- Government
- Principles of the Constitution
- Federalism – nation and state government
- Limited government – government must obey the law
- Checks and balances – one branch has the power to stop or “check” another
- Separation of Power – 3 separate branches each with their own role
- Popular Sovereignty – People rule
- Individual rights – rights of the people (Bill of Rights)
- Republicanism – representative government
- Constitution/Bill of Rights
- 1st – 5 Freedoms RAPPS
- 2nd – right to bear arms
- 3rd – quartering troops
- 4th – search and seizure
- 5th – rights of the accused
- 6th – speedy trial and right to counsel
- 7th – jury of peers (civil cases)
- 8th – cruel and unusual punishment
- 10th – Federalism (rights of the states)
- Branches of Government
- Executive
- President
- Enforces Laws
- Signs bills into law
- Legislative
- Congress
- House of Representatives – number based upon population
- Senate – equal vote for each state (2/state)
- Creates bills that will become laws
- Responsible for money
- Judicial
- Supreme Court
- Interprets the Constitution
- Constitutional Convention
- Held in Philadelphia – 1787
- George Washington President of the Convention
- Virginia Plan – Proposed by James Madison
- Three branches of government
- Executive
- Legislative
- Judicial
- Two houses in Legislative based upon state population
- Gave advantage to larger states
- New Jersey Plan
- Much like Articles of Confederation
- Single house and equal votes for each state
- Favored smaller states
- Great Compromise
- Three branches of government
- Executive
- Legislative
- House of Representatives – number based upon population
- Senate – equal vote for each state (2/state)
- Judicial
- Three-fifths Compromise
- Determined how slaves would be counted for representation and taxation
- Articles of Confederation
- Government of the United States through the Revolutionary War until adoption of the Constitution
- One branch of government
- Legislative
- Each state had equal vote
- States held all the power– Taxation
- Created a weak central government
- Created two positive laws
- Land Ordnance – surveyed the new land between the ApplachianMtns and Mississippi River creating townships
- Northwest Ordnance – created a process where new land could become territories and then states
- Important Documents
- Magna Carta – 1215
- Limited Government
- Jury of peers
- English Parliament – 1258
- Representative Government
- Virginia House of Burgesses - 1619
- First Representative Government in America
- Mayflower Compact – 1620
- Established the idea of Popular Sovereignty
- Fundamental Orders of Connecticut – 1639
- First constitution in America
- Created the idea of individual and equal voting rights
- English Bill of Rights – 1689
- Idea of individual Rights
- Albany Plan of the Union – 1763
- First plan to unite the colonies
- Declaration of Independence (1776)
- Written by Thomas Jefferson
- Declares the colonies independent
- Unalienable rights
- Regions and geography
- North/New England Colonies – economy based upon trade, fishing, whaling. Poor soil, cool cold climate subsistence farming
- Middle Colonies – economy based upon trade, fishing, and farming. Good soil, moderate climate
- Southern Colonies – economy based upon commercial farming (cash crops/plantations using slaves). Very good soil, warm climate.
- Appalachian Mountains – first natural boundary of the colonies
- Mississippi River – second natural boundary of the colonies and first western boundary of the United States.
- Louisiana Purchase – land gained from France from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains (except Texas)
- Oregon Territory – land originally claimed by Britain, Spain, US, and Russia that makes up what is now the states of Oregon and Washington
- Mexican Cession – land gained from the Mexican-American War that included California
- Gadsden Purchase – land in what is now lower Arizona and New Mexico that was purchased from Mexico and completes Manifest Destiny
- Important Court Cases
- Marbury v. Madison (1803) – Judicial Review
- McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) – Balance of power between federal and state government (federalism)
- Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) – Interstate Commerce controlled by federal government
- Worcester v. Georgia (1832) – supported Indian removal
- Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) – definition of citizenship. Declared the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional
- Important Acts/Laws/Treaties
- Road to Revolution - taxes or acts to pay for the French and Indian War
- Proclamation of 1763 – prevented settlement west of the Appalachians
- Sugar Act (1764) – tax on sugar
- Quartering Act (1765) – quartered British soldiers in colonial homes
- Stamp Act (1765) –required a tax and stamp on all legal and commercial documents.
- Townshend Acts (1767) – Suspended New York Assembly and placed a tax on various goods. Repealed after the Boston Massacre (1770)
- Tea Act (1773) – tax on tea and limited sales to the British East India Co.
- Intolerable Acts (1774) – Response to Boston Tea Party (1773). Closed Boston Port, reinstated the Quartering Act, reinstated numerous other taxes and gave colonial land to Canada.
- Treaty of Paris (1783) – Ended the Revolutionary War
- US is independent
- Created US boundaries
- Fishing rights off Canada coast
- New Republic thru Sectionalism
- Land Ordnance (1785) – surveyed the new land between the AppalachianMtns and Mississippi River creating townships
- Northwest Ordnance (1787) – created a process where new land could become territories and then states
- Judiciary Act of (1789) – Created the court system
- Jay’s Treaty (1796) – Ended British raids on US ships
- Pinckney’s Treaty (1795) – Opened the Spanish port of New Orleans to the US
- Alien and Sedition Acts (1789) – targeted aliens and speaking out against the government.
- Judiciary Act of 1801 – midnight judges (last minute appointments by Adams)
- Adams-Onis Treaty (1819) – US got Florida from Spain and Spain released claim to the Oregon Territory
- Missouri Compromise (1820) – balanced free and slave state representation
- Monroe Doctrine ((1823) – US closes foreign colonization of the Americas by European countries.
- Indian Removal Act (1830) –authorized the government to move Indians to land west of the Mississippi River
- Compromise of 1850 – California entered the US as a free state, Congress could not legislate slavery in the remaining Mexican Cession.
- Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo (1848) –Ended the Mexican-American war and gave all the land from the Rocky Mountains to California to the US.
- Fugitive Slave Act (1850) – required all states to return runaway slaves
- Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) – allowed voters to determine pro or anti-slavery in the new territories
- Major Eras
- Colonial Era – from the exploration of America thru the French and Indian War
- Revolutionary Era – following the French and Indian War, to the Road to Revolution, and thru the Revolutionary War and Declaration of Independence
- Early Republic – From the Declaration of Independence through Washington and Adams Presidency
- Jeffersonian Era – From President Jefferson thru President Monroe
- Jacksonian Era – Presidency of Andrew Jackson (Indian Removal/Trail of Tears)
- Westward Expansion – Manifest Destiny from the Louisiana Purchase through the Mexican Cession and Gadsden Purchase
- Industrial Revolution – Early 1800’s
- Sectionalism – 1820s thru 1850s (the nation growing apart and leading to the Civil War)
- Terms
- Triangular Trade – trade route between the Americas-Europe-Africa
- Mercantilism – system where the home country (England) gets rich by exploiting its colonies (America)
- Salutary Neglect – policy of limited interference by Britain with the colonies
- Great Awakening – period of spiritual revival throughout the country
- Enlightenment – period emphasizing science and logic
- Sons of Liberty- secret society opposing British policies
- Committees of Correspondence – organization formed to keep colonists informed
- 2nd Continental Congress - declared independence from Britain
- Shay’s Rebellion – uprising that prompted the Constitutional Convention
- Federalist papers – series of essays supporting ratification of the Constitution
- Anti-Federalist – people who opposed ratification of the Constitution
- Neutrality – policy of not joining or allying with other countries
- XYZ Affair –attempt by French agents to get American bribes
- Tariff – tax on imported goods
- Judicial review – Supreme Court authority to interpret the Constitution
- Louis and Clark Expedition – exploration of the Louisiana Purchase and Oregon Territory by Meriwether Louis and William Clark
- War Hawk – westerners who called for war against Britain in the early 1800’s
- War of 1812 – war fought with Britain. No clear winner; however, it led to US
- 2nd Great Awakening – another period of spiritual revival in the US. People began to look at problems in society like slavery, women’s rights, and alcoholism
- Suffrage – voting rights
- Abolition – movement to free slaves
- Temperance – movement to make alcohol illegal
- Industrial Revolution – period where factories and machines replace hand tools and cottage industries
- Gold Rush – Period where gold was found in California leading to a major increase in population
- 49er – people who went to California during the Gold Rush
- Sectionalism – loyalty to a region or section of the country
- Jacksonian Democracy – idea of power spread to the common man
- Trail of Tears – Indian movement west of the Mississippi
- Doctrine of nullification – ability of the state to ignore federal law
- Secession – a state withdrawing from the Union
- Oregon Trail – settler’s trail from Independence, MO to Oregon
- Manifest Destiny – idea the United States should own all the land between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
- Important People
- Abigail Adams – wife of John Adams
- John Adams – Second President, First President to serve from Washington, D.C.
- Wentworth Cheswell – served in the Revolutionary War and 1st African-American to serve in public office
- Samuel Adams – leader of the Sons of Liberty
- Mercy Otis Warren – political writer during the Revolutionary War
- James Armistead – spy for George Washington and Marquis de Lafayette during the Revolution
- Benjamin Franklin – Enlightenment thinker, inventor, Founding Father of the US
- Crispus Attucks – African/American killed in the Boston Massacre
- Haym Salomon – Jewish American who financially supported the Colonial Army during the Revolution
- Patrick Henry – Anti-Federalist politician (“Give me Liberty or Give me death”)
- Thomas Jefferson – wrote the Declaration of Independence, 3rd President
- Marquis de Lafayette – French officer and noble who supported and served during the American Revolution
- Thomas Paine – wrote “Common Sense” which called for American Independence
- George Washington – Commander of the Continental Army, President of the Constitutional Convention, 1st President of the US, warned against Political Parties and foreign alliances.
- Henry Clay – “The Great Compromiser”. Help create the Missouri Compromise and Compromise of 1850 in an effort to resolve the slavery issue in the US and prevent a Civil War
- John C. Calhoun –politician and Vice President under Jackson who supported the Doctrine of Nullification
- Alexander Hamilton – leader of the Federalists and Federalist Party. First Secretary of the Treasury. Proposed the first Bank of the United States
- John Marshall – one of the longest serving Supreme Court Justices. Chief Justice during Marbury v. Madison
- Sacagawea – guide and interpreter for Louis and Clark
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