Wyższa Szkoła Pedagogiczna
TWP w Warszawie
History of the United States of America
Course Syllabus
Instructor: dr Jakub Basista
E-mail:
Web page:
Time: winter semester 2008/2009
Venue:As indicated in timetable
Prerequisites:None
Office hours:Every Saturday when lecture takes place after classes.
Course Description:
This is a mandatory course for students of English Philology. The aim of the course is to give an outline of the history of the United States from the establishment of first English colonies to the present day. An attempt will be undertaken to present the political history of the United States against the social, cultural and economic background.
Course Format:
The course will be primarily a lecture course. Students’ discussion and questions are strongly encouraged. The course will consist of 10 two-hour meetings (i.e. 20 teaching hours in total). Students will be required to participate in class and take a final written exam.
Requirements:
Each student will be required to participate in classes and take the final exam.
Final Exam
Final exam will be written. Students will be required to answer in writing a number of questions in the form of an essay. Four essays selected out of 15 topics will make 25% of the final grade each (total 100%). Duration of the exam – 1 ½ hour.
Reading:
Any single or multiple-volume history of the Unites States of America is acceptable and advised for this course. Each US college publisher usually has American history textbook for its students and it may be used.
The following textbooks are worth taking into consideration and are in the WSP TWP library for your use:
- Boydston Jeanne, et al., Making a Nation, Pearson, Prentice Hall, 2004 (includes CD).
- Brinkley Alan, American History. A Survey, McGraw-Hill, two volumes, many editions (includes CD to use with Internet).
- Norton Mary Beth, et al., A People and a Nation, Houghton Miffin, many editions.
The following books, published in Polish, are also worth consulting as reference books:
- Jones Maldwyn A., The Limits of Liberty. American History 1607-1992, 1995 (Polish edition Historia USA, Marabut 2002).
- Tindall George B., Shi David E., America. A Narrative History, WW. Norton & Company 1996 (Polish edition Historia Stanów Zjednoczonych, Zysk i S-ka Poznań 2002).
- Bartnicki Andrzej, Critchlow DonaldT., Historia Stanów Zjednoczonych Ameryki, 5 volumes, PWN, Warsaw 1995.
Course Outline:
Topic 1
Organization of the course. Requirements. Pre-colonial America. Earliest discoveries and first settlements.
Topic 2
British Colonial America – society, economy, politics. First colonial wars. Territorial and economic expansion of the English colonies.
Topic 3
American Revolution. Breaking away from Great Britain. Declaration of Independence and American Constitution.
Topic 4
Further territorial expansion (towards Texas and Mexico). The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854. Social and economic problems of American federation. America’s social policy. Ethnic conflicts. Universal white male suffrage; rights of Indians, Blacks and women.
Topic 5
The War of Secession.
Topic 6
Reconstruction after the war. Rights of black people after the war.
Topic 7
USA’s domestic and international policy at the turn of 19th and 20th centuries.
World War I. Peace settlement in Paris and America.
Topic 8
The inter-war years in America. The Great Depression.
Topic 9
United States in World War II. Teheran, Yalta, Potsdam, the Truman Doctrine and the Cold War.
Topic 10
America’s Cold War engagement in the world and war in Vietnam. American domestic problems. American Politics in Contemporary World.
History of the USA
Topic 1
Organization of the course. Requirements. Pre-colonial America. Earliest discoveries and first settlements.
- Atlantic Ocean in the Early Modern Period
- Did the Chinese reach America in 1421?
- Columbus discovers America - 1492
- Treaty of Tordesillas 1494
- Spanish and Portuguese Empires in America
- English sea policy in the 16th century
1497 – John Cabot (from Genoa) travels to America on Henry VIII’s orders
Forming of the first English companies: Moscow (1555), Levant (1581) and Barberian (1585).
1585 – Sir Walter Raleigh establishes a colony at Roanoke Island (100 colonists) which perishes
1587 – second colony established, which perishes without explanation (attempt to relieve it came in 1590)
Non-English colonies in North America
1565 – Pedro Menéndez de Avilés founds colony in Florida
1598 – Juan de Oñate founds colony in New Mexico
1608 – New France founded
1614 – New Netherlands founded by the Dutch West India Company
1638 – founding of Swedish colony on the Delaware river – taken over by the Dutch in 1655
SOUTH COLONIES
1606 – founding of Virginia and Plymouth Companies
1607 – first English colony established in Virginia(called after queen Elizabeth – includes ChesapeakeIsland and Jamestown)
1633 – founding of Maryland(after Henriette Marie) by Cecilius, lord Baltimore (in 1635 local population gets legislative rights; 1649 – Act of Toleration)
1663 – charter founding Carolina issued by Charles II to 8 Englishmen
1664 – first settlements in North Carolina
1670 – founding of Charles Town (Charleston) in South Carolina
1732 – founding ofGeorgia(in honor of king George I)
MIDDLE COLONIES
1673/1682 – founding of New Jersey between HoudsonRiver and Delaware
1682 – founding of Pennsylvania by William Penn
1682 – William Penn establishes a colony in Delaware
NEW ENGLAND (NORTH COLONIES)
1620 – founding of Plymouth by the „Pilgrim Fathers” who came on board of „Mayflower” – whole families, English Separatists from Holland – 1691 – incorporated into Massachusetts).
1629 – founding of Massachusetts by Puritans (John Winthrop)
1636 – founding of Rhode Island by Roger Williams – the only colony with full religious toleration
1633 –founding of Connecticut by settlers from Plymouth
Merging of New England colonies
1638 – founding of New Haven by Massachusetts migrants
1638 – founding of New Hampshire by Massachusetts migrants
Topic 2
British Colonial America – society, economy, politics. First colonial wars. Territorial and economic expansion of the English colonies.
1636HarvardCollege founded in Massachusetts
1651First Navigation Act passed in England to regulate colonial trade
1663Carolina chartered
Second Navigation Act
1664New Netherlands conquered; New York founded
1665 proclamation of Duke’s Laws for New York (James, duke of York)
1670s Marquette, Jolliet, La Salle explore the Great Lakes and Mississippi
1675-76King Philip’s war devastates New England
1676 Bacon’s rebellion in Virginia
1681Pennsylvania chartered
1683 James agrees to elected Legislature in New York
1686-89 Dominion of New England established superseding all charters of colonies from Maine to New Jersey
1689-97 king William’s war fought on northern border of New England
1692 witchcraft trials in Salem
1693College of William and Mary founded in Virginia
1696 Another Navigation Act and Board of Trade and Plantations established
1701 Iroquis Indians adopt peaceful neutral policy towards French and English colonists
1701YaleCollege founded in New Haven
1702-3 Queen Anne’s war between France and England
1711-13 Tuscarora war in North Carolina
1715 Yamasee war destroys South Carolina
1718 New Orleans founded
1729 Carolina splits into two colonies
1720-40 beginning of „natural” growth of black population in Virginia – hope for big plantations
1732 Georgia founded
1739 Stono Rebellion in South Carolina
1739-48 King George’s war
1741 New York conspiracy
1746College of New Jersey founded at Princeton
1754King’s College founded in New York (later ColumbiaUniversity)
1760-75 peak of 18th century European and African migration to English colonies
1756 Seven Years’ War begins
1759 British army takes Quebec
1764 Sugar Act lays new duties; customs changes; Currency Law outlaws colonies’ paper money
1765 Stamp Act – all printed matters in colonies require a stamp
1766 Stamp Act repealed; Declaration Act (insists that Parliament can tax colonies)
1767 Townshend Acts; duties on trade within the colonial empire
1768-70 resistance to Townshed Act in colonies
1770 all but Tea tax repealed
King William’s War=War of the League of Augsburg= 1689-97
Queen Anne’s War=War of Spanish Succession=1702-13
King George’s War=War of Austrian Succession=1739-48
French and Indian =Seven Years’ War=1756-63
EXPORTS OF BRITISH COLONIES ABOUT 1770
New England:Ocean fisheries 59%
Wood products 23%
Other18%
Middle Colonies:Cereals74%
Wood products 7%
Iron/Ironware 7%
Other2%
Chesapeake:Tobacco69%
Cereals23%
Other8%
South Colonies:Cereals58%
Indigo22%
Wood products 11%
Other 9%
1700 – Population
WhiteBlack
Chesapeake87500 19500
New England93000
Total English colonies25100028000
Topic 3
American Revolution. Breaking away from Great Britain. Declaration of Independence and American Constitution.
1754Albany Congress meets – attempt to forge colonial unity
1760George III becomes king
1763Proclamation of 1763 tries to close land west of Appalachians to English settlers
1764Sugar Act lays new duties on molasses; customs changes – tightened regulations; Currency Law outlaws colonies’ paper money
1765Stamp Act – all printed matters in colonies require a stamp; Sons of Liberty formed
1766Stamp Act repealed; Declaratory Act (insists that Parliament can tax colonies)
1767Townshend Acts; duties on trade within the colonial empire; new officials and judges are send to America
1768-70Resistance to Townshend Act in colonies – boycott, public demonstrations
1770Lord North becomes p.m.; all but Tea tax repealed; Boston Massacre – five people are killed.
1773Tea Act issued to help East India Company; Boston Tea Party
1774Coercive Acts punish Boston and whole Massachusetts.
First Colonial Congress meets in Philadelphia adopting the Declaration of Rights and Grievances.
Continental Association implements economic boycott of Britain.
1774-5Provincial conventions replace colonial governments
1774-6
AMERICAN REVOLUTION
1775 First shots fired; Battles of Lexington and Concord.
Second Continental Congress begins
Dunmore’s proclamation offering freedom to slaves of those who join the British forces
1776Second Continental Congress directs states to draft constitutions
British evacuate Boston
Declaration of Independence
British take New York City
1777 Articles of Confederation sent to states for ratification
British take Philadelphia
Burgoyne surrenders at Saratoga.
1778French begin helping United States
British evacuate Philadelphia
1780British take Charleston
1781Articles of Confederation ratified
Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown
1782Beginning of peace negotiations
1783Peace Treaty signed in Paris guaranteeing independence of the United States
1788Constitution ratified
Topic 4
Further territorial expansion (towards Texas and Mexico). The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854. Social and economic problems of American federation. America’s social policy. Ethnic conflicts. Universal white male suffrage; rights of Indians, Blacks and women.
1776The Second Continental Congress directs states to draft constitutions
1777Vermont becomes the first state to abolish slavery
1781 Articles of Confederation ratified
1786Annapolis Convention meets to discuss reform of the government
1786-87Shay’s rebellion in western Massachusetts (will the republic survive?)
1787Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia
Organization of territory north of the Ohio river and east of the Mississippi river
1788Constitution ratified; The Federalist published by Hamilton, Jay and Adams
1789George Washington inaugurated as the first president
1791First ten amendments to the Constitution ratified (Bill of Rights)
1794Wayne defeats Miami Confederacy at Fallen Timbers
1795Treaty of Greenville opens Ohio to white settlers
Jay Treaty with England
Pickley’s Treaty with Spain
1796First contested presidential election: Adams elected president, Jefferson vice-president
1798XYZ affair
Sedition Act
Virginia and Kentucky resolutions
1800Franco-American Convention
Gabriel’s rebellion
1800/01Spain sells Louisiana to Napoleon’s France
1801Thomas Jefferson becomes the first Democratic-Republican president
1801-1805 United States defeat Barbary pirates in the Tripoli War, but decide to pay ransom (till 1815)
1803United States purchase Louisiana from France for $15 million (doubles the size of the nation)
1803-12British impressments of American sailors (some 6-8 thousand Americans taken by British Navy from American ships)
1804-06Lewis and Clark explore Louisiana (May through November when they reach Pacific Ocean)
1807 Chesapeake affair – clash between American frigate Chesapeake and British frigate Leopard
Jefferson closes American waters to British ships; increase of military spending
Embargo Act – stops exports from America (80% drop); hits New England to the extent that talks about secession begin.
1808Madison promoted by Jefferson (refused third term) wins
1808-13Prophet and Tecumseh – Indians from the Shawnees organize tribal resistance to settlers
Expansion towards Texas and Mexico. The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854.
1803Ohio joins the union (free state)
1812Louisiana joins the union (slave state)
1816Indiana joins the union (free state)
1817Rush-Bagot Treaty concerning naval presence in the Great Lakes
Mississippi joins the union (slave state)
1818Convention delimiting US-Canadian border with the British
Illinois joins the union (free state)
1819Alabama joins the union (slave state)
Transcontinental (Adams-Onis) Treaty with Spain – US give up claims to territories south of 42nd parallel, i.e. southern border of Oregon; delimits Louisiana border; US take over Americans’ claims towards Spain; Florida is merged with the US
1820Missouri Compromise pressed by House Speaker Henry Clay creates formula for admitting slave and free states
Maine becomes a state (free state carved out of Massachusetts)
1821Missouri becomes a state (slave state) – most citizens are from Kentucky and Tennessee
1822United Statesrecognize the independence of Latin American states as one of the first
1823Monroe Doctrine closes Western Hemisphere to European intervention
1830Railroad era begins (by 1850 there are 9000 miles of tracks)
Indian Removal Act passed (finances and means to resettle Indian population west of the Mississippi river)
Over 20,000 Americans have settled in the north-eastern province of Mexico
America locates troops on Mexican border
1832American settlers (Anglos) demand a right to organize a separate republic within Mexico
1834first missionaries arrive in Oregon
1836Arkansas joins the union as 25th state
1836Texas declares itself a sovereign republic
1836Santa Anna starts a war wiping out 187 Texas patriots at Alamo
1836Texas patriots catch up with Mexicans and defeat them; Santa Anna declares Texas’s independence; Texas draws a constitution and asks to be accepted into United States
1837Michigan joins the union
Sarah and Angelina Grimke tour North opposing slavery
1838“Aroostook” war
Anti-Slavery Petition campaign at height
1839-43Hard times strike; 1842 strikes declared lawful
1841“Oregon fever” attracts settlers to the Northwest
1845Texas accepted to the Union
Florida accepted into union
1846War with Mexico begins
Oregon Treaty negotiated with Great Britain (US get all OregonWashington, Idaho and parts of Wyoming and Montana
Iowa becomes a state
1848 Treaty of Guadelupe – Hidalgo gives US new territory in the South West (California, New Mexico, i.e. Nevada, Utah, Arizona and parts of Colorado and Wyoming)
Wisconsin becomes a state
1849Gold discovered in California (California applies for admission as a free state)
1850 Compromise of 1850 passed (California free, Texas boundary set, New Mexico and Utahorganized based on peoples’ decisions)
Fugitive Slave Act
1854Republican Party formed
Kansas-Nebraska Bill
Return of fugitive Burns from Boston to slavery in Virginia
1856Bleeding Kansas
Buchanan elected president
1857Dred Scott case in Supreme Court
Growth of the number of settlers
18201850
Mississippi73,000607,000
Arkansas14,000210,000
18351845
Texas35,000(still Mexican)125,000 (Anglo population)
Topic 5
The War of Secession (American Civil War).
1858Lincoln-Douglas debates
1860 Democratic Party splits into two
Southern Democrats demand “Slave Code for the Territories”
Lincoln elected president (other candidates: Douglas, Breckinridge, Bell)
South Carolina secedes from the Union
1861Six more Deep South states secede (Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas)
Confederacy established at Montgomery, Alabama (Jefferson Davies pres.
Attack on FortSumter begins Civil War (War of the Secession)
Four states of Upper South join the Confederacy (Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas)
CIVIL WAR
1861Battle of Bull Run
McClellan organizes Union Army
Beginning of blockade by Union
US Congress passes first confiscation act
1862Union army captures FortHenry and FortDonelson
US Navy captures New Orleans
Battle of Shiloh
Confederacy enacts conscription
McClellan fails to take Richmond
Second confiscation act
Confederacy offensive in Maryland and Kentucky
Battle of Antietam
1863Emancipation Proclamation takes effect
Union enacts conscription
African American soldiers join Union Army
Battle of Chancellorsville (Confederate victory; death of Jackson)
Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg
Battle of Chattanooga; Sherman’s advance towards Georgia
1864Battles of Wilderness and Spotsylvania
Battle of Cold Harbor
Sherman captures Atlanta
Confederacy begins to collapse on the home front
Lincoln’s reelection
Sherman marches through Georgia towards the sea
1865Sherman marches through Carolinas
US Congress approves Thirteenth Amendment
Lee abandons Richmond and Peterburg
Lee surrenders at Appomattox Court House
Lincoln assassinated
WAR DEATH TOLL – 620,000
Amendment XIII
Section 1 Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Section 2 Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
Topic 6
Reconstruction after the war. Rights of black people after the war.
1863Lincoln’s Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
1864Wade-Davis Bill
1865General Sherman’s Special Field Order No. 15
Freedmen’s Bureau established
Lincoln’s second inauguration. Lincoln assassinated; Andrew Johnson becomes president
General Howard’s Circular 13
Johnson begins rapid and lenient reconstruction
Johnson orders the Freedmen’s Bureau to return confiscated land to former owners
Confederate leaders regain power; white southern governments pass restrictive black codes
Congress refuses to seat southern representatives
Joint Committee on Reconstruction established by Congress
Thirteenth Amendment ratified
1866Congress renews Freedmen’s Bureau; Johnson vetoes renewal bill
Congress passes Civil Rights Act; vetoed by Johnson Congress presses through overriding presidential veto
Congress approves Fourteenth Amendment (most southern states reject it)
Congress renews Freedmen’s Bureau over presidential veto
In congressional elections, Republicans win more than two-thirds majority
Renunciation of Johnson’s plan of reconstruction
1867Congress passes First and Second Reconstruction Acts
Tenure of Office Act
Secretary of State William Seward arranges purchase of Alaska
1868Johnson fires Secretary of War Stanton
House of Representatives impeaches Johnson; Senate acquits him
Most southern states gain readmission to the Union
Fourteenth Amendment ratified
Ulysses S. Grant elected president
1869Congress approves Fifteenth Amendment (ratified in 1870)
1870Congress passes first Enforcement Act
1871Congress passes Ku Klux Klan Act
1872Amnesty Act frees almost all remaining Confederates from restrictions on holding office. Grant re-elected