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Midwestern United States

Land Marks and Land Laws

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Landmarks in Land Laws 1 The Old Northwest A piece of land that was northwest of the Ohio River, east of the Mississippi, and south of the Great Lakes. Open to the states to move South of the Ohio River, chaotic 2 Land Ordinance of 1785 This ?red-letter law designated: What the land would be used for How it would be divided 5 person Committee formed by Thomas Jefferson 3 Northwest Ordinance 1787 Governance in the Old Northwest Judicious compromise: temporary tutelage, then permanent equality 60,000 settlers
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Enduring Vision 8E Chapter 9 outline

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Chapter Nine: The Transformation of American Society, 1815-1840, pg 251-279 Chapter Lead-in, pg 251 ?Mill girls? Harriett Jane Hanson Robinson ? so many changes in American Society between 1820 and the Civil War. She was on the front lines of the industrial revolution in a textile mill in Lowell, Massachusetts, warm poor she began work at the age of 10. At age 11 she led her coworkers in a strike to protest reduction in wages. Married (1848) to William Stevens Robinson, editor of an anti slavery newspaper in Lowell, Massachusetts, bringing her to middle class standing. She was involved in the anti slavery movement, supported the new Whig party, and eventually embraced women?s suffrage.

Chapter 26 American Pageant

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Chapter 26 - The Great West and the Agricultural Revolution I. The Clash of Cultures on the Plains After the Civil War, the Great West was still relatively untamed, wild, full of Indians, bison, and wildlife, and sparsely populated by a few Mormons and Mexicans. As the White settlers began to populate the Great West, the Indians, caught in the middle, increasingly turned against each other, were infected with White man?s diseases, and stuck battling to hunt the few remaining bison that were still ranging around. The Sioux, displaced by Chippewas from the their ancestral lands at the headwaters of the Mississippi in the late 1700s, expanded at the expense of the Crows, Kiowas, and Pawnees, and justified their actions by reasoning that White men had done the same thing to them.

America A Narrative History 8th Edition ( Chapter 1 Outline)

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Ryan Lynn 6/7/13 AP US History Chapter 1 Outline: The Collision of Cultures- Pre-Columbian Indian Civilizations Possible origins of American Indians The Siberians The Siberians crossed the Bering Strait on a land bridge to Alaska. Crossed 12,000 to 15,000 years. Nomadic Hunters who drifted in pursuit of vast herds of mammals, mammoths, musk, oxen, bison and woolly rhinoceroses. In the next 500 years the Siberians migrated outwards from the Arctic Circle to the tip of South America. Southwestern Europe Recent archaeological discoveries in Pennsylvania, Virginia and Chile reveal that prehistoric humans arrived by sea 18,000 to 40,000 years ago.
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