Objective 1.01:______

3 Major Domestic Issues:

1.

2.

3.

Bill of Rights

Judiciary Act of 1789 (61)

Tariff

Hamilton’s Economic Plan (61)

Strict & Loose Interpretation of Constitution

Whiskey Rebellion (63)

Washington’s Farewell Address

Development of the first two-party system

Laissez-faire

Federalist Party (61)

Democratic-Republican Party (65)

Alien & Sedition Acts (70)

VirginiaKentucky Resolutions (70)

Nullification (71)

Election of 1800 (71)

“Midnight Judges” (75)

Marbury v. Madison (74)

John Marshall (74)

Establishment of federal power and supremacy over the states

Treaty of Ghent

Louisiana Purchase (77)

Hartford Convention (86)

Objective 1.02:______

Suffrage requirements1. Women

2. Wage earners-

(118) 3. Landless farmers-

4. American Indians-

5. African Americans-

6. other ethnic groups

Abigail Adams (1042)

Treaty of Greenville 1796 (67)

Tecumseh (83)

Tippecanoe (83)

Battle of Fallen Timbers (66)

Creek Wars (120)

Seminole Wars (112)

Emancipation

Eli Whitney (104)

Cotton Gin (104)

“Necessary Evil” (106)

Objective 1.02 Major Concepts

Conflicts with American Indians (91)

The status of slavery during the Federalist Era (105-08)

The place of women in the society during the Federalist Era

The disparities between classes in the new nation (Ch 3-2)

Objective 1.03:______

XYZ Affair

Convention of 1800

Impressment of seamen

Embargo Act 1807

President Washington’s Proclamation Neutrality

President Washington’s Farewell Address

War Hawks

War of 1812

Battle of New Orleans

Treaty of Ghent

Adams-Onis Treaty

Jay’s Treaty

Pinckney’s Treaty

Macon’s Bill #2

Objective 1.03 Major Concepts

Early Foreign Policy

The failure of peaceful coercion

Freedom of the high seas and shipping rights

The impact of European events on United States foreign policy

US History

Unit 2 Study Guide

Ch 3

Robert Fulton

Erie Canal

1st Industrial Revolution

Eli Whitney

Samuel Morse

Eli Whitney

John Deere

Cyrus McCormick

Tariff

Nativism

Cotton Gin

CottonKingdom

Henry Clay

American System

Era of Good Feelings

McCulloch v. Maryland

Adams-Onis Treaty

James Fennimore Cooper

Panic of 1819

Hudson RiverSchool of Artists

Missouri Compromise

Monroe Doctrine

Gibbons v. Ogden

Election of 1824

spoils system

corrupt bargain

Tariff of Abomination

South Carolina Nullification Crisis

Sequoyah

Worchester v. Georgia

The Indian Removal Act 1830

Trail of Tears

SC Exposition and Protest

John C. Calhoun

Pet Banks

Whig Party

The rationale for and the consequences of Manifest Destiny

Federal Indian policy before The Civil War

The political and economic importance of the West

Cultural expressions of patriotism

Celebrating the common man and the American way of life

Influence of the Transcendentalist Movement

Transformation of life in the early industrial revolution

Cultural polarization of Antebellum America

Implications of the plantation system in the South

Political agendas of antebellum leaders

Concepts of “Jacksonian Democracy”

Slave Revolts

States’ Rights

Era of Good Feelings

Women’s Rights

Temperance Movement

Improvement of social institutions (prisons, mental health, education)

Development of Utopian Communities

Second Great Awakening

Moral Dilemma of Slavery

The Abolitionist Movement

The debate on the expansion of Slavery

Weak Presidential Leadership

Growing Sectionalism

Rise of the Republican Party

The role of slavery

Economics and expansion of the geographic regions

Interpretations of the 10th Amendment

Immediate causes of the war

Key turning points of the war

Strategic strengths and weaknesses of each side

Executive Powers

Resistance to the war effort

Effects of military occupation

Limits on presidential and congressional power

Development of a new labor system

Reconstruction: resistance and decline

Enfranchisement and Civil Rights

Reorganization of southern social, economic, and political systems

Supremacy of the federal government

The question of secession

Dwindling support for civil rights

426 / Margaret Sanger
528 / Automobiles
528 / Henry Ford
528 / mass production
529 / assembly line
529 / Model T
531 / Market/advertising
532 / bear market
532 / bull market
532 / Buying on the margin
532 / Installment plan
534 / laissez-faire
534 / Return to Normalcy
535 / Albert Fall
535 / Herbert Hoover
535 / Teapot Dome scandal
536 / Calvin Coolidge
538 / Dawes Plan
539 / Billy Sunday
540 / Aimee Semple McPherson
540 / Fundamentalism
540 / Scopes Trial
541 / quota system
543 / KKK
545 / 18th amendment
545 / Volstead Act
546 / 21st amendment
546 / Bootleggers
546 / Speakeasies
548 / Silent and "talkies" films
548 / The Jazz Singer
549 / Babe Ruth
549 / Jack Dempsey
549 / Radio
550 / Charles Lindbergh
552 / flapper
554 / F. Scott Fitzgerald
554 / Lost Generation
554 / Sinclair Lewis
555 / Ernest Hemingway
559 / Jazz
559 / Marcus Garvey
559 / Universal Negro Improvement Association
560 / Louis Armstrong
561 / Harlem Renaissance
562 / Langston Hughes
562 / Zora Neal Hurston
571 / Mechanization
573 / Easy credit
573 / Overproduction
574 / Black Tuesday
574 / business cycle
574 / Speculation
575 / Hawley-Smoot Tariff
576 / John Maynard Keynes
576 / Ludwig von Mises
578 / Breadlines
580 / Hoovervilles
581 / tenant farmer
583 / dust bowl
587 / Soup kitchens
589 / Rugged individualism
590 / Direct relief
590 / Trickle down economics
591 / bonus army
592 / Douglas McArthur
600 / FDR
601 / Eleanor Roosevelt
601 / New Deal
603 / FDR's "Fireside Chats"
603 / Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
604 / Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
604 / Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
604 / TennesseeValley Authority (TVA)
605 / National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)
605 / Public Works Administration (PWA)
607 / Huey Long
608 / 2nd New Deal
608 / Works Progress Administration (WPA)
609 / Deficit spending/pump priming
609 / Social Security
612 / CIO
612 / Wagner act
613 / UAW
614 / court packing
618 / Mary McLeod Bethune
620 / Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
623 / welfare state

Objective 10.01: Causes of World War II and reasons for the United Statesentry into the war.

Aftermath of The Great War (WWI)

640 Treaty of Versailles

537 Kellogg-Briand Pact

575/538 Reparations & Dawes Plan

642 Worldwide depression

WWI leads to Rise of Dictators

640 Totalitarianism Governments

641 Fascism

641 Joseph Stalin

641 Benito Mussolini

657/695 General Tojo / Emperor Hirohito

642 Adolf Hitler

Third Reich

Dictators turn to aggression

645/646 Lebensraum/Anschluss

645 Appeasement

646 Munich Pact

649 Non-Aggression Pact

644 Invasions: -Manchuria (Rape of Nanjing)

645 “ -Ethiopia

646 “ -Sudetenland

652 Isolationism

US involvement & entrance

648 Quarantine Speech

650 Winston Churchill

652 Neutrality Acts

653 Lend-Lease Act

655 Four Freedoms

657 Pearl Harbor

10.02 Identify military, political, and diplomatic turning points of the war and determine their significance to the outcome and aftermath of the conflict.

Major Concepts

The United States at war

The influence of propaganda at home and abroad

-newsreels

-pamphlets

-airdrops

-war posters

Designs for peace

People and Terms turning point-military, political, or diplomatic Significanceto outcome/aftermath

(circle)

649Axis m p d

649Alliesm p d

649 Blitzkriegm p d

650Battle of Britainm p d

661Douglas MacArthurm p d

663Battle of Coral Seam p d

671Stalingradm p d

673George Pattonm p d

673Casablancam p d

675Midwaym p d

676Chester Nimitzm p d

686Tehran Conferencem p d

687D-Daym p d

689“Burn down Paris”m p d

691Battle of the Bulgem p d

691Island Hoppingm p d

693Iwo Jimam p d

693Okinawam p d

691Harry Trumanm p d

694Manhattan Projectm p d

693Atomic Bombm p d

694J. Robert Oppenheimerm p d

Ch 20-4 The Holocaustm p d

702Yalta Conferencem p d

703Potsdamm p d

706Nuremberg Trialsm p d

10.03 Describe and analyze the effects of the war on American economic, social, political, and cultural life.

Major Concepts

Ch 20-2 The Homefront

680-683 Suspension of Civil Liberties

Ch 22-1 Transition to Peacetime

Ch 22-2 Suburbanization

Terms and People

496 Selective Services Act

660 WACS

660 War Production Board

677 Rosie the Riveter

681 Japanese Internment Sites

681 War bonds

681 Korematsu v United States 1944

682 Rationing

751 Baby boomers

751 G.I. Bill

753 Taft-Hartley Act

754 Fair Deal

757 Levittown

756-761 Northern Migration

Middle class

762 AFL-CIO

10.04: Changes in the direction of foreign policy related to the beginnings of the Cold War.

Major Concepts

U. S. Military Intervention

716 The Cold War

718 Containment

850 The Domino Theory

People and Terms

701 Israel

716 Iron Curtain

718 Marshall Plan

720 Berlin Airlift

721 Truman Doctrine

722 Chinese Civil War

Chiang Kai-shek

Mao Zedong

729 Hydrogen Bomb

731 Nikita Khrushchev

733 Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

732 Eisenhower Doctrine

824 Fidel Castro

824 Bay of Pigs

824 Cuban Missile Crisis

826 Berlin Wall

826 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty

850 Geneva Accords

U-2 Incident

Ch 21-1 Korean War

38th parallel

limited war

Douglas MacArthur

Police Action

10.05:Assess the role of organizations established to maintain peace and examine their continuing effectiveness.

People and Terms

704 superpowers

705 Security Council

705 United Nations

720 Warsaw Pact

720 N.A.T.O.

727 S.E.A.T.O.

823 Alliance for Progress

Ch 21-3 / The Impact of the Space Race on education / 11.05
Connection of population shifts to technological changes / 11.05
Radio in 1950's / 11.05
Calculators / 11.05
Silicon Valley / 11.05
ICBMs / 11.05
729 / Hydrogen bombs / 11.05
768 / Color television / 11.05
730 / Microwave technology / 11.05
Nuclear power / 11.05
Commercial jet travel / 11.05
733 / 820 Sputnik / 11.05
733 / NASA / 11.05
733 / 763 National Defense Education Act / 11.05
734 / "Duck and cover" / 11.01
734 / Fallout Shelters / 11.01
Ch 21-4 / 737 / House on Un-American Activities Committee / 11.01
738 / Hollywood Blacklist / 11.01
739 / Alger Hiss / 11.01
739 / Julius and Ethel Rosenberg / 11.01
742 / McCarthyism / 11.01
Ch 22-1 / Effects of Cold War On America's Home life / 11.01
Spread of Suburbia / 11.01
The Military Industrial Complex / 11.01
Ch 22-2 / New Left / 11.01
758 / The Intestate Highway Act / 11.01
761 / Computers / 11.05
Ch 22-4 / 772 / The Feminine Mystique / 11.03
773 / Urban renewal programs / 11.06
784 / De jure Segregation / 11.02
Ch 23-1 / 784 / De facto Segregation / 11.02
785 / C.O.R.E. / 11.02
786 / Harry S. Truman / 11.02
787 / 792 Brown v Board of Education / 11.02
787 / Thurgood Marshall / 11.02
787 / Earl Warren / 11.02
788 / Little Rock Nine / 11.02
789 / Rosa Parks / 11.02
790 / Montgomery bus boycotts / 11.02
791 / Martin Luther King / 11.02
Ch 23-2 / 793 / George Wallace / 11.02
794 / S.N.C.C. / 11.02
796 / James Meredith / 11.02
798 / March on Washington / 11.02
800 / 834 Civil Rights Act of 1964 / 11.02
Ch 23-3 / 806 / 24th amendment / 11.02
806 / Voting Rights Act of 1965 / 11.02
808 / Malcolm X / 11.02
809 / Black Panthers / 11.02
809 / Black Power Movement / 11.02
Turning points / 11.02
Dwight D. Eisenhower / 11.02
John F. Kennedy / 11.02
Lyndon Johnson / 11.02
809 / Stokley Carmichael / 11.02
Ch 24-1 / 823 / Peace Corps / 11.06
Ch 24-2 / 828 / 877 Effects of Nixon's visits to China and Moscow / 11.01
828 / "New Frontier / 11.06
829 / Space Race/programs / 11.05
829 / John Glenn / 11.05
831 / Neil Armstrong / 11.05
3 / Law &Order / 11.06
Changing relationship of the federal government / 11.06
Voter Apathy / 11.06
HUD / 11.06
Ch 24-3 / 834 / VISTA / 11.06
836 / Head Start / 11.06
837 / "Great Society / 11.06
837 / National Endowment for the Arts / 11.06
838 / Medicare / 11.06
Ch 25-1 / 849 / Ho Chi Minh / 11.04
850 / Domino Theory and geopolitics / 11.01
U. S. Involvement in Vietnam: / 11.04
- Eisenhower / 11.04
- Kennedy / 11.04
- Johnson / 11.04
U. S. Involvement in Vietnam: / 11.04
26th Amendment / 11.04
851 / Vietcong / 11.04
852 / Gulf of Tonkin Resolution / 11.04
Ch 25-2 / 853 / Operation Rolling Thunder / 11.04
854 / Robert McNamara / 11.04
854 / Agent Orange / 11.04
854 / Napalm / 11.04
854 / General William Westmoreland / 11.04
Ch 25-3 / 860 / Selective Service System / 11.01
863 / Tet Offensive / 11.04
863 / 863 Tet Offensive / 11.06
864 / 1968 Election / 11.06
866 / 866 Robert Kennedy / 11.06
866 / 866 Martin Luther King, Jr. / 11.06
Ch 25-4 / 870 / KentState / 11.04
871 / My Lai Incident / 11.04
871 / Pentagon Papers / 11.04
871 / New York Times v U.S. 1971 / 11.06
872 / Fall of Saigon / 11.04
872 / Paris Peace Accords / 11.04
873 / Cambodia/Laos / 11.04
873 / Khmer Rouge / 11.04
875 / War Powers Act 1973 / 11.04
Ch 25-5 / 878 / Détente / 11.01
878 / S.A.L.T. I / 11.01
Ch 26-1 / White collar / 11.03
Blue collar / 11.03
886 / Woodstock / 11.03
887 / British Invasion-Beatles / 11.03
888 / Haight-Ashbury / 11.03
Ch 26-2 / 890 / Women's Liberation/Feminism / 11.03
891 / National Organization for Women / 11.03
891 / Equal Rights Amendment / 11.03
891 / Betty Friedan / 11.03
892 / Gloria Steinem / 11.03
892 / Phyllis Schafly / 11.03
894 / Pink collar / 11.03
894 / Roe v. Wade / 11.03
Ch 26-3 / 897 / Cesar Chavez / 11.03
899 / American Indian Movement / 11.03
Ch 26-4 / 904 / Clean Air Act / 11.03
904 / Clean Water Act / 11.03
904 / Environmental Protection Agency / 11.03
Ch 27-1 / 917 / Affirmative Action / 11.02
917 / 917 Watergate Scandal / 11.06
917 / 917 Bob Woodward/Carl Bernstein / 11.06
918 / 918 John Dean / 11.06
920 / 920 United States v Nixon 1974 / 11.06
Ch 27-3 / 931 / Carter's Human Rights Foreign policy /collapse of detente / 11.01
932 / S.A.L.T II / 11.01
937 / 937 Sam Ervin/Senate Watergate Committee / 11.06