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Sectionalism
The North
• Two parts
– The Northeast
• New England
• Middle Atlantic
– The Old Northwest
• From Ohio to Minnesota
Organized Labor
• Farmers and artisans were now dependant on
factory wages
• Due to low pay, long hours, and unsafe working
conditions, unions logically formed
• Commonwealth vs. Hunt
– Peaceful unions had the right to negotiate labor
contracts
• Improvement was limited by
– Periodic depressions
– Employers and courts that were hostile to unions
– Abundant source of cheap labor
Urban Life
• Slums expanded due to rapid growth
• Crowded housing
• Poor sanitation
• Infectious disease
• High rates of crime
African Americans
• African Americans were denied membership
to unions
• Sometimes hired as strike-breakers, but fired
directly after
Agricultural Northwest
• Old Northwest
– Ohio
– Indiana
– Illinois
– Michigan
– Wisconsin
– Minnesota
• Tied to the northern states by:
– Military campaigns
– Building of canals and railroads
Agriculture
• Steel plow
– John Deer
• Mechanical reaper
– Cyrus McCormick
• Grain used to feed cattle and make beer
New Cities
• Buffalo, Cleaveland, Detroit, Chicago,
Cincinnati, St. Louis grew larger
Immigration
• Sudden increase in 1832
• Few went to the south
• Result of
– Famines in Europe
– Inexpensive ocean transportation
– Reputation of the US as a economic oppurtunity
Irish
• Two million, almost half, came from Ireland
• Mostly farmers
• Discriminated against because of Roman
Catholic background
• Congregated in northern cities
• Initially excluded from the Democratic
Organization of Tammany hall
• Later took this organization over
Germans
• One million Germans came to the US in the
1840’s and 50’s
• Searched for cheap farmland
• Political influence was originally limited
• Strong supporters of public education
• Opponents of slavery
ativists
• Native born americans feared the immigrant
takeover
• Protestants
• Distrusted roman catholicism
• Lead to riots in cities
• The Supreme Order of the Star Spangled Banner
• Became the Know-Nothing party
• Nativism faded away with the coming of the Civil
War
The South
Agriculture and King Cotton
• Small factories in the south produced 15
percent of the nations goods
• Tobacco, Rice, and Sugarcane
• Cotton cloth was more affordable because of
the development of textile mills and the
cotton gin
Slavery
• Wealth was measured in terms of land and
slaves
• Supported slavery because it was ‘good for
slave and master’
• Four million slaves in 1860
• Slaves did whatever they were told, mostly in
the fields or in construction
Resistance
• Denmarck Vesey
– 1822
• Nat Turner
– 1831
• Quickly and violently suppressed
Free African Americans
• 250,000 in the south were not slaves
• Some emancipated during the revolution
• Children of white men
• Self purchase
White Society
• Aristocracy
– 100 slaves, 1000 acre farm
– Politically powerful
• Farmers
– Fewer than 20 slaves, 100 acres
– Modest living
• Poor Whites
– Hillbillies, poor white trash. Lived on hills as fake farmers
• Mountain People
– Lived in the mountains
– Loyal to the union
– Disliked slavery
Southern Thought
• Code of Chivalry
– Largely a feudal society
– Strong sense of honor
– Defense of womanhood
– Paternalistic treatment of inferiors
• Education
– Upper class valued education
– Slaves prohibited from reading and writing
• Religion
– Methodist and Baptist church supported slavery
– Unitarians challenged slavery
– Catholics and Episcopalians took a neutral stance
The West
• Native Americans
– All living west of the Mississippi river
• Life on the Plains
– Horses became a revolutionary benefit for Indians
– Nomadic buffalo hunters
The Frontier
• Mountain Men
– Native born white Americans saw the Rocky Mountains as a total
wilderness
– Lewis and Clark were considered Mountain Men
– They served as guides and pathfinders
• White Settlers on the Western Frontier
– Settlers in the western frontier were almost the same as the early
colonists
– Many died early from disease or malnutrition
• Women
– Women on the frontier had a limited life span due to pregnancy,
endless work, and isolation
• Environmental Damage
– Forests were cut down, and the beaver and buffalo were hunted
almost to extinction
Industrial Northeast
Establishments Employees Value
North Atlantic 69,831 900,107 1,213,897,518
Old Northwest 33,335 188,651 346,675,290
Southern 27,779 166,803 248,090,580
Western 8,777 50,204 71,229,989
Chapter Ten
– Lincoln won
The End of the War
Surrender at Appomattox
• Grant routed Lee, and made him surrender at
Appomattox Court House on April 9th, 1865
• Lee was allowed to return home alive
Assassination of Lincoln
• On April 14th, Lincoln was assassinated by
John Wilkes Booth at Ford’s Theater
Effects of the War on Civilian Life
Political Change
• The secession of the South lead to a majority
of republicans
– Radical Republicans
• Favored immediate abolition of slavery
– Moderate
• Best opportunities for whites
– Peace Democrats and Copperheads
• Supported the war but complained about how it was
done
Civil Liberties
• Habeas Corpus
– Habeas Corpus had been suspended
– The Court declared the suspension of Habeas
Corpus legal
• The Draft
– Originally volunteers
– Later, laws came into place for the Draft
– Draft riots occurred frequently
Economic Change
• Financing
– 2.6 billion dollars were borrowed to fund the war
– The government raised tariffs to fund the rest of
the war
– Prices rose 80%
– National Banking System in 1863
Modernizing Northern Society
• The Morrill Tariff Act of 1861
– Increased the national tariffs to fund the war and
provide insurance to manufacturers in America
• The Homestead Act of 1862
– Sold land in the Great Plains for free
• The Morrill Land Grant of 1862
– Made the use of federal land grants legal
• The Pacific Railway Act of 1862
– Made a transcontinental railroad legal
Social Change
• Women
– Were able to get jobs
– Lost their jobs as soon as the men returned
– Nursing became a new occupation, even after the
men returned
– Began equal rights movement
• End of Slavery
– 4 million slaves were freed
Chapter Fifteen
Reconstruction
Reconstruction Plans of Lincoln and
Johnson
Lincoln’s Policies
• Lincoln wanted to put the South to a test of
political loyalty to let them back into the
States
• Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
(1863)
– Full pardons given out for swearing fealty to the
Union
– When 10% of the population of a state swore
fealty, they could come back to the Union
More Policies
• Wade-Davis Bill (1864)
– Required 50% of the state to promise loyalty
– Only anti-confederates could create the constitutions
– Lincoln vetoed this
• Freedman’s Bureau
– Welfare
• Food, shelter, medical
– Started many schools and colleges
– Taught 200 K blacks to read
Lincoln’s Last Speech
• Alluded to progressive and radical republican
ideas
• He was then assassinated
Johnson and Reconstruction
• Supported poor white people
• Confederate origins, but stayed loyal to the Union
• White supremacist
• Policy
– Disfranchisement of all authority of the Confederacy,
and all rich Confederates
• Southern Governments of 1865
– The Confederacy was part of the Union 8 months after
Johnson was inaugurated
– Many leaders of the Confederacy became
congressmen
Johnson’s Policies Continued
• Black Codes
– Took away rights of African Americans
– Could not own land
– Made to sign work contracts
– Could not sue whites in court
• Johnson’s Vetoes
– Increase of Freedman’s Bureau power
– Nullification of Black Codes
• Election of 1866
– Republicans won by an enormous margin
Congressional Reconstruction
• Part One of Reconstruction
– 1863 to 1866 – Lincoln and Johnson
– Brought the Union back together
• Part Two of Reconstruction
– Congress took over the reconstruction
Radical Republicans
• Moderate Republicans
– Favored making the whites richer
• Radical Republicans
– More rights for African Americans
• Blacks became equal to whites (For purposes
of the Census) in 1866
• Thaddeus Stevens – Pennsylvania
– Wanted to use the military to give blacks rights
Enacting the Radical Program
• Civil Rights Act of 1866
– All blacks became US citizens
– Overturned Dred Scott
• Fourteenth Amendment
– All peoples born in the US were citizens
– All rights of all citizens (Blacks) were to be observed
– Political office revoked from all Confederates
– Debts returned to Confederates
– Punished states that kept citizens from voting
More Programs
• Report of the Joint Committee
– Confederates were not included in Congress
– Congress took over the reconstruction by declaring
that Congress had the right to readmit states to the
Union, and the president did not
• Reconstruction Acts of 1867
– Cut the Confederacy into pieces, under the Army’s
control
– Put the bar for readmission higher
• Had to accept 14th amendment
• Franchise guaranteed for all races
Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
• Tenure of Office Act
– The president was not allowed to fire a federal
officer or military commander without the
senate’s permission
– Johnson fired his Secretary of War to challenge
the act
– In the courtroom, the republicans lacked one vote
for impeachment, and Johnson kept his job
Reforms After Grant’s Election
• The Election of 1868
– Republican
• Ulysses S. Grant
• Won by the 500,000 votes that the blacks gave him
• Fifteenth Amendment
– No one could be denied the right to vote
• Civil Rights Act of 1875
– Equal rights pertaining to public places and
courtrooms
– Poorly enforced, due to the fear of losing white
political support
Reconstruction In The South
Composition of the Reconstruction
Governments
• Whites were the majority in the legislative branch
• Scalawags and Carpetbaggers
– Derogatory towards republicans
– Southern Republicans
• Scalawag
– Northern Republicans
• Carpetbaggers
• African American Legislators
– Educated property holders
Evaluating the Republican Record
• Accomplishments
– Universal Male Suffrage
– More rights for women
– Internal Improvements
– Taxes added
• Failures
– More corrupt
– Wasted money
– Decline of ethics and integrity
African Americans Adjusting to
Freedom
• Building Black Communities
– Black churches
– Education
– College
• Howard, Atlanta, Fisk, Morehouse
• Sharecropping
– The owner provided supplies in exchange for half
of the harvest
The North During Reconstruction
Greed and Corruption
• Rise of the Spoilsmen
– Giving government jobs and favors to supporters
• Corruption in Business and Government
– Used the stock market to make money
illegitimately
– Boss Tweed stole 200 million from taxpayers
• The Election of 1872
– Grant vs. Horace Greenly
– Grant won, and Greenly died
The Panic of 1873
• Many in the north without jobs or homes
• Inflation
• Bill calling for additional money (Not insured
by gold) vetoed by Grant
End of the Reconstruction
White Supremacy and the Ku Klux Klan
• Started by Nathaniel Bedford Forrest
• Killed freedmen
• Congress passed the Force Acts to stop the
KKK
Amnesty Act of 1872
• All restrictions removed from Confederates,
albeit high leaders
Election of 1876
• Republicans
– Rutherford B. Hayes
• Democrats
– Samuel J. Tilden
• Hayes won by an minuscule margin
Compromise of 1877
• Hayes would become the president if:
– Stopped support for the Republicans in the South
(Troops in the south withdrawn)
– Gave money to the south transcontinental railroad
• The supreme court then took apart the
reconstruction laws piece by piece, exposing
blacks to racism again (1880/1890)
Chapter Sixteen
Foreign Policy
1865-1914
Seward, Alaska, and the French in
Mexico
The French in Mexico
• Napoleon III sent French troops to Mexico
during the Civil War
• William Seward threatened action, and the
French left
The Purchase of Alaska
• Russia sold Alaska to Seward for 7.3 million
The New Imperialism
International Darwinism
• Imperialism
– Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and Japan were
taking over weaker countries
• Missionaries
– Went to Africa, Asia, and the Pacific to teach
• Politicians
– Henry Cabot Lodge and Theodore Roosevelt
supported imperialism
• Popular Press
– Newspapers sold more copies by printing about ‘far
away places’
Latin America
• Blaine and the Pan-American Conference
(1889)
– Pan-American Union was established
• Cleveland, Olney, and the Monroe Doctrine
– US wanted Britain to abandon Guiana
– US-Britain relations improved
The Spanish-American War
Causes
• Jingoism
– Aggressive Nationalism
• Cuban revolt
• Yellow Press
– Graphic headlines
• De Lome Letter
– Spanish leader spoke badly about McKinley
• The Maine
– 260 Americans killed
– Spanish blamed
• McKinley’s War Message
– Ordered a ceasefire from Spanish to Cuba
The Teller Amendment
• Congress authorized the US to go to war with
Spain.
• Specifically said that the US had no interest in
taking over Cuba
Fighting the War
• Began in Manila Bay, in the Philippines
• The Philippines
– Commodore Dewey sent to the Philippines
– Destroyed Spanish navy
• Invasion of Cuba
– Disease killed thousands of troops
Annexation of Hawaii
• Became a territory in 1900, and a state in
1959
Controversy Over the Treaty of Peace
• Terms
– Cuban Independence
– US ownership of two Spanish islands
– US took over the Philippines for $20 million
The Philippine Questions
• Treaty of Paris ratified on Feb 6th, 1899
• Anti-Imperialists objected to this. Obviously.
• Filipino leader Emilio Aguinaldo attacked the
US armies in an attempt for independence
Other Results of the War
• Insular Cases
– Did the Constitution apply to US Territories?
– Supreme Court ruled it did not
• Cuba and the Platt Amendment (1901)
– Required Cuba never to treaty with other powers
– Never to build up debt
– US could intervene in Cuban affairs
– US could have bases on Cuba
Election of 1900
• Republican
– McKinley
• Democrat
– William Jennings Bryan
• McKinley reelected
• US became a world power
Open Door Policy in China
Details
• Boxer Rebellion (1900)
– Boxers (Chinese nationalists) attacked
missionaries. US took over Beijing to staunch it
• Hay’s Second Round of Notes
– Written by John Hay
– US desire to preserve Chinese integrity, as well as
equal trade
Theodore Roosevelt’s “Big Stick” Policy
The Panama Canal
• Revolution in Panama
– Columbia refused to allow the US to dig in Panama
– Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty granted US control
• Hay-Pauncefote Treaty
– The US could dig without British involvement
• Building the Canal
– Began in 1904, completed in 1914
– George Goethals, William Gorgas main leaders
– US paid Colombia $25 million for Panama
The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe
Doctrine (Remember this!)
• When the Dominican Republic could not pay
debts to Britain, British warships were sent to
collect. Roosevelt responded by sending
American gunships to the DR, and collecting
taxes on American terms, and delivering it to
the British
• Used to justify sending US forces to Latin
America
East Asia
• Russo-Japan War
– War between Russia and Japan
– Treaty of Portsmouth reached
• Gentlemen’s Agreement
– The Japanese restricted immigration to the US, while the
US slowly took down segregation of Japanese in America
• The Great White Fleet
– Roosevelt sent battleships on tour around the world to
demonstrate US power
• Root-Takahira Agreement (1908)
– Mutual respect
– Support for the Open Door policy
Peace Efforts
• Roosevelt was awarded the Nobel Peace Price
for Russo-Japanese diplomacy
• Algeciras Conference in Spain stopped a fight
over Morocco between France and Germany
• Roosevelt also controlled the US participation
in the Second International Peace Conference
at Hague in 1907
William Howard Taft and Dollar
Diplomacy
Dollar Diplomacy in East Asia and Latin
America
• The idea that financial investment lead to
peace
• Railroads in China
– Taft invested in building railroads throughout
China
• Intervention in Nicaragua
– Marines were sent to Nicaragua to staunch a civil
war
The Lodge Corollary
• Henry Cabot Lodge
– Introduced the Lodge Corollary to the Monroe
Doctrine
• All non-European powers could not own territory in the
western hemisphere
Woodrow Wilson and Moral
Diplomacy
Moral Diplomacy
• Righting Past Wrongs – The Panama Canal
– The Philippines • US exemption from tolls
repealed
• Jones Act of 1916
– Promised – Conciliation Treaties
independence as soon • Disputes sent to
as a government was international level
created
• One year cease-fire
– Puerto Rico period before starting a
• All inhabitants given US war
citizenship
Military Intervention in Latin America
• Marines kept in Nicaragua
• Troops also kept in Haiti and the DR
Conflict in Mexico
• Tampico Incident
– Arms embargo against Mexico
– Fleet blockaded Vera Cruz
– Navy occupied Vera Cruz
– South American countries stepped in to help avoid
war
• Pancho Villa and the US Expeditionary Force
– Ran raids the US border and killed people in Texas
and Mexico
Chapter Twenty-One
World War I
1914-1918
Causes
• Archduke Francis Ferdinand is assassinated
• Austria invades Serbia
• Germany declares war against Russia
• Germany declares war against France and
invades Belgium
• Great Britain declares war on Germany
•
Neutrality
• The US wanted to remain neutral in the war
Submarine Warfare
• The Lusitania Crisis
– Germany sunk the British Lusitania, and 128
Americans died
• The Arabic was also sunk by Germans
• The Sussex was shot by German torpedoes,
injuring more Americans
Economic Links with Britain and France
• Trade with the Allies multiplied four fold,
while trade with Germany disappeared
• Loaned 3 billion dollars to Great Britain
The War Debate
Preparedness
• Even after the sinking of the Lusitania, the US
was unprepared for war
• Wilson called for expansion of the Armed
Forces
• National Defense Act, passed in June 1916,
increased the army force to 175,000
Opposition to War
• The Midwest and West were staunch
opponents to war
• Populists, progressives, socialists opposed war
The Election of 1916
• Wilson’s slogan, ‘He kept us out of war’
secured his reelection
Peace Efforts
Decision for War
• Germany entered Unrestricted Submarine
Warfare
• The Zimmerman Telegram asked Mexico to
help Germany in return for their conquered
lands
• Russian Revolution
– The czar was overthrown
Declaration of War
• On April 2nd, 1917, Wilson asked Congress to
declare war
• On April 6th, the majority of Congress voted to
declare war on Germany
Public Opinion
• Many people disapproved of the war, which lead to the
Espionage and Sedition Acts
• Espionage Act in 1917
• Sedition Act in 1918
• Tactics
– Attacked anyone deemed to be ‘un-American’
• Decline
– Leader of Indiana’s KKK convicted of murder
– Membership fell
Foreign Policy: The Fiction of Isolation
Disarmament and Peace
• Washington Conference (1921)
– Charles Evans started the talk about naval
disarmament
• Five Power Treaty
– The United States (5), Great Britain (5), Japan (3), France
(1.67), and Italy (1.67) agreed to the aforementioned ratios of
battleships.
• Four Power Treaty
– The United States, Great Britain, Japan, and France agreed to
respect each others territories
• Nine Power Treaty
– All nine nations agreed to respect the Open Door Policy
Kellog-Briand Pact
• Jane Addams awarded Nobel Peace Price
• Nations which signed the Kellog-Briand pact
gave up aggressiveness to achieve their ends
– Was ineffective because:
• Permitted defensive wars
• Failed to provide for an action to be taken against
violators
Business and Diplomacy
• Latin America
– Interests negotiated by Dwight Morrow in 1927
• Middle East
– Oil reserves
– Secretary of State Hughes got oil drilling rights
• Tariffs
– Fordney-McCumber Tariff
• Increased taxes on foreign imports by 25%
War Debts and reparations
• The US lent $10 billion to the allies
• The Treaty of Versailles demanded Germany
pay $30 billion to the Allies
• Dawes Plan
– Cycle of payments
– US loaned money to Germany, who paid it to the
Allies
– Britain and France paid the money from Germany
back to the Allies
Chapter Twenty-Four
Limits Of A Superpower
1969-1980
Richard Nixon’s Foreign Policy
Vietnam
• Nixon wanted to reduce US involvement in Vietnam
• Vietnamization:
– Gradually withdraw US troops and replace them with money
and weapons
– Nixon Doctrine
• All future Asian allies would receive support, but not through troops.
• Opposition to Nixon’s War Policies
– National Guard killed students at a protest
• Peace Talks, Bombing, and Armistice
– Nixon and Kissinger met with North Vietnam’s foreign minister
– Nixon bombed North Vietnam to ‘force a settlement’
– Paris Accords of January
• Promised an armistice, cease-fire, and free elections
Détente with China and the Soviet
Union
• Reduction of cold war tensions
• Visits to China
– Led to US recognition of Communist China
• Arms Control with the USSR
– Limited Antiballistic Missiles
Nixon’s Domestic Policy
The New Federalism
• Family Assistance Plan
– Welfare reform
Nixon’s Economic Policies
• Stagflation
– Stagnation plus inflation. Clever, no?
• Removed the dollar from the gold standard
• Froze wages for 90 days
• 10% surplus on all trade
The Burger Court
• Four of the Supreme Court Justices resigned,
and Nixon was able to appoint members
favorable to him
• Warren E. Burger was appointed, as was Harry
Blackmun, Lewis Powell, and William
Rehnquist
• The court that he shaped ordered him later to
turn over the Watergate tapes
The Election of 1972
• Democratic
– Senator George McGovern
• Republican
– Richard Nixon
WATERGATE
• Best part of the book
White House Abuses
• Men hired by Nixon were caught breaking into
the Watergate complex
• Wiretaps were ordered by Nixon
• A group called the Plumbers were used to stop
leaks
• They also burglarized a shrink’s office to get
information to discredit him (He published the
Pentagon Papers)
The Watergate Investigations
• Most of Nixon’s cabinet and VP were forced to
resign
• Nixon had kept tapes of Watergate, and tried
to claim executive privilege on them
• It didn’t work xD
• Nixon faced impeachment, and later resigned
Other Developments
• War Powers Act
– Nixon approved thousands of bombings on
Cambodia, which happened to be a neutral
territory
– The War Powers Act required the president to
report to congress 48 hours before taking ANY
military action whatsoever
Resignation of a President
• Nixon chose to resign from the Presidency,
rather than being impeached and tried by the
senate.
Gerald Ford in the White House
Pardoning of Nixon
• Gerald Ford gave Nixon a pardon for ‘any part
he may have played in the Watergate Scandal’
Investigating the CIA
• During the presidency of Ford, George Bush
was hired to help reform the CIA, after it
arranged the assassination of different foreign
dictators
Failure of US Policy in Southeast Asia
• Fall of Saigon
– Communist Vietnamese took over Saigon, and the
entire country fell to Communism
• Genocide in Cambodia
– Communist Khmer Rouge killed a million people
The Election of 1976
• Republican
– Gerald Ford
• Democrats
– Jimmy Carter
• Balanced Budget
– Welfare was limited (Under Personal
Responsibility and Work Opportunities)
The Election of 1996
• Republicans
– Bob Dole
• Democrats
– Clinton (Al Gore, The Creator Of The Internet, as VP)
Clinton’s Second Term
• Technology and wireless communication
flourished
• Inflation fell to 2%
• The price of houses quadrupled
• Unemployment was the lowest ever
IMPEACHMENT
Clinton was indicted and impeached for perjury
and obstruction of justice in the end of the
year 1998
The Lone Superpower in a New Century
Disputed Election of 2000
• Democratic
– Al Gore (THE CREATOR OF THE INTERNET!!!!!)
• Republican
– George W. Bush
• Bush vs. Gore
– Made George Bush president, deciding the much
sought after, fought over, and disputed election
The Rise of Southern Republicans
• Southern conservatives took over congress
• The south was entirely conservative
• Conservatives dominate!!
Domestic Policies and Problems
• Republican Tax Cut
– 1.35 trillion tax cut
• Education Reform
– No Child Left Behind
– But what about No Child Left Bored To Death?
• Recession of 2001
– Dow Jones fell 38%
– $400 billion annual deficit
War on Terrorism
• September 11th, 2001
– Three planes flew into the World Trade Center,
and one crashed, killing over 3,000 people
• War in Afghanistan
– The US invaded Afghanistan to try to destroy Al
Qaeda
• Changing Foreign Policy
– NATO expanded
War In Iraq
• Bush labeled North Korea and Iran as the ‘Axis
of Evil’
• America attacked Iraq ‘Before Hussein could
make nuclear weapons’
• America and Britain took over Iraq, and
deposed Saddam Hussein
Elections of 2004
• Democratic
– John Kerry
• Republican
– George W. Bush who, despite everyone screaming
that he was a horrible president, got reelected
– Perhaps people just want something to complain
about??
Not Covered In The Textbook.
• Obama. Yes, we can.
The End
• So, you finished everything in the AMSCO. I
would go look over chapter thirty a little bit,
because I skimmed a lot. But most of that is
common knowledge to most of us Americans.
But it’s all good. You’re done. Go watch TV.