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AP US History Chapter 17 Vocabulary Flashcards

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5814785432Homestead LockoutThe 1892 lockout of workers at the Homestead, Pennsylvania, steel mill after Andrew Carnegie refused to renew the union contract. Union supporters attacked the guards hired to close them out and protect strikebreakers who had been employed by the mill, but the National Guard soon suppressed this resistance and Homestead, like other steel plants, became a non-union mill.0
5814810836Management RevolutionAn internal management structure adopted by many large, complex corporations that distinguished top executives from those responsible for day-to-day operations and departmentalized operations by function.1
5814785168vertical integrationbusiness model in which a corporation controlled all aspects of production from raw materials to packaged products. Industrial innovators pioneered this business form at the end of the Civil War.2
5814785169horizontal integrationa business concept invented in the late nineteenth century to pressure competitors and force rivals to merge their companies into a conglomerate. John D. Rockefeller of Standard Oil pioneered this business model.3
5814785170trusta small group of associates that hold stock from a group of combined firms, managing them as a single entity. Quickly evolved into other centralized business forms, but progressive critics continued to refer to giant firms like US Steel and Standard Oil as examples.4
5835347793deskillingThe elimination of skilled labor under a new system of mechanized manufacturing, in which workers completed discrete, small-scale tasks rather than crafting an entire product. With deskilling, employers found they could pay workers less and replace them more easily.5
5814785171mass productiona phrase coined by Henry Ford, who helped to invent a system of good based on assembly instead of standardized parts. This system accompanied the continued deskilling of industrial labor.6
5835349542scientific managementA system of organizing work developed by Frederick W. Taylor in the late nineteenth century. It was designed to coax maximum output from the individual worker, increase efficiency, and reduce production costs.7
5814785172Chinese Exclusion ActThe 1882 law that barred certain immigrant laborers from entering the US. continued in effect until the 1940s.8
5814785173Great Railroad Strike of 1877A nationwide protest of thousands of workers and labor allies, who protested the growing power of the corporations an the steep wage cuts imposed by managers and a severe economic depression that had begun in 1873.9
5814785174Greenback Labor Partya national political movement calling on the government to increase the money supply in order to assist borrowers and foster economic growth. Called for greater regulation of corporations and laws enforcing an eight hour workday.10
5835352541producerismThe argument that real economic wealth is created by workers who make their living by physical labor, such as farmers and craftsmen, and that merchants, lawyers, bankers, and other middlemen unfairly gain their wealth from such "producers."11
5814785175Granger lawsEconomic regulatory rules passed in some Midwestern states in the late 1870s, triggered by pressure from farmers and the Greenback Labor Party.12
5814785176Knights of Laborthe first mass labor organization created among America's working class. Founded in 1869 and peaking the in theid-1880s, they attempted to bridge boundaries of ethnicity, gender, ideology, race, and occupation to build a "universal brotherhood" of all workers.13
5814785177AnarchismThe advocacy of a stateless society achieved by revolutionary means. Feared for their views, the people became scapegoats for the 1886 Haymarket Square bombing.14
5814785178Haymarket SquareThe May 4, 1886 conflict in Chicago in which both workers and policemen were killed or wounded during a labor demonstration called by local anarchists. The incident created a backlash against all labor organizations, including the Knights of Labor.15
5814785179Farmers' Alliancea rural movement founded in Texas during the depression of the 1870s that spread across the plains states and the South. Advocated cooperative stores and exchanges that would circumvent middlemen, and it called for greater government aid to farmers and stricter regulation of railroads.16
5814785180Interstate Commerce ActAn 1887 rule that created the federal regulatory agency designed to oversee the railroad industry and prevent collusion and unfair rates.17
5814785181closed shopa workplace in which a job seeker had to be a union member to gain employment. Advocated by craft unions as a method of keeping out lower wage workers and strengthening the unions' bargaining position with employers.18
5814785182American Federation of Labororganization created by Samuel Gompers in 1886 that coordinated the activities of craft unions and called for direct negotiation with employers in order to achieve benefits for skilled workers.19
5814785183Andrew CarnegieA Scottish-born American industrialist and philanthropist who founded the Steel Company in 1892. By 1901, his company dominated the American steel industry because of his use of vertical integration20
5814785184Gustavus SwiftDeveloper of an efficient system of mechanical refrigeration, an innovation that earned him a fortune and provided a major stimulus to the growth of the cattle industry.21
5814785185John D. RockefellerAn American industrialist and philanthropist, in 1870, founded the Standard Oil Company and ran it until he retired in the late 1890s. Often forced rival companies to sell out by drastically lowering his own prices. At one point he controlled 90% of the oil business. He became the world's richest man and first U.S. dollar billionaire.22
5814785186Henry GeorgeSan Francisco journalist published a provocative book in 1879 that was an instant best seller. It jolted readers to look more critically at the effects of laissez-faire economics. The book is called "Progress and Poverty" and proposes on putting a single tax on land as the solution to poverty.23
5814785187Terence PowderlyIn 1879, president of the Knight of Labor. He worked to strengthen the union by opening membership to immigrants, blacks, women and unskilled workers. He wanted to make the world a better place for both workers and employers. He did not believe in strikes. He relied on rallies and meetings.24
5814785188Leonora BarryLabor leader and social reformer who from 1886-1890 served as general investigator for women's work for the Knights of Labor. Under her leadership, the organization recruited women of many different occupations, including factory workers, teachers, waitresses, domestics, and housewives, with the result that women composed as much as 20% of the Knights' membership.25
5814785189Samuel GompersAn American labor leader, he, as president of the American Federation of Labor (AFL), stressed cooperation between management and labor instead of strike actions, as a means of obtaining labor demands. He led the AFL for forty years, until his death in 1924.26

US History Court Cases Flashcards

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5240384580Plessy v Ferguson1896 established the separate but equal doctrine0
5240388874Tinker v Des Moines1969 Have the right to express yourself as long as the action does not disrupt class work, school activities, or invade the rights of others1
5240394258White v Regester1973 Shaped litigation over gerrymandering redistricting plans2
5240399484Wisconsin v Yoder1972 1st Amendment's free exercise of religion prevents a state from making Amish children attend school past the 8th Grade3
5240419001Mendez v Westminster1946 1st case to hold that school segregation itself was illegal because the resources and quality were inferior, not because they were segregated4
5240429014Delgado v Bastrop ISD1948 left segregation of African American students (because it was a state law) and allowed separate 1st grade classes for "language deficient" students.5
5240449015Sweatt v Painter1950 court ruled in favor of Sweatt. UT law school failed to create school equal to it status in faculty members, university facilitates, and student progress. Paved the way for Brown v Board of Education6
5240454708Hernandez v Texas1954 14th Amendment protects other races/ethnicity when trial by jury7
5240458077Brown v Board of Education1954 separate but equal has NO place in public education. led to integration of public schools8
5240461665Edgewood ISD v Kirby1989 Money from wealthier school districts were shared with poorer school districts so all children receive better educational opportunities9
5240476932California v Bakke(1978), the Supreme Court ruled that a university's use of racial "quotas" in its admissions process was unconstitutional, but a school's use of "affirmative action" to accept more minority applicants was constitutional in some circumstances.10
6760771779Roe V Wadewhich recognized that the constitutional right to privacy extends to a woman's right to make her own personal medical decisions — including the decision to have an abortion without interference from politicians.11
9340422895Escobedo v Illinoisa United States Supreme Court case holding that criminal suspects have a right to counsel during police interrogations under the Sixth Amendment.12

AP US History - US Presidents Flashcards

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7724862590George Washington1789-1797 Federalist Whiskey Rebellion; Judiciary Act; Farewell Address0
7724862591John Adams1797-1801 Federalist XYZ Affair; Alien and Sedition Acts1
7724862592Thomas Jefferson1801-1809 Democratic-Republican Marbury v. Madison; Louisiana Purchase; Embargo of 18072
7724862593James Madison1809-1817 Democratic-Republican War of 1812; First Protective Tariff3
7724862594James Monroe1817-1825 Democratic-Republican Missouri Compromise of 1820; Monroe Doctrine4
7724862595John Quincy Adams1825-1829 Democratic-Republican "Corrupt Bargain"; "Tariff of Abominations"5
7724862596Andrew Jackson1829-1837 Democrat Nullification Crisis; Bank War; Indian Removal Act6
7724862597Martin Van Buren1837-1841 Democrat Trail of Tears; Specie Circular; Panic of 18377
7724862598William Henry Harrison1841 Whig "Tippecanoe and Tyler too!"; First Whig President8
7724862599John Tyler1841-1845 Whig "His Accidency"; Webster-Ashburton Treaty9
7724862600James Polk1845-1849 Democrat Texas annexation; Mexican War10
7724862601Zachary Taylor1849-1850 Whig Mexican War hero and staunch Unionist11
7724862602Millard Fillmore1850-1853 Whig Compromise of 185012
7724862603Franklin Pierce1853-1857 Democrat Kansas-Nebraska Act; Gadsden Purchase13
7724862604James Buchanan1857-1861 Democrat Dred Scott decision; Harpers Ferry raid14
7724862605Abraham Lincoln1861-1865 Republican Secession and Civil War; Emancipation Proclamation15
7724862606Andrew Johnson1865-1869 Democrat 13th and 14th amendments; Radical Reconstruction; Impeachment16
7724862607Ulysses Grant1869-1877 Republican 15th amendment; Panic of 187317
7724862608Rutherford Hayes1877-1881 Republican Compromise of 1877; labor unions and strikes18
7724862609James Garfield1881, Republican Brief resurgence of presidential authority; Increase in American naval power; Purge corruption in the Post Office19
7724862610Chester Arthur1881-1885 Republican Standard Oil trust created Edison lights up New York City20
7724862611Grover Cleveland1885-1889 (1st term), 1893-1897 (2nd term) Democrat Interstate Commerce Act; Dawes Act; Panic of 1893; Pullman Strike21
7724862612Benjamin Harrison1889-1893 Republican Sherman Anti-Trust Act; Closure of the frontier22
7724862613William McKinley1897-1901 Republican Spanish-American War; Open Door policy23
7724862614Theodore Roosevelt1901-1909 Republican Progressivism; Square Deal; Big Stick Diplomacy24
7724862615William Howard Taft1909-1913 Republican Dollar diplomacy NAACP founded25
7724862616Woodrow Wilson1913-1921 Democrat WWI; League of Nations; 18th and 19th amendments; Segregation of federal offices; First Red Scare26
7724862617Warren Harding1921-1923 Republican "Return to normalcy", return to isolationism; Tea Pot Dome scandal; Prohibition27
7724862618Calvin Coolidge1923-1929 Republican Small-government (laissez-faire) conservative28
7724862619Herbert Hoover1929-1933 Republican "American individualism"; Stock Market Crash; Dust Bowl; Hawley-Smoot Tariff29
7724862620Franklin Delano Roosevelt1933-1945 Democrat New Deal; WWII; Japanese Internment; "Fireside Chats"30
7724862621Harry Truman1945-1953 Democrat A-bomb; Marshall Plan; Korean War; United Nations31
7724862622Dwight Eisenhower1953-1961 Republican Brown v. Board of Education; Second Red Scare; Highway Act and suburbanization ("white flight"); Farewell Address warning of the military industrial complex32
7724862623John Kennedy1961-1963 Democrat Camelot; Bay of Pigs; Cuban Missile Crisis; Space program; Peace Corps33
7724862624Lyndon Johnson1963-1969 Democrat Civil and Voting Rights acts; Gulf of Tonkin Resolution; Great Society34
7724862625Richard Nixon1969-1974 Republican Environmental Protection Act; China visit; Moon Landing; Watergate35
7724862626Gerald Ford1974-1977 Republican Pardoning of Nixon; OPEC crisis36
7724862627Jimmy Carter1977-1981 Democrat stagflation / energy crisis; Iran hostage crisis; Camp David Accords37
7724862628Ronald Reagan1981-1989 Republican Conservative revolution; Iran-Contra scandal38
7724862629George H. W. Bush1989-1993 Republican Persian Gulf War39
7724862630Bill Clinton1993-2001 Democrat NAFTA; Lewinsky scandal and impreachment40
7724862631George W. Bush2001-2008 Republican War on terrorism; Patriot Act; Tax cuts; "No Child Left Behind"41
7724862632Barack Obama2008-2017 Democrat Affordable Care Act42
7724862633Donald Trump2017-? Republican "Make America Great Again"43

Ap us history historical thinking skills Flashcards

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4802812597Historical argumentationHistorical thinking involves the ability to create an argument and support it using relevant historical evidence.0
4802834980Analyzing evidenceHistorical thinking involves the ability to describe, select and evaluate relevant evidence about the past from diverse sources (including written documents, works of art, archaeological artifacts, oral traditions, and other primary sources) and draw conclusions about their relevance to different historical issues.1
4802923916Historical causationHistorical thinking involves the ability to identify, analyze and evaluate relationships among historical causes and effects.distinguishing between between those that are long term and proximate. Historical thinking also involves the ability to distinguish between causation and correlation and an awareness of contingency the way that historical events results from a complex variety of factors that come together in unpredictable ways and often have unaticipatated consequences.2
4803049767Patterns of continutty and change over timeHistorical thinking involves the ability to recognize, analyze and evaluate the dynamics of historical continutty and change over a period of time of varying length as well as the ability to relate these patterns to larger historical processes or theme.3
4803115792PeriodizationHistorical thinking involves the ability and evaluate different ways that historians divide history into discrete and definable periods. Historians construct and debate different sometimes competing motels of Periodization the choice of specific turning points or starting and eating dates might accord a higher value to one narrative region or group than another.4
4803170282Compare and contrastHistorical thinking involves the ability to identify compare and evaluate multiple perspectives on a given historical event in order to draw conclusion about that event..it also involves the ability to describe compare and evaluate multiple historical developments within one society one or more developments across or between different societies and various chronological and geographical contexts.5
4803202551InterpretationHistorical thinking involves the ability to describe, analyze and evaluate the different ways historians interpret the past. This includes understanding the various types questions historians ask, as well as considering how the particular circumstances and contexts in which individual historians work and write and shape their interpretations of past events and historical evidence.6
4803240654ContextualizationHistorical thinking involves the ability to connect historical events and processes to specific circumstances of time and place as well as broader regional, national or global processes.7
4803253878SynthesisHistorical thinking involves the ability to develop understanding of the past by making meaningful and persuasive historical and/or cross-disciplinary connections between a given historical issue and other historical contexts, periods,themes or disciplines.8

Early US History: Colonies Flashcards

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9105310188Indentured servantLaborer who agreed to work without pay for a certain period of time in exchange for passage to America0
9105310191New England Colonies: Name themNew Hampshire, Massachusetts (includes present day Maine), Rhode Island and Connecticut1
9105310192Middle Colonies: Name themNew York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware2
9105310193Southern Colonies: Name ThemVirginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Georgia3
9105310195Plymouth, MAsettlement location of the Pilgrims4
9105310196Mayflower Compact1620.The first attempt at democratic government in the U.S. Pilgrims had no legal basis for being there, so 41 men signed the document also pledging allegiance to the King.5
9105310200New England Colonies: EconomyForests → lumber Oceans → commercial fishing Good harbors → trading centers, commerce main jobs=traders, shipbuilders, fishermen6
9105310206Southern Colonies: Climate, Soil, EnvironmentClimate: Warm summers, very mild winters, Soil: very fertile, long growing season Environment: no natural harbors, tidal rivers, wide coastal plain7
9105310207New England Colonies: Climate, Soil, EnvironmentClimate: Cold Winters Soil: Rocky, Short growing season, Environment: mountains, forests, rivers, natural harbors8
9105310212Fundamental Orders of ConnecticutFirst Constitution in the Colonies9
9105310213Hooker, ThomasFounder of Connecticut for Religious Freedom10
9105310215Hutchinson, AnneThis woman questioned the Puritan Church and was kicked out of Massachusetts. As a result, many of her followers began to migrate out of Massachusetts Bay, especially to New Hampshire and Maine.11
9105310216Middle Colonies: Climate, Soil, EnvironmentClimate: Mild Soil: Fertile Environment: Rivers, Natural Harbors12
9105310219Why was New York so valuable to the British?Important Trading Port/Harbor13
9105310220Penn, WilliamFounder of Pennsylvania for the Quaker Religion. He believed that the land belonged to the Indians, and he was careful to see that they were reimbursed for it, and during his lifetime the colony had no major conflicts with the natives. More than any other English colony, Pennsylvania prospered from the outset but Penn went bankrupt14
9105310228Oglethorpe, JamesFounder of Georgia, built a fortified town at the mouth of the Savannah River in 1733 to stand as a military buffer between South Carolina and the Spanish settlements in Florida. He also wanted a refuge for British men and women without economic prospects in England.15
9105310229Triangular TradeTransferring of slaves, cash crops, and manufactured goods between West Africa, American colonies and the European colonial powers16
9105310233Middle Colonies: EconomyFarmers grew cash crops (wheat,barley, rye, corn), industries i.e. lumber (for ship building) and iron mills, and New York and Philadelphia were large trading centers (due to natural harbors) Main jobs=traders, shipbuilders,farmers17
9105310234Southern Colonies: EconomyGood soil for farming cash crops like tobacco, rice, indigo, and cotton main jobs: farming, some specialized jobs (shoemaker, carpenter, etc.)18
9105310237Cash Cropa readily salable crop that is grown and gathered for the market (as vegetables or cotton or tobacco)19
9105310238Middle PassageA voyage that brought enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to North America and the West Indies20
9105310239Slave CodesIn 1661 a set of "codes" was made. It denied slaves basic fundamental rights, and gave their owners permission to treat them as they saw fit.21
9105310240Navigation Acts1660 passed by British parliament to increase colonial dependence on Great Britain for trade; limited goods that were exported to colonies; tariffs; caused great resentment in American colonies.22
9105310242Bacon's RebellionFrontier farmers burned homes of the elite in Jamestown due to not being protected from Indians (It started by first outlashing at the Indians)23
9105310243CharterA document that gives the holder the right to organize settlements in an area24
9105310244Royal ColonyA colony ruled by a governor who was appointed by the king or queen25
9105310245JamestownThe first permanent English settlement in North America, found in East Virginia26
9105310246PatroonA land owner in new Netherlands who had to bring 50 settlers to the colony to help settle his land27
9105310247PilgrimsGroup of Puritan separatists who established Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts to seek religious freedom from the Anglican church after having lived briefly in the Netherlands. William Bradford became their first governor. 10% of Americans can trace ancestry to Mayflower.28
9105310248PuritansA religious group who wanted to purify the Church of England. They came to America for religious freedom and settled at Massachusetts Bay.29
9105310249Duke of Yorkbrother to King Charles II and "founder" of New York30
9105310250QuakersA form of Protestantism in which the believers were pacifists and would shake at the power of the word of the Lord; believed in Peacefulness & Equality for all. originated in mid-seventeenth-century England and grew into an important force as a result of the preachings of George Fox, a Nottingham shoemaker, and Margaret Fell.31
9105310254MercantilismEconomic policy based on the idea that the American colonies existed primarily to provide economic benefits for Great Britain; British bought raw materials from the colonists and sold them finished products; required that most (only) colonial trade occur within the British Empire. The theory was that there was a fixed amount of wealth in the world, and any wealth a nation acquired was, in effect, taken away from some other nation.32
9105310259Middle Colonies: DiversityDiversity in religion and nationalities. (New Amsterdam aka New York)33
9105310262Virginia House of Burgesses (1619)First representative (or self-governing) body in colonial America, bi-cameral (2 house) legislature modeled after British Parliament that could raise taxes and make laws.34
9105310273Magna Carta (1215); English Bill of Rights (1689)Limited the power of the King; emphasized the King was not above the law; representative government and the law outweighed the power of any monarch35
9105310281Columbus, ChristopherItalian explorer comissioned by Queen Isabella of Spain in 1492 to find a western trade route to the East Indies. Commanding ninety men and three ships— the Niña, the Pinta, and the Santa María—Columbus left Spain in August 1492 and sailed west into the Atlantic. He landed in the Bahamas and then Hispaniola.36
9105310282Queen IsabellaThe queen of Spain who financed Christopher Columbus is exploration in search of a trade route to India37
9105310283Soto, Hernando deThe explorer from Spain who was the first to see the Mississippi River.38
9105310286Spanish MissionsBegan as Catholic establishments and often became towns such as Santa Fe New Mexico.39
9105310287Coronado, FranciscoTraveled north from Mexico (1540-1542) into what is now New Mexico in a fruitless search for gold and jewels; in the process, he helped open the Southwest of what is now the United States to Spanish settlement.40
9105310289Santa FeThe capital of New Mexico41
9105310296Massachusetts (Bay Colony)One of the original 13 colonies. Puritans obtained a grant of land in from Charles I for most of the area now comprising Massachusetts and New Hampshire; It's success encouraged future colonization such as Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire. Its government resembled a theocracy, a society in which there is no clear line between church and state.42
9105310298Wampanaug IndiansNative Americans who lived in the forest near Plymouth. Lead by Massasoit.43
9105310299MassasoitLeader of the Wampanaug Indians44
9105310300SquantoNative American who taught the pilgrims how to grow corn, how to hunt deer, and hunt turkeys in the forest. A Pawtuxet who earlier in his life had been captured by an English explorer and taken to Europe, spoke English and was helpful to the settlers in forming an alliance with the local Wampanoags, under Chief Massasoit. After the first harvest, in 1621, the settlers marked the alliance by inviting the Indians to join them in an October festival, the first Thanksgiving.45
9105310301St. Lawrence RiverAn important river used by the French to trade with Native Americans.46
9105310307Williams, RogerStarted the city of Providence later known as the colony of Rhode Island who lived for a time in Salem, Mass and was a religious dissenter47
9105310308ProvidenceCity in Rhode Island where there was freedom of religion for all.48
9105310310PennsylvaniaA colony started by William Penn, a Quaker who sought religious freedoms for his people.49
9105310313King Louis of FranceThe king who wanted to find a shortcut to Asia.50
9105310314Cartier, JacquesExplorer who found and claimed Saint Lawrence river and called it the area New France.51
9105310315Salle, Sieur de laExplorer from France who discovered the Mississippi river and the Gulf of Mexico.52
9105310316FrenchNationality who traded with American Indians for their animal furs.53
9105310317American IndiansIndigenous people who taught the French to trap animals and how to use canoes to travel on rivers54
9105310319New FranceThe land from the mouth of the St. Lawrence rivers on the East Coast, past the Mississippi River West, and down to the Gulf of Mexico.55
9105310320St. LouisOne of two cities built by the French.56
9105310346Tordesillas TreatyAgreement of the Pope giving Portugal American land east of line and Spain land west of the line. Spain got more land.57
9105310347Spanish ConquistadorsThey conquered Native Americans, searched for gold, and developed haciendas throughout the New World.58
9105310348Spanish Armada1588. Philip II of Spain assembled one of the largest military fleets in the history of warfare to carry his troops across the English Channel and into England, but the smaller English fleet destroyed them and ended Spain's domination of the Atlantic. Their defeat shifted future colonization of North America to the English, French, and Dutch.59
9105310353Charles IIDeveloped proprietary colonies such as New York, New Jersey, and the Carolinas.60
9105310393New York, Philadelphia, & BostonThese northern cities became major trade hubs, integral for the economic development of the colonies.61
9105310398French and Indian War1754-1763 (Part of 7 years war in Europe) Conflict between Native Americans (Iroquois Confederacy on side of British, all others on side of French) and Europeans over land, specifically Louisiana Territory and Ohio Valley. Unified the colonists and dramatically changed the territorial boundaries of North America in favor of the British.62
9105310399Proclamation of 1763British announced that the land won during the French & Indian War (land west of the Appalachian mountains) was reserved for Native Americans63
9106473020AntinomianismWhat critics called the teachings of Anne Hutchinson from the Greek word meaning "hostile to the law"),64
9106481598Archaic PeriodThis is a scholarly term for the history of humans in America during a period of about 5,000 years beginning around 8000 BCE. In the first part of this period, most humans continued to support themselves through hunting and gathering,65
9106486109AztecMeso-American tribes conquered by Cortes, after small-pox weakened them.66
9106510700Clovis PeopleEstablished one of the first civilizations in the Americas. Archaeologists believe that they lived about 13,000 years ago. They were among the first people to make tools and to eat other animals.67
9106518533Mather, CottonThe Puritan who heard of the practice of infecting people with mild cases of smallpox in order to immunize them. despite opposition, he urged inoculation on his fellow Bostonians during an epidemic in the 1720s. The results confirmed the effectiveness of the technique. Other theologians (including Jonathan Edwards) took up the cause.68
9106541723Courerus de boisAdventurous fur traders and trappers—who also moved far into the wilderness and developed an extensive trade that became one of the underpinnings of the French colonial economy.69
9106554783Magellan, FerdinandPortuguese in the employ of the Spanish, found the strait that now bears his name at the southern end of South America. His expedition went on to complete the first known circumnavigation of the globe (1519-1522), even though he died before completed.70
9106598784Fundamental Constitution for Carolina in 1669The Earl of Shaftesbury, troubled by the instability in England, wanted a planned and well-ordered community. With the aid of the English philosopher John Locke, he drew up the Fundamental Constitution for Carolina in 1669, which created an elaborate system of land distribution and an elaborately designed social order.71
9106602972Calvert, George (Lord Baltimore)The first Lord Baltimore, a recent convert to Catholicism and a shrewd businessman, who founded Maryland for the persecuted English Catholics. He died and his son, Cecil, became second Lord Baltimore and finished his mission in Maryland.72
9106608865HeadrightsFifty-acre grants of land, which new settlers could acquire in a variety of ways. Masters received additional land grants for every servant they imported.73
9106613216Hudson, HenryIn 1609, This English explorer in the employ of the Dutch sailed up the river that was to be named for him in what is now New York State.74
9106633408Cortes, Hernando1518. Led a small military expedition of about 600 men into Mexico after he heard of great treasures. Met resistance from Aztecs and leader Montezuma. Smallpox weakened Aztecs and he conquered them.75
9106636827IncasCreated the largest empire in the Americas in Peru76
9106649595EncomiedasOñate distributed them to the Spanish settlers. They were licenses to exact labor and tribute from the natives in specific areas77
9106655772Indigo1740s. Eliza Lucas discovered that it could grow on the high ground of South Carolina, which was unsuitable for rice planting, and that its harvest came while the rice was still growing. It became an important complement to rice and a popular import in England.78
9106662714Iroquois ConfederacyThe most powerful native group that did not get along with the French. It was made up of the five Indian nations (Mohawk, Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, and Oneida) that had formed a defensive alliance.79
9106666878Rolfe, John1612, the Jamestown planter who produced tobacco crops of high quality and found ready buyers in England. Tobacco cultivation quickly spread up and down the James. He also married Pocahontus.80
9106671700Winthrop, JohnGovernor for Massecheutes Bay Colony, an affluent, university-educated man who had been instrumental in organizing the migration, and he commanded the expedition that sailed for New England in 1630.81
9106684181King Philip's War1675. Wampanoags, under the leadership of a Metacomet (known to the whites as "King Philip") terrorized a string of New England towns for 3 years. The war weakened the society and economy of Massachusetts. In 1676, the white settlers fought back and won. The very high casualties on both sides were a result of the use of advanced rifles.82
9106687742Calvert, Cecil (Lord Baltimore)Named one of his brothers, Leonard Calvert, governor of Maryland and sent him with another brother to oversee the settlement of the province.83
9106694146Middle GroundWhat Americans called the fusion of cultures in America that was often uneasy.84
9106699083New Orleans1718. Founded to service the French plantation economy at the mouth of the Mississippi River at the Gulf of Mexico.85
9106703353New YorkJames, Duke of York, renamed the colony of the New Netherlands after himself after the Dutch surrendered to the British. In 1673, the Dutch briefly reconquered New Amsterdam. But they lost it for good in 1674.86
9106836954Pennsylvania DutchGermans fleeing religios persecution. Most made their way to Pennsylvania, where they received a warm welcome.87
9106859699Peace of Paris of 1763Treaty ending French and Indian War/7 Years War. Under its terms, the French ceded to Great Britain some of their West Indian islands and most of their colonies in India. They also transferred Canada and all other French territory east of the Mississippi, except New Orleans, to Great Britain. They ceded New Orleans and their claims west of the Mississippi to Spain, thus surrendering all title to the mainland of North America.88
9106865420Pequot War1637. Hostilities broke out between English settlers in the Connecticut Valley and the Indians of the region. The Indians were nearly wiped out.89
9106907465SeigneuriesFrench agricultural estates along the St. Lawrence River90
9106920312New JerseyJames gave a large portion of that land to Sir John Berkeley and Sir George Carteret. Carteret named the territory after the island in the English Channel on which he had been born. In 1702, they ceded the territory back to the Crown as a royal colony.91
9106925365Dale, Thomas (Sir)1611. Sent to Jamestown to rebuild and manage it.92
9106967979Tenochtitlán1300 CE,the Mexica (Aztecs) established this city on a large island in a lake in central Mexico, (present-day Mexico City). They incorporated other tribes into their society, and it became the greatest city in the Americas to that point, connected to water supplies from across the region by aqueducts.93
9107010125Islands English claimed in the West IndiesAntigua, St. Kitts, Jamaica, and Barbados.94
9107019282QuebecFirst permanent settlement in North America by French, less than a year after the English started their first colony at Jamestown.95
9107033214Western AfricaMost of the African men and women who were forcibly taken to America came from a large region in west Africa below the Sahara Desert, known as Guinea. It was the home of a wide variety of peoples and cultures. Over half of all the new arrivals in the New World between 1500 and 1800 were Africans.96
9107093956Raleigh, Walter (Sir)Recruited his cousin, Sir Richard Grenville, to lead a group of men (most of them from the English plantations in Ireland) to Roanoke to establish a colony.97
9107103626Vespucci, AmerigoWho America was named after. A Florentine merchant and a member of a later Portuguese expedition to the New World who wrote a series of vivid descriptions of the lands he had visited and who recognized the Americas as new continents.98
9107116773Queen ElizabethSir Walter Raleigh named Virginia after her, "the virgin queen."99
9107165206Berkeley, William (Sir)In 1642 appointed governor of Virginia by King Charles I. Sent explorers across the Blue Ridge Mts. Put down 1644 Indian Uprising, agreed to prohibit white settlement west of a line est. with Indians.100
9107211622St. AugustineThe Spanish fort established in 1565 in Florida, became the first permanent European settlement in what is now the United States.101
9107366122CreolesWhite Immigrants of French descent who owned plantations on the lower Mississippi that were worked by black slaves.102
9107370498Dutch West India Company1624, established a series of permanent trading posts on the Hudson, Delaware, and Connecticut Rivers.103
9107377149Bacon, FrancisHe created an uprising in Virginia in response to the raids by Indians and the anger that governor Berkeley did not protect them sufficiently. He stood on the verge of taking command of Virginia. Instead, he died suddenly of dysentery; and Berkeley, his position bolstered by the arrival of British troops, soon managed to regain control.104
9107382218GeorgiaThe last of the 13 original colonies. Established to erect a military barrier against the Spanish lands on the southern border of English America,105
9107413682Cabot, John1497, he sailed to the northeastern coast of North America on an expedition sponsored by King Henry VII looking for a northwest passage through the New World to the Orient. It wasn't found.106
9107435866Smith, JohnJamestown settlement owed their survival to his leadership, who at age 27 was already a famous world traveler. He imposed work and order on the settlement and created a shaky relationship with the natives107
9107451150Stuart, JohnIn charge of Indian affairs in the southern colonies108
9107457097Johnson, William (Sir)In charge of Indian affairs in the northern colonies. married a Mohawk woman, Mary Brant, who was later to play an important role in the American Revolution.109
9107470441Wheelwright, JohnA a disciple of Anne Hutchinson who led some of his fellow dissenters to Exeter, New Hampshire. Other groups—of both dissenting and orthodox Puritans—soon followed. New Hampshire became a separate colony in 1679. Maine remained a part of Massachusetts until 1820.110
9107547330Olmec1000 BCE, first truly complex society in the Americas.111
9107552291PequotIndians of Connecticut and Mass Bay area reduced by smallpox. A war between Indians and colonists in 1637 nearly wiped the remaining out.112
9107596605PuebloNatives of Sante Fe Area. By 1750, their population declined (through disease, war, and migration) to less than half what it had been in 1680. New Mexico had by then become a reasonably stable, but still weak and isolated, outpost of the Spanish Empire.113
9107599729RoanokeEst by Sir Walter Raleigh. First settlement attempt failed when colonists left with Sir Francis Drake. Raleigh tried again in 1587, sending an expedition carrying 91 men and 17 women. Unfortunately, the ended up disappearing.114
9107605601Drake, Francis (Sir)English "sea dog" who staged successful raids on Spanish merchant ships and built confidence in England's ability to challenge Spanish sea power.115
9107615451Stono Rebellion 17391739. South Carolina, about 100 Africans seized weapons, killed several whites, and attempted to escape south to Florida.116
9107620138Balboa, Vasco de1513. This Spaniard fought his way across the Isthmus of Panama. He struggled through the stormy narrows and into the ocean ,so calm by contrast that he christened it the "Pacific."117
9115611412Maya800 CE. A more advanced society than Olmec emerged in parts of Central America and in the Yucatán peninsula of Mexico. They developed a written language, a numerical system similar to the Arabic, an accurate calendar, an advanced agricultural system, and important trade routes into other areas of the continents.118
9119662423Allan, EthanTook up the cause of the Green Mountain farmers and accused the landowners of trying to "enslave a free people." He eventually succeeded in making Vermont into a separate state, which broke up some of the large estates.119
9119668473Great AwakeningBegan in earnest in the 1730s, reached its climax in the 1740s, and brought a new spirit of religious fervor to the colonies. The revival had particular appeal to women (who constituted the majority of converts) and to younger sons of the third or fourth generation of settlers—those who stood to inherit the least land and who faced the most uncertain futures. The rhetoric of the revival emphasized the potential for every person to break away from the constraints of the past and start anew in his or her relationship with God. Such beliefs may have reflected the desires of many people to break away from their families or communities and start a new life.120
9119746366Edwards, JonathanOutstanding preacher of the Great Awakening. He attacked the new doctrines of easy salvation for all. He preached anew the traditional Puritan ideas of the absolute sovereignty of God, predestination, and salvation by God's grace alone. His vivid descriptions of hell could terrify his listeners.121

AP US History Review Flashcards

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6299586517Columbian Exchangea series of interactions and adaptations among societies across the Atlantic, including plants, animals, disease, people, etc.0
6299586518Columbian Exchange, from Americas to "Old World"potatos, corn, tomatoes, squash, beans, chocolate, syphillis, etc1
6299586519Columbian Exchange, from "Old World" to Americassmallpox, livestock (pigs, cows, sheep), bees, bananas, coffee, sugar2
6299586520encomienda systemIndian labor used to support plantation-based agriculture and extract precious metals and other resources. EX: sugar, silver3
6299586521How did Europeans justify the subjugation of Africans and Natives?White racial superiority, bible, view of groups as "savages"4
6299586522capitalisman economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state or hereditary noble class5
6299586523joint stock companiesBusinesses owned by shareholders that invested in exploration and colonization, enabiling more investors to profit with less risk6
6299586524MercantilismEconomic policy that focuses on making $ for the mother country. It favors a positive balance of trade for the mother country and the accumulation of gold and silver7
6299586525What led Europeans to develop diverse patterns of colonization?Differences in imperial goals, cultures, and the North American environments that different empires confronted8
6299586526What factors led to the emergence of the Atlantic slave trade?The abundance of land, a shortage of indentured servants, the lack of an effective means to enslave native peoples, and a growing European demand for colonial goods led to the emergence of the Atlantic slave trade.9
6299586527indentured servitudeSystem of labor in which a company or individual paid a person's passage to America in return for a contract of repayment through servitude (usually seven years).10
6299586528middle passagethe brutal journey of slaves in bondage across the Atlantic to America.11
6299586529Jamestown, 1607first permanent English colony in North America, founded in Virginia in 1607 - 13 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth in Massachusetts12
6299586530Describe the general characteristics of the New England coloniesThe New England colonies, founded primarily by Puritans seeking to establish a community of likeminded religious believers, developed a close-knit, homogeneous society and — aided by favorable environmental conditions — a thriving mixed economy of agriculture and commerce.13
6299586531What were the New England colonies?Plymouth (later absorbed into Massachussetts), Massachussetts Bay Colony, New Hamphire, Connecticut, Rhode Island14
6299586532Mayflower Compact, 1620The Mayflower Compact, signed by 41 English colonists on the ship Mayflower on November 11, 1620, was the first written framework of government established in what is now the United States.15
6299586533PuritansEnglish Protestants who wanted to create a "community of saints" or "city upon a hill" that would serve as a model of Christianity.16
6299586534Great Migration of Puritans to Massachusetts, 1630's and 1640'sBeginning with 700 people led by Governor John Winthrop, a great migration of Puritans from England brought over 20,000 people—mostly families— to New England over a ten-year period.17
6299586535Describe the general characteristics of the Middle ColoniesThe demographically, religiously, and ethnically diverse middle colonies supported a flourishing export economy based on cereal crops (wheat, corn, barley, etc)18
6299586536QuakersReligious group that settled Pennsylvania. Often known as the "Society of Friends," Quakers believed in an "Inner Light" that would guide them toward religious truth and were pacifists (opposed violence) who had good relations with Native Americans19
6299586537Describe the Chesapeake colonies (Virginia and Maryland) and North Carolinathey relied on the cultivation of tobacco, a labor-intensive product based on white indentured servants and African chattel.20
6299586538Headright SystemThe grant of 50 acres of land for each settler brought to Virginia by a colonist. Established a pattern of small wealthy planter elite and a large, landless, powerless majority that would characterize politics/society in the South until the Civil War and beyond.21
6299586539Molasses Act, 1733A British law that established a tax on imports of molasses, sugar, and rum from non-British colonies. The law was loosely enforced and New England imported great quantities of West Indian sugar for manufacturing rum. Example of mercantilism22
6299586540smugglingAs a way of ignoring British restrictions on colonial trade, colonists engaged in widespread smuggling. Smugglers who got caught were often often freed by sympathetic American juries.23
6299586541triangular tradeA system of trade between Africa, Europe, and American colonies that involved slaves, cash crops, and manufactured goods.24
6299586542House of Burgesses, 1619The first elected lawmaking body in North America, established by the Virginia Company to allow representative government in Virginia.25
6299586543Navigation ActsAttempt by England to assert its control over American trade by passing a series of laws that regulated colonial trade to England's benefit.26
6299586544salutary neglectUnofficial British policy of non-enforcement of trade laws. Salutary neglect lasted throughout most of the 1600s and 1700s. Considered good because the colonies grew economically and learned to govern themselves27
6299586545Bacon's Rebellion, 1676Armed rebellion in Virginia against Governor William Berkeley, who had the support of the British government. Forces from England came to Virginia to suppress the resistance and reform the colonial government to one that was more directly under royal control.28
6299586546First Great Awakening, 1730s-1760sEvangelical religious revival that swept through Britain's North American colonies. The Great Awakening strengthened beliefs in religious freedom and challenged the status of established churches.29
6299586547George WhitefieldChristian preacher whose tour of the English colonies attracted big crowds and sparked the First Great Awakening.30
6299586548Jonathan Edwards sparked the First Great Awakening, 1734Known for his "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God "sermon. Leading theologian (religious thinker) of First Great Awakening, a massive religious movement that swept through the colonies31
6299586549Impact of 7 Years' WarFrance was removed from North America; Great Britain was in massive debt, began to consolidate control over colonies - taxes; many colonists resisted32
6299586550Common SenseWritten by T-Paine, and Enlightenment thinker. Urged that it was "Common Sense" that colonies should break away from Great Britain33
6299586551Northwest Land OrdinancePassed under Articles - banned slavery in NW territory (OH, MI, IN, etc.); created a process for admitting new states (60,000 inhabitants)34
6299586552Proclamation of 1763It was created to alleviate relations with natives after the French and Indian War and stated that Americans were not permitted to pass the Appalachian Mountains. Angered struggling colonists who had no other option but to find fortune and life on the frontier. Largely ignored by the colonists who continued to expand west and cause further turmoil between the colonials and the natives.35
6299586553Stamp Act, 1765-66It imposed tax on newspapers, almanacs, pamphlets, deeds, wills, licenses. In retaliation, many colonial groups formed such as Sons of Liberty and tarred or feathered stamp tax collectors and organized non-important movements (boycotts) of British goods.36
6299586554Boston Tea Party, 1773Angry and frustrated at a new tax on tea, American colonists calling themselves the Sons of Liberty and disguised as Mohawk Native Americans, boarded three British ships and dumped British tea into the Boston harbor. Britain responded with "Coercive" or "Intolerable" Acts37
6299586555First Continental Congress, 1774Convention of delegates from twelve colonies (Georgia not present). It was called in to discuss their response to the passage of the Intolerable Acts (Punished Boston for the Boston Tea Party) by the British Parliament.38
6299586556Second Continental Congress, 1775a convention of delegates from the 13 Colonies that started meeting in the summer of 1775, in Philadelphia, PA, soon after first shots of the Revolution. The SCC managed the colonial war effort, sent The Olive Branch Petition was sent to King George III (who rejected it) and moved incrementally towards independence, adopting the Declaration of Independence.39
6299586557Thomas Paine published Common Sense, 1776Pamphlet that inspired people in the 13 Colonies to declare and fight for independence from England in the summer of 1776. I40
6299586558Declaration of Independence, 1776The fundamental document establishing the US as an independent nation, adopted on July 4, 1776. The declaration was ordered and approved by the Second Continental Congress and written largely by Thomas Jefferson. It declared the 13 colonies independent from Britain, offered reasons for the separation41
6299586559Northwest OrdinanceThe Ordinance created a system of surveying and selling western lands (then the area below the Great Lakes).42
6299586560Shay's Rebellion, 1786This conflict in Massachusetts caused many to criticize the Articles of Confederation and admit the weak central government was not working; uprising led by Daniel Shays in an effort to prevent courts from foreclosing on the farms of those who could not pay the taxes. This was the final push towards constructing the Constitution because the politicians throughout the nation felt the Articles of Confederation needed to be replaced or fixed.43
6299586561ConstitutionReplaced the Articles - series of compromises (Great, 3/5, Slave Trade); provided limits on federal power (separation of powers); did not address problems of slavery44
6299586562Alexander Hamilton appointed Secretary of the Treasury, 1789Treasury Secretary Hamilton helped put in place the basic economic foundations of the new government during the Washington Administration, with the overriding goal of strengthening the national government's role. Key elements include: assumption of state debts (to centralize economic life and elite interests in national government and enhance its legitimacy for international trade), creation of the First Bank of the US (under a loose construction [interpretation] of the "elastic clause"), strong support for manufacturing (proposed protective tariffs)45
6299586563Samuel Slater established the first textile mill, 1790Known as the "Father of the American Factory System" because he brought British textile technology to America with a few modifications fit for America. He learned textile machinery as an apprentice to a pioneer in the British industry. He brought the knowledge to America where he designed the first textile mills. This brought work to factories instead of homes where efficiency skyrocketed.46
6299586564Bill of Rights, 1791The Bill of Rights is the collective name for the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution. Proposed to assuage the fears of Anti-Federalists who had opposed Constitutional ratification, these amendments guarantee a number of personal freedoms, limit the government's power in judicial and other proceedings, and reserve some powers to the states and the public. The Bill was influenced by George Mason's 1776 Virginia Declaration of Rights, the English Bill of Rights 1689, and earlier English political documents such as Magna Carta (1215).47
6299586565Cotton Gin, 1793a machine invented by Eli Whitney that revolutionized the production of cotton by greatly speeding up the process of removing seeds from cotton fiber. Offered Southern planters a justification to maintain and expand slavery even as a growing number of Americans supported its abolition. Made slavery much more economically favorable for the South.48
6299586566Republican MotherhoodExpectation that women would instill Republican values in children and be active in families; helped increase education for women49
6299586567Washington's Farewell Address, 1796President George Washington decided not to seek reelection for a third term, setting a precedent every president would follow50
6299586568XYZ Affair, 1797-98Jay's Treaty angered France. As a result, Adams sent delegates to meet with French foreign minister Talleyrand in the hopes of working things out. Talleyrand's 3 agents told the American delegates that they could meet with Talleyrand only in exchange for a very large bribe.51
6299586569Alien & Sedition Acts, 1798passed by Federalists in Congress & signed by President Adams. It increased waiting period for an immigrant to become a citizen from 5 to 14 years, empowered president to arrest and deport dangerous aliens, & made it illegal to publish defamatory statements about the federal government52
6299586570Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, 1798-99Written by Jefferson and Madison, in response to the Alien and Sedition Acts, these resolutions gave states the power to decide when the government has abused its powers53
6299586571FederalistsPolitical Party led by Hamilton - pro-British; supported by the wealthy; pro-merchants and trade; Favored the National Bank (BUS); loose interpretation54
6299586572Democratic-RepublicansPolitical Party led by Jefferson - pro-French; supported by middle-class and farmers; pro-agriculture; against the BUS; strict interpretation55
6299586573Election of 1800Thomas Jefferson became president. First peaceful transfer of power in world history56
6299586574Marbury v. Madison, 1803It was a landmark United States Supreme Court case in which the Court formed the basis for the exercise of judicial review in the United States under Article III of the Constitution. Why it was important? The decision in this Supreme Court Case established the right of the courts to determine the constitutionality of the actions of the other two branches of government.57
6299586575Louisiana Purchase, 1803Jefferson sent Monroe to Paris in 1803 to purchase New Orleans and as much land east of it at a maximum price of $10 million. Monroe ended up spending $15 million, because he was able to get all of Louisiana, doubling the size of the United Sates58
6299586576Jefferson's embargo, 1807The Embargo Act of 1807 was an attempt by President Thomas Jefferson and the U.S. Congress to punish Britain and France for interfering with American trade while the two major European powers were at war with each other.59
6299586577The American System, 1815Policies devised by the Whig Party and leading politician Henry Clay to stimulate the growth of the economic and particularly manufacturing: national bank, high tariffs, and internal improvements60
6299586578Era of Good Feelings, 1815-24Period of strong nationalism, economic growth, territorial expansion under the presidency of James Monroe. Only one major political party at the time (Republican), because the Federalist Party had died in the wake of its opposition to the War of 1812.61
6299586579McCulloch v. Maryland, 1819Maryland had attempted to impede operation of a branch of the Second Bank of the US by imposing a tax on all notes of banks not chartered in Maryland. The court ruled that "within the power to tax is the power to destroy" and since federal government institutions should be supreme (under the Supremacy Clause), no state had the authority to destroy the 2nd BUS. Important for increasing power of federal government over states62
6299586580Missouri Compromise, 1820Involved expansion of slavery in the western territories. Missouri was the 1st part of the Louisiana Purchase to seek statehood. Senate had 11 free vs. 11 slave states. Missouri as a slave state would upset balance. Compromise split Maine (as a free state) from Massachusetts to maintain balance in Senate (now 12 to 12). It prohibited slavery in Louisiana Territory north of 36°30′ (except for MO). Compromise settled slavery expansion issue for a generation until issue came up again after Mexican War brought enormous new lands into the US.63
6299586581DemocratsParty led by Jackson - "Common Man"; pro states' rights; against the BUS64
6299586582WhigsPolitical Party led by Henry Clay! Favored the BUS and the American System; strong legislative branch; against "King Andrew I"65
6299586583Second Great AwakeningInspired many to achieve perfection on earth; helped influence reform movements (abolitionism, women's rights, temperance, etc.)66
6299586584American SystemHenry Clay's idea to unify the economy through: BUS, internal improvements, and tariffs. More successful in unifying the North and Midwest than South67
6299586585Market RevolutionDrastic changes in transportation (canals, RRs), communication (telegraph), and the production of goods (more in factories as opposed to houses)68
6299586586Monroe Doctrine, 1823US foreign policy regarding Latin American countries in the early 19th century during Monroe's presidency. It stated that further efforts by European nations to colonize land or interfere with states in North or South America would be viewed as acts of aggression, requiring U.S. intervention. Written by John Q. Adams, its objective was to free the newly independent colonies of Latin America from European intervention, so that the U.S. could exert its own influence.69
6299586587Election of 1824John Quincy Adams was elected President on February 9, 1825, after the election was decided by the House of Representatives in what was termed the Corrupt Bargain. Notable for being the only election to have been decided by the House of Representatives, where no candidate secured a majority of the electoral vote. I70
6299586588Nullification Crisis, 1832-33A sectional crisis during the presidency of Andrew Jackson created by the Ordinance of Nullification, an attempt by the state of South Carolina to nullify a federal law - the tariff of 1828 (AKA the "Tariff of Abominations"). Jackson got Congress to pass the Force Act, empowering him to use federal troops to collect tariffs and prepared to invade South Carolina. Henry Clay guided the Compromise Tariff of 1833 that reduced rates and ended the crisis.71
6299586589Jackson destroyed Bank of the United States, 1833-36Andrew Jackson destroyed the second Bank of the United States because he saw it as a tool of eastern financial elites against the interests of democracy and the common man. The bank renewal was vetoed by Jackson on Nov. 24, 4832 and slowly declined until the expiration of its charter in 1836. He fought a "Bank War" in the media against the head of the 2nd BUS, Nicholas Biddle. After BUS2's demise in 1836, a major financial panic and depression hit in 1837 during President Van Buren's administration in part due to the chaotic nature of the US financial system.72
6299586590Panic of 1837a financial crisis in the United States that touched off a major recession that lasted until the mid-1840s. Profits, prices and wages went down while unemployment went up. The panic had both domestic and foreign origins: Speculative lending practices in western states, a sharp decline in cotton prices, a collapsing land speculation bubble, international specie (gold) flows, and restrictive lending policies in Great Britain. On May 10, 1837, banks in NYC announced they would no longer redeem commercial paper in specie at full face value triggering the panic.73
6299586591Trail of Tears, 1838Andrew Jackson favored pushing all Amerindians west of the MS River. The Indian removal Act of 1830 provided for federal enforcement of this policy, Jackson defied the Supreme Court in the case of Worcester v. Georgia in 1832, which would allow Indians to stay. Under his protégé and successor, President Van Buren, the Cherokee Indians for forcible moved west of Mississippi River to Oklahoma, traveled more than 800 miles More than 4,000 Cherokees died during the 116-day journey.74
6299586592Election of 1840Martin Van Buren ( incumbent Democrat) vs. William Henry Harrison (Whig and victorious general in 1811 at Battle of Tippecanoe against Indians under Tecumseh). MVB hurt by Panic of 1837. Significance: massive voter turnout & use of slogans: "Tippecanoe and Tyler Too", "Log cabin and hard cider" were pro-Harrison slogans. The result was a Whig victory and a truly national two-party system75
6299586593Term "Manifest Destiny" first used, 1845Coined by John L. O'Sullivan, this expression was popular in the 1840s. Many people believed that the U.S. was destined to secure territory from "sea to sea," from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean and spread the American way of life, by force if necessary (conquering Indians and half of Mexico). This rationale drove the acquisition of territory. Example of "American Exceptionalism" - that God and US uniqueness justify actions76
6299586594Annexation of Texas, 1845Texas was annexed to the U.S, in 1845, it was this action that caused the Mexican War. It was the 28th state and came in as slave state.77
6299586595Mexican-American War, 1846-48A war fought between the United States and Mexico from 1846 to 1848. The United States won the war, encouraged by the feelings of many Americans that the country was accomplishing its manifest destiny of expansion. US gained approximately half of Mexico's territory. This Mexican Cession would revive the controversy over the expansion of slavery and help lead to the Civil War78
6299586596Wilmot Proviso, 1846The Wilmot Proviso was a rider to a bill proposed by Pennsylvania Congressman David Wilmot in 1846 that sought to ban slavery in any territories or new states acquired from Mexico. Essentially the argument was over whether there would be slavery in Texas, New Mexico, California, and other new western states. The debate is considered a crucial part of the lead-up to the Civil War.79
6299586597Seneca Falls convention, 1848Site of the first modern women's rights convention, and the start of the organized fight for women's rights in US history. At the gathering, Elizabeth Cady Stanton read a Declaration of Sentiments modeled on the Declaration of Independence listing the many injustices against women, and adopted eleven resolutions, one of which called for women's suffrage.80
6299586598Mexican Cession, 1848Land that Mexico ceded to the United States in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848. This territory included CA, NM, NV, AZ, UT, TX, and parts of Colorado and Wyoming. The addition of so much land to the United States exacerbated conflict over the expansion of slavery because some Northerners feared that the extension of slavery into California and New Mexico would deter free laborers from settling there.81
6299586599California gold rush, 1849Hundreds of thousands of people from around the world, mostly young men, came to California in 1849 after gold was discovered in search of instant riches. Led to quick population of California, and new conflicts over slavery as California petitioned for admission as a free state. Led to Compromise of 185082
6299586600Compromise of 1850"North: California admitted as free state, Texas gave up claims to disputed lands in New Mexico, Slave trade in DC was banned, but slavery was legal. South: Popular sovereignty in Mexican Cession lands, Texas was paid $10 million for land lost, stricter fugitive slave law."83
6299586601AbolitionistsMinority in the north; used fierce arguments (Garrison's Liberator), helping slaves escape (Underground RR), and violence (Nat Turner, John Brown at Harpers Ferry)84
6299586602Slavery as a Positive GoodArgument used by John C. Calhoun and many in the South to justify slavery85
6299586603Republican PartyEmerged as a sectional party in the North and Midwest; sought to keep slavery from expanding (free-soil) - as seen in Lincoln's election in 186086
6299586604Emancipation ProclamationChanged the purpose of the Civil War; allowed African Americans to fight in the Union Army; Kept Europe from aiding the South87
6299586605Harriet Beecher Stowe published Uncle Tom's Cabin, 1852Most important book in US history. Portrayed horrors of American slavery, especially slave auctions. Helped intensify Northern abolitionism and contempt for the South, thus contributing to likelihood of war. International bestseller that helped move public opinion in Europe against the South, thus assuring the failure of King Cotton diplomacy (hope that England would intervene for Confederacy to maintain the supply of cotton for its textile mills) as Europeans didn't want to die to save southern slavery.88
6299586606Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854Proposed by Senator Douglas (Illinois) and advocated popular sovereignty in Kansas and Nebraska territories (vote by people of territory whether they would be slave or free state). Douglas wanted it to facilitate the building of the transcontinental railroad on a central route through Illinois, thus benefitting his state economically. K/A Act passed but backfired terribly as extremes of both sides of slavery debate flooded into Kansas. Votes on constitutions were plagued with fraud and "Bleeding Kansas" begins as violence erupts between pro/anti-slavery groups.89
6299586607Dred Scot v. Sandford, 1857Chief Justice Taney ruled that Dred Scott was not a citizen and had no standing in court; Scott's residence in a free state had not made him free, that blacks have "no rights a white man is bound to respect," & Congress had no power to prohibit slavery in a territory (based on the 5th Amendment right of a person to be secure from seizure of property), voiding the Missouri Compromise and seemed to imply that no state could ban slavery at all. Outraged the North and helped make Civil War inevitable. Considered worst decision in Supreme Court history90
6299586608Election of 1860Abraham Lincoln became president! Major "realignment" of parties as new Republican Party (formed from ashes of "Free Soil Party") adopted an anti-slavery platform that attracted former Whigs and anti-slavery Democrats. The election led to the secession, civil war, the end of slavery, and Reconstruction. Also meant the triumph of capitalism over southern semi-feudalism and lead to rapid industrialization after the Civil War.91
6299586609Southern secession, 1860-61Immediately following Lincoln's victory in November 1860 election, 11 southern states seceded from the US, led by South Carolina, to form the Confederate States of America (CSA) because they feared the Republican Party under Lincoln would try to abolish slavery. Lincoln's refusal to allow the Union to dissolve and the Confederate attack on Ft. Sumter began Civil War.92
6299586610Emancipation Proclamation, 1863After the Union victory at Antietam, Sep. 23, 1862, Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation which declared slaves free in territories still in rebellion. Did not apply to border slave states because Lincoln feared it would push them into CSA, also felt he could only free slaves as a war measure under his power as commander-in-chief. However, hearing of this many slaves fled to Union armies, and this turned federal forces into armies of liberation (also made European intervention for South much less likely since Europe was anti-slavery)93
629958661113th AmendmentAbolished slavery; led to the rise of sharecropping in the south94
6299586612Radical RepublicansMost fervent abolitionists; Sought to change racial and cultural attitudes of the South; strongest advocates of African American rights in Congress95
629958661314th Amendment, 1868Grants citizenship to "all persons born or naturalized in the US"; it forbids any state to deny any person "life, liberty or property, without due process of law" or to "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of its laws." Most important law ever passed besides original Constitution and Bill of Rights. It has been the vehicle for the expansion of civil rights, women's rights, gay rights among other movements. It also allowed for the "incorporation doctrine" which means the application of the national Bill of Rights to the states.96
629958661415th AmendmentProvided suffrage for all adult MALES; divided the Women's Rights Movement97

AMSCO AP US History Chapter 29 Flashcards

AMSCO United States History 2015 Edition, Chapter 29 Limits of a Superpower, 1969-1980

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9307467162Henry KissingerNixon's national security adviser, he later become secretary of state during Nixon's second term. He helped Nixon to fashion a realistic foreign policy that generally succeeded in reducing the tensions of the Cold War. (p. 625)0
9307467163VietnamizationPresident Nixon announced that he would gradually withdraw U.S. troops from Vietnam and give the South Vietnamese the money, the weapons, and the training that they needed to take over the full conduct of the war. Under this policy, U.S. troops in South Vietnam went from over 540,000 in 1969 to under 30,000 in 1972. (p. 626)1
9307467164Nixon DoctrineThis doctrine declared that Asian allies would receive U.S. support but without the extensive use of U.S. ground forces. (p. 626)2
9307467165Kent StateIn April 1970, President Nixon expanded the war by using U.S. forces to invade Cambodia. A nationwide protest against this action on U.S. college campuses resulted in the killing of four youths by National Guard troops at Kent State in Ohio. (p. 626)3
9307467166My LaiThe American public was shocked to learn about a 1968 massacre of women and children by U.S. troops in the Vietnamese village of My Lai. (p. 626)4
9307467167Pentagon PapersThe New York Times published the Pentagon Papers, a secret government history documenting the mistakes and deceptions of government policy-makers in dealing with Vietnam. (p. 626)5
9307467168Paris Accords of 1973In January 1973, the North Vietnamese agreed to an armistice, in which the United States would withdraw the last of its troops and get back over 500 prisoners of war (POWs). The agreement also promised a cease-fire and free elections. However, the armistice did not end the war, but it allowed the United States to extricate itself. (p. 627)6
9307467169detentePresident Nixon and Kissinger strengthened the U.S. position in the world by taking advantage of the rivalry between the two Communist giants, China and the Soviet Union. Their diplomacy was praised for bringing about detente, a reduction of Cold War tensions. (p. 627)7
9307467170China visitAfter a series of secret negotiations with Chinese leaders, in February of 1972 Nixon astonished the world by traveling to Beijing to meet with Mao Zedong, the leader of Communist China. His visit initiated diplomatic exchanges that ultimately led to U.S. recognition of the Communist government. (p. 627)8
9307467185antiballistic missilesPresident Nixon used his new relationship with China to put pressure on the Soviets to agree to a treaty limiting antiballistic missiles (ABMs). (p. 627)9
9307467171Strategic Arms Limitation TalksPresident Nixon used his new relationship with China to put pressure on the Soviets to agree to a treaty limiting antiballistic missiles (ABMs), a new technology that would have expanded the arms race. After the first round of Strategic Arms Limitations Talks (SALT I), U.S. diplomats secured Soviet consent to a freeze on the number of ballistic missiles carrying nuclear warheads. While this agreement did not end the arms race, it was a significant step toward reducing Cold War tensions and bringing about detente. (p. 627)10
9307467172Middle East War (1973)On October 6, 1973, the Syrians and Egyptians launched a surprise attack on Israel in an attempt to recover the lands lost in the Six-Day War of 1967. President Nixon ordered the U.S. nuclear forces on alert and airlifted almost $2 billion in arms to Israel to stem their retreat. The tide of battle quickly shifted in favor of the Israelis. (p. 631)11
9307467173OPEC; oil embargoAfter October 1973 Arab Israel War, the Arab members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) placed an embargo on oil sold to Israel's supporters. The embargo caused a worldwide oil shortage and long lines at gas stations in the United States. (p. 631)12
9307467174New FederalismIn a program known as revenue sharing, or the New Federalism, Congress approved giving local governments $30 billion in block grants over five years to address local needs as they saw fit. Republicans hoped revenue sharing would check the growth of the federal government and return responsibility to the states, where it had rested before the New Deal. (p. 628)13
9307467175stagflationThe U.S. economy in the 1970s faced an unusual combination of economic slowdown and high inflation. To slow inflation, President Nixon at first tried to cut federal spending. When this policy contributed to a recession and unemployment, he adopted Keynesian economics and deficit spending. He surprised the nation by imposing a 90-day wage and price freeze. Next, he took the dollar off the gold standard, which helped to devalue it relative to foreign currencies. (p. 628)14
9307467176southern strategyHaving received just 43 percent of the popular vote in 1968, President Nixon was well aware of being a minority president. To win over the South, he asked the federal courts in that region to delay integration plans and busing orders. He also nominated two southern conservatives to the Supreme Court. The Senate refused to confirm them, and the courts rejected his requests for delayed integration. Nevertheless, his strategy played well with southern white voters. (p. 629)15
9307467186wage and price controlsIn 1971, President Nixon imposed a 90-day wage and price freeze to slow inflation. (p. 628)16
9307467187off the gold standardIn 1971, President Nixon took the U.S. off the gold standard, which helped to devalue the U.S. dollar relative to foreign currencies. (p. 628)17
9307467188cost of living indexedIn 1972, Congress approved automatic increases for Social Security benefits based on the rise in the cost of living. (p. 628)18
9307467189Title IXIn 1972, Congress passed this statue to end sex discrimination in schools that received federal funding. (p. 628)19
9307467177Burger CourtIn 1969, President Nixon appointed Warren E. Burger of Minnesota as chief justice to succeed the retiring Earl Warren. The Burger Court was more conservative than the Warren Court, but some of its decisions angered conservatives. (p. 629)20
9307467190Roe v. WadeIn 1973, the Supreme Court struck down many state laws prohibiting abortions as a violation of a women's right to privacy. (p. 629)21
9307467191election of 1972In the 1972 presidential election Richard Nixon easily won a second term by defeating Democratic Senator George McGovern of South Dakota. Nixon won every state except Massachusetts. (p. 629)22
9307467178George McGovernIn 1972, this Democratic Senator from South Dakota was a very liberal, antiwar, antiestablishment candidate for president. He was defeated easily by Richard Nixon. (p. 629)23
9307467179Watergate cover-upIn June 1972, a group of men hired by Nixon's reelection committee were caught breaking into the offices of the Democratic national headquarters in the Watergate complex. This break-in and attempted bugging were only part of a series of illegal activities. No proof demonstrated that Nixon had ordered the illegal activities. However, it was shown that Nixon participated in the illegal cover up of the scandal. (p. 630)24
9307467192plumbersThe president's aides created this group to stop leaks to the press as well as to discredit opponents. (p. 630)25
9307467193enemies listThe White House created this list of prominent Americans who opposed Nixon or the Vietnam War. (p. 630)26
9307467194United States v. NixonIn the last days of the Watergate scandal, the court denied Nixon's claims to executive privilege and ordering him to turn over the Watergate tapes. (p. 629)27
9307467180War Powers ActIt was found that President Nixon had authorized 3,500 secret bombing raids in Cambodia, a neutral county. In November 1973, after a long struggle, Congress finally passed this act over Nixon's veto. This law required Nixon and any future president to report to Congress within 48 hours after taking military action and to obtain Congressional approval for any military action lasting more than 60 days. (p. 631)28
9307467181impeachment and resignationThe start of impeachment hearings in the House forced Nixon to eventually turn over the Watergate tapes, tape recordings of Nixon in his office. The tapes clearly implicated Nixon in the cover-up. The House Judiciary Committee voted three articles of impeachment: (1) obstruction of justice, (2) abuse of power, and (3) contempt of Congress. On August 9, 1974 Nixon resigned. (p. 632)29
9307467195imperial presidencyCold War presidents had used national security, secrecy, executive privileged, and the mystique of the office to concentrate power into the White House. (p. 640)30
9307467182Gerald FordAs vice president, he became president when Richard Nixon resigned on August 1, 1974. He was a likeable and unpretentious man, but his ability to be president was questioned by many in the media. (p. 632)31
9307467196pardon of NixonIn his first month in office President Gerald Ford granted Richard Nixon a full and unconditional pardon for any crime he might have committed in office. (p. 632)32
9307467197reform of CIAFormer Congressman George H. W. Bush was appointed by President Ford to reform this agency after it had been accused of assassinating foreign leaders. (p. 633)33
9307467198fall of SaigonIn April 1975, the U.S supported government in Saigon fell and Vietnam became one country under Communist rule. (p. 633)34
9307467183Cambodia genocideIn 1975, the U.S. supported government in Cambodia fell to the Khmer Rouge, a radical Communist faction that killed over one million of its people in an effort to rid the country of western influence. (p 633)35
9307467199battle over inflationIn 1979-1980, inflation seemed completely out of control and reached the unheard of rate of 13 percent. (p. 636)36
9307467184BicentennialIn 1976 the United States celebrated its 200th birthday. (p. 633)37
9307467200election of 1976In 1976 presidential election Democrat James Earl (Jimmy) Carter won a close election by defeating Gerald Ford. He was helped by running as an outsider and the voters memory of Watergate. (p. 634)38
9307467201James Earl (Jimmy) CarterHe was elected president in 1976. He was a former Democratic governor of Georgia. (p. 634)39
9307467202human rightsPresident Carter championed the cause of human rights around the world. He opposed the all-white oppressive governments of South Africa and Rhodesia. He cut aid to Argentina and Chile for their human rights violations. (p. 634)40
9307467203Panama Canal TreatyIn 1978, the Senate ratified a treaty that would gradually transfer control of the Panama Canal from the U.S. to Panama. (p. 634)41
9307467204Camp David AccordsIn September 1978, President Carter arranged for leader of Egypt and Israel to met at the Camp David presidential retreat to provide a framework for a peace settlement between the two countries. (p. 635)42
9307467205Iranian hostage crisisIn November 1979, Iranian militants seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran, Iran and held more than 50 of the U.S. staff as hostages. The hostage crisis dragged on for the rest of Carter's presidency. (p. 635)43
9307467206recognition of ChinaIn 1979, the U.S. ended its official recognition of the Chinese government in Taiwan and completed an exchange of ambassadors with the People's Republic of China. (p. 635)44
9307467207Soviet Afghanistan invasionIn December 1979, Soviet troops invaded Afghanistan, an action that ended a decade of improving U.S.-Soviet relations. (p. 635)45
9307467208Paul Volcker, high interest ratesIn 1980, the chairman of the Federal Reserve Board pushed interest rates to 20 percent in order to combat inflation. (p. 636)46
9307467209malaise speechIn 1979, President Jimmy Carter gave a speech in which he blamed the U.S. problems on a "moral and spiritual crisis". (p. 636)47
9307467210cultural pluralismThe U.S. population became more racial diverse and diverse ethnic and cultural groups strove to celebrate their unique traditions. (p. 637)48
9307467211impact of 1965 immigration lawThe end of ethnic quotas favoring Europeans opened the United States to immigrants from all parts of the world. (p. 637)49
9307467212Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986This act penalize employers for hiring immigrants who had entered the country illegally or had overstayed their visas, while granting amnesty to undocumented immigrants arriving by 1982. (p. 637)50
9307467213Hispanic AmericansIn 2000, they became the country's largest minority group. (p. 637)51
9307467214Cesar ChavezIn 1975, as leader of the United Farm Workers Organization he organized boycotts and eventually gained collective bargaining rights for farm workers. (p. 637)52
9307467215American Indian MovementTo achieve American Indian self-determination and revival of tribal traditions this organization was founded in 1968. (p. 638)53
9307467216Indian Self-Determination ActIn 1975, this act gave American Indian reservations and tribal lands greater control over internal programs, education, and law enforcement. (p. 638)54
9307467217gaming casinosThe American Indians attacked widespread unemployment and poverty on reservations by building these facilities. (p. 638)55
9307467218Asian AmericansIn the 1980s, this group became the fastest growing minority population. (p. 639)56
9307467219gay liberation movementBy the mid 1970s, homosexuality was no longer classified as a mental illness and the federal Civil Service ended its ban on unemployment of homosexuals. (p. 639)57
9307467220Earth DayIn 1970, this annual celebration day, was created to show concerns about pollution and the destruction of the natural environment. (p. 639)58
9307467221Exxon Valdez accidentIn 1989, this oil tanker ran aground and created a massive oil spill off the coast of Alaska. (p. 639)59
9307467222Three Mile IslandIn 1979, this nuclear power plant accident in Pennsylvania turned public opinion against nuclear power. (p. 639)60
9307467223Chernobyl meltdownIn 1986, this nuclear plant in the Soviet Union exploded killing many people. (p. 639)61
9307467224Clean Air ActIn 1970, Congress passed this act to protect the air. (p. 639)62
9307467225Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)In 1970, Congress created this agency to protect the environment. (p. 639)63
9307467226Clean Water ActIn 1972, Congress passed this act to protect the water. (p. 639)64
9307467227Environmental SuperfundIn 1980, Congress created this fun to clean up toxic dumps, such as Love Canal in New York state. (p. 639)65
9307467228Endangered Species ActIn 1973, Congress passed this act to protect endangered species. (p. 639)66

2017 AP US Period 7 (1890-1945) Flashcards

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9720989914Spanish American WarIn 1898, a conflict between the United States and Spain, in which the U.S. supported the Cubans' fight for independence. As a result, the US acquired Guam, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico.0
9720989915Filipino War1899-1903 conflict in which the U.S. fought to keep the Philippine islands from becoming independent after Admiral Dewey destroyed the Spanish fleet on his attack on Manila at the outbreak of the Spanish American War.1
9720989916Treaty of Paris, 1898The treaty that concluded the Spanish American War, Commissioners from the U.S. were sent to Paris on October 1, 1898 to produce a treaty that would bring an end to the war with Spain after six months of hostility. From the treaty America got Guam, Puerto Rico and they paid 20 million dollars for the Philippines. Cuba was freed from Spain.2
9720989917Open Door Policy, 1899A policy proposed by the US in 1899, under which ALL nations would have equal opportunities to trade in China.3
9720989918William McKinley25th president responsible for Spanish-American War, Philippine-American War, and the Annexation of Hawaii, imperialism. Is assassinated by an anarchist and Teddy Roosevelt becomes president.4
9720989919"Souls of Black Folks"A book of essay's written by W. E. B. DuBois to challenge Booker T. Washington's views on race relations in US. In 1905, Du Bois founded the Niagara Movement as an organized response to Booker T. Washington's policies of accommodation and conciliation. The Niagara Movement aimed to counteract Washington's influence over the black community and in its manifesto declared its intention to "claim for ourselves every single right that belongs to a freeborn American, political, civil and social."5
9720989920W. E. B. DuBoisFounded NAACP and argued that African Americans should press for tan immediate end to segregation and economic and political justice; urged for the talented tenth to take the lead. He created the Niagara Movement that paved the way for the Harlem Renaissance.6
9720989921National Child Labor Committee, 1904One of the main issues addressed by the Progressive Movement was labor conditions, especially for children. Muckracking journalism and action from social and labor activists led to the formation of the National Labor Committee in 1904. As part of their charge, the committee investigated labor conditions around the nation. Photos of the investigation by the famed photographer Lewis W. Hine are in the collection of the Library of Congress. The first real effective child labor legislation was passed more than thirty years later during the New Deal.7
9720989922Panama CanalAmerican construction began on the Panama Canal. It took ten years and $352 million dollars to complete. The canal opened in 1914. During the building of the canal, begun under the French in 1879, more than 26,000 workers, many West Indian, died from construction accidents and yellow fever and other diseases.8
9720989923Roosevelt CorollaryPresident Roosevelt announced the Roosevelt Corollary, which extended the Monroe Doctrine and asserted the right of the United States to police the Caribbean.9
9720989924Great Migration (1905-1930)In the first decades of the twentieth century, African Americans left, in greater and greater numbers, the southern states where they had been subject to economic abuses and outright intimidation. The Great Migration, in which about half a million African Americans moved to the urban North from the rural South, began about 1905 and ended around 1930.10
9720989925The "Jungle"This 1906 work by Upton Sinclair pointed out the abuses of the meat packing industry. The book led to the passage of the 1906 Meat Inspection Act and Pure Food and Drug Act.11
9720989926Triangle Shirtwaist FactoryMarch 1911 fire in New York factory that trapped young women workers inside locked exit doors; nearly 50 ended up jumping to their death; while 100 died inside the factory; led to the establishment of many factory reforms, including increasing safety precautions for workers.12
9720989927Titanic Sinks 1911A tragic disaster, mans' stupidity, thought they built an unsinkable ship, but metallurgy allowed the bolts to pop out, inadequate life boats for the poorer and middle classes on board. Demonstrated the wide gap between rich and poor.13
9720989928Woodrow Wilson1912, 28th president of the United States, known for World War I leadership, created Federal Reserve, Federal Trade Commission, Clayton Antitrust Act, progressive income tax, lower tariffs, women's suffrage (reluctantly), Treaty of Versailles, sought 14 points post-war plan, League of Nations (but failed to win U.S. ratification), won Nobel Peace Prize14
9720989929ImperialismA policy of extending a country's power and influence through diplomacy or military force.15
9720989930Alfred T MahanAuthor who argued in 1890 that the economic future of the United States rested on new overseas markets protected by a larger navy. Wrote "The Influence of Sea Power Upon History"16
9720989931Yellow journalistsJournalists who wrote overly sensational articles to sell newspapers17
9720989932Cuban RebellionThis was the revolution during the Spanish American war in which Cuba wanted independence from Spain, however Spain would not grant it. Thus, America intervened, and due to the rising tensions, the Spanish American war started.18
9720989933"Remember the Maine"A slogan of the Spanish-American war referring to the sinking of a battleship in Cuba. Stirred up by yellow journalism, this lead McKinley to declare war.19
9720989934Battle of San Juan HillJuly 1, 1898-One of the most important battles of the Spanish-American War. Roosevelt, the Rough Riders and Pershing's Buffalo Soldiers defeated Spanish on Kettle and San Juan Hill.20
9720989935Admiral DeweyDestroyed the Spanish fleet in the Pacific during the SPAM war.21
9720989936Submarine warfareUsed during World War I mainly between German U-Boats and Atlantic supply convoys for Great Britain22
9720989937LusitaniaA British passenger ship that was sunk by a German U-Boat on May 7, 1915. 128 Americans died. The sinking greatly turned American opinion against the Germans, helping the move towards entering the war.23
9720989938Zimmerman TelegramMarch 1917. Sent from German Foreign Secretary, addressed to German minister in Mexico City. Mexico should attack the US if US goes to war with Germany (needed that advantage due to Mexico's proximity to the US). In return, Germany would give back Tex, NM, Arizona etc to Mexico.24
9720989939Liberty BondsWhere people bought bonds so the government could get that money now for war. The bonds increased in interest over time.25
9720989940RationingA limited portion or allowance of food or goods; limitation of use26
9720989941Victory gardensBackyard gardens; Americans were encouraged to grow their own vegetables to support the war effort27
9720989942War Industries BoardAgency established during WWI to increase efficiency & discourage waste in war-related industries.28
9720989943Espionage and Sedition ActTwo laws enacted to impose harsh penalties on anyone interfering with or speaking against U.S participation in WW129
9720989944Eugene DebsLeader of the American Railway Union, he voted to aid workers in the Pullman strike. He was jailed for six months for disobeying a court order after the strike was over.30
9720989945Fourteen PointsThe war aims outlined by President Wilson in 1918, which he believed would promote lasting peace; called for self-determination, freedom of the seas, free trade, end to secret agreements, reduction of arms and a league of nations.31
9720989946League of NationsA world organization established in 1920 to promote international cooperation and peace. It was first proposed in 1918 by President Woodrow Wilson, although the United States never joined the League. Essentially powerless, it was officially dissolved in 1946.32
9720989947Treaty of Versailles(WWI) 1918, Created by the leaders victorious allies Nations: France, Britain, US, and signed by Germany to help stop WWI. The treaty 1) stripped Germany of all Army, Navy, Air Force. 2) Germany had to pay war damages(33 billion) 3) Germany had to acknowledge guilt for causing WWI 4) Germany could not manufacture any weapons. Partitioned lands to Britain & France in the mandate system breaking up the Ottoman Empire.33
9720989948Red ScareA social/political movement designed to prevent a socialist/communist/radical movement in this country by finding "radicals," incarcerating them, deporting them, and subverting their activities34
9720989949Sacco & VanzettiA controversial trial in 1920 charging two Italian anarchist immigrants with the robbing of a shoe factory and the killing of two men within, with the two men arrested several weeks later. Massive protests resulted with the overall opinion that the men were arrested because they were radical immigrants, and while appeals continued to be raised, they were sentenced to death in 1927.35
9720989950Immigration Quota Act of 1924This was passed in 1924 replaced the Quota Act of 1921, cutting quotas for foreigners from 3% to 2%. Different countries were only allowed to send an allotted number of its citizens to America every year.36
972098995118th AmendmentProhibited the manufacture, sale, and distribution of alcoholic beverages37
972098995219th AmendmentAmendment to the U.S. Constitution (1920) extended the right to vote to women in federal or state elections.38
9720989953Harlem RenaissanceBlack literary and artistic movement centered in Harlem that lasted from the 1920s into the early 1930s that both celebrated and lamented black life in America; Langston Hughes, Louis Armstrong, & rise of jazz and the blues.39
9720989954Great DepressionStarting with collapse of the US stock market in 1929, period of worldwide economic stagnation and depression. Heavy borrowing by European nations from USA during WW1 contributed to instability in European economies. Sharp declines in income and production as buying and selling slowed down. Widespread unemployment, countries raised tariffs to protect their industries. America stopped investing in Europe. Lead to loss of confidence that economies were self adjusting, HH was blamed for it40
9720989955HoovervillesDepression shantytowns, named after the president whom many blamed for their financial distress41
9720989956Causes of Great DepressionUnemployment rising, the dustbowl, overproduction of everything, layoffs, buying on credit, over-speculation42
9720989957Dust BowlRegion of the Great Plains that experienced a drought in 1930 lasting for a decade, leaving many farmers without work or substantial wages.43
9720989958Herbert Hoover(1929-1933) The New York Stock Market Crashes October 29, 1929 "Black Tuesday".44
9720989959Black TuesdayOctober 29, 1929; date of the worst stock-market crash in American history and beginning of the Great Depression.45
9720989960Hoover DamDam on the Colorado River that was built during the Great Depression46
9720989961New DealA series of reforms enacted by the Franklin Roosevelt administration between 1933 and 1942 with the goal of ending the Great Depression.47
9720989962Alphabet AgenciesIn 1933 President Franklin D. Roosevelt launched his New Deal to deal with the Great Depression. The administrative style was to create new agencies. Some were set up by Congress (such as TVA) and others by Roosevelt's Executive Order (such as WPA). The agencies were also referred to as "alphabet soup". FIB, CIA, EPA, etc.48
9720989963Social Security(FDR) 1935, guaranteed retirement payments for enrolled workers beginning at age 65; set up federal-state system of unemployment insurance and care for dependent mothers and children, the handicapped, and public health49
9720989964Tennessee Valley AuthorityA relief, recovery, and reform effort that gave 2.5 million poor citizens jobs and land. It brought cheap electric power, low-cost housing, cheap nitrates, and the restoration of eroded soil.50
9720989965Lend LeaseLegislation proposed by FDR and adopted by congress, stating that the U.S could either sell or lease arms and other equipment to any country whose security was vital to America's interest -> military equipment to help Britain war effort was shipped from U.S51
9720989966Cash and Carry Policy1939. Law passed by Congress which allowed a nation at war to purchase goods and arms in US as long as they paid cash and carried merchandise on their own ships. This benefited the Allies, because Britain was dominant naval power.52
9720989967Wagner Act1935; established National Labor Relations Board; protected the rights of most workers in the private sector to organize labor unions, to engage in collective bargaining, and to take part in strikes and other forms of concerted activity in support of their demands.53
9720989968Eleanor RooseveltFDR's Wife and New Deal supporter. Was a great supporter of civil rights and opposed the Jim Crow laws. She also worked for birth control and better conditions for working women54
9720989969Huey Long"Kingfish" Rep. senator of LA; pushed "Share Our Wealth" program and make "Every Man a King' at the expense of the wealthy; assassinated55

US History Unit 1 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5216791008Laissez-FaireGovernment is hands off and lets the marketplace determine prices and wages0
5216795366Jim Crow Era1870-1960s South, where African Americans and whites are segregated1
5217149955Social DarwinismThe belief that businesses also have a "survival of the fittest", the best will survive, the others will fail2
5217158031MonopolyWhen ONE company controls an entire industry and limit competition3
5217159974Business TrustSimilar to monopoly, when a FEW companies control an entire industry4
5217171610Unrestricted ImmigrationFactories that needed many unskilled factory workers led to...5
5217181893NativistSomeone who believes that immigration should be restricted6
5217196141Cultural PluralismAmerica is like a salad bowl with many cultures being represented7
5217199861Labor UnionsGroups of workers that unite to improve their working conditions8
5217203675MuckrakersInvestigated journalists that exposed the problems of Gilded Age society9
5217208714Gilded AgeEra of extremes of wealth and poverty during the late 1800s10
5217220319Graduated Income TaxTax that increased with income, the rich pay higher percentage in taxes than the poor11
5217230068Antitrust LawsLaws that prevent monopolies and trusts from forming and break up those that too12
5217236007Women's Right MovementFocused on gaining suffrage (the right to vote)13
5217240383ProgressivesGroup of reformers that work to make positive changes and fix the problems of the Gilded Age14
7758874593SocialRelating to society, how people live and their interactions with each other15
7758884441PoliticalRelating government, laws, and leaders16
7758887614EconomicRelating to the economy, taxes, and business17

AP US HISTORY Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
6185650520War Industries Boardwas a United States government agency established on July 28, 1917, during World War I, to Coordinate the purchase of war supplies. The organization encouraged companies to use mass production techniques to increase efficiency and urged them to eliminate waste by standardizing products0
6185652335Great Migrationwas the movement of 6 million African-Americans out of the rural Southern United States to the Urban Northeast, Midwest, and West that occurred between 1910 and 19701
6185653735Espionage Act 1917is a United States federal Law passed on June 15, 1917, shortly after the U.S entry into world war I. It has been amended numerous times over the years. It was originally found in Title 50 of the U,S code (War) but is now found under Title 18, Crime2
6185656001Sedition Act 1918was an Act of the United States Congress that extended the Espionage Act of 1917 to cover a broader range of offenses, notably speech and expression of opinion that cast the government of the war effort in a negative light or interfered with the sale of government bonds3
6185656002Alvin York(Person) Was a blacksmith who was drafted into the army during WWI. York was promoted to the rank of sergeant and received the Medal of Honor.4
6185657638ArmisticeAn agreement made by opposing sides in a war to stop fighting for a certain time; a truce.5
6185657639Big Fourrefer to the leaders of the allied countries who had most input at the peace conference following World War I. Include Woodrow Wilson, the British Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, and the french Prime Minister, Georges Clemenceau6
6185659900League of NationsAn international organization established after World War I under the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles. Brought about much international cooperation.7
6185659901Article Xthe Covenant of the League of Nations is the section calling for assistance to be given to a member that experiences external aggression. It was signed by the major Peacemakers following the First World War, most notably Britain and France.8
6185663146Treaty of Versailleswas a document signed between Germany and the Allied Power Following World War I that officially ended that war.9
6185665663Henry of Cabot Lodgewas an American Republican Senator and historian from Massachusetts. he led the successful congressional opposition to his country's participation in the league of nation following World War I.10
6185665664Reservationistsa group of Senators, led by Henry Cabot Lodge, who opposed the treaty of Versailles, to end WWI unless specific changes were included.11
6185668816Isolationists/ Irreconcilables(Isolationists) People who wanted the United States to stay out of World Affairs. (Irreconcilable) Senators opposed to ratification of the Treaty of Versailles on any grounds.12
6185668817Return to Normalcya return to the way life before World War I, was United States presidential candidate Warren G. Harding;'s campaign promise in the election of 1920.13
6185671958Adkins V Children's Hospitalis a United States Supreme Court opinion that federal minimum wage legislation for women was an unconstitutional infringement of liberty of contract, as protected by the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment14
6185671959Teapot Dome Scandalwas a bribery incident that took place in the United States from 1921 to 1922, during the administration of President Warren G Harding.15
6185676759Ohio Gangwas a gang of politicians and industry leaders closely surrounding Warren, G. Harding, the 29th President of the United States of America. Many of these individuals came into Harding;s personal orbit during his tenure as a state level politician in Ohio hence the name16
6185678685Dawes Planwas an attempt in 1924 to solve the World War I reparations problem that Germany had to pay, which had bedeviled international politics following World War I and the Treaty Of Versailles.17
6185678686Young Planwas a program for settling German reparations debts after World War I written in 1929 and formally adopted in 1930.18
6185681539Kellogg-Briand Pactthe purpose of Kellogg-Briand Pact was to basically outlaw war. The pact was signed, in August of 1928, by France, Germany and the United States. The pact is named its two authors. Frank B. Kellogg and Aristides briand19
6185685058Good Neighbor Policywas the foreign policy doctrine, adopted by Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933, designed to improve relations with Latin America20
6185688691Calvin Coolidge(Person) January 5, 1933) was the 30th President of the United States (1923-29). A Republican lawyer from Vermont, Coolidge worked his way up the ladder of Massachusetts state politics, eventually becoming governor of that state.21
6185688692Herbert Hoover(person) A political leader of the twentieth century, who was president from 1929 to 1933. ... He had been president only a few months when the Great Depression began22
6185690672Red ScareThe rounding up and deportation of several hundred immigrants of radical political views by the federal government in 1919 and 1920. This "scare" was caused by fears of subversion by communists in the United States after the Russian Revolution.23
6185697943Palmer's Raidswere a series of raids conducted by the United States Department of Justice to capture, arrest and deport suspected radical leftists, especially anarchists, from the United States.24
6185700220Sacco and VanzettiOn May 31, 1921, Nicola Sacco, a 32-year-old shoemaker, and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a 29-year-old fish peddler, went on trial for murder in Boston. More than a year earlier, on April 15, 1920, a paymaster and a payroll guard had been killed during a payroll heist in Braintree, Massachusetts, near Boston.25
6185700221KKKis a white supremacist organization that was founded in 1866. Throughout its notorious history, factions of the secret fraternal organization have used acts of terrorism—including murder, lynching, arson, rape, and bombing—to oppose the granting of civil rights to African Americans.26
6185701716Immigration Quotaslimited the number of immigrants allowed entry into the United States through a national origins quota. The quota provided immigration visas to two percent of the total number of people of each nationality in the United States as of the 1890 national census.27
6185701717The Noble ExperimentIn 1920 congress began what was called "The Noble Experiment". ... It was titled by society as Prohibition. Websters dictionary defines prohibition as: A prohibiting, the forbidding by law of the manufacture or sale of alcoholic liquors.28
6185703190Al Caponewas an American gangster who attained fame during the Prohibition era as the co-founder and boss of the Chicago Outfit. His seven-year reign as crime boss ended when he was 33 years old.29
6185703191John Dewey(Person) was an American philosopher, psychologist, and educational reformer whose ideas have been influential in education and social reform.30
6185704388Scopes Monkey TrialA statute was passed (Mar., 1925) in Tennessee that prohibited the teaching in public schools of theories contrary to accepted interpretation of the biblical account of human creation.31
6185704389Buying on Marginrefers to the initial or down payment made to the broker for the asset being purchased; the collateral for the borrowed funds is the marginable securities in the investor's account.32
6185706502Bruce Barton(Person) was an American author, advertising executive, and politician. He served in the U.S. Congress from 1937 to 1940 as a Republican from New York.33
6185708807Charles Lindbergh(Person) Augustus (1902-1974), an American aviator, made the first solo nonstop flight across the Atlantic Ocean on May 20-21, 1927. Lindbergh was the first person to do it alone nonstop.34
6185724054Flappersa fashionable young woman intent on enjoying herself and flouting conventional standards of behavior.35

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