Unit 5: The Growing Nation
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Transcript Unit 5: The Growing Nation
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed below:
Favorite son
Majority
Plurality
Mudslinging
Suffrage
Spoils System
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary term
correctly.
Unit 5: The Growing
Nation
Chapter 11: The Jackson Era
Chapter 12: Manifest Destiny
Chapter 13: North and South
Chapter 14: The Age of Reform
Chapter 11: The Jackson Era
• Section 1: Jacksonian Democracy
• Section 2: Conflicts Over Land
• Section 3: Jackson and The Bank
Chapter 11 Section 1: Jacksonian
Democracy
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Election of 1824
Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, and John Quincy Adams were
favorite son candidates
No one received a majority of electoral votes
House of Representatives decided election
The Corrupt
Bargain
The Adams
Presidency
Henry Clay supported John Quincy Adams
Clay uses his influence as Speaker of the House to help
Adams win
Adams gives Clay Secretary of State position
“Corrupt bargain” overshadowed his presidency
Stronger navy, scientific expeditions, direct federal
involvement in economic growth
Congress rejected many of Adams’ proposals
Congress advocated a limited role for federal government
Section 1: Jacksonian Democracy
• President John Quincy Adams- 1843
Section 1: Jacksonian Democracy
• President Andrew Jackson- Official White
House Portrait
Section 1: Jacksonian Democracy
• Senator Henry Clay- Kentucky
Chapter 11 Section 1: Jacksonian
Democracy
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Election of 1828
Democratic-Republicans split into two parties: National
Republicans and Democratic Republicans
Democratic-Republicans nominated Andrew Jackson
National Republicans nominated John Quincy Adams
Mudslinging was introduced
Election slogans, campaign events, buttons, and rallies were
introduced
Andrew Jackson becomes the 7th U.S. President
What changes were
made under President
Jackson?
Suffrage expanded for white men
State constitutions changed to allow people to choose
presidential electors
Caucus system replaced with nominating conventions
State delegates choose presidential candidates
Jackson instituted the spoils system
Review and Process
• 1) Why did the House of Representatives decide the
election of 1824?
• 2) What was the “corrupt bargain?”
• 3) What did President Adams hope to accomplish as
president?
• 4) Why was the election of 1828 different from prior
presidential elections?
• 5) What changes were made under President Jackson?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you learned
today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Tariff
Nullify
Secede
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 11 Section 1: Jacksonian
Democracy
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Tariff of 1828
1828- passed by Congress
Made European goods more expensive
Manufacturers in the Northeast supported the tariff
Believed Americans would buy American-made goods
Southerners protested because they traded cotton for
European goods
Nullification and
Secession
John C. Calhoun argued for nullification and secession
Calhoun believed states had a right to cancel federal laws
Calhoun argued it was states that formed the federal
government
Calhoun argued states have rights and powers independent
of the federal government
Section 1: Jacksonian Democracy
• Vice President John C. Calhoun- South
Carolina
Chapter 11 Section 1: Jacksonian Democracy
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Nullification Crisis
Congress passed a lower tariff in 1832
South Carolina state legislature passed Nullification Act
stating that it would not pay tariffs of 1828 or 1832
South Carolina threatened to secede
President Jackson stated the Union must be preserved
Henry Clay’s
Compromise
Proposed compromise bill to end Nullification Crisis
Gradually lower tariff of 1832 over several years
South Carolina accepts the bill
Force Bill 1833
1833- President Jackson convinced Congress to pass this bill
Stated the president can use military force to enforce acts of
Congress
South Carolina “nullified” the act but did accept Clay’s
compromise tariff bill
Review and Process
• 1) Why did the Tariff of 1828 divide the
country between North and South?
• 2) Why did Vice-President John Calhoun argue
for nullification?
• 3) What was the Nullification Crisis?
• 4) Why was the Force Bill passed?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Relocate
Guerilla Tactics
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 11 Section 2: Conflicts Over
Land
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Indian Removal Act
1830
President Jackson supported relocating Native
Americans to lands west of the Mississippi River
1830-Passed by Congress
Federal government paid Native Americans to move
west
President Jackson sent officials to negotiate treaties
with Native American groups
Indian Territory 1834
Created by Congress for Native Americans from
Southeast
Present-day Oklahoma
Chapter 11 Section 2: Conflicts Over
Land
Main Idea
Supporting Details
The Cherokee
Nation
Lived in present-day Georgia and Alabama
Refused to give up their lands
1790’s- Treaties recognized the Cherokee as separate
nation
Georgia did not recognize Cherokee laws
Worcester v. Georgia Cherokee nation sued the Georgia in U.S. Supreme
1832
Court
Chief Justice John Marshall ruled Georgia had no right
to interfere with the Cherokee
Marshall stated only the federal government had
authority in matters involving the Cherokee
President Jackson supported Georgia’s efforts to
remove the Cherokee
Chapter 11 Section 2: Conflicts Over
Land
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Trail of Tears 1838
Forced march west of the Cherokee nation from their
homeland to present-day Oklahoma
General Winfield Scott and 7,000 troops came to
remove the Cherokee by force
4,000 Cherokee died
The Seminoles
Live in Florida
1832- went to war against the U.S.
Led by Chief Osceola
Used guerilla tactics against U.S. armed forces
1842- U.S. gave up trying to remove the Seminole
1,500 U.S. soldiers were killed
Section 2: Conflicts Over Land
• General Winfield Scott
Section 2: Conflicts Over Land
• Trail of Tears
Section 2: Conflicts Over Land
• Osceola
Review and Process
• 1) What was the Indian Removal act of 1830?
• 2) Why was the Indian Territory created in
1834?
• 3) Why was Worcester v. Georgia a significant
case in U.S. History?
• 4) What was the Trail of Tears?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Veto
Depression
Log Cabin Campaign
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 11 Section 3: Jackson and the
Bank
Main Idea
Supporting Details
How was the Bank
of the United
States used against
President Jackson
in the 1832
election?
President Jackson believed it was an organization of the
wealthy classes
1832- Bank president Nicolas Biddle applies for new
charter 4 years early
Biddle, Henry Clay and Daniel Webster hoped to use the
Bank to defeat Jackson in 1832 election
If Jackson vetoed the charter, he would lose popular support
Jackson vetoed charter and wins re-election
How did President Jackson ordered withdrawal of federal government funds .
Jackson “kill” the
Bank of the United Jackson ordered federal funds deposited into state banks
1836- Biddle refused to renew the Bank’s charter
States?
Section 3: Jackson and the Bank
• Nicholas Biddle- President of the Bank of the
United States
Chapter 11 Section 3: Jackson and the
Bank
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Election of 1836
Jackson supported Martin Van Buren from New
York
Van Buren becomes 8th President of United States
Panic of 1837
Land values dropped, investments dropped,
businesses closed, banks failed, thousands of people
lost jobs
Inflation caused prices to rise
Van Buren believed in a laissez-faire policy
The Whigs
1830’s
Political party that opposed Jackson’s policies
Supremacy of Congress over the Executive Branch
Programs of modernization and economic
protectionism
Chapter 11 Section 3: Jackson and the
Bank
Main Idea
Supporting Details
The Log Cabin
Campaign
1840- “Tippecanoe and Tyler Too” campaign slogan in
presidential election
Harrison in political cartoons showing him in front of
a log cabin
Log cabin became symbol of the Whig Party
Harrison’s Presidency
Harrison wins election of 1840
Harrison became sick with pneumonia and died on
April 4, 1841
Vice-President John Tyler becomes 10th President of
the United States
Tyler often disagreed with the Whig Party,
Chapter 11 Section 3: Jackson and
the Bank
• President William Henry Harrison
Source: http://www.npg.si.edu/img2/hall/big/bigwhharr.gif
Review and Process
• 1) How was the Bank of the United States used against
President Jackson in the 1832 election?
• 2) What was the outcome of the presidential election
of 1832?
• 3) How did President Jackson “kill” the Bank of the
United States?
• 4) What was the Panic of 1837?
• 5) Who were the Whigs?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you have
learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Joint Occupation
Mountain Man
Manifest Destiny
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 12: Manifest Destiny
•
•
•
•
Section 1:
Section 2:
Section 3:
Section 4:
The Oregon Country
Independence for Texas
War with Mexico
New Settlers in California and Utah
Chapter 12 Section 1: The Oregon
Country
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Competition for the
Oregon Territory
Area between Rocky Mountains and Pacific Ocean
United States, Britain, Spain, and Russia
1819-Spain lost its claim with Adams-Onis Treaty
1824- Russia gave up its land claims
1825- Britain and the U.S. agreed to divide Oregon at
the 49th parallel
Britain and the U.S. continued joint occupation
American Settlement
in Oregon
First American settlers in Oregon were mountain men
Became familiar with rivers, mountains, and trails
Beaver trappers and guides for other settlers
Most settlers moved there because of abundant and
fertile land
Chapter 12 Section 1: Oregon
Country
• Map of Oregon Territory
Chapter 12 Section 1: The Oregon
Country
Main Idea
Supporting Details
The Oregon Trail
A 2,000 mile trail from Missouri to the Pacific Ocean
The trail crossed the Great Plains, went through the
South Pass, and along the Snake and Columbia Rivers
Most pioneers traveled on this trail in covered wagons
called prairie schooners
Manifest Destiny
Idea that the United States was destined to spread
across the North American continent
Americans who emigrated to Oregon demanded
annexation
U.S. had to find a way to remove Britain’s claim
Chapter 12 Section 1: The Oregon
Country
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Election of 1844
James K. Polk nominated by the Democratic Party
Henry Clay nominated by the Whigs
Main issue was the annexation of Oregon
Polk’s campaign slogan was “54 40’ or Fight!” the
northern border for the U.S. should be at 54th parallel
Polk won the election and became the 11th President
of United States
How did the U.S. and U.S. wanted Britain to agree to 54 degrees 40’
Britain settle the
Britain would not agree
dispute over Oregon? June 1846- Britain and the U.S. agreed to the 49th
parallel
Fulfilling “Manifest Destiny,” now meant turning their
attention to Texas
Chapter 12 Section 1: Oregon
Country
• President James K. Polk
Review and Process
• 1) Which nations were competing for the Oregon
Country?
• 2) Which two nations held joint occupation of the
Oregon Country after 1825?
• 3) Who were the first American settlers in the Oregon
Country?
• 4) What was Manifest Destiny?
• 5) How did Britain and the U.S. settle their dispute over
Oregon?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you learned
today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Tejanos
Empresario
Decree
Annex
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 12 Section 2: Independence for
Texas
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Moses and Stephen
Austin
1821- Moses Austin received a land grant from Mexico to
create an American settlement in Texas
His son, Stephen, recruited 300 families to move to Texas
Settlement in Texas
Mexico’s Immigration
Policies 1830
Mexico wanted settlers
Mexico passed laws giving cheap land to settlers if they
learned Spanish, converted to Catholicism, and obeyed
Mexican law
Americans who refused to adopt Mexican ways
1830- more Americans lived in Texas than Mexicans
Mexico alarmed by the growing American population
Mexico forbade further immigration to Texas by Americans
Chapter 12 Section 2:
Independence for Texas
• Stephen Austin
Chapter 12 Section 2: Independence for
Texas
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna- Mexican president
Stephen Austin’s
request to make Texas a 1833- Visits Santa Anna to request immigration ban be
lifted and Texas to become a separate state
separate state
Immigration ban removed, Texas NOT a separate state
1834- Santa Anna declared himself dictator
Why did Texans want to
Stephen Austin arrested for sending a letter back to Texas
fight for their
instructing to make plans for independence
independence?
Texans no longer had any protection of their rights
Battle of Gonzales
1835
October 1835- Santa Anna sent troops to to punish the
Texans for being critical of him
Texans defeated the Mexican troops
First battle of the Texas Revolution
Chapter 12 Section 2:
Independence for Texas
• General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
Review and Process
• 1) Who were Moses and Stephen Austin?
• 2) How did conflict emerge between American
settlers and the Mexican government in Texas?
• 3) What immigration policies did Mexico
establish in 1830?
• 4) Why did Stephen Austin meet with Antonio
Lopez de Santa Anna in 1833?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
• Based on what you learned yesterday, complete
the following quick-write activity:
• Make an argument FOR or AGAINST annexing
Texas to the United States.
Chapter 12 Section 2: Independence for
Texas
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Battle of San
Antonio
1835
December 1835-Texan forces seized San Antonio
Many Texans left thinking the war was won
Santa Anna was determined to take back San Antonio
Battle of the Alamo
1836
February 1836- Santa Anna’s forces arrived in San Antonio
Santa Anna found remaining Texans in the Alamo
Santa Anna’s forces attacked but the Texans held them off
for 12 days
March 6, 1836- Mexican forces break in and killed nearly
everyone
“Remember the Alamo” became a rallying cry for Texan
forces
Chapter 12 Section 2:
Independence for Texas
• The Alamo
Chapter 12 Section 2: Independence for
Texas
Main Idea
Supporting Details
How did the Alamo help
the Texans win
independence?
Gave the Texan forces time to prepare for future battles
Texans declared their independence and name Sam
Houston as commander of all Texan forces
Battle of San Jacinto
April 21, 1836- Sam Houston’s Texan forces surprised Santa
Anna’s forces, killing 600 of his 1300 men
Houston’s troops captured Santa Anna
May 13, 1836 Santa Anna forced to sign treaty recognizing
Texas as an independent country
The Lone Star Republic
(Republic of Texas)
September 1836- Sam Houston elected president of Texas
Houston asks President Andrew Jackson to annex Texas
Jackson refused because it would upset the balance of slave
and free states
December 29, 1845- Texas was annexed by United States
Chapter 12 Section 2:
Independence for Texas
• Sam Houston
Review and Process
• 1) Why did Texans want to fight for their
independence?
• 2) What was the first battle of the Texas Revolution?
• 3) Why was the Battle of the Alamo helpful to the
Texans?
• 4) What was the name of the independent nation of
Texas?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you have
learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Cede
Californios
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 12 Section 3: War with Mexico
Main Idea
Supporting Details
New Mexico
Manifest Destiny created interest among Americans in
acquiring New Mexico
1845- United States offered Mexico $30 million for New
Mexico and California
Dispute over the
southern border
How did war with
Mexico begin?
U.S believed it was the Rio Grande River
Mexico claimed the boundary was the Nueces River
Mexico refused the $30 million U.S. offer
U.S. sent troops under General Zachary Taylor to the territory
between the Nueces and Rio Grande Rivers
April 24, 1846- Mexican forces attacked Taylor’s troops
Americans who supported war claimed Mexico attacked on
U.S. soil
Americans who opposed war claimed the U.S. provoked the
attack
Chapter 12 Section 3: War with
Mexico
• General Zachary Taylor
Source:
http://www.sonofthesouth.net/mexicanwar/pictures/zachary-taylor.jpg
Chapter 12 Section 3: War With Mexico
Main Idea
Supporting Details
President Polk’s War
Plan
Drive Mexican troops out of the disputed territory
between the Nueces and Rio Grande Rivers
Secondly, seize New Mexico and California
Third, capture Mexico’s capital city, Mexico City
August 18, 1846- Santa Fe captured by U.S. General
Stephen Watts Kearney
Santa Fe
Mexico City
Rio Grande and
Nueces Rivers
September 1847- General Winfield Scott captured
Mexico City
February 1847-General Zachary Taylor seizes control
of the disputed territory
Chapter 12 Section 3: War With Mexico
Main Idea
Supporting Details
California- The Bear
Flag Republic
June 1846- American forces seized the city of Sonoma
American forces declared California an independent republic
called the Bear Flag Republic
July 1846- U.S. Commodore John Sloat captured the cities of
Monterrey and San Francisco
Sloat declared California a part of the United States
Many native Californians did not want the U.S. to take over
California
January 1847- California was under U.S. control
Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo
February 1848- ended the Mexican War
Mexico gave up all claims to Texas
Texas border was fixed at the Rio Grande River
U.S. pays Mexico $15 million for California and New Mexico
(Mexican Cession)
Review and Process
• 1) Why were Americans interested in acquiring New
Mexico?
• 2) Explain the boundary dispute between Mexico and
the U.S. regarding Texas.
• 3) How did the Mexican War begin?
• 4) What was President Polk’s war strategy?
• 5) What were the terms of the Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you have
learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Forty-Niners
Boomtowns
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 12 Section 4: New Settlers in
California and Utah
Main Idea
Supporting Details
California Gold Rush
1848-1849
1848- Gold was discovered in California
People from all parts of the world rushed to
California
Boomtowns emerged
Population of San Francisco explodes
What were the effects
of the gold rush?
Few miners achieved lasting wealth
Miners often lost their money from wild spending or
gambling
Merchants made money by charging miners inflated
prices for basic needs such as food, clothes, and tools
Many people decided to stay in California
Chapter 12 Section 4: California
and Utah
• Boomtown (Tombstone, AZ)
Chapter 12 Section 4: New Settlers in
California and Utah
Main Idea
Supporting Details
How did California
become a state?
Rapid population growth required a more efficient
state government
1849- A new state constitution was written
March 1850- California applied for statehood
South disapproved its state constitution banned
slavery
September 1850- California was admitted as a free
state
Chapter 12 Section 4: New Settlers in
California and Utah
Main Idea
Supporting Details
The Mormons
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
1830- Created by Joseph Smith in New York
Forced to move from New York to Ohio, Missouri, and
Illinois
1844- Smith was killed by a mob in Illinois
Deseret
Brigham Young took over the Mormon Church
1846- Young led 12,000 Mormons on a pilgrimage to Great
Salt Lake in Utah
Mormons established a community called Deseret
Later renamed Salt Lake City
Chapter 12 Section 4: California
and Utah
• Brigham Young
Review and Process
• 1) Why did thousands of people rush to
California in 1848-1849?
• 2) What were the effects of the population
explosion in California?
• 3) How did California become a state?
• 4) Who were the Mormons?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Clipper Ship
Telegraph
Morse Code
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 13: North and South
•
•
•
•
Section 1:
Section 2:
Section 3:
Section 4:
The North’s Economy
The North’s People
Southern Cotton Kingdom
The South’s People
Chapter 13 Section 1: The North’s
Economy
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Technology and
Industry
Changed the way Americans worked, traveled, and
communicated
Most technological and industrial improvements were made in
the North
Transportation
Steamboat allowed goods and people to move quickly along
inland waterways
1820-1850- 3,100 miles of canals were built
Clipper ships could travel 300 miles a day
Railroads
1860- 31,000 miles of railroad tracks linked cities in the North
and Midwest
Transformed trade and settlement in the nations’ interior
Grain, livestock, and dairy products were transported
Towns developed along the railroad routes
Chapter 13 Section 1: The
North’s Economy
• Railroad- 1800’s
Source: http://www.dallashistory.org/images/Railroads__small_.jpg
Chapter 13 Section 1: The North’s
Economy
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Communication
1844-Samuel Morse developed the telegraph
Used electric signals to send messages along wires
Morse Code was created to transmit messages
1860-more than 50,000 miles of telegraph lines
existed
Changes in Agriculture Railroads and canals create new markets for farmers
New inventions encouraged people to farm more
land and raise more crops
1837- John Deere invented the steel tipped plow
1846- Cyrus McCormick invented the mechanical
reaper
Chapter 13 Section 1: The
North’s Economy
• Telegraph
Source: http://www.telegraphoffice.com/pages/images/Federal_Telegraph_Key.jpg
Review and Process
• 1) How did new technology and industry change
life in America?
• 2) How did the steamboat and railroads change
transportation in America?
• 3) What improvements were made in
communication?
• 4) What changes were made in agriculture?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Trade Union
Strike
Prejudice
Discrimination
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 13 Section 2: The North’s People
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Northern Factories
Produced shoes, watches, guns, sewing machines, clothing,
textiles, and agricultural machinery
Employees worked 11.4 hours per day
Dangerous and unpleasant working conditions
No laws existed to regulate to protect workers
Fight to improve
working conditions
1830’s- workers organized trade unions
Workers in New York City went on strike
Higher wages and a 10 hour workday
How did
industrialization
impact northern
cities?
People moved to the cities to fill factory jobs
1860- New York City’s population reached 800,000 and
Philadelphia’s reached 500,000
Overcrowding, run-down buildings, disease, and the threat
of fire
Chapter 13 Section 2: North’s People
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Immigration
Immigrants willing to work for low pay and long hours
Immigrants brought their language, customs, religion
Immigrants often faced prejudice and discrimination
How were African
Americans treated in
the North?
Racial prejudice and discrimination
Rhode Island and Pennsylvania passed laws prohibiting
African Americans from voting
Not allowed to attend public schools and were barred from
public facilities
How were women
treated in the North? Discriminated against in the workplace
Forced to work for less pay
Excluded from labor unions
Excluded from the workplace to create more jobs for men
Chapter 13 Section 2: North’s
People
• Ellis Island Immigrants
Source:
http://www.laputan.org/images/pictures/ellis%20island%20immigrants.gif
Review and Process
• 1) How did factory workers try to improve working
conditions?
• 2) How were African Americans treated in the North?
• 3) How were women treated in the North?
• 4) How did industrialization impact northern cities?
• 5) What impact did immigration have on American
society?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you have
learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed below:
Cotton Gin
Yeoman
Tenant Farmer
Cash Crops
Fixed Costs
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary term
correctly.
Chapter 13 Section 3: Southern Cotton
Kingdom
Main Idea
Supporting Details
An agricultural
society
Most southerners were small farmers
Few people could afford to own plantations
Yeomen, tenant farmer, rural poor, and plantation
owners
Farmers without enslaved people
Largest group of free people in the South
Grew crops for themselves and to sell or trade
Yeomen
Tenant Farmers and
the Rural Poor
Tenant farmers rented land
Rural poor lived in crude cabins in wooded areas
Rural poor planed corn, fished, and hunted for food
Rural poor were self-sufficient
Chapter 13 Section 3: Southern Cotton
Kingdom
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Plantations
Plantation owners wanted to earn profits
Plantations had fixed costs
Wealth was measured by possessions, including slaves
How did cotton
become the leading
cash crop of the South?
Why did industry fail
to develop in the
South?
Georgia, South Carolina, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Texas
Cotton gin made cotton production much faster
Cotton gin made slavery stronger
British demand for cotton
Cotton was extremely profitable
Capital was lacking
Markets for manufactured goods were smaller
Roads were poor, there were few canals, and the railroad
network was not very extensive
Chapter 13 Section 3: Southern
Cotton Kingdom
• Southern Cotton Field- 1800’s
Source:
http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/northamerica/after1500/economy/pictures/p
ickingcotton.jpg
Review and Process
• 1) How did cotton become the leading cash crop
in the South?
• 2) Why did industry fail to develop in the South?
• 3) Describe Southern society in the mid-19th
century.
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Slave Codes
Spiritual
Overseer
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 13 Section 4: The South’s People
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Life Under Slavery
Slaves worked long hours, earned no money, and had
little hope of freedom
Slaves worked in the plantation houses
Slaves were skilled laborers
Slaves were field hands
Slaves stayed in slave cabins
Many slaves were separated from their families
Chapter 13 Section 4: The
South’s People
• Slave Cabin
Source: http://www.louisiana101.com/5-2-03-slave_01.jpg
Chapter 13 Section 4: The South’s People
Main Idea
Supporting Details
African American
Culture
Laws did not recognize marriages between slaves
Slaves accepted Christianity because it was a religion of
hope
Spirituals provided a way to secretly communicate
Southern states passed slave codes
Many slaves resisted by working slowly, pretending to be
sick, or breaking tools
Slaves did escape slavery by fleeing north
Review and Process
•
•
•
•
•
1) Describe life under slavery.
2) Why did many slaves accept Christianity?
3) What did the spiritual provide to slaves?
4) Why were slave codes established?
Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Utopia
Temperance
Transcendentalist
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 14: The Age of Reform
• Section 1: Social Reform
• Section 2: The Abolitionists
• Section 3: The Women’s Movement
Chapter 14 Section 1: Social Reform
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Utopian Societies
Americans wanted to improve society by building utopias
1825- Robert Owen established New Harmony, Indiana
Dedicated to cooperation instead of competition
The Mormons also built utopian communities
Second Great
Awakening- Early
1800’s
People centered their lives around religion
Church membership increased
Inspired to become involved in missionary work and
social reform
Chapter 14 Section 1: Social Reform
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Alcohol
Social reformers blamed alcohol for family breakups,
crime, and insanity
1826- the American Society for the Promotion of
Temperance was formed
1851- Maine becomes first state to ban alcohol
Transcendentalism and Stresses the relationship between humans and nature
Stresses the importance of the individual conscience
Transcendental
writers
Margaret Fuller supported women’s rights
Ralph Waldo Emerson believed in the inner voice of
conscience
Henry David Thoreau practiced civil disobedience
Chapter 14 Section 1: Social
Reform
• Ralph Waldo Emerson
Source:
http://www.americanpoems.com/images/e
merson.jpg
Review and Process
• 1) Why did many Americans want to build
utopias?
• 2) Describe the Second Great Awakening.
• 3) What reforms were made regarding alcohol
consumption?
• 4) What is transcendentalism?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
• Complete the following quick-write activity:
• Examine the following quote: (from Emerson’s
Self-Reliance)
• Write your reaction to Emerson’s quote.
Explain your reaction.
Chapter 14 Section 1: Social Reform
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Horace Mann
Leader of education reform
1837- Head of the Massachusetts Board of Education
Education is essential to democracy
Proposed lengthening the school year to six months
Proposed improving the school curriculum
Wanted to find better ways to train teachers
What obstacles were
there to education
reform?
Schools lacked funds
Teachers lacked training
Some people opposed compulsory education
Most females did not go to school
West had few schools
African Americans often excluded
Chapter 14 Section 1: Social Reform
Main Ideas
Supporting Details
What education
reforms were
accepted by the
states?
States agreed on three major principles in education
reform:
Schools should be free and supported by taxes
Teachers should be trained
Children should be required to go to schools
Review and Process
• 1) What reforms did Horace Mann propose for
education?
• 2) What educational reforms were accepted by
the states?
• 3) What obstacles existed to educational reform?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Abolitionist
Underground Railroad
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 14 Section 2: The Abolitionists
Main Idea
Supporting Details
American
Resettle African Americans in Africa and the Caribbean
Colonization Society Founded by Virginians who bought slaves from
1816
slaveholders
Colony located on west coast of Africa
Came to be known as Liberia
1847- Liberia became independent
William Lloyd
Garrison
Abolitionist who published the anti-slavery newspaper
The Liberator
1832- Created the New England Anti-Slavery Society
1833- Created the American Anti-Slavery Society
Chapter 14 Section 2: The Abolitionists
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Frederick Douglas
Escaped slave
One of the most influential African American
abolitionists through writings and lectures
Editor of the anti-slavery newspaper North Star
Sojourner Truth
Born as a slave named Isabella Baumfree
1826- escaped and was officially set free when New
York banned slavery
Women’s rights and the abolition of slavery
Chapter 14 Section 2: The
Abolitionists
• Frederick Douglas
Source: http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/images/2003/douglass5.jpg
Review and Process
• 1) What was the main purpose of the American
Colonization Society?
• 2) What were the achievements of William
Lloyd Garrison?
• 3) What were the achievements of Frederick
Douglas?
• 4) Who was Sojourner Truth?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you
have learned today!
Bell Work
• Based on what you learned yesterday, complete
the following quick-write activity:
• Take a position on the following issue:
Abolition of slavery. Defend your position.
Chapter 14 Section 2: The Abolitionists
Main Idea
Supporting Details
The Underground
Railroad
Network of escape routes to the North and Canada
Passengers traveled at night
Traveled on foot and in wagons that had secret
compartments
Harriet Tubman was the most famous “conductor”
Tubman escaped slavery and helped hundreds of
runaways
Opposition to
abolitionism in the
South
Southern plantation owners who had numerous slaves
Non-slave owners who felt that abolition threatened the
Southern way of life
Chapter 14 Section 2: The
Abolitionists
• Harriet Tubman
Source:
http://www.gardenofpraise.com/images/tubm
an2.jpg
Chapter 14 Section 2: The Abolitionists
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Opposition to
abolitionism in the
North
Saw abolition as a threat to the nation’s social order
Believed freed African Americans would not be able
to blend into society
Believed that freed African Americans would take
jobs away from white workers
Southern Proslavery
Perspectives
Argued that slavery was essential to economic
progress and prosperity
Argued that slavery was preferable to factory work in
the North
Review and Process
• 1) What was the Underground Railroad?
• 2) Why were some people in the South opposed
to the abolition of slavery?
• 3) Why were some people in the North opposed
to the abolition of slavery?
• 4) Why did many Southerners argue in favor of
slavery?
• Write a one sentence summary about what yu
have learned today!
Bell Work
1) Define the vocabulary words listed
below:
Suffrage
Coeducation
2) Write a sentence using each vocabulary
term correctly.
Chapter 14 Section 3: The Women’s
Movement
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Women Abolitionists
Supported the abolition of slavery
First to campaign for women’s rights, to improve
women’s lives, and win equal rights
Lucretia Mott
Woman abolitionist who was also a Quaker
Gave lectures calling for temperance, worker’s rights,
and abolition of slavery
Helped fugitive slaves
Organized the Philadelphia Female Antislavery
Society
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Argued for women’s suffrage
Worked for equal rights for women
Chapter 14 Section 3: The Women’s
Movement
Main Idea
Supporting Details
Susan B. Anthony
Women’s rights, temperance, and the reform of New
York property and divorce laws
Equal pay, college training, and coeducation in the
schools for women
Formed the Daughters of Temperance
Seneca Falls
Convention 1848
July 1848- Women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls
Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions calling for:
An end to all laws that discriminated against women
Entrance into all-male worlds of trade, professions,
and business
Suffrage (right to vote)
Chapter 14 Section 3: The
Women’s Movement
• Susan B. Anthony
Source:
http://www.wpclipart.com/America
n_History/Womans_Rights/Susan_
B_Anthony.png
Review and Process
• 1) How was the women’s movement and the movement
to abolish slavery related?
• 2) Who was Lucretia Mott?
• 3) Who was Elizabeth Cady Stanton?
• 4) Who was Susan B. Anthony?
• 5) What was the purpose of the Seneca Falls
Convention in 1848?
• Write a one sentence summary about what you have
learned today!
Chapter 11 Quiz Review
• Section 1: Jacksonian Democracy
• Section 2: Conflicts Over Land
• Section 3: Jackson and The Bank
Chapter 13 Test Review
•
•
•
•
Section 1:
Section 2:
Section 3:
Section 4:
The North’s Economy
The North’s People
Southern Cotton Kingdom
The South’s People
Bell Work 5/11
• 1) Take out your notebooks and your notes from
chapter 13.
• 2) Take out one (1) sheet of paper for the entire
group.
• 3) Write each person’s name and class period on
the separate sheet of paper.
• 4) Choose one (1) person to be the “scribe” and
spokesperson for the group.
Review Competition Rules
• 1) There are 25 review questions and 5 groups.
• 2) Each group will be responsible for answering five (5)
questions on a rotational basis.
• 3) Each question will be presented for one (1) minute and MUST
be answered within that time.
• 4) You may discuss answers with your group members only.
• 5) Credit for correct answers will be given if you have accurately
explained the main ideas.
• 6) Each class will NOT be informed of a previous class’
performance.
• 7) Mr. Moore is the judge. Rulings on correct answers are final
decisions.
The Winning Class’ Prizes
• 1) 5 bonus points on the Chapter 13 test.
• 2) ALL Chapter 15 notes will be provided to
you.
• 3) One (1) movie day with food.
• Notes disclaimer: The notes that are provided
to you MUST be glued, taped, or stapled into
your notebooks!
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How did new technology and industry change
life in America?
Improve transportation
Faster communication
Mass production of goods
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How was manufacturing in the North changed
by industrialization?
New products and more of them
Faster production of goods
Factory system (all manufacturing steps
brought together)
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How did the steamboat and railroads change
transportation in America?
• Allowed manufacturers to offer goods and
services at much lower prices
Goods can be transported to people rather
than having people come and pick up the
goods
Chapter 13 Test Review
• What improvements were made in
communication?
Telegraph with telegraph lines
Morse code
Communication became cheaper and faster
Chapter 13 Test Review
• What changes were made in agriculture?
• Railroads made crop sales easier
• Technology allowed farmers to increase
their harvest
Cotton gin, steel tip plow, the reaper
Chapter 13 Test Review
• What developed along railroad routes? Why?
Cities and towns became centers of trade
• People could get from place to place faster
People can transport goods faster
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How did factory workers try to improve working
conditions?
• Factory workers formed trade unions
• Strikes to improve working conditions and
obtain higher wages
• Limit work days to 10 hours
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How were African Americans treated in the
North?
• Not allowed to vote
Forced to separate from the community
• Many were very poor
Some were able to get jobs
Discrimination and prejudice
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How were women treated in the North?
• Were paid less than male workers
• Played a major role in developing mills and
the factory system
• Excluded from unions
• Not allowed to VOTE!
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How did industrialization impact northern
cities?
• Made cities grow/ more populated
• Offered more jobs at stable wages
Increased crime and poverty
Chapter 13 Test Review
• What impact did immigration have on American
society?
• Factory Owners made them work long
hours for low wages
Cultures, ideas and disease
Chapter 13 Test Review
• What impact did Irish immigrants have on
American society?
• They worked for long hours and low pay.
• Worked in factories.
Worked on railroads.
Brought their culture and ideas
(Catholicism)
Chapter 13 Test Review
• What impact did German immigrants have on
American society?
• Brought sophisticated culture and ideas.
• Bought land
Started German communities.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• What claims did nativists make against
immigration?
• Said that immigrants would threaten the
futures of “native” Americans.
Immigrants would steal jobs from American
workers.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How did cotton become the leading cash crop in
the South?
• Demand for rice, tobacco, and indigo
decreased
• European demand for cotton increased.
Invention of the cotton gin increased
production.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• Why did industry fail to develop in the South?
• Agriculture was so profitable that it
discouraged industry.
Lack of capital in the south.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• Describe Southern society in the mid-19th century.
• Plantation owners-wealthiest class in southern
society.
• Yeoman Farmers-farmers that did not own slaves.
• The Slaves-involuntary workers on farms in
plantations.
• Tenant Farmers-rented land from bigger farms to
farm their crops.
Rural Poor-people that lived out in the country
side(subsistence farmers)….
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How did the cotton gin impact slavery?
• Increased the demand for slaves because
plantation owners decided to grow more
cotton.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• Why was the price of cotton high?
• European demand for cotton was high.
The southern United States was the main
source of cotton.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• Describe life under slavery.
• Any member of a family could be sold.
Many slaves developed spirituals and
embraced Christianity.
Many slaves lived in slave cabins and slept in
straw beds.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• Why did many slaves accept Christianity?
• Gave them a since of hope that it would help
them escape the circumstances they were in.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• Why were slave codes established?
• To prevent slaves from rebelling or escaping.
Slave codes were laws that were meant to
protect slavery.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• How was wealth measured in the South?
• Your possessions.
• The number of enslaved people you own.
Money.
Chapter 13 Test Review
• What responsibilities did plantation wives have?
• They managed the entire house.
• They supervised slaves.
They kept track of financial records.