APUSH Midterm Review Sheet!
APUSH Midterm Review Sheet!
APUSH Midterm Review Sheet!
Period 1: (1491-1607):
Columbian Exchange (pg 7-8):
a transfer of plants, animals, and germs from one side of the Atlantic to the
and syphilis
Europeans introduced Native Americans to sugarcane, livestock, iron, guns,
germs and diseases (which resulted in the death of millions of Native Americans)
Spanish Colonization (pg 8):
Spain sent explorers and conquistadors to the Americas
Enslaved the Indians under the Encomienda System and spread Catholicism
Champlain in 1608
Explored Mississippi and claimed Louisiana
After the defeat of the Spanish Armada in the late 1500s, England became
1587
Period 2: (1607-1754):
The colony almost failed because of swamp land, poor leadership, lazy
settlers
Indians helped, but then they started fighting the settlers
John Rolfe began cultivating tobacco, which became a profitable cash crop
indentured servants to America, the need for a stable labor force, (especially
after Bacons Rebellion), and the need for cheap labor to grow cash crops, such as
tobacco, rice, and indigo
Stono Rebellion (quizlet):
The most serious slave rebellion in the the colonial period which occurred in
The main form of rebellion was running away, though there was no where to
go
Mayflower Compact (pg 27):
Colony, that argued the colonists had a covenant with God and must set and
example for others to follow
Basic Ideas/Beliefs of the Puritans (pg 26):
Church of England (Anglican Church) was too similar to the Catholic Church
Predestination
Left England in search of religious freedom
Accepted Anne Hutchinson when she was banished from Massachusetts for
antinomianism (the idea that faith alone, not deeds, is necessary for salvation)
Congregationalists (pg 49):
The successors to the Puritans
First
built ships
All goods imported into the colonies had to pass through England
money
This allowed colonies to develop their own economic and political systems
congresses
Slavery in Colonial America (pg 37):
Colonies passed slave codes saying that slave status would be inherited &
Period 3: (1754-1800):
French And Indian War Results (pg 71):
Britain and the Colonists defeat the French and their Native American allies
The Era of Salutary Neglect comes to an end as Britain takes a more active
themselves by saying that the colonistss interests were being represented even
without colonists physically in Parliament
Stamp Act (pg 72):
Passed by Parliament in 1765 to raise revenue to pay for Bristish troops in
the colonies
First direct tax on the colonies
Colonists were outraged and organized the Stamp Act Congress to protest
Constitution
Northwest Ordinance of 1787 (pg 93):
Congress, (under the Articles of Confederation), set rules for creating new
states
Prohibited slavery in Northwest territory
The Senate would have equal representation (2 per state) and the House of
central government
Leaders: Washington, Madison, Hamilton
Constitution
Bill of Rights (pg 108-109):
First 10 amendments to Constitution
assembly, petition
took over state debts), creation of tariff (tax on imports), excise tax (nonessential goods tax to raise revenue for government, ex: whiskey tax), creation
of National Bank
Whiskey Rebellion (pg 113):
1794 rebellion of farmers in western Pennsylvania protesting Whiskey Tax
flexible document)
Wouldve allowed for a stronger federal government
immigrants
Made it illegal for newspapers to criticize government
In response to the Alien & Sedition Acts, Jefferson & Madison introduced
the statess rights doctrine of nullification
(Midnight Judges)
When Jefferson became President, he tried to withhold one of the
appointments (Marbury)
When Chief Justice John Marshall ruled this action unconstitutional, it
established the doctrine of judicial review, which allowed the Supreme Court to
decide whether acts of Congress or the President were constitutional
McCulloch v. Maryland (pg 154):
Maryland attempted to tax bank of U.S., but Supreme Court ruled this
action unconstitutional
This case limited statess rights and declared Bank of U.S. constitutional
federal government
Samuel Chase (pg 135):
Federalist Justice on Supreme Court that was impeached by House of
territory in North America and offered all of Louisiana for $15 million
American sailors, Jefferson prohibited all American merchant ships from sailing
to any foreign port
The Embargo (halt of trading) was a failure and it hurt American economy
on the frontier, & war hawks in Congress were pushing for war
Impact: U.S. gained respect of other nations & recognized Canada as part of
British Empire
Hartford Convention (pg 141):
In 1814, New England Federalists met to voice their opposition to the War
of 1812
They proposed changes to Constitution & the radical Federalists threatened
secession
After the war, the Federalist party declined because they were viewed as
unpatriotic
Era of Good Feelings (pg 150):
Nickname for the Monroe Presidency that was marked by nationalism,
Missouri would enter the Union as slave state, Maine entered as free state,
& it prohibited slavery in the rest of Louisiana territory North of the 36/30
latitude
Eli Whitney (pg 161-162):
Responsible for invention of cotton gin, which allowed planters to clean
(1830s-40s)
Common Man (pg 192-193):
See Jacksonian Democracy
vote
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Critic of slavery
The movement believed that people were naturally good and preached
perfectionism
Spoke about opportunity and salvation for all, which had democratizing
education
Dorothea Dix (pg 212):
Led movement for prison reform and separate institutions for mentally ill
Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony led campaign for equal voting,
in society
Modeled after Declaration of Independence
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abolitionist paper
The Liberator (pg 215):
The antislavery newspaper started by William Lloyd Garrison
among people
Lowell System (pg 163):
A textile factory in Massachusetts that recruited young women from farms
interconnecting roads, canals, and railroads for moving people, raw materials, &
manufactured goods
Cotton Gin (pg 178):
Made it easier to clean cotton which made cotton more affordable
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Period 5: (1848-1877):
Mexican War (pg 233-234):
An example of Manifest Destiny
The American war with Mexico was started over border dispute with Texas
(Rio Grande)
James K. Polk (pg 233):
A proponent of Manifest Destiny
Responsible for annexation of Texas & negotiating a border for Oregon with
Britain
Sent troops to disputed territory in Texas, which started Mexican War
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immigrants in U.S.
Protestants who distrusted Roman Catholics
Nebraska & allowed them to decide on issue of slavery with popular sovereignty
Repealed Missouri Compromise because those 2 territories were North of
popular sovereignty
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Douglas responded that slavery couldnt exist in a territory that didnt pass
slave codes & this angered southern democrats
Purpose was to track down runaway slaves to return them to their southern
owners
New law would have strict federal enforcement
19th century
Depicted the horrors of slavery & convinced many people that slavery was
wrong
Harriet Beecher Stowe (pg 250):
Author of Uncle Toms Cabin
at Pottawatomie Creek
Dred Scott Decision (pg 255-256):
After his owner brought him to free territory, Dred Scott sued for his
freedom & Supreme Court decided the following: Dred Scott was not a citizen &
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America
Advantages of North/South (pg 270):
North: more $, more railroads, more industry, larger population, navy
South: fighting defensive war, more experienced generals, high troop morale
Emancipation Proclamation
against a union could be accepted back into the U.S. as soon as 10% of the voters
took a loyalty oath
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immigrant) in U.S. and guaranteed equal protection under the law for all citizens
15th: right to vote for black males
crop
Kept southern blacks in a cycle of debt
Prohibited blacks from borrowing $ to buy land, forced them to sign labor
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Period 6: (1865-1898):
Gilded Age (Dennis Definition):
Term used to describe the late 19th century industrialization of American
when some people benefitted, but many did not (false gold coating)
Political Machines (pg 364):
Political parties in major cities came under control of tightly organized
strides in innovation & business & philanthropy, but often used illegal tactics to
consolidate their business and eliminate competition
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