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American Pageant Chapter 16 Flashcards

Chapter 16 The Ferment of Reform and Culture
Tenth Edition
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549275305Alexis de Tocquevilleperson who openly declared that there was "no country in the world where the Christian religion retains a greater influence over the souls of men than in America"0
549275306Thomas Painewrote a book that shockingly declared that all churches were "set up to terrify and enslave mankind, and monopolize power and profit"; promoted Deism1
549275307The Age of Reason (1794)book written by Thomas Paine that shockingly declared that all churches were "set up to terrify and enslave mankind, and monopolize power and profit"2
549275308Deismliberal belief that relied on reason rather than revelation, on science rather than the Bible; rejected the concept of original sin and denied Christ's divinity; believed in a Supreme Being who had created a knowable universe and endowed human beings with a capacity for moral behavior; followed by many Founding Fathers including Jefferson, Franklin, and Paine3
549275309Unitarianismbelief that God existed in only one person (hence unitarian), and not in the orthodox Trinity; denied the divinity of Jesus; stressed the essential goodness of human nature rather than its vileness; believed in free will and the possibility of salvation through good works; God as a loving father rather than stern Creator; followed by Ralph Waldo Emerson; appealed to intellectuals whose rationalism and optimism naturally made them not support the hellfire doctrines of Calvinism (especially predestination and human depravity)4
549275310Second Great Awakeningone of the most momentous episodes in the history of American religion; tidal wave of spiritual fervor that left in its wake countless converted souls, many shattered and reorganized churches, and numerous new sects; began on the southern frontier and rolled into the cities of the Northeast; affected more people than the First Great Awakening; brought support for prison reform, temperance, woman's rights, and abolitionism5
549275311"camp meetings"gatherings (with as many as 25,000 people) that spread the Second Great Awakening; would camp for several days and listen to hellfire gospel; people would engage in frenzies of rolling, dancing, barking, and jerking; many soon became sinful again, but these gatherings massively increased church membership and humanitarian reforms6
549275312Methodism and Baptismbenefited the most from the revivalism; stressed personal conversion contrary to predestination, a democratic control of church affairs, and a rousing emotionalism7
549275313Peter Cartwrightbest known of the Methodist traveling frontier preachers; ill-educated, strong servant of the Lord who spent 50 years traveling from Tennessee to Illinois while calling upon sinners to repent; converted thousands with his bellowing voice and flailing arms; physically knocked out those who tried to break up his meetings8
549275314Charles Grandison Finneythe greatest revival preacher; trained as a lawyer, stopped drinking and became an evangelist after a deeply moving conversion experience as a young man; held audiences spellbound; tall and athletic; led massive revivals in Rochester and New York City in 1830-31; preached old-time religion and was an innovator; devised the "anxious bench" where sinners stood and repented in front of the congregation; encouraged woman to pray aloud in public; promised a perfect Christian kingdom on earth and condemned alcohol and slavery; served as president of Oberlin College in Ohio which became a center for revivalist activity and abolitionism9
549275315"Burned-Over District"name given to western New York where many descendants of New England puritans had settled and where many preachers preached "hellfire and damnation"10
549275316Millerites or Adventistsmovement named after William Miller and which had several hundred thousand followers; rose from the Burned-Over District in the 1830s; interpreted the Bible to mean that Christ would return to earth on October 22, 1844; gathered in prayerful assemblies to greet Christ and were disappointed; were dampened by this but not destroyed11
549275317Methodists, Baptists, Presbyteriansthree religions that split North/South over slavery, first two by 1844-1845, third by 1857; 'first the churches split, then the political parties split, then the Union split'12
549275318Joseph Smitha tall, powerful, wrestler from the Burned-Over District who claimed that he received some gold plates from an angel; started the Mormon religion; was murdered and mangled along with his brother by a mob in Carthage, Illinois and the movement seemed near collapse13
549275319Book of Mormonthe text that the gold plates Joseph Smith reportedly received from an angel translated into14
549275320Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormon)the religion that was started by Joseph Smith as a result of his gold plates; almost collapsed when Smith was killed; moved to Utah and made the desert bloom by using irrigation; had their crops of 1848 nearly destroyed by crickets, only to be saved by a flock of gulls;15
549275321Mormonsfollowers of the Mormon religion who functioned under a religious oligarchy and were under serious opposition from non-Mormon neighbors in Ohio, then Missouri, then Illinois; hated for voting as a unit, drilling their own militia, and supposedly supporting polygamy (Smith reportedly had several wives); a few moved to Utah pulling two-wheeled carts; moved to Utah and became a prosperous theocracy and commonwealth; had followers in Europe, many of which moved to Utah; were threatened in 1857 when a federal army marched against the Mormons, who promised to fight to the death, but were eased after little bloodshed; argued against polygamy laws of 1862 and 1882 and therefore didn't make Utah a state until 189616
549275322Brigham Youngtook over the Mormons and saved the movement after Smith's death; stern compared to charming Smith; only had 11 days of formal schooling; an aggressive leader, eloquent preacher, and gifted administrator; led the Mormons to Utah 1846-1847 to escape oppression; made the Mormon settlement successful; married as many as 27 women and had 56 children; crisis developed when the Washington couldn't control his hierarchy after he was made territorial governor in 185017
549275323Deseret; Mormon Corridorname for the areas the Mormons rapidly took over and held after the US acquired the Mexican Cession in 1848; the main area through which the Mormons spread after 184818
549275324little red schoolhouseswhere most of the public education took place at this time period; had one room, one stove, one teacher, 8 grades, etc.; stayed open only a few months a year; teachers (mostly men) were ill trained, ill tempered, ill paid, often punished more than taught and often knew not much more than their best students; taught the "three R's"19
549275325Horace Manna brilliant and idealistic graduate of Brown University; secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education who campaigned for 1.) better and more schoolhouses, 2.) longer school terms, 3.) higher pay for teachers, 4.) expanded curriculum; his ideas spread but many communities still remained uneducated; by 1860 there were as many as 1,000,000 uneducated whites (blacks weren't aloud to learn to read or write in the south, North didn't allow blacks in schools)20
549275326Noah Webstera Yale-educated Connecticut Yankee; the "Schoolmaster of the Republic" who designed "reading lessons" that educated millions of children and were partly designed to increase patriotism; spent 20 years creating a dictionary, which was published in 1828 and helped standardize English21
549275327William H. McGuffeya teacher-preacher who created grade-school readers first published in the 1830s22
549275328McGuffey's Readerswhat McGuffey's readers were called (easy); first published in the 1830s; sold 122 million copies the following decades; taught lessons of morality, patriotism, and idealism23
549275329new, small, mostly Southern and Western liberal arts colleges(not a term) appeared as a result of the Second Great Awakening; were mostly made to satisfy local pride rather than spread education; like the older higher education schools, they taught 1.) Latin, 2.) Greek, 3.) mathematics, 4.) moral philosophy; were less intellectual and more bored24
549275330University of Virginiaone of the earliest state-supported universities, founded in 1819; founded by Thomas Jefferson, who designed its architecture and separated it from religion and politics; focused on modern languages and the sciences25
549275331higher education for womenhigher education for women? what's that? woman belonged at home at this time although there were some exceptions (see below)26
549275332Emma Willard; Troy Female Seminarygained respect for higher women education in the 1820s; was founded by this person in 182127
549275333Oberlin Collegealready considered crazy for educating blacks, this school in Ohio began educating women in 1837; (see the section on Finney for more info)28
549275334Mary Lyon; Mount Holyoke Seminary (later College)established an outstanding women's school in South Hadley, Massachusetts; the name of this school29
549275335lyceum lecture associationsgroups, about 3,000 in 1835, through which traveling lecturers spread information; spoke of science, literature (eew), and moral philosophy30
549275336Ralph Waldo Emersona member of a lyceum; a talented talker who journeyed thousands of miles31
549275337North American Reviewmagazine founded in 1815 that existed for a long time (most magazines didn't at this time) and was for intellectuals32
549275338Godey's Lady's Bookmagazine founded in 1830 that survived until 1898 and 150,000 subscribers (enormous at the time); read by countless millions of women (they shared)33
549275339Sylvester Grahamfounder of the Graham cracker; emphasized a whole-wheat bread and cracker diet34
549275340reforms(not a term) were abundant at this time period; fought for women's rights, miracle medicines, communal living, polygamy, celibacy, rule by prophets, fad diets, whole-wheat bread and crackers, and guidance by spirits, and against alcohol, tobacco, profanity, transit of mail on Sabbath, and most importantly, slavery35
549275341treatment of debtors(not a term) as late as 1830s, hundreds of poor people were imprisoned, some for owing a single dollar; the poorer classes were most hurt by this; state legislatures gradually abolished this36
549275342treatment of criminals(not a term) criminal codes were softened; number of acts deserving capital punishment decreased; types of brutal punishment used was reduced; states started reforming as well as punishing; "reformatories", "houses of correction", and "penitentiaries" developed37
549275343treatment of the insane(not a term) insane people were treated terribly; old concepts concluded that they had unclean spirits; the 1800s idea was that they chose to be the way they are, and should be treated like beasts; many were jailed with sane people38
549275344Dorothea DixNew England teacher-author; physically frail woman afflicted with persistent lung trouble who possessed infinite compassion and willpower and never raised her voice; traveled 60,000 miles in 8 years to establish reports on insanity from her observations; improved jail conditions and helped established that the demented weren't willfully perverse but mentally ill; had a classic petition in 1843 that she submitted to the Massachusetts legislature that described the bad situation of jails and improved conditions39
549275345American Peace Societyanti-war society formed in 1828 that declared war on war40
549275346William Laddman with badly ulcerated legs; had ideas that helped in the international organizations for collective security of the twentieth century that worked with other nations until the Crimean War and Civil War41
549275347American Temperance Societyorganization formed at Boston in 1826; (about a thousand local similar groups sprang up within a few year); implored drinkers to sign the temperance pledge and organized children's clubs known as the "Cold Water Army"; made use of pictures, pamphlets, and lectures42
549275348T.S. Arthur; Ten Nights in a Barroom and What I Saw There (1854)man against alcohol; a book written by this man that described in shocking detail how a once-happy village was ruined by Sam Slade's Tavern, was only second to Uncle Tom's Cabin in the 1850s, was successful onstage43
549275349temperance(not a term) had two major lines of attack: 1.) increasing the public's will to resist drinking, convincing people to drink rarely, rather than not at all, 2.) creating a law that would prohibit drinking at all44
549275350Neal S. Dowblue-nosed reformer, mayor of Portland, employer of labor, "Father of Prohibition"; was from Maine and witnessed the effects of alcohol; sponsored a law in Maine that prohibited the manufacture and sale of alcohol45
549275351Maine Law of 1851a statue supported by Dow that went into effect and prohibited the manufacture and sale of alcohol; was copied by other states that created similar statues; by 1857 about a dozen states had similar laws, all which were repealed or declared unconstitutional after a decade46
549275352women's role in America(not a term) women were subordinate to God and their husbands; could not vote and could be beaten (to a reasonable extent) like black slaves; could not own property after marriage; were better off than European women because women were scarce on American frontiers; unlike colonial times, women now married less, about 10% were unmarried by the Civil War; gender differences were emphasized by the new market economy; women were considered emotionally and physically weak but artistic and refined; they were responsible for teaching children morals and guiding their husbands away from a bad life; women were active in other reform movements, like temperance47
549275353Alexis de Tocqueville (again)French visitor who noted that rape in France was lightly punished whereas in America it was one of the few crimes punishable by death48
549275354Lucretia Motta Quaker who was angered when she and her fellow female delegates were rejected from a London antislavery convention49
549275355Elizabeth Cady Stantona mother of seven who left "obey" out of her marriage ceremony and advocated suffrage for women50
549275356Susan B. Anthonygrew up as a Quaker; a militant lecturer for woman's rights who fought so tirelessly for women's rights that women who fought for their rights were called "Susan Bs"51
549275357Elizabeth Blackwella pioneer in a previously forbidden profession for women (medicine) who was the first female graduate from a medical college52
549275358Margaret Fuller; The Dialtook part in the struggle to bring unity and republican government to Italy, died in a shipwreck off New York's Fire Island while returning to the US in 1850; the transcendentalist journal that she edited53
549275359Sarah and Angelina Grimkétwo women who fought for antislavery and women's suffrage54
549275360Lucy Stonewoman who maintained her maiden name after marriage; was extremely important to woman's suffrage55
549275361Amelia Bloomerrevolted against the uncomfortable "street sweeping" attire of woman by creating and promoting semi-masculine, short skirts with Trousers, an attire known as "bloomers"56
549275362Seneca Falls Convention/Women's Rights Conventionmeeting that launched the women's rights movement in America; where Stanton read her Declaration of Sentiments, which asserted that "all men and women are created equal"; was the first step towards women's suffrage57
549275363Robert Owena wealthy and idealistic Scottish textile manufacturer who in 1825 founded a communal society of about a thousand people where little harmony prevailed and radicals and scoundrels existed and sank the colony into contradiction and confusion58
549275364New Harmony, Indianathe unsuccessful community that Owen created where about 1000 people lived59
549275365Brook Farm, Massachusettsan community started in 1841 by the brotherly and sisterly cooperation of about 20 intellectuals; prospered reasonably until 1846 when a new communal building was lost to fire shortly after completion, collapsing the venture in debt; believed in "plain living and high thinking"; inspired Nathaniel Hawthorne to write a book60
549275366The Blithedale Romancebook by Nathaniel Hawthorne that was inspired by Brook Farm and whose main character was modeled on Margaret Fuller (see above)61
549275367Oneida Colonycommunity founded in New York in 1848; practiced free love ("complex marriage"), birth control, and eugenic selection of parents for superior offspring; the leader fled to Canada to escape persecution for adultery; flourished for more than 30 years because its artisans made superior steel traps and Oneida Community (silver) Plate; embraced monogamy and abandoned communism in 1879-188062
549275368Shakersamong the longest-lived sects; bean in the 1770s to set up the first of a score or so of religious communities; attained about 6,000 members in 1840, but were virtually extinct by 1940 because they prohibited marriage and sexual relations63
549275369Mother Ann Leefounder of the Shakers sect64
549275370Thomas Jeffersona gifted amateur inventor who won a gold metal for a new type of plow65
549275371Nathaniel Bowditchmathematician who wrote about practical navigation66
549275372Matthew F. Mauryoceanography who wrote about ocean winds and currents67
549275373Benjamin Sillimanthe most influential American scientist 1800-1850; a pioneer chemist and geologist who taught and wrote brilliantly at Yale College for over 50 years68
549275374Louis Agassiza distinguished French-Swiss immigrant who served for 25 years at Harvard College; student of biology who sometimes carried snakes in his pockets; insisted on original research and hated overemphasis on memory work69
549275375Asa Graythe "Columbus of American botany" who taught at Harvard College and published over 350 books, monographs and papers; his textbooks set new standards for clarity and interest70
549275376John J. AudubonFrench-descended naturalist who painted wild fowl in their natural habitat; painted a popular painting and had a society named after him; shot many birds for sport as a young man71
549275377Birds of Americaa magnificent painting by Audubon that attained considerable popularity72
549275378Audubon Societysociety named after Audubon (easy) that worked for the protection of birds73
549275379medicinestill primitive by modern standards regardless of a steady growth in medical schools; bleeding was a common remedy; smallpox was dreaded; the yellow fever epidemic of 1793 in Philadelphia took several thousand lives; illness often resulted from improper diet, hurried eating, perspiring and cooling off too rapidly, and ignorance of germs and sanitation; life expectancy was 40 years for a white person born in 1850, less for blacks; tooth operation were done by blacksmiths; self-prescribed patent medicines were common; tumors were rubbed with dead toads; the use of medicine was often harmful; operations were performed by tying the person down; laughing gas and other anesthetics were later used in the 1840s74
549275380Robertson's Infallible Worm Destroying Lozengesa type of self-prescribed patent medicine that was commonly used75
549275381Oliver Wendell Holmesdeclared in 1860 that if the medicines were thrown into the sea, humans would be better off and the fish worse off76
549275382Thomas Jeffersonarchitect of revolution; probably the ablest American architect of his generation; brought a classical design to his hilltop home, perhaps the most stately mansion of the nation77
549275383MonticelloJefferson's Virginia hilltop home that he designed and gave a classical design, making it one of the most stately mansions of the nation78
549275384University of Virginia at Charlottesvilleschool that Jefferson designed and gave a quadrangle that remains one of the finest examples of classical architecture in America79
549275385Edward Everettthe eminent Boston scholar and orator who placed a statue of Apollo in his home and had its naked limbs draped80
549275386Gilbert Stuarta spendthrift Rhode Islander and one of the most gifted of the early competent painters; painted in England and was comparable with the best painters; produced several portraits of Washington, all which were somewhat idealized and dehumanized81
549275387Charles Willson Pealepainter from Maryland who painted about 60 portraits of Washington, who patiently sat for about 14 of them82
549275388John Trumbullfought in the Revolutionary War and recaptured its scenes and spirit on canvas83
549275389Hudson River schoolschool that excelled at mirroring of local landscapes through paintings84
549275390daguerreotypea crude photograph that that brought competition to portrait painters85
549275391Louis Daguerreperfected a crude type of photograph mentioned above86
549275392"minstrel shows"featured white actors with blackened faces87
549275393Dixiesong written in 1856 ironically in New York City by an Ohioan that was adopted by the Confederates as their battle hymn88
549275394Stephen C. Fosterwhite Pennsylvanian who wrote the most famous black songs; went to the south one time in 1852; contributed to American folk music by capturing the painful spirit of slaves; lost his art and popularity and died in a charity ward as a drunkard89
549275395"Old Folks at Home"song published by Foster90
549275396Hamilton, Jay, Madisonthree authors of The Federalist91
549275397Common Sensewritten by Thomas Paine92
549275398Daniel Websterwrote masterpiece public orations93
549275399Autobiography (1818)book by Benjamin Franklin that is one of the few to achieve genuine distinction as a nonreligious book published before 1820; a classic in its simplicity, clarity, and inspirational quality; recorded only a fragment of Franklin's life94
549275400Knickerbocker Groupgroup in New York that wrote literature and enabled America to boast for the first time of a literature that matched its magnificent landscapes95
549275401Washington Irvingmember of the Knickerbocker Group (1); born in New York City, the first American general writer to win international recognition as a literary figure; forced to write when the family business failed; used English as well as American themes; did much to interpret America to Europe and Europe to America; "the first ambassador whom the New World of letters sent to the Old"; knew about Dutch traditions96
549275402Knickerbocker's History of New York (1809)book written by Irving that has amusing caricatures of the Dutch97
549275403"Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"two immortal Dutch-American tales written by Irving98
549275404James Fenimore Coopermember of the Knickerbocker Group (2); the first American novelist to win international recognition and make New World themes respectable; married into a wealthy family and settled on the frontiers of New York; boasted to his wife that he could write a better book than the one he was reading and took her challenge to do so and succeeded; had an initial failure until his second novel; explored the viability and destiny of America's republican experiment, by contrasting the values of "natural men", children of the wooded wilderness, with the artificiality of modern civilization99
549275405The SpyCooper's second novel that recovered him from his initial failure; an absorbing tale of the American Revolution100
549275406Leatherstocking TalesCooper's most famous book101
549275407The Last of the MohicansCooper's novel in which a deadeye rifleman named Natty Bumppo, one of nature's noblemen, meets with Indians102
549275408William Cullen Bryantmember of the Knickerbocker Group (3); writer from Massachusetts who wrote one of the first high quality poems produced in the US (see below); was forced to make his living by editing an influential New York newspaper (see below); set a model for journalism that was dignified, liberal, and high-minded103
549275409"Thanatopsis"written by Bryant; one of the first high-quality poems produced in the US; critics could hardly believe it was written on "this side of the water"104
549275410Evening Postnewspaper that Bryant made a living by editing105
549275411Transcendentalismone of the mainsprings of the literary flowering that took place 1825-1850, especially around Boston; resulted in part from the liberalizing of the straight-jacket Puritan theology; came partly from the German romantic philosophers and the religions of Asia; rejected the theory of John Locke that all knowledge comes to the mind from the senses; believed that truth "transcends" the senses and cannot be found by observation alone; every person possesses an inner light that can illuminate the highest truth and put him or her in direct touch with God, or the "Oversoul"; 1.) religious and social individualism, 2.) commitment to self-reliance, self-culture, and self-discipline (developed into hostility to authority and formal institutions of any kind, as well as to all conventional wisdom), 3.) exaltation of the dignity of the individual, whether black or white106
549275412Ralph Waldo Emersonthe best-known transcendentalist; serene, tall, slender, intensely blue-eyed, trained as a Unitarian minister; excellent writer; a lyceum lecturer who took a western tour every winter for 20 years;107
549275413"The American Scholar"Emerson's Phi Beta Kappa address at Harvard College in 1837 that was a brilliant intellectual Declaration of Independence that urged Americans to throw off European traditions and create their own; stressed self-reliance, self-improvement, self-confidence, optimism, and freedom; ideals reflected those of an expanding America; outspoken critic of slavery; supporter the Union108
549275414Henry David ThoreauEmerson's close associate; a poet, mystic, transcendentalist, and nonconformist who condemned the government for supporting slavery and was jailed for a night for not paying his Massachusetts poll tax; stiff-necked individualist that believed he should reduce his bodily wants so as to gain time for a pursuit of truth through study and meditation; writings later encouraged Mahatma Gandhi to resist British rule in India and Martin Luther King, Jr. thinking of nonviolence109
549275415Walden: Or Life in the Woods (1854)book that Thoreau is well-known for; a record of his two years of simple existence in a hut that he built on the edge of Walden Pond near Concord, Massachusetts110
549275416On the Duty of Civil Disobedienceessay by Thoreau that exercised a strong influence in furthering idealistic thought in America and abroad111
549275417Walt Whitmantranscendentalist writer from Brooklyn who wrote a famous collection of poems (see below); gained the informal title "Poet Laureate of Democracy"; was an example of a writer who was caught in the enthusiasm of an expanding America that turned its back on the Old World112
549275418Leaves of Grass (1855)a collection of poems written by Whitman; highly romantic, emotional, and unconventional; handled sex with frankness; was banned in Boston; was a financial failure at first and had only three reviews secretly by Whitman himself; later revived and honored in America and Europe113
549275419Henry Wadsworth Longfellowtaught modern languages at Harvard for many years; one of the most popular poets ever produced in America; not a transcendentalist; lived a serene life except for the death of his two wives, second of which he saw die when her dress caught fire; wrote for upper classes, adopted by lower classes; had wide knowledge of European literature, which supplied him with themes; wrote some famous poems based on American themes; only American to be honored with a bust in the Poet's Corner of Westminster Abbey114
549275420"Evangeline," "Hiawatha," "The courtship of Miles Standish"three admired poems by Longfellow that were based on American themes115
549275421John Greenleaf WhittierQuaker poet; poet laureate of the antislavery crusade; important in influencing social action; cried out against inhumanity, injustice, and intolerance; was undeterred by insults and stoning; aroused America over slavery; poet of human freedom116
549275422James Russell Lowellsucceeded Longfellow at Harvard; one of America's better poets; distinguished essayist, literary critic (eew), editor, and diplomat; remembered as a political satirist117
549275423Biglow Paperspapers in which Lowell was a political satirist, especially in 1846 dealing with the Mexican War; partly poetry in the Yankee dialect; condemned the alleged slavery-expansion designs of Polk118
549275424Oliver Wendell Holmesprominent poet, essayist, novelist, lecturer, and wit who taught anatomy at Harvard Medical School; nonconformist and conversationalist; among a group of literary lights who regarded Boston as the "hub of the universe"; died at the age of 85, the last among his distinguished contemporaries119
549275425"The Last Leaf"poem by Holmes that honors the last "white Indian" of the Boston Tea Party, applies to Holmes himself, who died as the "last leaf" among his contemporaries120
549275426William Gilmore Simmsthe most noteworthy literary figure produced by the South (with possible exception of Poe); wrote 82 books; became the "Cooper of the South"; wrote about the southern frontier of colonial days and the South of the Revolutionary War; neglected by the southern planter aristocracy which never accepted him because he was born to a poor Charleston storekeeper, even if he married into the social elite and became a slaveowner121
549275427Edgar Allan Poegifted lyric writer; master stylist; excelled in short stories, especially horror ones, in which he shared his alcoholic nightmares; invented the modern detective novel; had a morbidity contradictory to American optimism, and therefore appealed more to Europeans; an unhealthy orphan who married a child who died of tuberculosis; suffered hunger, cold, poverty and debt; attempted suicide; fascinated by the ghostly and ghastly; found drunk in a Baltimore gutter and died122
549275428"The Raven," "The Gold Bug," "The Fall of the House of Usher"three poems by Poe: a lyric poem; a tale that set new high standards; ghostly and ghastly123
549275429Nathaniel Hawthornereflected the Calvinist obsession with original sin and the struggle between good and evil; grew up as a Puritan in Salem124
549275430The Scarlet Letter (1850)novel by Hawthorne that describes an adulteress who was forced to wear a scarlet A on her chest as punishment and to deal with her sin125
549275431The Marble Faun (1860)novel by Hawthorne about a group of young American artists who witnessed a mysterious murder in Rome; explores concepts of the omnipresence of evil and the dead hand of the past weighing on the present126
549275432Herman Melvilleorphaned and ill-educated writer from New York; went to sea as a youth and served as a whaler; escaped cannibals; wrote about the South Seas; was not given immediate recognition because of his complicated writing; wrote unprofitably for years and worked as a customs inspector; died in relative obscurity and poverty; his writings gained popularity in the 1900s127
549275433Moby Dick (1851)Melville's masterpiece; complex allegory of good and evil about a whaling captain named Ahab who sought revenge against a whale named Moby Dick for removing his leg; Moby Dick eventually sunk Ahab's ship; widely ignored at the time of its publication before of it's complexity128
549275434William H. Prescotthistorian who accidentally lost sight in one eye while in college; published classic accounts of the conquest of Mexico (1843) and Peru (1847)129

American Pageant Chapter 15 Flashcards

Forging the National Economy

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549352470Industrial Revolutionthe shift, beginning in England during the 18th century, from making goods by hand to making them by machine0
549352471"Self Reliance" (1841)Ralph Waldo Emmerson's popular lecture-essay that reflected the spirit of individualism pervasive in American popular culture during the 1830's.1
549352472Limited Liabilitylegal principle that facilitates capital investment by offering protection for individual investors, who, in cases of legal claims for bankruptcy, cannot be held responsible for more than the value of there individual shares.2
549352473RendezvousThe principal marketplace of the Northwest fur trade, which peaked in the 1820s and 1830s. Each summer, traders set up camps in the Rocky Mountains to exchange manufactured goods for beaver pelts.3
549352474Commonwealth vs. Hunt (1842)Massachusetts Supreme Court decision that strengthened the labor movement by upholding the legality of unions.4
549352475Ecological ImperialismHistorians' term for the spoliation of Western natural resources through excessive hunting, logging, mining and grazing5
549352476Cult of DomesticityPervasive nineteenth-century cultural creed that venerated the domestic role of women. It gave married women greater authority to shape home life but limited opportunities outside the domestic sphere.6
549352477McCormick reaper (1831)Mechanized the harvest of grains, such as wear, allowing farmers to cultivate larger plots. The introduction of the reaper in the 1830s fueled the establishment of large scale commercial agriculture in the Midwest.7
549352478Turnpikeprivately funded, toll-based public road constructed in the early nineteenth century to facilitate commerce.8
549352479Eerie canalA historic canal that connects the Hudson River at Albany in eastern New York with the Niagara River and the Great Lakes. It opened in 1825.9
549352480Molly Maguires (1860s-1870s)Secret organization of Irish miners that campaigned, at times violently, against poor working conditions in the PA mines10
549352481Ancient Order of Hibernians (mid 1800s)Irish semi-secret society that served as a benevolent organization for down-trodden Irish immigrants in the U..S.11
549352482Pony Express (1860-1861)Short-lived, speedy mail service between Missouri and California that relied on lightweight riders galloping between closely place outposts.12
549352483Tammany Hall (est. 1789)Powerful NY political machine that primarily drew support from the city's immigrants, who depended on Tammany Hall patronage, particularly social services.13
549352484Know-nothing Party (1850s)Nativist political party, aka the American party, which emerged in response to an influx of immigrants, particularly Irish Catholics.14
549352485Transportation revolutionterm referring to a series of nineteenth-century transportation innovation-turnpikes, steamboats, canals, and railroads-that linked local and regional markets, creating a national economy.15
549352486Market RevolutionEighteenth and nineteenth century transformation from a disaggregated, subsistence economy to a national commercial and industrial network.16
549352487Cotton gin (1793)Eli Whitney's invention that sped up the process of harvesting cotton. The gin made cotton cultivation more profitable, revitalizing the Southern economy and increasing the importance of slavery in the South.17
549352488Patent officeFederal government bureau that reviews patent applications. A patent is a legal recognition of new invention, granting exclusive rights to the inventor for a period of years.18
549352489Cumberland RoadThe National Road or Cumberland Road was one of the first major improved highways in the United States to be built by the federal government. Construction began in 1811 at Cumberland, Maryland, on the Potomac River19
549352490Yellowstone National Parkthe first national park in the United States, created in 1872. Located in the border area between Wyoming and Montana and Idaho; spectacular wilderness; famous for Old Faithful geyser and for buffalo and bears. Once more parks were created, the National Park Service was created by Wilson in 191620
549352491John Jacob AstorCreated one of the largest fur businesses, the American Fur Company. He bought skins from western fur traders and trappers who became known as montain men. Astoria was named after him.21
549352492Robert FultonThis man invented the first commercially successful steamboat in the United States.22
549352493Cyrus Fieldin 1866, he laid a transatlantic telegraph cable to Europe, one of the most important innovations in communications.23
549352494Dewitt ClintonGovernor of New York who started the Erie Canal project. His leadership helped complete the canal, which boosted the economy greatly by cutting time traveled from west New York to the Hudson.24
549352495Cyrus McCormickIrish-American inventor that developed the mechanical reaper.25
549352496Samuel SlaterBritish-born textile pioneer in America. He oversaw construction of the nation's first successful water-powered cotton mill (1790-1793).26
549352497Eli Whitneyinvented the cotton gin27
549352498Elias HoweUnited States inventor who built early sewing machines and won suits for patent infringement against other manufacturers (including Isaac M. Singer) (1819-1867)28
549352499Issac SingerHelped Howe perfect the sewing machine by making it quicker and brought it to middle class families and large maufacturers.29
549352500Samuel F.B. Morsean American painter of portraits and historic scenes, the creator of a single wire telegraph system, and co-inventor, with Alfred Vail, of the Morse Code30
549352501John DeereAmerican blacksmith that was responsible for inventing the steel plow. This new plow was much stronger than the old iron version; therefore, it made plowing farmland in the west easier, making expansion faster.31
549352502Martin Van BurenServed as secretary of state during Andrew Jackson's first term, vice president during Jackson's second term, and won the presidency in 183632

American Pageant - Chapter 15 - Vocabulary Flashcards

Vocabulary from the guidebook packet for chapter 15 in American Pageant.

Terms : Hide Images
19284456PolygamyThe practice of having two or more spouses at one time.0
19284457PolygynyHaving two or more wives at one time.1
19284458PolyandryHaving two or more husbands at one time.2
19284459TheocracyLiterally, rule by God; the term is often applied to a state where religious leaders exercise direct or indirect political authority.3
19284460ZealotOne who is carried away by a cause to an extreme or excessive degree.4
19284461UtopianReferring to any place or plan that aims at an ideal social order.5
19284462CommunisticReferring to the theory or practice in which the means of production are owned by the community as a whole.6
19284463CommunitarianReferring to the belief in or practice of the superiority of community life or values over individual life, but not necessarily the common ownership of material goods.7
19284464Free LoveThe principle or practice of sexual relations unrestricted by law, marriage, or religious constraints.8
19284465EugenicConcerning the improvement of the human species through selective breeding or genetic control.9
19284466Coitus ReservatusThe practice of sexual intercourse without the male's release of semen.10
19284467ClassicalConcerning the culture of ancient Greece and Rome, or any artistic or cultural values presumed to be based on those enduring ancient principles.11
19284468MysticalReferring to the belief in the direct apprehension of God or divine mystery, without reliance on reason or human comprehension.12
19284469NonconformistOne who refuses to follow established or conventional ideas or habits.13
19284470NonviolenceThe principle of resolving or engaging in conflict without resort to physical force.14
19284471UrbaneSophisticated, elegant, cosmopolitan.15
19284472ProvidentialUnder the care and direction of God or other benevolent natural or supernatural forces.16

American Pageant Chapter 16 Vocab Flashcards

Key terms, people, and events from Chapter 16 of the 13th edition of the American Pageant.

Terms : Hide Images
1624763313OligarchyGovernment rule by a few people0
1624763314William Lloyd GarrisonStaunch abolitionist, created The Liberator1
1624763315Harriet Beecher StoweAbolitionist, wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin, from Cincinnati2
1624763316Frederick DouglassFormer slave, gained freedom at 21. Leading abolitionist, published The North Star.3
1624763317Stono Rebellion1739, South Carolina slaves fled to Florida, were unsuccessful4
1624763318Gag ResolutionAll anti-slavery appeals were forbidden to be discussed in Congress. Later repealed with help of John Quincy Adams5
1624763319Denmarck VeseyPlanned the largest revolt, but was foiled. He and 30 others were hanged6
1624763320Free SoilersThose that opposed slavery in Western territories7
1624763321Nat TurnerLed rebellion in which 60 Virginians were killed, mostly women and children. As a result, the South implemented harsher laws8

The American Pageant Chapter 16 Vocab (kinda) Flashcards

The American Pageant, 13th Edition

Terms : Hide Images
1810038585Irish ImmigrationOne of the largest groups of individuals to emigrant to the United States; Main reason was the potato famine0
1810038586German Immigration2nd largest group of immigrants. some came to U.S. for political reasons. some fled after the failed revolution in 1848. others came for religious freedom but, most came here for economic opportunity.1
1810038587Second Great AwakeningA second religious fervor that swept the nation. It converted more than the first. It also had an effect on moral movements such as prison reform, the temperance movement, and moral reasoning against slavery.2
1810038588Joseph SmithFounded Mormonism in New York in 1830 with the guidance of an angel. 1843, Smith's announcement that God sanctioned polygamy split the Mormons and let to an uprising against Mormons in 1844; translated the Book of Mormon and died a martyr.3
1810038589MormonsChurch founded by Joseph Smith in 1830 with headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah, religious group that emphasized moderation, saving, hard work, and risk-taking4
1810038590Elizabeth Cady Stanton(1815-1902) A suffragette who, with Lucretia Mott, organized the first convention on women's rights, held in Seneca Falls, New York in 1848. Issued the Declaration of Sentiments which declared men and women to be equal and demanded the right to vote for women. Co-founded the National Women's Suffrage Association with Susan B. Anthony in 1869.5
1810038591Susan B. AnthonyAn early leader of the women's suffrage movement, co-founded the National Women's Suffrage Association with Elizabeth Cady Stanton in 1869.6
1810038592Oneida CommunityIt was founded by John Humphrey Noyes. It was a group of socio-religious perfectionists who lived in New York. They practiced polygamy, communal property and communal raising of children. (Utopian society).7
1810038593Hudson River SchoolFounded by Thomas Cole, first native school of landscape painting in the U.S.; attracted artists rebelling against the neoclassical tradition, painted many scenes of New York's Hudson River8
1810038594TranscendentalismA philosophy pioneered by Ralph Waldo Emerson in the 1830's and 1840's, in which each person has direct communication with God and Nature, and there is no need for organized churches. It incorporated the ideas that mind goes beyond matter, intuition is valuable, that each soul is part of the Great Spirit, and each person is part of a reality where only the invisible is truly real. Promoted individualism, self-reliance, and freedom from social constraints, and emphasized emotions.9
1810038595Henry David ThoreauAmerican transcendentalist who was against a government that supported slavery. He wrote down his beliefs in Walden. He started the movement of civil-disobedience when he refused to pay the toll-tax to support him Mexican War.10
1810038596Ralph Waldo EmersonAmerican transcendentalist who was against slavery and stressed self-reliance, optimism, self-improvement, self-confidence, and freedom. He was a prime example of a transcendentalist and helped further the movement.11
1810038597The ShakersNo sex12
1810038598The Temperance MovementThe movement where American's abstained themselves from the consumption of alcohol13

The Ferment of Reform and Culture Ch. 15 The American Pageant Flashcards

important figures from chapter fifteen in the 12th edition of The American Pageant for AP US History students

Terms : Hide Images
1913339689Joseph SmithFounder of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints (Mormons)0
1913339690Brigham YoungSecond prophet of the Latter-Day Saints; let followers to Utah and created a theocracy1
1913339691Horace MannHumanitarion who advocated for public schools with better teachers, longer school terms, expanded curriculum, and higher pay for teachers; "Father of the American common school"; pushed for reforms for mental health institutions and end to slavery2
1913339693Dorothea DixActivist for the insane-created first mental asylums3
1913339695Lucretia MottQuaker, abolitionist, social reformer, and advocate of women's rights; co-organized the Seneca Falls Convention4
1913339696Elizabeth Cady StantonPresident of National Women's Suffrage Association from 1885-1890; drafted the Declaration of Sentiments; Co-organized Seneca Falls Convention5
1913339697Susan B. AnthonyWomen's right's advocate; Founded National Women's Suffrage Association with Elizabeth Cady Stanton; arrested and fined for trying to vote in 18726
1913339701John James AudubonPainted and published Birds of America7
1913339703The Hudson River Schoolturned out students such as Thomas Coles, Thomas Doughty, and Asher B. Durand, who all painted landscapes of American Wilderness8
1913339704Washington Irving"Legend of Sleepy Hollow"; "Rip Van Winkle"; along with James Fenimore Cooper, was one of the first American authors to earn acclaim in Europe9
1913339705James Fenimore CooperLeatherstocking Tales-a series of novels about Natty Bumppo; known for Last of the Mohicans10
1913339706Ralph Waldo Emersonmost notably wrote the Transcendentalist in 184111
1913339707Henry David ThoreauKnown for Walden and Civil Disobedience12
1913339708Nathaniel HawthorneWrote The House of the Seven Gables and The Scarlett Letter13
1913339709Henry Wadsworth Longfellowwrote The Song of Hiawatha, Paul Revere's Ride, A Psalm of Life, and Evangeline; member of the Fireside poets14
1913339710Walt Whitmanwrote Leaves of Grass which was praised by Ralph Waldo Emerson15
19133397132nd Great Awakeningprotestant revival in the 19th century that gave birth to numerous reform movements16
1913339714Burned-Over DistrictArea of western New York that was the epicenter of the 2nd great awakening17
1913339715American Temperance Societyearly moral reform group who aimed to outlaw alcohol18
1913339716Maine Law of 1851first law that resulted from the Temperance movement.19
1913339717Seneca Falls ConventionWomen's rights convention 1948.20
1913339718Declaration of Sentimentsdocument drafted by the women at the seneca falls convention that listed abuses of women by men21

The Ferment of Reform and Culture Ch. 15 The American Pageant Flashcards

important figures from chapter fifteen in the 12th edition of The American Pageant for AP US History students

Terms : Hide Images
1018869446Peter CartwrightEarly American preacher; helped begin the Second Great Awakening0
1018869447Charles Grandison FinneyEvangelist; "America's foremost revivalist"; encouraged women to pray; opposed liquor and slavery1
1018869448William MillerAmerican Baptist preacher; Followers were called Millerites and later Adventists; Expected Christ to return to Earth on October 22, 18442
1018869449Joseph SmithFounder of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints (Mormons)3
1018869450Brigham YoungSecond prophet of the Latter-Day Saints; let followers to Utah and created a theocracy4
1018869451Horace MannHumanitarion who advocated for public schools with better teachers, longer school terms, expanded curriculum, and higher pay for teachers; "Father of the American common school"; pushed for reforms for mental health institutions and end to slavery5
1018869453William H. McGuffyMcGuffy's Reader was the text for most schools from 1836-1900; contained religious messages6
1018869455Dorothea DixActivist for the insane-created first mental asylums7
1018869456Neal S. Dow"Father of Prohibition"; Sponsored first prohibition law in Maine in 18578
1018869457Lucretia MottQuaker, abolitionist, social reformer, and advocate of women's rights; co-organized the Seneca Falls Convention9
1018869458Elizabeth Cady StantonPresident of National Women's Suffrage Association from 1885-1890; drafted the Declaration of Sentiments; Co-organized Seneca Falls Convention10
1018869459Susan B. AnthonyWomen's right's advocate; Founded National Women's Suffrage Association with Elizabeth Cady Stanton; arrested and fined for trying to vote in 187211
1018869461Lucy StoneRadical Women's rights speaker who kept her maiden name after marriage.12
1018869462Robert OwenIdealist Scottish manufacturer who attempted to create a communal society in New Harmony, Indiana13
1018869463John Humphrey Noyesutopian socialist who formed the Oneida Community in 184814
1018869464John James AudubonPainted and published Birds of America15
1018869465Sylvester GrahamAdvocate of dietary reform; created Graham Crackers16
1018869466The Hudson River Schoolturned out students such as Thomas Coles, Thomas Doughty, and Asher B. Durand, who all painted landscapes of American Wilderness17
1018869469Washington Irving"Legend of Sleepy Hollow"; "Rip Van Winkle"; along with James Fenimore Cooper, was one of the first American authors to earn acclaim in Europe18
1018869470James Fenimore CooperLeatherstocking Tales-a series of novels about Natty Bumppo; known for Last of the Mohicans19
1018869471Ralph Waldo Emersonmost notably wrote the Transcendentalist in 184120
1018869472Henry David ThoreauKnown for Walden and Civil Disobedience21
1018869473Nathaniel HawthorneWrote The House of the Seven Gables and The Scarlett Letter22
1018869475Henry Wadsworth Longfellowwrote The Song of Hiawatha, Paul Revere's Ride, A Psalm of Life, and Evangeline; member of the Fireside poets23
1018869477Walt Whitmanwrote Leaves of Grass which was praised by Ralph Waldo Emerson24
1018869478Louisa May AlcottLittle Women; joined the Transcendentalist Club25
1029370330Grimke SistersSarah and Angelina26
10293703312nd Great Awakeningprotestant revival in the 19th century that gave birth to numerous reform movements27
1029370332Burned-Over DistrictArea of western New York that was the epicenter of the 2nd great awakening28
1029370333American Temperance Societyearly moral reform group who aimed to outlaw alcohol29
1029370334Maine Law of 1851first law that resulted from the Temperance movement.30
1029370335Seneca Falls ConventionWomen's rights convention 1948.31
1029370336Declaration of Sentimentsdocument drafted by the women at the seneca falls convention that listed abuses of women by men32

Membrance Structure and Function Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
1284170440AquaporinsA channel protein in the plasma membrane of a plant, animal, or microorganism cell that specifically facilitates osmosis, the diffusion of free water across the membrane.0
1284170441concentration gradientA region along which the density of a chemical substance increases or decreases.1
1284170442cotransportThe coupling of the "downhill" diffusion of one substance to the "uphill" transport of another against its own concentration gradient.2
1284170443diffusionThe spontaneous movement of a substance down its concentration or electrochemical gradient, from a region where it is more concentrated to a region where it is less concentrated.3
1284170444electrochemical gradientThe diffusion gradient of an ion, which is affected by both the concentration difference of an ion across a membrane (a chemical force) and the ion's tendency to move relative to the membrane potential (an electrical force).4
1284170445endocytosisCellular uptake of biological molecules and particulate matter via formation of vesicles from the plasma membrane.5
1284170446exocytosisThe cellular secretion of biological molecules by the fusion of vesicles containing them with the plasma membrane.6
1284170447electrogenic pumpAn active transport protein that generates voltage across a membrane while pumping ions.7
1284170448flaccidLimp. Lacking turgor (stiffness or firmness), as in a plant cell in surroundings where there is a tendency for water to leave the cell. (A walled cell becomes flaccid if it has a higher water potential than its surroundings, resulting in the loss of water.)8
1284170449glycoproteinA protein with one or more covalently attached carbohydrates.9
1284170450hypertonicReferring to a solution that, when surrounding a cell, will cause the cell to lose water.10
1284170451hypotonicReferring to a solution that, when surrounding a cell, will cause the cell to take up water.11
1284170452ion channelA transmembrane protein channel that allows a specific ion to diffuse across the membrane down its concentration or electrochemical gradient.12
1284170453membrane potentialThe difference in electrical charge (voltage) across a cell's plasma membrane due to the differential distribution of ions. Membrane potential affects the activity of excitable cells and the transmembrane movement of all charged substances.13
1284170454osmoregulationRegulation of solute concentrations and water balance by a cell or organism.14
1284170455plasmolysisA phenomenon in walled cells in which the cytoplasm shrivels and the plasma membrane pulls away from the cell wall; occurs when the cell loses water to a hypertonic environment. I.e. elodea leaf in salt water.15
1284170456selective permeabilityA property of biological membranes that allows them to regulate the passage of substances across them.16
1284170457sodium-potassium pumpA transport protein in the plasma membrane of animal cells that actively transports sodium out of the cell and potassium into the cell.17
1284170458turgidSwollen or distended, as in plant cells. (A walled cell becomes turgid if it has a lower water potential than its surroundings, resulting in entry of water.)18

APUSH CH. 12-14 Test Review Flashcards

For Ms. Greenblatt's Ch. 12-14 test on November 12, 2012.

Terms : Hide Images
528923562Andrew JacksonBelieved that the J. Q. Adams administration was corrupt and aristocratic. Promising a more democratic political system he told voters that he inteded to purify and reform the Government. A slave owner, slavery defender, and condoner of abolitionist attacks, he disliked the natives and ordered the forcible reomval of the southeastern tribal nations to the west of the MS river. Earned the nickname "Old Hickory" and brought notoriety and an appointment as a major general for his victory over the Creek nation 1813-1814. His popularity increased following aggressive forays in Spanish FL. Vetoed 12 bills (especially the Maysville Road Bill to spite Henry Clay) and replaced the legislative branch with democrats. An opposer to the 2nd Bank of the US, he had Roger Taney weaken the bank by giving $10 mil to the state banks.0
528923563Tariff of AbominationsPassed by Democrats in Congress, it arbitrarily raised rates to protect NE textiles, PA iron, and some agricultural goods. Triggered the SC Nullification Crisis of 18321
528923564Force BillAndrew Jackson asked Congress for legislation to enforce tariff duties and new tariff revisions in 1833. Engineered by Clary and Supported by Calhoun, these revisions called for gradual reductions. SC quickly repealed its nullification of the tariff laws but nullified the Force Bill.2
528923565Oregon TerritoryOriginally called the "Oregon Question", this territory began as a joint American-British holding. By 1843, settlers wrote a constitution and elected a legislature. After Polk wanted a boundary of 54°40', the British agreed to a compromise in June 1846. The 49th parallel would be recognized as the boundary of Oregon Territory as long as Vancouver Island remained British.3
528923566James BuchananA Democrat who served as president from 1857-1861. He had been abroad for the previous 4 years and had avoided the controversy over the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which destroyed the career of outgoing president James Pierce. He largely maintained the status quo, enforcing the fugitive slave act and opposing abolition movements. His attempt to maintain peace between the North and South proved futile; the South seceded three months before his term ended4
528923567William Lloyd Garrison(1805-1879) A white abolitionist who favored immediate liberation of all slaves. Using his newspaper The Liberator, he decried as immoral the moderate abolitionists who called for returning slaves to Africa. He was a powerful writer with a radical message, and his newspaper was banned by many Southern states. Nevertheless, his persistence won him a wide following among white abolitionists and free blacks. He also supported the women's suffrage movement.5
5289235682nd Great AwakeningThis was a revival of evangelicalism that began in the 1790s in New York and quickly spread across the country. The movement was strongest in the South and West during this period, with numerous formal churches forming in places that previously had none. In the Northeast, this gave rise to a social reform movement, with many religious leaders advocating against drinking, poverty, and other social problems.6
528923569NativismThis term means hatred and fear of foreigners. It has a long history in American politics. Nearly all political parties have exploited it at one time or another for political advantage. The Know-Nothing party was founded on it; its members were united by their hatred for Irish, German, and Catholic immigrants. It tends to be stronger in times of economic depression7
528923570Treaty of Guadalupe HidalgoEnded the Mexican-American War of 1846-1848, negotiated by Trist and signed on 2/2/1848. The Rio Grande became the boundary between Mexico and the U.S., and the Southwest and California passed into U.S. hands. The U.S. gained about 75,000 Spanish speakers, 150,000 Native Americans, and 529,017 square miles. Paid Mexico about $15 million, and agreed to honor American claims against Mexico, guaranteeing civil, political, and property rights to former Mexican citizens.8
528923571Gwinn Land LawValidated Mexican land, but you had to prove that you owned the land, also violated the Treaty of Guadalupe9
528923572Cult of DomesticityThe prevailing value system among the upper and middle classes. Although all women were supposed to emulate this ideal of feminity, blacks, the working class, and immigrant women did not fit the definition of "true women" due to social prejudice. It identified the home as women's "proper sphere" and women were expected to fufill the roles of a calm and nurturing mother, a loving and faithful wife, and a passive, delicate, and virtuous creature, along with being pious and religious while supporting their husbands. (wikipedia)10
528923573Roger B. TaneyThe Chief Justice who made the pro-slavery decision in the Dred Scott Case. He also was the attorney geneneral and secetary of the treasury under Jackson, and gave the $10mil in federal money to the state banks.11
528923574Dred ScottA slave brought by his master into the North, where slaves became free. He argued that because he was now in the North he should be free, initiating the Dred Scott Case.12
528923575Spoils SystemRefers to the practice of trading jobs for political favors. When Andrew Jackson was sworn in as president in 1828, he dismissed numerous officials and replaced them with his political supporters. Although past presidents had also committed this practice, Jackson was the first to face widespread public criticism for it13
528923576Joseph SmithMurdered in 1844, he claimed to be visited by the angel Moroni who led him to golden tablets buried near his home. From this, the Book of Mormon was created and then established the Church of Jesus Christ and Latter Day Saints (Mormons). He also petitioned Congress for spearate territorial status and ran for the presdiency in 1844. Also was Brigham Young's predecessor14
528923577Homestead Act(1862) This act granted citizens 160 acres of government land free, if they were over 21, as long as they lived on and improved the land, as well as paying a small registration fee.15
528923578Declaration of SentimentsElizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott formed the Seneca Falls Convention in Seneca Falls, New York in 1848. This document was modeled on the Declaration of Independence and proclaimed that both men and women were created equal. They expressed a remedy in 11 resolutions, all calling for equality.16
528923579Harriet Beecher StoweWrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin", which depicted the harsh slave life on plantations. Lincoln blamed the author for causing the uproar that led to the Civil War17
528923580James K. PolkA Democrat who served as president from 1845 to 1849. He ran on an expansionist platform, and he successfully negotiated with Great Britain to secure U.S. control of the Pacific Northwest. Known as the "Manifest Destiny" president, he was a forceful advocate for war with Mexico over the Southwest Territory. During his presidency, the United States won the Mexican-American War, gaining control of Arizona, New Mexico, California, Nevada, and Utah.18
528923581John C. CalhounJackson's VP from South arolina provided a theory to check federal power and to protect the rights of minoritys. In 1828, he annoymously published "Exposition and Protest", presenting nullification as a means by which southern states could prtect themselves from harmful national action. Supported the Force Bill of 1833 and an opposer to the Free-Soilers. He created the Address to the People of the Southern States" and threatened secession and called for a united stand against further attempts to interfere with the southern right to extend slavery.19
528923582TranscendentalistsThis group was one of the many reform groups that appeared. Largely influenced by Emerson, this group believed that intuitive truth transcended sense experience. Since they were inspired by self-reflection and reliance, Transcendentalists questioned many of societies hardest issues, confronting slavery, the increased pace of economic life, obsessive materialism, and the conforms of social life.20
528923583American PartyThe official name for the Know-Nothing party21
528923584Removal Act of 1830Signed by Jackson in 1830. The government promised to protect and guarantee Native American's land in the west if they agreed to be removed from the southern U.S.22
528923585TexasThe Lone Star Republic, was initially independent of the U.S., but was annexed in 1845 by President Tyler. It was a slave state and its addition to the Union would upset the balance so it was given the right to divide into 5 states.23
528923586Nicholas TristNegotiated the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo which ended the Mexican War.24
528923587Brook FarmEstablished near Roxbury, MA, in 1841, it was one of several utopian religious communities founded to counter the growing commercialism of American society. This was home to the Transcendentalists, a group of writer and intellectuals that included Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau.25
528923588Compromise of 1850This was ushered through Congress by Stephen Douglas and Henry Clay. It was meant to solve the dispute over whether California would be a free or slave-owning state. The ___ admitted California as a free state, enacted stronger fugitive slave laws, and created the new territories of Utah and New Mexico. These territories were tasked with deciding their own status (free or slave-holding) under a policy of popular sovereignty26
528923589Gadsden PurchaseNegotiated by the U.S. ambassador to Mexico, James Gadsden in December of 1853. It was the reason for the U.S. building a transcontinental railroad along a deep southern route and resolved border issues left open by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.27
528923590Fort Laramie Council(1851) Arranged by the U.S. government, this council called together Native Americans from all across the West in order to negotiate movement. The Native Americans were given compensation for the destruction of their grass, timber, buffalo, as well as annual payments of goods and services. However, the Native Americans had to, in return, give up their rights of free movement. The U.S. government drew up tribal boundaries (which were later disregarded by many, especially the Sioux). this opened up the way for a larger influx of emigrants to the West, which would end up destroying the Native Americans way of life nonetheless.28
528923591Worcester v. GeorgiaChief Justice Marshall ruled that Georgia's law held no force over the Cherokee and that Native Americans were "quasi nations" of the U.S. government with the right to govern themselves.29
528923592Sarah GrimkéA women who struck back against female inferiority and servility jusitifcations by writing "Letters on the Condition of Women and the Equality of the Sexes" in 1837. She stated that "whatever is right for man to do, is right for woman". This strong message was later translated into an active movement for women's rights.30
528923593Kansas-Nebraska ActFormulated by Stephen Douglas and passed by Congress. This opened up the territories of Kansas and Nebraska to slavery, thereby repealing the Missouri Compromise and inflaming Northerners. The act led to the dissolution of the Whig party, as disgusted anti-slavery Whigs joined with Northern Democrats to form the Republican party.31
528923594Henry ClayWanted a national bank, tariff protectionism, internal improvements and other government action to increase economic development. Was a whig.32
528923595Stephen DouglasA democratic senator from Illinois, Douglas pushed the Kansas-Nebraska Act through Congress in 1854 to entice railroad developers to build a transcontinental railroad line in the North. The act opened Kansas and Nebraska territories to slavery and thus effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820. Douglas rejected pro slavery Lecompton Constitution in the Senate in 1857 after Border Ruffians had rigged the elections to draft a state constitution. A champion of popular sovereignty, he announced his Freeport Doctrine in response to the Dred Scott decision in the Lincoln-Douglas debates in 1858. Although he was the most popular Democrat, Southern party members refused to nominate him for presidency in 1860 because he rejected the Lecompton Constitution to make Kansas a slave state. As a result, the party split: Northern Democrats nominated Douglas, while Southern Democrats nominated John C. Breckinridge. In the election of 1860, Douglas toured the country in an effort to save the union.33
528923596"54 degrees 40 minutes or Fight"James K. Polk's presidency slogan in order to get the borders of Oregon Territory extended34
528923597The LiberatorPenned by William Lloyd Garrison, it became the leading antislavery journal in the United States.35
528923598TopekaWhere the Free-Soilders held their own convention against the Lecompton Constitution and created a second government.36
528923599LecomptonThe city where the Lecompton Constitution was drawn up. This was the Constitution that Kansas tried to use to gain admittance to the union; however, it permitted slavery as well as no restrictions to the importation of slaves into it. Although welcomed by Buchanan, it was denied entrance into the union by Stephen Douglas and the Republican-dominated Congress.37
528923600Know-NothingsA nativist party that tried to exclude immigrants from the U.S. by increasing the naturalization age.38
528923601William WalkerA man from Tennessee who invaded Mexican Baja California in 1853 with less than 300 men and delcared himself president of the Republic of Sonora. In 1855 he invaded Nicaragua and declared himself a dictator while legalizing slavery. He was shot and killed in 1860 during an attempt to capture Honduras39
528923602Manifest DestinyThe principle that it was God's given right to discover and settle new land all over the entire continent, this led to the massive migration to the west and furthered the idea of white supremacy.40
528923603Robert OwenA Scottish cotton mill owner who created a model factory town in Scotland and later came to the US to set one up in Indiana. The 1820 book "The Book of the Moral World" inspired many cooperative efforts.41
528923604John BrownLed the Raid on Harper's Ferry in hopes of at least arming slaves with weapons and invoking an uprising, but was overcome by federal troops and was later hanged. Many northern abolitionists believed he died a martyr.42
528923605John C. BreckinridgeThe Southern Democrat who ran against the Republican Lincoln. In the election of 1860, he won mostly all of the states in the south.43
528923606Popular SovereigntyLocal self government44
528923607David WilmotCreater of the Wilmot Proviso. He had the intention to preserve lands for whites and blacks alike.45
528923608Specie CircularGold or silver, instead of paper money, used to buy/sell government land46
528923609OneidaFounded by Noyes (along with 51 of his followers) in 1848, Oneida was a "perfectionist community" in Oneida, New York. Only spiritually advanced (mainly Noyes) males could father the children of the community. However, many unusual practices included communal child rearing, sexual equality in work, the removal of competition. Unlike other communities, Oneida focused on manufacturing, rather than agriculture.47
528923610Constitutional Union PartyMade up of border-states and southern Whigs, claimed the middle ground and nominated John Bell for president in the election of 1860.48
528923611Frederick DouglassAn escaped slave, he taught himself to read, ended up running for Vice-President, and even met a few Presidents, supporting Abolitionists and being a strong supporter and spokesperson.49
528923612Brigham YoungJoseph Smith's Mormon sucessor who created the Mormon state of Deseret. He led an explorartory expedition West and reached Salt Lake in late July of 1847.50
528923613Margaret FullerA Transcendentalist and friend of Emerson, Fuller questioned her place in society. She founded and edited "The Dial" and questioned the absence of women's voices in society, as well as advancing literature, prison reforms, and the moral quality of American life.51
528923614Nicholas BiddleOriginally from Philadelphia, he ran the Second National Bank.52
528923615Sojourner TruthIn 1851, in Akron, Ohio, she preached against slavery and for women's rights. She used many bible references and was a powerful speaker.53
528923616Ostend ManifestoArgued that Cuba belonged to U.S. (by support of many theories including one involving silt flowing down from the Mississippi and tried to pressure Spain into selling it. It was eventually put down by William Marcy (Pierce's Secretary of State).54
528923617Theodore Dwight WeldA Finney discipe who delievered a four hour temperance lecture in Rochester.55
528923618Free Soil PartyThis party thrived briefly in the mid-1800s and nominated former President Martin Van Buren as the party's candidate in the 1844 presidential election. People in this party were opposed to extending slavery into the territories annexed from Mexico. The party attracted antislavery Whigs as well as some Democrats and former members of the Liberty Party.56
528923619Arthur and Lewis TappanTwo brothers from New York who financed the Lane Seminary, a school to train abolitionist leaders.57
528923620Anti-MasonsPeople against the Masons (a secret society who did "good works")58
528923621Camp Meetingsmeetings that were sparked by Lyman Beecher. They took on a new emphasis and location.59
528923622Elizabeth Cady StantonAfter being forced to sit behind curtains and forbidden to speak at the 1840 all male World Anti-Slavery Convention, she, along with another woman, drew up a list of women's grievances. She continued to meet in annual conventions as well as campaigning for equal political, legal, and property rights60
528923623Lucretia MottAided in writing the Declaration of Sentiments.61
528923624Trail of TearsSince the Cherokee were unable to preserve their lands from land-hungry whites, the Cherokee were forced to walk the "Trail of Tears" to Oklahoma in 1838. About 4,000 Cherokee died along the way, almost a fourth of the population. Many others were forced to walk this trail as well, like the Shawnee, Miami, and although they resisted heavily, the Seminole.62
528923626Abby KellyA young Quaker teacher in MA who began to circle antislavery petitions in 1836. She was threatened by an angry mob in Philly because she delieved an abolitionist speech to antislavery women. Eventually, she observed that American women "have good cause to be grateful to the slave".63
528923627John Humphrey NoyesA man from Putney, NY who heard Finney preach. He believed that the final conversion led to perfection and complete release from sin. In 1848, he created the "perfectionist" community in Oneida, NY. Only certain spiritually advanced males (usually himself) could father children . Other practices included communal child rearing, sexual equality in work, the removal of competition from both work and play, and a program of "mutual" critisim at community meetings. He opted for modern manufacturing. Greatly admiring the Shakers, he also condemned sexuality and demanded absolute chastity so that only conversions could bring in new members.64
528923628Mother Ann LeeAn Englishwomen who founded the Shakers, she and her followers believed that God had a dual personality, male and female, and that their leader was the female counterpart. The communities created were known for their cojmmunal ownership of property, equality of women and men, simplicity, and beautifully crafted furnature.65
528923629Freeport DoctrineDouglas' response stated that despite the court's ruling, slavery could be prevented from any territory by the refusal of the people living in that territory to pass laws favorable to slavery. Likewise, if the people of the territory supported slavery, legislation would provide for its continued existence (Wikipedia).66
528923630"Bleeding Kansas"The miniature civil war that occurred in Kansas territory. Main causes include: the Pottawatomie Massacre, where John Brown (along with some followers) went and slaughtered five proslavery followers.67
528923631Fugitive Slave Act(1850) Required that slaves runaway slaves be returned to their masters.68
528923632Charles FinneyShifted the revivalism movement to upstate New York and the Old Northwest to Rochester NY. Also lead the 2nd Great Awakening. He understood that the human 'agency' of the minister was crucial in causing a revival, while insisting that conversion and alvation were not the end of religious experience, but the beginning. While encouraging individual reformation, he enforced the commitment by converted Christians to seek social reform.69
528923633Election of 1860Lincoln wins. His opponents included Douglas, Breckinridge, and Bell. The Lincoln-Douglas debates was a series of seven public debates in the state of Illinois, debating many various issues, slavery was constantly drawn into question.70
528923634Changing American Political Party SystemsFirst Party System: 1790s-1820s - (Rep) Jefferson, Madison, Monroe; (Fed) Hamilton, Adams. Transition: 1824 and 1828 - (Dem-Rep) Jackson; (Nat'l Rep) J. Q. Adams. Second Party System: 1830s-1850s - (Dem) Jackson, Van Buren, Calhoun, Polk; (Whig) Clay, Webster, W.H. Harrison. Third Party System: 1856-1890s - (Dem) Douglas, Pierce, Buchanan; (Rep) Lincoln, Seward, Grant71
528923635MilleritesA group of followers who followed William Miller, the man responsible for incorrectly predicting the day of judgement to be March 1843. This later created a sect called the Seventh Day Adventists.72
528923636Abolition & AbolitionistsIn pre-civil war America, those who opposed slavery were known as this. The Quakers and other evangelical groups were the first to vocally oppose slavery. This grew in popularity with the publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin and the advocacy of activists like Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison.73
528923637Westward MigrationSparked by Manifest Destiny, migrators began to move to the west as well as the east. Thousands sought gold but others hoped to suceed in more lucrative professions. The migration was brought on by new land acquistions from the Gadsden Purchase, Annexation of Texas, and the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.74
528923638John SlidellPolk's agent, sent to Mexico City with instructions to secure the Rio Grande border for the U.S. However, the Mexican government refused to even acknowledge Slidell.75
528923639John BellThe Constitutional Union Party candidate for president, Bell ran against Lincoln, Douglas, and Breckinridge in the election of 1860. Bell campaigned for compromise, union, and slavery. He received wide support in the border states region but carried only Kentucky, Virginia, and Tennessee.76
528923640Seneca Falls ConventionTook place in upper state New York in 1848. Women of all ages and even some men went to discuss the rights and conditions of women. There, they wrote the Declaration of Sentiments, which among other things, tried to get women the right to vote.77
528923641Dorothea DixA New Englander who observed that the MA legislature imprisoned insane people and called for reforms in asylums. Not only did she believe that poor institutions corrupt good human beings, she founded institutions for the care and education of the blind and deaf.78
528923642"Gag Rule"(1836) Passed to keep Abolitionist petitions out of Congress79
528923643Personal Liberty LawsThe _____ were passed by many Northern states angry over the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which opened those two territories to slavery. The _____ were designed to weaken fugitive slave laws; they guaranteed all escaped slaves a jury trial and a lawyer. Needless to say, Southerners were furious, and antagonism between pro- and anti-slavery forces grew stronger80
528923644Plains TribesSeveral Indians tribes comprising of (to name a few) Comanche, Omaha, Apache, Pawnee, and many more. They had adopted a nomadic way of life following the introduction of Spanish horses. Mobility also increased tribal contact and conflict, and war became a central idea. Many felt that it was braver to touch an enemy than to kill or scalp them. This pattern of conflicrt discourged political unity, but their contact with white society brought them gains through trrade in skins, but also introduced alcohol and epidemics of smallpox and scarlet fever. The Sioux tribe petitioned in 1846 to Polk by saying the cause of the dissappearimg buffalo was from white people hunting in their land. They requested compensation of white damages, but when the president denied the request, they attempted to extract taxes from those passing over their land.81
528923645Daniel WebsterA leader of the Whig party in the Second Party System. He supported the Fugtive Slave Act.82
528923646Abraham Lincoln16th president of the US and elected in 1860, he was a Republican running against Stephen Douglass of the Northern Democrats, John Beckinridge of the Southern Democrats, and John Bell of the Constitutional Union. He hated slavery and was a more moderate Republican He did not want the issue of slavery to extend into the territories. Though he believed in white supremacy and specific equal rights to not be granted to blacks, he believed that blacks were entitled to all the natural rights in the Declaration of Independence as well as many economic rights as well.83
528923647Cherokee IndiansConsidred one out of five "civilized nations", their land holdings of more than 50 million acres in 1802 dimished to 9 milion by 1822. Along with the Creek and Chickasway trives, they restricted land sales to government agents in 1825. The GA legislature in 1829 declared that the tribal council was illegal and claimed jurisdiction over both the tribe and its lands. They were forbidden to bring suits or testify against whites in GA courts. In two landmark cases against Georgia and Worcester v Georgia, Chief Justice Marshall held that the GA law was repugnant to the Constitution with no force over this tribe, and that by inviolable treaty rights Native Americans were considered domestic dependent nations"84
528923648Dred Scott CaseAn 1857 Supreme Court ruling that provided a legal affirmation of slavery. Scott was a former slave whose master had taken him to free territories. Scott then sued for his freedom, eventually losing in the Supreme Court. Chief Justice Roger Taney's decision declared that slaves were property. not citizens. It also nullified the Missouri Compromise by declaring that Congress could not regulate slavery in the territories85
528923649North StarA journal started by Frederick Douglass in 1847. He expressed his appreciation for the help of that "noble band of white laborers" but declared that it was time for those who "suffered the wrong" to lead the way in advocating liberty.86
528923650TemperanceThere were societies for this issue. They were organized groups, generally led by women, that encouraged people not to drink and often advocated for outright prohibition of alcohol.87
528923651The Women's MovementSeveral women called for equality, and was further fueled by the Declaration of Sentiments.88
528923652Life on the FrontierFarming became an integral part as well as mining. Before permanent schools or churches existed, men resumed familiar political rituals of elctioneering, voting, and talking politics. As rural communities grew, settlers began to replicate the organizations they had knwn at home. Newspapers, journals, and books reinforced familiar norms and determination. As more settlers arrived, support for educational, religious, and cultural institutions that defined acceptable behavior and enforced convetional standards grew.89
528923653Mexican AmericansPeople who were acquired due to American acquisitions of Mexican land such as Texas and the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Through the aforementioned treaty, they were guaranteed the civil, political, and property rights of former citizens.90
528923654Missouri CompromiseNegotiated by Henry Clay in 1820. At the time, the Union was split evenly between slave states and free states. Missouri's application for statehood threatened to make slave-owning states the majority in the Senate. The ____ admitted Missouri as a slave state while creating the new free state of Maine out of part of Massachusetts. It also prohibited slavery above the 36°30′ parallel (with Missouri as the exception)91
528923655Uncle Tom's CabinWritten by Harriet Beecher Stowe, this novel helped lay the groundwork for the Civil War by depicting the seriousness and brutality of slavery. The book depicted plantation life in a highly unfavorable light; it sold more than a million copies and fueled abolitionist sentiments across the country92
528923656Ralph Waldo EmersonConsidered a leading intellectual of his time, Emerson was a writer and also helped influence the growing Transcendentalists movement. He cast off European tradition, and urged Americans to look inward or to nature for self-knowledge.93
528923657Henry David ThoreauA Transcendalist thinker, he is a popular writer in the transcendalist era as was a deep thinker about the virtuous natural life. Following his departure from Walden, NH, he protested against slavery and the Mexican War by refusing to pay his taxes. During his brief stint in jail he wrote an essay called "Civil Disobedience" in 1849, followed by a book "Walden" in 1854.94
528923658Mormon ExperienceOffically called the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Joseph Smith created this experience with a utopian society in mind. First migrating to OH, then to MO, they went back it IL. Once Brigham Young took over, they were focused in the Great Basin area near Salt Lake City and renamed the state of Deseret. There was no seperation of church and state. They also concentrated on converting, rather than killing, Native Americans. Smith and other church leaders also practiced polygamy.95
528923659Raid on Harper's FerryLed by John Brown, he led a raid in 1859 in a hope to provoke a general uprising of slaves throughout the Upper South, but federal troops overcame him, killing half his men. Brown was later captured, tried, and hanged, but was considered a martyr by many abolitionists.96
528923660The Agricultural FrontierPioneer farmers pulled out native plants and established familiar crops while felling timber. Seed brought from home also introduced flourishing weeds such as Canadian thistle that graduall displaced native grass and rendered the land useless for grazing.97
528923661The Mining FrontierThe discovery of gold in California in 1848 brought many new hopeful immigrants to the area. Within a year, its population ballooned and made CA eligible for statehood. Racial antgonism between American miners and foreigners was not rare and often led to ugly riots and lynching. Men tried to get rich and those who were married were hestiant to bring their families to the camps due to the raucious character of the communities.98
529118589Oregon Land PolicyThis act awarded single men 320 acres of land and 640 acres for married men, as long as they occupied their claim for four years and made improvements99
529118590Adams-Onis Treaty(1819) In return for Florida, the U.S. conceded Texas to Spain.100
529163014Zachary TaylorA hero of the Mexican War, Taylor became the second and last Whig president in 1848. He campaigned without a solid platform to avoid controversy over the westward expansion of slavery in the Mexican Cession. He died after only two years in office and was replaced by Millard Fillmore.101
532393572Wilmot Proviso(1824) Put forth by Pennsylvania Representative David Wilmot, who proposed that Congress grant President Polk the $2 million he had requested to buy Mexican territory and bring the war with Mexico to a close. In return, Congress would require any land gained from Mexico to be slavery-free. The _____ was passed by the House twice, but it was defeated by Southerners in the Senate.102
532547507Mexican-American War(1846-1848) Began after President Polk attempted to buy the Southwest Territory from Mexico. When the Mexican government refused, Polk provoked the country until it attacked American troops. Whigs and abolitionists opposed the conflict, with the latter fearing that new states would allow slavery. The war ended when the United States invaded Mexico City and Mexico ceded control of much of the modern Southwest in exchange for $15 million103

Invertebrates Flashcards

Flashcards for invertebrates quiz~

Terms : Hide Images
286051324types of symmetryasymmetrical, radial, bilateral0
286055963asymmetricalno symmetry1
286051325radial symmetrywhen multiple imaginary planes could cut the image into equal halves2
286055964bilateral symmetrywhen only one imaginary plane could cut the image into equal halves3
286055965First category is called...porifera4
286055966Porifera have ... (way to remember porifera)porifera = pores, so porifera have pores5
286055967Porifera are...sponges6
286055968Type of symmetry of porifera (sponges)asymmetrical7
286055969How porifera gain nutrientsfilter feed8
286055970How is water able to flow in and out through porifera pores?flagellated cells create water current9
286057177How do porifera respire?by diffusion10
286057178What is the skeleton of porifera made of?Spicules (hard crystals) or spongin (protein)11
286057179What are spicules?hard crystals that make up the skeleton of porifera12
286057180What are spongin?protein that make up the skeleton of porifera13
286063934How many cell layers do porifera have?2 cell layers14
286063935Do sponges have a body cavity (coelomates)?No15
286074693------16
286063936Second category is called...cnidaria17
286063937Types of cnidaria are...jellyfish, sea anemones, hydras, and coral18
286063938What type of symmetry do cnidarians have?radial symmetry19
286063939"Structure" that all cnidaria havetentacles20
286063940Besides from tentacles, what do all cnidarians have?cnidocytes (specialized stinging cells)21
286063941What are cnidocytes?specialized stinging cells22
286063942What structures does each cnidocyte contain?nematocyst23
286063943What is a nematocyst?a poison filled stinging structure in each cnidocyte24
286065525How many cell layers do cnidarians have?two25
286065526What are the cell layers of cnidarians filled by?gelatinous mesoglea26
286065527How are respiration, circulation, and excretion done in cnidarians?diffusion27
286068468Cnidarians are ___ in terms of feedingcarnivorous28
286068469How do cnidarians feed?sting prey with nematocyst which paralyzes prey29
286068470How many body forms do cnidarians have?230
286068471What are the body forms of cnidarians?medusa and polyp31
286068472What is a medusa?One of the two body forms of a cnidarian; tentacles DOWN32
286068473What is a polyp?One of the two body forms of a cnidarian; tentacles UP33
286074694------34
286074695Third category is called...Platyhelminthes35
286074696Another name for a Platyhelminthes is ...a flatworm36
286074697types of platyhelminthes/flatwormsfree-living, flukes, tapeworms; (types can be free-living or parasitic)37
286074698How many layers do platyhelminthes/flatworms have?338
286074699Do platyhelminthes/flatworms have a body cavity?No, they are 3 layered acoelomates (no body cavity)39
286074700What symmetry do platyhelminthes/flatworms have?bilateral40
286074701platyhelminthes/flatworms are the first to have a distinct...head (cephalization)41
286085210What are circulation, respiration, and excretion typically done by?Diffusion42
286085211How do free living platyhelminthes/flatworms gain nutrients?consume food43
286085212How do parasitic platyhelminthes/flatworms gain nutrients?diffusion44
286085213platyhelminthes/flatworms gender...free-living have separate sexes45
286085214Parasites have a complex...life cycle46
286085215What is the first group to have a more complex life-cycle?platyhelminthes/flatworms (parasitic)47
286085216------48
286085217Fourth category is called...nematoda49
286085218Another name for nematoda is...round worms50
286085219Nematoda/roundworms can be ___ and ___.free-living and parasitic51
286085220How many layers to nematoda/roundworms have?3 (with false body cavity)52
286085221Do nematoda/roundworms have a body cavity?They are pseudocoelomates, meaning they have a false body cavity (cavity filled with fluid).53
286085222What is the first category to have a body cavity?nematoda/roundworms... but it is false/falled with fluid (pseudocoelomates)54
286085223What is the first category to have a complete digestive tract?nematoda/roundworms55
286091737nematoda/roundworms have a complete ____ with a ___ and ___.digestive tract with a mouth and anus (free living)56
286091738Respiration, circulation, and excretion are done by...diffusion57
286091739nematoda/roundworms reproduce...sexually58
286091740nematoda/roundworms gender...separate sexes59
286091741How do nematoda/roundworms move?muscles working against the fluid filled body cavity (hydrostatic skeleton)60
286091742How big are nematoda/roundworms?Range in size from microscopic to a mete in length61
286094813------62
286094814Fifth category is...annelida63
286094815Another name for annelida is...segmented worms64
286094816Examples of annelida are...earthworms, leaches, and marine worms65
286094817Do annelida have a body cavity?Yes, they are true coelomates (have organs in a body cavity)66
286094818What is the first category to be true coelomates?Annelida67
286095851Digestive system...most have a complete digestive system68
286115749Annelida/segmented worms are ___ or ___, while a few are ____ (in terms of eating)decomposers or carnivorous, while a few are filter feeders69
286142310What type of circulatory system do annelida/segmented worms have?closed (blood contained in vessels)70
286142311What is the first category to have a closed circulatory system?annelida/segmented worms71
286142312How do terrestrail (land) annelida/segmented worms respire?diffusion72
286142313How do aquatic annelids respire?primitive gills73
286142314annelida/segmented worms gender...some show separate sexes while the earthworms and hermaphroditic74
286142315Leaches...external parasites and suck blood/body fluids from their host75
286142316How do earthworms feed?eat soil to obtain nutrients from the organic material in the soil76
286142317------77
286142318sixth category is called...mollusca78
286142319Examples of mollusca are...snails, clams, and squids79
286142320Do mollusks have body cavities?Yes, they are true coelomates80
286142321Mollusks have a ____ body with ____soft body with an internal or external shell81
286142322How many body parts to mollusks have?four82
286142323What are the four body parts of a mollusk?muscular foot, mantle (thin layer of cells that cover the body), visceral mass (internal organs), and shell (secreted by the mantle)83
286142324What is a mantle?A thin layer of cells that cover the body of a mollusk84
286142325What is a visceral mass?internal organs85
286142326What is a shell of a mollusk secreted by?the mantle86
286142327How to mollusks respire?Aquatic = use gills Few terrestrial snails = primitive lung87
286142328What helps mollusks feed?radula88
286142329What is a radula?a tool used for feeding by mollusks89
286142330How do different mollusks use their radula?snails = scrape algae, squids = pierce object to kill their prey90
286142331What are the three classes of mollusks?bivalves, gastropods, and cephalopods91
286142332What are bivalves and what are examples of them?Filter feeders with two shells; clams and oysters92
286142333What are gastropods and what are examples of them?Algae grazers and herbivores; snails and slugs93
286142334What are cephalopods and what are examples of them?carnivorous mollusks with a well developed nervous system; octopus and squids94
286143672What is the first category with a well developed nervous system?cephalopods (mollusks)95
286158614------96
286158615What is the seventh category?arthropods97
286158616Arthropods are known as such because they have ___ ____.jointed appendages98
286158617Arthropods include...crabs, spiders, insects, and centipedes99
286158618Do arthropods have a body cavity?Yes, they are true coelomates100
286158619What type of skeleton do arthropods have?exoskeleton101
286158620What are arthropod's exoskeletons made of?chitin102
286158621How do arthropods grow?They molt their old exoskeleton and make a new one103
286158622Arthropods have ___ bodies.segmented (number of segments depends on the type of arthropod)104
286158623How to arthropods feed (type)?can be herbivores, carnivores, omnivores, decomposers, and parasitic105
286158624How to arthropods respire?tracheal tubes to the tissues, book lungs, or gills106
286158625Circulation in arthropods...combination of vessels, hearts, and an open system that baths the organs107
286158626How many classes of arthropods are there?five108
286166205What are the classes of arthropods?crustaceans, chelicerae, centipedes, millipedes, and insecta109
286166206What are crustaceans and what is special about them?lobsters, crabs, crayfish, shrimp; most are aquatic110
286166207What are chelicerae and what is special about them?spiders, horseshoe crab, mites, ticks, and scorpions; specialized piercing mouth parts111
286166208What are centipedes and what is special about their diet?arthropods with many segments with one pair of legs per segment; carnivorous112
286166209What are millipedes and what is special about their diet?arthropods with many segments with two pair of legs per segment; decomposers113
286166210What are insecta?arthropods with a wide variety of adaptations for feeding, ability to fly, and metamorphosis114
286170907------115
286170908What is the eighth category?echinodermata116
286170909What are examples of echinoderms?sea stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, brittle stars, and sea cucumbers117
286170910Do echinoderms have a body cavity?Yes, they are true coelomates118
286170911How do echinoderms move and respire?with their water vascular system with tube feet119
286170912How do echinoderms feed?sea urchins = grazers sea cucumbers are decomposers sea stars are carnivorous120
286170913How to echinoderms excrete waste?diffusion into the water121
286170914What do echinoderms do for circulation?water vascular system122
286170915Do echinoderms have a skeleton?Yes, called a test123
286170916What is an echinoderm's skeleton called?a "test"124
286170917What symmetry do echinoderms have?five part radial symmetry125
286173972------126
286173973What are the eight categories (in order)1) porifera 2) cnidaria 3) platyhelminthes 4) nematoda 5) annelida 6) mollusca 7) arthropods 8) echinodermata127

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