AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

Introduction to Stress Flashcards

-Understand stress
-Understand causes of stress
-Understand effects of stress
-Learn to cope with stress
-Learn to prevent stress

Terms : Hide Images
1162944082anxietythe feeling of being very worried about something0
1162944083causea person, event, or thing that makes something happen1
1162944084copeto succeed in dealing with a difficult problem or situation2
1162944085effectthe way in which an event, action, or person changes someone or something3
1162944086stresscontinuous feelings of worry about your work or personal life, that prevent you from relaxing4
1162944087stressorsomething that causes stress5
1162944088worryto be anxious or unhappy about someone or something, so that you think about them a lot6

AP Euro - The Age of Imperialism (1870-1914) Flashcards

Same as my other AP euro sets

Terms : Hide Images
7103334(Cecil) Rhodes1890; The diamond mine millionare; British0
7103335(Charles) Darwin"Came up with the ""survival of the fittest"" science"1
7103336(Commodore Matthew) Perry1853; An American naval officer who led an expedition to Japan and convinced the shogun to open ports for trade with the US2
7103337(David) LivinstonGreat Explorer of Africa who was found in 1871 by Stanley3
7103338(Dr.) Sun Yat Sen"The father of modern China who proclaimed a republic and was named the new president; Three point program of nationalism, democracy, and livelihood"4
7103339(Henry) StanleyThe Anglo-American newspaperman who explored the Congo and established trade agreements with leaders in the Congo River Basin5
7103340(John) HayThe American Secretary of State who proposed that equal trading rights to China be allowed for all nations and that the territorial integrity of China be respected6
7103341(Jules) FerryPremier of France who was considered the builder of the modern French Empire and arranged the Congress of Berlin7
7103342(Rudyard) Kipling"The man who expressed the mission of 1890s imperialism' Soinced ""The WHIt eMan's Burden"""8
7103343Age of New ImperialismBegan 1870s; The time period where European states established vast empires (mainly in Afria) for the benefit of the colonial power9
7103344Boer War1899-1902; The war where the British defeated the Boers and annexed the two republics (Orange Free State and Transvall)10
7103345BoersThe original Dutch settlers who resented British rule in Africa11
7103346Boxer Rebellion1900; uprising of Chinese nationalists to drive out all foreigners and restore China to isolation; Failed12
7103347British East India CompanyThe British ruling power of India13
7103348Congress of BerlinThe meeting which established the principle that European ocupation of African territtory had to be based on effective occupation that was recognized by other states and that no single nation could control Africa14
7103349imperialismGhe domination of one country or people over another group of people15
7103350Leopold II of Belgium1879; Sent Stanley to explore the Congo16
7103351Meji Restoration1867; The policy of Japan to reverse its isolation and replace the feudal rulers of the shogun and increase the power of the emperor17
7103352Old Imperialism"1500-1800s; European nations sought trade routes with the Far east, explored the New World, and established settlements in North and South America and Southeast Asia"18
7103353Open Door PolicyThe US policy twoards international trade19
7103354Opium WarThe war in which the Chinese government tried to halt the British from exporting opium to China20
7103355Russo-Japanese War1904-1905; The war fought over Manchuria where the Japanese beat the Russians21
7103356Sepoy Mutiny1857; An uprising of Indian natives22
7103357Seven Years War1763; The war in which the British took control of India after the French23
7103358Suez Canal"1875; The canal between Egypt and Asia; British took contorl of the Canal, its lifeline to Asia"24
7103359Treaty of Nanking"1872; The treaty, ending the opium war, which opened up five more ports for the British in China"25
7103360ZulusA native African group who fought with the Boers for contorl of the land26

APUSH Chapter 27 Flashcards

APUSH Chapter 27

Terms : Hide Images
1405566012Josiah Strong/Our Country:Its Possible Future and Its Present Crisischampioned superiority of Anglo-Saxons, encouraged Americans to spread religion to backward peoples0
1405566013Captain Alfred Mahan/The Influence of Sea Power Upon Historycontrol of the seas is necessary for world dominance, economy, strategy...1
1405566014Pan-American Conference 1889James G. Blaine wanted to trade with Latin America, sketched outline for low tariff...2
1405566015the Great Rapproachementcooling of tensions between GB and US, reconciliation because English anger focused on Germany and other Euro. powers...3
1405566016Hawaiiislands that the US coveted as a provision center, military base and sugar plantation...4
1405566017Pearl HarborUS has naval base rights here since 1887...5
1405566018Queen LiliuokalaniHawaii's queen that refused to let the US control the islands. She was eventually overthrown by whites...6
1405566019CubaSpanish controlled, useful for sugar, US had lots of money invested here, wanted independence from Spain...7
1405566020insurrectosrebels who created havoc in trying to drive out the Spanish. scorched-earth policy...8
1405566021yellow journalismscorching headlines and scoops instead of hard facts. Pulitzer vs Hearst...9
1405566022USS Mainebattleship to "visit"/protect, Americans in Cuba. eventually sunk...10
1405566023Teller Amendmentif the US wins the Spanish-American war, the US will promptly give Cuba its freedom...11
1405566024Commodore George Dewey/Manila Baysoldier vs defeated Spanish, ordered by Roosevelt to go to Philippines to fight war. Quickly destroyed Spanish fleets @ Manila Bay ...12
1405566025Emilio AguinaldoChinese-Filipino leader of insurgents who sided with Americans to fight Spain's stronghold on them...13
1405566026Santiago HarborSpanish sent weak Cervera to fight Americans in Cuba. Easily defeated by the US Cervera vs William Shafter's ill equipt "Rough Riders", commanded by T-Roosevelt...14
1405566027Rough Riderspart of Shafter's invading army, withstood very difficult obstacles in war. no hourses...15
1405566028Foraker Act 1900gave Puerto Ricans limited degree of self government. American regime worked wonders for PR...16
1405566029Platt AmendmentCubans were forced to wire their own constitution in 1901...17
1405566030GuantanamoCubans sold this base to the US still used today, can only be undone by 2 parties, Cuba + US...18
1405566031John Philip Sousawrote popular military marching music...19
1405566032Manchu governmentthe government in charge of China in the early 20th century...20
1405566033Johny Hay/Open DoorHay urged that people should respect Chinese rights and have fair competition with other countries. Anyone can trade every nation given = ops to trade...21
1405566034Boxers/Boxer RebellionPatriotic Chinese group, martial arts, ill foreign devils, took over Beijing, murdered Christians and foreigns...22
1405566035"Speak softly & carry a big stick"motto of Teddy Roosevelt, successor of McKinley, one must be affirmative in how they do his jobs at being president...23
1405566036Hay-Paunceforte Treaty 1901gave United States right to build and fortify the canal. Britain approved...24
1405566037New Panama Canal Companycompany that undertook the job of building it. $40 million to build...25
1405566038PanamaSite of canal, next to Columbia which did not approve of the canal. US created rebellion here...26
1405566039Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrineif LA countries can't pay back loans, the US steps into help. Keep Europe out of equation27
1405566040Great White Fleet16 batallions from VA sailed to Japan, Hawaii, LA, New Zealand to show how great America is28
1405566041Root-Takahira Agreementuphold Open Door and for each other to respect Pacific territory...29

Substance Abuse Final Flashcards

Substance Abuse

Terms : Hide Images
689980300Alcohol Percentage.5 x proof0
689980301Alcohol IntoxicationRecent ingestion Behav/psych changes Slurred speech Incoordination Impairment in attention/memory1
689980302Alcohol WithdrawalCessation of alcohol use Increased hand tremor Insomnia Nausea/vomiting Sweating2
689980303Alcohol AbsorptionSmall intestine and stomach Food/water slow down absorption Carbonated liquids speed up3
689980304BAC100 g of alcohol in 100 ml of blood is 100% (.10)4
689980305Alcohol MetabolismLiver metabolizes .25 oz alcohol/hr (.5 of one standard drink)5
689980306Alcohol ToxicDehydrogenase converts to acetadelhyde and then converts to aldehyde hydrogenase to acetic acid6
689980307Mechanisms of Action Alcohol5HT, DA, glutamate, GABA, enhances inhibitory effects of GABA7
689980308.05 BACDecreased alertness Good feeling Release of inhibitions Impaired judgment8
689980309.10 BACSlower reaction Impaired motor function Less caution9
689980310.15 BACLarge increases in reaction time10
689980311.20 BACDepression in sensory/motor11
689980312.25 BACSevere motor disturbance Staggering Sensory perceptions impairment12
689980313.30 BACStuporous but conscious13
689980314.35 BACSurgical anesthesia Minimal level causing death14
689980315.45 BACAbout death15
689980316Behavior EffectsBx effects the rate at which BAC rises Higher BAC needed to impair performance of chronic user Placebo effect16
689980317Crime/Violence AlcoholHomicide Assaults and other crimes of violence Suicide17
689980318Brain Concerns AlcoholLoss of brain tissue Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome 10 drinks/day18
689980319Liver Concerns AlcoholFatty liver Alcoholic hepatitis - inflammation Cirrhosis - 10 years of 1 pt whiskey/daily19
689980320Other Concerns AlcoholHeart disease Cancer Immune system20
689980321Fetal Alcohol SyndromeGrowth retardation before/after birth Small head and eyes Midfacial area Flattened bridge Short length of nose21
689980322DetoxificationAbstinence syndrome: Stage 1 - tremors, heart beat, sweating Stage 2 - hallucinations Stage 3 - delusions, delirium Stage 4 - seizure activity22
689980323Nicotine Absorption90% absorbed 60 mg is lethal (one cigar = 2 lethal doses)23
689980324Nicotine Physiological EffectsMimics acetylcholine, blocks receptor Release adrenaline Nausea, dizziness, tremors Inhibits hunger, deadens taste buds24
689980325Nicotine TreatmentsReplacement therapy: gum, lozenges, skin patches, inhaler Zyban (bupropion) - Wellbutrin Chantix25
689980326Nicotine WithdrawalDaily use/several weeks 24 hours: Insomnia Depressed Irritable Decreased heart rate Anxiety26
689980327Caffeine IntoxicationRecent consumption, 250 mg or more (more than 2-3 cups coffee) Restlessness Excitement Insomnia Flushed face Muscle twitching Rambling flow of thought/speech27
689980328CaffeineCoffee Tea Chocolate Energy drinks Caffeinated drinks OTC medications28
689980329Caffeine MechanismAbsorbed rapidly - 30 mins Blocks adenosine receptor Increase arousal Decrease fatigue Stimulant Relives headache29
689980330Opioid IntoxicationRecent use Behav/psych changes: Apathy Impaired judgment Dysphoria Pupillary constriction: Slurred speech30
689980331Opioid WithdrawalCessation/Administration of opioid antagonist Dysphoric mood Nausea Muscle aches Yawning Insomnia31
689980332OpioidsMorphine - active ingredient Codeine - secondary active ingredient Heroin - chem derivative - more potent because lipid soluble and enters brain quicker32
689980333Opioid MechanismsEnkephalins - morphine NTs (brain/adrenal glands) Endorphins - morphine NTs ( brain/pituitary glands) Pain regulation33
689980334Opioids BenefitsPain relief Colic Cough suppressant34
689980335Opioids NegativeDependence OD35
689980336Hallucinogen IntoxicationRecent use Anxiety Depression Paranoid ideation Impaired judgment Perceptual changes: Derealization Illusions Hallucinations During/shortly after hallucinogen: Pupillary dialation Sweating Blurring of vision Tremors36
689980337Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (Flashbacks)Re-experiencing following cessation of hallucinogen: geometric hallucinations, intensified colors, halos around objects.37
689980338Phencyclidine IntoxicationRecent use Belligerence Impulsiveness Impaired judgment Unpredictability Within an hour: Hypertension Numbness Muscle rigidity Seizures38
689980339Hallucinogens TermsPhantastica Psychotomimetics Dellirants39
689980340Phantasticagroup of drugs that create a world of fantasy; also known as psychedelics (mind-viewing) drugs40
689980341Psychotomimeticsmimicking psychosis41
689980342Dellirantsanother group of drugs that cause cessation and loss of touch with reality42
689980343Phantastica Indole HallucinogensIndole - chem structure found in 5HT and LSD. Stimulate serotonin receptors. Alter perception, anxiety, panic attacks. Hallucinogen persisting perception disorder. Psilocybin - active ingredient in Psilocybe mushrooms43
689980344Phantastica Catechol HallucinogensMescaline peyote - cactus Mescaline - active ingredient Synthetic - MDMA, MDA44
689980345Deliriants PCPPCP - developed as anesthetic Angel dust - PCP sprinkled on plant such as oregano/parsley Ketamine - PCP like drug known as K or Special K45
689980346Deliriants Anticholinergic HallucinogensBelladona Mandrake Henbane Natura46
689980347DeliriantsAmanita muscaria Salvia divinorum47
689980348Cannabis IntoxicationRecent use Euphoria Anxiety Impaired judgment Social withdrawal Two/more signs: Conjuctival injection (red eyes) Increased appetite Dry mouth48
689980349MarijuanaCannabis = plant THC = active ingredient Resin is in flower Hashish = concentrated resin from cannabis plant Anandamide = chem found in brain; acts like marijuana49
690003765Caffeineis NOT a depressant50
690003766LSDis NOT classified as an opioid51
690003767Opioids TypesOxycoton Oxycodon Codeine Hydrocodone52
690003768Hallucinogen TypesLSD Mushrooms53
690003769Marijuana CausesNOT nausea54
690003770Primary Preventionaimed at people who have not tried drugs55
690003771Secondary Preventionaimed at people with drug problems56
690003772Methadonetreats opioid dependance57
690003773Tertiary Preventionaimed at relapse prevention or follow up program58
690003774Universal Preventionaimed at entire population59
690003775Selective Preventionaimed at high risk groups w/general populations60
690003776Indicated Preventionaimed at individuals who show signs of developing problems61
690003777Scare Tactics/Factsdoes not work62
690003778Contingency Managementindividuals are given immediate rewards for clean urine samples63
690003779Other Tx for SAOutpatient Intensive outpatient Inpatient Detox64
690003780CBTEffective65
690003781Alcohol Pharmacological TxBenzos - withdrawals Antabuse - side effects Naltroxene - opioid antagonist Acamprosate - resembles GABA66
690003782Nicotine Pharmacological TxNicotine replacement therapy Zyban - inhibit NE and DA reuptake Chantix - nicotine-receptor agonist67
690003783Opioid Pharmacological TxMethadone - minimizes withdrawal Buprenorphrine - detox/maintenance Naltrexone68
690003784Motivational InterviewingNon-confrontational approach Targets level of motivation69
690003785MI Changes of ChangePrecontemplation Contemplation Preparation Action Maintenance70
690003786OARSOpen ended questions Affirmations Reflections Summaries71
690003787Alcoholis made by yeasts during fermentation72
690003788Moist Snufffinely chopped tobacco, held in mouth73
690003789Quidpiece of chewing tobacco74
690003790Opiumraw plant substance containing morphine and codeine75
690003791Black Tarillicit heroin from Mexico76

Ch. 7 Human Memory Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
1398471108Memorycapacity to retain information over time0
1398471109Encodingconversion of incoming information into a form that can be stored in memory (auditory info)1
1398471110Storagemaintaining information in memory over a period of time, organized information we receive2
1398471111Retrievalbringing stored information into mind3
1398471112Encoding Failureinformation did not get into memory4
1398471113Storage Failureinformation disappeared from memory, no longer in storage, information decays5
1398471114Retrieval Failureinformation still in memory but cannot be located6
1398471115Decay Theoryinformation in memory eventually disappears if it is not used (use it or lose it) as time passes7
1398471116Interference Theoryinformation stays in memory permanently even if it is not used.8
1398471117Atkinson-Shiffrin Model of Memory: 3 memories1) Sensory 2) Short-term 3) Long-term9
1398471118Capacityhow many units of information can be held at one time10
1398471119Duration of Storagehow long information can be held11
1398471120Reason for ForgettingStorage failure vs. retrieval failure12
1398471121Long-term memory contains:Declarative Memory & Non-declarative memory13
1398471122Declarative Memoryinformation you can describe: SEMANTIC MEMORY= general info, EPISODIC MEMORY= personally experienced events14
1398471123Non-declarative Memoryinformation you cannot describe: skilled actions & habits15
1398479254Chunksa unit of information that consists of smaller units of information16
1407330696Displacementinformation being held in STM is pushed out by newly arriving information17
1407344035Retroactive Interferencerecently learned information prevents recall of earlier learned information18
1407344036Proactive Interferenceearlier learned information prevents recall of later learned information19

The American Pageant 11th Edition, Chapter 18 Flashcards

Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy, 1841-1848

Terms : Hide Images
522761742caucus (" . . . the stiff-necked Virginian was formally expelled from his party by a caucus of Whig congressmen. . . .")An unofficial organization or consultation of like-minded people to plan a political course or advance their cause, often within some larger body.0
522761743royalty (". . . they were being denied rich royalties by the absence of an American copyright law.")The payments to an inventor, author, composer, and so on, usually as a percentage of the sales or profits from their work.1
522761744default (". . . several states defaulted on their bonds. . . .")To fail to pay a loan or interest due.2
522761745repudiate ("When . . . several states . . . repudiated [their bonds] openly, honest English citizens assailed Yankee trickery.")To refuse to accept responsibility for paying a bill or debt.3
522761746protectorate (". . . Texas was driven to open negotiations . . . in the hope of securing the defensive shield of a protectorate.")The relation of a strong nation to a weaker political entity, which comes under its control and protection but still retains elements of autonomy.4
522761747colonyA territory under direct ownership or control of the imperial power.5
522761748colossus ("Such a republic would check the southward surge of the American colossus. . . .")In politics, an entity of extraordinary size and power.6
522761749resolution ("He therefore arranged for annexation by a joint resolution.")In government, a formal statement of policy or judgment by a legislature, but requiring no legal statute.7
522761750intrigue (". . . the Lone Star Republic had become a danger spot, inviting foreign intrigue that menaced the American people.")A plot or scheme formed by secret, underhanded means.8
522761751parallel (" . . . the United States had sought to divide the vast domain at the forty-ninth parallel.")In geography, the imaginary east-west lines, parallel to the earth's equator, marking latitude.9
522761752meridiansThe imaginary north-south lines, marking longitude on the globe.10
522761753deadlock ("The Democrats, meeting later in the same city, seemed hopelessly deadlocked.")To completely block or stop action as a consequence of the mutual pressure of equal and opposed forces.11
522761754dark horse ("Polk may have been a dark horse, but he was hardly an unknown or decrepit nag.")In politics, a candidate with little apparent support who unexpectedly wins a nomination or election.12
522761755mandate ("Land-hungry Democrats . . . proclaimed that they had received a mandate from the voters to take Texas.")In politics, the belief that an official has been issued a clear charge by the electorate to pursue some particular policy goal.13
522761756platform ("Polk . . . had no intention of insisting on the . . . pledge of his own platform.")The campaign document stating a party's or candidate's position on the issues, and upon which they "stand" for election.14
522761757no-man's-land (". . . Polk was careful to keep American troops out of virtually all of the explosive no-man's-land between the Nueces and the Rio Grande. . . .")A territory to which neither of two disputing parties has clear claim and where they may meet as combatants.15
522761758indemnity ("Victors rarely pay an indemnity. . . .")A repayment for loss or damage inflicted.16
536327811False (Tyler turned away from the Whig policies of Clay and Webster.)(True/False) After President Harrison's death, Vice President John Tyler carried on the strong Whig policies of party leaders like Clay and Webster.17
536327813False (Anglo-American hostility remained strong.)(True/False) By the 1840s, the bitter memories of two Anglo-American wars had disappeared, putting an end to major British-American conflicts.18
536327814True(True/False) The "Aroostook War" over the Maine boundary was settled by a territorial compromise in the Webster-Ashburton Treaty.19
536327815True(True/False) A primary motive driving Americans to annex Texas was fear that the Lone Star Republic would become an ally or protectorate of Britain.20
536327816True(True/False) Texas was annexed by a simple majority resolution of both houses of Congress because the two-thirds vote necessary for a treaty of annexation could not be obtained in the Senate.21
536327817True(True/False) The British claim to the disputed Oregon country was considerably strengthened by the thousands of British settlers in the region supported by the Hudson's Bay Company.22
536327818True(True/False) In the election of 1844, Clay lost to Polk partly because he tried to straddle the Texas annexation issue and thus lost antislavery support.23
536327819True(True/False) Polk's victory in the election of 1844 was interpreted as a mandate for Manifest Destiny and led directly to the annexation of Texas and a favorable settlement of the Oregon dispute.24
536327820False (He achieved it with remarkable success completely in less than four years.)(True/False) President Polk proved unable to implement his four-point program for his presidency because of strong opposition from anti-imperialist Whigs.25
536327821False (It was a dispute over the southern boundary of Texas.)(True/False) The immediate cause of the Mexican War was an attempt by Mexico to reconquer Texas.26
536327822True(True/False) Polk's primary objective in fighting the Mexican War was to obtain California for the United States.27
536327823True(True/False) The overwhelming American military victory over Mexico led some expansionist Americans to call for the United States to take over all of Mexico.28
536327824False (It gave the United States large territorial gains.)(True/False) The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo added Texas to the territory of the United States.29
536327825True(True/False) The outcome of the Mexican War became a source of continuing bad feeling between the United States and much of Latin America.30
536327826False (It forced the slavery controversy to the center of national politics.)(True/False) The Wilmot Proviso prohibiting slavery in territory acquired from Mexico enabled the slavery issue to be temporarily removed from national politics.31
536327827True(True/False) In the dispute with Britain over Oregon, the United States repeatedly demanded control of the whole territory as far as "fifty-four forty."32
536327828True(True/False) The Polk administration was frustrated by its inability to purchase California from Mexico.33
537215120b(Multiple Choice) The conflict between President Tyler and Whig leaders like Henry Clay took place over issues of a. slavery and expansion. b. banking and tariff policy. c. foreign policy. d. agriculture and transportation policy. e. Whig party leadership and patronage.34
537215121a(Multiple Choice) Among the major sources of the tension between Britain and the United States in the 1840s was a. American involvement in Canadian rebellions and border disputes. b. British support for American abolitionists. c. American anger at British default on canal and railroad loans. d. American intervention in the British West Indies. e. American involvement in the prohibited international slave trade.35
537215122e(Multiple Choice) The Aroostook War involved a a. battle between American and French fishermen over Newfoundland fishing rights. b. conflict over fugitive slaves escaping across the Canadian border. c. battle between British and American sailors over impressment. d. battle between Americans and Mexicans over the western boundary of Louisiana. e. battle between American and Canadian lumberjacks over the northern Maine boundary.36
537215123d(Multiple Choice) During the early 1840s, Texas maintained its independence by a. waging constant small-scale wars with Mexico. b. refusing to sign treaties with any outside powers. c. relying on the military power of the United States. d. establishing friendly relations with Britain and other European powers. e. declaring absolute neutrality in the conflicts between the United States, Britain, and Mexico.37
537215124a(Multiple Choice) Which of the following was NOT among the reasons why Britain strongly supported an independent Texas? a. Britain was interested in eventually incorporating Texas into the British Empire. b. British abolitionists hoped to make Texas an antislavery bastion. c. British manufacturers looked to Texas as a way to reduce their dependence on American cotton. d. A puppet Texas nation could be used to check the power of the United States. e. An independent Texas would provide a shield for European powers to re-enter the Americas and overturn the Monroe Doctrine.38
537215125e(Multiple Choice) Texas was finally admitted to the Union in 1844 as a result of a. the Mexican War. b. the Texans' willingness to abandon slavery. c. an agreement that Texas would eventually be divided into five smaller states. d. a compromise agreement with Britain. e. President Tyler's interpretation of the election of 1844 as a "mandate" to acquire Texas.39
537215126e(Multiple Choice) Manifest Destiny represented the widespread nineteenth-century American belief that a. Americans were destined to uphold democracy and freedom. b. the irrepressible conflict over slavery was destined to result in a Civil War. c. Mexico was destined to be acquired by the United States. d. the American Indians were doomed to disappear as white settlement advanced. e. God had destined the United States to expand across the whole North American continent.40
537215127a(Multiple Choice) Britain eventually lost out in the contest for the disputed Oregon territory because a) the rapidly growing number of American settlers overwhelmed the small British population. b) the British recognized the greater validity of American legal claims on the territory. c) superior American naval forces made the British position in the region untenable. d) an international arbitration commission ruled in favor of the American claims41
537215128a(Multiple Choice) The British finally agreed to concede to the United States the disputed Oregon territory between the Columbia River and the forty-ninth parallel because a. they did not really want to fight a war over territory that American settlers might overrun. b. they recognized that the Lewis and Clark expedition has established America's prior claim to the territory. c. they determined that their own harbors at Vancouver and Victoria, British Columbia, were superior to those on Puget Sound. d. the Americans had concentrated superior military and naval forces in the region. e. the Hudson's Bay Company no longer considered the area economically valuable.42
537215129a(Multiple Choice) Henry Clay lost the election of 1844 to James Polk primarily because a. his attempt to straddle the Texas annexation issue lost him votes to the antislavery Liberty party in New York. b. his strong stand for expansion in Texas and Oregon raised fears of war with Britain. c. he supported lower tariffs and an independent Treasury system. d. he lacked experience in presidential politics. e. Polk persuaded voters that Clay would not aggressively seek to acquire California for the United States.43
537215130c(Multiple Choice) The final result of the British-American conflict over the Oregon country in 1844-1846 was a) an American success in winning the goal of a boundary at "fifty-four forty." b) an agreement to continue the joint occupation of Oregon for twenty years more. c) a compromise agreement on a border at the forty-ninth parallel. d) an outbreak of war between the two nations.44
537215131b(Multiple Choice) The direct cause of the Mexican War was a. American refusal to pay Mexican claims for damages caused by the Texas war for independence. b. Mexico's refusal to sell California to the United States and dispute over the Texas boundary. c. Mexican support for the antislavery movement in Texas. d. American determination to conquer and annex northern Mexico. e. Mexican anger at American discrimination against Latinos in Texas.45
537215132d(Multiple Choice) President Polk was especially determined that the United States must acquire San Francisco from Mexico because a. it was the most strategic fort on the entire Pacific Coast. b. it was the home of most of the American settlers in Mexican California. c. the discovery of gold in California meant that San Francisco would be the gateway to the gold fields. d. the harbor of San Francisco Bay was considered the crucial gateway to the entire Pacific Ocean. e. the Franciscan Catholic missionaries there were using it as a base to counteract American Protestant missions in Oregon.46
537215133c(Multiple Choice) The phrase "spot resolutions" refers to a. President Polk's message asking Congress to declare war on Mexico on the spot. b. the amendment introduced after the Mexican War declaring that not one new spot of land could be opened to slavery. c. Congressman Abraham Lincoln's resolution demanding that President Polk specify the exact spot, on American soil, where American blood had supposedly been shed. d. the congressional act determining which spots of Mexican land should be ceded to the United States. e. Congress's resolution declaring that the key spot America should seize from Mexico was San Francisco Bay.47
537215134e(Multiple Choice) The brilliant American military campaign that finally captured Mexico City was commanded by General a. Stephen W. Kearny. b. John C. Frémont. c. Zachary Taylor. d. Robert E. Lee. e. Winfield Scott.48
537215135c(Multiple Choice) The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ending the Mexican War provided for a. a return to the status quo that had existed before the war. b. the eventual American acquisition of all of Mexico. c. American acquisition of about half of Mexico and payment of several million dollars in compensation. d. the acquisition of California and joint U.S.-Mexican control of Arizona and New Mexico. e. American guarantees of fair treatment for the Mexican citizens annexed by the United States.49
537215136b(Multiple Choice) The major domestic consequence of the Mexican War was a. the decline of the Democratic party. b. a sharp revival of the issue of slavery. c. a large influx of Mexican immigrants into the southwestern United States. d. a significant increase in taxes to pay the costs of the war. e. a public revulsion against the doctrines of Manifest Destiny and expansionism.50
537215137CarolineAmerican ship involved in supplying Canadian rebels that was sunk by British forces, sparking an international crisis between Britain and the United States51
537215138Aroostook WarOutbreak of fighting between American and Canadian lumberjacks over disputed Maine boundary52
537215139Mexican WhigsAntislavery Whigs who strongly opposed the annexation of Texas as a conspiracy by the slave power53
53721514054°40'Northern boundary of Oregon territory jointly occupied with Britain, advocated by Democratic party and others as the desired line of American expansion54
537215141Oregon TrailTwo-thousand-mile-long path along which thousands of Americans journeyed to the Willamette Valley in the 1840s55
537215142manifest destinyThe widespread American belief that God had ordained the United States to occupy all the territory of North America56
537215143Liberty partySmall antislavery party that took enough votes from Henry Clay to cost him the election of 184457
537215144Walker Tariff of 1846Reduced tariff law sponsored by President Polk's secretary of the Treasury that produced substantial revenue and bolstered the U.S. economy58
537215145CaliforniaRich Mexican province that Polk was determined to buy and Mexico refused to sell59
537215146Nueces RiverRiver that Mexico claimed as the Texas-Mexico boundary, crossed by Taylor's troops in 184660
537215147spot resolutionResolution offered by Congressman Abraham Lincoln demanding to know the precise location where Mexicans had allegedly shed American blood on American soil61
537215148California Bear Flag RepublicShort-lived West Coast republic proclaimed by American rebels against Mexican rule just before the arrival of U.S. troops in the province62
537215149Buena VistaSite of major victory by American troops under Zachary Taylor over Mexican troops under Santa Anna.63
537215150Treaty of Guadalupe HidalgoTreaty ending Mexican War and granting vast territories to the United States64
537215151Wilmot ProvisoControversial amendment, which passed the House but not the Senate, stipulating that slavery should be forbidden in all territory acquired from Mexico65
537215152Abraham LincolnCongressional author of the spot resolutions criticizing the Mexican War66
537215153Winfield Scott"Old Fuss and Feathers," whose conquest of Mexico City brought U.S. victory in the Mexican War67
537215154Henry ClayLeader of Senate Whigs and unsuccessful presidential candidate against Polk in 184468
537215155Nicholas TristLong-winded American diplomat who negotiated the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo69
537215156Daniel WebsterWhig leader and secretary of state who negotiated an end to Maine boundary dispute in 184270
537215157Rio GrandeClaimed by United States as southern boundary of Texas71
537215158John C. FremontDashing explorer/adventurer who led the overthrow of Mexican rule in California after war broke out72
537215159Aroostook WarClash between Canadians and Americans over disputed timber country73
537215160Santa AnnaMexican military leader who failed to stop humiliating American invasion of his country74
537215161TexasIndependent nation that was the object of British, Mexican, and French scheming in the early 1840s75
537215162Zachary TaylorAmerican military hero who invaded northern Mexico from Texas in 1846-184776
537215163David WilmotCongressional author of resolution forbidding slavery in territory acquired from Mexico77
537215164James K. PolkDark-horse presidential winner in 1844 who effectively carried out ambitious expansionist campaign plans78
537215165OregonNorthwestern territory in dispute between Britain and United States, subject of Manifest Destiny rhetoric in 184479
537215166John TylerLeader elected vice president on the Whig ticket who spent most of his presidency in bitter feuds with his fellow Whigs80
5372151673, 1, 5, 4, 21. ___ United States ends a long courtship by incorporating an independent republic that had once been part of Mexico. 2. ___ The first American president to die in office is succeeded by his controversial vice president. 3. ___ A treaty adding vast territory to the United States is hastily pushed through the Senate. 4. ___ American and Mexican troops clash in disputed border territory, leading to a controversial declaration of war. 5. ___ An ambitious "dark horse" wins an election against an opponent trapped by the Texas annexation issue.81
537215168The rapid Senate ratification of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo(Cause and Effect) Thwarted a growing movement calling for the United States to annex all of Mexico82
537215169The overwhelming American military victory over Mexico(Cause and Effect) Enabled the United States to take vast territories in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo83
537215170Polk's frustration at Mexico's refusal to sell California(Cause and Effect) Helped lead to a controversial confrontation with Mexico along the Texas border84
537215171British support for the Texas Republic(Cause and Effect) Increased American determination to annex Texas85
537215172Tyler's refusal to carry out his own Whig party's policies(Cause and Effect) Split the Whigs and caused the entire cabinet except Webster to resign86
537215173The Wilmot Proviso(Cause and Effect) Heated up the slavery controversy between North and South87
537215174Strong American hostility to Britain(Cause and Effect) Sparked bitter feuds over Canadian rebels, the boundaries of Maine and Oregon, and other issues88
537215175Clay's unsuccessful attempts to straddle the Texas issue(Cause and Effect) Turned antislavery voters to the Liberty party and helped elect the expansionist Polk89
537215176The upsurge of Manifest Destiny in the 1840s(Cause and Effect) Created widespread popular support for Polk's expansionist policies on Texas, Oregon, and California90
537215177Rapidly growing American settlement in Oregon(Cause and Effect) Strengthened American claims to the Columbia River country and made Britain more willing to compromise91

APUSH Chapter 23 Flashcards

APUSH Chapter 23

Terms : Hide Images
1405555591U.S. Grantwar hero from North, cherished by Northerners, not a good politician and narrow minded- started a chain of bad events. wom only because of strong Republican party + civil war, gave in easily to the spoils system (handing out jobs)0
1405555592Ohio Ideato pay back war debts with greenbacks or bills. mainly vouched by midwestern Democrats, Eastern Republicans wanted it in gold...1
1405555593Jim Fiskthe go-getter in the Fisk and Gold ring, both bribed Grant's brother and manipulated both men into helping raise prices of gold. the bubble burst on Black Friday 1869and they earned a profit. treasury had to release gold.2
1405555594Hay Gouldthe smarter one in the Fisk and Gould ring, gold market bubble burst on Black Friday but made off with money...3
1405555595Tweed Ring (William Tweed)"Boss Tweed" used bribery, graft, and faudulent elections to scam New Yorkers out of $200 million, eventually NY times published an expose and he ended up dying in jail...4
1405555596Thomas Nestcartoonist who pilloried Tweed for an illiterate audience, turned down bribe to tell the truth...5
1405555597Samuel J. TildenNew York attorney who headed the prosecution of William Tweed. had a presidential nomination, lost race eventually...6
1405555598Credit MobilierUnion Pacific Road formed this company, hired themselves at a ridiculous wage. to have their comn men stay unnoticed, bribed the U.S. Vice Pres and congressmen...7
1405555599Whiskey Ringrobbed the treasury of a lot of money through excise taxes. Grant's secretary was accused, then let off hook. secretary of war William Belknap had to resign, too...8
1405555600William BelknapGrant's secretary of war had a forced resignation after it was discovered that he was a part of the Whiskey Ring...9
1405555601Horace GreeleyNY Times editor who was dogmatic, emotional, and unstable in his political views. endorsed by Liberal Republicans who wanted Grant's corruption and military reconstruction to be done away with, despite his contempt for them. "Grant is a drunk crook"...10
1405555602Liberal Republicanswanted an end to military reconstruction and to get rid of Grant's corruption. Nominated Horace Greeley for president...11
1405555603Panic of 1873caused by overspeculation in railroad stock, railroad track laying, factories, grain, banking credit, until no more profits ensued + companies went under...12
1405555604hard moneymade of gold and silver, actually worth something, using this as main currency would promote deflation, hard to get, value based on quantity (rich people from Northeast endorsed this)13
1405555605cheap moneypaper bills that only stood for something if it was backed up by gold reserve. using this would promote inflation (farmers endorsed this)...14
1405555606Resumption Act 1875withdrawing greenbacks from circulation, made it worth the same as gold, "as good as gold"...15
1405555607contractionreplacing bills with gold to back it up, paper as good as gold, smaller amount of money in circulation ,deflation...16
1405555608Gilded Agesarcastic name given by Mark Twain to talk about 30 years after the Civil War, everything seemed glam + peaceful, but underneath, economic disparity says otherwise (robber barons)...17
1405555609Grand Army of the Republic (GAR)a fraternal organization for Union vets from the Civil War- Republican, mostly...18
1405555610Roscoe ConklingU.S. senator NY swapping civil service jobs for votes. 1870s-80s, republican, conklingite ...19
1405555611James G. Blaine (2)Conklingites' rival, known as Half Breeds, another patronage system for civil service jobs. Also Republican20
1405555612Rutherford B. HayesRepublican candidate for president as nominated by bickering factions of his party. "The Great Unknown", Ohio gov. 3x, swing state...21
1405555613Compromise of 1877set up an electoral commission 15 men from Senate, House, and Supreme Court. ended up letting Hayes win, if troops left Louisiana + South Carolina, and a railroad ran through Texas, Democrats get patronage...22
1405555614Electoral Count Act15 ppl from House Senate, Supreme court decide who gets electoral vote from state returns...23
1405555615Civil Rights Act 1875prohibited racism jury selection, = accomodations in public but in the 1883 Civil Rights cases, 14th Amendment says it only protects government violations and not individual cases of discrimination...24
1405555616RedeemersSouthern Democrats, white, try to establish old order of whites>blacks, can have political power again...25
1405555617crop-liensmall farmers get credit, so can get food + supplies in exchange for harvests, forever in debt to whites, share cropping26
1405555618Jim Crowseries of laws that made blacks "subordinate" justified horrible treatment + segregation on a state level...27
1405555619Plessy v. Ferguson 1896justified South's segregationalist policies through "separate but equal" protection of 14th Amendment. Blacks definitely NOT treated equally as whites28
1405555620KearneyitesDenis Kearnmen, Irishman who incited his followers to violently abuse the Chinese. Hated them for cheap labor competition. Some murdered Chinese.29
1405555621Chinese Exclusion Act 1882prohibiting all immigration from China into the U.S. until 194330
1405555622U.S. v. Wong Kim Ark 1898using 14th Amendment, birth right citizenship, jus soli and not jus sanguinis...31
1405555623James A. Garfielddark horse from 1880, Republican, a year later, he was assassinated by Charles Guiteau with a shotgun (after grant was voted out)...32
1405555624Chester A. ArthurStalwart, rich, powerful but fought against corruption in politics...33
1405555625Pendleton Act 1883"magna carta" of civil service, campaign contributions from federal employees illegal, based on examinations...34
1405555626James G. Blainehalf-breed, 1884, choice for Republicans, involved in expose, he was making a corrupt deal with railroad workers, drove followers away. Stupid Republican speech from someone else drove Irish Voters away, "Rum Romanism Rebellion"...35
1405555627Grover Clevelandlawyer, good, honest, affair led Democrats to move to the other side. Won by small margin. Named 2 confederates in Cabinet, fird gov. employees 4 Democrats. had to veto giving pensions to war servicemen + disabilities. Tariffs low --> low prices-->fewer monopolies...36
1405555628MugwumpsRepublicans who hated Blane enough to switch to the Democratic party....37
1405555629William Henry HarrisonOld Tippecanoe, war hero, grandfather of Benjamin Harrison38
1405555630repeaters/floaters"voting cattle", corrupt ppl, can purchase easily sway their ballot. Employed by Republicans....39
1405555631McKinley Tariff Act of 1890boosting duties to 48. 4% peacetime40
1405555632Farmers' Alliancemilitant organization of southern and western framers, 9 members in Congress...41
1405555633Populistspolitical party, "People Party" -inflation, free unlimited coining 16oz Ag vs 1oz Au -graduated income tax -gov. owner ship of railroads, telegraph, telephone -direct election of Senators -1 term limit on the Pres. -immigration on restriction -shorter work day...42
1405555634James B. Weaverpresidential nominee, greenbacker not many votes, but sig. 3rd party presence...43
1405555635HJomestead160 acres of land by living on 5 years, federal troops44
1405555636Coeur d'Alenesmashed a strike here. workers' unrest...45
1405555637Colored Farmers' National Alliancemilitant southern Black Farmers, shared complaint with poor white farmers, hated populists46
1405555638Tom Watsonmember of Populist party who wanted to win over Black votes in the south to boost their polling numbers. Fed up with Republicans (who didn't help them as much anymore as reconstruction was over), democratic whites saw their voting potential and sought to oppress them. populist party weak w/o black support, eventually became a racist47
1405555639Depression of 1893most devastating economic downturn of the century. lasted for 4 years, overbuilding, speculation, labor disorder, agricultural troubles, free Ag48
1405555640Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890required the government to purchase 4.5 million oz of Ag every month, paid people who could mine notes that were redeemable for Ag or Au. wanted to create a demand for silver, especially after discontinuation of silver coins in the 1870s49
1405555641William Jennings BryanNebraskan congressman, Democrat, spoke for 3 hours championing free Ag. Eventually alienated by Cleveland50
1405555642J.P. Morganlead banker in the United States, called upon by Cleveland to bail out the U.S. when gold reserves hit the dangerous low of $41 million. Cleveland called a sellout, but single handedly preserved the integrity of US currency overseas51

Unit 1: Scientific Investigation WHS Flashcards

Biology, Unit 1, Scientific Investigation, Scientific Method, Eukaryotic Cell, Prokaryotic Cell

Terms : Hide Images
465568034Scientific InvestigationThe process by which a scientist asks a question about the natural world, collects and analyzes data to help answer that question, and communicates the results to the scientific community0
465568035Homeostasismaintaining a stable internal environment1
465568036CellsThe basic unit of all living things2
465568037Eukaryotic Cellcell with a nucleus (surrounded by its own membrane) and other internal organelles3
4655680388 Characteristics of Life1. Made of one or more cells 2. Displays organization 3. Grows and Develops 4. Reproduces 5. Responds to stimuli 6. Requires Energy 7. Maintains Homeostasis 8. Adaptations evolve over time4
465568039Hypothesisan educated guess to the problem or a prediction of the results; usually written as an IF .... THEN statement5
465568040Independent VariableThe one factor changed by the scientist. The IF part of the hypothesis, graphed on the x-axis6
465568041Dependent VariableThe variable being affected, observed and/or measured. The THEN part of the hypothesis, graphed on the y-axis.7
465568042Control Groupin an experiment, a group that serves as a standard of comparison with another group to which the control group is identical except for one factor8
465568043Constantsconditions that stay the same in the experiment9
465568044Quantitative Datanumerical data10
465568045Qualitative DataInformation describing color, odor, shape, or some other physical characteristic11
465568046Pie Graphsshows how facts and figures relate to each other by presenting them as portions of a circle12
465568047Line GraphsVisual display that show how two variable are related, independent variable platted on horizontal x axis, dependent variable platted on the vertical y axis13
465568048Bar Grapha type of graph in which the lengths of bars are used to represent and compare data in categories14
465568049TheoryA well tested explanation of many scientific observations15

Weiten Psychology 7th ch 4 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
389905042Absolute thresholdThe minimum amount of stimulation that an organism can detect for a specific type of sensory input.0
389905043Additive color mixingFormation of colors by superimposing lights, putting more light in the mixture than exists in any one light by itself.1
389905044AfterimageA visual image that persists after a stimulus is removed.2
389905045Auditory localizationLocating the source of a sound in space.3
389905046Basilar membraneA structure that runs the length of the cochlea in the inner ear and holds the auditory receptors, called hair cells.4
389905047Binocular depth cuesClues about distance based on the differing views of the two eyes.5
389905048Bottom-up processingIn form perception, progression from individual elements to the whole.6
389905049CochleaThe fluid-filled, coiled tunnel in the inner ear that contains the receptors for hearing.7
389905050Color blindnessDeficiency in the ability to distinguish among colors.8
389905051ComparitorsPeople, objects, events, and other standards that are used as a baseline for comparisons in making judgments.9
389905052Complementary colorsPairs of colors that produce gray tones when added together.10
389905053ConesSpecialized visual receptors that play a key role in daylight vision and color vision.11
389905054ConvergenceA cue to depth that involves sensing the eyes converging toward each other as they focus on closer objects.12
389905055Dark adaptationThe process in which the eyes become more sensitive to light in low illumination.13
389905056Depth perceptionInterpretation of visual cues that indicate how near or far away objects are.14
389905057Distal stimuliStimuli that lie in the distance (that is, in the world outside the body).15
389905058Door-in-the-face techniqueMaking a large request that is likely to be turned down as a way to increase the chances that people will agree to a smaller request later.16
389905059FarsightednessA vision deficiency in which distant objects are seen clearly but close objects appear blurry.17
389905060Feature analysisThe process of detecting specific elements in visual input and assembling them into a more complex form.18
389905061Feature detectorsNeurons that respond selectively to very specific features of more complex stimuli.19
389905062FoveaA tiny spot in the center of the retina that contains only cones; visual acuity is greatest at this spot.20
389905063Frequency theoryThe theory that perception of pitch corresponds to the rate, or frequency, at which the entire basilar membrane vibrates.21
389905064Gate-control theoryThe idea that incoming pain sensations must pass through a "gate" in the spinal cord that can be closed, thus blocking pain signals.22
389905065Gustatory systemThe sensory system for taste.23
389905066Impossible figuresObjects that can be represented in two-dimensional pictures but cannot exist in three-dimensional space.24
389905067Inattentional blindnessFailure to see visible objects or events because one's attention is focused elsewhere.25
389905068Just noticeable difference (JND)The smallest difference in the amount of stimulation that a specific sense can detect.26
389905069Kinesthetic systemThe sensory system that monitors the positions of the various parts of one's body.27
389905070Lateral antagonismA process in the retina that occurs when neural activity in a cell opposes activity in surrounding cells.28
389905071LensThe transparent eye structure that focuses the light rays falling on the retina.29
389905072Light adaptationThe process whereby the eyes become less sensitive to light in high illumination.30
389905073Monocular depth cuesClues about distance based on the image from either eye alone.31
389905074Motion parallaxCue to depth that involves images of objects at different distances moving across the retina at different rates.32
389905075Need for self-actualizationThe need to fulfill one's potential.33
389905076Olfactory systemThe sensory system for smell.34
389905077Opponent process theoryThe theory that color perception depends on receptors that make antagonistic responses to three pairs of colors.35
389905078Optic chiasmThe point at which the optic nerves from the inside half of each eye cross over and then project to the opposite half of the brain.36
389905079Optic diskA hole in the retina where the optic nerve fibers exit the eye.37
389905080Optical illusionSee Visual illusion.38
389905081Parallel processingSimultaneously extracting different kinds of information from the same input.39
389905082PerceptionThe selection, organization, and interpretation of sensory input.40
389905083Perceptual constancyA tendency to experience a stable perception in the face of continually changing sensory input.41
389905084Perceptual hypothesisAn inference about which distal stimuli could be responsible for the proximal stimuli sensed.42
389905085Perceptual setA readiness to perceive a stimulus in a particular way.43
389905086Phi phenomenonThe illusion of movement created by presenting visual stimuli in rapid succession.44
389905087Pictorial depth cuesClues about distance that can be given in a flat picture.45
389905088Place theoryThe idea that perception of pitch corresponds to the vibration of different portions, or places, along the basilar membrane.46
389905089Proximal stimuliThe stimulus energies that impinge directly on sensory receptors.47
389905090PsychophysicsThe study of how physical stimuli are translated into psychological experience.48
389905091PupilThe opening in the center of the iris that helps regulate the amount of light passing into the rear chamber of the eye.49
389905092Receptive field of a visual cellThe retinal area that, when stimulated, affects the firing of that cell.50
389905093RetinaThe neural tissue lining the inside back surface of the eye; it absorbs light, processes images, and sends visual information to the brain.51
389905094Retinal disparityA cue to the depth based on the fact that objects within 25 feet project images to slightly different locations on the left and right retinas, so the right and left eyes see slightly different views of the object.52
389905095Reversible figureA drawing that is compatible with two different interpretations that can shift back and forth.53
389905096RodsSpecialized visual receptors that play a key role in night vision and peripheral vision.54
389905097SensationThe stimulation of sense organs.55
389905098Sensory adaptationA gradual decline in sensitivity to prolonged stimulation.56
389905099Signal-detection theoryA psychophysiological theory proposing that the detection of stimuli involves decision processes as well as sensory processes, which are influenced by a variety of factors besides the physical intensity of a stimulus.57
389905100Subjective contoursThe perception of contrours where none actually exist.58
389905101Subliminal perceptionThe registration of sensory input without conscious awareness.59
389905102Subtractive color mixingFormation of colors by removing some wavelengths of light, leaving less light than was originally there.60
389905103Tactile systemThe sensory system for touch.61
389905104Top-down processingIn form perception, a progression from the whole to the elements.62
389905105Trichromatic theoryThe theory of color vision holding that the human eye has three types of receptors with differing sensitivities to different wavelengths.63
389905106Vestibular systemThe sensory system that responds to gravity and keeps people informed of their body's location in space.64
389905107Visual illusionAn apparently inexplicable discrepancy between the appearance of a visual stimulus and its physical reality.65
389905108Volley principleThe theory holding that groups of auditory nerve fibers fire neural impulses in rapid succession, creating volleys of impulses.66
389905109Weber's lawThe theory stating that the size of a just noticeable difference is a constant proportion of the size of the initial stimulus.67

The American Pageant 11th Edition, Chapter 17 Flashcards

The South and the Slavery Controversy, 1793-1860

Terms : Hide Images
518991255oligarchy ("Before the Civil War, the South was in some respects not so much a democracy as an oligarchy. . . .")Rule by a small elite.0
518991256medievalism ("Southern aristocrats . . . strove to perpetuate a type of medievalism that had died out in Europe. . . .")Devotion to the social values, customs, or beliefs of the European Middle Ages, especially a fixed social hierarchy and code of honor.1
518991257commission ("They were pained by the heavy outward flow of commissions. . . .")Fee paid to an agent in a transaction, usually as a percentage of the sale.2
518991258middlemen ("[Southern planters] were pained by the heavy outward flow . . . to northern middlemen, bankers, agents, and shippers.")In commerce, those who stand between the producer and the retailer or consumer.3
518991259racism ("Thus did the logic of economics join with the illogic of racism in buttressing the slave system.")Belief in the superiority of one race over another or behavior reflecting such a belief.4
518991260squadron (" . . . the Royal Navy's West African Squadron seized hundreds of slave ships. . . .")A medium-sized military unit, especially naval or air, assigned to a specific task or purpose.5
518991261bankruptcy (". . . families were separated with distressing frequency, usually for economic reasons such as bankruptcy. . . .")In law, the condition of being declared unable to meet legitimate financial obligations or debts, therefore requiring special supervision by the courts.6
518991262overseer (". . . under the watchful eyes and ready whip-hand of a white overseer or black 'driver.' ")Someone who governs or directs the work of another.7
518991263sabotage ("They sabotaged expensive equipment. . . .")Intentional destruction or damage of goods, machines, or productive processes.8
518991264fratricidal (The killing of sisters is sororicide; of fathers patricide; and of mothers matricide.) (". . . supported a frightfully costly fratricidal war as the price of emancipation.")Literally, concerning the killing of brothers; the term is often applied more broadly to the killing of relatives or countrymen in feuds or civil wars.9
518991265barbarism (barbarian) ("It was good for the Africans, who were lifted from the barbarism of the jungle. . . .")The condition of being crude, uneducated, or uncivilized.10
518991266table (tabling) ("It required all such antislavery appeals to be tabled without debate.")In parliamentary rules of order, the act of setting aside a resolution or law without voting or taking action, positive or negative, on the proposal itself.11
518991267True(True/False) After 1800, the prosperity of both North and South became heavily dependent on growing, manufacturing, and exporting cotton.12
518991268True(True/False) The southern planter aristocracy was strongly attracted to medieval cultural ideals.13
518991269False (It was economically inefficient and agriculturally destructive of the soil.)(True/False) The growing of cotton on large plantations was economically efficient and agriculturally sound.14
518991270False (Most slaveowners owned fewer than ten slaves.)(True/False) Most southern slaveowners owned twenty or more slaves.15
518991271True(True/False) In 1860, three-fourths of all white southerners owned no slaves at all.16
518991272True(True/False) Poor whites supported slavery because it made them feel racially superior and because they hoped someday to be able to buy slaves.17
518991273True(True/False) The one group of southern whites who opposed slavery consisted of those who lived in mountain areas far from plantations and from blacks.18
518991274False (Free blacks had an extremely vulnerable status and were generally poor.)(True/False) Free blacks enjoyed considerable status and wealth in both the North and the South before the Civil War.19
518991275True(True/False) Slaveowners generally treated their black slaves as valuable economic investment.20
518991276False (The black family under slavery was generally strong, and most slave children were raised in two-parent homes.)(True/False) Slavery almost completely destroyed the black family.21
518991277True(True/False) American slaves used many small methods of resistance to demonstrate their hatred of slavery and their yearning for freedom.22
518991278False (Abolitionists were very unpopular in the North.)(True/False) Abolitionists like William Lloyd Garrison quickly attained great popularity in the North.23
518991279True(True/False) While moralistic white abolitionists like Garrison refused to become involved in politics, practical black abolitionists like Douglass looked for a way to abolish slavery through political action.24
518991280True(True/False) After about 1830, the South no longer tolerated even moderate pro-abolitionist discussion.25
518991281True(True/False) Southern whites increasingly argued that their slaves were happier and better off than northern wage earners.26
518991282d(Multiple Choice) The primary marker for southern cotton production was a) the North. b) France. c) Latin America. d) Britain.27
518991283c(Multiple Choice) The invention that transformed the southern cotton economy was a) the sewing machine. b) the mechanical cotton-picker. c) the cotton gin. d) the steamboat.28
518991284a(Multiple Choice) A large portion of the profits from cotton growing went to a) northern traders and European manufacturers. b) southern and northern slave traders. c) southern textile industrialists. d) midwestern farmers and cattle growers.29
518991285b(Multiple Choice) Among the economic consequences of the South's cotton economy was a) increasing immigration of laborers from Europe. b) a dependence on the North for trade and manufacturing. c) a stable system of credit and finance. d) a relatively equal distribution of property and wealth.30
518991286c(Multiple Choice) Most southern slaveowners held a) over a hundred slaves. b) over fifty slaves. c) fewer than ten slaves. d) only one slave.31
518991287c(Multiple Choice) Even though they owned no slaves, most southern whites supported the slave system because a) they were bribed by the planter class. b) they enjoyed the economic benefits of slavery. c) they felt racially superior to blacks and hoped to be able to buy slaves. d) they disliked the northern abolitionists.32
518991288d(Multiple Choice) The only group of white southerners who strongly opposed slavery and the slaveowners were a) poor southern whites. b) urban merchants and manufacturers. c) religious leaders. d) Appalachian Mountain whites.33
518991289c(Multiple Choice) The condition of the 500,000 or so free blacks was a) considerable better in the North than in the South. b) notable improving in the decades before the Civil War. c) as bad or worse in the North than in the South. d) politically threatened but economically secure.34
518991290c(Multiple Choice) Most of the growth in the African-American slave population before 1860 came from a) the illegal importation of slaves from Africa. b) the re-enslavement of formerly free blacks. c) natural reproduction. d) the incorporation into the United States of new slave territories.35
518991291b(Multiple Choice) Most slaveowners treated their slaves as a) objects to be beaten and brutalized as often as possible. b) economically profitable investments. c) members of their extended family. d) sources of technological innovation.36
518991292a(Multiple Choice) The African-American family under slavery was a) generally stable and supportive. b) almost nonexistent. c) largely female-dominated. d) seldom able to raise children to adulthood.37
518991293c(Multiple Choice) Most of the early abolitionists were motivated by a) a desire to see an independent black republic in America. b) anger at the negative economic consequences of slavery. c) religious feeling against the "sin" of slavery. d) a philosophical commitment to racial integration.38
518991294d(Multiple Choice) The most prominent black abolitionist leader was a) Sojourner Truth. b) David Walker. c) William Lloyd Garrison. d) Frederick Douglass.39
518991295c(Multiple Choice) After 1830, most southerners came to look on slavery as a) a curse on their region. b) a necessary evil. c) a positive good. d) a threat to their social ideals.40
518991296a(Multiple Choice) By the 1850s, most northerners could be described as a) opposed to slavery but also hostile to immediate abolitionists. b) fervently in favor of immediate abolition. c) sympathetic to white southerners arguments in defense of slavery. d) eager to let the slaveholding South break apart the Union.41
519017308Cotton KingdomTerm for the ante-bellum South that emphasized its economic dependence on a single staple product42
519017309West Africa SquadronBritish naval unit that seized hundreds of slave ships in the process of suppressing the illegal slave trade in the early 1800s43
519017310Uncle Tom's CabinHarriet Beecher Stowe's powerful 1852 novel that focused on slavery's cruel effects in separating black family members from one another44
519017311black beltThe fertile region of the Deep South, stretching across Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana, where the largest concentration of black slaves worked on rich cotton plantations45
519017312AmistadSpanish slave ship, seized by revolting African slaves, that led to a dramatic U.S. Supreme court case that freed the slaves46
519017313American Slavery As It IsTheodore Dwight Weld's powerful antislavery book47
519017314American Colonization SocietyOrganization founded in 1817 to transport American blacks back to Africa48
519017315LiberiaAfrican republic founded by freed American slaves in 182249
519017316Lane RebelsThe group of theology students, led by Theodore Dwight Weld, who were expelled from their seminary for abolitionist activity and later became leading preachers of the anti-slavery gospel50
519017317The LiberatorWilliam Lloyd Garrison's fervent abolitionist newspaper that preached an immediate end to slavery51
519017318American Anti-Slavery SocietyGarrisonian abolitionist organization, founded in 1833, that included the eloquent Wendell Phillips among its leaders52
519017319Narrative of the Life of Frederick DouglassClassic autobiography written by the leading African American abolitionist53
519017320Mason-Dixon LineThe line across the southern boundary of Pennsylvania that formed the boundary between free states and slave states in the East54
519017321gag resolution (or gag rule)Strict rule passed by pro-southern Congressmen in 1836 to prohibit all discussion of slavery in the House of Representatives55
519017322free-soilersNorthern antislavery politicians, like Abraham Lincoln, who rejected radical immediate abolitionism, but fought to prohibit the expansion of slavery in the western territories56
519401990Eli WhitneyInventor of a machine for extracting seeds from cotton that revolutionized the southern economy57
519401991Harriet Beecher StoweAuthor of an abolitionist novel that portrayed the separation of slave families by auction58
519401992Nat TurnerVisionary black preacher whose bloody slave rebellion in 1831 tightened the reins of slavery in the South59
519401993William WilberforceBritish evangelical Christian reformer who in 1833 achieved the emancipation of slaves in the British West Indies60
519401994Theodore Dwight WeldLeader of the Lane Rebels who wrote the powerful antislavery work American Slavery As It Is61
519401995Wendell PhillipsNew England patrician and Garrison follower whose eloquent attacks on slavery earned him the title "abolition's golden trumpet"62
519401996Denmark VeseyFree black whose failed attempt to lead a slave revolt in Charleston, South Carolina, led to the execution of more than thirty of his followers63
519401997William Lloyd GarrisonLeading radical abolitionist who burned the Constitution as "a covenant with death and an agreement with hell"64
519401998David WalkerBlack abolitionist writer who called for a bloody end to slavery in an appeal of 182965
519401999Sojourner TruthNew York free black woman who fought for emancipation and women's rights66
519402000Martin DelanyBlack abolitionist who visited West Africa in 1859 to examine sites where African Americans might relocate67
519402001Frederick DouglassEscaped slave and great black abolitionist who fought to end slavery through political action68
519402002Lewis TappanWealthy New York abolitionist merchant whose home was ransacked by a proslavery mob in 183469
519402003John Quincy AdamsFormer president who won the Amistad rebellious slaves' freedom and fought for the right to discuss slavery in Congress70
519402004Elijah LovejoyIllinois editor whose death at the hands of a mob made him an abolitionist martyr71
5194020052, 5, 3, 1, 4Put the following events in correct order by numbering them from 1 to 5. 1. ___ The last slaves to be legally imported from Africa enter the United States. 2. ___ A radical abolitionist editor is murdered, and so becomes a martyr to the antislavery cause. 3. ___ A radical abolitionist newspaper and a slave rebellion spread fear through the South. 4. ___ A new invention increases the efficiency of cotton production, laying the basis for the vast Cotton Kingdom. 5. ___ A group of seminary students expelled for their abolitionist views spread the antislavery gospel far and wide.72
519402006Whitney's cotton gin and southern frontier expansionism.(Cause and Effect) Turned the South into a booming one-crop economy where "cotton was king"73
519402007Excessive soil cultivation and financial speculation(Cause and Effect) Created dangerous weaknesses beneath the surface prosperity of the southern cotton economy74
519402008Belief in white superiority and the hope of owning slaves(Cause and Effect) Kept poor, nonslaveholding whites committed to a system that actually harmed them75
519402009The selling of slaves at auctions(Cause and Effect) Often resulted in the cruel separation of black families76
519402010The slaves' love of freedom and hatred of their condition(Cause and Effect) Caused slaves to work slowly, steal from their masters, and frequently run away77
519402011The religious fervor of the Second Great Awakening(Cause and Effect) Stirred a fervent abolitionist commitment to fight the sin of slavery78
519402012Politically minded abolitionists like Frederick Douglass(Cause and Effect) Opposed Garrison and organized the Liberty party and the Free Soil party79
519402013Garrison's Liberator and Nat Turner's bloody slave rebellion(Cause and Effect) Aroused deep fears of rebellion and ended rational discussion of slavery in the South80
519402014White southerners defenses of slavery as a positive good(Cause and Effect) Widened the moral and political gap between the white South and the rest of the Western world81
519402015The constant abolitionist agitation in the North(Cause and Effect) Made abolitionists personally unpopular but convinced many Northerners that slavery was a threat to American freedom82

Pages

Subscribe to CourseNotes RSS

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!