Unit #1 Study Guide
Brinkley Chapters 1-3
Skim to p. 14 & Read p. 14 (Spanish America) – p. 97
Topic Outline #1-3
Key Ideas:
- Characteristics of European settlements (Spanish, French, and Dutch) and their relationship with the indigenous populations
- Specific locations of major non English settlements and motivations for settlement
- English settlements: Roanoke, Jamestown, and Plymouth/Massachusetts Bay (Who founded, when, and why?)
- How do the settlers and settlement differ by region (Northern, Middle, Southern)?
- Reasons for settlement and leaders in various other colonies
- Puritans: social and religious characteristics
- Labor in the colonies: Slavery and indentured servitude
- Colonial relationship with England: types of colonies, colonial governments, colonial reorganization, “benign neglect”, and mercantilism
- Colonial economy: regional characteristics, triangular trade, Navigation Acts
- Enlightenment and Great Awakening: relationship between two ideas and results/impacts
- Colonial unrest: Hutchinson/Williams, witch trials, Bacon
- Conflicts with Native Americans: Pequot War, King Philip’s War
Dates Worth Remebering:
- 1589 settlement of Roanoke (failed)
- 1607 Jamestown—first permanent British colony in United States
- 1620 Plymouth founded
- 1630 Massachusetts Bay founded (Winthrop’s group)
- 1730’s First Great Awakening begins in the colonies
- 1763 Proclamation of 1763 marks end of colonial era (Benign Neglect)
Unit #2 Study Guide
Brinkley Ch 4-6 (p. 168)
(I recommend you skim the sections on military history)
Topic Outline #4 & 5
Key Ideas
- How does the French and Indian (Seven Years) War divide the colonists from the British? Why is the war a step towards a revolution?
- Why does the Proclamation of 1763 hold significance as a turning point? How were things different after its passage?
- The Stamp Act holds great significance. Why?
- Why did the colonists resist the idea of direct internal taxation by the British?
- Major acts by British and the responses of the colonists. Learn the chronology here.
- First and Second Continental Congress: actions and significance
- Revolutionary War: Lexington and Concord, Bunker Hill, Saratoga, and Yorktown (only the basics)
- Impact on various groups (especially concept of Republican Motherhood)
- Assumptions of the republic (Read p. 149)
- Articles of Confederation: why were they created to be so weak?, specific weaknesses?, and successes?
- Shays Rebellion: why did it happen and what did it change in America?
- Constitutional compromises and ratification debate
- Why George Washington?
Dates Worth Remembering:
- 1763 End of Benign Neglect
- 1765 Stamp Act
- 1774 First Continental Congress
- 1775 Second Continental Congress
- 1781 Articles of Confederation ratified
- 1788 Constitution ratified
- 1789 American government begins under Constitution
Unit #3
Brinkley Ch. 6 (p.168 on)-Ch 8 (p. 228)
Topic Outline #5
Key Ideas:
- Ch 6
- Hamilton’s financial plan
- Origin of the Federalist and Republican parties and the differences in philosophy
- French revolution and the inability to maintain neutrality
- Foreign policy under Washington
- Washington’s Farewell Address: key ideas
- Federalist measures under Adams: Quasi War, Alien and Sedition Acts, & Midnight Appointments
- Revolution of 1800: Is this a revolution? What specific changes are implemented under Jefferson?
- Ch. 7
- Growth of American nationalism (figures)
- Second Great Awakening
- What does Jeffersonian Republicanism mean? What was Jefferson’s vision for America? (Read p. 181), How consistent are the Jeffersonians in carrying out this vision?
- Marbury v Madison: facts of the case & significance
- Louisana Purchase: why did we want it/need it?, the deal, problems for Jefferson, exploration
- The Embargo Act
- Indian conflicts
- War of 1812: reasons, results, death of the Federalists, battle of New Orleans
- Ch. 8
- Clay’s American system
- Era of Good Feelings: causes, end
- Missouri Compromise
- Monroe Doctrine
Dates Worth Remebering:
- 1789 French Revolution begins
- 1800 Jefferson elected
- 1801 Second Great Awakening begins
- 1803 Louisana Purchase
- 1807 Embargo Act
- 1812 War of 1812 begins (duh)
- 1814 Treaty of Ghent
- 1814 Hartford Convention
- 1815 Battle of New Orleans
- 1816 Second Bank chartered (expires 1836)
- 1823 Monroe Doctrine proclaimed
Unit #4
Brinkley Ch. 8 (p. 228 on)-Ch. 11
Topic Outline #6-8
Key Ideas:
- Ch. 8
- Election of 1824: specifics & changes in electoral system
- Ch. 9
- What is Jacksonian Democracy? Why is Jackson forever linked to the idea of the “common man” in the U.S.?
- Relationship between Jackson and Calhoun: doctrine of nullification, Peggy Eaton affair, Webster Hayne
- Nullification Crisis: origin, compromise, how is this reflective of growing sectionalism?
- Indian removal: include Marshall court cases (p. 226 “The Court and the Tribes”)
- Bank War
- Rise of opposition: Whig Ascendancy, Election of 1840
- Ch. 10
- Iron Triangle: Rising immigration, industrialization, and urbanization
- Rise of nativism
- Transportation revolution
- Market Revolution
- Lowell System
- Cult of Domesticity
- Ch. 11
- “King Cotton”
- Class conflict in the South
- Paradoxes of southern slavery
- Major slaves rebellions: Prosser and Turner
Dates Worth Remembering:
- 1824 Election of Quincy Adams
- 1825 Erie Canal finished
- 1828 Election of Jackson
- 1830 Indian Reomval Act
- 1832 Jackson vetoes recharter of bank
- 1833 Bank War
- 1836 Specie circular issued
- 1840 Harrison elected
- 1845 Potato famine begins in Ireland