M/J US History EOC REVIEW 2100010 M/J US History 2100020 1

M/J U. S. History
M/J U. S. History
EOC REVIEW
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2100020
NAME _________________________________
COLONIZATION
1. Compare the relationships of each of the following as to their impact on the colonization of North America and
their impact on the lives of Native Americans as they sought an all water route to Asia.
a. British (Roanoke, Jamestown, Pilgrims, Puritans)
b. French
c. Spanish
d. Columbian Exchange
e. Dutch
2. List colonies and compare characteristics, founders, economics and religions of each section of the English
colonies.
a. New England
b. Middle
c. Southern (Jamestown’s survival)
d. Triangular Trade
REVOLUTION
1. French and Indian War – 1754-1763 – British vs French
a. Causes
b. Course of war
c. Treaty of Paris 1763
d. Outcome and Consequences for British colonists (1763-1774)
e. Native American Allies
2. Major events/issues involved in colonial reaction to British policy from 1763-1774 and so causes of
Revolutionary War.
a. Proclamation of 1763
b. Sugar Act
c. Stamp Act/Declaratory Act
d. Sons of Liberty
e. Townshend Acts
f. Boston Massacre
g. Tea Act/Boston Tea Party
h. Quartering Act
i. Intolerable Act (Coercive Acts)
j. Lexington/Concord-1775
3. Contribution and effects of influential groups to American and British war efforts during the American
Revolution.
a. British Parliament
b. King George III
c. Sons of Liberty
d. Loyalists
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e. Patriots
f. Slaves
g. Native Americans
4. Course and Consequences of the American Revolutionary War – 1775-1783 – Colonists vs British
a. George Washington
b. Battle of Bunker Hill, Battle of Trenton, other major battles
c. Battle of Saratoga
d. French Aid
e. Colonial Battle Strategy
f. Hessians/Trenton
g. Battle of Yorktown
h. Treaty of Paris 1783 (outcomes)
5. Declaration of Independence – July 4, 1776 – Philadelphia, PN
a. Main writer
b. Structure
c. Content
d. Consequences
EARLY REPUBLIC
1. Articles of Confederation:
a. Structure
b. Strengths
c. Weaknesses
2. Constitutional Convention – May, 1787 – Philadelphia, PN
a. Great Compromise( census)
b. Bill Becomes Law
c. Popular Sovereignty
d. Federal System(Federalism)
3. Ratification of U.S. Constitution – 1788
a. Preamble
b. Federalists/Anti-Federalists
c. Federalist Papers
d. Bill of Rights (know 1st ten amendments)
e. Ratification
4. Political Parties (Views and definitions of political parties)
a. Federalists (Alexander Hamilton)
5. John Adams’s Presidency – 1796 (Federalist)- 2ndpresident
a. Alien Act
b. Sedition Act
6. Thomas Jefferson’s Presidency – 1800, 1804 (Democratic-Republican)i-3rd president
a. Marbury v. Madison
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b. Louisiana Purchase (include Napoleon, Corps of Discovery, slave revolt in Santo Domingo/Haiti,
Lewis and Clark Expedition, Missouri River, Sacagawea, doubles size of U.S.)
7. James Madison’s Presidency 1808, 1812 (Democratic-Republican)-4th president
a. War of 1812 (Britain) 1812-1814---Causes, course, consequences – Star Spangled Banner
WESTWARD EXPANSIONISM
1. Causes, course, consequences of westward expansionism and diplomatic assertiveness.
a. Convention of 1818
b. 1818 – Andrew Jackson’s illegal seizing of 2 Spanish Forts in Florida
c. 1819 – Adams-Onis Treaty
d. 1820 – Missouri Compromise
e. 1821 – Mexico Independence
f. 1830-1838 – Trail of Tears
g. 1840 – Manifest Destiny
h. 1845 – Texas Annexation
i. 1846 – Oregon Territory
j. 1846-1848 – Mexican American War/Mexican Cession land
k. 1849 – California Gold Rush
l. Compromise of 1850
m. 1853 – Gadsden Purchase
n. 1854 – Kansas Nebraska Act
2. Impact of Westward Expansion
a. Native Americans
b. Slave Population
c. Mormons
d. Trails West (Oregon Trail, Santa Fe Trail, Mormon Trail, Lewis and Clark Trail)
e. California statehood-1850
3. Industrial Revolution (Inventions/inventors-effects-people)
a. Cotton gin, spinning jenny, power loom
b. Factory system (Slater/Lowell)
c. New England textile mills
d. Child labor (Lowell Girls)
e. Slave labor/Cotton Kingdom
4. Slave Culture
a. Plantation Life
b. Resistance efforts (include Underground Railroad)
c. Slave Codes/ Fugitive Slave Laws
d. Florida as a refuge
5. 1800s Reform Movements 1820-1860
a. Abolitionists Movement
b. Women’s Rights
c. Second Great Awakening
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d. Temperance
e. Education
f. Enlightenment
6. Andrew Jackson’s Presidency 1828,1832 (Democrat)-7th president
a. Tariff debate (state’s rights, nullification)
b. Indian Removal Act (Cherokee Trail of Tears)
7. James Polk’s Presidency 1844 (Democrat)-11th president
a. Western Expansionist- Manifest Destiny
b. 1845-Gained Texas
c. 1846-Gained Oregon Country (BR)
d. 1848-Gained Mexican-Cession Land- Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
8. Zachary Taylor’s Presidency 1849-1850 (Whig)-died 16 months into his term-12th president
a. California becomes a state 1850
b. Balance of slave/free states
CIVIL WAR
1. Civil War Causes 1861-1865
a. Missouri Compromise (LA Purchase land)
b. Sectionalism (State’s rights)
c. Compromise of 1850 (Mexican Cession land)
d. Fugitive Slave Act – 1850
e. Kansas – Nebraska Act – 1854
f. “Bleeding Kansas” – 1856
g. Dred Scott vs. Sanford 1857
h. December 1860 – April 1861 – 11 states secede
i. Confederate States of America form
2. Abrahams Lincoln’s Presidency 1860, 1864 (first Republican president)16th president
a. Preserve Union
b. Careful handling of Border States
c. Emancipation Proclamation-1863
3. Course of Civil War
a. 11 Confederate States, 5 Union Border States, 19 Union States, Western Territories
b. Generals – Confederate and Union
c. Major Battles ( Antietam, Gettysburg)
d. Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address-1863
e. Resources, economics and strengths for each side
4. Reconstruction 1865 -1877
a. Civil War Amendments---13th, 14th, 15th
b. Rise of Jim Crow Laws
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M/J U. S. History
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CITIZENSHIP
1. Citizenship
a. Constitutional Provisions
b. Suffrage from colonial times through present day
c. Amendments that expanded voting rights (15 and 19)
d. Seneca Falls Convention – Stanton, Mott (denied attendance to World Anti-Slavery Conference)
FLORIDA HISTORY
1. Florida
a. Spain
b. St. Augustine/Pensacola/Tallahassee
c. Seminole Wars (Andrew Jackson) 1818
a. Pirates
b. Runaway Slaves
c. Adams -Onis Treaty 1819
d. Statehood
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