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History of the United States

Chapter 2 Outline: American Government 9th Ed., Wilson&Dilulio

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Samuel Choi CHAPTER 2 OUTLINE: THE CONSTITUTION Introduction The goal of the American revolution was liberty The Problem of Liberty Americans fought to protect their liberties when fighting against the British; they felt their liberties were being violated. At first colonists believed they could stay within the British empire and still retain their liberties. As colonist lost faith in the English Constitution, they realized they could only protect their rights by breaking off from the British empire. The Colonial Mind Most colonists believed that man was naturally corrupt and greedy and would continually try to seek power. This is why colonists believed that the English Constitution would not work; English politicians were corrupt. Colonists believed in natural rights

Chapter 32 Outline

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Chapter 32 Outline Catherine Snyder Seeing Red Bolshevik Revolution: spread some Communism into America ?Red Scare?: 1919-1920, crisis where suspected Communism was heavily questioned and punished Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer: rounded up suspected communists excessively Buford: 249 alleged alien radicals were deported to Russia IWW: members were often persecuted along with other radicals Hooded Hoodlums of the KKK Ku Klux Klan: spawned by postwar reaction, more so resembled antiforeign nativist movements (antiforeign, anti-Catholic, anti-black, anti-Jewish, anti-pacifist, anti-Communist, anti-internationalist, anti-evolutionist, anti-bootlegger, antigambling, anti-adultery, anti-birth control) Stemming the Foreign Flood

Chapter 26 Outline

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Chapter 26 Outline The Clash of Cultures on the Plains Plains Indians: often fought one another, very scattered, not really organized beyond nomadic family groups Fort Laramie and Fort Atkinson: US tried to make peace treaties with various tribes, marked beginning of reservation system Buffalo Soldiers: 1/5 of US Army were black at the time Receding Native Population Colonel J. M. Chivington: his militia massacred 400 Indians at Sand Creek, CO Fetterman massacre: 1866 Sioux war party ambushed Fetterman?s troop and killed all Treaty of Fort Laramie: US abandoned Bozeman Trail, gave Sioux the Great Sioux Reservation

ap_mod_amer_ch_4_outline

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Jon Mathis AP Modern American History Mr. Watson Period 3 September 18, 2013 American Life in the Seventeenth Century A. The Unhealthy Chesapeake American wilderness was unforgiving. Malaria, dysentery, and typhoid killed lots of people. Average life expectancy was below 50. Women were so scarce that men fought over all of them One third of all brides in one Maryland county were already pregnant before the wedding Virginia had the highest population B. The Tobacco Economy The Chesapeake was very good for tobacco production Chesapeake Bay exported 1.5 million pounds of tobacco yearly in the 1630s, and by 1700, it increased to 40 million pounds a year a. More availability led to falling prices b. A system encouraged growth of the Chesapeake

APUSH Alan Brinkley Period 1-2 Terms

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Period?1?2?Terms? Please?put?an?*?by?any?information?you?believe?is?incorrect?or?that?you?have?doubts?about.?Once? someone?checks?and?revises?it?as?need,?please?remove?the?*.? Chapter?1? ? Term? Definition? Importance? Tribal?Society? the?way?in?which?many? native?american?peoples? organized?themselves?and? their?societies.?? ? Mayans? natives?of?Central? America??located?on?the? Yucatan?peninsula.?? created?sophisticated? culture??written?language,? numerical?system,?and?an? accurate?calendar...succeeded? by?the?Aztecs? Aztecs? warrior?people?that? succeeded?the?Mayans?in? Mexico.?Ruled?over?much? of?central?and?southern? Mexico.?Elaborate? administrative,?educational? and?medical?systems.? Practised?human?sacrifice.?? Human?sacrifice?led?

American Pageant 14th Edition Chapter 17 notes

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t I. The Accession of ?Tyler Too? Harrison was a figure head real leaders were Webster and Clay- Harrison died of pneumonia He didn?t like the dictator tactics of Jackson- Tyler was a ex-Democrat Was a Whig but embraced the Jeffersonian states? righters- at odds with majority of his party He believed opposite of pro-bank, pro-tariff- pro-internal improvements II. John Tyler: A President Without a Party The Whig platform started with the Whig Congress passing a law to end the independent treasury- Tyler signed, Clay drew up a bill for a new Bank of the United States- Tyler vetoed it

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