Unit 1: Exploration and Colonization



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U.S. History EOC Study Guide

Building a Nation (Colonization-ca. 1877)

Unit 1: Exploration and Colonization

I can. . .



  1. Identify the reasons for colonization, evaluate its impacts, and analyze the success or failure of settlements in North America

      1. Spain

        1. Treaty of Tordesillas – Pope divides the New World between Spain and Portugal

        2. Sought to establish claims to territory; to secure gold, silver, and ag. Produce; to convert Indians to Catholicism

        3. settled the West Indies, Mexico, Central America, and South America

        4. founded St. Augustine (the oldest city in the United States); founded Santa Fe (second oldest city in the United States)

      2. France

        1. Sought to acquire fish, trade with the Indians and convert the Indians to Catholicism

        2. Settled and explored the St. Lawrence, Great Lakes region and the interior of North America (Champlain, Marquette and Joliet)

      3. England

        1. Virginia

          1. Jamestown (1607) – founded by the joint-stock company Virginia Company of London; about 100 settlers; unaccustomed to work, but they began cultivating tobacco; become a royal charter

        2. Massachusetts

          1. Plymouth (1620) – Pilgrims come over on the Mayflower; led by William Bradford

          2. Massachusetts Bay (1630) – organized under the joint-stock company Massachusetts Bay Company; led by John Winthrop; established the Puritan Ethic

        3. D

  2. Analyze religious development and its significance in colonial America (e.g. religious settlements, and the Great Awakening

      1. Southern (Chesapeake) – Anglican Church dominates

        1. Second largest colonial membership

        2. Much less influence in colonies than in England, though being a member carried great status

      2. Middle – most religiously diverse region containing Quakers, Catholics, Presbyterians

        1. Quakers – under William Penn, this faith had minimal church structure; “Inner Light” was the guide to salvation; belief in pacifism and religious tolerance

        2. Catholic Church – Maryland; however they were unpopular in the colonies, often denied voting or office-holding rights

        3. Presbyterians – located in the frontier and backcountry; many were of Scots/Irish descendents

      3. New England – Congregational Church (Puritans)

        1. Largest denomination in the colonies

        2. Belief in predestination

        3. Intolerant of other religions and/or differing views

          1. Roger Williams – promoted separation of church and state and called for fair payment to Native American’s for their land; settled Rhode Island

          2. Anne Hutchinson – banished for holding Bible readings and claiming the individuals could interpret scripture

        4. d

      4. Great Awakening – Starting in the 1720s, and under the leadership of Jonathan Edwards, it stimulated religious conversions and strong religious emotion through itinerate preachers and mass revival meetings

        1. Outcomes – split churches, but also promoted religious diversity and therefore tolerance in America

      5. d

  3. Describe significant aspects of the variety of social structures of colonial America

      1. Southern (Chesapeake) – male-dominated with the population more dispersed and separated due to the agricultural nature of development

      2. Middle – tended to be the most diverse region in all aspects

      3. New England – family-owned farmers formed the community which centered around the church

  4. Compare the economies of the various colonies, and analyze the development and impact of indentured servitude and African slavery in North America (e.g. social, political, and economic)

      1. Southern (Chesapeake) – plantation economy producing indigo, rice and tobacco; wealthy planter society with indentured servants and slaves; a struggling group of small farmers occupied the frontier (backcountry)

      2. Middle – family-sized farmers produced wheat, corn and oats; long rivers allowed fur trade with Indians in the interior; small businesses popped up in the more urban areas

      3. New England – family farms for subsistence purposes; lumber, ship building, whaling, fishing became common, eventually leading to manufacturing ; but available land and economic success took a toll on the theocratic nature of the colony

      4. Indentured servitude – impoverished Europeans sign contracts to work from four to seven years in exchange for passage to the New World; decreases after Bacon’s Rebellion (a poor backwood’s population – many of them former indentured servants – posed a threat to the security and the power structure of the colony).

      5. Slavery – begins in 1619; by 1750 ¾ of slave population is in the South

  5. Explain the origins and development of colonial governments

      1. Virginia House of Burgess (1619) – landowning male colonists could elect representatives to the colonial legislature; the New World’s first elected legislature.

      2. Mayflower Compact (1620) – plans for self-government; established citizen lawmakers, rule by the majority, and fair treatment of persons under the law

      3. New England Town Meetings – church meetinghouse in the center of town with farms on the outskirts; freemen (originally propertied and church members) conducted town affairs

      4. Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (1639) – led by Thomas Hooker, it becomes the first successful written constitution; propertied loyal male citizens could choose a legislature (which choose the governor)

      5. Types of Charters

        1. Royal – Eight; the monarch selected the governor and appointed the members of the governor’s council (except Massachusetts); qualified voters elected the lower house (colonial assembly)

        2. Proprietary – three; proprietor selected the governor; eligible voters elected the colonial assembly

        3. Self-governing – colonists directly or indirectly elected the governor and members of both houses

Unit 2: Creating a Nation

I can. . .



  1. Evaluate the influence of Enlightenment ideas on the development of American government as embedded in the Declaration of Independence

      1. Right of revolution

      2. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (was property)

      3. Consent of the governed

      4. Against the King, not Parliament; being denied the Rights of Englishmen (these rights find their way into the Bill of Rights)

  2. Identify and evaluate the ideas and events that contributed to the outbreak of the American Revolution, and determine the key turning points of the war

      1. Proclamation Line of 1763 – prohibited colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains; Britain hopes to . . .

        1. Protect the fur trade with the Indians

        2. Remove a cause of Indian uprisings

        3. Prevent colonial settlements beyond the control of the British authorities

      2. Acts of Parliament

        1. Sugar (1764) – to raise money for colonial defense it taxed molasses; colonists smuggled in sugar

        2. Stamp (1765) – passed to raise money; the same tax existed in Great Britain; it taxed dice, playing cards, newspapers, marriage licenses; Colonist convene the Stamp Act Congress, riot, and boycott goods; it is repealed

        3. Declaratory (1766) – effort by the British to save face after the Stamp Act is repealed; England could pass any laws for the colonies

        4. Townshend (1767) – passed to raise money and regulate trade; taxed imports: glass, paint, lead, paper, tea; colonists boycott British goods; repealed

      3. Boston Massacre (1770) – British troops are in the cities to enforce laws; a mob in Boston taunts the soldiers; five colonists are killed

      4. Boston Tea Party (1773) – Tea shipped from Britain to the colonies was now exempt from taxations; the cheapest tea ever, but it now undercut colonial merchants; this action defies British authority and destroys British property

      5. Intolerable Acts (1774) – to punish Massachusetts and assert British authority

        1. Closed Boston Harbor until the colonists paid for the destroyed tea

        2. Authorized the quartering of troops in any colonial town

        3. Permitted British officials accused of crimes in Massachusetts to stand trial in Britain

        4. Curtailed self government in Massachusetts

      6. First Continental Congress (1774) – met in Philadelphia; addressed a “Declaration of Rights and Grievances” to King George III and voted to boycott British goods

  3. Identify the impetus for the Constitutional Convention (limitations of government under the Articles of Confederation), and analyze the events and outcomes of the Convention (i.e. the “bundle of compromises)

      1. Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation

        1. No chief executive

        2. Each state got one vote in the legislature

        3. Congress could not tax the people directly

        4. Each state could issue its own money

        5. Congress could not recruit an army

        6. Congress could not regulate interstate commerce

        7. American government lacked international power

      2. Successes of the Articles

        1. Small farmers, frontier settlers, and city workers were happy. Debtors liked the cheap money.

        2. Passed the Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787

          1. Both established the systematic settlement of what is now Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and part of Minnesota with an emphasis on education, “bill of rights,” and the prohibition of slavery

      3. Bundle of Compromises

        1. Representation – the Virginia Plan (based on population) and the New Jersey Plan (based on equal rep.) was settled with the Connecticut Compromise

          1. House of Representatives (population) and the Senate (equal rep.)

        2. Slavery – 3/5 Compromise: slaves were to be counted as 3/5 of a person for population for representation and for taxation purposes

        3. Tariffs – Congress was given the power to levy tariffs on import but not on exports

        4. Presidency – given a four-year term with the complex Electoral College

  4. Interpret the ideas and principles expressed in the U.S. Constitution

      1. Popular sovereignty, limited government, federalism, checks and balances, separation of powers, judicial review

      2. Delegated, or enumerated, powers – primarily financial and military; Elastic Clause

      3. Reserved powers – 10th Amendment: “reserved to the states”- education, voting requirements, marriage laws, traffic laws, etc.

      4. Concurrent powers – shared by both the federal and state governments

  5. Explain the development of the Bill of Rights, and assess various debates of the day

      1. Key rights

  6. Evaluate, take, and defend positions on the development of U.S. foreign policy during the early nineteenth century (e.g. Embargo Act, Monroe Doctrine)

      1. XYZ Affair (1798) – conflict with the French over French hassling U.S. shipping during Adams’ administration; U.S. sought a negotiation, but the French did not recognize our diplomats; the U.S. stood up to a European power and helped the Federalist Party in America

      2. Alien and Sedition Acts (1798) – four laws directed against politically active anti-Federalist foreigners; attempted to stifle criticism of the Adams administration; one could not defame the president, had to wait 14 years to become a citizen (up from 5), and gave the president the power deport foreigners or enemies during wartime

      3. Louisiana Purchase (1803) – 820,000 sq. mile territory purchased from France during Jefferson’s administration; launches the expansion of the American continent; expanded scientific investigation; Lewis and Clark Exploration

      4. Embargo Act of 1807 – during Jefferson’s Administration, it protested British and French interference with American shipping; it barred American vessels from European ports; failed by hurting American manufacturing and agriculture

      5. War of 1812 – between the U.S. and Great Britain; Causes . . .

        1. Britain’s seizure of American ships and impressing American sailors

        2. American resentment of Britain

        3. American belief that Britain and Canada were arming Indians

        4. American ambitions to annex Canada and Florida

      6. Monroe Doctrine (1823) – foreign policy issued during the presidency of James Monroe; it stated the European colonization of the Western Hemisphere was over, and that the U.S. would not interfere in the affairs of Europe; we did not have the force to back it up

Unit 3: Antebellum America

I can. . .



  1. Identify and evaluate the political and territorial changes resulting from westward expansion of the United States in the early nineteenth century

      1. Louisiana Purchase – expansion of American territory; eliminates the French influence in America; brings about the removal of Southeastern Indian tribes

      2. American System – program set forth by Henry Clay to unite and develop the country’s economy through a national bank, a protective tariff, and internal improvements

      3. Manifest Destiny – American Expansionist mindset; brings about the Oregon Trail and exploration of the Northwest and West Coast; brings about increased conflict with Plains Indians; Annexation of Texas and the Mexican War are connected to this; promoted by. . .

        1. Land-hungry Americans

        2. Patriots fearful of Britain’s design for that land

        3. Eastern merchants wanting the Pacific Coast for trade

        4. Democratic-minded people seeking to spread freedom, individualism

        5. Nationalist who sought America’s greatness

  2. Analyze the evaluate federal and state policies toward American Indians in the first half of the nineteenth century

      1. Cherokee Removal

  3. Describe and evaluate the impacts of the First Industrial Revolution during the nineteenth Century (e.g. the Lowell system, immigration, changing technologies, transportation innovations)

      1. Lowell Mills – employed young women in a strict environment

      2. Immigration in the early-to-mid 1800s

        1. Irish - fleeing poverty from the Potato Famine; settled in eastern cities

        2. German - fleeing political persecution; entire families and communities settled in the Midwest

      3. Turnpikes, canals, and steamboats –

        1. National (or Cumberland) Road – from Cumberland, Maryland, to Vandalia, Illinois. Partly financed by federal funds.

        2. Wilderness Road – road through the Cumberland Gap connecting NC to KY and TN.

        3. Erie Canal – Connected the Great Lakes to the Hudson River creating an all-water route from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean. Reduces transportation costs eastward by 85%.

        4. Clermont was the first successful steamship; built by Robert Fulton

      4. Agricultural Advancements –

        1. Liberal land policies moved Americans westward

        2. Eli Whitney’s cotton gin

        3. John Deere’s self-cleaning steel plow

        4. Cyrus McCormick’ reaper

  4. Identify and evaluate the major events and issues that promoted sectional conflicts and strained national cohesiveness in the antebellum period

      1. Missouri Compromise (1820) – issue: the admission of new states and slavery; Henry Clay devised the compromise

        1. Maine is separated from Massachusetts and becomes a free state

        2. Missouri entered as a slave state

        3. All other territory in the Louisiana Purchase north of 36’30’ was closed to slavery (it left far less territory open to slavery than closed to slavery

      2. Annexation of Texas (1845) – Southerners supported it, northerners did not – they feared the extension of slavery, the increased Southern representation in the House of Representatives, and possible war with Mexico

      3. Mexican War (1846-48) –

        1. Caused by

          1. Annexation of Texas

          2. Boundary dispute

          3. American ambition to acquire additional Mexican land

        2. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

          1. Rio Grande is the southern boundary of Texas

          2. California and New Mexico ceded to the U.S.

          3. U.S. paid Mexico $15 million

      4. Compromise of 1850 – Issue: Slavery in California and the rest of the newly acquired territory; Henry Clay once again came up with a compromise

        1. California admitted as a free state

        2. The rest of the Mexican Cession was divided into the territories of New Mexico and Utah and was to follow popular, or squatter, sovereignty

        3. Texas was given $10 million in exchange for a strip of land assigned to New Mexico

        4. Slave trade, but not slavery, was prohibited in Washington D.C.

        5. Strict fugitive slave law was adopted to make it easier for Southerners to recover runaway slaves found in the North

      5. Kansas-Nebraska Act (1954) – it repeals the Missouri Compromise

        1. Divided the remaining land of the Louisiana Purchase into Kansas and Nebraska

        2. Authorized the people in these territories to determine the status of slavery according to popular sovereignty

        3. Bleeding Kansas ensues

      6. Dred Scott Case (1857) – Issue: a black slaver had been taken by his master into the Minnesota region, which according to the Missouri Compromise was free territory. Did residence in a free territory make him a free man? The Supreme Court said “No.” Black men are not citizens and could not bring suit in federal court.

        1. Slaves are property

        2. Congress may not deprive any person of the right to take property into federal territory

        3. Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional

      7. John Brown’s Raid (1959) – fanatical abolitionist led a band of 20 men in a raid on a federal arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Va., in the hopes of acquiring the weapons and leading a slave rebellion.

      8. Crittenden Amendments – last effort at compromise before the Civil War; proposed two amendments to the Constitution. . .

        1. Prohibiting the federal government from interfering with slavery in the Southern states

        2. Restoration of the Missouri Compromise line

  5. Identify significant religious, philosophical, and social reform movements of the nineteenth century and their impact on American society

      1. Transcendentalism – philosophical movement of the 1830s and 40s that proposed the general goodness of man and nature; self-reliance, inner spirituality and independence were key elements

        1. Leaders were Ralph Waldo Emerson (Nature and Self-Reliance Essays), Henry David Thoreau (Walden and Civil Disobedience), and Walt Whitman (Leaves of Grass)

      2. The Arts and Letters –

        1. Romanticism –

        2. Hudson River School – landscape paintings which expressed a romantic love of nature, a religious awe of God’s creation, a scientific interest in natural history, resentment against society’s growing industrialization and urbanization, and patriotic pride in America’s countryside.

        3. The Penny Press – newspapers with serialized stories and news presented very lively; increased advertising space to increase circulation

        4. Lithography –reproducing images from flat surfaces; made it possible to produce on paper or other materials works of art in quantity and at low cost

      3. Women’s issues – see below

  6. Identify the major characteristics of he abolition movement in the antebellum period, its achievements, failures, and Southern opposition to it

      1. Argument against slavery –

        1. Morally wrong

        2. Transgressed religious teachings and violated the ethics of the Bible

        3. Resulted in cruel and inhuman treatment

        4. Degraded slave owners

        5. Violated democracy

      2. Frederick Douglass – former slave

      3. William Lloyd Garrison – published antislavery newspaper, the Liberator

  7. Analyze the women’s rights and suffrage movements and the impact of women on other reform movements in the antebellum period

      1. Seneca Falls –

        1. Goals –Right to vote; overcoming the “cult of domesticity”

        2. Supporters – middle-class women; some male abolitionists; Quakers

        3. Leaders – Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott

        4. Methods – Published a Declaration of Sentiments; held an annual convention

  8. Compare and contrast the economic, social, and cultural differences of the North and South during the Antebellum period



Unit 4: Civil War and Reconstruction

I can. . .



  1. Identify and analyze the technological, social, and strategic aspects of the Civil War

      1. Advantages of the North –

        1. Control of two-thirds of the states

        2. Larger population

        3. Manufacturing base (90% of nation’s industry)

        4. 20,000 miles of railroads

        5. Three-fourths of the nation’s financial resources

        6. Control of the navy and merchant marine

      2. Advantages of the South –

        1. Geographically compact group of eleven states

        2. Fighting a defensive war

        3. Held the interior

        4. Shorter lines of communication

        5. Loyalty of military commanders

        6. Knowledge of terrain and the skills to go with it

        7. Overseas friends of aristocracy

      3. Stalemate in the East –

      4. Northern victories –

      5. Final years -


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