I. Colonial America: 1603-1754

MAJOR THEMES:

  • Native American diversity – Migration from Asia & Population patterns
  • Spain’s Empire, French Canada, English settlement in New England, Southern, & Mid-Atlantic Colonies
  • Religious diversity in the American colonies
  • The origins of indentured servitude and slavery in the Chesapeake
  • Resistance to colonial authority: Bacon’s Rebellion, the Glorious Revolution, Pueblo’s Revolt
  • Population growth and immigration. Transatlantic Trade and the growth of seaports
  • The 18th Century backcountry. Growth of plantation economies and slave societies
  • Impact of the Enlightenment, the First Great Awakening, and Puritanism
  • Colonial governments and imperial policy in British North America

TERMS TO KNOW:

1

Spain, France, Dutch

  • Treaty of Tordesillas (1494)
  • Columbian Exchange - Horse
  • Encomienda, Mission, & Caste Systems
  • Pueblo Revolt – Pope (1680)
  • coureurs de bois – French & Indians
  • New Netherlands - New Amsterdam
  • Patroonships - Peter Stuyvesant

Jamestown (Chesapeake)& Southern Colonies:

  • Roanoke (1585)
  • Jamestown (1607)
  • Joint-stock companies
  • Virginia Company
  • John Smith
  • John Rolfe
  • tobacco – cash crops
  • indentured servants
  • Headright System
  • House of Burgesses (1619)
  • William Berkeley
  • Bacon’s Rebellion (1676)
  • George Calvert (Lord Baltimore)
  • Proprietorship - Maryland (1634)
  • Act of Toleration (1649)
  • James Oglethorpe / Georgia (1733)

New England

  • Plymouth Colony - Pilgrims
  • Puritans & Separatists
  • “the elect” & predestination
  • Role of women in Puritan N.E.
  • Mayflower Compact (1620)
  • William Bradford
  • Massachusetts Bay Colony (1630)
  • John Winthrop
  • “A Model of Christian Charity”
  • “City upon a hill”
  • The Great Migration
  • Halfway Covenant (1662)
  • Roger Williams
  • Anne Hutchinson
  • antinomianism
  • Salem Witch Trials (1692)
  • Pequot War (1637)
  • Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
  • King Philip’s War (1675-1676)
  • Metacom & Wampanoags

Middle Colonies & Other:

  • Pennsylvania – Quakers“The Society of Friends” –
  • “The Holy Experiment” - William Penn
  • Charter of Liberties (1701)
  • Mercantilism
  • Navigation Acts (1650-1673)
  • Triangle Trade – Middle Passage
  • First Great Awakening (1730s-1740s)
  • Jonathan Edwards – “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” (1741)
  • George Whitefield
  • “New Lights” & “Old Lights”
  • Dominion of New England (1685-1688 James II)
  • Sir Edmund Andros
  • Glorious Revolution – William & Mary (1688)
  • Jacob Leisler & John Coode
  • Ben Franklin Poor Richard’s Almanac
  • John Peter Zenger Trial (1735) press

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II. REVOLUTIUONARY AMERICA (1754-1787)

MAJOR THEMES:

  • Causes and effects of the French and Indian War
  • The Imperial Crisis and resistance to Britain – road to Revolution
  • The War for Independence – and its impact on American society
  • State constitution and the Articles of Confederation

TERMS TO KNOW

1

  • French & Indian War (1754-1763)
  • Albany Plan of Union
  • “Join or Die”
  • Treaty of Paris of 1763
  • salutary neglect
  • Pontiac’s Rebellion (1763)
  • Proclamation of 1763
  • Paxton Boys
  • Sugar Act (1764)
  • virtual vs. direct representation
  • “No taxation without representation”
  • Quartering Act (1765)
  • Stamp Act (1765)
  • Stamp Act Congress – James Otis
  • internal & external taxes
  • Patrick Henry - Virginia Resolves
  • Sons of Liberty – Samuel Adams
  • Daughters of Liberty “Spinning Bees”
  • Writs of assistance
  • Declaratory Act (1766)
  • Townshend Acts (1767)
  • Boston Massacre (1770)
  • The Gaspee Incident (1772)
  • Regulator Movement (1760s) NC/SC
  • Committees of Correspondence
  • Tea Act – British East India Co.
  • Boston Tea Party (1773)
  • Coercive (Intolerable) Acts (1774)
  • Quebec Act (1774)
  • Suffolk Resolves
  • First Continental Congress (1774)
  • John Adams
  • Lexington & Concord (1775)
  • Bunker Hill
  • Second Continental Congress (1775)
  • George Washington – Continental Army
  • Olive Branch Petition
  • Common Sense – Thomas Paine
  • Declaration of Independence ‘76
  • Battle of Saratoga
  • French alliance in 1778
  • Patriots vs. Loyalists (Tories)
  • Role of women during revolution
  • Benedict Arnold
  • Yorktown (1781)
  • Articles of Confederation (1781-1787)
  • Treaty of Paris of 1783
  • Land Ordinance of 1785
  • Northwest Ordinance of 1787
  • Shays’ Rebellion (1786-1787

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III. The Constitution & New Republic

MAJOR THEMES

  • The federal Constitution – convention, compromises & ratification
  • Washington, Hamilton and the shaping of the national government
  • Emergence of political parties: Federalists and (Democratic) Republicans

TERMS TO KNOW:

1

  • Society of Cincinnati (1783)
  • Annapolis Convention (1785)
  • Abigail Adams “Remember the ladies”
  • Constitutional (Philadelphia) Convention (1787)
  • Madison & Hamilton
  • Virginia Plan
  • New Jersey Plan
  • “The Great Compromise”(Connecticut Plan)
  • 3/5s Compromise
  • FederalistsAntifederalists
  • checks and balances
  • separation of powers
  • electoral college system
  • “implied powers”
  • Necessary and proper “elastic clause”
  • Loose & Strict constructionists
  • ratification
  • The Federalist (Papers) (esp. #10)
  • Bill of Rights
  • Judiciary Act of 1789
  • Alexander Hamilton’s economic plan
  • Report of Public Credit (1790)
  • Report on Manufacturers (1791)
  • Assumption Plan - compromise
  • Bank of the United States
  • French Revolution (1789)
  • Neutrality Proclamation (1793)
  • Edmund “Citizen” Genet
  • Impressment
  • Haitian Rebellion - impact
  • Jay’s Treaty (1794)
  • Pinkney’s Treaty (1795)
  • Battle of Fallen Timbers (1794)
  • Treaty of Greenville (1795)
  • Whiskey Rebellion (1794)
  • Washington’s “Farewell Address” (1796)
  • John Adams
  • 1st 2 Party System Democratic –Republicans & Federalists
  • XYZ Affair - Quasi War
  • Alien & Sedition Acts (1797-1798)
  • Virginia & Kentucky Resolutions (1799)
  • Thomas Jefferson & Aaron Burr
  • “Revolution” of 1800
  • “Midnight Appointments”

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IV. Jeffersonian Age

1800-1824 (Jefferson, Madison, Monroe)

MAJOR THEMES:

  • Was the “Revolution of 1800” ushering in Jefferson and the Democratic-Republicans truly revolutionary?
  • Marshall and his Supreme Court decisions:judicial federalism.
  • Republican Motherhood and education for women
  • Beginning of the 2nd Great Awakening
  • Significance of Jefferson’s Presidency – key changes and controversies
  • Growth of slavery and free black communities
  • Expansion into the trans-Appalachian West; American Indian resistance
  • The War of 1812 causes and consequences.
  • The transportation revolution and creation of a national market economy/ “Market Revolution”
  • Beginnings of industrialization and changes in social and class structures
  • Planters, yeoman farmers, and slaves in the cotton south

TERMS TO KNOW:

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•Jeffersonian Republicanism & ideals

  • deism
  • Republican agrarianism
  • Republican motherhood
  • Louisiana Purchase (1803)

•Lewis & Clark – Corps of Discovery (1804-1806)

• “Midnight Appointments”

•John Marshall – Marshall Court (1801-1835)

•Marbury v. Madison (1803) - Judicial review

•Samuel Chase impeachment

• Aaron Burr

• Barbary Pirates (1801-1805)

•Chesapeake-Leopard Affair (1807)

•Embargo Act (1807)

• Non-Intercourse Act (1809)

• Macon’s Bill #2 (1810)

• War Hawks

• John C. Calhoun (SC)

• Henry Clay (KY)

•Causes of War of 1812 - Impressment

•War of 1812 “Mr. Madison’s War”

• Tecumseh – Indian Confederacy

•Hartford Convention (1814)

• Treaty of Ghent (1814)

•Battle of New Orleans (1815)

• Andrew Jackson

• “Era of Good Feelings”

• “Virginia Dynasty”

•Cultural Nationalism – increased literacy rates “Penny Press”

• Noah Webster

• Washington Irving, James Fennimore Cooper

• Nathanial Hawthorne, Herman Melville

• Economic Nationalism

• Clay’s American System

• Daniel Webster

•Fletcher v. Peck (1810)

•McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)

•Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819)

•Cohens v. Virginia (1821)

•Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)

• Erie Canal (1825)

• Robert Fulton – Cornelius Vanderbilt

•“Market Revolution”/Market Economy

• Eli Whitney

• Samuel Slater

• Lowell System

• Tariff of 1816

• Panic of 1819

• Tallmadge Amendment (1819)

• Missouri Compromise of 1820

• Rush-Bagot Agreement (1817)

• Adams-Onis Treaty (1819)

• Monroe Doctrine (1823)

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V. The Age of Jackson: 1824-1844

(John Q. Adams, Jackson, Van Buren)

MAJOR THEMES:

  • Emergence of the second party system: Democratic Party & Whigs
  • Immigration and the rise of nativism
  • Federal authority and its opponents: judicial federalism, the Bank War, tariff controversy, and states’ rights debates.
  • Jacksonian democracy and its successes and limitations
  • Forced removal of American Indians to the trans-Mississippi West

TERMS TO KNOW:

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  • Sectionalism v. Nationalism
  • “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824
  • Jacksonian Democracy
  • “Age of the Common Man”
  • Election of 1828
  • “King Andrew” “King Mob”
  • Anti-Masons
  • spoils system
  • Peggy Eaton Affair
  • Five civilized tribes
  • Indian Removal Act (1830)
  • Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831)
  • Worcester v. Georgia (1832)
  • “Trail of Tears”
  • Tariff of Abominations (1828)
  • South Carolina’s Exposition & Protest (1828)
  • Webster-Hayne Debate (1830)
  • Nullification Crisis 1832
  • Force Bill(1833)
  • Clay’s Compromise Tariff 1833
  • Second Bank of the U. S.
  • Nicholas Biddle
  • The Bank War – Jackson Veto
  • “pet banks”
  • Roger Taney
  • New Two-Party System
  • Democratic Party vs. Whigs
  • “Gag Rule” 1836
  • Specie Circular
  • Martin Van Buren
  • Panic of 1837
  • Nativism
  • “Log Cabin” & “Hard Cider” Campaign (1840)
  • “Tippecanoe & Tyler Too!”
  • William Henry Harrison
  • John Tyler “His Accidency”
  • “The Man Without A Party”

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VI. Antebellum Reform (1820-1860)

MAJOR THEMES:

  • The impact of the 2nd Great Awakening - Evangelical Protestant revivalism
  • Social reform movements
  • Ideals of domesticity – roles of women
  • Transcendentalism and utopian communities
  • American Renaissance: literary and artistic expressions

TERMS TO KNOW:

1

•Second Great Awakening (1820s)

•Utopia & “perfectionism”

  • Charles Finney (1823)
  • “Burned-over District” NY

• Baptists & Methodists

•Mormons (CJC)LDS (1830)

• Joseph Smith (book in 1829- killed in 1844)

• Brigham Young (exodus 1846)

• Romanticism

•Transcendentalism

• Ralph Waldo Emerson

• Henry David Thoreau

• Brook Farm- George Ripley (1841-1849)

• Shakers – Mother Ann Lee

• New Harmony – Robert Owen

  • Utopian socialism

• Oneida Community 1848

• Joseph Henry Noyes

•Hudson River School: Thomas Cole, Frederick Church

•American Temperance Society (1826)

- Lyman Beecher

•Dorothea Dix – Asylums (Penitentiary)

• Horace Mann(late 1830s)

* common schools & normal schools

• McGuffey Reader

• Grimke Sisters

•Godey’s Lady’s Book

• “Cult of Domesticity” “Separate Spheres”

• Lucretia Mott

• Elizabeth Cady Stanton

• Seneca Falls Convention (1848)

• “Declaration of Sentiments”

• Susan B. Anthony

• Amelia Bloomer (1850s)

  • Resistance, sabotage, “sambo”
  • Famous Slave Revolts:
  • Stono Rebellion (SC -1739)
  • Gabriel Prosser (VA - 1800)
  • Denmark Vesey (SC - 1822)
  • Nat Turner (VA - 1831)
  • “peculiar institution”“King Cotton”

• American Colonization Society (1817)

• Liberia (1822)

•William Lloyd Garrison- The Liberator

•American Antislavery Society (1833)

•Frederick Douglass – North Star (1847)

• Harriet Tubman

• Sojourner Truth

• David Walker

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VII. 1830s-1850: Manifest Destiny - Westward Expansion – Sectional Tensions

MAJOR THEMES:

  • Western migration and cultural interactions
  • Territorial acquisitions
  • Early U.S. imperialism: the Mexican War

TERMS TO KNOW:

•Manifest Destiny

• John O’Sullivan – Democratic Review

* Mexican Independence (1821)

• Stephen Austin

• Sam Houston

• General Santa Anna (1834)

• Texas Revolt 1836

• Alamo

• Battle of San Jacinto

• Lone Star Republic (1836-1845)

*Caroline Affair (1837)

* Aroostook War 1838-1839

• Webster-Ashburton Treaty (1842)

• Samuel F. B. Morse

• James K. Polk 1844 Election

•54o 40’ Or Fight!– Oregon Question

• Slidell Mission (1845)

* Nueces or Rio Grande?

“American blood has been spilled on American soil!”

•Mexican War (1846-1848)

• Wilmot Proviso (1846)

• General Zachary Taylor

* General Winfield Scott

* San Patricio’s Battalion

• John C. Fremont – Bear Flag Revolt

•Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo (1848)

•Gold Rush (1848-49)

VIII. Road to Civil War, Civil War & Reconstruction

MAJOR THEMES:

  • Pro- and antislavery arguments and conflicts
  • Compromise of 1850 and popular sovereignty
  • The Kansas-Nebraska Act and the emergence of the Republican Party
  • Abraham Lincoln, the election of 1860, and secession
  • Civil War: two societies at war: mobilization, resources, and internal dissent.
  • Military strategies and foreign diplomacy
  • Emancipation and the role of African Americans in the war
  • Social, political, and economic effects of war in the North, South, and West
  • Presidential and Radical Reconstruction
  • Southern State governments: aspirations, achievements, failures
  • Role of African Americans in politics, education, and the economy
  • Compromise of 1877 – the end of Reconstruction
  • Impact of Reconstruction

TERMS TO KNOW:

1

•Compromise of 1850

• Stephen A. Douglas

• Fugitive Slave Law

• Underground Railroad

• Harriet Beecher Stowe – Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852)

* “Slave Power” Conspiracy

* Ostend Manifesto (1854)

• Hinton R. Helper – Impending Crisis of the South (1857)

•George Fitzhugh – Cannibals All! (1857)

•Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854)

• Know-Nothings (American Party)

• Free Soilers(1848)

* Republican Party

• Commodore Matthew Perry (1853)

• Clayton-Bulwer Treaty (1850)

• Gadsden Purchase (1853)

•Popular sovereignty

• “Bleeding Kansas”

•John Brown - Pottowatomie (1856)

•Sumner-Brooks Conflict (1856)

• James Buchanan

• Lecompton Constitution (1857)

•Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857)

• Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1858)

• “House divided” & Freeport Doctrine

• Harper’s Ferry, VA (1859)

•Crittenden Compromise (1860)

* 1860 Election - secession

• Jefferson Davis & C.S.A

• Fort Sumter (1861)

• Border States

• Anaconda Plan

* Battle of Bull Run (1861)

• George McClellan

• Antietam (1862)

• Emancipation Proclamation (1862)

* Confiscation Acts “contraband”

• MA 54th Regiment – black soldier experience

* NY Draft Riots

•MerrimacMonitor

• Gettysburg, Vicksburg & Grant

• Sherman’s “March to the Sea” (’64-’65)

• Appomattox Court House (1865)

•Ex parte Merryman (Habeus corpus)

•Ex Parte Milligan(1866)

• Copperheads – Clement Vallendingham

• Greenbacks

• Morrill Tariff Act (1861)

• 10% Plan

• Wade-Davis Bill (1864) – 50% Plan

• Presidential Reconstruction – Andrew Johnson

• Freedman’s Bureau

• Black Codes

•Radical (Congressional) Reconstruction

• Civil Rights Act of 1866

• 13th, 14th (’68) & 15th (’69) Amendments

• Tenure of Office Act (1867)

• Scalawags Carpetbaggers

• Crop lien system –Sharecropping, tenant farmers

• “Waving the Bloody Shirt”

• Credit Mobilier Scandal

• Panic of 1873 (“Crime of ‘73”)

• Redeemers

•KKK & Force Acts of 1870 & ‘71

• Compromise of 1877

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IX. Closing the Frontier & the New South

MAJOR THEMES:

  • Expansion and development of western railroads – transcontinental railroad
  • Competitors for the West: miners, ranchers, homesteaders (farmers), and American Indians
  • Government policy toward American Indians
  • Gender, race, and ethnicity in the far West
  • Environmental impacts of western settlement
  • New South: Reconfiguration of southern agriculture: sharecropping and crop lien system
  • New South: Expansion of manufacturing and industrialization
  • The politics of segregation: Jim Crow and disenfranchisement

TERMS TO KNOW:

1

•Homestead Act (1862)

• Morrill Land Grant Act (1862)

•Pacific Railway Act (1862) – Transcontinental Railroad

* Open Range Cattle Drives – cowboys, Chisholm Trail

• “Great American Desert”

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• Sand Creek Massacre (1864)

• Frederick Jackson Turner “FrontierThesis” (1893)

• Reservation Policy

• Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851)

• George A. Custer - Little Big Horn (1876)

• Sitting Bull & Crazy Horse

• Chief Joseph

• Helen Hunt Jackson (1881)

• Dawes (Severalty) Act (1887)- assimilation until 1930s

• Carlisle Boarding School

• Ghost Dance

• Wounded Knee Massacre (1890)

• Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)

• Jim Crow Laws

  • “Exodusters” (1879-1880)
  • “New South”
  • Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)

• Civil Rights Cases of 1883

•Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)

•Literacy Tests & Grandfather clause

• Ida B. Wells - anti-lynching campaign

•Booker T. Washington

• Tuskegee Institute & Atlanta Compromise

•W. E. B. DuBois

•Granger Laws - Oliver Hudson Kelley

•Munn v. Illinois (1876)

•“Wabash Case” (1886)

• Interstate Commerce Act (1886) ICC

• Farmer’s Alliance

• People’s Party (Populists)

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X. Big Business, Big Labor, & Big Cities

(Garfield, Arthur, Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison, Cleveland, McKinley)

MAJOR THEMES:

  • Corporate consolidation of industry
  • Effects of technological development on the worker and workplace
  • Labor and unions
  • National Politics and influence of corporate power
  • Migration and immigration: the changing face of the nation
  • Proponents and opponents of the new order: Social Darwinism and the Social Gospel movement
  • Urbanization and the lure of the city
  • City problems and political machines
  • Intellectual and cultural movements and popular entertainment
  • Agrarian discontent and political issues of the late 19th Century

TERMS TO KNOW:

1

•Gilded Age

• Trusts: vertical & horizontal integration

• Lasseiz Faire

• Robber Barons

• Cornelius Vanderbilt

• Jay Gould

• Andrew Carnegie “Gospel of Wealth”

•John D. Rockefeller - Standard Oil

•Social Darwinism – William G. Sumner

• Russell Conwell “Acres of Diamonds”

• Thomas A. Edison – Menlo Park

•Horatio Alger – “Self-made man”

• Yellow-dog contract

• Open shop

• Closed shop

• Railroad Strike of 1877

•Knights of Labor – Terrence Powderly

• Haymarket Riot (1886)

•AFL- Samuel Gompers (1886)

•Homestead Strike (1892)

• Pullman Strike (1894)

•Eugene Debs– Socialist Party

•Boss Tweed - Tammany Hall – Political Machines

• Thomas Nast

• Henry George Progress & Poverty (1879)

• Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives

• Edward Bellamy- Looking Backward

• Ellis Island 1892

• “Melting Pot” theory

• Emma Lazarus

• Settlement House Movement

• Jane Addams – Hull House

• Social Gospel

• Women’s Christian Temperance Union

• Anti-Saloon League

• Carry Nation

• Louis Sullivan

• Chicago School of Architecture

• Ashcan School of Art

• Ragtime: Scott Joplin

• Stalwarts & Halfbreeds

• Pendleton Act (1885)

• Bland-Allison Act (1878)

•McKinley Tariff (1890)

• Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890)

• Sherman Antitrust Act (1890)

•U. S. v. E. C. Knight (1890)

• Omaha Platform (1892)

•Panic of 1893

• Coxey’s Army (1894)

• William Jennings Bryan

• Mark Hanna & William McKinley

• “Cross of Gold”

• Silver bugs Gold bugs

• Free Silver & Bi-Metalism

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XI. America Becomes A Global Power: 1890-1914

MAJOR THEMES:

American Imperialism: political and economic expansion

Roosevelt, Taft & Wilson foreign policy

TERMS TO KNOW

1

  • Treaty of Kanagawa
  • “Seward’s Folly” (1867) $7.2 mil.
  • Imperialism
  • Missionaries
  • Josiah Strong: Our Country (1885)
  • Social Darwinism
  • Alfred Thayer Mahan: Influence of Sea Power Upon History (1890)
  • Pan-American Conference (1889)
  • Queen Liliuokalani
  • Alfred Dole
  • Hawaii Annexation (1900)
  • Spanish-American War (1898)
  • jingoism
  • Cuba Libre! (1895)
  • Valeriano Weyler
  • Yellow Journalism – Hearst & Pulitzer
  • De Lome Letter (1898)
  • Remember the Maine! (1898)
  • Teller Amendment
  • Rough Riders
  • Commodore Dewey
  • Emilio Aguinaldo
  • Treaty of Paris of 1898
  • “White Man’s Burden”
  • Anti-Imperialist League
  • Insular Cases (1901-1903)
  • Platt Amendment (1901)
  • John Hay –Open Door Policy (1899)
  • Boxer Rebellion (1900)
  • Big Stick Diplomacy
  • Hay-Pauncefote Treaty (1901)
  • Panama Canal (1904-1914)
  • Roosevelt Corollary
  • Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905)
  • Treaty of Portsmouth (1905)
  • “Gentlemen’s Agreement” (1908)
  • Great White Fleet
  • Root-Takihara Agreement (1908)
  • Dollar Diplomacy
  • Henry Cabot Lodge, Sr. Lodge Corollary (1912)
  • Moral Diplomacy
  • Jones Act (1916)
  • Tampico Incident
  • Pancho Villa
  • John J. Pershing

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XII. THE PROGRESSIVE ERA 1901-1918

MAJOR THEMES

Origins of Progressive reform: municipal, state, and national. Who were the Progressives?

Goals of Progressivism: successes, failures.

Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson as Progressive Presidents

Women’s Roles: family, workplace, education, politics, and reform – suffrage & temperance

Black America: urban migration and civil rights initiatives

TERMS TO KNOW:

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  • Frederick Taylor “Taylorism”
  • Scientific Management
  • Muckrakers
  • McClure’s Magazine (1893)
  • Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives
  • Lincoln SteffensThe Shame of the Cities
  • Frank Norris The Octopus
  • Ida TarbellHistory of Standard Oil Co
  • “Australian” Secret Ballot
  • Direct Primaries
  • 17th Amendment
  • Initiative, recall, referendum
  • City Manager
  • Robert LaFollette
  • T.R.’s Square Deal (1901-1909)
  • Antracite Coal Strike (1902)
  • Trust-busting- Good Trusts and Bad Trusts
  • Northern Securities Company
  • J.P. Morgan
  • Triangle Shirtwaist Fire (1911)
  • Elkins Act (1903) & Hepburn Act (1906)
  • The Jungle – Upton Sinclair
  • Meat Inspection Act (1906)
  • Pure Food and Drug Act (1906)
  • Gifford Pinchot – John Muir
  • Conservation and preservation
  • William Howard Taft
  • Payne-Aldrich Tariff (1909)
  • Pinchot-Ballinger Controversy (1910)
  • Socialist Party – Debs
  • Helen Keller
  • I.W.W. Wobblies
  • Big Bill Haywood
  • Election of 1912
  • Progressive “Bull Moose” Party
  • New Nationalism
  • New Freedom
  • Underwood Tariff (1913)
  • 16th Amendment
  • Federal Reserve Act (1914)
  • Clayton Anti-Trust Act
  • Federal Trade Commission Act
  • Louis Brandeis
  • Keating-Owen Act (Child Labor Act)
  • Hammer v. Dagenhart (1918)
  • Women’s Suffrage Movement
  • Carrie Chapman Catt - NAWSA (1900)
  • Alice Paul – NWP (1916)
  • 19th Amendment (1920)

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