Fillmore VP

1850: Clay’s Compromise of 1850 – passes as separate acts during Fillmore – but violated

California free state

Other areas – popular sovereignty

US takes Texas debts

Slave trade banned in Washington

Fugitive Slave Law strengthened

Clayton – Bulwer Treaty – U.S. and Britain agree to neutrality of a canal in Central America

1852: Commodore Matthew Perry opens Japan to US trade.

Election of 1852: Pierce (Dem) defeats Scott (Whig)

1853: Gadsden Purchase – buy land from Mexico to build RR

Uncle Tom’s Cabin - Stowe

1854: The Kansas-Nebraska Act - passed to create two states for a RR to go to west – slavery in states

determined by popular sovereignty – North fears overturn of Missouri Compromise

New England Emigrant Aid Society – into Kensas / Nebraska territory

1854-1859 – Bleeding Kansas – Topeka (Free Soilers) government vs. LeCompton (slavery) gov.

Ostend Manifesto – by Buchanan to take Cuba – rejected

Walker expedition – Walker raises army, takes Nicaragua, Pierce recognizes new government

1856: Lawrence Mob Violency: abolitionist materials burned

Pottawatomie Massacre: John Brown kills four pro-slavery people

Election of 1856: Buchanan (Dem) defeats Fremont (Rep –Free Soil) and Fillmore (Know Nothings)

1857: The Dred Scott decision.

slaves are property to be taken anywhere – allows for slavery in North

Missouri Compromise unconstitutional

LeCompton Constitution rejected

Panic of 1857 – depression – Buchanan does nothing

1858 – Lincoln – Douglas Debates – on extension of slavery into new territories

Free Port Doctrine – Dred Scott decision has to be enforced – if not popular sovereignty rules

“A House Divided” against itself can’t stand – Lincoln’s speech

1859 – John Brown’s Raid – Harpers Ferry to free slaves

1860: Crittenden Compromise – last attempt at amendment against barring slavery below 36’ 30 line - fails

1860: Election of 1850 – Lincoln (Rep) defeats Douglas (Dem)

Lincoln not abolitionst

|For Seccession |Against Seccession |

|North violates rights – doesn’t enforce fugitive laws |Not truly free and independent state |

|History – right to abolish a destructive government |Agreed to follow majority |

|Money from treasury goes for Northern interests |Gave up rights to join union |

|Government for the north |“form a more perfect union” |

|Gov. taking away property |Contract among people not states |

|No majority – rights taken away | |

1860-1865: The Civil War

1860: South Carolina secedes.

Beginning of Industrial Revolution – “Guilded Age”

1861: The Civil War begins at Fort Sumter – Beauregard (S)

fires first shot

“Necessity Knows no Law” – Lincoln increases army,

navy, 1st income tax, green backs, no freedom

of press or speech, Villandigham (Copperhead – Peace Dem) jailed

Confederacy established – Davis – President; Stephens - VP

|Confederate Constitution |

|No protective tariffs No federal funded improvements |

|States could impeach federal officers States supreme |

|Slavery protected 2/3 of house to appropriate money (Problem) |

1861 – Kansas admitted as a free state

Ex Parte Marryman – Lincoln suspends habeas corpus and

passes martial law in Maryland – Taney says only Congress can

Suspend habeas corpus

Bull Run – South wins – Civil War becomes long

1862: Pacific RR Act – partially fed. funded – gave land for RR

Homestead Act – 1862 – gov. land grants for agricultural college

1863: Battle at Antietam

Banking Acts (1863, 1864) – establish federally charted banks

Draft Riot - NY

The Emancipation Proclamation.

Battle of Gettysburg – turning point

Lincoln announces "10 Percent Plan." – lenient plan –

must plan allegiance to US

1864: Election of 1864 – Lincoln (Rep) defeats McClellan (Dem)

Wade – Davis Bill: South divided into military units until majority pledges allegiance and bans slavery

Wade - Davis Manifesto: Congress controls Reconstruction

Pullman Car and Refrigerated Car invented

Sand Creek Massacre – Chivington attacks defenseless Indian village

1865: Civil War Ends – Lee surrenders to Grant at Appomattox, VA

1865: Freedman's Bureau is established – education and food

Lincoln is assassinated – Andrew Johnson becomes president

Johnson’s amnesty plan – pardons almost all Confederates

Thirteenth Amendment – abolishes slavery

1866: Ex Parte Milligan – Military courts can’t try civilians when civil courts are open

Civil Rights Act is passed over Johnson's veto – gave blacks equal rights

National Labor Union formed – short lived – attempted political involvement (womens rights, temperance, 8hr day, cooperatives)

Fetterman Massacre – troops killed

1867: Alaska Purchased.

Grange – organization formed by Kelly for social and educational reform for the farmer – Farmers face deflation, debt, drought, depression

Reconstruction Acts – divide South into 5 military units, protect black voting, est. new constitutions

1868: Tenure of Office Act – Pres. Can’t remove any appointed official without Senate consent

- declared unconstitutional – Congress can’t take away powers of Pres.

14th Amendment – All persons born/ naturalized within US are citizens – equal protection

Ku Klux Klan begins.

Washita River – Custer destroys Cheyenne village

Carnegie Steel Company is formed.

Election of 1868: Grant (Rep) defeats Seymore (Dem)

1869: Transcontinental RR completed from Union Pacific and Central Pacific

Knights of Labor formed - secret

1870: Fifteenth Ammendment is ratified – right to vote can’t be determined by race, color, etc.

Force Acts - to protect the constitutional rights guaranteed to blacks by the 14th and 15th Amendments

Standard Oil Company is formed.

1872: Credit Mobilier Scandal – stock holders of RR construction

company overcharge gov. for job

Election 1872: Grant re-elected

1873: Slaughterhouse Cases – 14th Am doesn’t place fed gov’t under

obligation to protect basic rights concerning monopolies

1874: Red River Wars – last attempt to resist reservationis

Farmers Alliances – anti-RR pools, rebates, pass Granger laws

1875: Civil Rights Act – gave blacks equal rights

Pearl Harbor acquired.

1876: Battle of Little Bighorn. – Custer killed

U.S. vs. Reese- allows voting qualifications – literacy test, poll tax, grandfather clause

Alexander Graham Bell invents the telephone.

Election 1876: Hayes (Rep) defeats Tilden (Dem)

1877: Munn vs. Illinois – If in interest of public good, than states can regulate prices reasonably

Compromise of 1877 – Hays becomes president, troops withdraw from South

1878: Hall vs. DeCuir – allowed segregation

Bland – Allison Act – coined a limited number of silver

Treaty of 1878 – get rights to Pago- Pago, Samoa

1879: Thomas Edison invents the electric light.

Knights of Labor go public – Pres. Powderly – no strike stand – both skilled and unskilled –too diverse

1880’s Dust Bowl begins

1880: Election of 1880: Garfield (Rep) defeats Hancock (Dem); Garfield dies – V.P. Chester Arthur

1881: Tuskeegee Institute is founded.

Helen Hunt Jackson writes A Century of Dishonor

1882: Chinese Exclusion Act

European Restriction Act

1883: Brooklyn Bridge is completed.

Civil Rights Cases: allowed individual discrimination

More Jim Crow laws passed

1884: Election of 1884: Cleveland (Dem) defeats Blaine (Rep)

1886: The American Federation of Labor is founded by Gompers – for skilled only (no women/ blacks) – dealt only with labor – used strikes

Interstate Commerce Act – regulate RR and private businesses

Haymarket Incident – 1886 – peaceful turned violent

– people think unions are radical

1887: Interstate Commerce Commission - forbid long haul / short

haul practices

American Protective Association – Anti-Catholic

Dawes Severalty Act – government break up land individually –

break up farms - failed

1888: Election of 1888- Harrison (Rep) defeats Cleveland (Dem)

1889: Jane Addams founds Hull House

Berlin Conference – US, Britain and Germany agree to joint protection of Samoa – doesn’t work

1st Pan American Conference – trade agreement

Bering Sea Controversy – over seals

1890: North American Women's Suffrage Association is founded.

The Sherman Antitrust Act. – “Trusts in restraint of trade are illegal”

1890-1900: Blacks are deprived of the vote in the South.

Wounded Knee – Indians revolt to outlawing the sacred ghost dance – Last Indian war

Sherman Silver Purchase Act – gov’t buys silver but doesn’t coin – curb inflation

McKinley Tariff Act – raises tariffs

1892: The Homestead Strike –at Carnegie Steel – Pinkerton guards and troops put down strike

Miners strike - Idaho

General Electric Company formed.

Populist Omaha Platform – 8hr work day, nationalization of RR,

inflation, coinage of silver, anti-rich capitalist, decrease tariff

Election of 1892: Cleveland (Rep) defeats Harrison (Dem) and

Weaver (Populist)

1893: Depression

Sherman Silver Purchase Act repealed – devalued gold

1894: The Pullman strike – Pullman Co. controls prices but

fires workers – Am Railway Union strikes

Coxey’s Army marches on Wash. for unemployment relief

1895: U.S. vs. E. C. Kight Company. – difference between

manufacturing and commerce – manufacturing doesn’t fall under anti – Trust Act

Pollack vs. Farmers’ Loan and Trust Co. – income tax is unconstitutional

In reDebs – strikes are a restraint of trade under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act

Booker T. Washington's Atlanta Compromise Speech – both races must accept and help each other – blacks have to earn rights

1896: Plessy vs. Ferguson – “Separate but Equal”

Election of 1896: McKinley (Rep) defeats Bryan (Dem)

Cross of Gold Speech by Bryan

1897: Dingley Tariff – raises tax on duties

1898: Spanish American War – because of election year and yellow journalism (Pulitzer and Hearst)

Maine explodes – “Remember the Maine”

DeLome Letter – criticizes McKinley

Williams vs. Miss. Upheld literacy test

Get Hawaii

Peace of Paris: Gives Cuba Independence and US gets

Puerto Rico, Philippines, and Guam

1899: Samoa divided between US and Germany

Teller Amendment – gave Cuba freedom

Open Door Notes – Hay – agree to territorial integrity of China

1900: National Negro Business League founded by Booker T. Washington

Gold Standard Act – gold standard unit of value

Progressive Era – cure corruption, anti-monopolies, temperance, help immigrants and labor, building codes, public utilities

Boxer Rebellion – Chinese nationalist rebel – foreign nations unite to put down rebellion

1901: US Steel Corporation formed.

Platt Amendment – gave US a base in Cuba and permission for troops to intervene and consent to treaties

Insular Cases – Constitution does not follow the flag

1902 – Coal Strike

1903: Department of Commerce and Labor created

Hay-Herran Treaty – for Panama canal – rejected by Columbia

Hay – Buena Varilla Treaty – gives US land in Panama

Elkins Act – dealt with RR rebates – part of “Square Deal”

1904: Panama Canal Zone acquired.

The National Child Labor Committee is formed.

Roosevelt Corollary: addition to Monroe Doctrine – made US a police force

Take over Dominican customs duty

Arbitrates in Venezuela dispute with Germany

1905: Industrial Workers of the World is formed.

1906: Upton Sinclair writes The Jungle – meat packing reform – resulted in Meat Inspection Act

Gentleman’s Agreement – Japanese can return to school – if Japan limits immigration

T. Roosevelt negotiates Treaty of Portsmouth of Russo-Japanese War – receives Nobel Peace Prize

Hepburn Act - strengthened the powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission

Pure Food and Drug Act - Established Food and Drug Administration

1907: Drago Doctrine – Invest in Latin America at own risk

Bank Panic

1908: Muller vs. Oregon – limited number of hours for women

Root-Takahira Agreement – Japan will honor Open Door Notes

1909: NAACP is founded.

Taft begins implementation of Dollar Diplomacy (Haiti, Nicaragua)

Payne-Aldrich Tariff – lowered tariffs

Ballinger - Pinchot Controversy – Ballinger, Sec. of Interior, dismissed – charged with not following nation;s conservation policy

1911: Standard Oil Co. vs. US – court determines what’s a reasonable trust – Standard Oil Co. broken up

1913: The Sixteenth Amendment – authorized income taxes

The Seventeenth Amendment – direct popular election of Senate

Underwood Tariff – lowered duties

Federal Reserve Act – created federal reserve system

1914: The Federal Trade Commission is established.

The Clayton Antitrust Act – amendment to Sherman Anti-Trust Act – strengthed anti-monopolistic reform

Federal Trade Bill.

United States invades Veracruz in Mexico – US soldiers arrested

1915: The USS Lusitania is sunk by a German submarine

troops sent to Haiti

1916: Adamson Act – allowed government to take over RR - administered by McAdoo

troops sent to Dominican Republic

War Industries Board – coordinate production and mobilize – headed by Beruch

Food Administration – headed by Hoover

Leiver Act – set prices for agricultural products

Fuel Administration – headed by Garfield – control fuel prices

1917: US enters WWI

Great Migration – blacks move from South to North – causes race riots – Harlem Renaissance – Garvey back to Africa movement

Creel Committee: Public Info. – spread propaganda – formed Liberty Leagues

|For War |Against War |

|Submarine warfare |“He Kept Us Out of War” |

|Destroying trade |Only benefit the wealthy |

|Violating rights |British violated our rights too |

|Espionage and sabotage |Germany tried to avoid Lousitania |

|Zimmerman Note |Propaganda |

|Keep balance of power | |

|Make world safe for democracy | |

1918: National War Labor Board – Under Taft – prevented strikes

Armistice Day

Treaty of Versailles – Germany accepts full blame, demilitarize Rhineland, Ger. Looses all colonies

1918: Wilson's Fourteen Points.

|Important Points |

|Open covenants Freedom of seas and trade |

|Disarmament Rebuilding of Belgium |

|Form Poland *League of Nations |

Espionage and Sedition Act.- suppress criticism, can’t interfere with draft

1919: The Palmer Raids.

Shenck vs. US – “clear and present danger” –

open opposition to war will undermine war effort

Abrahms vs.US – upheld Sedition Act

American Protective League – pro-war activists,

prosecuted and censored

Senate rejects Versailles Treaty and League of Nations

Ireconcilables – Borah – disagree with Article X = involvement in foreign affairs

Reservationist – Lodge – accept treaty if Article X is clarified – only Congress can commit troops

Eighteenth Amendment is ratified prohibiting alcoholic beverages.

Race riots - Chicago

Volstead Act – enforced 18th Amendment

1920: Nineteenth Amendment grants Womens Sufferage.

Women vote 1st time

KDKA – 1st radio station

Sinclair Lewis writes Main Street

First Commercial radio broadcast.

1921: Margaret Sanger founds the American Birth Control League.

Revenue Act – decreases taxes

Washington Disarmament Conference – limit naval arms

Post War Depression

Immigration Act – restricts immigration

1922: Sinclair Lewis writes Babbit

Fordney McCumber Tariff – high increase in duties

1923: Teapot Dome Scandal – Sec. of Interior Fall sells oil reserves to private industry

Harding dies

1924: McNary – Haugen Bill – vetoed – help farmers by buying surplus

Dawes Plan – helped Germany with reparation – provided loan

Peak of KKK

1925: The Scopes "Monkey" Trial.

Great Gatsby by Fitzgerald

The New Negro by Locke

1926: Weary Blues by Hughes

1927: Charles Lindbergh flies from New York to Paris solo.

Immigration Law

Sacoo and Vanzitte executed

“The Jazz Singer” – 1st talkie

1929: Kellog – Briand Pact: Peace alliance

The Great Stock Market crash

| Causes of Crash |

|Durable goods Profits increase; wages stay same |

|Easy credit Federal Reserve does nothing |

|Overproduction Speculation and margin buying |

|Debt |

Agricultural Market Act – establish Federal Farm Board – assistance to farmers

Tax Cut

Young Plan – reduced reparation payments, no longer involved in German economy

1930: The Smoot-Hawley Tariff – high protective tariff

London Naval Treaty – decrease number of ships

1931: Japan invades Manchuria

1932: Stimpson Doctrine

Federal Home Loan Bank Act – assist with morgages

Public Works Project

The Reconstruction Finance Corporation – part of trickle down economics – lent money to banks

Bonus Army – marches on DC to receive veterans bonus – Hoover sends in troops

Franklin D. Roosevelt is elected President.

1933: New Deal begins

WPA – Works Progress Administration – employed artists, writers, photographers

CCC – Civilian Conservation Corps

NIRA- National Industrial Recovery Act – sets up NRA – business men make codes for min wages, hr.

Glass Stegall Banking Act – kept us on gold standard – and created FDIC – against bank runs

SEC – Securities and Exchange Commission – watched market prices

AAA – Agricultural Adjustment Association – paid farmers not to overproduce

TVA – Tennessee Valley Authority – bring electricity – competes with private industry

CWA – Civil Works Administration

NYA – National Youth Administration

HOLC – Home Owners Loan Corp.

“Good Neighbor” Policy – Repudiated Roosevelt Corollary

Japan and Germany withdraw from League of Nations

20th Amendment –Presidential term starts on Jan. 20

1934: NYE Investigation: determines cause of WWI

Indian Reorganization Act - restored tribal ownership of lands, recognized tribal constitutions and government, and provided loans for economic development.

Share the Wealth society founded by Huey Long – called for distribution of wealth

1935: Schechter Poultry Corporation vs. US – NRA unconstitutional – put legislative power under executive administration

Wagner Act: set up National Labor Relations Board

Fair Labor Standard Act – set min. wage and hours

CIO – Congress of Industrial Organization – labor union for skilled and semi-skilled

Social Security Acts – provided benefits to old and unemployed

Revenue Act – 1935 – tax the wealthy

1st Neutrality Act – stop selling munitions to belligerents – Am. can’t travel on belligerent ships

1936: Butler vs. US - AAA unconstitutional – put taxes on processing

2nd London Conference on disarmament

2nd Neutrality Act – no lending money to belligerent nations

1937: 3rd Neutrality Act: Cash n’ Carry (pay for it and transport it yourself) – doesn’t apply to Latin America and China

Quarantine Speech – isolate belligerent nations

Panay Incident- Japanese bomb Am. ship – U.S demands only apologies and reparations

Japan moves into East China – US does nothing

1938: End of New Deal Reforms.

|For New Deal |Anti - New Deal |

|Regulation of federal institutions |Socialistic program |

|Benefits to labor |Unconstitutional |

|Help unemployed |Deficit spending |

|Restored confidance |Gov’t competes with Private industry |

| |Monopolistic |

| |Worthless – creates dependency |

John Steinback’s Grapes of Wrath

1940: Selective Service – peace time draft

Destroyers for Bases Deal

Smith Act – finger printing of aliens

1941: Japanese attack Pearl Harbor

Lend Lease - lend materials for war

US enters WWII.

Relocation Camps for Japanese

1942: Congress of Racial Equality – prevent segregation and discrimination

Revenue Act of 1942 - effort to increase tax revenues to cover the cost of WWII

1943: Office of Price Administration – seals prices, rations food

Detroit race riots - government does nothing

Casablanca Conference - FDR and Churchill met in Morocco to settle the future strategy of the Allies

Cairo Conference - conference of the Allied leaders to seek Japan's unconditional surrender.

Tehran Conference - FDR, Stalin, Churchill to discuss strategy against Germany

1944: GI Bill - benefits for veterans – money for education, mortgage – creates middle class

D-Day – July 6, 1944

1945: Yalta Conference – Allies meet to decide on final war plans

Battle of Bulge – Last German offensive

Okinawa - deadly military campaign on Pacific island

US joins the United Nations

Nationwide strikes due to inflation – OPA disbanded

A-Bomb dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Germany and Japan surrender ending World War II

Roosevelt dies – Truman VP

Potsdam Conference - Truman, Churchill, and Stalin meet in Germany to set up zones

1946: Kennan containment – prevent spread of communism

Employment Act – goal to have full employment

Atomic Energy Act – establish Atomic Energy Commission – develop better bombs

President’s commission on Civil Rights – advocate rights

Philippines get independence

Churchill's "Iron Curton" speech in response to Russian aggression.

1947: The Marshall Plan – economic aid to Europe after WWII

Taft –Hartley Act – 80 cooling period not to strike – labor leaders must sign Non-Communist oath

Truman Doctrine – financial commitment to nations fighting Communism

Federal Employee Loyalty Program – anti-communistic oaths

National Security Act – created CIA

Jackie Robinson breaks color barrier

1948: Election of 1848- Truman defeats Dewey and Thurman(DixiCrat)

Truman desegregates armed forces

Berlin Blockade - Berlin Airlift

OAS – Alliance of North America and South America

Alger Hiss Case – convicted of purgery

Nuremberg trials

1949:NATO formed

Communistic Victory in China

Russia’s 1st A-Bomb

Department of Defense created

West and East Germany created

Fair Deal: most don’t pass; Housing Act (construction increases); minimum wage increases

Orwell, Ninteen Eighty-Four

1950: Korean War begins – enter because of containment

McCarren Internal Security Act – illegal to contribute to Communism

McCarthyism – fear of communism wide spread

National Security Council Memo 68 – beginning of massive defense spending

1951: 22nd Amendment – President can only serve 2 terms or 10 years

Denis vs. United States- upheld Smith Act under “clear and present danger clause”

Catcher in the Rye – Salinger

US – Japanese Treaty – bases in Japan

ANZUS – Australia, New Zealand, and US ally

MacArthur fired by Truman – invades China

1952: Election of 1952: Eisenhower (Will end war) vs. Stevenson

1953: Rosenbergs executed

terminate reservations for N.A.

Armistice in Korea – 38th parallel

Shah of Iran returns to power in coup – to keep Iran from going Communistic

Krushchev in control of Russia

1954: Army – McCarthy hearings – brought down Joseph McCarthy

Brown vs. Board of Education – overturns Plessy vs. Furguson decision

SEATO – alliance Turkey, US, Iraq, and Iran

Fall of Dien Bien Phu – French loose in Vietnam

Geneva Conference – reduction of nuclear weapons, divide Vietnam along 17th parallel –

elections in a year

Mao bombs Taiwan – Eisenhower threatens to send troops in and the A-bomb - brinkmanship

China bombs Taiwan – Eisenhower sends in troops – China backs off

1955: Montgomery bus boycott begins – Rosa Parks

AFL and the CIO merge

Warsaw Pact: USSR and Eastern European allies unite to counter NATO

1956: Election of 1956: Eisenhower re-elected: ended Korean “War” and balanced budget

Suez Crisis – Egyptian President nationalizes canal

Howl – by Allen Ginsberg – bohemianism – Beat Generation

Interstate Highway Act - building federal roads; movement into rural area; creation of suburbs

Hungarian Revolution – rebel against Communism – US doesn’t support

US puts Diem in power in South Vietnam

Election 1956: Eisenhower defeats Stevenson again

1957: Eisenhower Doctrine – extends to Truman Doctrine to Middle East – help fight Commies

Domino Theory - if one country fell to Communism, it would undermine another that one would fall, producing a domino effect.

Baby Boom peaks

Civil Rights Act- create permanent civil rights commission – supervise voting

Little Rock school desegregation

Russians launch Sputnik – space race

1st nuclear power plant

On the Road – Jack Kerouac

1958: National Defense Education Act- funding to math, science, and language programs

NASA formed

1959: Cuban Revolution –Castro invades

Labor Reform Act – protect employees

Alaska and Hawaii admitted as states

1960: U-2 incident – US spy plane goes down in USSR – convert operation discovered

Greensboro sit -in

Civil Rights Act – federal government registers black voters

Election 1960: Kennedy (Dem) defeats Nixon (Rep) – 1st TV debate

National Lieration Front – Viet Cong formed

1961: Bay of Pigs: attempt to overthrow Castro – fails

Trade Embargo on Cuba

Alliance for Progress - to build up Third World nations to the point where they could manage their own affairs.

Berlin wall built to stop crossing

Peace Corps – encouraged US citizens to help third world countries

Coup regime in Vietnam – Diem assassinated

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) - an Arab majority - oil trade - joined together to protect themselves.

1962:Cuban Missle Crisis – USSR sends missiles to Cuba – US removes missiles from Turkey and USSR from Cuba.

Baker vs. Carr – end of gerrymandering – manipulating voting districts

Engel v. Vitale - prayer in public schools were banned on violation the First Amendment.

Silent Spring Rachel Carson – on pollution

Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) - condemned anti-Democratic tendencies of large corporations, racism and poverty

1963: Kennedy assassinated by Oswald – Johnson becomes President

Test Ban Treaty – no testing in atmosphere or ocean – US, USSR, Br

March on Washington: Martin Luther King Jr. I have a Dream Speech

The Feminine Mystique , Betty Ferdan

1964: 24th Amendment – outlaws poll tax

US enters Vietnam War - Tonkin Gulf – 1 bullet fired at US ship causes war:

Gulf of Tonkin Resolution - Johnson can police Vietnam

War Powers Act – restrained president’s ability to commit troops overseas

Economic Opportunity Act: Job Core for youth training; Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA); Office of Economic Opportunity – establish Equal Opportunity Laws

Civil Rights Act: public accommodations could not be segregated and that nobody could be denied access to public accommodation on the basis of race.

Tax reduction

Great Society- Platform for LBJ's campaign, it stressed the 5 P's: Peace, Prosperity, anti-Poverty, Prudence and Progress.

1965: Medicare and Medicaid – aid to elderly

Higher Education Act – Federal Scholarships

Ralph Nadar's Unsafe at any Speed -criticized poor construction and design of automobiles

Watts, Detroit race riots - army sent in

Voting Rights Act - it allowed for supervisors to register Blacks to vote in places where they had not been allowed to vote before.

1966: Department of Housing and Urban Development established

Department of Transportation created

National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act – promote car safety requirements

Miranda vs. Arizona –the accused must be read his/her rights

National Organization for Women (NOW) - advocate equal rights

1967:25th Amendment – Allowed VP who becomes Pres. to pick a new VP

1968: Election of 1968 – RFK shot; Nixon elected

Nixon's "New Federalism" - returning power to the states

Vietnamization begins – war extends

TET – Viet Cong attacks during Vietnamese holiday

War extended to Laos and Cambodia

Civil Rights Act - attempted to provide Blacks with equal-opportunity housing.

1969: Vietnamization begins – slow withdrawal of troops from Vietnam

Nixon Doctrine – reducing number of troops abroad by helping nations economically and militarily

Armstrong walks on the moon

Warren E. Burger appointed - a conservative to fill Earl Warren's liberal spot.]

U.S. bombed North Vietnamese positions in Cambodia and Laos. Technically illegal because Cambodia and Laos were neutral

1970: Kent State – Protest war – troops sent in – 4 die

1971: Reed vs. Reed – outlawed sexual discrimination

Desegregation – kids bused into black/white schools

New Economic Policy: wage and price controls to curb inflation

1972: Election of 1972: Nixon re-elected defeating McGovern in largest landslide victory

Nixon visits Red China and Russia: eases tensions

SALT1: Nuclear arms limitation agreement

Watergate Scandal begins: burglarizing and wiretapping the national headquarters of the Democratic Party

investigation headed by Baker

Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) - proposed the 27th Amendment, calling for equal rights for both sexes

1973: VP Agnue resigns: Ford replaces him

Treaty of Paris: Ends Vietnam – troops withdrawn – Vietnam temp. divided again

Gideon vs. Wainwright - court decided that state and local courts must provide counsel for defendants in felony cases

Roe vs. Wade - restricting abortion is unconstitutional.

1974: Nixon resigns

Ford pardons Nixon

Vietnam becomes Communistic

Kaher roge – ruthless regime established in Cambodia

1975: US ship Mayaquez attacked by Cambodia - crew rescued

South Vietnam becomes Communist

1976: Election of 1975: Carter defeats Ford

1977:US gives up rights to Panama Canal in 1999

1978: China and US agree to establish diplomatic relations

1979: Create Department of Energy and Department of Education

Fuel shortage

Camp David Accords: Peace between Israel and Egypt

Shah expelled from Iran: American embassy taken hostage: Carter’s rescue mission fails

SALT II - Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty with Russia - removed after Russia attacked Afghanistan

Three Mile Island - power plant failure emits radiation in Pennsylvania

1980: Election of 1980: Reagan wins with his “Reaganomics” program of reducing taxes and spending -

"supply-side" and "trickle-down" economics

Iran hostages released

Olympic Boycott - The U.S. withdrew from the competition held in Moscow to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan

1981: Air Traffic Controllers Stike

Assassination attempt on Reagan

Economic Recovery Tax Bill:

Sandra Day O'Connor becomes first woman Supreme Court justice

1983: Military invasion of Grenada (Caribbean island) to stop Communism

American peacekeeping force in Lebanon attacked by terrorists - 241 dead

1984: Taxes increase

1986: US bombs terrorist targets in Libya

1988: Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF Treaty) limiting intermediate-range nuclear missiles with Russia

-----------------------

U.S. Government Structure

1. Separation of powers – 3 branches

Congress – 2 Houses – pass laws work by committee

17 delegated powers + elastic clause

Senate – passes treaties (2/3), tries impeachment (2/3) approves appointments to courts

and exec

House – impeaches, starts finance bills, chooses Pres if no majority

President – executes the laws with cabinet and departments

commander in chief

chief of state

sets foreign policy

wins by majority of electoral college – unitary rule

Courts – federal and state court system

9 on Supreme Court

can find laws unconstitutional – Marbury v. Madison

2. Federalism – Role for states – reserved powers

Roles for federal government – delegated powers, limited power

3. Checks and balances – impeachment

Judicial review

Appointments must be approved

2 Houses

Veto

4. Unwritten constitution-

2 term-limit for President (“written” as of 1951)

President responsible for economy since FDR

Political parties

5. Adaptability of Constitution-

Amendments

Elastic clause

Judicial interpretation

Agencies

6. Ambiguities-

War power

Foreign policy

Interpretation of federalism

Executive privilege

7. Amendments –

Bill of Rights

Expansion of voting – 18, poll tax forbidden, blacks, women Washington DC, direct Election of Senate.

President – electoral college votes for Pres and VP separately, 2 terms, disability,

shorten lame duck

Income tax

Blacks – 13, 14, 15

14th – equal treatment for all by federal and state government.

8. Parties - primaries, conventions

President: head of his party

Laws

Amendments to the Constitution (Ratification dates)

1-10: Bill of Rights, ratified 1791

1: freedom of speech, press, assembly, and religion (includes separation of church and state); freedom to petition the government.

2: Right of militia to bear arms.

3: No quartering of soldiers in citizens’ homes without consent.

4: Protection from search and seizure of property without a warrant

5: Grand jury indictment required; no double jeopardy; Right to not incriminate oneself; can’t be deprived of life, liberty, or private property without due process.

6: Right to speedy trial by jury of peers; specific charges required; accused must be present during witness testimony; Right to a lawyer and to compel witnesses to testify on one’s behalf.

7: Right to a jury trial.

8: No cruel or unusual punishment; reasonable bail while awaiting trial.

9: This listing of rights doesn’t mean one doesn’t have other rights, or that those unmentioned rights are any less important.

10: Powers not given to federal or kept by state government belong to state governments and the people.

11: Citizens of another state or country can’t sue a state in federal court without its permission (1798)

12: Separated out electoral college vote for vice president to avoid a repeat of the election of 1800 deadlock (Jefferson and Burr tied)

Civil War Amendments: 13-15

13: abolished slavery, 1865

14: establish equality under the law for African-Americans, 1868

15: established suffrage for former slaves, and all African-Americans

16: established government’s power to collect income taxes from individuals, 1916

17: Switched U.S. senate selection to direct election by people (instead of by the state legislatures), 1916

18: Established government’s right to enforce prohibition, 1919

19: Established woman suffrage, 1920

20: “lame duck” amendment moved up presidential inauguration and Congress meetings to January (from March)

21: Repealed prohibition, 1933

22: Made the two-term limit on presidency part of the Constitution (as opposed to the “unwritten constitution,” 1951

23: representation and right to vote in Washington, D.C., 1961

24: Abolished the poll tax, a charge for the right to vote, 1964

25: Established Congressional power to legislate a process for presidential succession, in the event of the president’s incapacity to govern, 1967

26: Lowered suffrage to age 18 (lowered from age 21), 1971

27: Congress can’t vote itself a raise to take effect during the same term, 1992

Agriculture:

Homestead Act, 1862: 160 acres free if resident for 5 years

Agricultural Adjustment Acts, 1933, 1938. Farmers paid not to grow crops as price supports. These have only recently been curtailed in the 1990s.

Business/ Labor:

Interstate Commerce Commission, (ICC) 1886. Regulates railroads

Sherman Antitrust Act, 1890: Forbids all combinations in restraint of trade

Clayton Antitrust Act, 1914: Forbids interlocking directorates holding companies, tie-in contract. Prohibits use of antitrust laws against unions

Federal Reserve System (“the Fed”), 1916: establishes a national bank for banks, to regulate the money supply by setting reserve, discount rate, and open market sale or purchase of government bonds. Run by regional boards. Currently chaired by Alan Greenspan..

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), 1934: 1934, regulates stock exchanges (e.g. buying on margin) and monitors trading for unfair manipulation of stock exchanges.

National Industrial Recovery Act 1933: Codes of business that set wages, hours and prices.

National Labor Relations Act, 1933 Guarantees the right to organize and bargain collectively, forbids blacklists

Social Security Act, 1935: Old age pension and unemployment insurance. Medicare for aged included in 1965.

Taft Hartley Act 1947 Forbids closed shop, permits states to bar union shop, allow temporary injunctions of strikes affecting national welfare.

Taylor Act, 1967, forbids strikes in New York State of public employees (police, firefighters, teachers, etc.). Severe fines for violations. Many other states have similar laws.

Immigration:

1882 Chinese Exclusion Act Suspended immigration of all Chinese.

Another law prohibited immigration of criminals, paupers, and "mentally defective" persons.

1891 By this year the federal government had established full control of immigration. Regulations now forbid the immigration of:

• "persons suffering from a loathsome or dangerous contagious disease."

• It also included earlier provisions which kept out criminals, prostitutes, paupers, and "mentally defective" persons.

• It required that an immigrant prove to officials that he or she would not become a burden on society.

1892 Ellis Island opens in New York City as a federal immigration inspection station

1894 Immigration Restriction League formed. Between 1896 and 1915, this group waged a half dozen attempts to pass a literacy requirement for entry to the U.S.

1901 Congress bars anarchists from entry, after President McKinley is assassinated by a man professing to be an anarchist.

1908 Gentlemen's Agreement President Theodore Roosevelt made a deal in which Japan agreed to deny passports to its laborers who wished to come to the United States.

1917 Literacy Test is finally enacted. Every immigrant aged 16 or older must be able to read. It keeps out very few immigrants.

1921 Emergency Quota Act set temporary quotas which favored northern and western Europeans. Maximum annual total set at 358,000. It offered no entry to Africans or Asians.

1924 National Origins Act reduces the annual total to 164,000. It also drastically reduced the number of southern and eastern Europeans allowed entry. Italy's quota, for example, was reduced from 42,000 to 4,000 persons.

1929 Total limited to 150,000 annually, with specific quotas for each country; these were based on the number of people from each country living in the U.S. in 1920

1930s Refugees from the Nazis are barred entry to the U.S. Despite the fact that these people sought to escape persecution or even death, the quota system kept most of the refugees ù principally Jewish ù from coming to the U.S.

1952 The McCarran-Walter Act retained the quota system and slightly amended exisiting laws. On the one hand, it permitted Asians living in the U.S. to become citizens and allowed 2,000 Asians to enter the country each year. Allowed the government to deport aliens considered subversive. (Truman Administration).

1965 The Immigration and Nationality Act eliminated the quota system. It kept a limit on the annual total, but allowed anyone to enter on a first come, first served basis. For the first time, anyone from southern Europe, Africa, or Asia received the same consideration as someone from France or Germany. Gives preference to professionals and skilled workers, and those related to U.S. citizens. (LBJ Administration)

1979 New laws allowed an additional 50,000 refugees to be accepted annually, although the president was granted the power to admit more refugees as the need arose. A refugee is anyone escaping persecution or having a well-founded fear of persecution. (Carter Administration)

1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act imposes fines against employers who hire illegal aliens. Employers must now check documents which prove citizenship. It has not slowed the entry of illegal immigrants from Latin America via the Mexican border. (Reagan Administration)

African Americans

1865 13th Amendment ratified, abolishing slavery

1866 Civil Rights Act grants citizenship to the freedmen, but is overturned in court.

1868 14th Amendment ratified, granting equal citizenship and rights under the law, regardless of race or color

1870 15th Amendment ratified, grants the right to vote to all, regardless of race or color

1876 The contested presidential election of 1876 results in a deal in which Union troops are removed from the South, thus ending Reconstruction; enforcement of the "Civil War Amendments" comes to an end. By 1890 in the South, de jure segregation is legally-enforced in schools, hotels, buses, trains, train stations, restrooms, restaurants, water fountains. Virtually every public and private facility — is segregated. In the North, de facto segregation (segregation in fact) means that in practice, blacks are not hired, sold houses, or admitted entrance to many private institutions and clubs.

1896 Plessy v. Ferguson ruled that "separate, but equal" facilities do not violate the 14th Amendment; segregation is therefore considered constitutional.

1912 The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is formed by W.E.B. DuBois and a group of white and black citizens to fight for the political equality of all races.

1917 “The Great Migration” begins, which continues through the 1960s, originally a response to demands for additional labor during wartime. The north begins to experience de facto racial segregation, race riots.

1920s Marcus Garvey founds the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and its Black Star shipping line. Garvey promotes pride in African heritage, and black nationalism: a very different approach to black civil rights in America.

1933 FDR establishes a group of African-American advisors, known as the “black cabinet.” New Deal programs provide jobs and assistance to blacks as well as whites.

1941 A. Phillip Randolph leads the March on Washington Movement, urging equal opportunity legislation in federally-contracted defense industries. Executive Order 8802.

1948 President Truman orders the desegregation of the Armed Forces, against his generals’ wishes.

1954 Brown v. Board of Education: "separate is inherently unequal."

Emmet Till tortured and killed in Mississippi, creating nationwide shock at white Southern hostility and violence upon blacks.

1955- Rosa Parks, NAACP; Montgomery Bus boycott, Martin Luther King, Jr.

1956 Montgomery Bus Boycott a success; city bus system desegregated; African-American bus drivers hired. The Supreme Court rules segregation in public transportation is unconstitutional.

1956-57, Little Rock Nine at Little Rock Central High. President Eisenhower sends U.S. Army to desegregate Little Rock, Arkansas's Central High School; the "Little Rock Nine" are allowed to attend. Congress passes the weak Civil Rights Act of 1957, but it has little impact on voting rights.

1960 Lunch Counter Sit-ins, Nashville TN. Led by college students in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC, pronounced “snick”). Adults turned to boycott Nashville stores for employment. Achieved integration in the city.

Congress passes a weak Civil Rights Act of 1960; again, little impact

1960-61, 100 other cities held sit-ins. 50,000 Americans participated. 3,600 arrested.

1961 Freedom Rides, Congress Of Racial Equality(CORE) led an integrated civil disobedience bus tour through the South, led to violence, firebombs, beatings, all nationally televised. Led to federal intervention by JFK and RFK as attorney general.

1963 KKK bomb kills four black schoolgirls in a Birmingham, Alabama church. Birmingham Anti-Segregation Campaign. Police Chief Bull Connor's violent retaliation against peaceful protestors results in riots. Riots spread to other U.S. cities north and south. MLK, Jr. arrested: "Letter From Birmingham Jail."

June: Medgar Evers, NAACP officer, shot to death in Mississippi by unknown gunman

August: March on Washington, more than 200,000 blacks and whites demonstrate, King

gives "I have a dream" speech.

1964 Freedom Summer Massive voter registration drive in Mississippi, organized and staffed by white and black college students, many from the North. Three civil rights workers, two white and from the north are murdered by the KKK.

Civil Rights Act of 1964. These murders stir awareness and condemnation by much of the nation, including President Johnson, and leads directly to his successful initiation and push for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which Congress passes. The Act outlaws job discrimination, and all forms of segregation.

24th Amendment does away with poll taxes; “war on poverty” declared by President

Johnson’s "Great Society" Program launched. LBJ declares a "war on poverty."

Economic Opportunity Act, Medicare/Medicaid, school aid, HUD,

1965 Voting Rights Act eliminates literacy tests

Robert C. Weaver, first black appointed to the Cabinet

Malcolm X assassinated

1967 Riots in many U.S. cities. 43 dead in Detroit's riot. National Guard troops called in to help. Affirmative Action programs established, requiring businesses and colleges receiving federal funding to increase job opportunities and admissions for women and minorities.

1968 April 4, Martin Luther King, Jr. assassinated in Nashville, Tennessee.

Riots again erupt around the country.

1978 Regents of the University of California v. Bakke ruled that the school's affirmative action "quota system" was unconstitutional and that Bakke, a white applicant, should be admitted. However, it also ruled that race could be one factor in determining admission to a college.

2003 Affirmative action case is heard by the Supreme Court to determine whether University of Michigan affirmative action policies, which consider race as one of many factors, but don’t use a quota, is constitutional (see Bakke case above).

Major Figures in the Struggle for African-American Civil Rights

Booker T. Washington - turn of century; accommodate to present conditions, don't insist on social equality or pushing for political rights, emphasis on economic self sufficiency, vocational education, dignity, and self respect. Founder of the Tuskegee Institute.

W.E.B. DuBois - Early 1900s; historian and activist; founder of the NAACP, circa 1909. Protest all inequalities, bring law suits for rights, educate the "talented tenth" for the professions as a vanguard; integrate. Wrote first revisionist history of reconstruction. .

Ida B. Wells(-Barnett) – Progressive era activist from the south; school teacher at age 16, journalist and anti-lynching Progressive-era activist. Her work for women’s suffrage was rebuffed by many white woman suffragettes. Wells was fiercely determined and remained active despite death threats.

Marcus Garvey - 1920s; colorful founder of the United Negro Improvement Association; black pride; promote black businesses; solidarity with blacks world wide; back to Africa; steamship company for repatriation goes bankrupt. Scandal led to conviction for mail fraud, exile.

A. Phillip Randolph - Organizer of Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Organized and canceled a March on Washington in 1944 to protest discrimination in the defense industry. Gained Executive Order 8802 from FDR which fulfilled this demands. Led the 1963 March with King.

Thurgood Marshall NAACP's lead lawyer arguing the 1954 Brown v. Bd. of Ed. case. Later named as Supreme Court Justice (1st black ever) by President Lyndon B. Johnson.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. - Southern Christian Leadership Conference founder, boycotts, sit-ins, protests, marches, law suits; non violent direct action, his very effective strategy, to raise consciousness, press for laws to dismantle Jim Crow laws and establish voting rights; his vision: a fully integrated society.

Malcolm X - 1950s, early 1960s leader of Black Muslims, contempt for white society, black nationalist, separatist, unity with blacks worldwide, discipline and self respect, full civil rights for blacks. Led rallies, international protests. Rejected nonviolence and assimilation, but altered views upon return from Mecca.

Stokely Carmichael - arises from SNCC. Originates slogan of "black power," intimidation, black pride, full rights and control of black communities: Black Panthers, Angela Davis, e.g.

Jessie Jackson - ran for President in 1984 with the Rainbow Coalition, emphasis on solving poverty problems, lower military budget with money diverted to domestic problems, affirmative action, increase black voter participation.

Louis Farrakhan - leader of the Nation of Islam, black nationalist, separatist. Known for derogatory statements against whites, particularly Jews. Lately has nudged himself a bit toward center with the "Million Man March" which brought together a more diverse, but solely black and male, leadership and following, and called for black male responsibility.

Al Sharpton - Formerly: raise consciousness of racism with marches, and protests, distrust of legal system. Presently shifting to electoral politics. Ran for U.S. Senator from NY in 1990's, and presidential candidate in 2004.

Clarence Thomas - career at first outside civil rights community, opposes affirmative action and special programs for minorities, just enforce present laws, hard work and self discipline, avoid self pity and self image of underdog. Now a Reagan appointee on the Supreme Court.

J.C. Watts Republican House representative from Oklahoma, Watts opposes affirmative action and supports other conservative social and political views. He supports conservative actions to help the poor, but not blacks specifically, such as the Commercial Revitalization Tax Act (1998).

Women

1848 First national women's suffrage convention meets in Seneca Falls, NY. Attendees include Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Frederick Douglass. Issued the "Declaration of Rights and Sentiments" which called for political equality, specifically property and voting rights for women.

1869-

1896 Four new Western states are the first to grant women suffrage (WY, ID, UT, CO)

1890 NAWSA, Carrie Chapman Catt (begun by Stanton, Anthony) Highly organized, centrally managed, grassroots group. “The Winning Plan” state campaigns to pressure congress for an amendment.

1910-

1912 Five additional Western states follow suit

1916 National Woman's Party, Alice Paul, militant faction splits off from NAWSA, uses C.D. Arrests embarrass Wilson who urges passage of amendment to Congress.

1920 President Wilson finally endorses suffrage, in part for women’s crucial role during the war. The 19th Amendment gives women suffrage, but it has little impact on reform politics.

1921 Sheppard-Towner Maternity Act.

Stimulated by high maternity and infant mortality rates.

Provided states with funds for maternal education and public health nurses.

First federal welfare funding in U.S. history.

Ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1929.

1928 First Congressional hearing on the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)

"Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the U.S. or by any state on account of sex."

1963 The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan, challenged the notion that women were the "weaker sex." Advocated that women be admitted to the professions and high-level business positions. The opening salvo of the modern women's rights movement.

1964 Civil Rights Act forbids gender discrimination in employment.

1966 National Organization for Women (NOW) is formed by Betty Friedan and other feminists to increase awareness of discrimination against and domination over women by men, as well as to pass antidiscrimination legislation and push for equal pay and day-care centers.

1972 Congress passes ERA and sends it out to the states for possible ratification. Three quarters or 38 states needed to ratify. (See 1928 above, and 1982 below.)

Higher Education Act forbids discrimination in admission to colleges and universities. One section, Title IX, states that "No person in the U.S. shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving

Federal financial assistance." Public schools and colleges greatly increased funding of women's sports programs as a result.

1973 Roe v. Wade, extremely controversial, ruled that laws prohibiting abortion in the first six months of pregnancy are unconstitutional because the first amendment implies a right to privacy, which in this matter applies to a woman's choices regarding her own body. This ruling has been narrowed in recent years by further Supreme Court challenges.

1978 The Pregnancy Discrimination Act bans employment discrimination against pregnant women.

1981 The U.S. Supreme Court rules that excluding women from the draft is constitutional.

Kirchberg v. Feenstra, overturns state laws designating a husband “head and master” with unilateral control of property owned jointly with his wife.

1982 Deadline for state ratification; ERA falls short of 38 states by 3.

1984 In Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees, sex discrimination in membership policies of organizations, such as the Jaycees, is forbidden by the Supreme Court, opening many previously all-male organizations (Kiwanis, Rotary, Lions) to women.

The state of Mississippi belatedly ratifies the 19th Amendment, granting women the vote.

1986 In Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson, 477 U.S. 57 (1986), the U.S. Supreme Court held that a hostile or abusive work environment can prove discrimination based on sex.

1987 Johnson v. Santa Clara County: The U.S. Supreme Court rules that it is permissible to take sex and race into account in employment decisions even where there is no proven history of discrimination but when evidence of a manifest imbalance exists in the number of women or minorities holding the position in question.

1989 In Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, 492 U.S. 490 (1989), the Supreme Court affirms the right of states to deny public funding for abortions and to prohibit public hospitals from performing abortions.

1994 Gender Equity in Education Act: trains teachers in gender equity, promotes math and science learning by girls, counsels pregnant teens.

The Violence Against Women Act funds services for victims of rape and domestic violence, allows women to seek civil rights remedies for gender-related crimes, provides training to increase police and court officials’ sensitivity and a national 24-hour hotline for battered women.

1996 United States v. Virginia, affirms that the male-only admissions policy of the state-supported Virginia Military Institute violates the Fourteenth Amendment.

1997 Elaborating on Title IX, the Supreme Court rules that college athletics programs must actively involve roughly equal numbers of men and women to qualify for federal support.

1998 Mitsubishi Motor Manufacturing of America agrees to pay $34 million to settle an E.E.O.C. lawsuit contending that hundreds of women were sexually harassed.

Burlington Indusries, Inc. v. Ellerth: The Supreme Court rules that employers are liable for sexual harassment even in instances when a supervisor’s threats are not carried out, but not when the employer took steps to prevent or promptly correct any sexually harassing behavior and/or when the employee did not take advantage of available opportunities to stop the behavior.

2000 CBS Broadcasting agrees to pay $8 million to settle a sex discrimination lawsuit by the E.E.O.C. on behalf of 200 women.

United States v. Morrison: The U.S. Supreme Court invalidates those portions of the Violence Against Women Act permitting victims of rape, domestic violence, etc. to sue their attackers in federal court.

Native Americans

1763 Proclamation Line of 1763 by British government to protect Indians.

1828 Cherokee Nation v. Georgia: In 1828 the Cherokee, a "civilized" tribe who had lived in peace working as farmers, building houses and roads found gold on their land. As a result white settlers moved in and the State of Georgia claimed jurisdiction over the Cherokee. The Cherokee sued claiming they were independent from Georgia. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Cherokee. The victory was short lived, however, as President Andrew Jackson refused to enforce the Court’s decision.

1830 Indian Removal Act pushes the Five Civilized Tribes west of the Mississippi River.

1838 Trail of Tears: Forced removal of the Cherokee west of Mississippi.

1850-60 California's Indian population: from 100,000 to 35,000

1851 Fort Laramie Treaty grants Indians their territory forever; Indians, in turn, guarantee safe passage of Oregon Trail travelers.

1860s First Sioux War. Transcontinental railroad construction and westward movement of Americans begin widespread encroachment on Plains Indian lands.

1864 Sand Creek Massacre: 300 peaceful Indian men, women & children attacked and slaughtered by U.S. Army under Colonel Chivington.

1867 Reservation policy established for the Black Hills & Oklahoma.

1870-

1880s Second Sioux War, Nez Percé, Apache Indian Wars with U.S.

1871 End of treaty-making by U.S.; Indians subject to U.S. policy.

1876 Custer's Last Stand: 264 soldiers killed by 2,500 Sioux & Cheyenne at Little Bighorn River, Montana.

1877 The Sioux surrender; Crazy Horse killed. The Nez Percé captured at Canadian border after 1,700 mile flight under Chief Joseph.

1885 Of an original 60 million, only 1,000 buffalo remain in the U.S.

1886 Apache's Geronimo surrenders.

1887 Dawes Act breaks up remaining tribal lands; enforces "Americanization" policy of settlement on reservations.

1890 Wounded Knee, South Dakota massacre of Native Americans.

1924 Congress passes a law granting Indians full citizenship who hadn’t already received it.

1932 President Hoover reorganizes the Bureau of Indian Affairs; increases its budget.

1934 Wheeler-Howard Act: Ended land allotments, restored unsold surplus lands to tribal ownership, authorized tribes to form councils with significant powers over their people. FDR's “New Deal” for Indians.

1953 Eisenhower’s “Termination” policy established to assimilate Native Americans. A dramatic revision of federal policy that ended the Bureau of Indian Affairs and all of its programs (later reestablished). It divided tribal property among its members. Limited tribal self government and relocated many Indians to the cities where jobs were available. The Termination policy also ended federal responsibility and social services (health, education, and welfare).

1973 Sit-in at D.C. Bureau of Indian Affairs to protest conditions. Indian rights movement gathers momentum, especially in organizations such as the American Indian Movement (AIM).

1974 Oglala civil war, Wounded Knee, S.D. siege by F.B.I. agents

1980s- Native American tribes granted exceptions to state anti-gambling

present laws in New York, Connecticut, and other states, opening casinos on reservations. Native American and other human remains in American museums are returned to tribes for burial.

Politics/Government:

Pendleton Act: Created the Civil Service exams whereby you get a government job by taking an exam instead of by favor.

Federal Campaign Reform Act of 1974. Following Watergate, matching funds to Presidential candidates up to maximum of $5 million in primary, and $20 million in the election, limits spending by Senate and House candidates, and limits contribution by individuals and political organizations.

War Powers Act, 1974: The President can send troops into combat must inform congress within 48 hours. Congress may then order the troops home if it wishes. Hostilities must terminate within 90 days unless Congress gives explicit permission for them to continue.

Economic History

Hamilton’s Financial Plans, 1790s

Federal payment of state and national debts incurred during revolution

Creation of a national bank (Bank of the United States)

Institute tariffs to protect American industries from foreign competition

Differing economies in North, South & West caused sectionalism and political conflict, 1800-60

North: Industry and trade were dominant due to poor soil, excellent seaports, great rivers for transport and for factory waterpower, Roads and canals were built with state money to expand this capability.

West: (Old Northwest: Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio) Agriculture dominated due to excellent farmlands here also, but primarily in grains due to colder climate, shorter growing season. Slavery is uneconomical, so it essentially didn’t exist here. The West eventually aligns with the North.

South: Agriculture dominated due to excellent farmlands, rivers best for transport only (not waterpower), Invention of cotton gin leads to cotton’s dominance of economy, growth of slave trade and use, and desire for westward expansion (especially to Texas). The slave issue becomes divisive and leads to sectionalism as abolition becomes a political movement. The tariff issue also leads to sectionalism. The 1828 Tariff of Abominations leads to John Calhoun of SC to write his Nullification Doctrine, a theory that states may nullify laws which it determines to be unconstitutional. This, in turn, leads to the belief that states may secede (leave) the Union, which eventually leads to Civil War.

Industrialism (1865-1920)

During and after the Civil War (1861-65), northern industries grew enormously. The corporation, a legal entity, and the issuing of stocks, led to nationwide businesses with enormous factories. This also led to the concentration of wealth in a very few hands, which led, in turn, to poltical corruption by the “robber baron” business leaders.

Government maintained a laissez-faire policy: government would not interfere with the economy, even in the event of a depression. Hypocritically, however, the federal government did send in the U.S. army to break workers’ strikes.

Progressive Era: Government moved away from laissez faire with Theodore Roosevelt’s Square Deal policy of mediating disputes between workers and management, and trustbusting.

The Welfare State

New Deal: Franklin Roosevelt’s policy of mild pro-unionism, and intervention in economy toward relief, recovery, and moderate reforms.

The Great Society: Lyndon Johnson’s program to wage the “War on Poverty” in the 1960s. Established Medicaid (health care coverage for the poor), federal education subsidies (Headstart e.g.), jobs programs (VISTA, e.g.). Never fully funded due to the massive cost of the Vietnam War.

Supply-side economics (Reaganomics): Cut corporate and individual taxes, cut social spending by government in order to encourage private investment leading to economic growth, and eliminate some federal business regulations to increase profits.

This top-down approach to economic intervention, meant to create growth, was sometimes referred to as “trickle-down economics” because it was asserted that additional wealth in corporations and the upper class would trickle down to the lower classes.

NAFTA: North American Free Trade Agreement, 1994: tariffs removed amongst Canada, United States and Mexico to stimulate greater trade and economic growth; critics believe it is resulting in fewer American exports and jobs in the United States. (Bush, Clinton)

GATT: General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 1994: like NAFTA, this economic agreement seeks to encourage free trade by reducing tariffs and other trade restrictions. It is enforced by the World Trade Organization (WTO). (Clinton)

Both of the two agreements above concern the overriding issue of “globalization” of the world’s economy.

Major Political Parties

Federalists: Pro England, manufacturing, strong national government, army, BUS, limited free speech. Hamilton, Adams

Jeffersonian

(Democratic)

Republicans: Pro French, farmers, strong state governments, low taxes, individual rights, small army, small national government anti national internal improvements, anti manufacturing. Jefferson, Madison, Monroe

Parties fall apart as Republicans become more like the Federalists when in office, and Federalists are tainted by the Hartford Convention.

Whigs: assumed to be the party of the wealthy, Clay’s American plan (tariff, internal improvements, and BUS), city oriented, nationalist, established business, anti Jackson. Clay, Webster, Tyler

Democrats: assumed to be the party of the common man, anti high tariff, expansionist, anti BUS inheritors of Jefferson’s concern for farmer, rising businessmen, Jackson, Van Buren, Calhoun, Polk.

Parties fall apart during the 1850s when they can’t deep their southern and northern wings together.

Republicans: Pro northern business, high tariff, Homestead Act, help to R.R., hold union together, free the slaves, hard money, pro imperialism. Lincoln, Grant, McKinley, T. Roosevelt. There are conservative and progressive-reform wings.

America Becomes A Global Power: 1900-1920s

MAJOR THEMES:

Organize U. S. foreign policy from 1870-1920 by: (1) geographic regionFar East, Latin America, Caribbean, Europe; (2) American motives economic, moral, Monroe Doctrine, balance of power among European nations, dominance in the Caribbean; (3) influence of domestic policies on foreign policy.

Imperialism: characteristics, sources, nature, causes, impact, results, compared to European imperialism.

Link Reconstruction, Populism, and Imperialism.

Compare and contrast the old and the new Manifest Destiny.

Roosevelt’s foreign policy.

Wilson’s foreign policy.

U. S. policy toward Mexico and Cuba, 1890s-1930s.

Causes of U. S. entry into World War I and its attempts to remain neutral.

Defeat of the Versailles Treaty: immediate and long-term consequences.

War and the threat of war united and divided Americans in the 1898-1920s period.

Compare and contrast the Populist and Progressive movements.

Compare Progressivism and Jacksonianism.

Goals of Progressivism: successes, failures.

Progressives as the new Federalists: Compare Hamilton’s program and Progressivism.

Progressivism as the “have-nots” against the “haves”: role of labor unions, immigrants, Blacks, women, and urban poor.

Corporations and unions both wanted governmental protection but not governmental regulation.

Trace the regulation of big business and court interpretations from the Interstate Commerce Act to U. S. v. U. S. Steel Corp. in 1920.

Trace the long history of a reform such as prohibition, women’s rights, or banking.

Supreme Court interpretations and changing economic and social conditions, 1890-1920.

Significant elections: 1900, 1912, 1920.

Compare and contrast the programs and administrations of Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and William Howard Taft: banking, railroads, trusts, tariffs, etc.

World War I both helped and hurt Blacks and labor.

Compare the domestic impact of the First and Second World Wars.

Progressivism a liberal or conservative movement?

TERMS TO KNOW:

- James G. Blaine - Pan-Americanism

- “Yellow journalism” - jingoism

- Alfred Thayer Mahan - U. S. S. Maine

- Commodore Matthew Perry - Commodore Dewey

- Queen Liliokalani - Rough Riders

- Treaty of Paris (1898) - Walter Reed

- Insular Cases - Teller Amendment

- Platt Amendment - protectorate

- Aguinaldo - John Hay, Secretary of State

- Open Door Notes - Boxer Rebellion

- extraterritoriality - most-favored-nation clause

- Teddy Roosevelt’s “Big Stick” policy - Clayton-Bulwer Treaty

- Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty - Panama Canal

- Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine - “Colossus of the North”

- Russo-Japanese War - Treaty of Portsmouth

- Gentleman’s Agreement - Great White Fleet

- Muckrakers - Jacob Riis [How the Other Half Lives]

- Thorstein Veblen [The Theory of the Leisure - Lincoln Steffens [The Shame of the Cities]

Class] - Frank Norris [The Octopus]

- Ida Tarbell [History of Standard Oil Co.] - John Dewey [The School and Society]

- Margaret Sanger - 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th Amendments

- Triangle Shirtwaist Co. fire - Anti-Saloon League

- Square Deal - Newlands Reclamation Act (1902)

- Forest Reserve Act (1891) - Anthracite Coal Strike (1902)

- Hepburn Act (1906) - “Trustbuster”

- Meat Inspection Act - Upton Sinclair [The Jungle]

- Pure Food and Drug Act - Panic of 1907

- Wisconsin, “Laboratory of Democracy” - Bob LaFollette

- Ballinger-Pinchot controversy - “Dollar Diplomacy”

- Bull Moose Party - Roosevelt’s Osawatomie, KS speech

- New Freedom - New Nationalism

- Socialist Party - IWW [“Wobblies”]

- “Big Bill” Haywood - Federal Reserve Act (1913)

- Underwood-Simmons Tariff - Jones Act (Philippines), 1916

- Jones Act (Puerto Rico), 1917 - Pancho Villa

- General John “Blackjack” Pershing - Triple Entente

- Triple Alliance - Central Powers

- Lusitania - Zimmermann Note

- War Industries Board - Herbert Hoover, Food Administration

- Espionage Act (1917) - Sedition Act (1918)

- selective service - Fourteen Points

- Versailles Treaty - Big Four

- collective security - Senator Henry Cabot Lodge

- Red Scare - Palmer raids

IMPORTANT SUPREME COURT CASES:

* Insular Cases [1901, 1903, 1904] constitutional rights in territories

* Northern Securities Case [1904] antitrust laws

* Lochner v. New York [1905] due process and state police power

* Schenck v. U. S. [1919] radicals and the 1st Amendment

* Abrams v. U. S. [1919] radicals and the 1st Amendment

The ‘Roaring’ 20s & the Depression: 1920-1940

MAJOR THEMES:

Harding and the 1920s as the end of Progressivism.

What aspects of Progressivism survived into the 1920s?

Were the 1920s “golden” or “roaring” for farmers, labor, and business?

Coolidge: The man who builds a factory builds a temple; the man who works there worships there.

The 1920s as an age of nonconformity: Blacks, feminists, literary criticism, new sexual freedoms.

The dark side of the 1920s: anti-immigration, KKK, Scopes Trial, prohibition.

Alienation as a literary them in the 1920s F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Great Gatsby [the “Lost Generation”].

Causes of the Great Depression.

Compare the criticisms of American society writers made in the 1920s with those made in the 1930s.

Compare Hoover’s and FDR’s response to the Depression.

Compare the role of the federal government in the economies of the 1920s and 1930s.

The twenties were pro-business; the thirties were anti-business.

Compare Progressivism and the New Deal.

Compare and contrast the First and Second New Deals.

The New Deal was revolutionary.

The New Deal was a conservative program.

The New Deal helped the rich more than the needy.

Successes and failures of the New Deal.

The Supreme Court and the New Deal.

Impact of various New Deal programs and agencies on American society.

Rise of the welfare state.

Big government and big labor checked big business.

Explain the critics of the New Deal: Townsend, Coughlin, Huey Long, leftists, conservatives.

What ended the reform effort by the late 1930s?

Reform would have come without a depression because reform in American history is the periodic readjustment of aspects of the economy.

Compare the labor movement of the 1930s with the labor movement of the late 19c.

Why did the Socialist Party fail to become a serious factor in American politics?

TERMS TO KNOW:

- “Return to Normalcy” - Teapot Dome Scandal

- Muscle Shoals - Secy. of the Treasury Mellon (tax cuts)

- Election of 1924 - Progressive Party

- Federal Farm Board - “The Lost Generation”

- Theodore Dreiser [An American Tragedy] - Ernest Hemingway [A Farewell to Arms]

- T. S. Eliot [The Waste Land] - prohibition [Volstead Act]

- fundamentalists - Immigration Acts (1921, 1924)

- Billy Sunday - Scopes Trial

- Henry Ford [Model T] - The Jazz Singer [1st talking movie]

- flappers - the “New Woman”

- Harlem Renaissance - Langston Hughes

- Marcus Garvey - Pan-African movement

- Charles Lindbergh - “Spirit of St. Louis”

- Twenty-One Demands - Washington Naval Conference

- 5:5:3:1.75:1.75 naval ratio - Dawes Plan

- Young Plan - Kellogg-Briand Treaty

- Smoot-Hawley Tariff (1930) - Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)

- Bonus Army - “Hoovervilles”

- Good Neighbor Policy - Norris-LaGuardia Act (1932)

- election of 1932 - 20th & 21st Amendments

- bank holiday - Hundred Days

- Emergency Banking Relief Act (1933) - “Relief, Recovery, Reform!”

- Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act (1933) - Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC)

- National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) - National Industrial Recovery Administration

- the “Blue Eagle” (NRA)

- Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) - Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)

- Federal Emergency Relief Admin. (FERA) - Civil Works Administration (CWA)

- Public Works Administration (PWA) - Works Progress Administration (WPA)

- Harry Hopkins - Federal Arts Project

- Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) - Federal Housing Authority (FHA)

- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) - Joseph Kennedy, Sr.

- Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) - Rural Electrification Administration (REA)

- National Youth Administraiton (NYA) - Indian Reorganization Act (1934)

- Wagner Act (1935) - National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)

- Fair Labor Standards Act - Congress of Industrial Organization (CIO)

- John L. Lewis - Dust Bowl

- Oakies - John Steinbeck [The Grapes of Wrath]

- Frances Perkins, Secy. of Labor - Eleanor Roosevelt

- Keynesian economics - Huey Long [the “Kingfish”]

- “Share the Weath” - Father Charles Coughlin

- Election of 1936 - Social Security Act

- “Court Packing” - Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes

- Hatch Act (1939)

IMPORTANT SUPREME COURT CASES:

* Schechter Poultry Corp. v. U. S. [1935] constitutionality of New Deal programs

America Becomes A Superpower: 1940-1960

MAJOR THEMES:

Compare isolationism after World War I with leadership of the Western world after World War II.

Compare and contrast American foreign policy in the 1920s and 1930s with American foreign policy in the fifteen years after World War II.

The impact of communism upon both foreign and domestic affairs in the two decades after World War II.

Was the Cold War inevitable?

Compare and contrast the foreign policies of Truman and Eisenhower.

How consistent was U. S. policy toward China from 1900-1949?

Impact of the Spanish-American War, World War I, and World War II on our commitments and security in Asia and the Pacific Ocean.

American foreign policy from 1945-1960 was controlled by the ghost of Woodrow Wilson.

Compare and contrast the experiences of various groups—labor, Blacks, business, farmers—following the First and Second World Wars.

Disputes among black leaders over goals, methods, and the degree of integration.

1950s as an era of social anxiety.

Reasons for and consequences of black migration from the rural South to the urban North in the 20c.

Civil rights movement to 1960.

Why is FDR ranked as a great President?

TERMS TO KNOW:

- Montevideo Conference - Rio de Janeiro Conference (1933)

- Buenos Aires Conference (1936) - Lima Conference (1938)

- Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) - Francisco Franco

- Adolph Hitler - Benito Mussolini

- Joseph Stalin - Chiang Kai-shek

- Panay Incident - General Tojo

- Lend Lease - Atlantic Charter (1941)

- Pearl Harbor (12/7/41) - War Production Board

- Office of Price Administraiton (OPA) - genocide

- Holocaust - “Final Solution”

- D-Day (6/4/44) - Stalingrad

- Winston Churchill - Casablanca Conference (1943)

- Teheran Conference (1943) - “unconditional surrender”

- Battle of the Bulge - Manhattan Project

- J. Robert Oppenheimer - Hiroshima

- Nagasaki - V-E Day

- V-J Day - Manzinar

- relocation - Yalta Conference

- Potsdam Conference - Churchill’s “Iron Curtain” speech

- Bretton Woods Conference - Dunbarton Oaks Conference

- UN Charter - Nuremberg trials

- Voice of America - Marshall Tito

- containment - George F. Kennan

- Truman Doctrine - Marshall Plan

- Berlin Blockade - NATO

- Warsaw Pact - SEATO

- CENTO - ANZUS

- collective security - Mao Tse-tung

- Korean War - General Douglas MacArthur

- Gandhi - Dien Bien Phu

- Ho Chi Minh - Bricker Amendment

- John Foster Dulles - mutual assured desgtruction (M.A.D.)

- brinksmanship - Nikita Khrushchev

- Hungarian Revolt (1956) - Common Market

- Organization of American States (OAS) - U-2 Incident

- Bay of Pigs - Alliance for Progress

- Cuban Missile Crisis - ICBM

- G. I. Bill of Rights (1944) - Baby Boom

- Taft-Hartley Act - Senator Robert A. Taft

- Dixiecrats - Senator Strom Thurmond

- Henry Wallace - Fair Deal

- National Security Act (1947, 1949) - McCarthyism

- Senator Joseph McCarthy - Alger Hiss

- Julius and Ethel Rosenberg - McCarran Internal Security Act (1950)

- 22nd Amendment - Ayn Rand [The Fountainhead]

- McCarran-Walter Immigration Act (1952) - Interstate Highway Act

- Dept. of Health, Educ. & Welfare (HEW) - St. Lawrence Seaway

- Jimmy Hoffa - AFL-CIO merger

- Sputnik - National Defense Education Act (NDEA)

- “military-industrial complex” - desegregation

- “Separate But Equal” - Thurgood Marshall

- Rosa Parks - Montgomery, AL bus boycott

- Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. - Little Rock, AR desegregation crisis

- Civil Rights Act (1957) - Civil Rights Act (1960)

- poll taxes

IMPORTANT SUPREME COURT CASES:

* Korematsu v. U. S. [1944] war powers and civilians

* Brown v. Board of Education, Topeka, KS [1954] blacks, education and the equal protection

clause.

Side Note:

Admiralty Courts – royal courts that were paid for convictions.

- Colonists oppose

Historiography

Bancroft – quest for liberty

Beer, Andrews, Gipson – constitutional issues

Charles Beard – economic – conflict of classes

Boorestine – preserve traditional rights

Bailyn – Intillectual Revolution

Nash – social revolution – break barriers

W

A

S

H

I

N

G

T

O

N

1789

1796

A

D

A

M

S

1796

1800

J

E

F

F

E

R

S

O

N

1800

1808

M

A

D

I

S

O

N

1808

1816

M

O

N

R

O

E

1816

1824

A

D

A

M

S

1824

1828

Historiography

Parton – Jackson wanted to dominate

Turner – Jackson triumph of democracy and representation of people – universal manhood suffrage and two party system

Hammond – Jackson contributes to panic 0f37 by dismanteling bank

Temin – panic and depression inevitable – caused by bank

J

A

C

K

S

O

N

1828

1836

V

A

N

B

U

R

E

N

1836

1840

T

Y

L

E

R

1840

1844

P

O

L

K

1844

1848

T F

A I

Y L

L L

O M

R O

R

E

1848

1852

P

I

E

R

C

E

1852

1856

B

U

C

H

A

N

A

N

1856

1860

Historiography

Woodward – South unique, different, agric.

Goven – sectional differences exaggerated

Beringer – Confederacy defeated because of loss of will – poor leadership, defeat

McPherson – defeat inevitable, internal divisions, Northern superiority

Morison – War fought for moral issues

Schlesinger – slavery couldn’t be peacefully abolished

L

I

N

C

O

L

N

1860

1865

Historiography

Goodwyn – populist are democratic

Activists - reactionary

Hicks – populists are rational people

reacting to harsh laissez-faire

Hofstadter – anti-intillectuals fighting for

lost cause – class vs. class – radical

Turner – West has been a major impact on American policies since beginning

J

O

H

N

S

O

N

1865

1868

G

R

A

N

T

1868

1876

H

A

Y

E

S

1876

1880

A

R

T

H

U

R

1881

1884

H

A

R

R

I

S

O

N

1888

1892

C

L

E

V

L

A

N

D

1892

1896

M

C

K

I

N

L

E

Y

1896

1900

R

O

O

S

E

V

E

L

T

1900

1908

T

A

F

T

1908

1912

W

I

L

S

O

N

1912

1920

W

I

L

S

O

N

1912

1920

H

A

R

D

I

N

G

1920

1923

C

O

O

L

I

D

G

E

1923

1928

H

O

O

V

E

R

1928

1932

R

O

O

S

E

V

E

L

T

1932

1945

R

O

O

S

E

V

E

L

T

1932

1945

T

R

U

M

A

N

1945

1952

E

I

S

E

N

H

O

W

E

R

1952

1960

K

E

N

N

E

D

Y

1960

1963

J

O

H

N

S

O

N

1963

1968

Historiography

Bonomi – awakening was a contest between Enlightenment and Pietism

Butler – Awakening didn’t occur – not united, different congregations, no structure

Historiography

Sibly – slavery overemphasized as cause for Civil War – more sectional differences

Holt – slavery cause political struggle

Historiography

Stamp – Reconstruction successful – economic consolidation, democracy, Amendments ratified

Foner – failed to secure rights for blacks, corruption and fractionalism

Historiography

Tipple – Robber Barons – threatened traditional beliefs, destruction of competition

Chandler – entrepreneurs were hard working and innovative

Arnold – anti-trust acts preserved competition

McGraw – regulation inefficient

Historiography

Laurie – labor radical – want gov’t regulation, public ownership

Degler – labor reactionary – preserving against capitalism, had anti-socialistic ideals

Historiography

Kelly – conflict between USSR and US inevitable – different values, structure

Paterson – US more powerful – attempt to dominate makes conflict inevitable

Historiography

Barnham – prohibition works – aimed at saloons, gambling, corruption, and prostition.

Historiography

Beards – Imperialism due to economic reason – trade threatened

Bemis – US land hungry

Pratt – white man’s burden

Historiography

Kennan – Wilson an impractical idealist

Trask – Wilson had realistic war goals that coordinated with larger diplomatic aims

N

I

X

O

N

1968

1974

F

O

R

D

1974

1976

C

A

R

T

E

R

1976

1980

C

L

E

V

E

L

A

N

D

1884

1888

R

E

A

G

A

N

1980

1988

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