HISTORY 10

READING ASSIGNMENTS AND IMPORTANT TERMS

CHAPTERSECTIONS AND TOPICSTERMS*

Chapter 1Section 1 – Native American Societies Hopewell Culture

Anasazi

Cahokia

Natchez People

Burial Mounds

Matrilineal

Section 2 – Europe Encounters Africa and thePeasants

The Americas, 1450-1550Yeomen

Primogeniture

Pagans

Heresies

Civic Humanism

Prince Henry,Portugal

Bonded Labor, Types

Trade Slaves

Reconquista

Hernan Cortes

Encomiendas

Columbian Exchange

Section 3 – The Protestant Reformation andMartin Luther

The rise of EnglandHenry VIII

King Philip’s Wars

Mercantilism

The Price Revolution

English Gentry

Enclosures Act

The Little Ice Age

An Indenture

Chapter 2Section 1 – The Rival Imperial Models ofSt. Augustine

Spain, France, and HollandFranciscan Missions

Pope’s Rebellion

New France

Iroquois & Hurons

The “Beaver Wars”

“Black Robes”

Henry Hudson

* Terms noted in lectures not included in this list.

CHAPTERSECTIONS AND TOPICSTERMS*

Chapter 2Section 2 – The English Arrive: The ChesapeakeSir Humphrey Gilbert

ExperienceSir Walter Raleigh

Jamestown

Chief Powhatan

The “Great Charter”

King James First’s

Privy Council

Toleration Act, 1649

Chattel Slavery

The Navigation Acts

Bacon’s Rebellion

Freeholders

Section 3 – Puritan New EnglandPilgrims

Mayflower Compact

John Winthrop

New England

Proprietors

Section 4 – The Eastern Indians’ New WorldPraying Towns

Metacom’s Rebellion

Chapter 3Section 1 – The Politics of Empire, 1660-1713Restoration Colonies

Proprietorships

William Penn’s

Frame of Government

English Mercantilism

& Colonialism

1651 Navigation Act

1673 Revenue Act

Lords of Trade

1688 Glorious

Revolution

John Locke’s Two

Treatises on

Government

Section 2 – The Imperial Slave EconomyThe Middle Passage

The Stono Rebellion

“Virginia Luxuries”

Bills of Exchange

Section 3 – The New Politics of Empire“Salutary Neglect”

1713-17501733 Molasses Act

Land Banks

Chapter 4Section 1 – Freehold Society in New EnglandReading Only

No Terms

Section 2 – The Mid-Atlantic Towards a NewReading Only

Society, 1720-1765No Terms

Section 3 – The Enlightenment and the GreatDeism

Awakening, 1720-1765Pietism

Jonathan Edwards

George Whitefield

The Baptists

Chapter 5Section 1 – Imperial Reform, 1763-17651762 Revenue Act

George Grenville

Excise Levies

1764 Sugar Act

Vice Admiralty

Courts

1765 Stamp Act

Virtual

Representation

1765 Quartering

Act

Section 2 – Dynamics of RebellionPatrick Henry

1765 Stamp Act

Congress

Stamp Act Resolves

English Common

For Colonial

Resistance

1766 Declaratory Act

1767 Townshend Acts

1767 Revenue Act

1767 Restraining Act

Homespuns

Non-Importation

Crispus Attucks

Section 3 – The Road to Independence,Committee of

1771-1776 Correspondence

1773 Tea Act

Boston Tea Party

1774 Coercive/

Intolerable Acts

The 1st Continental

Congress

Chapter 5Section 3 ContinuedCommittees of Safety

And Inspection

Minutemen

2nd Continental

Congress

1775 Prohibitory Act

Thomas Paine

“Common Sense”

Thomas Jefferson as

An author of the

Declaration of

Independence

Chapter 6Section 1 – The Trials of War, 1776-1778General William

Howe

Trenton, 1776 “camp followers”

Horatio Gates

Saratoga, 1777

Valley Forge, 1777

Baron von Steuben

Section 2 – The Path to Victory, 1778-1783Treaty of Alliance,

February, 1778

British Southern

Strategy

Marquis de Lafayette

Benedict Arnold

Yorktown, 1781

Treaty of Paris, 1783

Section 3 – Creating Republican Institutions,Popular Sovereignty

1776-1787John Adams’ Thoughts on Government, 1776

Articles of

Confederation, 1777

Old Northwest

Ordinance, 1784

Land Ordinance, 1785

Ordinance of 1787

Daniel Shay

SEE NEXT PAGE

Chapter 6 Section 4-The Constitution of 1787James Madison’s

Virginia Plan

The New Jersey Plan

The “Great

Compromise”

3/5 Compromise

Necessary # of states

For ratification

Federalists

Federalists Papers

Federalist Paper #10

Chapter 7Section 1-The Political Crisis of the 1790’s1789 Judiciary Act

Hamilton’s Report on

Public Credit

The Redemption &

Assumption Plans

Article I, Section 8,

Loose versus Strict

Interpretation of the

Constitution

Hamilton’s Report on

Manufacturing, 1791

Democratic –

Republicans

1794 Whiskey

Rebellion

Jay’s Treaty, 1793

The First American

Party System

The XYZ Affair

Naturalization,

Alien & Sedition

Acts, 1798

1798 Kentucky –

Virginia Resolves

Revolution of 1800

SEE NEXT PAGE

Chapter 7Section 2-The Westward Movement

And the Jeffersonian RevolutionTreaty of Ft.Stanwix,

1784

Treaty of Greenville,

1795

Whitney’s Cotton Gin

The (2nd) 1801

Judiciary Act

Marbury v. Madison,

1803

1795 Pinkney Treaty

1803 Louisiana

Purchase

Meriwether Lewis &

William Clark

Section 3- The War of 1812 and the Transformation of Politics

Impressment

1807 Embargo Act

Tecumseh & Tenskwatawa

Prophetstown

William Henry Harrison

The Battle of Tippecanoe, 1811

The Battle of Horseshoe Bend, 1814

The Hartford Convention, 1814

The Treaty of Ghent, 1814/1815

Henry Clay

National Republicans

Bonus Bill

John Marshall

Judicial Review

Marbury v. Madison

McCulloch v. Maryland

Chapter 10Section 1 – The Rise of Popular Politics

Franchise

Suffrage

Martin Van Buren & Jackson

Patronage and the Spoils System

Henry Clay’s American System

The 12th Amendment

The “Corrupt Bargain”

The Tariff of Abominations, 1828

“Old Hickory”

Jackson’s interpretation of a “judicious” tariff

Features and Outcomes of the 1828 Election

Section 2 – The Jacksonian Presidency, 1829-1837

South Carolina’s position on tariffs

South Carolina’s Ordinance of Nullification

South Carolina’s Exposition and Protest

Jackson’s view on the Exposition and Protest

The 5 Civilized Tribes

Sequoyah

The 1830 Indian Removal Act

The Bad Axe Massacre, 1832

Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 1831

Worcester v. Georgia, 1832

1835 Treaty of New Echota

The “Trail of Tears”, 1838

Laissez-faire economics

Section 3 – Class, Culture, & The 2nd American party System

The Whigs, 1834

The Order of Freemasonry

Martin Van Buren, 1836

Working Men’s Parties, 1830’s

Closed Shop Agreements

Commonwealth v. Hunt, 1842

Independent Treasury Act, 1840

Ethnocultural Politics

Chapter 11Section 1 – Individualism

Romanticism

Walden, Life in the Woods

Brook Farm

Section 2 – Rural Communalism and Urban Popular Culture

Joseph Smith

The “Mormon War”

The Nativist Movement

Section 3 – Abolitionism

Abolitionists

David Walker

Nat Turner’s Revolt, 1831

William Lloyd Garrison & The Liberator

The Grimkes

The Underground Railroad

Section 4 – The Women’s Rights Movement

“Republican Motherhood”

Dorothea Dix

Horace Mann

“Sojourner Truth”

Seneca Falls, 1848

Susan B. Anthony

Chapter 13Section 1 – Manifest Destiny: South & North

The Adams-Onis Treaty, 1819

The “peace” and “war” parties

The Battles of the Alama and San Jacinto, 1836

Van Buren’s refusal to annex Texas, 1836

“Manifest Destiny”

“Oregon Fever”

“Californios”

1843 Oregon Conventions

James K. Polk (“Young Hickory”), 1844

Section 2 – War Expansion, and Slavery, 1846-1850

The Nueces versus Rio Grande Rivers & Texas

John Slidell

Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana

The “Bear Flag” Revolt

Conscience Whigs

(David) Wilmot’s Proviso, 1846

Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, 1848

The free Soil Movement & The Buffalo Convention

Frederick Douglass

Squatter Sovereignty

Zachary Taylor (“Old Rough & Ready”)