Unit 5 Study Guide
Ch. 13
1. Manifest Destiny
2. Joseph O’Sullivan
3. Spanish Texas and Stephen Austin
4. San Jacinto
5. Opposition to Annexation
6. Disputed Claims in the West
7. Conflicts between Settlers and Indians
8. Oregon trail
9. James K. Polk
10. Compromise Over Oregon
11. Texas Boundary in Dispute
12. American Interests in California
13. Failure of the Slidell Mission
14. Opposition to the War
15. Bear Flag Revolution
16. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
17. Wilmot Proviso
18. Competing Plans for the Expansion of Slavery
19. Free-Soil Party
20. Forty-niners
21. Indian Slavery
22. Sectional Conflict over Slavery in the Territories
23. Clay’s Proposed Solution
24. The New Leaders of the Senate
25. Temporary Compromise
26. Opposition to the Fugitive Slave Act
27. Ostend Manifesto
28. Transcontinental Railroad and Slavery
29. Gadsden Purchase
30. Kansas-Nebraska Act
31. Birth of the Republican Party
32. Bleeding Kansas
33. Pottawatomie Massacre
34. Preston Brooks and Charles Sumner
35. “Free Soil” Ideology
36. The Pro-Slavery Argument
37. Election of 1856
38. Dred Scott v. Sandford
39. Lecompton Constitution Rejected
40. Lincoln-Douglas Debates
41. Lincoln’s Position
42. John Brown’s Raid
43. Disunion
Ch. 14
1. Establishment of the Confederacy
2. Crittenden Compromise
3. Fort Sumter/ The War Begins
4. Union Advantages
5. Southern Advantages
6. Republican Economic Policy
7. National Bank Acts
8. Draft Riots
9. Wartime Repression
10. 1864 Election
11. Confiscation Acts
12. Emancipation Proclamation
13. Black Enlistment
14. Mistreatment of Black Soldiers
15. The War and Economic Development
16. U.S. Sanitary Commission
17. Traditional Gender Roles Enforced
18. Nursing and Medicine
19. Confederate Government and Davis’ Leadership
20. Southern Divisions
21. Funding Problems for the South
22. Raising the Confederate Army
23. Manpower Shortages
24. Centralization
25. Economic Woes
26. New Roles for Women
27. Lincoln’s Leadership
28. Robert E. Lee
29. The Union Blockade
30. Ironclads
31. King Cotton Diplomacy
32. Trent Affair
33. Guerilla War in the West
34. High Casualties
35. Repeating Weapons
36. Importance of the Railroad
37. The Telegraph
38. First Battle of Bull Run
39. Wilson’s Creek
40. New Orleans Captured
41. Shiloh
42. George McClellan
43. Seven Pines
44. Antietam
45. Battle of Chancellorsville
46. Vicksburg
47. Gettysburg
48. Battle Chattanooga
49. Grant’s Strategy and the Capture of Atlanta
50. “March to the Sea”
51. Appomattox Courthouse
52. Impact of North’s Victory/ Thirteenth Amendment
Ch. 15
1. The Devastated South
2. Myth of the “Lost Cause”
3. Freedom for Ex-slaves
4. The Freedman’s Bureau
5. Conservative and Radical Republicans
6. Lincoln’s 10% plan
7. Wade-Davis Bill
8. Death of Lincoln
9. Johnson and “Restoration”
10. The Black Codes/ Johnson’s Vetoes
11. Fourteenth Amendment
12. The Three Reconstruction Bills
13. Fifteenth Amendment
14. The Impeachment of Johnson
15. The Reconstruction Governments
16. Scalawags, Carpet Baggers, and Freedmen
17. Segregated Schools
18. Failure of Land Redistribution
19. Sharecropping
20. The Crop-Lien System
21. Changing Gender Roles
22. President U.S. Grant
23. Credit Mobilier
24. Panic of 1873
25. National Greenback Party
26. “Seward’s Folly”
27. Alabama Claims
28. Ku Klux Klan
29. Enforcement Acts
30. Social Darwinism
31. Hayes versus Tilden
32. Reconstruction: Where Historians Disagree
33. Compromise of 1877
34. Republican Failure in the South
35. Legacies of Reconstruction
36. Bourbon Rule
37. Henry Grady
38. Minstrel Shows
39. Convict-lease system
40. Booker T. Washington
41. The Atlanta Compromise
42. Plessey v. Ferguson
43. Restricting the Franchise: Literacy test, poll tax and grandfather clause
44. origins of Segregation: Where historians disagree
45. Lynchings