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1607

First permanent English


Settlement in the New World

1492

Christopher Columbus
discovered The New World

1215

Magna Carta limited the power


of the king of England

Virginia House
of Burgesses

-1619
- First representative
assembly in the colonies

1620

- Plymouth colony established


- Mayflower Compact signed
by the Pilgrims to create
self-government

English Bill
of Rights

1689 Protected the individual


rights of English Citizens

Puritans

- Founded Massachusetts
Bay Colony in 1830
- Wanted to reform or purify
the Church of England

Catholics

- Religious group that wanted


to escape persecution
- Founded the colony of
Maryland

Pilgrims

- Religious group that wanted


to escape persecution
- Founded the colony of
Plymouth in 1620

Quakers

- Religious group that


wanted to escape
persecution in Europe
- Founded the colony of
Pennsylvania

Middle
Passage

The part of the triangular


trade involving the forced
migration of Africans to the
New World as part of the
Atlantic slave trade

Fundamental
Orders of
Connecticut

1639 - The first example of


a written constitution
in the colonies
- Influenced by Thomas Hooker

Reasons for
European
Exploration

The 3 Gs God, Gold,


and Glory

Lord Charles
Cornwallis

British general who


lost at Yorktown during the
American Revolution

Mercantilism

An economic system
where European countries
use trade and colonies to
gain wealth and power

King
George III

King of England during


The American Revolution

John Locke

Enlightenment thinker who


argued for peoples natural
rights (life, liberty, property)

- English lawyer and judge

William
Blackstone

- Wrote Commentaries on the


Laws of England
- Colonists referenced his writings
when arguing for self-government

New England
Colonies

- Massachusetts, Connecticut,
Rhode Island, and New Hampshire
- Rocky soil and Cold Winters
- Economy based on Shipbuilding,
Fishing, Trade, Small Farming

Middle
Colonies

- New York, New Jersey,


Pennsylvania, and Delaware
- Breadbasket Colonies grew
wheat, barley, rye, oats, and other
grains.
- Diversity and Religious Tolerance.

Southern
Colonies

- Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina,


South Carolina, and Georgia
- Year around growing season
-Cash crops such as tobacco,
rice, and indigo
- Slavery and Plantations.

Charles de
Montesquieu

- French political thinker


- Wrote Spirit of the Laws
- Argued for separation of powers
(executive, legislative, judicial)

Thomas
Paine

Wrote Common Sense - a


pamphlet about the ideas of
independence

French and
Indian War

- 1754-1763
- British and American soldiers
fought French and Native
American soldiers for control
of North America.

Imports

Goods or products that are


brought into the country
through trade

Exports

Goods or products that are


sent out of the country
through trade

Triangular
Trade

Trade route between Europe,


Africa, and the New World

William
Penn

- Quaker who founded


Pennsylvania as a
holy experiment
- purpose was Peace and
Religious Tolerance

Albany Plan
of Union

- Join or die
1754 - An early attempt by Ben
Franklin at forming a union of the
colonies "under one government
during the French and Indian War.

Representative
Government

Power and right to govern


come from the people who
choose leaders to make the
laws on their behalf

Toleration

Acceptance of others
beliefs, actions,
and customs

First Great
Awakening

1730s Emotional sermons


at revival meetings made
faith more important for
American colonists

Battle of
Saratoga

- Turning Point of the


American Revolution
- France and Spain joined the
side of the Patriots

Boston
Massacre

March 5, 1770 5 civilians


were killed by British soldiers
including Crispus Attucks

Valley
Forge

- Washingtons troops endured a


difficult winter in Pennsylvania
- thousands died due to lack of
food and clothing
- Baron von Steuben trained and
inspired the troops

Boston
Tea Party

1773 - Act of civil disobedience


in which colonists dumped
342 chests of tea into the
Boston Harbor

Lexington
and Concord

Battle of
Yorktown

Thomas
Jefferson

- 1775
-Shot Heard Round the World
- Beginning of the American
Revolution

-1781
- Final surrender that ends
at the Revolutionary War

- Main writer of the Declaration


of Independence in 1776
- 3rd President of the U.S.
- Purchased Louisiana Territory
in 1803

1776

George
Washington

Paul
Revere

- Declaration of Independence
- formally separated the
colonists from England
- Commanding General
of the Continental Army
- 1st President of
United States

- Known for the Midnight Ride


in which he warned the
colonists of British troop
movements

Crispus
Attucks

1st African American killed


at the Boston Massacre

John Paul
Jones

- American Naval Hero during


the American Revolution
- I have not yet begun to fight!

Samuel
Adams

- Founder of Sons of Liberty


(the group that organized
Boston Tea Party)

Sugar Act

1764 - tax on sugar


molasses, one event leading
to revolution

Quartering
Act

1766 - British soldiers could


stay in colonists homes
- Colonists would provide food
and lodging

Intolerable
Acts

1774 - Britain punishes


colonists severely for the
Boston Tea Party
- Also known as the
Coercive Acts

Proclamation
of 1763

Colonists forbidden by
England to settle west of
Appalachian Mountains

Stamp Act

1765 - tax on legal documents,


newspapers, licenses, diplomas,
dice, and playing cards.
- One event that lead to the
American Revolution

Tea Act

1766 - lead to the Boston Tea


Party

Olive Branch
Petition

- Colonists declare loyalty to


King George III but ask him to
cancel Intolerable Acts
- Final effort at Peace by
colonists

Treaty of Paris
in 1783

officially ended American


Revolution.
- United States was recognized
as a nation by England

Abigail
Adams

- Wife of John Adams


- Fought for womens rights
- Remember the ladies

First and
Second
Continental
Congress

Delegates met in Philadelphia


and agreed to boycott British
goods, stop trade with
England, and form militias

Patrick
Henry

- Patriot, Anti-Federalist
- Give me liberty or
give me death!

No taxation
without
representation

Main complaint by
the Colonists against
the British

Wentworth
Cheswell

African American who made an


all-night ride to warn colonists
of British troop movement

Benjamin
Franklin

- Politician, Statesman, Author,


and Inventor
- Signed the Declaration of
Independence and Constitution
- Secured French help for the Patriots
during the American Revolution

Haym
Solomon

Polish born Jewish immigrant


- Patriot who helped finance
the American Revolution

Bernardo
de Glvaz

- Led Spanish troops against


British in the South
- Helped to supply Americans
during the American Revolution

Mercy Otis
Warren

Wrote anti-British and antiLoyalist plays during the


American Revolution

James
Armistead

African-American who was a


spy for the Patriots during the
American Revolution

Militia

a military force composed of


ordinary volunteer citizens

Unalienable
Rights

- Rights that cannot be taken


away without due process
- Life, Liberty and the pursuit
of Happiness

Marquis
de Lafayette

French general who helped


lead and train the Continental
troops during the American
Revolution

Minutemen

- Colonial Militia that were


ready at a moments notice

Patriots

Colonists who supported


U.S. independence and
rebelled against Britain

Loyalists

Colonists who were loyal to


Britain during the American
Revolution

Blockade

An effort to cut off food, supplies,


war material or communications
from a particular area by force,
either in part or totally

Boycott

Voluntary refusal to use products,


or buy from and deal with a
person, organization, or country
as an expression of protest

Writs of
Assistance

A document used especially


in colonial America authorizing
British officers to search in
unspecified locations for
unspecified illegal goods

Articles of
Confederation

- First United States government


- Strengths Kept colonies united
- Weaknesses - No Executive or
Judicial Branch; No power to tax;
Most of the power belonged to the
States

Northwest
Ordinance

(1787) Laws for the


orderly expansion of the
United States.
- Organized Western lands
as equal states

1787

Constitutional Convention
55 delegates met in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania to revise Articles of
Confederation; created a
U.S. Constitution instead

Repeal

- The removal or
reversal of a law

The Great
Compromise

- Solved issue of representation


between small and large states.
- Created 2 houses in Congress.
1.House of Representatives

based on population
2.Senate equal representation
2
per state

Shays
Rebellion

1786 - A rebellion by Massachusetts


farmers in debt
- Land taken and prison was threatened
- Demonstrated need for stronger
government and the weakness of the
Articles of Confederation

John
Adams

- 2nd president
- Federalist, Founding Father,
Continental Congress delegate,
Declaration of Independence
Committee

James
Madison

- Father of the Constitution


- 4th President, Founding Father
- Declared war on Britain to
start the War of 1812

Delegate

- A person who speaks or acts


on behalf of an organization
or group of people
- A representative

Three-Fifths
Compromise

Northern and Southern


states agreed to count 3/5 of
slaves towards representation
and taxes

1803

Louisiana Purchase
land bought from France
by Jefferson doubling size
of United States

Marbury vs.
Madison

1803 Supreme Court case that


established Judicial Review
- The ability of the Supreme Court
to be able to decide if a law
violates the Constitution

Federalist
Papers

1787 written arguments for a


strong central government
- Written by those who supported
the Constitution
- Tried to persuade the states to
ratify the Constitution

Bill of
Rights

1791
First 10 Amendments
guarantee individual freedoms;
gained support for the
Constitution to be ratified

Alexander
Hamilton

- 1st Secretary of the Treasury


- Leader of the Federalists

Federalists

- People who supported the


ratification of the Constitution
- Wanted a strong government
to protect the Country

AntiFederalists

- People who were against the


ratification of the Constitution
- Favored states rights
- Wanted a bill or rights to
protect citizens rights

Ratify
(Ratification)

- To approve by a vote

Founding
Fathers

- Men who made key


contributions to the
Declaration of Independence
and U.S. Constitution

Civic Virtue

- Habits of personal living that


are of importance for the
success of the community
- Examples include voting, serving on
a jury, serving in the military, obeying
laws, paying taxes, volunteering

Constitution

- A written plan
of government

Judicial
Branch

- Supreme Court
- Interprets the Laws

Legislative
Branch

- Congress
- Makes the Laws

Executive
Branch

- President
- Enforces the Laws

Limited
Government

- The government only has


the powers given to it in the
Constitution

Republicanism

- People elect
representatives that make
and enforce the laws

Federalism

- Powers that are divided


between the States and
National Government

Separation
of Powers

Divides the government into


3 independent branches
Executive, Legislative,
and Judicial

Checks and
Balances

The ability of the branches


to keep control of the
other branches

Popular
Sovereignty

- Authority to govern comes


from the people
- We the People

Individual
Rights

- Rights, liberties, and


privileges that are protected
by the Bill of Rights

Amend
(Amendment)

- A change or an addition
to the Constitution

1st
Amendment

- 5 Freedoms
- Religion, Assembly, Press,
Petition, and Speech

Veto

The right of a president


reject or cancel bills passed
by the Legislative Branch

Impeach

- Formal process in which a


government official is accused
of unlawful activity
- The outcome may include the
removal of that official from office
as well as other punishment

Override

-The power of Congress


to cancel out a Presidential
veto with a 2/3 vote

McCullough vs.
Maryland

1819 - Supreme Court case on the


issue of Congress creating a bank
- Ruled that Congress can create
a bank and the states cannot tax
federal institutions

George
Washingtons
Farewell
Address

- George Washington warned the


nation to stay neutral and avoid
alliances with other nations.
- He also warned that political
parties would divide the nation

Judicial
Review

The ability of the Supreme


Court to be able to decide if
a law violates the Constitution

Due
Process

- The requirement of the state


to respect all of the legal rights
that are owed to a person
- The government must follow
the exact course of the law

Urban
(Urbanization)

- Large cities
- Movement of people
from farms to the cities

Rural

- Areas outside of large cities


- the country
- Country towns and small cities
- Farming and Agricultural
communities

DemocraticRepublican
Party

- Leader: Thomas Jefferson


- Priorities: Agriculture, Strong
State Government, Strict
interpretation of the Constitution,
and trade with France

Federalist
Party

- Leader: Alexander Hamilton


- Priorities: Manufacturing, Strong
Federal Government, Loose
interpretation of the Constitution,
and trade with Britain

Cabinet

A group of advisors to the


president, consisting of the
leaders of the 15 Executive
departments of the federal
government

Amendment
Process

- Proposed by 2/3 of both


Houses of Congress
- Approved by 3/4 of
the States

Bill

- A proposed law under


consideration by Congress.
- It does not become law until
it is passed by Congress and
approved by the President.

Jury

A group of citizens which


hears the testimony in legal
disputes and determines what
it believes is the truth

Nullify

- To declare something illegal


- To cancel or invalidate

Electoral
College

The group of individual appointed


by each state who formally elect
the President and Vice President
of the United States.

Embargo

The partial or complete stopping


of commerce and trade with
a particular country, in order
to isolate it.

Nationalism

- Devotion and loyalty to


one's own nation or country
- Patriotism

War of
1812

- War between the U.S. and Britain


- Started as a result of British
interference of U.S. shipping and
the kidnapping of U.S. Sailors
- Ended with the Treaty of
Ghent in 1814

Precedent

A decision or action that


serves as an authoritative rule
or pattern for future situations

Daniel
Webster

- Congressman from the North


(Massachusetts)
- Anti-slavery; Pro-tariffs; For
Federal Authority; Wanted
the Union preserved

John
Calhoun

- Congressman from the South


(South Carolina)
- Pro-slavery; Anti-tariffs;
For States Rights

Temperance

A movement to end or
reduce the use of alcohol

Dorothea
Dix

An American activist who led


a campaign to improve the care
of prisoners, the disabled, and
the mentally ill.

Industrial
Revolution

- A period in which changes occurred


in agriculture, manufacturing,
transportation, economic policies,
and the social structure
- resulted in mass production, lower
cost of goods, factory system, and
growth of cities

Labor
Reform

A campaign to bring about


changes in working conditions
and to restrict child labor
in the 1800s

Florida

Territory added to the United


States in 1819 as a result of the
AdamsOns Treaty with Spain

Texas
Territory

- A sovereign Republic in North


America, bordering the United States
and Mexico between 1836-1845
- Independence from Mexico in 1836
- Annexation and Statehood in 1845

Second Great
Awakening

- A revival movement
in the mid-1800s
- Brought about many changes
in society including the
Reform Movement

Lewis and
Clark

Commissioned by Thomas
Jefferson to lead an expedition
to explore the new lands
acquired as a result of the
Louisiana Purchase

Horace
Mann

- Education Reform
- "Father of the Common School
Movement
Head of State School Board of
Massachusetts
- Proponent of public education for all

Elizabeth
Cody Stanton

- Womens Rights Activist


- Organized the first Womens Rights
Convention at the Seneca Falls
Convention in New York
- Helped write the Declaration of
Sentiments

Susan B.
Anthony

- Womens rights organizer


- Played a pivotal role to introduce
women's voting rights in the
United States.

Andrew
Jackson

- 7th President
- Old Hickory
- Battle of New Orleans Hero,
supported the common man, Indian
removal policies, created the
Democratic Party

James
Monroe

- 5th president
- Issued Monroe Doctrine
- Purchase of Florida in 1819

James K.
Polk

Transcendentalism

Oregon
Territory

- 11th President
- President mostly associated
with Manifest Destiny and
Westward Expansion
- Movement in the 1830-40s
as a protest to the general state of
culture and society
- Stressed individual creativity over
reason and theory
- Leaders: Ralph Waldo Emerson and
Henry David Thoreau

- Territory located in the


Northwest part of the U.S. the
region was jointly occupied
between the U.S. and Great
Britain and divided in 1846

Hudson
River School

- American art movement started


by a group of landscape painters
- Painted the natural beauty of
America
- Influenced by Romanticism

Nullification
Crisis

- South Carolina declared a federal


tariff illegal which they justified
by States Rights
- President Jackson threatened
to use force
- Henry Clay negotiated a Compromise

John James
Audubon

- Painted, studied, and wrote


about birds and animals
- His major work, a color-plate book
entitled The Birds of North America

Annex
(Annexation)

- The act of taking a smaller


territory and adding it to a
larger one

Tariff of
Abominations

- A high tariff in 1828 that


angered the South
-Led to increased cost of goods
and decreased cotton exports
- Led to the Nullification Crisis

Henry
Clay

- A Politician from Kentucky known


as the Great Compromiser
- created the American System
which called for tariffs, the
creation of a bank, and
improved transportation

Missouri
Compromise

1820 Missouri admitted as a


slave state and Maine admitted
as a free state
- Maintained balance in the Senate
- Slavery permitted south of the
36.30 degree parallel

Worcester v.
Georgia

1832 - Supreme Court ruled Cherokee


nation was a distinct community
and only the federal government
had authority to deal with Indians
- The ruling was ignored and the
Cherokees were moved.

Gibbons vs.
Ogden

1824 Supreme Court ruled


that states cannot interfere
with interstate or foreign
business and trade

Henry David
Thoreau

- American author, poet,


philosopher, abolitionist,
naturalist, tax resister and
leading Transcendentalist
- Wrote Essays on Civil
Disobedience

Era of Good
Feelings

- The time period after the War of


1812 during Monroes presidency
- Reflected a sense of national
purpose, pride, patriotism, and
unity among Americans

Civil
Disobedience

- The refusal to obey certain

laws, demands, and commands


of a government
- A form of non-violent protest

Washington
D.C.

The capital city of the


United States of America

Wilmot
Proviso

- A proposed law that would


have made all future states
Mexican Cession free
from slavery
- Failed to pass in the Senate

Revenue

- The income that a government


receives from taxation and
other sources
- An amount of money
regularly coming in

Labor
Union

- A group of workers that


organize to get better pay
and working conditions

- A practice where a political party,

Spoils
System

Immigrant
(Immigration)

after winning an election, gives


government jobs to its voters as a
reward for working toward victory,
and as an incentive to keep working
for the party

- A person who comes to


a country to take up
permanent residence

Louisiana Purchase
- 1803

13 Original Colonies

Land acquired after


the American Revolution
- 1783

Florida Annexation
- 1819

Texas Annexation
- 1845

?
Oregon Territory
- 1846

Gadsden Purchase
- 1853

Mexican Cession
- 1848

U.S. /
Mexican War

- An armed conflict between the U.S.


and Mexico from 1846-1848 as a
result of the annexation of Texas,
which Mexico considered part of its
territory despite the 1836 Texas
Revolution.

Cyrus
McCormick

Invented the
Mechanical Reaper led
to improved farming
and harvesting

Free
Enterprise

- U.S. economic system


- Protects property rights
and features minimal
government regulation
- Encouraged business, trade,
competition, and investment

Eli
Whitney

- Introduced

Interchangeable
Parts and invented
the Cotton Gin

Cotton Gin

- A machine that removed


seeds from Cotton
- Expanded cotton production, the
plantation system, and slavery

Interchangeable
Parts

- Parts that are identical


- They are made to specifications
that ensure that they will fit into
any device of the same type
- Made production of many goods
faster and cheaper

William Lloyd
Garrison

- Abolitionist
- Wrote anti-slavery newspaper
called The Liberator
- NE Antislavery Society

Robert
Fulton

Invented the first successful


Steamboat called it the
Clermont led to improved
transportation

Erie Canal

A waterway in New York that


runs the Hudson River to
Lake Erie, completing a
water route from the Atlantic
Ocean to the Great Lakes

Samuel F.B.
Morse

Invented the Telegraph and a


Code to be able to send
messages led to improved
communication

Indian
Removal
Act

American government policy


that forced Native Americans
west of the Mississippi River
in 1830

Mexican
Cession

- Mexico sold western lands


to U.S. in 1848 after the
U.S. / Mexican War
- Became the Southwestern
part of the United States

Gadsden
Purchase

Mexico sold U.S. strip of


land in present-day Arizona
and New Mexico in 1853

Manifest
Destiny

Westward expansion of
the United States from
the Atlantic Ocean to the
Pacific Ocean

Forty-niners
(49ers)

Miners that came to


California during the
Gold Rush in 1849

California
Gold Rush

Discovery of Gold brought


over 80,000 people to
California in 1849

Monroe
Doctrine

1823 Prohibited the further


colonization of the
Western Hemisphere
by European nations

Trail of
Tears

- Forced march of over 15,000


Cherokee Indians West to
Oklahoma in 1838-39
- Many died as a due to lack
of food and warm clothing

Seneca Falls
Convention

- 1848 in New York


- First organized convention for
Womens Rights
- Marked the beginning of the
Womens Rights Movement

Sojourner
Truth

Harriet
Tubman

Grimke
Sisters

- Former female slave


- Abolitionist and Womens
rights activist

Famous conductor of the


Underground Railroad

Southern sisters who


moved to Philadelphia and
became abolitionists

Frederick
Douglass

- Freed slave
- speaker and Abolitionist
- wrote anti-slavery newspaper
called the North Star

Abolitionists

Group of people who


were against slavery and
wanted it outlawed

Underground
Railroad

- Routes, paths, and places


that helped slaves escape to
the North or Canada

The North

- Union
- Manufacturing, Business,
Trade, Commerce
- Urban, Large Cities

The South

- Confederacy
- Plantation Farming,
Agriculture, Cash Crops
- Rural, Farming communities

The West

- Undeveloped land
- Pioneers, Farmers, Settlers,
Trappers, Traders, Native
Americans
- Ranching, Mining, Farming

Territory

- A region or section of the


United States that has not
yet been admitted to the
Union as a state

Compromise

- An agreement between
two people or two groups

South
Carolina

- First State to secede


from the Union

Suffrage

The right to vote

1860 Presidential
Election

-Won by Republican Candidate


Abraham Lincoln
- Led to the secession of the
Southern States

Julia Ward
Howe

Writer of the Battle Hymn


of the Republic which was
sung by Union troops during
the Civil War

Kansas-Nebraska
Act

Compromise
of 1850

Bleeding
Kansas

Divided the Kansas and


Nebraska territories and
let settlers vote on the
issue of slavery
Agreement to
a)Admit California as a free
to benefit the North
b)Create the Fugitive Slave
to benefit the South

state
Act

Violence between pro-slavery


and anti-slavery settlers in
the Midwest territories

John Brown

- Extreme Abolitionist
- Bleeding Kansas
- Raid on Harpers Ferry

Stephen
Douglas

- politician who supported


popular sovereignty
- Debated Lincoln in Illinois
over the issue of slavery

1861-1865

Civil War attempt for


Southern states to separate
from the United States and
form own country

Robert E.
Lee

Confederate Commanding
General in charge of the
Army of Northern Virginia

Ulysses S.
Grant

- Union Commanding
General
- 18th U.S. President

Harriet Beecher
Stowe

Wrote a book about


slavery entitled
Uncle Toms Cabin

13th

14th

15th

Amendment

Abolished slavery
throughout nation

Amendment

Gave citizenship to all


people born in U.S.

Amendment

Gave voting rights to all


male U.S. citizens

Dred Scott v.
Sandford

1857 slave who sued for his


freedom
- Courts ruled slaves were
property an slavery was made
legal in all territories

Fugitive Slave
Law of 1850

- Helped slave owners


recapture runaway slaves
- demanded all citizens help

Popular
sovereignty

The right of states


and territories to vote
on issues

John Wilkes
Booth

Assassinated Abraham
Lincoln in Washington D.C.
at Fords Theater

Thomas Stonewall
Jackson

- Commander in the
Confederate Army
- Inspired a Confederate victory
at the Battle of Bull Run

William T.
Sherman

Union general who waged


total war in his march from
Atlanta to the Atlantic Ocean

Fort Sumter

- First shots fired at the Civil War


- 1861 off the coast of
Charleston, South Carolina
- Confederate victory
- No deaths

Battle of
Antietam

- Bloodiest day of the Civil War


25,000 casualties
- First battle in Union Territory
- Confederacy lost chance for
European support

Battle of
Gettysburg

- Turning Point of the Civil War


- 3 day battle Union victory
- Confederate would never
attack the North again

Siege of
Vicksburg

- Union victory during the


Civil War resulting in the Union
control of the Mississippi River
and a split Confederacy

Emancipation
Proclamation

- January 1, 1863
- Lincoln frees slaves in
Confederate states

Gettysburg
Address

Speech given by Lincoln that


honored Union Soldiers and
dedicated a cemetery in
Pennsylvania

Anaconda
Plan

- Union strategy during


the Civil War
a)blockade Southern ports
b) take over the Mississippi River
c) capture Richmond

Appomattox
Courthouse

Surrender of Confederate
General Robert E. Lee to
Union General Ulysses S.
Grant to end the Civil War

Jefferson
Davis

President of the
Confederate States of
America (Confederacy)

Secede

To formally withdraw
from the Union

Lincolns Second
Inaugural Address

- Lincoln made this speech


during the Civil War
- Focused on healing the nations
wounds at a time when the end of
the war was in sight

Lincolns First
Inaugural Address

- Lincoln made this speech


before the Civil War
- Focused on the states not
being able to secede and the
importance of preserving the Union

Black Codes

Set of laws in the South


to limit the rights of
former slaves

Jefferson Davis
Inaugural Address

Speech made by the


Confederate President focusing
on the right of States to secede
and the willingness to fight for it

Confederate States
of America
(Confederacy, CSA)

Southern States that


seceded from the Union

Tariff

- A tax on goods coming


into the country
- Supported by the North
because the protected
American Manufacturing

Freedmen

Former slaves

1877

End of reconstruction
troops removed from
the South

Reconstruction
Act of 1867

Divided South into


5 military districts

King Cotton

- Confederate strategy during the


Civil War
- Hoped to use cotton to force
European nations to aid the
Confederacy.

Hiram Rhodes
Revels

First African-American
to serve in the United
States Senate

Philip
Bazaar

- Sailor born in Chile that was


given the Medal of Honor for
actions during the Civil War

Radical
Reconstruction

Northern Congressmen
took control of Reconstruction
as a response to the Black Codes
and over concern for Andrew
Johnsons presidential policies.

William
Carney

First African American to


receive the Medal of Honor for
actions during the Civil War

Scalawags

Southerners who
supported the Union
during the Civil War

Carpetbaggers

Northerners who traveled


to the South during
Reconstruction to get
involved in Politics

Segregation

- Separate individuals
by race
- Separate schools and
public facilities

States Rights

- The belief that states have a


right to cancel illegal federal laws
- The belief that states have the
right to secede
- A cause of the Civil War

Slavery

- Forced servitude as the


property of another person.
- Supported in the South and
disliked in the North
- A cause of the Civil War

Sectionalism

- Loyalty to the interests of a


region or section of the country,
rather than to the country
as a whole.
- A cause of the Civil War

Transcontinental
Railroad

- Railroad that connected the


Great Plains to the west coast.
- Union Pacific and Central
Pacific Railroads met in
Promontory Point, Utah in 1869.

Dawes Act
of 1887

- Attempt to break up tribes and


assimilate Native Americans into
American Society.
- Broke up tribes into sections
and resulted in a loss of
land for Indians.

Homestead Act
of 1862

- Government gave 160 acres of


land to farm and improve to
encourage expansion to the West.
- If settlers improved the land after
5 years then the land would
become their property.

Ku Klux Klan

Group that used violence to


oppose civil rights for Blacks

Morril Act
of 1862

- Each state would get 30,000


acres of land to sell.
- Money made from the land
would be used to fund
colleges that agriculture and
mechanical arts.

Sharecropping
System

- Poor farmers and former slaves


made deals with landowners who
provided land and supplies
- Both would share the crop that was
produced

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