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”)