US History—Regular
Write in complete sentences!!
The Constitution
- What is the main purpose of Article I of the Constitution?
- What is the main job of Congress?
- What is the role of Congress and the President in making laws?
- Who may become President?
- How is the president elected?
- How long is the term of a federal judge?
- How does the Constitution define treason?
- If a state law conflicts with a federal law, which law is followed?
- Whose powers are the Bill of Rights intended to limit?
- What are the 13-15th Amendments referred to as? Describe each one.
- What did the 19th, 20th and 21st Amendments accomplish?
- Describe the 24th and 26th Amendments.
2.1 Government and Party Politics
- What were precedents George Washington set?
- What were two main economic problems facing the country in 1789?
- How did Hamilton’s Federalist views affect his role as Secretary of Treasury?
- Why did Washington support Hamilton’s response to the Whiskey Rebellion?
- What were the first American political parties? How do they differ?
- How did the Whiskey Rebellion influence the creation of these parties?
2.2: The Struggle Over Foreign Policy
- How did the British encourage conflict in the Northwest Territory?
- Why did the British want to limit US settlement in the area?
- How did the two political parties differ in their views of the French Revolution?
- Why was it important for the US to sign a treaty with Spain?
- How did US policy toward France change under Adam’s administration?
- What were the Alien and Sedition Acts?
2.3 The Age of Jefferson
- What changes did Jefferson make in the federal government?
- What economic developments helped Jefferson achieve some of his goals?
- Who was Marbury, and why was he suing Madison?
- Why did the Supreme Court rule against Marbury?
- Why did Marshall have such a lasting effect on the judicial system?
- Was Judge Marshall a strict or loose constructionist?
- Why did Americans want to expand US territory?
- Why did Jefferson want to buy Louisiana?
- How did the US benefit from war in Europe?
- What was the cause of the conflict with Britain, and what was Jefferson’s solution to it?
2.4 The War of 1812
- Why did the US declare war on Great Britain?
- Why was the American invasion of Canada a failure?
- What US forces performed well in the War of 1812?
- Why were the British shocked by this good performance?
- What as the significance of the British attack on Baltimore?
- How did Americans view the Battle of New Orleans?
- What was the end result of the Hartford Convention?
- How did the War of 1812 affect the Natives?
- Although the US did not win the War of 1812, how did it signal a new stage in the nation’s development?
3.1 Industry and Transportation
- Why did railroad construction end canal building?
- How did turnpikes, canals, and railroads affect the way that people in different states interacted?
- What was Eli Whitney’s main contribution to manufacturing?
- How might interchangeable parts affect artisans who made products by hand?
3.2 Sectional Differences
- What factors contributed to industrialization in the Northeast?
- Why did workers organize labor unions during the 1820s?
- How did the increase in immigration affect industrialization and workers’ rights?
- Why did the cotton boom spread slavery in the South?
- What were the economic consequences of the cotton boom?
3.3 Era of Nationalism
- What economic policies did Clay advocate in his American System program?
- Why did the Monroe Doctrine mean little in 1823?
- What were the terms of the Missouri Compromise?
- In what ways was the compromise a success and failure?
Pg. 113 Hudson RiverSchool
- How can a landscape painting depict an artist’s pride in his or her homeland?
- Why would landscape paintings in the 1800s have been an important method of portraying the US to people in other places?
3.4 Democracy and the Age of Jackson
- How did Adams win the election?
- Why did critics denounce Adams’s programs?
- Why did many states rewrite their constitutions to expand voting rights?
- Why was Jackson such an appealing candidate?
- In what ways did Jackson’s Democratic Party change the party structure?
- Why did Jackson appeal to many southern voters?
- What does the Worcester v. Georgia case reveal about white Americans’ attitudes toward Natives?
3.5 Constitutional Disputes and Crises
- Why would an act of nullification have weakened the Union?
- What were the main political views of the Whigs?
- What did Jackson do to oppose the bank?
- What was the result of Jackson’s banking policies?
- What was Jackson’s policy on federal land purchases, and how did it affect the economy?
- In what way did Van Buren suffer from Jackson’s politics?
4.1 A Religious Awakening
- What caused the Second Great Awakening?
- How did the Second Great Awakening affect reforms during this period?
- Why might southern slave owners oppose churches for enslaved African Americans?
- Why did many Americans discriminate against and persecute Mormons?
- Why was Catholicism thought to be un-American?
- Why were some people attracted to life in utopian communities?
- Why were the Transcendentalists considered reformers?
4.2 A Reforming Society
- Why did reformers think public school was important?
- Why was it important to have the government fund public schools?
- What do the efforts of Dorthea Dix suggest?
- How did prison reformers want to change the prison system?
4.3 The Antislavery Movement
- Why did the growing population of free African Americans concern slaveholders?
- Why did the American Colonization Society establish Liberia?
- How did the African Americans react to the establishment of Liberia?
- What was the main tactic that abolitionists used to persuade others that slavery was wrong?
- How did people in the South justify slavery?
- Why did northern workers fear the abolition of slavery?
- Why did northern factory owners oppose abolition?
4.4 The Women’s Movement
- Why did female abolitionists compare themselves to slaves?
- What was ironic about the fact that Mott and Stanton were excluded from some meetings at an abolitionist convention?
- What did the Seneca Falls Convention accomplish, and why was it significant?
- What was the main goal of Susan B. Anthony?
- How did lawmakers in NY help advance the cause of women’s rights in 1848?
5.1 Migrating to the West
- What innovations brought by the Spanish enabled Native Americans to hunt and wage war more effectively?
- Why was the California colony successful for the Spanish when Texas was not?
- What was Manifest Destiny, and how did it encourage people to settle in the West?
- How could trade with the US and American migrants threaten Mexico’s security?
- Why did Brigham Young lead the Mormons west to found New Zion?
5.2 Texas and the Mexican-American War
- Why did Mexico invite Americans to settle in Texas?
- What did the settlers have to promise in exchange for land?
- Why did the Mexican government refuse to honor Santa Anna’s agreement with the Texans?
- Why was annexation so controversial?
- Why did Polk compromise with the British?
- How does the reaction to Polk’s compromise foreshadow division in the nation?
- Why did Polk send US troops to Texas?
- Why did antiwar Whigs not oppose the war publicly?
- What was the outcome of the Mexican-American War?
- What factors contributed to the US victory?
5.3 Effects of Territorial Expansion
- Why was Polk disappointed with the outcome of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo?
- What made the Wilmot Proviso so divisive?
- What was early gold mining like?
- What were conditions like for miners?
- How did mining change over time?
- How did white miners exclude Chinese and Mexican people from the gold fields?
Pg 175: Should the US Annex Texas?
- Why did Polk think annexation would promote peace?
- Why did Clay think annexation would lead to war?
6.1 Slavery, States’ Rights, and Western Expansion
- What was the Wilmot Proviso?
- Why was the Wilmot Proviso denounced by the South and supported by the North?
- Why did the issue of slavery intensify after the Mexican War?
- What was the main goal of the Free Soil Party?
- How did the Free Soil Party influence the election of 1848?
- What did Calhoun threaten?
- Why would Henry Clay want to settle the differences in Congress peacefully?
6.2 A Rising Tide of Protest and Violence
- How did Uncle Tom’s Cabin raise tensions between the North and South?
- How did Douglas reintroduce slavery in the US?
- Why did opponents of slavery view the Kansas-Nebraska Act as a threat?
- How did the creation of two governments in the KansasTerritory lead to violence?
6.3 Political Realignment Deepens the Crisis
- What trend in American politics grew in the 1840’s?
- Why did northerners and southerners stop supporting the Whig Party?
- What as the driving force behind the creation of the Republican Party?
- Why did the Supreme Court deny Scott his freedom?
- Why did Douglas support popular sovereignty?
- In what way was Lincoln’s loss of the 1858 election considered a victory?
- Why did John Brown attack an arsenal?
- What did Frederick Douglass fear would result from Brown’s raid?
6.4 Lincoln, Session, and War
- What caused the Democratic Party to split?
- What was the goal of the Constitutional Union Party?
- Why did the Republican Party remain intact?
- How did the division of the Democratic Party influence the outcome of the election?
- How did the southern states justify secession?
- What did Lincoln promise the South in his inaugural address?
- Why was Lincoln’s decision to send supplies to FortSumter difficult to make?
7.1
- What made the South vulnerable to a naval blockade?
- What made the North better prepared to wage war than the South?
- Which states were border states?
- What was Lincoln’s strategy for keeping the border states in the Union?
- Why did the Battle of Bull Run, or Manassas, convince the Union that it would not win a quick victory in the war?
- What setbacks did the Union suffer in pursuing its Anaconda Plan?
- Why was the battle between the Monitor and the Virginia important?
7.4
- What made Vicksburg difficult to seize?
- How did Grant’s siege of Vicksburg achieve the goal of the Union’s Anaconda Plan?
- How did General Lee respond to these victories?
- Why did Lincoln ask Grant to take charge of the entire Union army?
- How did Grant prove Lincoln right?
- What were the North’s costs of Grant’s campaign for the Union?
- How did the Union victories in the South affect the election of 1864?
7.2
- How does the proclamation change the war?
- What groups were unhappy with Lincoln’s policy of downplaying slavery?
- Why did Lincoln wait until after a Union victory to go forward with the proclamation?
- How did some African Americans in the South manage to join the fighting?
7.3
- Why would there be a shortage of goods in the South?
- What did the rich and African Americans in the North have in common during the war?
- Why did the Confederate government have difficulty paying for the war?
- What problem in prison camps in the South might not have been as severe in the North? Why?
- How did women prepare for their jobs?
7.5The War’s End and Impact
- Why might Confederate leaders not find it feasible to end slavery?
- Why did Lincoln and Grant take more generous approach toward the South?
- What immediate effect of the war was felt by both northerners and southerners?
8.1 Rival Plans for Reconstruction
- Why did the federal government have difficulty in formulating its Reconstruction policies?
- How did the South’s share of the nation’s wealth change between 1860 and 1870?
- What was Lincoln’s 10% Plan?
- How did the Wade-Davis Bill differ from the Ten Percent Plan?
- When was Abraham Lincoln assassinated, and who succeeded him as President?
- What evidence is there that the federal occupation of the South failed to protect African Americans?
- How would the 14th Amendment penalize states that refused to allow citizens to vote?
8.2 Reconstruction in the South
- Why did black men quickly sign up to vote in southern states?
- How did southern literacy rates benefit carpetbaggers?
- How did Reconstruction affect women?
- How did the school system in the South represent the successes and failures of Reconstruction?
- Which of the three systems for sharing land describe offered the most independent arrangement for the farmer and landowner?
- When and where did white southerners organize the Ku Klux Klan?
- How did the federal government respond to the acts that the Klan committed?
8.3 The End of Reconstruction
- Why would South Carolinians elect an aristocratic plantation owner and former Confederate general as their governor?
- How might economic turmoil affect the social and political development of a nation?
- When did the federal government begin withdrawing troops from the South, and when did it dissolved the Freedmen’s Bureau?
- What was the Compromise of 1877?
- In what ways did Reconstruction affect African Americans in the South?
- What effect did the civil rights movement have on African American political participation?
9.1 Technology and Industrial Growth
- Why would consumers buy a product that entrepreneurs offered?
- How did the CW encourage the growth of industry?
- Why did industry continue to expand after the CW?
- Why would a patent encourage the work of inventors?
- How did the invention of the telephone affect the US economy?
- How did the invention of the Bessemer process affect transportation?
- How do rail lines reflect the physical geography of the US?
- How did industrialization change the population of US cities and rural areas?
9.2 The Rise of Big Business
- Why did some people argue that big business leaders were “robber barons”?
- Why might the philanthropy of rich businessmen affect people’s opinion of themselves?
- What assumption does Social Darwinism make about the poor, who were exploited by big business?
- How did federal regulations seek to control railroads?
- Why did these regulations have little effect on big business?
9.3 The Organized Labor Movement
- In what ways did factory owners exploit their workers?
- Why were factory workers often unhappy with their jobs?
- How did workers communicate with their employers about their complaints?
- How did the goals of the AFL differ from those of the Knights of Labor?
- Why did workers stage strikes and protests?
- Why might it have been difficult for labor unions of this period to win popular support?
10.1 The New Immigrants
- Why did the new wave of immigrants encounter more resistance than earlier immigrants?
- What difficulties did immigrants face at immigration stations such as Ellis Island and AngelIsland?
- How did Americanization programs help create America’s “melting pot” culture?
- Which group of people were excluded from the “melting pot” model?
- What is the relationship between nativism and the Chinese Exclusion Act?
10.2 Cities Expand and Change
- Where were most major American cities located in the late 1800s and early 1900s? What determined the locations of these cities?
- Why were more immigrants drawn to these urban areas than to rural areas?
- Why were farmers migrating to cities at this time?
- In what ways did urban life improve during late 1800s and early 1900s?
- How did new modes of transportation segregate people in and around cities by their level of income?
- Why was tenement living so difficult?
10.3 Social and Cultural Trends
- What became the measure of success for middle-class families?
- How did advances in consumer products and transportation affect middle-class family life?
- How were Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst responsible for spreading American mass culture?
- Why did amusement parks appeal to urban dwellers with limited money to spend?
- Why did moving pictures, vaudeville and exhibitions appeal to the public?
11.1 The New South
- What new industries arose in the South in the late 1800s?
- What was lacking in the South’s first round of railway development?
- Why did dependence on cotton cause serious problems for the South’s economy?
- For what did the Farmers’ Alliance lobby?
- How did the Supreme Court erode the rights of African Americans
11.2 Westward Expansion and the American Indians