2015 History Flashcards

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1
Q

What is power?

A

The ability to control someone or something

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2
Q

What is authority?

A

Power with the right to control power

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3
Q

Who was Christopher Columbus?

A

Landed in Bahamas and sailed ocean blue in 1492

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4
Q

Who was John Cabot?

A

English sailor trying to find the Northwest Passage

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5
Q

What was the Stamp Act?

A

The 1765 British decree taxing all legal papers issued in the colonies.

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6
Q

Who was King George III?

A

He created the Proclamation Line (Application Mountains) that limited colonial expansion in North America. He enforced many tax laws on the colonists who thought it unfair without representation in Parliament. This tension started the American Revolution.

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7
Q

What were the Articles of Confederation?

A

the plan, ratified by the states in 1771, that established a national congress with limited powers (it couldn’t tax and raise money) It was replaced by the Constitution.

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8
Q

What is the Legislative Branch?

A

Concerning the branch of government (Congress) that makes laws. Congress is made up of the Senate and the House of Representatives.

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9
Q

What is a parliament?

A

the assembly of representatives who make laws in England.

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10
Q

What is a boycott?

A

A refusal to buy

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11
Q

What was the American Revolution?

A

1775 - 1783 an eight year war between the 13 colonies and England. George Washington was the leader of the Continental Army. 25,000 American and 10,000 British lost their lives in the war.

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12
Q

What does it mean to acquit?

A

To declare innocent of a crime of wrong doing.

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13
Q

What was the Boston Tea Party?

A

The 1773 protest against British trade policies in which Patriots boarded vessels of the East India Company and threw the tea cargo into Boston Harbor.

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14
Q

What is the Executive Branch?

A

concerning the branch of government (President and Vice President) that enforces laws.

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15
Q

What is the Judicial Branch?

A

concerning the branch of government (Supreme Court/Federal Courts) that interprets laws and punishes lawbreakers.

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16
Q

What was the Boston Massacre?

A

the clash in 1770 between British troops and a group of Bostonians in which five colonists were killed.

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17
Q

What is the first amendment?

A

freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly, and petition

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18
Q

What is the second amendment?

A

the right to bear arms

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19
Q

What is the third amendment?

A

quartering of soldier

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20
Q

What is the fourth amendment?

A

prohibits search and seizure

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21
Q

What was is the Declaration of Independence?

A

the document adopted by the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, establishing the United States as a nation independent of great Britain

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22
Q

What was the Treaty of Paris?

A

(1783) the treaty ending the revolutionary war.

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23
Q

What is an issue?

A

not an event - is ongoing- has long term effects- is something we can do something about - has two or more sides- If a policy can solve it- It’s not an issue.

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24
Q

What is an uprising?

A

an act of instance of rising up. Rebellion

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25
Q

What were the Roanokes?

A

site of the first English colony in the America’s started in 1585

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26
Q

What is a colony?

A

a settlement ruled by a distant parent country

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27
Q

What is the Constitution?

A

our current framework of government- Executive Branch (president) - Legislative Branch (Congress) - Judicial Branch (Supreme Court) established in 1787

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28
Q

What is the Bill of Rights?

A

the first ten amendments to the Constitution, guaranteeing the basic rights of American citizens

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29
Q

What is an amendment?

A

A change or a addition to a legal document. This is why the constitution is called “Living Document”. Constitution has 27 amendments

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30
Q

What is the fifth amendment?

A

Prohibits trial for a crime except on indictment of a Grand Jury and double jeopardy.

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31
Q

What is the sixth amendment?

A

Right to a public and speedy trial by an impartial jury

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32
Q

What is the seventh amendment?

A

Right to trial by a jury in civil cases.

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33
Q

What is the eighth amendment?

A

Prohibits imposing cruel, unusual punishments and fines, prohibits granting excessive bails.

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34
Q

What is ninth amendment?

A

Assures the recognition of those rights that people may have but are not listed here.

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35
Q

What is the tenth amendment?

A

Provides that the powers that are not given to the United States nor prohibited by the constitution are reserved to the states respectively or to the people.

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36
Q

What was the Constitutional Convention?

A

The meeting of state delegates in Philadelphia in 1787 that resulted in the writing of the Constitution.

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37
Q

What was the New Jersey Plan?

A

a plan, unsuccessfully proposed at the Constitutional Convention, providing for a single legislative house with equal representation for each state.

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38
Q

What was the Virginia Plan?

A

a plan, unsuccessfully proposed at the Constitutional Convention, providing for a legislature of two houses with proportional representation in each house and executive and judicial branches to be chosen by the legislature

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39
Q

What is a federalist?

A

A person who favored the plan of government created by the Constitution.

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40
Q

What is an anti-federalist?

A

A person who opposed ratification of the Constitution

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41
Q

What is the Frontier Line?

A

The land between civilization and wilderness

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42
Q

What was the Northwest Territory?

A

The land north of the Ohio River & was created into 5 states

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43
Q

What does it mean to survey?

A

To measure land to determine the exact boundaries of a given area. Used for townships

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44
Q

What was the Northwest Ordinance?

A

The 1787 law that set forth a plan of government for the townships 36 sq miles at one dollar an acre in the Northwest Territory. Created by Thomas Jefferson. The law banned slavery, gave freedom of religion and trial by jury. 60,000 citizens in territory to apply for statehood.

45
Q

What is republicanism?

A

For the country to thrive its citizens need certain virtues. These include a sense of equality, simplicity, and to sacrifice for the public good.

46
Q

What was the Louisiana Purchase?

A

The United States’ purchase from France (Napoleon) in 1803 of land west of the Mississippi. Jefferson purchased all 800,000 square miles for $15 million.

47
Q

What were the Lewis and Clark expeditions?

A

The expeditions from 1804-1806 that explored the Louisiana Territory.

48
Q

What was a pioneer?

A

They lived in permanent homes on farms and brought civilization to the frontier. Last to enter frontier region.

49
Q

What is a rendezvous?

A

A meeting or get together agreed on in advance with mountain men in the early 1800’s to support the fur trade.

50
Q

What does it mean to assimilate?

A

To adopt the dominate culture. (i.e. dress, language & heritage.)

51
Q

What was the South Pass?

A

A low lying area through the Rocky Mountains in that is now Wyoming. Many trails west used this pass to get through the Rocky Mtns. (i.e. Mormon and Oregon Trail)

52
Q

What is the Oregon Trail?

A

The most famous route to the Pacific Northwest from Independence, Missouri to the Columbia River.

53
Q

What was the Oregon County?

A

The vast region of the Northwest surrounding the Columbia, Snake, and Fraser Rivers claimed by the British

54
Q

What is an emigrant?

A

A person who leaves one place for another

55
Q

What is Mormonism?

A

A religion founded by Joseph Smith in 1820. After Smith’s death, followers followed Brigham Young to the Rocky Mountains as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS). The term Mormon comes from the Book of Mormon.

56
Q

What was the Adams-Onis Treaty?

A

Signed in 1819, Spain sold Florida to the United States for $5 million.

57
Q

What is the Missouri River?

A

To start the expedition it was the river which Lewis and Clark and other men traveled up in flat bottomed river boats called pirogues

58
Q

What is a tributary?

A

A river that flows into a larger river.

59
Q

Who was Zebulon Pike?

A

An army officer who lead an expedition in 1805 to the Southern half of the Louisiana purchase. He was hired to find the head waters of the Red River, but never found it. He never climbed the famous peak in Colorado that bears his name

60
Q

Who was Sacajawea? Who were the Shoshoni Indians?

A

She was a teenage Indian who helped navigate Lewis and Clark as they explored the Louisiana Purchase. This nomadic tribe gave horses to the expedition that was invaluable to the success of the journey to the Pacific Ocean.

61
Q

What was the Mormon Trail?

A

A wagon train led by Brigham Young in 1847 to present day Utah to avoid religious persecution. Known as the “Great Migration”

62
Q

What was the Santa Fe Trail?

A

An international trade route between the U.S.A and Mexico. Pioneered by William Becknell it connected Missouri with Santa Fe Mexico. Americans who used this trail went to Mexico for cheap land and caused tensions that led to Texas independence.

63
Q

What was the Indian Removal Act?

A

The 1830 law that authorized the president to move Eastern Indians to public lands west of the Mississippi.

64
Q

What does it mean to relocate?

A

To move to another location

65
Q

What was the Trail of Tears?

A

The forced journey of the Cherokee Indians from their homes in Georgia to the lands in the West in 1838-1839.

66
Q

Who was Andrew Jackson?

A

Our 7th president elected in 1829. Elected as a man of the frontier. He wrote Indian Removal Act. Nicknamed “Old Hickory.”

67
Q

What was the Dawes Act?

A

A federal law that intended to turn Native American into farmers and landowners.

68
Q

What was The Carlisle School?

A

Indian boarding school in Penn. 1879- 1918 - Used to assimilate Indians toward the white European culture.

69
Q

Who was Chief Justice John Marshall?

A

A supreme court justice that voted in favor in letting Native Americas stay on native land in Georgia. President Jackson response was “Him and what army”- He refused to listen to the higher court.

70
Q

What was the Oregon Treaty?

A

Polk used the slogan “Fifty-four Forty or Fight” to seal this agreement making the 49th parallel dividing British North America and the United States in 1846.

71
Q

Who was James K. Polk?

A

Our 11th president. He told Congress,” Mexico has invaded our territory and shed American blood upon American soil.”

72
Q

What was the Mexican Cession?

A

The land that Mexico Ceded to the US in 1848 under the terms of the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.

73
Q

What was the Gadsen Purchase?

A

The deal from Mexico that got New Mexico and Arizona for $10 million.

74
Q

What was the California Gold Rush?

A

The mass migration in California following the discovery of gold in 1849.

75
Q

What is a forty-niner?

A

A person who took part in the California Gold Rush

76
Q

What is a boom town?

A

Town that grows rapidly in population as a result of sudden prosperity. (i.e. San Francisco)

77
Q

What does it mean to cede?

A

To give up

78
Q

What was the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo?

A

The treaty that ended the Mexican/American war and made the Rio Grande boundary to Texas

79
Q

What was Chapultepec?

A

A Mexican military academy in Mexico City that was defended by young Mexicans in the Mexican-American war. Captured by US forces 1847. Last battle in the Mexican American War.

80
Q

What was the Battle of Goliad?

A

More than 300 of Fannin’s men were gunned down after the Alamo by Santa Anna.

81
Q

What was a tejano?

A

A Mexican living in Texas in the 1800‘s

82
Q

What was the Battle of Alamo?

A

1836 an attack with a mission (a church) in San Antonio by Mexican forces during the Texas revolution. Started over a cannon.

83
Q

What was the Battle of San Jacinto?

A

1836 battle in which Texan force under Santa Anna were defeated by, Sam Houston and lost independence to Texas.

84
Q

What does it mean to annex?

A

Add to existing country or area

85
Q

What was the Mexican War?

A

The 1846- 1848 war. Known as Polk’s War. It completed Manifest Destiny.

86
Q

What is a abolitionist?

A

A person who worked in the movement to do away with slavery. Feelings started in the First Great Awakening in the north.

87
Q

What were the Salem Witch Trials?

A

Trials in 1692 in the COLONY of Salem, Massachusetts that led to 20 peoples’ death after young girls charged people with practicing witchcraft.

88
Q

What was the First Great Awakening?

A

Religious movement in the 13 colonies around 1740. Described the agonies of Hell & urged people to go to church and repent their sins. Start of anti-slavery in the north.

89
Q

What is a Conestoga wagon?

A

A horse pulled covered wagon with wide wheels, curved wagon bed, and an arched canvas top.

90
Q

What is a mill?

A

A machine that processes materials such as grain. Used water power and were in the north.

91
Q

What is a cotton gin?

A

A machine designed to separate seeds from cotton fiber created by Eli Whitney. The machine increased the demand for slaves in the south.

92
Q

What is soil exhaustion?

A

The overuse of fertile soil. Plantations went west as cotton used up the nutrients of the soil.

93
Q

What is sectionalism?

A

Loyalty to local interests. One of the issues that divided people was the issue of slavery

94
Q

What was the Missouri Compromise? aka the Compromise of 1820

A

Act in 1820 admitting Missouri as a slave state, Maine as a free state, and forbidding slavery north of the 36 30’ line.

95
Q

What is Popular Sovereignty?

A

The pre civil war policy of allowing the voters in a territory to decide whether or not to allow slavery

96
Q

What was the Kansas-Nebraska Act?

A

The 1854 law creating the territories of Kansas and Nebraska and allowing settlers there to decide whether to permit slavery. POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY. Both pro and anti slavery forces used violence to control people’s votes.

97
Q

What was the Three-Fifths Compromise?

A

Created with the Constitution in 1778 to count FIVE slaves as THREE people for the census in the House of Reps. (CONGRESS) = House of Reps and Senate to create laws in the U.S.

98
Q

What is economy?

A

The way people use resources to make a living.

99
Q

What was the Middle Passage?

A

The journey lasting 3 months of slave ships crossing the Atlantic from Africa

100
Q

What is the Front?

A

The area where two opposing armies meet on a battle field

101
Q

What is a triangular trade?

A

A trade route connecting three different places, such as, English Colonies, England, and Africa. Critical for the slave trade. Many trading companies in the north made large amounts of money selling slaves to the south after the Treaty of Paris.

102
Q

What were underground railroads used for?

A

Escape routes and hiding places that moved escaped slaves north. Harriet Tubman famous for running safe houses.

103
Q

What was the Dred Scott Case?

A

The 1857 case in which the Supreme Court ruled that slaves were not citizens and that congress couldn’t forbid slavery in the territories. Slavery legal everywhere, no more “Free & Slave” states Slavery was guaranteed by Constitution in the US

104
Q

What was the First Battle Bull Run?

A

The first major battle of the civil war, won by the confederates in 1862

105
Q

What is Richmond, Virginia?

A

Capital of the Confederate States of America. The capital was moved to Montgomery, Alabama during the last year of the war

106
Q

What is a platform?

A

A statement of goals, and principles of a group, especially a political party. (i.e. Abraham Lincoln wants to contain slavery where it exists)

107
Q

What is a border state?

A

Around the Civil war, a state between the North and the South (i.e. Missouri, Kentucky)

108
Q

What are the Confederate States of America?

A

A nation formed by eleven southern states in 1861. South Carolina was the first to leave Union. This was to be the name of the new country. A new county based on slavery

109
Q

Who was Jefferson Davis?

A

President of the Confederate States of America