Robert brown high school


Explain the significance of the political cartoon



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Explain the significance of the political cartoon:



Industrial Revolution- New technologies in manufacturing leads to the rise of manufactured goods and factories in the 1880’s.

Cotton Gin-
(The growth of “King Cotton”- South begins to be the main producer of cotton. Increases the brutality of slavery in the south.

Transportation Revolution- brought new technologies and goods through numerous new transportation methods in the United States. (Erie Canal, Transcontinental Rail Road, Major Port cities-New York)

Urbanization-
Andrew Jackson & the Trail of Tears-

S

poils System-
Andrew Jackson gave government jobs to people who helped the party win the election regardless of capabilities.

Manifest Destiny-


Equality Terms

Suffrage Seneca Falls Convention William Lloyd Garrison

Susan B. Anthony Abolitionist Underground Railroad

Harriet Tubman Fredrick Douglass Uncle Tom’s Cabin




Road to Civil War

Compromise of 1850-

Popular Sovereignty- the people living in the territory would vote on whether or not the territory would be a Slave State or not.

Fugitive Slave Law- requires any “escaped” slave to be returned to the south.
Dred Scott v. Sanford-


John Brown’s raid-


Kansas-Nebraska Act-

Election of 1860 (Lincoln)

South Carolina Secedes- in 1860 South Carolina leaves the Union and forms the Confederate States of America with six other states that left the union.
Civil War-

Lincoln’s main goal is to preserve the Union!!
The Civil War was fought between the ______________________ and the ___________________________.
Emancipation Proclamation-

Gettysburg Address-

Unit III Quiz



1. The legal basis for the United States purchase of the Louisiana Territory was the

  1. power granted to the President to make treaties

  2. President’s power as Commander in Chief

  3. authority of Congress to declare war

  4. Senate’s duty to approve the appointment of ambassadors

2. The Louisiana Purchase had great geographic significance for the United States because it

  1. reduced British control of North America

  2. focused the United States on westward expansion

  3. extended United States control over Mexico

  4. decreased tensions with Native American Indians

3. "Compromise Enables Maine and Missouri To Enter Union" (1820)
"California Admitted to Union as Free State" (1850)
"Kansas-Nebraska Act Sets Up Popular Sovereignty" (1854)

Which issue is reflected in these headlines?



  1. enactment of protective tariffs

  2. extension of slavery

  3. voting rights for minorities

  4. universal public education

4. The phrase “by military conquest, treaty, and purchase” best describes the

  1. steps in the growth of American industry

  2. methods used to expand the territory of the United States

  3. major parts of President Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points

  4. causes of the United States entry into the Korean War

5. Before the Civil War, the principle of popular sovereignty was proposed as a means of

  1. allowing states to secede from the Union

  2. permitting voters to nullify federal laws

  3. deciding the legalization of slavery in a new state

  4. overturning unpopular decisions of the Supreme Court

6. As the United States acquired more land between 1803 and 1850, controversy over these territories focused on the



  1. need for schools and colleges

  2. failure to conserve natural resources

  3. expansion of slavery

  4. construction of transcontinental railroads

7. The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 was mainly concerned with

  1. ending slavery in all the states

  2. reducing consumption of alcoholic beverages

  3. improving treatment of the mentally ill

  4. expanding women’s rights

8. The rapid westward migration caused by the discovery of gold in California led directly to

  1. the start of the Civil War

  2. the adoption of the Compromise of 1850

  3. increased trade through the Panama Canal

  4. control of the United States Senate by the slave states

9. Manifest Destiny was used to justify an American desire to

  1. limit the number of immigrants entering the country

  2. control the area located east of the Appalachian Mountains

  3. expand the United States to the Pacific Ocean

  4. warn European countries against colonizing Latin America

10. In the 1850s, the phrase “Bleeding Kansas” was used to describe clashes between

  1. proslavery and antislavery groups

  2. Spanish landowners and new American settlers

  3. Chinese and Irish railroad workers

  4. Native American Indians and white settlers

11. Which argument did President Abraham Lincoln use against the secession of the Southern States?

  1. Slavery was not profitable

  2. The government was a union of people and not of states.

  3. The Southern States did not permit their people to vote on secession.

  4. As the Commander in Chief, he had the duty to defend the United States against foreign invasion.

12. The abolitionist movement, the women’s suffrage movement, and the 1960’s civil rights movement are all examples of reform efforts that

  1. succeeded without causing major controversy

  2. developed significant popular support

  3. achieved their goals without government action

  4. failed to affect the nation as a whole

13. Which statement best explains President Abraham Lincoln’s justification for the Civil War?

  1. As an abolitionist, President Lincoln wanted to end slavery in the United States.

  2. President Lincoln wanted to keep the South economically dependent on the industrial North.

  3. President Lincoln’s oath of office required him to defend and preserve the Union.

  4. To keep the support of Great Britain and France, President Lincoln had to try to end slavery immediately.

14. A major result of the Civil War was that the

  1. economic system of the South came to dominate the United States economy

  2. Federal Government’s power over the States was strengthened

  3. members of Congress from Southern States gained control of the legislative branch

  4. nation’s industrial development came to a standstill

15. Sectional differences developed in the United States largely because

  1. the Federal Government adopted a policy of neutrality

  2. economic conditions and interests in each region varied

  3. only northerners were represented at the Constitutional Convention

  4. early Presidents favored urban areas over rural areas

16. The rulings of the Supreme Court in Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857), Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), and Korematsu v. United States (1944) all demonstrate that the Supreme Court has

  1. continued to extend voting rights to minorities

  2. protected itself from internal dissent

  3. sometimes failed to protect the rights of minorities

  4. often imposed restrictions on free speech during wartime

17. "Compromise Enables Maine and Missouri To Enter Union" (1820)
"California Admitted to Union as Free State" (1850)
"Kansas-Nebraska Act Sets Up Popular Sovereignty" (1854)

Which issue is reflected in these headlines?



  1. enactment of protective tariffs

  2. extension of slavery

  3. voting rights for minorities

  4. universal public education

18. Which statement is best supported by the data in the table?



  1. The Confederate troops lost the Civil War as a result of their higher numbers of injuries and fatalities.

  2. The Union army had better generals during the Civil War.

  3. The Civil War had more casualties than any other war.

  4. More soldiers died from disease than from wounds.

19. In the 1850s, why did many runaway slaves go to Canada?

  1. They feared being drafted into the Northern army.

  2. The Fugitive Slave Act kept them at risk in the United States.

  3. More factory jobs were available in Canada.

  4. Northern abolitionists refused to help fugitive slaves.

Unit IV Reconstruction & Productivity

13th Amendment (1865)- Abolishes SLAVERY in the United States

14th Amendment (1868)- All US born are citizens regardless of race.

15th Amendment (1870)- All citizens (MEN) of Age can vote.
Reconstruction Era-
Booker T. Washington-
WEB Dubois-


Struggles for equality during Reconstruction

Black Codes- Laws in the South that aimed to keep African Americans from using their rights. (ex voting)

Ku Klux Klan- White Southerners that created a group that acted brutally towards African Americans.

Poll Taxes- Southern States imposed a tax on every voter to limit the # of African Americans from voting.

Literacy Tests-
Grandfather Clauses- “If your grandfather did not vote- than you could not either”

Jim Crow Laws- passing of laws that created segregation. (The separation of the races)

Freedman’s Bureau- created by congress to aid African Americans in using their rights. Also built schools.




Need to know Court Cases for Civil Rights

Civil Rights Cases(1883) ruled that slavery was abolished but discrimination by individuals was not prohibited by the constitution.

Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) established segregation is OK is “separate but equal”

Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) established that facilities separated by race were unequal.

Rise of Big business

Sharecroppers- landless farmers who gave part of their year’s crop to landowner to as rent.

Monopoly- A company or small group of companies that have complete control over a particular field (ex. steel)

Entrepreneurs- people who take responsibility for the organization and operation of a new business venture.

Robber Barron-

Andrew Carnegie-

John D. Rockefeller_

Henry Ford-

Laissez Faire- the idea that the government should NOT interfere the economy.

Philanthropists- wealthy entrepreneurs that used or donated part of their wealth to better society. (built libraries ect)

Social Darwinism- “survival of the fittest” the strong people or businesses “survive”

Sherman Antitrust Act (1890)- prohibited monopolies by declaring monopolies’ and trusts illegal.



Knights of Labor- an organization that fought for better working conditions for its workers. (8 hour work day)

American Federation of Labor- union of skilled workers fought for better conditions. (Samuel Gompers)

Labor Strikes

Great Railway Strike (1877) Haymarket Riot (1886) Homestead Strike (1892)

Pullman Strike (1894) Lawrence Textile Strike (1912)






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