Advanced Placement US History
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Transcript Advanced Placement US History
Advanced Placement
US History
Test Review
historyteacher.net
www.apstudent.com/ushistory
What About the Test?
Three Parts – 3 hours and 5 minutes
Part I – 80 Multiple Choice in 55 minutes
50 % of the score
Part II – DBQ
15 minute mandatory reading time
45 minutes to write
Part III – Essays
4 essays in two categories
Choose 1 out of each category
35 minutes each
Part II and III together comprise 50% of your
score.
Colonial America / Early Republic
Colonial America
ROANOKE
JAMESTOWN
THE MAYFLOWER COMPACT
THE PILGRIMS AND PLYMOUTH
COLONY
THE MASSACHUSETTS BAY
COLONY
SALEM WITCH TRIALS
KING PHILIP'S WAR
NATIVE AMERICANS
BACON'S REBELLION
FIRST GREAT AWAKENING
THE MARYLAND TOLERATION ACT
THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR
PONTIAC'S REBELLION
PROCLAMATION OF 1763
THE EARLY REPUBLIC, 1775-1820
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION
SHAY'S REBELLION
THE FEDERALIST PAPERS
THE CONSTITUTIONAL
CONVENTION OF 1787
THE WHISKEY REBELLION
THE BURR CONSPIRACY
LEWIS & CLARK
TECUMSEH
The War of 1812
Report and Resolutions of the
Hartford Convention
Francis Scott Key
Era of Good Feelings
Henry Clay - John C. Calhoun
THE MARSHALL SUPREME COURT
CASES
Expansion and Reform /
Women and Social Reform
EXPANSION AND REFORM, 18201860
THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE,
1820
The Monroe Doctrine
The Erie Canal
Jacksonian Democracy
Trail of Tears
The Texas Revolution
MOUNTAIN MEN AND THE FUR
TRADE
Oregon-Trail
Manifest Destiny
Daniel Webster - Webster-Hayne
Debate
The U.S.-Mexican War, 1846-1848
The Second Great Awakening
WOMEN AND SOCIAL REFORM,
1820-1940
United States Utopian
Communities
The American Immigration
Hudson River School of Art
The Industrial Revolution
DOROTHEA DIX
Seneca Falls Convention
Early Nineteenth Century
American Literature
Slavery and Abolitionism /
Union in Peril
SLAVERY AND
ABOLITIONISM
Slave Revolts
The Underground
Railroad
The Slave Trade
Abolitionist Movement
William Lloyd Garrison
"Bleeding Kansas"
Dred Scott Decision
HARRIET BEECHER
STOWE
Uncle Tom's Cabin
THE UNION IN PERIL,
1820-1860
THE KANSASNEBRASKA ACT
POLITICS AND
SECTIONALISM IN THE
1850s
THE COMPROMISE OF
1850 and the
FUGITIVE SLAVE ACT
THE FREE SOIL PARTY
JOHN BROWN
Civil War and Reconstruction/
Rise of Industrial America
CIVIL WAR AND
RECONSTRUCTION, 18611877
CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR
THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE
SHERMAN'S MARCH TO THE SEA
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
CIVIL WAR AND
RECONSTRUCTION, 1861-1877
THE TRANSCONTINENTAL
RAILROAD
AMERICAN IMMIGRATION
HAYES VS. TILDEN: THE 1876
ELECTORAL CONTROVERSY
THE RISE OF INDUSTRIAL
AMERICA
THE TRIANGLE SHIRTWAIST
FACTORY FIRE
CHILD LABOR IN THE EARLY
1900s
TEMPERANCE AND PROHIBITION
THE GILDED AGE AND THE
PROGRESSIVE ERA
HULL HOUSE
THE 1886 HAYMARKET SQUARE
RIOT
SAMUEL GOMPERS
THOMAS ALVA EDISON
SPANISH AMERICAN WAR
ANTI-IMPERIALISM IN THE
UNITED STATES , 1898-1935
THE HISTORY OF JIM CROW
PROSPERITY, DEPRESSION AND WAR /
America Since 1945
PROSPERITY, DEPRESSION AND
WAR, 1920-1945
RED SCARE
CHARLES LINDBERGH
THE SACCO-VANZETTI CASE
THE 1929 STOCK MARKET CRASH
THE SAD TALE OF THE BONUS
MARCHERS
FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT'S
FIRESIDE CHATS
FDR AND THE DEPRESSION - A
NEW DEAL
WORLD WAR II - THE YALTA
CONFERENCE
ATOMIC BOMB: DECISION
NUREMBERG WAR CRIMES
TRIALS
AMERICA SINCE 1945
COLD WAR
BAY OF PIGS INVASION
THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS AND
ITS AFTERMATH
THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT,
1955-1965
GREENSBORO SIT INS: LAUNCH
OF A CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
THE ROSA PARKS
VIETNAM WAR
JFK / THE KENNEDY
ASSASSINATION
UNITED STATES FOREIGN
POLICY FOR THE 1970s
WATERGATE: THE SCANDAL THAT
DESTROYED PRESIDENT NIXON
AP U.S. History Exam Review
Frequently Asked MCQs
MCQs on the following topics frequently appear on the “real” exam. Be sure to understand the
concepts behind the terms.
1. Puritan motive (build a city on a hill, i.e. provide a model)
2. Motive of those settling Virginia (seek profit)
3. 1st Great Awakening (Ivy League colleges founded by New Lights)
4. Deism
5. Albany Congress, 1754 (Franklin, first attempt to unite colonies – failed)
6. Stamp Act / Stamp Congress
8. Slavery in pre-independence times / Indentured servants (all the rage prior to slavery)
10. Proclamation of 1763
11. Articles of Confederation
12. Bill of Rights (1st 10 Amendments to Constitution, protecting individual liberties, and giving states
the powers not directly given to the feds)
12. Attitude of founding fathers towards political parties (Jeff “We’re all feds, we’re all reps)
13. Hamilton’s economic plans
14. Shay’s Rebellion
15. XYZ Affair
16. Marbury .v. Madison
17. Louisiana Purchase – why ? control mouth of Mississippi
18. Hartford Convention (federal law null & void ??) / Nullification, John C. Calhoun, Tariff of
Abominations (1828)
19. Eli Whitney (interchangeable parts to rifle, cotton gin)
20. Henry Clay’s “American System” (high tariffs, BUS, federal funding of internal improvements)
More Multiple Choice?
21. Monroe Doctrine
22. Andrew Jackson (Indian removal / Trail of Tears, veto Congress, opposes nullification, opposes BUS, supports Westward
expansion)
23. Transcendentalists
26. Ralph Waldo Emerson (stressed individuality, self-reliance)
27. Wm Lloyd Garrison, “The Liberator” – abolitionist
28. Harriet Tubman – Underground Railway
29. Dred Scott .v. Sanford, 1857 (slave is not a citizen, slave is property, Missouri Compromise is dead)
30. Popular Sovereignty
31. Kansas-Nebraska Act
32. Douglas’s Freeport Doctrine (popular sovereignty can exclude slavery anywhere)
33. Primary cause of Civil War (maintain the union)
34. Emancipation Proclamation, 1863 – gave North the moral high ground, calculated to win support of Britain & France)
35. Radical Reconstruction
36. Compromise of 1877 (ends Reconstruction in South)
37. Knights of Labor
38. Dawes Act, 1887 (assimilate Indians into mainstream America = kill tribal identity)
39. Social Gospel
40. Populists – farmers’ party, wanted “free silver”
41. Yellow Press (Hearst, Pulitzer – called for war with Spain. “Remember the ‘Maine’”)
42. “New Immigration” – from SE Europe, after Civil War (Gilded Age)
43. Open Door Policy (open access to China for Am investment)
44. Du Bois & Booker T. Washington
45. Muckrakers (Sinclair Lewis, Mother Jones)
46. Germany’s unrestricted submarine warfare (main reason for US joining WWI)
47. Wilson’s 14 Points (Article X). Wilson lost vote in Senate ‘cos he wouldn’t compromise on wording. Senate didn’t want US
totally tied to L of N charter)
48. Bonus Army, 1932 (give us our bonus, now)
49. 100 Day Congress, New Deal / Civilian Conservation Corps
You Have to Be Kidding?
51. Cuban Missile Crisis
52. Brown .v. Board of Education (overturned old Plessy .v.
Ferguson)
53. Sputnik, 1957 ~ arms & space race, & education
receives greater emphasis in US
54. Sit-Ins, 1960, Greensboro, NC (seeking integration of
public facilities)
55. Civil Rights Acts 1960, 1964
56. Malcolm “X”
57. Gulf of Tonkin Incident (& Resolution – gave LBJ a free
hand to escalate Vietnam War)
58. Watergate
59. Tet Offensive, 1968
60. Camp David Accords (Carter, Begin & Sadat, peace in
Middle East)
ERAS
Early Republic
1789 - 1829
George
Washington
John Adams
Thomas
Jefferson
James
Madison
James
Monroe
John Quincy
Adams
Jacksonian
Democracy
1829 - 1853
Andrew
Jackson
Martin Van
Buren
William
Henry
Harrison
John Tyler
James Polk
Zachary
Taylor
Sectional
Conflict
1853 - 1881
Franklin
Pierce
James
Buchanan
Abraham
Lincoln
Andrew
Johnson
Ulysses
Grant
Rutherford
Hayes
Gilded Age
1881 - 1897
James
Garfield
Chester
Arthur
Grover
Cleveland
Benjamin
Harrison
Grover
Cleveland
Progressive
Era
1897 - 1921
William
McKinley
Theodore
Roosevelt
William
Taft
Woodrow
Wilson
Depression
& World
Conflict
1921-1961
Warren
Harding
Calvin
Coolidge
Herbert
Hoover
Franklin
Roosevelt
Harry
Truman
Dwight
Eisenhower
Social
Change&
Soviet
Relations
1961 - 1989
John
Kennedy
Lyndon
Johnson
Richard
Nixon
Gerald
Ford
Jimmy
Carter
Ronald
Reagan
Globalization
1989 -
George H.
W. Bush
Bill Clinton
George W. Barack
Bush
Obama
Millard
Fillmore
Presidential Review
The Young Republic, 1788-1815
1. George Washington, 1789-1797
VP – John Adams
Secretary of State – Thomas Jefferson
Secretary of Treasury – Alexander Hamilton
Major Items: Judiciary Act, 1789
Tariff of 1789
Whiskey Rebellion, 1799
French Revolution – Citizen Genét, 1793
Jay Treaty with England, 1795
Pinckney Treaty with Spain, 1795
Farewell Address, 1796
First Bank of United States , 1791-1811
2. John Adams, 1797-1801 Federalist
VP – Thomas Jefferson
Major Items: XYZ Affair, 1797
Alien Act, Sedition Act, 1798
Naturalization Act
"Midnight Judges," 1801
Kentucky (Jefferson) & Virginia (Madison) Resolutions, 1798
3. Thomas Jefferson, 1801-1809 Republican
VP – Aaron Burr, George Clinton
Secretary of State – James Madison
Major Items: Marbury v. Madison, 1803
Louisiana Purchase, 1803
Lewis & Clark Expedition, 1804-1805
12th Amendment, 1804
Embargo Act, 1807
Non-Intercourse Act, 1809
4. James Madison, 1809-1817
Republican
VP – George Clinton, Elbridge Gerry
Secretary of State – James Monroe
Major Items: Macon Act, 1810
Berlin & Milan Decrees
Orders in Council
"War Hawks," 1811-1812 - War of 1812
Hartford Convention, 1814
First Protective Tariff, 1816
Era of Good Feelings & the Common
Man, 1815-1840