====== APUSH Study Guide by Timchong ====== Helpful Resources: * [[https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1UmUmORiYcjt6g0q5SAjc-h1TIzzTVO1M?usp=sharing|Political Parties Throughout the Ages]] * [[https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1gpj_Nzb6iiwV3HhXTUoJO5wRmQLXQkUQ?usp=sharing|Political Partys Map/Diagram]] Credit: this guide compiles information from Tim Chong, Paul Kang, Tim Joo, and outside resources. Document put together by Tim Chong TC {{:pasted:20240413-042751.png}} ===== Period 1 ===== ===== Native American Societies Before European Contact ===== Societies of Southwest * Depend on maize * Spread from Mexico to North America * Fostered economic development and social diversification among Native Americans * Pueblo people (Anasazi) * Lived in small towns - pueblos starting from year 900 * Four corners - Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico * 13th-14th century - volcano + drought - dispersed and led to conflict * Some joined with Zunis and Hopis in New Mexico, others joined communities in the Rio Grande * Great Migration Societies of the Great Basin and Great Plains * Mobile lifestyles - lack of natural resources * Shoshone, Paiute, and Ute Peoples of the Great Basin * Great Basin - area between Rocky Mountains and Sierra Nevada Mountains * Desert, arid conditions, drought * “Desert culture” - made baskets as opposed to sedentary groups that made pottery * American Indians of the Great Plains * Great Plains - Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains * Plains Indians are stereotype Native Americans * Most hunted on foot and maintained a mobile lifestyle * Some who were closer to the Mississippi developed more sedentary, agrarian lifestyles Societies of the East * Atlantic = mix of agricultural and hunter-gatherer economies * Fostered the development of permanent settlements * Algonquian Peoples * Atlantic coast - hunted, fished, grew corn * Those in the upper Great Lakes/New England - cold = no agriculture, relied on hunting and fishing * Iroquois Great League of Peace * A group of Iroquoian-speaking people formed the Iroquois League * Formed in order to end fighting among is groups * They lived in permanent villages * Relied on farming, gathering, hunting, and fishing - mostly farming however * Three sisters - corn, beans, squash * Traditionally matrilineal society - inheritance and descent pass through the mother’s line Societies of the Pacific Northwest * In areas of present day California - foraging + hunting + resources of the Pacific Ocean and rivers * Chinook People of the Pacific Northwest * The Chinook people lived in Washington and Oregon * High degree of economic development and social stratification * A higher caste of people - shamans, warriors, wealthy merchants - lived separate from the commoners * Many Chinook people lived in longhouses - 50 ppl ===== European Exploration in the Americas ===== Factors contributing to European Exploration * Explain why the age of exploration took place when it did * The Crusades and the Revival of Trade * Trade routes and international economic activity shifted power * Became interested in finding new trade routes with the east * Black Death and the Decline of Feudalism * Black Death played a role in the decline of feudalism * Opened up opportunities for survivors - work was in high demand and food and land were more plentiful * Renaissance * Spirit of exploration * Scholarly spirit to map new areas * Gutenberg’s printing press * Protestant Reformation and the Catholic Counter-Reformation * Puritans flee to North America * Jesuits devote themselves to spreading their gospel throughout the world ===== Columbian Exchange, Spanish Exploration, and Conquest ===== The Impact of Exploration and Conquest on Europe * New sources of wealth helped the transition from feudalism to capitalism * New crops + livestock = population growth in Europe * The Impact of the Columbian Exchange on Europe * Revolutionized agriculture * Supplemented the meager diets of the peasants * Introduction of tobacco * Economic Impact of Conquest * Conquest did not necessarily bring improvements to Spain * The influx of gold and silver caused inflation * Taxes went up fivefold to pay for military expenditure * Spain went into debt and borrowed money from European banks, eventually ending in a depression on the Spanish economy Technological Advances and New Economic Structures * Technological Advances and a Revolution in Navigation * Compass * Astrolabe * Quadrant * Hourglass * Portolani - detailed maps * Joint-stock company * Important engine for exploration and colonization * Investors propelled expeditions to the New World * Risks were spread out across multiple shareholders Spanish and Portuguese Models * First expeditions were by the Spanish and Portuguese * Portugal and Spain Lead the Way * Prince Henry the Navigator searched for new trade routes to Asia that avoided the Mediterranean * Eventually sailed around the Cape of Good Hope and reached India * Spain sent Columbus and reached the Carribean * Spanish and Portuguese Ambitions * Treaty of Tordesillas * Spaniards later established the first permanent European settlement at St. Augustine, Florida * Conquistadores and the Defeat of Native Peoples * Defeat of the Aztecs by Cortes and defeat of the Incas by Pizarro * Disease and Death * No immunities to European diseases * 90% of them died ===== Labor, Slavery, and Caste in the Spanish Colonial System ===== Spanish Exploitation of New World Resources * Spain created the encomienda system to extract gold and silver and ship it to Spain *justified enslaving natives because the Spanish would Christianize them * Spain soon became the wealthiest country in Europe with the influx of precious metals * Silver and the Encomienda System * Spanish settlers were granted tracts of land and the right to extract labor from natives * Old World Feudalism * Bartholomew de Las Casas - Created the idea of Black Legend, the tale that the Spanish unleashed unspeakable cruelty on the Indians Spain and the African Slave Trade * Impact of the Slave Trade * Slavery existed in Europe even before the discovery of the New World * Destabilized African communities by taking out strong, young people * Introduction of European goods undermined the African economy * Resistance to Slavery and the Development of Maroon Communities * Africans developed cultural resistance that attempted to preserve traditional cultural patterns and maintain autonomy * Maroons were Africans who escaped slavery in the New World and established independent communities - many in Carribean and Brazil * Preserve African traditions using medicinal herbs, special drumming and dancing as part of healing rituals * Most significant Maroon communities - Palmares - 30,000 residents independent until conquered by Portuguese in 1694 Social Structure of Spanish America * Spanish Caste system * The Casta System * Spaniards were always outnumbered by natives * Spanish men outnumbered spanish women → intermarriage * Caste: * Peninsulares - born in Spain * Creoles - born in the New World of Spanish Parents * Mestizos - children of Spanish men and Indian women - 4-5% of Spain’s New World Empire * Mulattos - children of Spanish men and African women * Native Americans * Africans ===== Cultural Interactions between Europeans, Native Americans, and Africans ===== Interactions, Trade, and Cultural Adaptations in the New World * Each side adopted some useful aspects of the other’s culture * Cultural Misunderstandings * Conflict between Indians and Europeans as both groups tried to make sense of each other * Matrilineal vs. Patrilineal * Indians did not understand individual ownership of land - it was seen as a community resource * Religious Adaptation in the New World * Some Native Americans adopted Christianity * Some adopted Catholicism completely while others incorporated some aspects into traditional practices Resistance by American Indians and Africans * Native American Resistance in Spain’s New World Colonies * Some fled from Spaniards * Some Guale Indians led a revolt against the mission at St. Augustine - Juanillo’s Revolt - resulting in the death of several missionaries * Juan de Onate and the Acoma Pueblo People * New Mexico * Juan de Onate and his soldiers occupied held by the Acoma Pueblo people * The Acoma attacked the Spanish occupiers, killing 15 * Onate responded by firing cannons and killing over 800 natives * The remaining 500 were enslaved Debates around Perceptions of American Indians * Development of the Belief of White Superiority * As mixing of races occurred → pure blood * European control of Natives and Africans → white supremacy * Justified the Spanish belief that they were at the top of the hierarchy * Debates over Spain’s Actions in the New World * Encomienda System → Bartholomew de Las Casas * Juan Gines de Sepulveda - asserted that Indians were beings of an inferior order * Natural slaves according to natural law The Nature of Spanish Conquest and Colonization * “Black Legend” was a term coined in 1914 to describe the anti-Spanish propaganda written by the English, Italian, Dutch, and other European writers * English writers may have been trying to demonize the Spanish to portray English behavior in the New World in a more favorable light * Look at the source of the documents in question ===== Period 2 ===== ===== European Colonization ===== Spain’s New World Colonies * Maintained tight control over its colonial empire in the new world * Evolution of Spanish America * Encomienda System * Replaced by the repartimiento system - mandated that natives be paid wages * Many times, the work of natives was supplemented by black slave labor * Still highly exploitative * North part was the Viceroyalty of New Spain, south was Viceroyalty of Peru French and Dutch Colonies * Few French or Dutch people actually settled * Their colonies served as trading outposts * Intermarried with natives, promoting trade, acquiring furs and other valuable goods for export * France’s New World Empire * New France stretched from Quebec, encompassed Great Lakes and Ohio River Valley, and the Great Basin * Port Royal * Quebec * French-American Indian Diplomacy * Had few colonists - had to rely on diplomacy * Accommodation and adaptation to American Indian Ways * The Metis of the French Colonies * Intermarriage = children who were known as Metis - mixed blood * Metis communities combined Catholic and indigenous religious practices * The Dutch Presence in the Americas * Forts and small settlements in Guyana * Island settlements in the Carribean * Focused on sugar production * Dutch New Amsterdam * Dutch East India Company * Northwest passage to Asia * Delaware to Cape Cod * Economy of New Amsterdam * Few Dutch settlers initially came * The company provided land incentives * New Amsterdam was attacked by King Charles II of England, and was surrendered to the British - who renamed it New York English Colonial Patterns * Not few colonists - English migrated in substantial numbers * Population Pressures and English Colonization * Enclosure Acts in England created a food crisis and a population surplus * The English Merchant Class and the Expansion of Trade * Merchants were growing wealthy, formed joint-stock companies * Mercantilism - formed companies such as the East India Company * New World Colonization - diminish population and provide new markets * Colonization of Ireland ===== The Regions of British Colonies ===== The Chesapeake and the Upper South * Came to rely on labor-intensive tobacco, using white indentured servants and slaves * Founding of Jamestown and the “Starving Time” * Chartered by King James I and funded by the Virginia Company * Mostly hoped to find gold and silver * Strong imbalance of the ratio of women to men due to **Primogeniture: ** At this time period only first born sons would inherit property in Britain. Because of this, many non first-born sons moved to Jamestown/Chesapeake colonies to try to strike rich by finding gold, etc. * Were not prepared to establish permanent colonies * 3 years later, only 60 of the original 500 survived * Jamestown and its American Indian Neighbors * Relations deteriorated rapidly * Powhatan and the local Alogonquians traded corn * When they could not supply enough, the English raided them * Whites consistently encroached on American Indian lands and defeated them * A Tobacco Economy * John Rolfe experimented with growing tobacco * Most important crop of the Chesapeake region * ¾ of exports from the region * Shaped the development of Virginia + Carolina * Required large tracts of land → quickly exhausted the nutrients in the soil * Led them to seek territory that belonged to the natives * Pattern of large crop production continued with cotton in the 1800s * Required a large number of laborers → indentured servants → slaves * Labor and Tobacco * Head-right system → new immigrants were offered a 50 acre incentive * Indentured servitude * Potential immigrant would agree to work for a certain amount of years in exchange for free passage * Maryland * Similar to Virginia in that in exported tobacco and used indentured servants and slaves * First proprietary colony - instead of joint-stock * Owner was George Calvert, Lord Baltimore * Wanted to created refuge for Catholics * Son took over when he died - Cecelius Calvert * Protestants actually outnumbered Catholics, but Catholicism was tolerated * North Carolina * Carolina was founded by wealthy plantation owners from Barbados * They created an economy in the South of Carolina that resembled Barbados’ sugar economy * The English made the North resemble Chesapeake colonies’ economy * Tensions between the two groups led to a split The New England Colonies * Driven by religious reasons * Origins of Puritanism * Protestant Reformation * Those who wanted to purify the Church of England of Catholic practices * Puritan Beliefs and Practices * Took inspiration from Calvinism * Predestination, Protestant work ethic, community * Plymouth and the Mayflower Compact * A group of separatists, known as the “Pilgrims” * Founded Plymouth, but failed to attract large numbers of mainline Puritans from England * Massachusetts Bay Colony - “A City Set Upon a Hill” * King Charles I sought to suppress the religious practices of Puritans * Granted a charter to Massachusetts Bay Company * Led by John Winthrop * Was a much more successful haven for Puritans than Plymouth * The “Great Migration” and the Growth of New England * Had a difficult first year * By 1640, however, a “great migration” of 20,000 settlers came to Massachusetts * They were farmers, carpenters, etc. not aristocrats * Attracted families * Eager to build permanent, cohesive communities * New Hampshire * Originally settled by the English fishing villages * Massachusetts soon claimed the region and an agreement in 1641 gave it jurisdiction over New Hampshire * A royal decree separated the two colonies in 1679 * Roger Williams and the Founding of Rhode Island * Roger Williams was a devout Puritan minister * Concerned about the mistreatment of the natives * Worried that civil government would distract ministers from godly matters * Founded Rhode Island * Separation of church and state * The Banishment of Anne Hutchinson * Argued that ministers were not needed to interpret and convey teachings of the Bible - God could communicate directly to true believers * Accused Puritan leaders of resorting to the idea that salvation was determined solely by God’s divine plan, not by the actions of individuals * In 1638, Winthrop and other leaders banished her * She and her supporters established a settlement in Rhode Island * The Founding of Connecticut * Winthrop insisted that new members be able to demonstrate to the church that they had a conversion experience * Thomas Hooker argued that they only had to live a godly life * Founded Hartford in the Connecticut River Valley * Fundamental Orders of Connecticut adopted in 1639 * Splintering of Puritanism * Second and third generation Puritans did not have the same zeal * Decline in church membership * Halfway Covenant (1662) * Concerns about the decline of Puritan zeal led to the establishment of the Halfway Covenant * Allowed for partial church membership for children of church members * Did not have to demonstrate a conversion experience - extremely difficult - could be baptized and become partial, non-voting members of the church * Salem Witch Trials (1692) * People were ready to turn on each other * Fractured community The Middle Colonies * Most diverse colonies - religion, ethnicity, and social class * Thriving export economy based on cultivation of cereal crops * Pennsylvania * King Charles II granted tract of land to William Penn * Quakerism and the “Holy Experiment” * Saw each other as equals in the eyes of God, called each other “friend” * Practiced religious toleration and frowned upong slavery * New Jersey and Delaware * Initially settled by the Dutch * Duke of York gave land to friends, George Carteret and Lord Berkeley of Stratton, who established New Jersey * Delaware’s initial Dutch settlers were killed by Natives * Taken over by New Amsterdam → New York → gifted to Penn → eventually became Delaware in 1704 * New York * Commercial port * Slave population greater than North Carolina (but less than other southern states) * Negro Plot of 1741 * Tensions between whites and slaves * It was believed that there was a slave conspiracy → slaves executed The Lower South and Colonies of the West Indies * Longer growing seasons, exporting staple crops, depend on slave labor * Black slaves were population majority * Sugar and slavery in the West Indies * Barbados was most profitable British colony * Based on agriculture and slavery * Barbados sugar plantation owner 4x wealthier than Virginia plantation owner * Also owned more slaves * Carolina * Could not find a crop as profitable as sugar - grew rice instead * Split from North Carolina, South continued to operate like Barbados - thousands of slaves controlled by a few elite planters * Georgia * James Oglethorpe * Colony for debtors * Mandatory military service * Buffer state between the colonies and Spanish Florida The Development of Self-Government in Britain’s New World Colonies * Attempts at early democracy * The Evolution of Governance in Colonial North America * Britain did no create an extensive governing structure * Ruled by royal governors, but were easily leveraged because they depended on tax revenue to run the colony * Instilled many colonists the sense of ability to self-govern * Town Meetings in New England * Decision making assemblies open to all free male residents * Selected a group of representatives - selectmen - who carried out governing functions until the next meeting * The House of Burgesses in Virginia * Created by the Virginia Company * Free men could vote for representatives - later restricted to wealthy men * Over time become less powerful and more exclusive * King transferred governance from Virginia Company to the Crown in 1624, but allowed the House to remain ===== Transatlantic Trade ===== The Atlantic Economy and Evolution of Colonial Economies * Triangular trade * Brought manufactured items from England to Africa and Americas * Slaves were sold * New World colonies produced raw materials * The African Slave Trade * Destabilized the regions in Africa where it occurred * Mostly young and male * Middle Passage - horrid journey from Africa to the Americas * Tobacco, Indigo, Rice, Sugar, and Slavery in the South and the West Indies * Virginians exported tobacco * Colonies of the Lower South specialized in indigo and rice * Southern colonies supplied 90% of the exports from British North America * Most profitable were the sugar plantations in the West Indies * Fur Trade in the North American Interior * Drew Europeans to the Ohio River Valley/Great Lakes * Destabilized Indian communities by pushing native peoples to extend their traditional territory to get more furs * Conflict between neighboring Indian groups, allied with and armed by competing Europeans * Wheat, Indentured Servants, and Redemptioners in the Middle COlonies * Middle colonies - Pennsylvania and New Woyk - developed cultivation of wheat/cereal crops * Relied on indentured servants and redemptioners - promised to pay for passage by borrowing money from a friend or servitude - most got stuck with a terrible contract without ability to negotiate * Fish and Lumber in New England * Salted fish, livestock, timber were big exports from New England * Molasses → rum * Many left New England and new immigrants would rather settle in the middle colonies Trade, Disease, and Demographic Changes for American Indians * Contact, Disease, Warfare, and the Collapse of the Huron * Many of the Huron people died after contact with the french due to measles and smallpox * More died in the Beaver Wars - killed by the Iroquois who were supplied weapons by the Dutch * The Catawba - Contact, Trade and Cultural Adaptation * Catawba tried to survive by making themselves useful * Sold goods such as pottery, baskets, and moccasins * Eventually exposed to alcohol, which increased instability British Imperial Policies * Attempted to exert greater control over the colonies, but failed due to colonial resistance * “Salutary neglect” allowed colonies to develop without much oversight * Mercantilism * Nations increase power by increasing wealth * Exports exceed imports * Need a steady and inexpensive source for raw materials - colonies * Navigation Acts and Mercantilism * Navigation Acts * Enumerated good - from colonies could only be shipped to Britain * Profitable staple crops could only be shipped to Britain * They were sold within England and at a profit to other countries * Wool act, Hat Act, Iron Act restricted colonial manufacturing * Guaranteed manufacturers steady low price raw materials and protected them from colonial competition * Greater Imperial Control * All charter and proprietary colonies became royal colonies * Dominion of New England * Charles II resented New England because Puritans executed his father during the English Civil War * Revoked charters of all colonies north of Delaware River * Formed one massive colony called the Dominion of New England * Met with resistance * Glorious Revolution and the Restoration of Colonial Charters * When William of Orange took over the throne, New Englanders arrested Sir Edmund Andros and got rid of the Dominion * Lax Enforcement of Mercantilist Policies * Robert Walpole - “salutary neglect” * Urged the Crown to not excessively interfere with the profitable trade * Colonists routinely smuggled banned good into and out of the colonies ===== Interactions between American Indians and Europeans ===== Imperial Conflicts and North American Political Instability * Rivalries between European countries drew natives into their conflicts * Introduction of firearms to the natives * Beaver Wars (1640-1701) * French aligned themselves with Algonquian-speaking tribes along the St. Lawrence River * Dutch established a post at Albany and allied with the Iroquois * Iroquois wanted to expand their trading network, but the Huron (Algonqui) stood in their way * Exploded into open warfare * Dutch rule superseded by British who took control of New Netherland, allied themselves with the Iroquois - who were able to expand, but Huron suffered * French and Indian Wars and Control of North America (1688-1763) * Four conflicts for control of North America, the fourth was the most decisive - called the French and Indian War * Similar: * Grew out of conflicts in Europe between Great Britain and France * Wars involved and intensified rivalries between tribes * As long as there was no victor, tribes got to maintain control of most of their land * Increased bonds between colonists and British government * With the threat of enemies, colonists felt the need of British military * Would not remain after the defeat of the French in 1763 * King William’s War (1688-1697) * Nine Years’ War * Iroquois allied with British colonists * French and Indian tribes (Wabanaki Confederation) challenged Iroquois domination of the fur trade as well as British expansion north * After the Grand Settlement of 1701, Iroquois were primarily neutral * Queen Anne’s War (1702-1713) * Border of Canada * Wabanaki Confederacy joined French in trying to stop the northern advance of British colonists * Raid on Deerfield, Massachusetts - destroying town, killing colonists, and taking captives * South: * Chickasaw + British, Choctaw + French fought over the claims to fur trade in the Mississippi River * French + Spanish + Apalachee, Britain fought over the Southern border of Florida and Carolina * The war did not settle boundary issues * Weakened Spanish presence in Florida, devastated American Indians in Spanish Florida * Fighting between the Chickasaw and the Choctaw did not cease until the defeat of the French in the French and Indian War in 1763 * Both groups stood their ground * King George’s War (1744-1748) * Fought in New York, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Nova Scotia * Successful siege on French Fortress of Louisbourg in Nova Scotia * French and Indian forces destroyed Saratoga, New York * In peace treaty - returned the fort for the return of Madras in India British Colonial Expansion and Conflicts with American Indians * These were conflicts carried out by colonists themselves * The Pequot War (1634-1638) * Massachusetts Bay + Plymouth + Narragansett + Mohegan to defeat Pequots * Needed land for Puritans to settle * King Philip’s War (1675-1678) * Wampanoags alliance with Pilgrims in 1621 * 1670 - English encroaching on their land + execution of three wampanoags who killed a christianized wampanoag * Metacomet - chief of the Wampanoag - known as King Philip, launched an attack on Massachusetts towns * New Englanders + Mohawks → 40% of Wampanoags dead * Praying Indians in Puritan New England * Most native people in New England could not maintain traditional culture * Praying towns made for natives to abandon their culture and adopt European clothing and Christianity and settle on farms * Racial Hierarchy and American Indians * In the beginning, maintaining relations was important * Later, desire grew to acquire their land * Believed the natives were savage and gave them justification to exploit them Spain and American Indians in North America * Spanish colonial efforts more readily made accommodations to American Indian culture * Pueblo Revolt * Pueblo Indians in New Mexico were resentful of Spanish rule * Encomienda system undermined their traditional economy * Pueblo religion was banned * Pueblo Revolt, Pope’s Rebellion, attacks on Spanish Franciscan priests and Spaniards * 300+ spanish killed * Spanish agreed to allow them to continue their culture, each family granted land ===== Slavery in the British Colonies ===== The Development of British Slavery * Slavery was more efficient and provided more workers at a lower cost than indentured servitude * Bacon’s Rebellion and the Development of Slavery in Virginia * Former indentured servants grew resentful of taxes they were required to pay and their lack of representation in the House of Burgesses * Violence intensified between them and the natives * Bacon’s Rebellion - Nathaniel Bacon - wanted to attack the natives * Governor Berkeley refused because they engaged in profitable trade with the Indians * Bacon burned homes of elite planters and the capital building in Jamestown * Virginians turned to slaves instead of unreliable indentured servants Ideas About Race and the Development of Slavery in British North America * Origins of Racial Hierarchy * Britain did not tolerate intermarriage * Divided humanity into civilized and barbaric, Christian and heathen * Nature of Slavery in British North America * An indentured black servant John Casor was declared by a court to be a slave for life * Partus Sequitur Ventrum - a child of a slave mother would also be a slave * Sanctioned the rape of slave women by their white owners * Black and slave were almost synonymous terms Resistance to Slavery * Stono Rebellion * Main fear of slave owners was violent rebellion * Most famous one was Stono, South Carolina (1739) * Initiated by 20 slaves → death of 20 slave owners * Lesser forms of resistance: * Working slowly * Breaking tools * Retaining cultural connections to Africa ===== Colonial Society and Culture ===== Religious Pluralism in Colonial America * The “Great Awakening” * In the face of declining church membership and religious zeal, with the rise of Enlightenment philosophy and deism, Protestant leaders took action * Great Awakening started in Britain * Most well known preacher was George Whitefield - held revival meetings * They took more emotional, less cerebral, approach to religion * Jonathon Edwards - “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” * Core message: anyone could be saved and people could make choices in their life that would affect their afterlife * Against original sin and predestination * Immigration and Dissenting Denominations * Most churches in the 1600s were Anglican or Congregational * Recognized by colonial administrations (not Rhode Island, New Jersey, Pennsylvania - separated government from religion) * Baptist + Methodist grew out of Great Awakening * Immigration from Germany settled in Pennsylvania, New York, and the South * Lutheran, Calvinist, Mennonites, Moravians, Dunkers * New York - Sephardic Jews * Deism and the Enlightenment * Deism: God created the world and left it alone * Natural Laws - clockwork Anglicization of British North America * Emulating the British * Colonists attempted to model their lives based on British culture * Sent children to Britain for schooling * Purchased British goods * British culture connection = status * Consumerism * Trans-Atlantic Print Culture * High degree of literacy = demand for printed materials * Newspapers reprinted items from British press, covered European and local affairs * Ben Franklin - Pennsylvania Gazette (not founder) * Anglicanism and Enlightenment Thinking - from Great Britain to North America * Anglican Church * Conservative and ritualistic High Church * Reform-minded, liberal Low Church (Enlightenment) * Latitudinarians * Gained a foothold in the colonies * Harvard University moved in this direction * Religious Toleration * Locke, Voltaire * 1649 Maryland Act of Religious Toleration * Did not apply to Jews, Muslims, or Christian sects that did not believe in the trinity Diverging Interests - British Policies and Colonial Dissatisfaction * Tensions over Imperial Control * The Dominion of New England ended with the Glorious Revolution * Colonists responded to tighter control by rejecting governors’ requests for funding The Background to Colonial Resistance to Imperial Control * Enlightenment Thinking and Resistance to British Rule * John Locke - role of government was to protect natural rights - life, liberty, property * Influence of the Country Party and “Cato’s Letters” * Country Party - critical of the British government for corruption, wastefulness, and tyranny * Court Party - opposite, members operated within the inner sanctum of power in London * Country Party - aka Commonwealth men - accused political figures of upsetting the constitutions and endangering individual liberties * Popular among North American colonists * Country Party essayist - “Cato” - frequently reprinted in the colonies - condemned corruption in the British political system * American Legal Procedures and Freedom of the Press * Lack of British-trained lawyers * Less imprisonment and more whipping, branding, and public shaming * Criticisms of public officials not illegal if truthful ===== Subject to Debate ===== * Regional Differences in British North America * Whether differences between regions are more important than the commonalities (between colonies) * Slavery and the Development of Racism * Did slavery develop because of preconceived notions of racial hierarchies? * Or did these notions develop over time to justify the enslavement? * How Oppressed were the British Colonies? * Colonists were oppressed? Or they were ignoring the mercantilist laws? ===== Period 3 ===== ===== The Seven Years’ War (The French and Indian War) ===== Expansion and War * Expansion and overlapping land claims led to a war between Britain and France * Britain won and eliminated France from North America * This war was a turning point in relations between Britain and the colonies because the government attempted to assert greater control over the colonies * Origins of the War * Land disputes in the Ohio River Valley led to forts being build and skirmishes, which led to the French and Indian War * British Victory * Three distinct phases * Local affair - continuation of skirmishes between British and French colonists * Full takeover of the war by Britain, seizing supplies and forcing colonists to join the war - the colonists resisted * British government tried to work with the colonies and reinforced the troops with British soldiers → French surrendered in 1761 * Treaty of Paris (1763) * France surrendered its North American empire - Canada and east of Mississippi to Britain and West of Mississippi River to Spain Debt and Taxation Following the French and Indian War * British wanted the colonists to pay the war debt through increased taxation as they were the major beneficiaries of the British victory * The Sugar Act * Mainly sought to crack down on smuggling and enforcing taxes * The Stamp Act * Faced the most intense colonial opposition - other acts were seen as trade regulations, however, this was a direct tax designed purely to raise revenue * Quartering of British Troops * Colonists were expected to house British soldiers if there were no spaces in barracks and cover the costs of feeding them American Indian Resistance and Colonial Settlement Following the French and Indian War * Indians wanted to maintain lucrative fur trade, but at the same time they wanted to resist encroachment by British colonists * Clashing Cultures in the Great Lakes Region * The French developed harmonious relationships with the Indians, however, the British did not believe in gift-giving and diplomacy * Pontiac’s Rebellion * Britain occupied Ottawa land, and the chief Pontiac organized resistance to British troops * They attacked Fort Detroit and struck 6 other forts * The attacks were initially successful with 400 British soldiers and 2000 colonists killed or captured, however, when Thomas Gage took over as general, the rebellion was broken * The Proclamation Act (1763) * Great Britain ordered colonists not to settle beyond the Appalachian Mountains, however, many colonists had already migrated west and felt that they deserved the land because of the sacrifices they made during the French and Indian War * The British government did not want to provoke any more bloodshed and wanted to profit off of the fur trade * Conflict in the Interior of the Continent Following the French and Indian War * After the American Revolution, colonists continued to move westward which caused Indians to be displaced and was challenged by the presence of Spain and Britain just outside the US’s borders * The Scots-Irish * The middle colonies received many immigrants, particularly the Scots-Irish who were Presbytterians from Scotland, due to difficult economic conditions * Economic Opportunity in Pennsylvania * PA attracted immigrants because of the land and need for workers, other states were not so hospitable - south was dominated by slavery and the north by Puritanism * The Paxton Boys * A vigilante group of Scots-Irish organized raids against American Indians, and presented their grievances to the PA legislature - bitterness to Indians and the Quaker elite for being lenient towards Indians ===== Taxation Without Representation ===== Colonial Resistance to British Policies in the Aftermath of the French and Indian War * Colonists began to unite and organize around threats posed by changing British policies → resistance and independence movement * The Stamp Act Congress * Delegates from nine colonies in 1765 wrote a list of grievances * No taxation without representation * British Parliament responded to this idea with “virtual representation”, that even though they did not vote for representatives, members of Parliament represented the entire British empire * Committees of Correspondence * These committees spread information and coordinated resistance actions * Basically became shadow governments that assumed powers and challenged the legitimacy of legislative assemblies and royal governors * Crowd Actions * The Sons of Liberty groups harassed Stamp Act agents, and stores were ransacked if they did not boycott British goods * The Stamp Act was rescinded in 1766 * The Townshend Acts (1767) * New taxes on paint, paper, lead, tea, and other goods were external taxes on imports, not on the items themselves * By 1768, colonial leaders called for boycotts - homespun clothing was produced and Americans sought locally produced goods * The Boston Massacre * Britain deployed royal troops to Boston because of the rioting - but their presence angered Bostonians; they disagreed with military in times of peace * Colonists heckled British sentries and eventually the British fired, killing 5 citizens and leading to the Boston Massacre * Gaspee Affair * Colonial protestors boarded the ship, the Gaspee, and looted and torched it * The Tea Act and the Boston Tea Party * To bolster the British East India Company, whose stock value had collapsed, Britain passed the Tea Act, eliminating British tariffs from tea sold in the colonies and making the price so low to beat out local merchants and smugglers * The colonists were angered, not because of low prices, but because the British government was showing favoritism towards a large company * The colonists responded by dumping $2 million of tea in the harbor * The Coercive/Intolerable Acts * The **Massachusetts Government Act** put Massachusetts under direct British control, limiting the power of town meetings and allowing the royal governor to appoint officials who had previously been elected * The **Administration of Justice Act** allowed trials to be moved from Massachusetts to Britain - removing the ability to be judged by one’s own countrymen * **Boston Port Act** closed the port of Boston to trade * The **Quartering Act** expanded the 1765 Quartering Act and required colonists to house British troops upn command * The **Quebec Act** let Catholics in Quebec freely practice their religion, which Protestant Bostonians saw as an attack on their faith * Formation of the Continental Congress * Britain hoped to isolate Massachusetts through the Intolerable Acts, but colonists throughout America resented Britain * After the Virginia legislature was dissolved by Britain, the First Continental Congress met in Philadelphia in September and October 1774 with representatives from all colonies except Georgia * They passed resolutions on nonimportation, nonexportation, and nonconsumption to cut off all trade with Britain * Committees of Safety were created to enforce these agreements and recommended the colonies to make military preparations The Resistance Movement From Above and Below * The Role of Women in the Resistance Movement * They made clothing, formed groups such as the Daughters of Liberty who organized boycotts and public protests * During the Tea Act crisis, they produced local tea * Artisans and Laborers and the American Revolution * Craftsmen and laborers made up the bulk of both local militias and the Continental Army in the Revolutionary War * Artisans formed legal committees and militia groups in support of revolution ===== Philosophical Foundations of the American Revolution ===== Protestant Evangelicalism and Enlightenment Philosophy * Protestant Evangelicalism and the American Revolution * A more intense and radical form of Protestantism, more focused on individual conversion and less on established churches * Many ministers spread ideas of republicanism, and projected the American Revolution as a struggle against godless tyranny * Enlightenment Thinking in the Age of Revolutions * The American Revolution started a series of revolutions that kept with Enlightenment thinking but also articulated a new set of ideas about governance, individual liberty, and reason * The Ideas of John Locke * Basic rights are life, liberty, and property Common Sense, The Declaration of Independence, and Republican Self-Government * Divided Loyalties * In the colonies, a third called the Patriots wanted independence, another third Loyalists did not, and the rest remained neutral * The Olive Branch Petition * The Continental Congress sent the Olive Branch Petition to the King, proposing a structure where the colonies would exercise greater autonomy, but it was rejected * Common Sense * Paine advocated that colonies declare independence, and put the blame of the crisis on King George III * The Declaration of Independence * On July 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress ratified the Declaration of Independence, with a list of grievances and containing key elements of Locke’s natural rights theory * Visions of Republicanism * America would be the first republic since Ancient Rome, with no central authority * Competing theories on republicanism emerged - the idea that citizens led simple lives and were virtuous, or Adam Smith’s view that rational self-interest and competition can lead to greater prosperity for all ===== The American Revolution ===== The War for Independence - Factors in the Victory of the Patriot CAuse * Lexington and Concord * First battle of the war in April 1775 * Factors in the Outcome of the War * The British had a highly trained, professional army, the strongest navy, and substantial financial resources, and also had the support of the Loyalists in the colonies * They offered freedom to slaves who joined Britain, and could count on many Indian tribes for support * However, they had the French as enemies, and were fighting far away from home * Many Patriot soldiers believed firmly in their cause, and they had the leadership of George Washington, Nathanael Green, and Henry Knox * The Three Phases of the American Revolution * At first, the British thought that the revolution was started by a minority, and suffered heavy losses (although they won) in the Battle of Bunker Hill, and retreated from New England * Second, the British tried to gain control of New York to isolate New England and drove Washington and his troops out of New York in 1776 * However, they were defeated at the Battle of Saratoga, which showed France that the colonists could mount formidable forces for battle * France agreed to supply military assistance in 1778 due to its animosity towards Britain * The third phase was in the South, where Britain hoped to rally Loyalist sentiments and tap into the resentment of the slaves, but the aid of the French led Cornwallis to surrender at the Battle of Yorktown * In the North, fighting had reached a stalemate Funding the War Effort * Currency, Inflation, and Financial Difficulties * The Continental Army was constantly underfunded and short of basic supplies because Congress did not have the ability to levy taxes and had to ask states for funds * They attempted to solve this by printing money which only led to inflation, and instead turned to printing certificates for frontier land ===== The Influence of Revolutionary Ideas ===== The Call for Egalitarianism * The justification for the revolution inspired others to change society * Moves to abolish slavery * Slaves petitioned state legislatures to grant them their natural rights * Petitions for emancipation were rejected, but some cases in Massachusetts where slaves sued for “all men are born free and equal” ended up in ending slavery in Massachusetts * Vermont and Pennsylvania both outlawed slavery as well Evolving Ideas on Gender * The importance of women during the Revolution set the stage for the evolution of ideas around gender * The idea of “republican motherhood” emerged in the decades after the American Revolution * Remember the Ladies * This phrase was sent by Abigail Adams to her husband John Adams in hopes that issues in gender inequality might be resolved - many women found analogies in tyranny of a king to tyranny of a husband over his wife * Republican Motherhood * It was the concept that women had civic responsibilities in the evolving culture of the new nation - John Locke asserted that marriage should involve a greater degree of consent * The experience that many women gained from participating in the struggle for independence empowered them * Republican motherhood did not mean political equality between men and women, but simply asserted that women had a role to play in civic life - that women were active agents in maintaining public virtue * These ideas expanded the possibilities for women to gain an education, to teach their children and raise the next generation of republican leaders The Impact of the American Revolution Abroad * Revolution in France * Six years after the American Revolution ended, the French Revolution began - where the overthrowing of the king was supported by a majority of the American citizens, but abandoned when Robespierre began the reign of terror * Rebellion in Haiti * The white colonists resisted French rule because of the American and French Revolutions * Then the mixed-race planters rebelled, challenging their second-class status * Finally, the slaves rebelled, led by Toussaint L'Ouverture and aided by Spanish troops - which led many in the US to fear a slave rebellion of their own * Independence Struggles in Latin America * Several nations of Spain’s New World empire rebelled against Spanish rule, inspired by a combination of ideology, geopolitics, and material interests ===== The Articles of Confederation ===== Governance on the State Level * State Constitutions * By 1778, ten states had drawn up constitutions and the others had updated their colonial charters * They created republics, some with direct democracy and legislatures The Articles of Confederation and the Critical Period * The Articles of Confederation * They were written in 1776 with the Declaration of Independence, however, it was not well written, lacked philosophy, and created a firm league of friendship rather than a strong centralized nation * This was mainly due to the fear of state leaders in created a centralized authority, and the fact that many state leaders were loyal to their states * Structure of Government Under the Articles of Confederation * Congress would be a unicameral legislature with delegations from each state, each state getting one vote * Major decisions required nine votes and changes and amendments to the Articles required an unanimous vote * Raising Revenue * The national government did not have the power to tax the people directly and depended on voluntary contributions from the states * Congress agreed that states would contribute revenue in proportion to their population, but the states were often tardy or resistant * Inflation, Debt, and the Rejection of the Impost * There was the problem of inflation due to printing money, and the remaining war debt the government struggled to pay off * Morris proposed a 5% import tax to raise revenues, but RI and NY both rejected the necessary unanimous because of their thriving harbors * Shays’s Rebellion * Many farmers were unable to pay taxes in Massachusetts and were losing their farms to banks * They petitioned, but were ignored by the Massachusetts legislature * Frustrated, Shays led a rebellion which closed down several courts and freed debtors from prison which was eventually stopped by 4,000 armed men * This showed the lack of federal power because of the Articles of Confederation * Towards a New Framework for Governance * Shays’s Rebellion occurred right before the Philadelphia convention, and the delegates were ready to scrap the Articles and write something new Organizing the Northwest Territory * The Northwest Territory * After US independence, there was a debate about the land between the Appalachians and the Mississippi River * In the end, states gave up individual claims to the land and it became national land * Land Ordinances and the Northwest Ordinance * The Land Ordinance of 1784 divided the Northwest Territory into 10 potential new states, and the Land Ordinance of 1785 reduced the states to 5 * In 1787, Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance, setting up a process by which areas could become territories, and then states * Once the population of a territory reached 60,000, it could write a constitution and apply for statehood * It also banned slavery north of the Ohio River * Moving into the Northwest Territory * Future president William Henry Harrison passed the Harrison Land Law, making it easier for ordinary settlers to buy land * The Northwest Territory eventually became Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin ===== The Constitutional Convention and Debates Over Ratification ===== Compromise and the Framing of the Constitution * The Great Compromise * The Virginia Plan advocated for a bicameral legislature with representatives proportional to the population whereas the New Jersey Plan called for a unicameral legislature with each state having one vote * The Great Compromise created a house of representatives and a senate The Constitution and Slavery - Compromise and Postponement * The Three-Fifths Compromise * Slaves would be counted as ⅗ of a person when determining the population for delegates to the House * Tacit Approval of Slavery * The delegates voted to protect the international slave trade for 20 years and provided a way for the return of fugitive slaves Federalists, Anti-Federalists, and the Adoption of the Bill of Rights * The Federalists * The supporters of the Constitution were the Federalists, including Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison * They wrote a series of essays titled The Federalist arguing in favor of and defending the constitution * Anti-Federalism * They worried the new government would be controlled by members of the elite and saw the Constitution as favoring the creation of a powerful, aristocratic ruling class - Patrick Henry and George Mason * They worried that individual rights were not adequately protected, and voiced that many colonists were eager to see power be exercised locally * Ratification * They ratified :) * The Bill of Rights * Seven states voted to ratify only if there would be a Bill of Rights * Much of the language written by James Madison, comes from various states’ constitutions * Amendments 1-4: Basic Rights of the People * Freedom of expressions * Right to bear arms * Right against quartering soldiers * Protection against unreasonable searches and seizures without probable cause * Amendments 5-8: Rights of the Accused * Grand jury indictments, prohibits authorities from trying a suspect twice for the same crime, and from forcing a suspect to testify against themselves, and from seizing someone’s property * Right to a speedy and public trial with a jury, and a right to be informed of the charges and questions witnesses * Right to trial by jury * Prevents government from cruel and unusual punishments and prevents excessive bail * Amendments 9-10 * Additional rights not mentioned shall be protected from government infringement * Powers not delegated to the federal government or prohibited by the Constitution will be retained by the states and people * The Right to Vote * The government left it to states to form rules for voting until the 15th, 19th, and 26th amendments ===== The Constitution ===== The Structure of Government Under the Constitution * The Three Branches of Government, Separations of Powers, and Checks and Balances * The legislative branch, Congress, has the power to levy taxes, regulate trade, coin money, establish post offices, declare war, and approve treaties * The Constitution also allowed Congress to created laws it deemed necessary and proper * The executive branch, the president, is to suggest legislation, command armed forces, and nominate judges * The powers of the judiciary branch, the Supreme Court, are to hear cases involving people or entities from different states and to hear cases involving federal law, and judicial review, the power to nullify laws that it deems inconsistent with the Constitution * Framers built a system of checks and balances * Federalism - the National Government and the States * Federalism is the evolving relationship between the national government and the states * States hold on to reserved powers and the expanded national government is given many new powers (delegated powers) ===== Shaping the New Republic ===== Spain and Britain Challenge American Growth * British and American Indians * Americans were frustrated by British attempts to prevent westward movement * They did not evacuate forts in the western territories and maintained fur trade with Indian groups in the area; they refused to leave until the US had paid its war debts * Conflicts with Spain and Pinckney's Treaty * Although the US was granted territory south to the northern boundary of Spanish Florida, that border was not clearly defined * Moreover, Spain attempted to limit American shipping on the Mississippi RIver * Negotiations between Pinckney and Don Manyel de Godoy resulted in a treaty that allowed American shipping on the Mississippi, and defined the border between the US and Florida * Conflicts with Great Britain and Jay’s Treaty * Britain was not pleased with US trade with France when Britain was in a war against France so they began intercepting ships, southern planters wanted reimbursement from the british for slaves that had fled because of British promises, and settlers were angry because of the British forces in forts in the Northwest, and Americans accused the British of aiding the Indians in US-Indian skirmishes * John Jay was sent to Britain and came back with a treaty where Britain agreed to withdraw from the West after 18 months without any compensation to shippers or planters for lost slaves * American planters would also be forced to repay debts to the British that dated from the colonial era, but the British allowed the US to trade in the West Indies * Hamilton saw the treaty as the best they could do, but Jefferson saw this as pro-British sympathy Role of the United States in the Aftermath of the French Revolution * The Question of Alliances * When France went to war with Britain in 1793, many American felt the US had an obligation to help France and because of a treaty they had signed with France * However, others felt that the treaty was null because it was signed with the previous government, and they harbored warm feelings for the British system * Conflict with France and the XYZ Affair * In 1797, France began to seize American ships, to which Adams sent negotiators to Paris to attempt a peaceful settlement * They were not allowed to meet with the foreign affairs minister, and were approached by agents who asked for money in order to meet with Talleyrand * Congress allocated money and allowed ships to fight French ships in the Carribean, leading to America’s first undeclared war, the Quasi War * This helped instill respect for America’s navy, which had just been formed Spanish missions in California * The Expansion of the Mission System * Junipero Serra was instrumental in founding the 21 missions in California - both religious missions and military outposts * The Spanish extracted labor from the Indian people, and for the natives, disease wiped out their populations and were brutally treated by the missionaries American Indian Policy in the New Nation * American Indians and the Constitution * The Constitution did not clarify the status of Indian tribes, and therefore, they did not have status as foreign nations, neither did Indians have citizenship to the US nor representation in Congress Putting the Constitution into Practice * The Judiciary Act of 1789 * It created 13 federal judicial districts which had district and circuit courts * The Supreme Court could hear appeals from circuit courts and had the final say, and had the last word on constitutional interpretation * Washington and the Unwritten Constitution * Washington established several traditions and customs that came to be known as the Unwritten Constitution * The presidential cabinet was made up of three men running departments of state, war, and treasury * He chose an attorney general and a chief justice of the Supreme Court as well * He served no more than two terms Policy Debates in the New Nation * Federalists and Democratic-Republicans * Federalists tended to be more pro-British, more critical of the French Revolution, more friendly to urban, commercial interest, more critical of the French Revolution, and more ready to use the power of the federal government to influence economic activity * Democratic-Republicans tended to be more critical of the British, more supportive of the French Revolution, more critical of centralized authority, and more favorable to agricultural interests * Hamilton vs. Jefferson * Hamilton’s Economic Program and the National Bank * Hamilton proposed a national bank, which would hold the government’s tax revenues and act as a stabilizing force on the economy - 20% publicly and 80% privately controlled * He thought it was important to have wealthy investors financial invested in the new government * Jefferson argued that this was against the Constitution, but Hamilton used the **elastic clause** to deem it was necessary and proper, and was signed into law in 1791 * Dealing with Debt * He insisted that national war debt be paid back in full to enhance the bank’s legitimacy, and that state debts be assumed by the government and paid back * This was met with opposition by states that did not have a large debt or had already paid back their debts * Encouragement to Manufacturing * Hamilton encouraged manufacturing by imposing tariffs on foreign-made goods and subsidizing American industry * He believed that industrial development was key to a balanced and self-reliant economy * The Excise Tax and the Whiskey Rebellion (1794) * To help raise revenue for his plans, Hamilton raised taxes, one of those being an excise (sales) tax on whiskey * This hit grain farmers hard, who were barely able to make ends meet by distilling grain into whiskey * In 1794, 7,000 men marched to Pittsburgh but were quickly put down by 13,000 militiamen in contrast to Shays’s Rebellion * The Alien and Sedition Acts (1798) * They were passed by a Federalist-dominated Congress in order to limit criticism from the opposition Republican Party * Naturalization Act - made it more difficult for foreigners to achieve American citizenship * Sedition Act - made it a crime to defame the president or Congress (seemed to challenge free-speech guarantees of the recently ratified First Amendment) * Alien Friends/Alien Enemies Act - allowed president to imprison and deport noncitizens * Jeffersonians were troubled by the expansion of federal p[ower that the acts represented * The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions * Jefferson and Madison were so opposed to the Alien and Sedition Acts that they proposed the idea that a state could nullify a law it found to be inconsistent with the Constitution The Struggle for Neutrality in the 1790s * Washington and Neutrality * Issued the Neutrality Act and urged the United states to avoid permanent alliances with foreign powers ===== Developing an American Identity ===== Culture and Identity in the Early National Period * American Education * Noah Webster saw the US as a tolerant, rational, democratic nation, and published a speller, grammar, and reader for American schoolchildren - with Americanized spellings such as theater instead of theatre * Jedidiah Morse insisted American schoolchildren use American textbooks * American History * Mercy Otis Warren wrote a three volume History of the Revolution * Mason Weems wrote The Life of Washington * Intended to instill nationalist spirit in Americans * American Architecture * Bulfinch brought the Federal style to the US - a style imbued with Greek and Roman elements ===== Movement in the Early Republic ===== Migrations, American Indians, and Shifting Alliances * The Status of American Indian Lands after the American Revolution * The land between the Appalachians and the Mississippi had been set aside as an Indian Reserve by the British, but the Treaty of Paris failed to address Indians’ status * As more Americans moved to the area, the status of Indians became more precarious * Treaty of Fort Stanwix * The government negotiated with the Iroquois Confederacy in 1784 and they agreed to cede the land north of the Ohio River, however, they did not own the land and the Shawnee, Delaware, and Miami who the land belonged to protested * Additional treaties ceded lands to the US, but none resolved the issue, with the powerful Shawnee not being part of the negotiations and the presence of the British * American Defeat at the Wabash River * 600 American troops were killed by forces led by Miami warrior Little Turtle in present-day Ohio * The Battle of Fallen Timbers and the Treaty Greenville * Washington was determined to regain control north of the Ohio, defeating the Indians in the Battle of Fallen Timber in 1794, and native groups gave up claims to most of Ohio in the Treaty of Greenville Internal Migrations, Frontier Cultures, and Tensions in the Backcountry * The Dynamics of Backcountry Settlements * Tensions have existed since the 1600s between backcountry settlers and elite policymakers, ex. Bacon’s Rebellion (1676) * Backcountry Virginians were resentful of Governor William Berkeley and the House of Burgesses, arguing that they paid a disproportionate amount of taxes and were not represented in the House, and that government was not taking sufficient action against natives * Similarly, in the second half of the 1700s, the Carolina Regulators movement, made up of backcountry farmers in North and South Carolina, challenged the policies and practices of merchants, bankers, officials, and the colonial government * War of the Regulation - a catalyst for which was the collection of debts and the reliance of many farmers on bankers’ credit and loans which was full of corruption - was an uprising in an attempt to challenge the system of officials and sheriffs and the political infrastructure surrounding it The Expansion of Slavery and Divergent Regional Attitudes Towards Slavery * The North Moves Toward a Free-Labor System * Many northerners saw unfree labor as inconsistent with the republican ideas of the American Revolution, and even indentured servitude would disappear by 1800 * Northern states passed gradual emancipation laws which did not free existing slaves but provided the freedom of future children of slave women * Free-black communities developed in many northern states * The Growth of Slavery in the South * Slavery became increasingly important in the South due to Eli Whitney’s cotton gin * The number of slaves in the United States grew despite emancipation laws ===== Subject to Debate ===== * Debating the Causes and Nature of the American Revolution * No taxation without representation is only one of the issues that led to the Revolution * Perhaps it was a new set of ideas about politics and democracy * Or maybe it was a class conflict in colonial America, between the colonial elites who wanted to maintain the colonial social structure, but without the British overlords, and the common people who wanted a real break with the hierarchies of the past * The Effectiveness of the Articles of Confederation * The Articles are not necessarily bad - the colonies won the American Revolution with the Articles and they did an excellent job in dealing with new western lands * Although the national government was weak, this can be seen as a positive as the Articles effectively protected the traditional rights of the states * The Nature of the Constitution * Is the Constitution simply a way for the men who wrote it to protect their economic interests? ===== Period 4 ===== ===== The Rise of Political Parties and the Era of Jefferson ===== Political Parties and the Rise of the First Two-Party System * The Federalists, the Democratic-Republicans, and the “Revolution” of 1800 * The Federalists in the 1790s promoted Hamilton’s economic plans, and embraced a broader national agenda for industrialization * Democratic-Republicans, following Jefferson, sought to limit the power of the national government and reserve greater authority at the state level * Election of 1800 - Adams (Federalist) vs. Jefferson (Democratic-Republican) * The votes ended up being tied between Burr and Jefferson, Hamilton advocated for Jefferson and he ended up winning the election * Jefferson labeled this transfer of power from the Federalists to the Democratic-Republicans the “revolution of 1800” because he believed he would return the US to its founding principles * Decline of the Federalist Party and the “Era of Good Feelings” * Despite fears of turmoil, power peacefully changed hands in 1800 * The Federalists lost support because the Republican agricultural areas grew more rapidly than commercial centers of the north, and because of their opposition to the War of 1812 * The “Era of Good Feelings” marked a time in the 1810s and 20s where only the Democratic-Republicans competed for votes, making it so that Monroe easily won the election of 1816 * However, the Supreme Court kept alive alive many elements of the Federalist agenda The Supreme Court Asserts Federal Power and the Power of the Judiciary * Chief Justice John Marshall issued a series of decisions that extended the power of the federal government over state laws, as well as establishing that the Supreme Court was the final say in interpreting the Constitution * Marbury v. Madison (1803) and the Principle of Judicial Review * Judicial Review - review of the constitutionality of an act or law * Adams tried to fill seats of judges during the last days of his presidency, but some were blocked by Jefferson * Marbury, a potential judge, sued to have his commission, but SCOTUS ruled that Marbury was not entitled to his seat because the Adams’s law was unconstitutional * This established SCOTUS’s power to review laws and determine whether they are consistent with the Constitution * The Marshall Court and Federal Power * McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) prohibited Maryland from taxing the Second Bank of the United States * Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) invalidated a monopoly on ferry transportation between NY and NJ, asserting that only the USFG could regulate interstate trade * Cohens v. Virginia (1821) affirmed the right of SCOTUS to receive appeals from state courts * Worcester v. Georgia (1832) held that any dealings with American Indians be carried out by the USFG, upholding the autonomy of American Indian communities The Louisiana Purchase and Territorial Expansion * The Louisiana Purchase * France, under Napoleon, sold the Louisiana Territory (land beyond the Mississippi) to the United States for $15 million * Although it was unconstitutional to acquire new lands, Jefferson went against his strict constructionist view of the Constitution and made the purchase * It doubled the territory of the United States, and the US gained full control of the port of New Orleans at the Mississippi River, skyrocketing US economic growth * The Lewis and Clark Expedition * Meriwether Lewis and William Clark explored and mapped the Louisiana territory, seeking practical routes, and established the presence of the US in the West ===== Politics and Regional Interests ===== The Persistence of Regional Priorities * Regional economic interests often trumped national interest * The Market Economy and Regional Loyalties * Industry in the northern states and slavery in the south, although some regions became more interlinked as local economies were transformed into national markets, the issue of free vs. slavery divided the country The American System and Sectionalism * Henry Clay’s “American System” * In the nationalist mood that followed the War of 1812, Clay put forth a series of economic proposals * Internal improvements - better transportation and infrastructure * High tariffs on imported goods to promote American Manufacturing * Chartering the Second Bank of the United States in order to stabilize the economy and make credit more readily available * The Growing Isolation of the South * Roads and railroads tended to connect the North and ignore the South, and settlers tended to move westward instead of South, eventually isolating the South politically A Temporary Truce on the Slavery Question in the Pre-Civil War Period * Missouri Compromise * If Missouri was admitted into the US, it would have upset the balance of 11 free and 11 slave states, and so Missouri was admitted as a slave state and Maine as a free state * It also divided the remaining area of the Louisiana Territory at the 36*30’ north latitude, where above that line slavery was not permitted * The “Gag Rule” in the House of Representatives * Abolitionists pressed congressmen to introduce and debate antislavery laws, and in response, southern politicians successfully pushed for resolutions that would table antislavery propositions, preventing them from being debated, “gagging” them ===== America on the World Stage ===== Trade, Diplomacy, and the Expansion of American Influence * The Barbary Wars (1801-1805, 1815) * Morocco, Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli, collectively known as the Barbary Coast, controlled trade in the Mediterranean, and demanded large payments from trading nations as tribute, otherwise they were subject to plundering by pirates * In 1801, Tripoli demanded a steep increase in payment and Jefferson refused, leading to the First Barbary War - where in the end, Tripoli agreed to release hostages and stop raiding American ships for $60,000 * However, raiding did not stop, leading to the Second Barbary War, bringing an end to the American practice of paying tribute * Ongoing Troubles with European Nations * Although the US attempted to remain neutral and trade with both France and Britain while they were at war, Britain impressed American sailors * In 1807, British warship Leopard fired on the USS Chesapeake, where 4 Americans were abducted and 3 were killed * “Peaceful Coercion” and Free Trade * As Britain continued to interfere with American shipping, Jefferson passed the Embargo Act (1807), which cut off US trade to all foregin ports in hopes that this would persuade other nations to leave US ships alone * However, all this did was cripple America’s mercantile sector, and it was replaced by the Non-Intercourse Act of 1809 which only prohibited trade with France and Britain - which was just as unpopular because they were the US’s 2 biggest trading partners * Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810) * In an attempt to revive trade, this bill was passed that said the US would prohibit trade with the enemy of the nation that agreed to respect America’s rights as a neutral nation at sea - Napoleon agreed and the US cut trade to Britain in 1811 * However, France continued to seize American ships and the cutting of trade with Britain worsened relations and pushed the two nations to war * The War of 1812 * Trade conflicts and pressure from the War Hawks pushed President Madison to declare war against Britain in 1812 * The war lasted 2 ½ years - Britain won early battles at Fort Dearborn and Fort Detroit, but in 1813, the US burned the city of York, won the Battle of the Thames in Canada where they defeated British and Indian forces and killed the Indian leader Tecumseh * The British burned down the White House and the Capitol in one incident * A peace treaty was signed in 1814, but without realizing it, Andrew Jackson achieved a major victory at New Orleans in 1815 * The Hartford Convention and Opposition to the War of 1812 * The War of 1812 was unpopular with New England merchants who saw their trade with Britain disappear, and Federalists met in Hartford to express their displeasure, and ended in a resolution calling for a ⅔ Congress majority for declarations of war * The Treaty of Ghent (1814) * Ended the war of 1812, the two sides agreed to stop fighting, give back territory seized in the war, and recognize the boundary between US and Canada * It did not mention Britain arming American Indians, interference with American shipping, or impressment of American seamen * “Old China Trade” * US merchants opened lucrative trade with China, not officially sanctioned by the USFG, known as “Old China Trade” * Driven by American demand for Chinese products, opened new markets to the US * Recognizing the growing power of Britain in China, the US signed the Treaty of Wanghia in 1844 in which China extended to the US the same trading privileges as Britain * Nationalist Sentiment and the Monroe Doctrine (1823) * President Monroe was alarmed at threats by the Holy Alliance of Russia, Prussia, and Austria to restore Spain’s lost American colonies * He issued the Monroe Doctrine as a statement warning European nations to keep their hands off the Americas, an important statement of intent, rather than actual ability to enforce this * The Adams-Onis Treaty (1819) * The US gained control over Florida with the Adams-Onis Treaty, it transferred control of Florida, accepted Spain’s claims to Texas, and settled the boundary between Louisiana and Spanish territory * The US wanted to gain control of Florida because it was a destination for escaped slaves * The Caroline Incident, the “Aroostook War”, and the Webster-Ashburton Treaty * The Webster-Ashburton Treaty split the disputed territory between Maine and British Canada, and settled a disagreement over the border between Minnesota and Canada * This border, although roughly drawn by the Treaty Paris, led to conflicts as more Canadians and Americans moved in to the area around Maine, and the brawling between the two groups was coined the “Aroostook War” * The Caroline incident was where British authorities burned an American vessel on the border of Minnesota and Canada which was being used by anti-British Canadian rebels to transport supplies. In response, New York officials had arrested a Canadian sheriff and threatened to execute him for participating in the murder of an American crew member * “Fifty-four Forty or Fight”: Negotiating the Oregon Border * Both Britain and the US laid claim to the Pacific Northwest, and in 1818, the two nations agreed on a “joint occupation” of the Oregon Country * Fifty-four Forty or Fight was the cry of Americans who wanted to own all the territory, and instead, a line was drawn at the 49th parallel - the current border between US and Canada ===== Market Revolution: Economic Transformations ===== The Market Revolution * The Expansion of Banking * Banking and credit were increasingly important, especially after the Panic of 1819 which demonstrated the volatility of the new market economy * The Second Bank of the US and newly chartered state banks extended credit, issuing bank notes, but valuations of currency were different in each states - but the ability of banks to put currency into the economy fueled economic growth * The Incorporation of America * States started writing incorporation laws allowing for the chartering of businesses, which provided investors with limited liability - investors could only lose the amount they invested and could not be held liable in civil suits * SCOTUS and the Market Economy * Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819) - SCOTUS ruled that Dartmouth’s colonial charter was still valid and could not be made a state college * Fletcher v. Peck (1810) - SCOTUS upheld a corrupt land deal between Georgia and individuals - they maintained that a contract should be upheld, although it might not have been in the public interest Advances in Technology * Agricultural Efficiency * The steel plow, invented in 1847, was more durable and efficient than the cast-iron plow * The automatic reaper in 1831 cut and stacked wheat and other grains * The thresher loosened the grain kernels from the inedible husk * Eli Whiteney and Interchangeable Parts * Many industrial processes came to rely on interchangeable parts - parts of a specific item were made and could be rapidly assembled into finished products - an idea promoted by Eli Whitney * The Development of Steam Power * As steam power was developed in Britain, Fulton in the US developed a functioning steamboat, and steamboats dominated commercial shipping in the 20 years after 1807 * Steam power also replaced water wheels at factories * Advances in Communication * Morse invented the first telegraph in 1844, and in 1850, telegraph lines were built around the country Improvements in Transportation and Regional Interdependence * Canals and Roads * The construction of canals and roads, called internal improvements, expanded trade, and were usually built by private entities with subsidies from the government * The Erie Canal connected the hudson to the Great Lakes, New York to the interior of the country, dropping shipping costs by 90% * The National Road (Cumberland Road) stretched from Maryland to the Ohio River Valley * Railroads * The first tracks were laid in 1829 by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and by 1860, they connected the country * It dropped costs of transportation significantly Regional Specialization * Commerce, Trade, and Manufacturing in the North * The Waltham-Lowell system brought all stages of textile production under one roof by having employees live in company housing, and this system spread rapidly * The use of interchangeable parts was widespread to manufacturers of agricultural implements, tools, clocks, and ironware * The Growth of Cotton Production in the South * In the first half of the 1800s, cotton replaced other crops as the most profitable crop in the South as the North needed it for textile production * The cotton gin combined with the insatiable demand in the North and Britain for cotton led to 58% of American exports being cotton by 1860, and thereby the number of slaves as well ===== Market Revolution: Society and Culture ===== Migrations and New Communities in the Age of the Market Revolution * Irish Immigration * The potato famine led to many Irish immigrants to the US * German Immigration * Many German immigrants were skilled craftsmen and entrepreneurs who immigrated to the US to escape political repression following the failed revolution of 1848 in the German states * The Movement to the West * The West grew rapidly after the War of 1812 with expansion in roads, canals, and railroads * More than 4 million Americans settled in the west from 1800-1840 * Many southern planters hoped to recreate the Cotton Kingdom in the less expensive lands of the west * Some migrants “squatted” on their new land, lacking legal title or deed * The towns of the Old Northwest resembled New England while the plantations and the slave labor system of the new lower South resembled the Old South The Market Revolution’s Impact on Economic Class * Social Mobility, Class, and the “Free Labor” Ideology * The material wealth of the US grew dramatically in the market revolution; the average income and standard of living increased * It provided hope of social mobility - ability to move up the social ladder * It bolstered the “free labor” ideology, that it was possible for wage earners to actually own land and become independent of others - led Northerners to see their society as superior to that of the South * However, many workers were stuck in low-wage factory work, and there was wealth inequality with entrepreneurs and aristocrats holding the majority of the benefits and fortune * There was a growth of a middle class as well, and a growth of occupations such as lawyers, clerks, bank workers, etc. * The Development of Unions * A labor union allowed workers in a firm to bargain “collectively” with their employer * Mill workers in Lowell, MA organized as the Factory Girls Association staged two strikes, but had limited success by the Panic of 1837 and large scale Irish immigration * In Commonwealth v. Hunt, SCOTUS ruled that unions were legal, and several organizations such as the National Typographical Union and the Stone Cutters achieved success Workers and New Methods of Production * The Putting Out System * Men and women performed a task arranged by an agent at home, which was usually part of a larger operation such as cutting leather which would later be turned into shoes * This provided jobs for people at various times of the year * Slater Mill and the Development of the Factory System * The first to industrialize was the textile industry * As early as the 1790s, Slater built the first factory in the US that spun cotton into yarn or thread, powered by the Blackstone River * Water, human, and animal power characterized industry in the pre-Civil War era * The Lowell System * Textile factories in Lowell Massachusetts drew in young women because they thought they could pay them less and that they would only be temporary because they would eventually get married * Many of these women experienced freedom and autonomy unheard of for young women at the time, and demonstrated this by going on strike following wage cuts, but were eventually replaced by Irish immigrants Gender and Family Roles in the Age of the Market Revolution * Gentility, Domesticity, and the Middle-class Ideal * A new culture surrounded the middle class - one where women were seen as the weaker sex, in a world outside the world of money and politics * The “Cult of Domesticity” and the “Proper” Role for Women * The ideas of republican motherhood gave way to the conception of a middle-class woman’s place, seen as intellectually inferior and whose role was to maintain the house and care for children * The cult of domesticity insisted that women keep a proper Christian home in a separate sphere from men * The legal structure of the US already considered women second-class, they could not vote or sit on juries or were not entitled to protection against physical abuse by their husbands, and property they owned would become their husband’s if they married * This was under the legal doctrine of feme covert, where wives had no independent legal or political standing ===== Expanding Democracy ===== Participatory Democracy and an Expanding Electorate * The Growth of Popular Politics and the Elimination of Property Qualifications * Following the Era of Good Feelings, most states removed property qualifications for voting so that most free white males had the right to vote * This impulse to expand democratic participation was strongest in the new western states, and the old eastern states followed suit * The Dorr Rebellion and Resistance to the Expansion of Democracy * Webster led conservative opposition to democratic reform in the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1820-21 arguing that power naturally and necessarily follows property * Federalist political leaders in MA were able to block several of the more egalitarian proposals of the convention * In RI, democratic reformers organized a People’s Convention in 1841 which wrote a new, more democratic, state constitution which most people agreed with * They tried to inaugurate a new governor, Thomas Dorr, but President Tyler put the Dorr Rebellion down with federal troops, but this reflected a popular desire for a more democratic governing structure * Democracy in America by Alexis de Tocqueville * French writer Tocqueville, upon visiting the US, wrote Democracy in America describing how democracy in the US meant more than voting, that there was a belief in equality, active participation in voluntary civic organization, and the belief that individual initiative and note birth determined one’s success ===== Jackson and Federal Power ===== The Second Two-Party System: The Democrats and the Whigs * The Era of Good Feelings broke apart as the Jacksonian branch of the Democratic-Republicans became known as the Democratic Party, while their opponents were the Whigs, organized by Clay * Jacksonian Democracy * Jackson and his supporters were bitter because of the election of 1824 as although he had the largest number of electoral votes (no candidate reached the required number of electoral votes to be declared president), the House elected John Quincy Adams to become president * It was believed that Clay as the Speaker of the House convinced representatives to tilt the election towards Adams, and Adams named Clay his secretary of state, causing Jackson’s supporters to label it as a corrupt bargain * In the election of 1828, Jackson’s supporters painted Adams as elist, and his populist appeal helped him * This election was considered the first modern election, in the sense that because of the elimination of property qualifications for voting * The “Tariff of Abominations” * The Tariff Act of 1828, known as the Tariff of Abominations, dramatically raised tariff rates on many items and led to a reduction in trade between the US and Europe * This hit SC, which depended on cotton exports, especially hard * John C. Calhoun and the Nullification Crisis * The Tariff Act of 1828 especially angered southern politicians in SC - led by Calhoun, and although Jackson signed a new act to lower tariffs, they were not satisfied * These politicians upheld the theory that states had the right to nullify federal legislation, but SCOTUS ruled this invalid * Jackson was alarmed at the flouting of federal authority and passed the Force Bill in 1833 which authorized military force against SC, and Congress revised tariff rates again, providing relief for SC - both helped alleviate the crisis * Destruction of the Second Bank of the United States * Jackson argued that the bank put too much power into the hands of a small elite * He vetoed the rechartering of the bank and killed it - a move that played well with his voters and he won reelection * The federal deposits from the national bank to state banks * The Specie Circular and the Panic of 1837 * Jackson’s suspicion of bankers and credit led him to issue the Specie Circular mandating that government land be sold only for hard currency (gold/silver) * This led to falling land prices and a shortage of government funds * Both the destruction of the national bank and the Specie Circular led to the Panic of 1837 * Worst economic crisis that brought many canal and railroad projects to a halt, led to the collapse of banks and businesses, and led to high unemployment * The Panic also damaged the political fortunes of the Democrats, Van Buren did not address the economic crisis and so he lost to the Whig Party in the election of 1840 to Harrison * Whigs and Democrats * The Whigs were formed in 1833, and many supported government programs aimed at economic modernization, such as Clay’s American system * Issues tended to be less important/pressing in this period of American history, and both parties focused intently on winning elections and holding on to power Contention Between Whites and American Indians Over Western Lands * American Indians and the West * In the early 1800s, white settlers were pouring into the Ohio River and it was never clear if the Indians who made agreements with whites did so with the authority of their people * Harrison, governor of Indiana at the time, negotiated the Treaty of Fort Wayne where Indians agreed to cede 3 million acres for a fee * However, the most important leader at the time, Tecumseh, was not present for this * He and his brother Tenskwatawa, “the Prophet”, were trying to unite all Indian nations east of the Mississippi River * Battle of Tippecanoe and the War Hawks * Settlers persuaded Harrison to wage war against Temcumseh’s confederation * The Battle of Tippecanoe ousted members of the confederacy and was an American victory * The War Hawks, led by Clay and Calhoun, accused Britain of encouraging and funding Temcumseh’s confederation, and pushed for military action against the British * This would allow the US to eliminate the Indian threat and perhaps invade Canada * Indian Removal Act (1830) * Many whites wanted to push into the interior of the South, which were the traditional lands of the “Five Civilized Tribes” - Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee-Creek, and Seminole * Federal policy had been to respect the rights of Indians to inhabit the land, however, Jackson adopted a policy of Indian removal * He pushed for the Removal Act of 1830 * The “Trail of Tears” * Jackson and Buren pushed for Georgia to move Indians to the West despite Worcester v. Georgia, which declared that Indian tribes were subject to federal treaties, not to actions of states * Although some gave up their land willingly, many resisted under Cherokee’s principal chief John Ross, and federal troops were dispatched to move 18,000 Indians to the Oklahoma Territory, the trek labeled as the Trail of Tears (1838), and resulted in the deaths of approx. ¼ of the people * American Indians and Florida * Whites grew concerned that slaves were escaping to FL and raided FL, this was followed by counterraids by the Seminole and other Indians on communities in Georgia and Alabama * This led to the First Seminole War during the War of 1812, and a second Seminole War, and eventually FL coming into America’s hands * Indian Territory * As part of Indian removal policy, many tribes from east of the Mississippi were relocated to Indian Territory in OK * The establishment of an Indian Territory was part of the Indian Intercourse Act of 1834 * Once in the territory, conflicts broke out between Indian groups indigenous to the area and those relocated there ===== The Development of an American Culture ===== The Emergence of a National Culture * This culture developed after the War of 1812 along with nationalist sentiment that borrowed elements of European culture but also sought to create something uniquely American * The American Renaissance * In the decades before the civil war, there was a high literary spirit * Moby Dick, Leaves of Grass, The Scarlet Letter, The House of Seven Gables, and Walden were hallmarks of American literature grappling with questions raised by the Puritans and focusing on the American democratic dream European Romanticism and American Culture * The Romantic Perspective * Romanticism was a reaction to industrialization * Was deeply nationalistic and reactionary in its embrace of pure national community * Challenged rationality and embraced emotion over accuracy * Hudson River School * The Hudson River School of Painting represented by Thomas Cole, Asher Durand, and Frederic Church painted the Hudson River in a way as to emphasize emotion and the feeling of the moment rather than the accuracy of the image * Romanticism in American Literature * Many Americans were captivated by British writer Sir Walter Scott, with his larger-than-life heroic figures, who epitomized romanticism in literature * In America, Cooper with his “Leatherstocking Tales” including the Last of the Mohicans (1826), captured the danger and fascination of the frontier experienceIrving also published short stories such as Rip Van Winkle and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow which portrayed a fanciful version of America ===== The Second Great Awakening ===== Religious and Spiritual Movements in Antebellum America * The Second Great Awakening * At beginning of the 1800s, many clergy members worried that Americans were more captivated by politics than God and Salvation, and Americans felt a yearning for a more immediate religious experience * A movement of large camp meetings began in Kentucky and spread to other states - the growing towns along the Erie Canal came to be known as the burned over district because of the intensity of the religious revival * Second Great Awakening ministers such as Finney told people they could control their eternal life, much different from predestination, which encouraged individual redemption and even societal reformation * It acted as a springboard for a variety of reform movements * Mormonism * Joseph Smith founded Mormonism in the 1830s growing out of the Second Great Awakening * They were a sect that separated themselves from community, and were met with hostility for their unorthodox teachings such as rejecting the trinity or allowing polygamy * The group was forced to move from place to place * Transcendentalism * It was a spiritual and intellectual movement critical of materialism in the US * Thoreau wrote about the importance of nature in finding meaning and wrote “Civil Disobedience”, urging people not to acquiesce to unfair and unjust government dictates * Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote a series of philosophical essays, including “On Self-Reliance” * Utopian Communities * They were experiments in communal living, structured around a guiding principle and were critical of materialism * However, whereas transcendentalists focused on cultivation of the self, utopian communities sought a more collective alternative to society * The most well known community was Brook Farm outside of Boston in 1841, started by the transcendentalist George Ripley, and was based on the idea that all people would share equally in the labor and leisure of the community * Spiritual Developments in American Indian Communities * In the wake of the defeat of the Iroquois Confederacy, a Seneca named Handsome Lake developed a set of spiritual practices that was known as the Longhouse Religion - he spoke out against Indian factionalism, alcohol consumption, and offered many Indians a sense of hope in the face of setbacks ===== An Age of Reform ===== Reform Movements in the Antebellum Period * The Temperance Movement * The goal was to limit or ban the sale/consumption of alcohol * It attracted a large following for many reasons; many women were troubled by the large amount of alcohol consumed by their sons and husbands - not only did husbands come back to their house drunk, they also spent all their money on alcohol and abused their wives and children * The American Temperance Society, founded in 1826, was guided by Lyman Beecher’s Six Sermons on the Nature, Occasions, Signs, Evils, and Remedy of Intemperance * It claimed 1.5 million members by 1835 and alcohol consumption in the US dropped by about half from 1830-40 * However, by the 1870s, most “dry states”, states that banned the sale of alcohol, had repealed their prohibition laws * The Asylum and Penitentiary Movement * Dorothea Dix advocated for the rights of the mentally ill, and created the first mental asylums in the US * Public Education * Horace Mann, the secretary of the education, led a movement for free public education, which was seen as essential to democratic participation Debating the Future of Slavery in America * Abolitionism * The reform spirit of the Second Great Awakening inspired the movement, and although it was a minority opinion among northern whites, it had a major impact on America * William Lloyd Garrison and “Immediate Emancipation” * In 1831, Garrison began publishing The Liberator, and led the movement for the immediate and uncompensated abolition of slavery, as opposed to gradual emancipation laws * Garrison broke with all previous antislavery sentiment in arguing that there should be no compensation for owners, that slaves should be immediately freed, and that they were entitled to the same rights as white people * American Colonization Society * Founded in 1817 with the goal of transporting Afircan Americans to Africa * Some wanted blacks to escape to Africa to escape racism and others wanted them gone because they perceived them as a lower social caste * Advocates thought that slaves should not receive treatments as equals in the US, so a colony in Africa called Liberia was created, and 12,000 African Americans were sent there in the antebellum period * Some were slaves freed under the condition they leave, and others were free blacks who believed they could succeed in Liberia * Frederick Douglass was critical of colonization, and saw it as accommodating slavery instead of ending it Growing Tensions over Slavery * Abolitionism and Electoral Politics * The Liberty Party was founded in 1840 by abolitionists, and pushed the idea that the Constitution was against slavery and that the US should live up to its ideals, opposed to Garrison who condemned the Constitution as being pro-slavery * Racism and Resistance to the Antislavery Movement * White supremacy was central to southern culture, and caused them to believe slavery was necessary and proper * It allowed even the poorest whites to feel superior and feel they had something in common to wealthy plantation owners * The Lovejoy Incident * Elijah Lovejoy was an abolitionist newspaper publisher in Illinois who was killed by a proslavery mob The Women’s Rights Movement * Women in the Public Sphere * Women challenged the idea of a cult of domesticity and the private sphere, following the reforms of Dorothea Dix to push for a variety of reforms * They formed the Female Moral Reform Society to urge women not to engage in prostitution * The Grimke sisters, daughters of prominent SC slave owner, were leaders in the abolitionist cause * Mott and Stanton were abolitionists who were banned from the World Anti-Slavery Convention because of their gender, and started rethinking the conditions of women in the US * Seneca Falls Convention * Stanton and Mott led a group of women in the Seneca Falls Convention to raise the issue of women’s suffrage, and also the structure of gender inequality - property rights, education, wages, child custody, divorce, and overall legal status of women * Declaration of Sentiments was issued - “all men and women are created equal” ===== African Americans in the Early Republic ===== Slave Rebellions - The Limits of Anti-Slavery Efforts in the South * Unlike plantations in the Carribean, slaves were outnumbered by whites and the whites were well armed * Gabriel’s Rebellion * In 1800, a blacksmith named Gabriel who was introduced to ideas about republicanism and democracy, planned out a rebellion of 1000 men * However, the rebellion was quashed by the Virginia militia before it began due to slaves alerting their owners about the rebellion, and 27 participants were hanged * The Denmark Vesey Conspiracy * Vesey was charged by local authorities with organizing a plot to destroy Charleston and instigate a broad slave uprising * Historians question if a rebellion was in the works at all, but Vesey and 35 others were hanged * Nat Turner’s Rebellion * Turner, a slave preacher, led a rebellion in Southampton County, VA, a band of blacks armed with guns and axes that resulted in the deaths of 55 people * The revolt was put down with federal troops, with 100 African Americans being executed by authorities and more were attacked and killed by angry mobs * It was the largest rebellion in the 1800s and led to increased fear of slave rebellions and stricter slave laws The Cultures of African American Communities - Free and Slave * David Walker * A black who in 1829 issued a pamphlet called “David Walker’s Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World” which called for blacks to resist slavery by any and every means - this pamphlet caused some southern legislatures to enact penalities against anyone caught reading it * Frederick Douglass * A powerful speaker in the antislavery movement, he wrote Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, and gave the speech”What ot the Slave is the Fourth of July”, criticizing the US for not adhering to its founding principles * The African Methodist Episopal (AME) Church * Richard Allen in PA in 1816 founded the AME, reflecting the desire of the free black communities to have greater autonomy and tailor the sermons to the experiences of the black community * Cultural Resistance to Slavery * Slaves developed subtle resistance tactics - passing on stories with the message that the weak often got the better of the strong and creating music to create relief from the work of slavery ===== The Society of the South in the Early Republic ===== Slavery and the Southern “Way of Life” * Southern Defense of Slavery * Some contrasted slavery with harsh factories in the north and the lack of care for their employees * George Fitshugh was critical of the free labor ideology, the idea that workers of the north could earn money to buy land and become independent of others, and said that it masked a heartless approach to the world * Others said the Bible sanctioned slavery, or that it was a positive good for slavery because it provided them with skills, discipline, and civilization * Biblical Defense of Slavery * Cited passages that said slaves should be submissive to their masters * The Curse of Ham was central to the biblical defense of slavery, where Noah told Ham that his descendants would be slaves * The “Mudsill Theory” * Some argued that the existence of slaves was necessary, such as a mudsill supports a house, the institution of slavery prevented a class of poor, landless people undermining civilization Cotton, Slavery, and the Southern Exception * Cotton and Slavery * In 1807, Britain outlawed international slave trade and the US followed suit in the year after * All of the northern states had voted to abolish slavery outright or gradually, but slavery and cotton were the main engines behind American economic growth in the first half of the nineteenth century * Slavery and the Culture of the South * A large slave population had an impact on shaping southern culture - the language, food, music, and dialect * White supremacy took a strong hold in the South, more than in the North where, although there was white supremacy, it lacked the intensity of the South without any black population in the North Westward Expansion and the Politics of Slavery * Expansion into Texas - From Settlement to Independence * Mexico was eager to attract settlers to provide a buffer from Indian raiding parties * Led by Sephen Austin, settlers were attracted to Texas because of the abundance of land that could be sued for cotton cultivations * Mexico allowed these settlers a degree of self government, but tensions grew in the 1830s as a result of Texans bringing slaves, which was banned in Mexico * General Santa Anna sought to bring them into Mexican law and custom, and in 1835, the Texans rebelled - many of whom were Spanish speaking Tejanos who objected to being ruled by Mexico City * Although the rebels almost lost 200 defending the Alamo and 400 in the Goliad, under the General Houston, they were able to win independence from Mexico, establishing the Republic of Texas in 1836 * Annexation of Texas and the Politics of Slavery * Many Texans were eager for the Lone Star Republic to join the United States * However, Jackson, not wanting to add to tensions by admitting a large slave state, blocked annexation, and this was continued by Van Buren and Harrison * President Tyler supported the annexation but did not have the support to make this a reality, but managed to push it through to Congress at the end of his presidency ===== Subject to Debate ===== * Was it an Era of Good Feelings * Some note the beginnings of divisions ofer the issue of slavery, and others on class divisions that emerged when the master-apprentice system gave way to the wage-labor system * The Legacy of President Jacksoin * In the latter 1800s, he was scoffed at by historians who came from elite New England - he seemed arrogant, ignorant, and authoritarian * By the early 1900s, Progressive-era historians saw Jackson as a man of the pioneer era who brought the democratic, frontier spirit with him to the White House * More recently, historians draw parallels between Jackson’s expansionist impulses and American foreign adventures from Vietnam to Iraq * The Indian Removal Act and the Trail of Tears left a permanent stain on his legacy * The Antebellum Period and the Advent of Social History * Social history has become more prominent, and the focus on what life was like for ordinary Americans * Reform Movements - Democratic or Restrictive? * The temperance movement reflects the more restrictive aspect of reform movements * The women’s rights movement and abolitionist movement were democratic * The push for public education can be seen in both lights - a prerequisite for meaningful participation in the democratic process, but also an opportunity for learning to impose a rigid set of middle class Protestant values on a diverse working class * The Impact of Westward Expansion * The era of manifest destiny is often shrouded in the language of idealism, democracy, adventure, and optimism, but if carried out in other countries, would be seen in a negative light such as Napoleon’s conquest or the brutality of Japanese conquest * Historians and the Brutality of Slavery * Time on the Cross, published in 1974, asserts that while slavery was immoral, it was an efficient business model that was less brutal towards slaves than history would make it out to be * However, their data and methods are often challenged by other historians ===== Period 5 ===== ===== Manifest Destiny ===== Westward Migrations * Americans Respond to the Call of Manifest Destiny * Manifest destiny refers to the movement of individuals to the west and to the political extension of United States territory - it was the destiny of the United States to expand westward and its power in the Western Hemisphere * Coined by John O’Sullivan - it was God’s plan that the US take over and populate the land from coast to coast - but most Americans moved west out of economic desires rather than a desire to fulfill a divine plan * Overland Trails * Most famous trail to the west was the Oregon Trail - a 2,000 mile route from Missouri to the Pacific * Santa Fe Trail, California Trail * Approx. 300,000 people traveled these trails * Story of the Donner Party (1846-7) is often repeated - a wagon train of 87 migrants became snowbound in the Sierra Nevada mountains, of which 48 were rescued * However, the death rate on these trails was only slightly higher than average death rates, with Indians more likely to work as guides and trade than be bandits * The California Gold Rush * Discovery of gold at Sutter’s Mill in CA in 1848 - the year that California became a US territory * Many migrated in 1849, termed the 49ers, however, very few common people could make profit with gold which required heavy machinery to strike * The Mormon Exodus * The Mormons, who had migrated to Utah as a result of religious persecution, arrived in Utah during the Mexican War and Utah became US territory The Ideological Foundations of Manifest Destiny * Manifest Destiny and Race * Americans came to believe that other people that inhabited North America were incapable of establishing a democratic government which justified their westward expansion * This came from European Romanticism and scientific racialism which held that whites were superior to other races, fueling the American belief that they were superior to the savage tribes of the west * The Spread of Democratic Civilization * Justified manifest destiny by asserting the superiority of American democratic practices - conquest of Mexico was seen as a victory of liberty-loving Protestants over tyrannical and anti-republican Catholics Government Promotion of Western Expansion * The Morrill Land Grant Act (1826) * Promoted secondary public education in the West - the USFG transferred substantial tracts of its lands to the states so they could build public colleges or sell the land to fund the building of educational facilities * Pacific Railroad Act (1862) * Extended government bonds and tracts of land to companies engaged in building transcontinental railroads * The Homestead Act (1862) * Provided free land in the region to settlers who were willing to farm it - passed with the absence of Democrats from Congress during the Civil War * Many people applied for and were granted homesteads, however, many did not have farming skills and went bankrupt, and it became increasingly difficult for ordinary farmers to compete with large-scale agricultural operations Economic Expansion Beyond the Western Hemisphere: The United States and Asia * Opening Trade with Japan * Commodore Matthew C. Perry used gunboat diplomacy to open up Japan and secure a treaty that made American trade with Japan possible ===== The Mexican-American War ===== The Mexican War and Westward Expansion * The Election of 1844 and the Annexation of Texas * Polk wanted to push for Texas annexation, and even before he became president, Tyler passed a Texas’s annexation to Congress before he left * It joined the US as the 15th slave state in 1845 * Origins of the War with Mexico * Polk and other expansionists were eager to incorporate the remainder of Mexico’s northern provinces into the US, and tensions brought the two nations to a dispute over the southern border of Texas * In 1846, skirmishes in the disputed area led to war between US and Mexico * Victory over Mexico on the Battlefield * The US won early battles in the Mexican-American War (1846-48), and although Mexico was determined to win, they surrendered when the US captured Mexico City * The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo * Mexico signed this treaty, giving up the disputed territory in Texas and giving up California and New Mexico in the Mexican Cession for $15 million - including modern-day CA, NE, UT, AZ, NM, CO, WY * Gadsden Purchase * Acquired from Mexico in 1853, 5 years after the Mexican war, it added more area ot the US and was sought by the US as a possible southern route for a transcontinental railroad * The Acquisition of the Mexican Cession and the Slavery Question * The question of whether slavery would exist in the new territories continued to generate national controversy Conflict on the Frontier Following the Mexican-American War * Expansion and Violence on the Frontier * The trails that took settlers west to the Oregon territory passed straight through Indian lands and the Indian Territory where Indians had been relocated * This caused the government to begin taking control of Indian lands and restrict them to reservations * The Growth of the Reservation System * The Indian Appropriations Act of 1851 established reservations in present-day OK, and the goal of the reservation system was to keep American Indians off lands that white settlers wanted to settle * In exchange, Indians were promised a degree of autonomy as well as annuities * The system reduced Indian land from 15 to 1.5 million acres, and the land was incapable of farming, reducing many to poverty * The Treaty of Fort Laramie * Indians resisted further encroachments into the Great Plains, so in 1851, US representatives and 10,000 Plain Indians convened in Fort Laramie where they agreed that Indians provide a way for wagons to reach the far west in exchange for the promise that remaining Indian lands would be untouched * The Great Sioux Uprising (1862) * When settlers refused to honor the Treaty of Fort Laramie, Sioux Indians led by Chief Little Crow killed a thousand settlers before being put down by the military * The Colorado War and the Sand Creek Massacre (1864) * The migration west continued during the civil war * The Colorado War (1864-65) was fought between the US/Colorado militia, against the Southern Cheyenne, Arapaho, and allied Brule and Oglala Sioux (Lakota) people in Colorado * Included the Sand Creek Massacre - after a settler family was killed by Indians, Colonel Chivington led an attack on a peaceful Cheyenne village killing 150-50 women and children * American Indians in the Mexican Cession * Disease took lives of thousands * Systematic campaigns of extermination against Indians caused a genocide, and as the 1850s progressed, thousands of Indians were either murdered or enslaved ===== The Compromise of 1850 ===== Territorial Acquisition and the Slavery Question * The Wilmot Proviso * Americans reached an uneasy truce on slavery with the Missouri Compromise in 1820 * Northern politicians put forth the Wilmot Proviso (1846), which would ban slavery in territories that would be gained in the Mexican American War * The proposal failed to pass the Senate * The Election of 1848 and the Free-Soil Party * Both the Whigs and Democrats avoided taking strong stands on the issue of slavery * Antislavery men in both parties founded the Free-Soil Party in 1848 which only got about 5-10% of the vote, but many of its members would later join the Republican Party (1854) * Popular Sovereignty * Senator Lewis Cass proposed the idea that slavery should be left to the people of that territory * Southerners wanted the vote on slavery to happen later, as it would give slavery more time to develop, whereas Northerners wanted it to happen earlier * Cuba and the Ostend Manifesto * Polk offered to purchase Cuba from Spain, but Spain refused * Later, American diplomats were sent to Belgium by President Pierce to secretly buy Cuba - their goals, written up as the Ostend Manifesto, provoked anger from northern politicians who saw this as an attempt to expand the slavery empire beyond the ConUS California Application for Statehood * California and the Compromise of 1850 * Californians wrote up a constitution in which slavery would be illegal, which the Southern senators objected to - Clay and the Senate worked out the Compromise of 1850 in which CA would be admitted as a free state and there would be a harsher fugitive slave law * Although they did not pass as an omnibus (jumbo) bill, bills allowing NM and UT to decide slavery based on popular sovereignty, accepting a new boundary between Texas and Mexico, and banning the slave trade (but not slavery) in Washington all passed individually ===== Sectional Conflict: Regional Differences ===== The North and Immigration * Irish Immigration and the Five Points * The largest destination for Irish immigrants was the Five Points neighborhood of NYC * It was the worst in terms of density, disease, child mortality, unemployment, prostitution, and violent crime, but it was the original American melting pot, combining elements of the black commmunity and the Irish community * Mulatto was a term coined for intermarriage between the blacks and Irish Anti-Immigrant Sentiment in the Antebellum Period * A strong anti-Catholic nativist movement developed in the US to limit the rights, political power and cultural influence of newly arrived immigrants * Nativism * Many Americans thought that the new immigrants who were mostly non-Protestnat, lacked the self-control of proper middle-class Protestant Americans - evidenced by excessive drinking culture * The Know Nothings * The Know-Nothing Party was a political wing of an anti-Catholic, anti-Irish movement, and achieved electoral success in mainly the Northeast Differing Economic Models: The Free Labor Ideal Versus the Slave System * The economy of the North was increasingly focused on a free-labor model with manufacturing industries, whereas the economy of the South was increasingly dependent on a slave-labor, agricultural economy * North population grew fast while South population was slow Abolitionism in the North - Strategies and Tactics * The Fugitive Slave Act and Personal Liberty Laws * Many northerners grew alarmed at the enforcement of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act in the Compromise of 1850 which allowed slave catchers to bring the brutality of the slave system to northern cities * In response, northern states passed personal liberty laws, offering protection to fugitives * Prigg v. Pennsylvania - SCOTUS overturned the conviction of slave catcher Edward Prigg on the grounds that federal law was superior to state law * Ableman v. Booth - SCOTUS affirmed the legality of the Fugitive Slave Act * Uncle Tom’s Cabin * Written by Harriet Beecher Stowe depicted the brutality of slavery - this caused northerners to humanize slaves * John Brown and the Raid on Harper’s Ferry * In 1859, Brown carried out a raid to acquire weapons from a federal armory in Harper’s Ferry, VA, with intention to distribute the weapons to slaves, which would cause a massive slave rebellion * They were stopped with reinforcements led by Robert E. Lee * This convinced southerners that there was a northern conspiracy to overthrow slavery, although in reality, Brown’s act was condemned by northern politicians The Southern Response to the Slavery Question * Racism and the Defense of Slavery * In the first half of the 1800s, the defense of slavery shifted * It went from a necessary evil to a positive good * Racism and Culture * There was a growing popularity of minstrel shows, where whites would perform variety shows in blackface - portraying blacks as lazy, shiftless, dim-witted, and happy-go-lucky * Southern slave-owners became increasingly interested in the religious practices of their slaves, and they built churches on their plantations - ministers would point out that Hebrews owned slaves or that slavery was not condemned by Jesus ===== Failure to Compromise ===== The Deterioration of Relations Between the North and the South * The Kansas-Nebraska Act * In 1854, Senator Douglass introduced this Act to the Senate - calling for dividing the Northern section of the Louisiana Purchase into Kansas and Nebraska and allowing for slavery there - however those areas were closed by the Missouri Compromise and they ended up being left to popular sovereignty * Many were upset at the act and at Douglass * Bleeding Kansas * Violence erupted as pro and anti-slavery men fought for control of the state * Thousands of pro-slavery Missourians came over the border to vote for Kansas to be a slave state * In response, each side wrote up a constitution for Kansas - anti-slavery with the Topeka Constitution and pro-slavery with the Lecompton Constitution * President Pierce recognized the pro-slavery government * A pro-slavery group of Missourians attakced the anti-slavery town of Lawrence in 1856 * John Brown, a deeply religious anti-slavery activist, along with his sons and several followers, killed five pro-slavery men with swords along the Pottawatomie Creek * This was a precursor to the Civil War * The Beating of Senator Charles Sumner * He gave a pointed anti-slavery speech called Crimes against Kansas, where he singled out Senator Butler of SC, and when Butler’s nephew heard the news, he beat Sumner with a cane - Northerners saw this as a sign of southern barbarity, southerners made his nephew a hero * The Dred Scott Decision * Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) - Dred Scott had been living in Illinois/Wisconsin where slavery was banned by the Northwest Ordinance, however upon returning to Missouri, they were to return to slavery * He sued on the basis that they were free because they had once lived in free areas - however, SCOTUS ruled that Scott was still a slave and could not initiate a lawsuit, and they ruled that Congress did not have the authority to declare the northern portion of the Louisiana Purchase free * The decision, therefore, invalidated the Missouri Compromise * SCOTUS also declared that no blacks, even if they were free, could be citizens because they were beings of an inferior order - this indicated to northerners that slavery was a national, rathern than sectional, institution, and that Congress could do little to stop it The Death of the Second Two-Party System * Party Realignment * The Whigs were divided between proslavery Cotton Whigs and anti-slavery Conscience Whigs * The Democratic Party became increasingly a regional southern, proslavery party * The Republican Party and the Free-Labor Ideal * In 1854, former members of the Know-Nothing Party, Conscience Whigs, abolitionists, and former Democrats formed the Republican Party to uphold the free labor ideology - upheld civic virtue and the dignity of labor with an emphasis on economic growth and social mobility * It defended a system that allowed hard-working individuals to achieve independence and property * Though the party was critical of slavery, it did not advocate abolition but simply that slavery should not be allowed to spread to new territories * The Election of 1856 * This made it clear that the two-party system was over, and the Republican party emerged as a major party over the Whig Party dissolved * The Democratic Party won the election by picking a northern candidate who had southern sympathies, James Buchanan, who could get both northern and southern supporters ===== Election of 1860 and Secession ===== The Election of 1860 and the Secession Crisis * The Election of 1860 * The Democratic Party was divided between a northern wing and a southern wing * The northern Democrats rallied around popular sovereignty whereas the southern Democrats strongly endorsed slavery * The Constitutional Union endorsed maintaining the Union and avoiding the slavery issue * The Republican Party chose Abraham Lincoln * Lincoln’s Electoral Victory in 1860 * His debates with Stephen Douglas for the Illinois Senate seat popularized him and he asked Douglas whether he favored the spread of slavery - to which he responded that he would put forth popular sovereignty * When he ran for president, he indicated that he could not tamper with slavery where it already existed, but promised to block slavery’s expansion to the West * When he won presidency, southern slaveholders were unsatisfied because slavery needed to expand to remain economically viable, and even before he was inagurated, 7 southern states seceded * The Onset of War * Lincoln did not permit southern secession, but did not want to start a war * The presence of US troops at Fort Sumter was the spark of the war - the Confederacy decided they would not tolerate the US flag at Fort Sumter, and in 1861, Confederate president Jefferson Davis ordered the bombardment of the fort * Lincoln rallied 75,000 troops after the surrender of Fort Sumter, and the two sides were at war ===== Military Conflict in the Civil War ===== Mobilizing for War * Industrialization * The Civil War spurred rapid industrialization of the North as the Union required a large amount of war materials - guns, bullets, boots, uniforms * Manufacturers rapidly began modernizing production, and industrialization stimulated a long period of economic growth, turning the US into a world economic power * People like Carnegie, Rockefeller, Gould, JP Morgan, and Armour began their economic rise through supplying the Union war effort * Funding the war * The US funded the war in 3 ways - issuing currency, borrowing money, and levying taxes - which greatly expanded the scope of the federal government * Congress issued 3 Legal Tender Acts in 1862 and 1863 which allowed the government to issue paper currency, “greenbacks” - money that was not backed by gold or silver but by the people’s faith in the government * Congress passed a series of National Bank Acts which created a national banking system - allowing existing banks to join the system and issue US Treasury notes as currency - providing stability to the banking/currency system when there was no national bank (the Federal Reserve was not created until 1913) * The government appealed to the public to purchase bonds, being lent about $400 million by the people and loaned $2.6 billion during the war by banks and other financial institutions * The government created a wide array of taxes, and for the first time, an income tax - tax rates remained modest during the war in the face of widespread public opposition * NYC Draft Riots * Protests broke out against the wartime draft in NYC in 1863 * People were especially upset about a law that allowed draftees to be able to pay $300 to escape serving * Blacks were frequently a scapegoat, accused of taking jobs from whites * Civil Liberties and Home Front Opposition * Lincoln suspended habeas corpus, authorizing the arrest of rebels and traitors without due process in order to respond to riots and threats of militia action in the border state of Maryland * In 1863, Congress passed the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act to support this move by the president Turning the Tide: Factors in the Union victory * Strengths and Weaknesses of the Two Sides * Union advantages: * Greater population (much of the southern population was slaves) * Greater military capacity * More diverse economy * Extensive railroad network * This allowed the Union to resupply its troops and bring reinforcements as the war dragged on * Confederacy advantages: * Fighting a defensive war * Did not have to invade the North to win, just had to fight on home soil * South’s rich military tradition - had able generals and a cohort of military men to draw from * Fighting the Civil War * Union’s 3 part strategy * The navy would blockade southern ports - the Anaconda Plan - to prevent supplies from reaching the South and blockade southern products from being shipped abroad * Divide Confederate territory in half by taking control of the Mississippi River * Then, troops would march on the confederate capital of Richmond, VA to achieve victory * The Union believed the war would be quick and easy, but these illusions were shattered at the First Battle of Bull Run where Confederate troops forced Union troops to retreat * Lincoln went through many generals before settling on Ulysses S. Grant * The Union suffered defeat at the Second Battle of Bull Run, the Battle of Fredericksburg, and other battles * The 1862 Battle of Antietam repelled a Confederate invasion and was considered a slight Union Victory * A fight broke out between two ships, the Confederate Merrimac and the US Monitor which ended in a draw, but pointed at the future of naval battles * The Union managed successfully blockade the South, and the South attempted to use King Cotton Diplomacy, putting an embargo on shipping cotton to Britain in hopes that it might force British factories to come to a halt and for Britain to aid the Confederacy, however, this only hurt the Confederacy * The Union blockade prevented the Confederacy from selling surplus cotton on the world market, and a negotiation with Britain ensured the Union that they would stay on the sidelines * **Turning point** in the war was the Battle of Gettysburg, after which, the Confederacy was now on the retreat * The Union victory at Vicksburg, MS, allowed the Union to gain control of the Mississippi river * In 1864, General Sherman’s March to the Sea from Atlanta to Charleston was a military campaign designed to destroy the morale of Southern civilians through burning houses, raiding and looting villages, and making life so unpleasant for Georgia’s civilians that they would plead to end the war * Confederate general Robert E. Lee finally surrendered to Grant at the Appomattox Courthouse, VA in 1865 ===== Government Policies During the Civil War ===== The Focus of the War: From Union to Emancipation * President Lincoln and Slavery * Lincoln, with the help of abolitionists, Radical Republicans, and free blacks and slaves helped to issue emancipation while guiding the country through a devastating war * He was able to convince a reluctant country that ending slavery was consistent with basic American values * The Confiscation Acts (1861) * Congress passed them in 1861 and 1862 - the first declared that any slaves working for the Confederacy could be taken as contraband of war, and the second allowed for the seizure of slaves owned by Confederate officials * The Emancipation Proclamation (1862) * He waited until the Union had achieved victory on the battlefield, and when the Union repelled an invasion at Antietam, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation on September 1862 * This ordered the freeing of all slaves in **Confederate territory** * It did not free slaves in Union territory, but it made it clear that this was just as much a war for the liberation of the slaves as it was a war to preserve the Union Lincoln and the Meaning of the Civil War * The Gettysburg Address and the Transition Toward a Modern Nation * His address at Gettysburg framed the Civil War in the larger context of fulfilling the US’s democratic goals * He stated that the US was conceived in Liberty and that all men are created equal * The Civil War, to Lincoln, was a test of whether a nation conceived around the principles of liberty and equality could last * The war made it clear that the states did not have the autonomy to secede - and after the war, the US was increasingly referred to as a nation, rather than just a union of states ===== Reconstruction ===== The Expansion of Citizenship Following the Civil War * The 13th Amendment (1865) * By the end of the Civil War, some slaves were not freed, especially in KY and TX * This freed the remaining slaves and put in the Constitution that slavery was illegal in America * The 14th Amendment (1868) * Asserted that all people born in the US are citizens * Stated that no citizens shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law * The southern states were forced to accept this before they could regain representation in Congress * The amendment undid long-held custom and the Dred-Scott decision, putting blacks on an equal footing with whites and providing a guarantee of equality before the law, and although it did not guarantee blacks the right to vote, for every male who was denied the vote, the state would be forced to deduct a person from its total population count * The 15th Amendment (1869) * Granted black men voting rights, stating that the vote may not be denied to someone based on race color or previous condition of servitude The Women’s Rights Movement and the Constitution * Debates over the 15th Amendment * Many were upset that the 14th Amendment specifically included the word male as before, suffragists could argue that the Constitution did not say anything about women not being able to vote * Stanton and Susan B. Anthony refused to support the 15th Amendment because it did not include women * Others, led by Lucy Stone and husband Henry Blackwell, although disappointed, argued that it was important to support the Reconstruction and the Republican Party * Stanton and Anthony formed the National Woman Suffrage Association and Stone formed the American Woman Suffrage Association in 1869, both of which merged in 1890 to become the National American Woman Suffrage Association The Limited Successes of Reconstruction * Reconstruction refers to the process of reuniting the national following the Civil War * It resulted in some short term successes, a shift in power from the executive branch to Congress, but the successes were short lived * Approaches to Reconstruction * What accommodations would be made for freed slaves? * How would the South be reintegrated? * Would there be any punishments for secessionists? * Wartime Reconstruction * In 1863, he announced the ten percent plan which if 10% of the voting population in a southern state took an oath of allegiance to the US, they could establish a new government and send representatives to Congress * He vetoed the Wade-Davis bill which would’ve raised the bar to 50% * In his second inaugural address, he announced the wanted to reunite the country with malice toward none, with charity for all - he wanted to end the war as soon as possible * Presidential Reconstruction * After Lincoln’s assassination, his VP Andrew Johnson assumed power * He had no affinity for the Republican Party, nor emancipation and black equality * He quickly recognized the new southern state governments as legitimate after they ratified the new Amendments * In the South, many members of the old slave-owning class were now back in power who tried to pass the Black Codes, and southern postwar conditions were so similar to prewar conditions that many northerners wondered if they had “won the war but lost the peace” * Black Codes * These were a set of laws passed by Southern states to regulate blacks and recreate the conditions of slavery * They forbade blacks from owning land or businesses, and vagrancy laws allowed for the arrest of blacks for infractions such as not having a certain amount of money while being on a public road * Punishments for violations of Black Codes included forcing blacks to labor on a plantation for a period of time * Congress and the President Clash over Reconstruction * In 1866, tensions increased between Johnson and congressional Republicans * Johnson vetoed an extension of Freedman’s Bureau and a Civil Rights Act that were designed to overturn the Black Codes * Freedman’s Bureau was established by Congress to provide practical aid to 4,000,000 newly freed black slaves in their transition from slavery to freedom * The biggest fight was over the Fourteenth Amendment - Johnson took an active role in urging Southerners to reject the amendment which he saw as further congressional interference in Reconstruction * Radical Reconstruction * Johnson tried to mobilize white voters against the Fourteenth Amendment in the 1866 midterms, however, the strategy backfired and Republicans won a resounding victory * They embarked on more sweeping measures, and this phase of Reconstruction (Radical Reconstruction) showed the potential of a biracial democracy in the US * Reconstruction Acts of 1867 * These divided the South into 5 military districts which could rejoin the US only if they guaranteed basic rights to blacks and accept the 14th Amendment, however, they could not fully carry out their program * Rep. Stevens introduced a bill that would grant freed men 40 acres of land, however, this went against the Republican value of protecting private property and died in the summer of the year it was introduced (1867) * The Impeachment of President Johnson * The tensions grew so large that the House impeached Johnson for violating the Tenure of Office Act * Although he was eventually found not guilty, it rendered him powerless to stop Congress’s Reconstruction plans * The Composition of Reconstruction Governments * Democrats still served in state legislatures, often in the minority * The Republicans were made up of different groups - Southern whites who joined were termed scalawags by their Democratic opponents, and they were former Whigs who sought to promote economic progress for the South * Many northerners came to the South to participate in Reconstruction, some for economic reasons termed carpetbaggers, but some to help freed slaves adjust to free life * Many Republican legislatures were African Americans, and in the 1870s, 2 blacks were elected to the Senate with more than a dozen in the House * The Record of Reconstruction Governments * White southerners accused the Reconstruction government of corruption and ineptitude, however, modern historians pointed out that they accomplished a great deal against all odds * They established schools for African Americans such as Howard University and Morehouse College, and they established hospitals that served the black community, rewrote constitutions, updated penal codes, and began the physical rebuilding of the war-torn South * The Waning of the Reconstruction * Southern conservative Democrats called redeemers aggressively sought to regain power - aided by networks of white terrorist organizations that used violence to silence African Americans and intimidate them from participating in public life * In Colfax, LA, both a Democratic and Republican candidate claimed victory, and in early 1873, the Republican candidate and his slate of appointees occupied a courthouse in Colfax, defended by armed blacks * A large group of white insurgents, including Klan members, attacked the courthouse, killing over 100 blacks and taking over the building * The violence was legally challenged in United States v. Cruikshank, SCOTUS ruled that the Enforcement Act of 1870, which enabled the constitutional rights of blacks to be protected, was unconstitutional, a decision that weakened Reconstruction * This caused many northern whites to lose interest in reforming the South and redirected their interest to the industrial development of the North * The Formal End of Reconstruction: The Election of 1876 * Although Tilden won the majority of the popular vote, neither him nor Rutherford B. Hayes were able to claim enough electoral votes to be declared the winner * A special electoral commission declared Hayes the winner in three contested states which was protested by Democrats * The Compromise of 1877 allowed Hayes to win the presidency, but Republicans agreed to end Reconstruction, paving the way for rule by Democratic Party in the South ===== Failure of Reconstruction ===== From Slavery to Sharecropping * The Development of the Sharecropping System * Plantation owners wanted to hire groups of blacks to work for them, but blacks wanted their own plot - “forty acres and a mule” * Blacks began to rent land by paying half of their yearly crop to the land owner - this sharecropping system was a compromise - blacks did not have to work under supervision while white plantation owners acquired cotton to be sold on the open market * After paying back loans, black farmers were left very little, creating a cycle of debt which prevented blacks from acquiring wealth and owning land Conflicts Over Notions of Citizenship and American Identity * Segregation in the South * Jim Crow laws were a series of segregation laws passed in the southern states, segregating public facilities such as railroad cars, bathrooms, and schools, relegating blacks to second-class status * The Supreme Court and the Narrowing of the 14th Amendment * Advocates for black civil rights hoped that the 14th Amendment would prevent the implementation of Jim Crow laws * However, SCOTUS interpreted privileges or immunities in a broad language that it allowed for Jim Crow laws * In the Slaughterhouse cases, the Court made a distinction between national citizenship and state citizenship * In Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), SCOTUS asserted that racial segregation did not violate equal protection guaranteed by the 14th Amendment * The Exclusion of African Americans from Political Process * Literacy tests and poll taxes limited their ability to vote * Poor whites got around these rules with the grandfather clause - guaranteeing a man the right to vote if he or his father or grandfather had the right to vote before the Civil War * Moreover, the Democratic Party often held whites only primaries, and African Americans who spoke out against this were targets of violence and murder - KKK formed in 1866 * A Second Reconstruction * Reconstruction lasted only a decade and many of its accomplishments were short lived, however, these failures prompted a second reconstruction with civil rights activists in the 20th century ===== Subject to Debate ===== * Slavery and the Question of Civil War Causation * What are the causes of the Civil War? * Southern partisans blame the North for interfering with their domestic institutions * Northern partisans blame the Dred Scott decision, the beating of Senator Sumner, and the defense of slavery as inflexibility on the part of the South * Historians saw the war as an irrepressible conflict - inevitable because of slavery and conflicts because of free labor ideology * Was this even a war around slavery? Or was it just between a capitalist industrial North and an agrarian, almost feudal south? * The Myth of the “Lost Cause” * It holds that the Confederate cause was a noble and honorable one, and that the south only lost because of the overwhelming forces of the north * However, this ignores the centrality of the slavery question * Viewing the Reconstruction Period in Context * Traditional historians criticize the Republican Party for imposing crushing burdens on the South, occupying it with troops, and saddling it with inept and corrupt government * However, recent historians emphasize the progress made by blacks under Reconstruction, helping to inspire civil rights activists in the 20th century * Roosevelt = Theodore Roosevelt, FDR = Franklin Roosevelt, LBJ = Lyndon B. Johnson ===== Period 6 ===== ===== Westward Expansion: Economic Development ===== Mechanization and the Transformation of American Agriculture * The Impact of Mechanization * During the decades following the Civil War, machines such as the mechanical reaper and the combine harvester replaced hand-held tools * Production of corn and wheat more than doubled between 1870-1900 * Undermined small-scale family farms as mechanization lowered the prices farmers received per bushel of corn or wheat, and most farmers could not afford the new equipment * Agriculture changed from small-scale farms with laborers → large scale mechanized operations * Many smaller farms went out of business Agrarian Resistance in the Face of Structural Change * Debt and Dependence in the Gilded Age * Farmers struggled in all areas * Railroad companies were overcharging farmers for carrying produce to Chicago and other destination * Tight supply of currency in the US made it hard for farmers to pay off debt, and it drove down the prices they received for their crops * Banks were foreclosing (take possession of a mortgaged property as a result of failure to keep up their mortgage payments) on farms * The Greenback Party * A political formation that sought an expansion of the currency supply * Founded in 1878, following the Panic of 1873, they advocated for paper money not backed by gold or silver, but public trust in the government like how it was done during the Civil War * Although the party disbanded, the call for expanding the money supply was taken up again in the panic of 1893 * The Grange and Granger Laws * National Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry (Grange), is a farmers’ organization that pushed for state laws to protect farmers’ interests * Founded in 1867, it led the fight to pass laws that regulated railroad freight rates and made certain abusive corporate practices illegal - Granger Laws * Munn v. Illinois (1877), SCOTUS asserted it was within the government’s powers to regulate private industry * Wabash v. Illinois (1886), SCOTUS reversed itself and ruled that states could not regulate railroads because they cross state lines * Protecting Communal Lands of the Southwestern Hispanos * Clashes occurred in the 1880s-90s between recently arriving settlers from older states and long-time Mexican and American Indian occupants of the land * Large portions of these lands were used communally by the local Hispano population (the name given to people of colonial Spanish descent) * By the 1890s, the Hispanos and Indians had lost more than 90% of their land and began organizing resistance * Groups such as Las Gorras Blancas and Las Manos Negras led raids on settler land - cutting fences and burning property * Ultimately, varied tactics of the movement failed to regain lost lands Transportation, Communication, and the Opening of New Markets in the West * Land Grants to Railroads * In the second half of the 1800s, the USFG encouraged economic growth by subsidizing improvements in transportation and communications, encouraging the building of railroad lines * Cost of goods came down and standard of living of Americans rose * The Pacific Railway Act of 1862 caused land grants given by the government for new rail lines to be built to go straight to railroad corporations rather than to states * 175 million acres - generated huge profits for railroad companies, bringing in about $435 million * The Telegraph and the Telephone * The telegraph network (developed before the Civil War) continued to spread throughout the Gilded Age * First transatlantic cable was laid in 1858 * Alexander Graham Bell was granted a patent for the telephone in 1876 and established the Bell Telephone Company * By the end of 1880, almost 50,000 telephones were in use in the United States Promoting Westward Expansion - Government Policies, Railroads, and Mining Operations * Government Policies and Westward Expansion * Congress continued the Homestead Act of 1862, but they discovered that the land it granted - 160 acres - was too small * So Congress passed the Timber Culture Act (1873) to allow homesteaders to receive additional lands if they agreed to plant trees on a portion of it and the Desert Land Act (1877), offering acreage for a discounted price if the recipients agreed to irrigate the land * Government Support for Transcontinental Railroads * The Pacific Railroad Acts, passed in 1860s, promoted government bonds and land grants to railroad companies to complete rail lines to the Pacific Ocean * The completion of the transcontinental railroad at Promontory Summit, UT in 1869 was a milestone in connecting the country * Four additional transcontinental lines were completed in the coming decades, the last one, the Great Northern Railway (1893), was privately build without the benefit of federal land grants * Western railroad companies relentlessly promoted land sales (from the land grants they had) to the populations of the overcrowded cities of the East * Mining Operations in the West * Gold in CA (1848), silver in Nevada’s Comstock Lode (1859) → Virginia City was established as a result, gold at Pikes Peak (1869) → Denver City and Boulder City * Similar rushes occurred in ND, SD, MO, AZ, UT, ID * While a few did cash in on the precious metal, most did not * Most of the mining was done by large mining firms with expensive equipment → investors enjoying substantial profits, shares being traded on international markets, and wage workers replacing prospectors ===== Westward Expansion: Social and Cultural Development ===== Settling the West * Chinese Communities in the West * Chinese immigrants were initially drawn to North America by the gold rush in CA * By 1865, 20,000 Chinese immigrants had moved; by 1870, over 63,000 lived in America * White Californians pushed for laws to exclude them from mining - 1852 Foreign Miners’ License Tax * Discrimination, legal obstacles, and changes in the economics of mining pushed most Chinese immigrants away from mining and towards other jobs * They made up 90% of the workforce who helped complete the first transcontinental railroad * Anti-Asian Sentiment and the Chinese Exclusion Act * 1854 California Supreme Court the People of the State of California v. George W. Hall ruled the Chinese Americans could not testify against whites in court → impossible to prosecute crimes of whites against Chinese Americans * Many californians blamed the Chinese for the Panic of 1873, and Chinese residents were labeled “coolie labor” * Workingmen's Party (formed 1876) argued that the presence of Chinese laborers depressed wages, pushing for legislation excluding Chinese immigrants from the US * 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act - first discriminatory federal laws that targeted a particular national group - banned chinese immigration * It was renewed and made permanent in 1902; repealed in 1943 * Mining Boomtowns in the West * Towns grew rapidly, often populated by prospectors * Boomtown - Virginia City in NV * Many boomtowns were extremely ethnically diverse, and as mining operations became more elaborate and industrial, the towns more closely resembled the industrial cities of the East * Ranching and the Era of the Cowboy in the West * From the mid 1860s-80s, cowboys drove large herds of cattle across the open plains * However, several factors ended the era of open-range grazing by the mid 1880s * Large ranchers began to enclose grazing areas with newly-invented barbed wire, and severe blizzards in the late 1880s decimated the cattle population of the Great Plains - after which cowboys were replaced by wage-earning hired hands, working under managers * Farming on the Great Plains * The first generation of pioneers drawn to the Great Plains were nicknamed “sodbusters” because they had to cut through the thick layer of sod to get to the topsoil necessary for farming * Sod was also used to build their houses * Although some farmers obtained land directly from the government through the Homestead Act, but most purchased land from railroads, or speculators who obtained land from unsuccessful homesteaders * As the century progressed, this dream of land ownership proved to be beyond the means of many people * The family farms of the prairie gave way to large-scale agribusinesses * By the late 1800s, as farmers went into debt from the boom of large-scale farming, increasing numbers of residents of the West were migrant farmers, tenant farmers, sharecroppers, and hired employees as land was consolidated into fewer and fewer hands Violence on the Frontier * Destruction of the Buffalo * Railroad workers and passengers went on a killing spree, shooting buffalo for food and (mostly) sport * Industrial uses for their hides put pressure on their numbers * In a matter of decades, the buffalo herds on the Plains were virtually exterminated, which weakened the Plains people, who depended on the buffalo * Red Cloud’s War and the Second Treaty of Fort Laramie * The Homestead Act and development of railroad lines brought a wave of settlers into the Great Plains region * Between 1866 and 1868, fighting occurred in the WY and MO territories between US troops and the Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Northern Arapaho * Known as Red Cloud’s War, it included a major defeat for US forces in a battle (Fetterman’s Fight), it ended with the Second Treaty of Fort Laramie, in which the US allowed the Lakota to maintain much of the disputed territory and close the Bozeman Trail * The Indian Peace Commission (1867) * Congress tried to negotiate an end of warring on the Great Plains by establishing the Indian Peace Commission * The commission met in St.Louis, Missouri with a number of Plains Indian * Although several treaties were negotiated, Congress did not consistently fund or enforce agreements made by the commission * Congress wanted to confine Indian groups to reservations and pursue a policy of assimilation, but the commission ultimately failed as fighting on the Plains continued * The Battle of Little Big Horn and Custer’s Last Stand (1876) * Discovery of gold in the Black HIlls of the Dakota Territory in 1874 brought more settlers and brought tensions to a peak * Great Sioux War (1876) - Sioux warriors, along with Cheyenne allies, achieved a major victory over American forces at the Battle of Little Big Horn * The episode, also known as Custer’s Last Stand, resulted in the death of George Custer + 225 men * After, US forces led by General Sheridan defeated Indian forces → Lakota Sioux were confined to a reservation in the Dakota Territory * The defeat of the largest and most warlike Plains Indian tribes was a major turning point in the long campaign by the government of controlling the Plains Indians Government Policies and the Fate of American Indians * President Grant and the “Peace Policy” * In 1869, President Ulysses S. Grant announced that the government would pursue a peace policy in regard to Indians with assimilation as its goal * The goal was that eventually, individual Indians would become “wards of the state” and be civilized by emissaries, then become citizens with individual ownership of plots of land, rather than reservations owned by groups * It did not initially gain many adherents * Helen Hunt Jackson and the Call for Reform * By the 1880s, sympathizers of American Indians pushed for a change - Helen Hunt Jackson wrote A Century of Dishonor (1882) which chronicled the abuses of the USFG against the natives * It was seen as the duty of white middle-class women to civilize people - these women were successful in lobbying for the 1887 Dawes Severalty Act * Dawes Severalty Act (1887) * Aka General Allotment Act - abandoned the reservation system and divided tribal lands into individually owned plots (severalty refers to lands that are owned by individuals) * The goal was to make Indians assimilate into white culture - norms of white middle-class culture * This reform was as damaging to Indians as was the earlier reservation policy * Indian Boarding Schools * Late 1870s - Bureau of Indian Affairs established a series of Indian boarding schools that were designed to assimilate Indian children by stripping them of their culture * Ex. Carlisle Institute in PA (est. 1879) - students were forced to cut their hair, rid themselves of traditional clothing, practice christianity, trained in menial tasks * “Kill the Indian in him, save the man” American Indian Resistance * The Ghost Dance Movement * Some tribes, among the great losses they suffered, adopted a spiritual practice known as the Ghost Dance * Developed by a prophet named Wovoka, he emphasized cooperation among tribes and clean living and honesty * Wounded Knee and the End of Autonomous American Indian Groups * The last battle of the Indian Wars was at Wounded Knee Creek in SD (1890) - US troops attempted to peacefully disarm a group of Lakota Indians but soon opened fire on the Lakota men, women, and children (200+ people died) ===== The “New South” ===== The Limited Success of Calls for a “New South” * The Persistence of Tradition in the “New South” * Henry Grady argued for a mixed economy in the South that would include industrialization * He wanted to move away from single-crop plantation agriculture * However, this promised remained hollow - blacks continued to toil in sharecropping systems (paying with a share of their yearly crop) or tenant farming (owned his own tools and rented the land at a fixed rate) Segregation in the “New South” * The Proliferation of the “Jim Crow” System * Jim Crow laws segregated public facilities such as railroad cars, restrooms, and schools * Relegated blacks to second-class status in the South * SCOTUS ruled that the 14th Amendment did not protect blacks from Jim Crow laws * Plessy v. Ferguson and the “Separate but Equal” Doctrine * Opponents argued that the 14th Amendment stated no person shall be denied equal protection of the laws, however, the Court stated that segregation was acceptable as long as the facilities for both races were of equal quality * Challenging Jim Crow in the Gilded Age * Ida B. Wells was a black woman who sued the Memphis and Charleston Railroad for denying her a seat in the ladies’ car * She won the case initially, but the railroad ultimately won on appeal * After 3 friends of hers were lynched, she wrote against the practice of lynching, and that it was a tactice to suppress black political activism and re-assert white supremacy * Booker T. Washington encouraged blacks to gain training in vocational skills and argued that confrontation with whites would end badly for blacks, instead counseling cooperation with supportive whites ===== Technological Innovation ===== The Raw Materials of Industrialization * Steel and the Bessemer Process * Steel production was the key to the industrialization of the US * Although iron production grew and was used extensively in the railroads, steel - an alloy of iron - was found to be more durable, versatile, and useful than iron * Before the middle of the 1800s, it was too expensive to be commercially useful * The development of the Bessemer process greatly reduced the cost of steel and made it available to a wide variety of industrial operations, and by the 1860s, a more efficient production method, called the open-hearth process, replaced the Besssemer process * Coal and Oil * Most practical fuel went from hard coal (anthracite) and softer coal (bituminous) → oil (George Bissel demonstrated that oil could be refined and used for a variety of processes) * Its most industrial use was lubricating machinery * Later in the century, the demand for oil increased as it came to be refined into gasoline ===== The Rise of Industrial Capitalism ===== The Rise of the Corporation and Mass Production * The Evolution of the Corporation and the Managerial Revolution * Before the Civil War, many states made it easy for an entity to incorporate * Incorporation: the formation of individuals into an organized entity with legally defined privileges and responsibilities * The Pennsylvania Railroad incorporated in 1846 and many entities followed suit after the Civil War * Large corporations developed management systems that separated top executives from managers * This led to the managerial revolution, which included modern cost-accounting procedures and the division of responsibilities * A new class of middle managers evolved in the post-Civil War period, supervising purchasing, accounting, marketing, sales, etc. * This also created the need for secretaries and other office workers, opening up new opportunities for women in the workforce * Advances in Marketing and Distribution * During the late 1800s, industrial capitalism devised methods to distribute the large quantities of good produced by growing factories * Patterns of consumption began to change: many products, mostly clothing, went from home → commercial production * Home grown produce → canned foods * Chain Outlets and Department Stores * Retail outlets began to replace small-scale local stores * Chains such as Atlantic and Pacific (A&P) Tea Company (groceries) and F.W. Woolworth (manufactured dry goods) opened outlets in cities and towns throughout the US * Department stores such as Wanamaker’s in Philadelphia and Macy’s in NYC catered towards middle-class residents * Sears, Roebuck, and Montgomery ward printed catalogs and created a system of installment payment plans * One no longer had to be near a metropolitan center or the actual stores because of mail-order catalogs * The Labor Force in the Industrial Era * Before the Civil War, immigrants were primarily from northern and western Europe, but by the 1870s, new sources of immigration included southern and eastern Europe, Mexico, and China * Employers hired recruiters to pay for the passage of European immigrants → this was made illegal in 1885 Economic Consolidation * The Rise of the Major Industries * The 3 major industries were railroads, steel, and oil * The corporate model spread to many industrial processes such as bicycles, clothing, shoes, and paper * The “Robber Barons” * Term given to the men who controlled the major industries in the US * Means to call attention to their cutthroat business activities and attempts to control governments * Andrew Carnegie and Vertical Integration * Andrew Carnegie came to dominate the steel industry by investing in all aspects of steel production * Carnegie Steel Company controlled the mills where steel was made, the coal mines that supplied the coal, and iron ore mines that supplied the base of the steel * He also controlled the transportation lines - ships that transported iron and railroads that transported the coal to the factory * Vertical integration - all key aspects of the business are performed by the company itself * Rockefeller and Horizontal Integration (or Consolidation) * Horizontal integration - merging of companies that create the same or similar products * This can lead to a monopoly → a common way that corporations gained monopoly control of an industry was by establishing trusts * A trust consisted of trustees from several companies in the same industry acting together rather than against each other * Rockefeller organized the most well known trust in the oil-processing industry: Standard Oil * Other “Robber Barons” * Among Carnegie and Rockefeller were railroad magnate Collis P. Huntington, coal and iron merchant Mark Hanna, meat processing giant Philip Armour, and mining and railroad Stephen Elkins * J.P. Morgan, a financier, gained leverage through control of various industries, including several railroad companies, into dominance of the entire US economy Corporations Look Abroad * The Growth of Multinational Corporations * Foreign trade was rapidly expanding in the Gilded Age: $400 million in the 1870s → $1.4 billion in 1900 * Several companies like Standard Oil, Eastman Kodak, and American Tobacco established branches in other countries * The Panic of 1893 further encouraged business men to seek new markets abroad * Moreover, because the American frontier was closed - nothing more West to explore - the next logical step for many Americans was to expand into foreign territory ===== Labor in the Gilded Age ===== Poverty and Wealth in Industrializing America * The Wealthy Class * The Gilded Age saw the growth of a wealthy class that far surpassed the wealth inequality of the past → building mansions in exclusive urban neighborhoods and summer cottages * Thorstein Veblen in The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899), coined the phrase “conspicuous consumption” to describe the lavish spending habits of the wealthy * The Working Class * Wage for workers rose slightly, but were still way below minimum levels today * Wages would be cut in the Panics of 1873 and 1893 * However, families who moved to big industrial cities had amounts of spending money that were unimaginable in the small towns they came from * And although they did not receive much wages, the prices of goods were falling due to industrialization An Expanding Workforce * Women and Children in the Labor Force * Skilled craftsmanship → unskilled tasks in a mass-production system = children and women enter the paid workforce in large numbers as wages for working-class men remained low * The influx of women and children into the workforce depressed overall wages * From 1870s-WWI, child labor grew each decade * By 1900, children made up 18% and women made up 17% of the workforce Conflict at the Work Site * The Declining Status of Work in the Age of Industrialization * Fierce industrial competition worsened working conditions * Wages rose incrementally at times only to be erased by downturns in the economy * The increased reliance on child labor + immigrants further eroded wages * Production = loss of control over processes of production, as processes were broken down and “de-skilled” → led to a loss of sense of pride in one’s work and an increase in unsafe and unsanitary conditions * The loss of control of the work process was a root cause of worker grievances, responded to by labor organizations and unions through bargaining and striking * An Era of Pitched Battles in the Workplace * The labor battles of the Gilded Age were almost exclusively won by management with its near monopoly on weaponry, support of government and courts, and vast numbers of poor, working-class men willing to serve as strikebreakers * These battles happened during economic downturns * The Knights of Labor * A significant early union was the Knights of Labor (est. 1869) * Welcomed all members w/o discrimination, and led by Terence V. Powderly in the late 1880s, they wanted to improve wage and hours for workers and implement better safety rules and end child labor * Although gaining 800,000 members by 1886, by 1890, organizational problems led to their numbers and influence declining * Ethnic, linguistic, and racial barriers made united action difficult, and government repression in the wake of the Haymarket bombing in Chicago weakened the organization * The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 * In 1877, a strike at McCormick Reaper Works led to the jobs of striking workers being given to scabs (replacement workers) * The striking workers attacked the scabs, and the police opened fire on the strikers, killing/injuring 6 men * The strikers called for a rally in Haymarket Square, and towards the end, a bomb exploded in the police ranks; the police responded by opening fire on the rally * This caused many Americans to shy away from the labor movement * The American Federation of Labor (AFL) (1886) * It only allowed skilled workers to join and did not allow blacks or women to join * Its only goal was getting higher wages and better conditions for its members, not working for broader social reform * The Homestead Strike (1892) * Carnegie was determined to break the union known as the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers (under the AFL umbrella) * He announced in 1892 that he would not renew their contract, leaving the country in the summer and leaving his plant in the hands of his manager Frick * Frick hired Pinkerton guards to make sure the union workers could not get in, and a battle ensued between workers and “Pinks” * Although the workers temporarily gained control of the plant, 8,000 National Guard troops were called to retake it * The Pullman Strike: Strife in a Company Town (1893) * Occurred during the Panic of 1893 where the Pullman Company, which built railroad cars, cut wages several times * The town of Pullman was built by the company as a company town, providing decent housing but also control over its workers - eg. denying housing to troublemakers (pro-union workers) * When wages were cut in 1893 and 1894, the rent remained the same, so workers appealed to the American Railway Union * Three union organizers were fired, and in response, most of the 3,300 workers went on strike → leading to railroad traffic coming to a standstill * President Cleveland called federal troops to put the strike down, killing 25 workers * SCOTUS in In re Debs (1895) ruled that the government was justified in stopping the strike ===== Immigration and Migration in the Gilded Age ===== Migrations and a Diverse Workforce * The “New Immigration” * There was a new wave of immigrants in addition to the Irish and German immigrants of pre-Civil War years * They came from southern and eastern Europe and Asia - labeled “new immigrants” * The Exoduster Movement * Because of the rise of the KKK, Jim Crow laws, and the nature of blacks as second class citizens, approx. 40,000 blacks departed from Southern States, crossing the Mississippi to settle in Kansas * Black activists and white philanthropists established organizations such as Colored Relief Board and the Kansas Freedmen’s Aid Society to help them make their journey The New Culture of Immigrant City * A Divided City * The Gilded Age is characterized by a division between the working-class districts and wealthy enclaves * Ex. in NYC, the wealthy moved uptown, away from the urban core where the working class districts were * Living Conditions for the Working Class and the Poor * Despite small increases in wages, the working class and poor were crammed into neighborhoods, such as the Lower East Side of New York * Substandard tenement buildings, lack of ventilation and light, horse dung, and a lack of basic municipal services, such as sewer lines, running water, and garbage removal * Working-Class Culture and Urban Life * City life, modest increases in wages, and slightly shorter workday provided more time for leisure activities for the masses of urban residents * Saloons were often part social hall, part political club, and part community hub - a place for recreation * Therefore, the reformist attacks on drinking were seen as an attack on saloons and working-class immigrant culture ===== Responses to Immigration in the Gilded Age ===== Debates Over Identity and Immigration * The Persistence of Ethnicity in the Gilded Age City * Immigrants felt both a need to assimilate to American culture, but also a desire to maintain ethnic solidarity * In NY, Chicago, foreign language papers emerged such as Jewish Daily Forward and Il Progresso Italo-Americano * There formed Little Italy and Jewish neighborhoods - these ethnic enclaves provided grocery stores so that immigrants could purchase foods reminiscent of their countries of origin * Millions of immigrants worked for part of the year in the US and then spent the rest in their home country - called “birds of passage” * Immigration and Nativism * The new immigrants heightened fears among conservative, Protestant public figures such as Henry Cabot Lodge and Madison grant, who feared that whites were committing race suicide by allowing inferior races to enter America in large numbers Justifying the Inequities of the Gilded Age * The Waning of the Free Labor Ideal * Originally it put forth the idea that working for another person was a temporary condition, and that every employee would accumulate enough money to start his own farm or shop * However, with the army of unskilled workers flooding into the massive firms of the late 19th century * The notion of free labor was challenged, and some embraced the new corporate order * Social Darwinism * Popularized by William Graham Sumner who argued against government intervention, and argued that the inequalities of wealth of the late 1800s were part of the “survival of the fittest” * Horatio Alger and the Myth of the Self-made Man * Alger wrote a series of cheap novels that depicted a poor boy who achieved success * These rags to riches stories put forth a much different idea that the reality of Gilded Age America The Settlement House Movement * Jane Addams and Hull House * Settlement houses existed to aid immigrants, especially immigrant women * They offered classes, set up employment bureaus, provided childcare facilities, and helped victims of domestic abuse * Addams founded and ran Hull House in Chicago, and is considered one of the founders of the field of social work in the US ===== Development of the Middle Class ===== The Growth of the Urban Middle Class and the Expansion of Consumer Culture * Rise of the Middle Class * A class of white-collar employees became essential to the functioning of industrial capitalism * Their wages rose faster, and workday was shorter than the working-class (blue-collar) * Women filled many of the lower-level white collar jobs, and as the typewriter came into use, literate women learned the skill and were hired to perform office duties * Women were also hired as school teachers * The Commercialization of Leisure * The growth of the middle class went hand in hand with the commercialization of leisure time activities * Ex. amusement park - Coney Island, “Buffalo Bill” Cody’s Wild West show, and P.T. Barnum’s circus * Newspapers * Joseph Pultizer’s New York World and William Randolph Hearst’s New York Journal gained readership through exaggerated, sensationalistic coverage of events * This “yellow journalism” played a role in pushing public opinion toward support for the 1898 Spanish-American War * The Health of the City and Parks Movement * As germ theory developed, public parks were part of a strategy to provide an alternative to dirty streets and alleyways for healthful recreation * Frederick Law Olmsted and New York’s Central Park * The design competition was won by Olmsted and Calvert Vaux * On one hand, Olmsted sought to create a democratic meeting place where the city’s different classes could congregate and enjoy the benefits of nature, however, working class advocates wondered why the park was built so far from the working-class districts of the city * Recreation and Spectator Sports * Baseball: the national pastime developed in 1845 * Tennis: Lawn tennis was developed in Great Britain (1873) as mainly a women’s sport, but gained popularity with both men and women in the Gilded Age * Croquet: Popular activity in public parks in the late nineteenth century, often played by mixed gender groups * Cycling: bicycles were popular especially among women who enjoyed the freedom from male supervision that bicycle riding offered * Football: college football became popular during the Gilded Age The Moral Obligations of the Wealthy Class * Andrew Carnegie and “The Gospel of Wealth” * He asserted that the rich have a duty to live responsible, modest lives and give back to society * Successful entrepreneurs should distribute their wealth so that it could be put to good use, rather than frivolously wasted * He believed in laissez faire economics and urged millionaires to take action on behalf of the community so the government would not have to ===== Reform in the Gilded Age ===== Challenges to the Dominant Corporate Ethic * Henry George and the “Single Tax” on Land * In his book Progress and Poverty (1879), he criticized the vast resources, especially land, controlled by the wealthy elite. He argued for a “single tax” on land values, which he believed would create a more equitable society * Socialism and Anarchism * Many began to question the basic assumptions of capitalism and embraced alternative ideologies * After the failure of the Pullman Strike, Eugene V. Debs became one of the founders of the Socialist Party of America in 1901 * Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backward, 2000-1887 * This novel imagined a man who falls asleep in 1887 and awakens in 2000 to find a socialist utopia in which the inequities and poverty of the Gilded Age have been eradicated * Coxey’s Army * A group of workers, many recently laid off by railroad companies (1894), marched from Ohio to DC to demand that the government take action to address the economic crisis * Cleveland ignored their please for government relief - there were other similar armies Gender, Voluntary Organizations, and Social Reform * Challenging Notions of Domesticity * Many women began to challenge the cult of domesticity * In the 1880s and 90s, women’s clubs began to emerge, and investigated and advocated around issues of poverty, working conditions, and pollution * They organized an umbrella organization - the General Federation of Women’s Clubs * Tried to curb alcohol consumption - the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, and pressed for voting rights - the National American Woman Suffrage Association ===== Controversies Over the Role of Government in the Gilded Age ===== Laissez Faire Policies vs. Reform * Resistance to Regulation * 1866 SCOTUS St. Louis and Pacific Railway Company v. Illinois limited ability of states to regulate railroads, asserting that states could not impose direct burdens on interstate commerce * The Interstate Commerce Commission was created to regulate railroads, however, it was underfunded and ineffective * In 1890, the Sherman Antitrust Act was passed to break up trusts, however, it failed to regulate manufacturing Debates Around Pursuing an Imperialist Policy * Industry and Empire * Many Americans resisted the idea of the US embarking on overseas possessions, however, the desire for new markets led the country to look abroad ===== Politics in the Gilded Age ===== Farmers and the Populist Party * The Populist Party was formed by activists to challenge the growth of corporate power over the agricultural sector; they sought a radical redistribution of power in the US and pushed for stronger government intervention in the economy * Organizing the Populist Party * Born in 1893, it was able to harness the discontent after the Panic of 1893 and gave voice to a radical program for change that included increased democracy, a graduated income tax, regulation of the railroads, and currency reform * They insisted that the amount of currency in circulation was insufficient, and called for “free and unlimited coinage” of silver * Their party did remarkably well in the presidential election later that year, but their popularity was short lived * The Election of 1896 and the “Cross of Gold” Speech * The election of 1896 resulted in the demise of the populist party and helped establish the identity of the major political parties in the 20th century * William Jennnings Bryan called for free and unlimited coinage of silver, and in his Cross of Gold speech, he promised not to let the American people be crucified upon a cross of gold, and endorsed by the populist party * On the other hand McKinley appealed to banking and business interests by keeping the country on the gold standard, and won the election * The Republican Party continued to be more aligned with pro-business interests and the Democratic Party continued to present itself as the champion of the “little guy” Politics, Big Business, and Corruption in the Gilded Age * The Evolution of the Two-Party System * Neither party was able to dominate politics during the last decades of the 19th century, and both seem to be increasingly removed from the concerns of ordinary Americans * They seemed to be more responsive to the priorities of the newly formed trusts and industrial giants than to the needs of farmers or workers, which is why the Populist Party formed * Ideology Takes a Back Seat * Issues like child labor, the consolidation of industries, workplace safety, and abuses by railroad companies were either avoided or dealt with superficially * Neither party did much to protect rights of blacks or indians, or rights of women * Both were divided on the tariff - Democrats wanted lower tariff rates and Republicans wanted higher tariff rates * Both parties seemed to be aligned with the priorities of big business - taking bribes and favors * Corruption and the Grant Administration * Grant’s Administration was tainted by corruption, and many government spots were given to friends * He surrounded himself with incompetent staff, and was indecisive on the Reconstruction * Corruption and Civil-Service Reform * Civil service is the workforce of government employees - attempted were made to remove nepotism from government hiring - hiring the most qualified people instead * Mugwumps, Stalwarts, and Half-Breeds * Reform-minded Republicans, nicknamed “Mugwumps”, wanted to move away from the corruption of the Grant years and create a merit-based civil service * Their opposition were the Stalwarts, and those who were loyal republicans but wanted some degree of reform, were known as the Half-Breeds * The Pendleton Act * The Republicans nominated Garfield for president in 1880, but was assassinated 4 months after inauguration, shot by Guiteau who claimed it was because he was denied a government job * Congress passed the Pendleton Act in 1883 to set up a merit-based federal civil service, a professional career service that allots government jobs on the basis of a competitive exam * The Politics of Tariff Rates * Industrialists tended to encourage higher tariffs to keep out foreign goods, and they were supported by the Republicans * Democrats tended to support a lower tariff rate - their cotton and wheat sales benefited from increased international trade * President Chester Arthur broke with Republican orthodoxy and lowered tariff rates * Many Democrats, including Cleveland began to push for lower tariff rates - arguing that it would put more money into circulation and stimulate economic activity * Many tariff reformers became increasingly critical of the power of trusts and large corporations in dominating the economy at the expense of consumers and small producers * In 1888, Benjamin Harrison signed into law the highest tariff in the nation’s history * The Currency Issue * The vibrant economic growth that characterized much of the last decades came to a screeching halt in 1983 because of the Panic of 1893 * Many historians cite the inadequate amount of currency in circulation as one of the underlying weaknesses in the economy - the money supply did not have the possibility to grow as the economy expanded Politics, Power, and Reform in Urban America * Urban Politics and the Rise of Machine Politics * Politics came to be dominated by political machines - smooth running organizations whose purpose was to achieve and maintain political power, usually regardless of political ideology * NYC was dominated by the Democratic Party machine, run by party “bosses” and headquartered at Tammany Hall - most notable was Tammany Chief William Marcy Tweed * Boss Tweed earned a reputation for corruption, however, under the Democratic Party, the city initiated massive municipal projects that provided jobs to thousands of immigrants * The Campaign Against Prostitution * Religious-based activists saw the practice as sinful, whereas campaigners for gender equality saw a double standard in society’s acceptance of male extramarital sexual activities, and public health advocates saw this as spreading venereal disease, and anti-poverty activists saw this as reinforcing a cycle of poverty of working class women * These forced pressured local authorities to close red-light districts, and successfully lobbied for the Mann Act (1910) which cracked down on the transport of women across states to engage in prostitution * The Temperance Campaign * This was especially popular among women who were troubled by the fact that their husbands often drank away their paychecks * Another reason for the movement’s popularity was that it complemented the anti-immigrant movement (against saloons were immigrants would drink) ===== Subject to Debate ===== * The Appropriateness of the Label: Robber Baron * Most big companies were incorporated and run by boards of directors, not one big money man, and moreover, the rising tide of wealth generated helped lift all boats through higher wages and better conditions * The Populist Movement - Reasonable or Irrational? * One one hand, some historians see the movement as a reasonable response to the dire situation farmers were in * However, others paint it as an irrational, emotional rebellion against the modern world, citing racism and anti-immigrant sentiment in the movement * Corrupt Political Bosses and Immigrant Communities * Although there is truth to the narrative that bosses undermined democracy until reformers rose up to clean the political process, political machines provided the only safety net and jobs program for recently arrived immigrants * In some ways, the attacks on the political machines were attacks on the structure of the immigrant community ===== Period 7 ===== ===== Imperialism: Debates ===== The Motives of American Imperialism * Alfred Thayer Mahan and the Importance of Naval Power * The US was focused on domestic issues at the time and expansion in North America * He pushed for a strong navy and an overseas empire in his book The Influence of Sea Power Upon History * Industrialization and the Panic of 1893 * Imperial holdings would provide American industry with important raw materials and a new market of people * Desire for new markets intensified following the Panic of 1893 * “White Man’s Burden” and Racial Hierarchy * Some Americans felt it was the duty of the civilized people to uplift the less fortunate - Rudyard Kipling’s “The White Man’s Burden” * Others felt that the inferior races would disappear in a survival for the fittest - social darwinism * Christian Missionaries * They were eager to spread the gospel, and many targeted China’s large population * Hawaii * American missionaries arrived in Hawaii in the 1820s * Later, when Americans established massive sugar plantations, undermining the local economy, there was conflict between businessmen and Queen Liliuokalani * Sanford Dole, pineapple grower, urged the US to intervene * US forces deposed of the queen in a coup, and eventually annexed Hawaii in 1898 Debate over the Role of the US in the World * The American Anti-Imperialist League * Included conservative Democrats (Bourbon Democrats) as well as some progressives (Mark Twain) * Condemned imperialism in the aftermath of the Spanish-American War * A Departure from American Traditions * Instead of earlier acquisitions of land such as the Louisiana purchase that were designed to expand US territory, new imperialism would essentially be US rule over a foreign population * Critics saw this as an immoral departure from the democratic traditions of a nation that was born in a war against a major power * Anti-imperialist Sentiment and White Supremacy * Not all critics of imperialism were progressive - some critics feared that by acquiring the Philippines, the US would experience an influx of Filipinos * Worried about “polluting” the American population ===== The Spanish-American War and Its Aftermath ===== The Spanish-American War * Began from a struggle in Cuba for independence from Spain - there were 3 wars, and because of growing US business interests in Cuba, they intervened in the last war for independence * United States Interest in Cuba * In the 1890s, an independence movement was trying to end Spanish rule - the governor, Valeriano Weyler, used cruel tactics (concentration camps) to suppress the rebellion * By 1898, ¼ of the population had died from starvation and disease * Some American businessmen wanted to intervene because of the sugar harvest, and other citizens wanted to intervene because it was a struggle for independence, much like the US had experienced * “Yellow Journalism” and the Call to War * Events in Cuba were brought to attention through newspapers * Increased literacy set the groundwork for America’s first mass media, and to attract customers, newspapers began printing bold, sensational headlines, sometimes warping the truth * News organizations used these techniques to build support for war with Spain * Sinking of the Maine * The event that led directly to the Spanish-American war was the destruction of American battleship, the USS Maine, which blew up in Havana * Although there was a lack of evidence that Spain caused this to happen, as a result of heightened tensions because of yellow journalism, many Americans pointed to Spain as the culprit * US Victory in the Spanish-American War * The US declared war in April 1898, and Spain agreed to an armistice 4 months later * American forces landed in Cuba on June 22, 1898, and Spanish forced surrendered on July 17 * Fighting in the Philippines lasted only days as they took the capital in an alliance with Filipino rebels * Roosevelt led a charge up San Juan Hill in a key battle for Cuba - he was headlined in American papers, elevating his status in the political realm * The Treaty of Paris * Spain agreed to cede the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam to the US in exchange for $20 million * Anti-imperialists insisted that the Constitution did not permit the American government to make laws for people who were not represented * Cuba and the Platt Amendment * Cuba would become independent in name only - the US wanted to ensure that American economic interests would not be challenged by a future Cuban administration * The Platt Amendment allowed the US to militarily intervene in Cuban affairs if it deemed necessary, limited the Cuban government’s ability to conduct foreign policy, and allowed the US to lease a naval base at Guantanamo Bay The United States as an Imperialism Power * The Insular Cases * As the US gained territories, the question of whether constitutional rights should be applied to people in new American territories led to heated debates * Expansionists argued that residents of colonies should not expect citizenship or basic constitutional rights * Anti-imperialists saw this as hypocrisy, that denying constitutional rights to people living under an American flag, would “put them into the rank of land-grabbing nations of Europe” * SCOTUS settled this in a series of cases known as the “Insular Cases”, and ruled that the imperial power need not grant its subjects constitutional rights, on the basis that the subjects were of an inferior race, and that the colonial power had the responsibility to uplift these people before granting them autonomy * War in the Philippines * Many Filipinos were disappointed to learn that the US decided to hold on to the Philippines because they saw the US as a liberating force * Following the Treaty of Paris, the three year long Philippine-American War ensued, far more deadly than the Spanish-American War * Filipino forces were led by Emilio Aguinaldo and continued to resist for the next decade - but the US would hold onto the Philippines until WWII * China and the Open Door Policy * Major European powers had begun carving China out into spheres of influence * John Hay, US secretary of state, asserted an open door policy for China * The US pretended to be concerned for the territorial integrity of China, but was more interested in gaining a foothold in trade with China * The Boxer Rebellion * Chirstian missionaries came to China, but found little success * The presence of missionaries caused the creation of anti-foreign secret societies, such as the Boxers * They led a rebellion that resulted in the death of more than 30,000 Chinese converts as well as 250 foreign nuns * Theodore Roosevelt and the “Big Stick” * Roosevelt asserted that the US should “speak softly, but carry a big stick”, referring to military force * He claimed that the US had the right to militarily intervene in the nations of Latin America - the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine * In 1902, he warned Germany to stay out of Venezuela after they failed to repay a loan to Germany and Germany threatened military intervention * Panama and the Panama Canal * With the acquisition of overseas Pacific territories, policymakers wanted a shortcut to Asia * Before 1903, Panama was a region of Colombia, and when Colombia refused the US offer of $10 million to build a canal, the US instigated a rebellion in Panama against Colombia * Panama became an independent country and immediately agreed to the Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty (1903) with the US to build the canal * Roosevelt, Diplomacy, and the Nobel Peace Prize * He was interested in establishing the US as a major player in world diplomacy * He acted as a mediator between France and Germany in their conflict over Morocco * He was interested in maintaining a balance of power among other world powers, offering to mediate an end to the Russo-Japanese War * The “Gentleman’s Agreement” * In 1907, the diplomatic gains Roosevelt had achieved with Japan were threatened by discriminatory legislation passed in California (in 1906, the San Fran. Board of Education decided that Japanese American students would be segregated in school, like Chinese-American students” * Roosevelt worked out a Gentleman’s Agreement in which Japan agreed to limit immigration to the US and he agreed to pressure California to end discriminatory practice * President Taft and “Dollar Diplomacy” * Taft continued an aggressive foreign policy, but put more emphasis on expanding and securing American commercial interests - came to be known as dollar diplomacy * Sent troops to Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic to coerce them into signing commercial treaties with the US - tried to substitute dollars for bullets (money instead of military conflict) * Failed to stem the Mexican Revolution in 1911 * President Wilson’s Foreign Policy * The initial focus of Wilson was on domestic concerns, however, his administration became increasingly drawn into foreign policy matters * He was driven both by a desire to secure American economic interests abroad and by a strong moral compass * He appointed the anti-imperialist William Jennings Bryan to be his secretary of state * However, he still authorized the continued occupation of Nicaragua to suppress a rebellion, and sent troops to Haiti and the Dominican Republic in 1916 to ensure that American economic interests were not challenged * Wilson and the Mexican Revolution * Began with the austin of an autocratic leader in 1910, and degenerated into a civil war * In 1914, Wilson challenged the legitimacy of the new leader, General Vicoriana Huerta and sent marines to overthrow the regime * A new, pro-American government came to power but was challenged by rebel leader Francisco “Pancho” villa * Wilson authorized more than 12,000 troops to invade Mexico and capture Villa, who eluded American forces ===== The Progressives ===== The Progressive Movement * The Making of the Progressive Movement * Essentially a middle class response to the excesses of rapid industrialization, political corruption, and unplanned urbanization * Both Roosevelt and Wilson took on the progressive mantle * Women And the Progressive Movement * The Progressive movement provided a means for women to become engaged in public issues * Women often framed their participation in the movement as “social housekeeping”, as to not seem like a radical break from the traditional domestic activities of women * Pragmatism * They questioned the philosophical quest for eternal truths, and argued that an idea was only coherent as it was able to be used for a practical purpose * Progressives gravitated towards this idea * Reform Darwinism * Progressive activists rejected Social Darwinism, and instead thought the evolution of human society required active intervention and cooperation, rather than a laissez-faire approach * Muckrakers and the Birth of Investigative Journalism * Progressives believed in the power of the newly developed mass print media to shed light on social ills and to inspire actions - and the practitioners of a new “investigative journalism” were known as muckrakers * Progressives and Municipal Reform * They were alarmed at the inefficiency and corruption of municipal government, like the political machines * Progressivism and Moral Reform * The attack on social ills led many to campaign against sin and vice * Their attempt to civilize the urban environment included tackling excessive drinking, prostituion, rowdy behavior, and bawdy entertainment * The Progressive Response to the Triangle Factory Fire * A tragic fire swept through the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, whose employees were young women, most of them immigrants * This led to the creation of fire safety laws in NY and the growth of the International Ladies Garment Workers’ Union Divisions Within the Progressive Movement * The Progressive Movement, Race, and Segregation * The Southern states have Jim Crow laws and the Ku Klux Klan - eugenics tried to justify segregation with races having inferior capabilities * Many activists and progressivists ignored the conditions of Afircan Americans, and some even endorsed segregation * Wilson ordered the segregation of government offices, and praised racist films * Fighting Segregation in the Progressive Era * The principal voices for social justice for black people came from bnlack activists who attempted to put the issue of racism on the national agenda, ex. W. E. B. Du Bois * Different Directions Among African-American Leaders * Du Bois’s call for full political equality and civil rights was in contrast to the more conciliatory approach of Booker T. Washington * Marcus Garvey was important in the black-nationalist movement because of his advocacy of black people returning to their ancestral homelands in Africa, and although not many people made this journey, this instilled pride in African Americans * Democracy Versus Expertise in Progressive Governance * When it came to challenging corrupt political machines, progressives either tried to empower professional manager and planners, while others tried to empower the citizenry through democratic reforms * Expertise, Efficiency, and Mastery * Some argued that governance based on rational scientific ideas could overcome forces contributing to societal drift * Efficiency and Municipal Government in the Wake of the Galveston Flood * When a flood killed 8,000 people in Galveston, given the inept government response, local leaders created commissions to spearhead the cleanup and rebuilding of the city * The Push for Expanded Participation in Democracy * Many pushed for democratic empowerment of the citizenry * However, this did not address the laws preventing the majority of blacks from voting * A host of reforms were advocated to make local, state, and national governments more responsive to the popular will * Women’s Suffrage * Ratification of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution (1920) gave women the right to vote * The push for women’s suffrage dates back, at least to the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention * A series of associations were formed to promote women’s suffrage, and even Wilson came to support women’s suffrage in 1918 * The Referendum, the Recall, and the Initiative * Reformers hoped that by expanding democracy, the power of political machines would be lessened * The referendum was a Progressive era reform that allowed people to vote directly on proposed legislation * The recall allowed the people of a city or state to remove an elected official before his or her term ended * Direct Primaries * This was a push for voters to choose party candidates to run for elected public office, instead of political party leaders picking running candidates * Direct Election of Senators * Previously, senators were chosen by state legislatures, but progressives pushed for the direct election of senators * The 17th Amendment was ratified in 1913 * The Australian Ballot * Instead of having publicly viewable ballots, secret ballots were adopted in American in 1910 Progressive Reform on the National Level * Progressivism and Industrial Capitalism * During the Gilded Age, America’s industrial output grew exponentially with no government regulation * Industrialists championed laissez-faire economics * However, many Americans came to believe that unregulated industry could be harmful to individuals, communities, and even to the health of industrial capitalism itself * The Jungle and the Meat-packing Industry * The horrors of the meat-processing industry was published in Upton Sinclair’s novel, The Jungle * The public uproar that followed the book led Congress to pass the Meat Inspection Act, and establish the Food and Drug Administration * The History of the Standard Oil Company * The Standard Oil Company, a giant trust assembled by John D. Rockefeller, had come to dominate the petroleum-processing industry * Ida Tarbell’s book exposed the ruthlessness of the oil company and contributed to the government breaking up the trust in 1911 * Regulating Workplaces Practices - Muller v. Oregon and the “Brandeis Brief” * Because of the long working hours and child labor, the movement to reform the workplace suffered a set-back in 1905 Lochner v. New York, SCOTUS ruled that NY law restricting hours for bakers was unconstitutional * However, in Muller v. Oregon (1908), the decision upheld an Oregon law limiting the number of hours women could work * Brandeis wrote a brief, citing a lot of scientific, psychological, and sociological studies to bolster his case of limiting women’s hours of work * This kind of case citing studies came to be known as a “Brandeis brief” * Challenging Child Labor * Photographs of children in workplace settings brought child labor to public attention * Because labor laws were under state law, Congress could only pass legislation prohibiting the sale of items produced in factories that employed children under 14 years of age * However, in Hammer v. Dagenhart (1917), SCOTUS found the act unconstitutional - citing that the goods themselves were not immoral, it was the practices that were * Progressivism in the White House * In the early 20th century, progressivism entered the discourse of the national political parties * Roosevelt embraced many progressive reforms, but Taft was a disappointment to the Progressive movement, and the divisions that Taft created in the Republican Party contributed to the victory of Democrat Woodrow Wilson * Wilson implemented some progressive reforms * Theodore Roosevelt and the “Square Deal” * He quickly moved the Republican Party and the nation in a progressive direction when he assumed presidency in 1901 * His domestic agenda was known as the “Square Deal”, and championed conservation of natural resources * Roosevelt and the Regulation of Business * Square Deal approach to the anthracite coal strike in 1902 * Negotiated with mine owners so miners received a 10% wage increase, but not union recognition * Pushed for important consumer protections in the wake of The Jungle, environmental protection, and stronger regulation of the railroad industry * Strengthened the Interstate Commerce Commission with the Elkins Act, which targeted the railroad practice of granting rebates (discounts) to favored customers * The Hepburn Act gave the ICC greater freedom to set railroad rates * Roosevelt as “Trust Buster” * Saw the concentration of economic power in the few as damaging to the economy as a whole * The Sherman Antitrust Act was passed to limit monopolies; he used the act to pursue bad trusts - ones that interfered with commerce * Northern Securities Company controlled all railroad traffic in the Northwest, from Chicago to Washington, and eliminated competition in this region * In Northern Securities Co. v. United States (1904), SCOTUS broke the company up under the Sherman Antitrust Act * Became “trust buster” for challenging monopolies * The Administration of William Howard Taft * Taft won the 1908 election * He disappointed Progressives by agreeing to higher tariff rates in the Payne-Aldrich Tariff (1909), despite progressives trying to reduce consumer prices * However, he did pursue antitrust suits, initiating 90 antitrust causes, including a major case against US Steel * Taft, Roosevelt, and the Election * Roosevelt came to regret supporting Taft, and so a rift appeared in the Republican Party between Roosevelt and Taft * This division caused the Democratic Party’s Woodrow Wilson to win * Progressivism and Woodrow Wilson * He was only the second Democrat to serve since Andrew Johnson, possibly because the Republicans “waved the bloody shirt”, invoking the memory of the Democrats’ role in secession and the Civil War * He was known as a progressive reformer * Wilson and the Federal Reserve Act * Because of his suspicion of the banking industry, being in service of the stock market more than the American public * He pushed for the Federal Reserve Act, which created the Federal Reserve Bank in 1913, part private and part publicly controlled bank * Its policies can expand or contract the currency supply to combat a sluggish or inflated economy * In addition, it can lower or raise its interest rates on loans, causing other banks to follow * Ex. lower interest rates = more economic activity, higher interest rates = cool economic activity/prevent inflation * Regulation of Business * Wilson was a supporter of small business and strengthened the antitrust powers of the USFG with the Clayton Antitrust Act (1914), exempting labor unions from being targeted by antitrust actions * Created the Federal Trade Commission (1914) to regulate unfair business practices * The Prohibition Movement and the Eighteenth Amendment * Saloons were seen as parasites on working-class communities, profiting off alcohol abuse * The 18th Amendment banned the production, sale, and transportation of alcohol as of 1920 Addressing Environmental Issues in the Progressive Era * Concern for Disappearing Wilderness * Zoologist/adventurer George Bird Grinnell and Roosevelt organized the Boone and Crockett Club to lobby for environmental protection * Roosevelt and Conservation * Appointed Gifford Piunchot to head the US Forest Service and the government’s conservation efforts * Expansion of the National Park System * It was began in 1872 with Yellowstone, and Yosemite became a national park in 1890 * Roosevelt created 5 additional parks and 150 national forests, ultimately putting over 200 million acres under public protection * Conservation and Preservationism * Conservation: nation’s natural resources should be used in a responsible way so they continue to exist for future generations * Preservation: wants nature to be hands-off to society * Conservation tapped more into progressive thinking - efficiency, expertise, scientific management, and government intervention * The Controversy over Hetch Hetchy Valley * The valley was targeted by San Fran. officials as a possible water source/potential reservoir * The Wilson administration gave in after an earthquake and fire destroyed much of San Fran. in 1906 ===== World War I: Military and Diplomacy ===== The United States Enters World War I * The Context of WWI * Nationalism, imperialism, militarism, the alliance system * This sense of nationalism was fueled by a competition to imperialize the remaining independent areas of Asia and Africa * The Onset of War * Assassination of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian empire, Archduke Franz Ferdinand → Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia * The alliance system brought Germany and Italy into the conflict on the side of Austria-Hungary while Russia, France, and Great Britain (Triple Entente) were on the opposing side * The Allied Powers fought against the Central Powers (Italy switched sides in 1915) for 4 years and resulted in the deaths of 8.5 million soldiers * US Neutrality * The US initially assumed it could stay neutral during WWI * Adopted a policy of isolationism when it came to matters on the European continent * Neutrality allowed the US to trade with both sides of the conflict * Immigration Patterns and Public Opinion Around WWI * German and Irish immigrants tended to favor the Central Powers while many Americans favored the Allied Powers because of their ties to Great Britain * From Neutrality to Intervention * Wilson emphasized “freedom of the seas”, indicating the US would sell weapons to anyone * However, as Britain blockaded Germany, a majority of weapons were traded to Britain * Germany responded by threatening attack on US ships by U-boats (submarines) * The sinking of the British liner, Lusitania, influenced many Americans, and so Germany pledged to make no attacks on passenger ships without prior warning in both the Arabic Pledge and the Sussex Pledge (extending the protection to merchant ships) * The US took advantage of this and traded extensively with Great Britain * Progressives and the War * At the beginning, many progressives were hesitant because they thought participation in a major war would pull the nation from domestic reform * However, many saw great possibilities in American participation: expansion of the USFG, sense of unity and nationalism, and renewed focus on issues of social Justice * President Wilson and the War * Wilson became increasingly convinced that the US needed to participate to make the world “safe for democracy”, especially as the Allied Powers seemed to be more democratic (after Russia dropped out) * The American public was divided, and the government went to great lengths to alter public opinion * The Zimmerman Note and Unrestricted German Submarine Warfare * The intercepted telegram from German foreign secretary Zimmerman indicated that Germany would help Mexico regain territory it had lost to the US if Mexico joined the war * Germany also announced in 1917 that it would rescind the Sussex Pledge and resume unrestricted submarine warfare against Britain and its allies * In 1917, the US declared war on Germany * Shaping Public Opinion * Wilson established the Committee on Public Information in 1917 to organize pro-war propaganda * The CPI sent Four-Minute Men around the country to give brief speeches in favor of the war * Posters depicted ruthless German soldiers, depicted as Huns * Uncle Sam poster :) * Funding the War * Many posters encouraged Americans to purchase bonds to fund the war’s cost * “If you can’t enlist - invest” * The USFG ended up raising ⅔ the war’s costs from war bonds * Federal Agencies and War Production * War Industries Board created to direct industrial production, ensure uninterrupted production of arms, uniforms, etc. * The FDA ensured sufficient food production to feed the troops and civilians * National War Labor Policies Board dealt with labor disputes * These government agencies were exactly what progressive reformers had hoped to create on a permanent basis The Role of the US in WWI * American Participation in WWI * 2 million soldiers of the American Expeditionary Force provided the Allies with much needed reinforcement * Trench warfare made it difficult for either side to gain much ground * The Allies’ advances towards the German border, aided by American troops, led Germany to seek a ceasefire The US and the Postwar World * Wilson’s 14 Points * This was a document where WIlson envisioned a world order based on freedom of the seas, removal of barriers to trade, self determination for EUropeans, and an international organization to resolve conflicts * Only the League of Nations resulted from this * United States Rejection of the Treaty of Versailles * US did not join the League of Nations, as they would have had to approve the Treaty of Versailles, which was rejected by the Senate in 1919 ===== World War I: Home Front ===== WWI and the Conservative Rejection of Progressive Reform * Civil Liberties During Wartime * Despite hopes of progressives, there were also curtailments of civil liberties during the wartime * The Espionage and Sedition Acts were passed during WWI to put limits on public expressions of antiwar sentiment, making it a crime to interfere with the draft, war bonds, or say anything disloyal about the war effort * The Espionage Act was upheld by SCOTUS in Schenck v. United States, ruling that freedom of speech is not absolute and can be limited in wartime * The Crusade against Organized Labor and Dissent * When WWI ended, the government disbanded the agencies it created to regulate the economy during the war * Workers no longer had the protections of the National War Labor Policies Board, and inflation was no longer kept in check * Biggest strike - Seattle General Strike where the Industrial Workers of the World and the American Federation of Labor worked together to virtually close down Seattle * Management used techniques to maintain the upper hand - painting striking workers as Bolsheviks, pushing for open shops - workplaces in which the union could not require workers to join the union, and government intervention: ex. SCOTUS ruling that picketing was not protected by the First Amendment * The “Red Scare” * Campaign against Communists, anarchists, and other radicals, also targeting labor leaders, attempting to portray the labor movement as a front for organizing * Caused by the successful Bolshevik Revolution in Russia that brought the Communist Party to power and the establishment of the USSR, and the Comintern, an international organization of communists trying to duplicate that success in other countries * The communist movement in the US was extremely small, however, the government took action: Attorney General Palmer began carrying out unwarranted raids (“Palmer Raids”) of suspected radicals’ homes * Deported more than 500 noncitizens, radical newspapers shut down, libraries were purged of radical books, accused elected officials were removed from office * Schenck v. United States gave cover to restrictions on civil liberties * Americans began to question Palmer’s tactics, but suspicion of “reds” persisted throughout the 1920s * The Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti * Sacco and Vanzetti (immigrants and anarchists), accused of robbery and murder, despite the sketchy evidence, were found guilt and executed * This showed the intolerance that many Americans had toward immigrants and radicals - many Americans also protested the verdict World War I and the Rise of Nativism * Anti-Immigrant Sentiment * Nativism - opposition to immigration - rose sharply during WWI * Government propaganda and the Committee for Public Information (which encouraged people to report neighbors who were undermining the war effort) contributed to hatred towards German Americans * Libraries banned German books and schools prohibited the teaching of German, and Congress passed the Immigration Restriction Act which established a reading test requirement for admission to the US and barred immigrant laborers from several countries that were designated as the “Asiatic Barred Zone” War, Opportunity, and Migration * The Great Migration * The needs of industry for labor during WWI led to the Great Migration of African Americans out of the South, which lasted until the Great Depression * Reasons for rural South → urban North * Jim Crow Laws, discrimination * Segregation * Exclusion from political system - literacy tests and poll taxes * The main factor that drew them to the North was jobs - factory agents from the North frequently made recruiting trips to the South, offering immediate employment and free passage to the North * Racial Violence - Chicago, Washington, Tulsa, and Beyond * A riot in Chicago left 38 people dead and 500 injured * 1921 in Tulsa, Oklahoma - a young black man who tripped over a white woman was accused of rape - a group of African-American veterans tried to prevent crowds from lynching the man * A riot ensued, destroying Greenwood District (the wealthiest African-American community), with over 10,000 left homeless and 300 African Americans killed ===== 1920s: Innovation in Communications and Technology ===== Technological Advances, Corporate Growth, and the Consumer Economy * Toward Greater Consolidation * The consumption of consumer goods stimulated the American economy * New products, such as automobiles and radios captured the public’s imagination, and new production techniques increased industrial output * Henry Ford and Mass Production * The assembly line reduced the price of Ford’s Model T car and made it affordable to the middle class * However, it took jobs away from skilled mechanics * The Impact of the Automobile * Automobiles grew more rapidly in the US than in other countries * The proliferation of the automobile industry, using mass production techniques, stimulated the growth of steel, chemical, oil, and glass-production industries * This also led to more Americans began to settle in suburban communities, and also led to “urban sprawl” * Scientific Management * Techniques developed by Frederick Winslow Taylor were key to mass production * He noted the most efficient techniques and made work more efficient, but also more monotonous * Many workers resisted this loss of autonomy * Advertising and Mass Consumption * The availability of consumer goods to the average family increased * The advertising industry also tapped into Freudian psychology, attempting to reach the public on a subconscious level New Media and National and Regional Cultures * Radio and the Development of Mass Culture * Radio became an extremely popular medium by the end of the 1920s for music, sermons, weekly serials, comedians, and soap operas * Radio and movies tended to create a more homogeneous culture in the US in the 1930s * Movies and the Development of Mass Media * By the end of the 1920s, ¾ of the American people were going to movies every week * It continued to thrive during the Great Depression * Wizard of Oz, Marx brothers produced anarchic comedies which mocked authority figures and the pretensions of the wealthy * Charlie Chaplin’s comedy Modern Times satirized the entire capitalist system, from assembly line work to the corruption of the law enforcement system * The Grapes of Wrath chronicled conditions of Dust Bowl farmers migrating to California * Modern Media and Regional Culture * The spread of new technologies provided the technical means to record local and regional cultural forms and transmit them to wider audiences * Country music enjoyed broader appeal, as did gospel, blues, and ragtime ===== 1920s: Cultural and Political Controversies ===== Growth of the City * The Social Geography of the City * Immigrants continued to pour into the US for the first 2 decades of the 1900s, with a majority of the population of cities like NYC, Chicago, and San Fran. being made up of immigrants * The mechanization of agriculture lowered the demand for labor in rural areas, contributing to the internal migration of people into cities * New Opportunities for Women * Urbanization and industrialization provided new opportunities for women in the workforce * The most common occupation for women was in the field of domestic service in the 1850s, transforming to factory work and then finally to office work in the 1900s * The new woman of the 1920s was engaged in public issues, participating in the political struggles of the Progressive movement and gained new confidence in public issues * “Flappers” were independent-minded young women of the 1920s who openly defied Victorian moral codes about lady-like behavior Nativism and the Quota System * The Growth of Nativism * The large wave of immigrants fueled a popular nativist movement * Some nativists focused on the fact that most new immigrants were not Protestant, that their language was associated with radical movements or drunkenness, that laborers would take jobs from native-born American workers, or that WWI contributed to German hatred * The Quota System * Nativism led to legislation that greatly reduced the number of immigrants allowed into the US * The Emergency Quota Act (1921) and the National Origins Act (1924) set quotas for new immigrants based on nationality * Stopped new immgration, there was no limits on immigration for natives of countries within the Americas Migration Patterns and Cultural Production * The Harlem Renaissance * The Great Migration of African Americans contributed to the Harlem Renaissance - a literary, artistic, and intellectual movement centered in the primarily black neighborhood of Harlem, NYC * A key goal was to increase pride in black culture, and to forge a new cultural identity among African-American people * Writings of Langston Hughes and jazz of Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington were part of the movement, as was the African-American national anthem: “Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing” - James Weldon Johnson * The Literature of Dissent * The Lost Generation literary movement of the 1920s expressed a general disillusionment with society - troubled by the destruction and seeming meaningless of WWI * The Great Gatsby exposed the shallow lives of the wealthy, Sinclair Lewis’s novels mocked the emptiness of middle-class life, and Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms critiqued the glorification of war * Regionalism in the Context of Modernity * Regional cultures also flourished as a national culture emerged * Many historians see regionalism as a conscious response to the homogenizing forces of modern media and mass culture * Regionalist literature has its roots in the 19th century, most famously with Mark Twain, describing life along the Mississippi River * The most important Southern writer is William Faulkner, many of whose works are set in a fictional county in Mississippi (The Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying) * Regionalism can also be seen in the Works Progress Administration - regionalist art in WPA murals and paintings * American Gothic * The “Okie” Migration and the Culture of Displacement * The movement of Dust Bowl refugees to California, and with them came their culture * The attitudes, politics, religious denominations, and dialects of Oklahoma, Texas, Missouri, and Arkansas shaped the culture of agricultural centers in California’s Central Valley, most notably Bakersfield * Yiddish Theater * The migration of Eastern European Jews to the US gave rise to several cultural developments * Yiddish theater, often rivaling Broadway in scale and quality, was a major cultural force in the US with over 200 venues or touring performing groups * The center of Yiddish Theater was NYC, the district was centered in Jewish Lower East Side * These dramas explored populist approaches such as flamboyant acting and audience participation, but after WWI, they explored more serious themes Culture Clashes in the 1920s * The Resurgence of the KKK * The original KKK, a violent, racist group with its roots in the Civil War had died out in the 1880s * However, in the 1920s, the organization was a genuine mass movement, devoted to white supremacy and 100% Americanism, evident in a number of race riots in the US * The Bible Versus Science * Many Americans developed a fundamentalist approach to the Bible and to religion * In the Scopes trial of 1925, Scopes, a biology teacher, was fined for violating the Butler Act, a state law forbidding the teaching of evolution * Rural and Urban Responses to Prohibition * The 18th Amendment banned the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages * However, this was short lived, as the consumption of alcohol reached pre-Prohibition levels by 1925 * Furthermore, the lawlessness in America went up as bootleggers, speaksies, and organized crime filled the gap left by the end of the legitimate alcoholic beverage industry * Criminal activity became so widespread that Congress ratified the 21st Amendment which repealed Prohibition ===== The Great Depression ===== The Transition of the American Economy and Economic Instability * The Panic of 1893 * Panic = economic downturn * As the economy became more consolidated after the Civil War, with only a handful of corporations controlling larger and larger segment of the economy, if only a few of those companies experienced downturns, the potential for a large-scale disruption to the economy became more likely * Panic of 1893 - worst economic depression before the Great Depression * Caused by the bankruptcy of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, then the failure of the National Cordage Company * This led to a major decline in stock prices, and led to a collapse of 500 banks, who invested their assets in the stock market * This led to the subsequent collapse of 15,000 businesses, 20% of the workforce was unemployed and a million had lost their jobs in 1894 * The economy did not recover until 1901 * The Panic of 1907 * Several banks had invested in a scheme to gain control of the United Copper Company * However, when the scheme was unraveled, a large number of bank customers withdrew their deposits simultaneously over concerns of the bank’s solvency (company’s ability to pay back long term debt and meet financial obligations) - bank runs * One major NY bank, Knickerbocker Trust Company, collapsed, sending ripples of fear through banks and leading to a withdrawal of reserves (cash minimums that banks must have on hand) * This was partly calmed by J.P. Morgan, who offered to have US Steel take over a struggling steel industry rival that a major NY bank had invested in * However, the deal could not proceed until Morgan got assurances that Roosevelt and the government would not initiate antitrust action * This demonstrated the lack of control that the US government had over the industrial/financial world Causes of the Great Depression * Overproduction and Underconsumption * The assembly line and scientific management vastly increased industrial output, and for much of the 1920s, the public was induced by easy credit and seductive advertising to absorb this increased output of goods * However, by 1927, consumption could not keep up with production * A weak labor movement led to stagnant wages, and ordinary Americans did not share in the economic expansion in the 1920s * By the late 1920s, manufacturers began laying off workers, worsening a bad situation * Problems on the Farm * During this time, the agricultural sector lagged behind the rest of the economy * Farmers increased production for WWI, but even afterwards, they were left in a cycle of debt, overproduction, and falling commodity prices * This was worsened by mechanization, increased tariff rates, and an isolationist foreign policy * An Inflated Stock Market * 1920s - people invested with borrowed money - buying stocks on margin, paying only 10% of the price up front with the promise of paying the remainder in the future * While this practice worked at first, it led to stock prices reaching new heights while the earnings of those corporations were declining, leading investors to sell stocks and incentivized panic selling * On Oct. 29, 1929, the stock market crashed Hoover and the Great Depression * Rugged Individualism and Limited Government Intervention * Rather than expand federal intervention to address the Great Depression, Hoover invoked “rugged individualism” - the belief that the nation’s problems could best be solved by the people themselves, and when they were unable to, Hoover encouraged voluntary cooperation and private charities to step in * He started the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (1932), which extended loans to struggling railroads, banks, insurance companies, and other firms but not to individuals * The Bonus March and the Erosion of Confidence in Hoover * In June of 1932, a group of WWI veterans, who called themselves the Bonus Expeditionary Force, marched into Washington DC to demand a bonus that they had been promised for their service in the military * Hoover ordered the secretary of war to evacuate them, leading to the deaths of several veterans and hundreds of injuries * This reflected on Hoover, but most of the aggressive acts against the protestors were carried out by General Douglas MacArthur, against the orders of President Hoover ===== The New Deal ===== The Creation of the New Deal * Goals: Extend relief to the poor, Stimulate economic recovery, Create long-term reform of the American economy * From Hoover to FDR * FDR won governorship in NYC and introduced a number of innovative programs to help New Yorkers as the Great Depression Depended * He conveyed to the public a sense of empathy, and his openness to experimentation allowed for a more flexible response than Hoover * He won the election of 1932 and asserted that the USFG should take some responsibility for the welfare of the people * Previously, people received assistance from churches, settlement houses, and private charities, but the New Deal provided relief to individuals through variety of agencies * The First New Deal * FDR developed a remarkable array of programs during its first hundred days, which comprised the first New Deal - reflected his willingness to experiment and the scope of the problems that faced the nation * Glass-Steagall Act (1933) * Created the Federal Deposit insurance Corporation, which insured deposits so that in the case that a bank went bankrupt, people did not lose their savings * National Industrial Recovery Act (1933) * Designed to stabilize the industrial sector * Drew up a set of codes with representatives from labor corporations, designed to shorten hours, guarantee trade union rights, establish min. wage, regulate price of certain petroleum products, and promote fair business practices * Cutthroat competition hurt the economy and pushed workers’ wages down, which limited their ability to purchase goods * Agricultural Adjustment Act (1933) * Paid farmers to grow **fewer** crops * Agricultural Adjustment Act - reduce production to bolster sagging commodity prices and strengthen the agricultural sector * However, this often got tenant farmers and sharecroppers evicted, because landowners no longer needed as much land - hurting many of the nation’s poorest farmers * Tennessee Valley Authority (1933) * Built dams, generated electricity, manufactured fertilizer, provided technical assistance to farmers, and fostered economic development in the Tennessee Valley - regional planning * Federal Emergency Relief Act (1933) * Distributed more than $500 million to state and local governments, which would distribute aid to the poor * Civilian Conservation Corps (1933) * Provided outdoor work for young men between 18-24 - soil conservation, flood control, road building, bridges, and forest projects * Employed 2.75 million men * Securities and Exchange Commission (1934) * Created to oversee stock market operations by monitoring transactions, licensing brokers, limited buying on margin, and prohibiting insider trading Critics of the New Deal and the Second New Deal * The Growth of the Commiunist Party * Although the communist movement never gained much traction in the US, there were some who saw the success of the USSR and felt that the capitalist system was not working * The Party attracted members by adopting the Popular Front strategy - drop talk of an impending revolution and to cooperate with a spectrum of anti-facist groups and governments, including the New Deal * Populist Opposition to the New Deal * Some criticized the New Deal as being overly cautious * Upton Sinclair (The Jungle) proposed sweeping, socialistic solutions; Townsend proposed a tax to generate enough money to give everyone over 60 a monthly stipend; Huey Long proposed breaking up the fortunes of the rich and distributing them to everyone else * The Growth of Organized Labor * National Industrial Recovery Act and Wagner Act legalized union membership in the US * By the end of WWII, went from 3 million in 1933 to 36% of American workers in unions * The Congress of Industrial Organizations * Drive to organize workers led to tensions within the labor movement * The 50 year old American Federation of Labor, had never shown much interest in organizing unskilled assembly-line workers * Labor leaders such as John L. Lewis organized the Committee for Industrial Organization within the AFL, which was later expelled by the AFL * They became the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), growing rapidly and surpassing the AFL * The Sit-down Strike * Although unions were legal, employers did not have to accept union demands * A new tactic by CIO unions was for workers to sit down in the shop floor, refusing to work and preventing the companies from hiring replacement workers (scabs) * Most famous strike - General Motors in Flint, Michigan (1936-1937) * Conservatives Critics Denounce Creeping Socialism * Some argued that the New Deal was socialism in disguise, the most prominent group on the right being American Liberty League - who promoted “open shop” - a business in which the employees are not required to join a union * Catholic priest Father Charles Coughlin used his popular national radio show to attack FDR as a commuinist and dictator * The Second New Deal * Although conditions were better than when he first took office, with more than 10 million Americans out of work, he could not claim the New Deal was a complete Success * In addition, SCOTUS declared the National Industrial Recovery Act unconstitutional because it used legislative powers in Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States and the Agricultural Adjustment Act unconstitutional for using state powers (statutory regulations) in United States v. Butler * With pressure and a looming election, FDR introduced the Second New Deal, less about shaping different sectors of the economy and more about providing assistance and support to the working class * Works Progress Administration (1935) * The WPA created jobs for millions of unemployed, employing over 8 million by the time it shut down * Social Security Act (1935) * Designed to help the unemployed, elderly, and disabled * Retirement benefits were funded by taxes on workers and employers * The Wagner Act (1935) * Encouraged the formation of unions * Established the National Labor Relations Board to oversee union elections and arbitrate conflicts between workers and owners * Prohibited owners from taking punitive actions against workers who sought to organize unions * Led to a tremendous increase in union activity * The Second New Deal and the Court Packing Plan * FDR was worried that SCOTUS would invalidate parts of his Second New Deal, and proposed a bill to allow him to appoint 6 additional justices * It did not pass Congress, but the Court became friendlier to the president anyway where some conservative justices retired and FDR was able to appoint 7 new justices * The Rollback of the New Deal * Many historians believe the new direction FDR took hurt the economy * By 1937, the economy was showing signs of improvement, and FDR took the advice of some conservatives and cut back on spending * The Roosevelt Recession * His move to cut spending on the New Deal contributed to a further downturn in 1938 (“Roosevelt Recession”) * He later increased government spending, which helped, but real improvements came in 1939 as the US began producing arms and supplies in preparation for WWII * Keynesian Economics * When FDR cut back spending, he was rejecting the advice of economist John Maynard Keynes (General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money), who argued that deficit spending by the government was acceptable and desirable if it was stimulating the economy * The idea of using the tools of the government to influence economic activity is known as **Keynesian economics** * His theories influenced Democratic administrations, but Republicans focused on cutting government spending The Legacy of the New Deal * Political Realignment * Hoover’s conservative laissez-faire approach has been echoed in the policies of Republican presidents like Reagan, H.W. Bush, W. Bush, while FDR’s liberal interventionist approach inspired Democratic president Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” * Today, Democratic leaders debate how closely their party should be associated with New Deal liberalism The Depression, the New Deal, and Affected Groups * African Americans * Hit hard by the economic difficulties of the 1930s - many New Deal programs ignored African Americans - such as the Agricultural Adjustment Act, which did not help tenant farmers * FDR was wary of losing the support of the southern wing of the Democratic Party, so he did not push for civil rights legislation or anti-lynching legislation * Despite his reluctance, African Americans switched from the party of Lincoln (Republicans) to the Democratic Party * This is because the First Lady and Interior Secretary championed civil rights, and because the president met periodically with a group of African American advisors, and finally because they believed that Roosevelt was attempting to improve conditions for poor and working-class people * The Scottsboro Boys Case * 9 African American youths were convicted of rape in Alabama on flimsy evidence * SCOTUS reversed most of the convictions, but the state courts again found them guilty, even after one of the victims admitted fabricating her story * Charges were dropped on four, the other five served prison time * Women * Suffered a double burden during the Depression - responsible for putting food on the table during difficult times, while on the other hand, they were frequently scorned if they “took a job away from a man” by working outside the home * Moreover, New Deal programs were not inclusive - the Civilian Conservation Corps excluded employing women, and the National Industrial Recovery Act set lower wage levels for women than men * Nevertheless, women such as Eleanor Roosevelt opened doors for women - more women were working outside the home in 1940 than in 1930 * American Indians * New Deal - Indian Reorganization Act (1934) undid the Dawes Severalty Act (1887) which attempted to assimilate American Indians into mainstream society by breaking up reservations and dividing land into small plots for individual Indians * This Act restored tribal ownership of reservation lands and recognizing the legitimacy of tribal governments * The act also extended loans to American Indian groups for economic development * Mexican Americans and the Great Depression * Many Mexicans had moved to the southwest United States in the 1920s to work in agriculture, driven by opportunity as well as chaos caused by the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920) * They saw their wages plummet in the 1930s and New Deal programs did not help - the CCC and WPA excluded migrant farm workers by requiring a permanent address * Many Mexicans returned to their homeland - decreasing Mexican-American by almost 40% in the Great Depression Economic Dislocation and Migrations in the Era of the New Deal * The Migration from the Dust Bowl to California * 1934-1937: parts of Texas, Oklahoma, and surrounding areas suffered from a major drought * Area became known as the “Dust Bowl” - caused by unsustainable over-farming coupled with a devastating drought * With the natural grass cover of the region removed, the fertile topsoil blew away when the drought struck * The Soil Conservation Service and USFG encouraged farmers to replant trees and grass, and purchased land to be kept out of cultivation ===== Interwar Foreign Policy ===== The Politics of Isolationism * Higher Tariff Rates - From Fordney-McCumber to Smoot-Hawley * Isolationist Republican presidents enacted higher tariffs to keep out foreign goods * The 1922 Fordney-McCumber Act dramatically raised tariff rates * In the midst of the Great Depression, isolationist legislators pushed through the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, which increased tariffs to their second-highest rate in US history * The Washington Disarmament Conference * President Warren Harding successfully pressed for a reduction of naval power among Britain, France, Japan, Italy, and the US at this conference * The Kellogg-Briand Pact * One of 63 nations to sign this pact which renounced war in principle * Because it was negotiated outside of the League of Nations, it was unenforceable * The Good Neighbor Policy * In the 1920s, the US continued Roosevelt’s “Big Stick” approach in regard to Latin America, engaging in several military interventions in Cuba, Nicaragua, and Haiti * Upon taking office in 1933, FDR began to pursue a more conciliatory policy in Latin America - Good Neighbor - to create more order in the hemisphere and less dislike * Secretary of State signed a declaration at the Inter-American Conference in Uruguay that no nation had the right to interfere in the affairs of another nation * In 1934, Roosevelt rejected an interventionist approach in regard to Cuba and worked to expand trade with Latin American through the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act (1934) From Isolationism to Intervention * The Challenges of Isolationism in the 1930s * Mussolini and the Fascists took power in Italy in 1922, Hitler and the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, and Franco took power in Spain in 1939, as well as Japan falling under military rule * These dictatorial governments all took aggressive actions in the 1930s, and Great Britain and France declared war on Germany when it attacked Poland in 1939, beginning WWII * This made it hard for the US to maintain isolationism * The Continued Pull of Isolationism * Isolationists argued that the US should stay out of European affairs, taking WWI as a lesson * In addition, the Senate’s Nye Committee uncovered evidence that certain American corporations had profited greatly from US participation in WWI, which led Americans if these companies had pushed the country into the war * The Argument for Intervention * Many Americans believed it would be a mistake for the US to isolate itself from world affairs * Interventionists believed that if Britain were defeated, airplanes and submarines would bring Hitler’s war machine to the US * Many also believed that if Hitler was successful, civilization itself would be threatened * The Quarantine Speech and the Panay Incident * FDR argued that certain aggressive nations should be quarantined by the international community * The public response to this speech was generally negative, showing that the isolationist sentiment was still strong in the US * Even when Japan sank the USS Panay, isolationist political leaders urged FDR to accept Japanese apologies * The Onset of WWII * Soon after the war started, Roosevelt pushed for legislation allowing the US to send arms to Britain with the condition that Britain pay for the weapons first and transport them in their own ships * This “cash-and-carry” policy allowed the US to support Britain without the risk of US ships being destroyed * Steps Toward Engagement in WWII * US grew more interventionist as they saw the fall of France * In 1940, the US ratified the Selective Service Act, requiring compulsory military service for males between 21-35 years of age * By 1941, 70% of the American people were ready to help Britain directly, even if it risked getting involved in WWII * Congress approved the Lend-Lease Act, which allowed the US to send arms to Britain in American ships, and was extended to the USSR after Hitler broke the Nazi-Soviet Pact * FDR and Churchill solidified the alliance between the two countries through the Atlantic Charter * Pearl Harbor and American Intervention * Debates about intervention ended abruptly when Japanese warplanes attacked Pearl Harbor ===== World War II: Mobilization ===== Mobilizing for WWII * Rationing and Recycling * In 1942, the Office of Price Administration began rationing key commodities to civilians such as gasoline and tires * The government also rationed food - sugar, meat, coffee, lard, butter, etc. * Families received ration books and used ration stamps with cash when they purchased these items, and children would organize Tin Can Clubs to collect scrap metal to be melted down * Funding the War Effort * Paid for through war bonds and increases in taxes * The government went into massive debt during the war; however, WWII demonstrated that massive government spending can play a significant role in stimulating a sluggish economy * War Production - Becoming the Arsenal of Democracy * In 1942, FDR created the War Production Board and the Office of War mobilization to oversee war production * Almost overnight, unemployment of the 1930s ended - there were actually labor shortages * To ensure uninterrupted production, labor unions agreed to refrain from striking during the war [[APUSH%20Study%20Guide%20by%20Timchong%202830477d275d409da904b058926c01ac:image1|{{APUSH%20Study%20Guide%20by%20Timchong%202830477d275d409da904b058926c01ac:image1.png}}]] World War II and American Values * Rosie the Riveter * There was a government effort to recruit women to participate in the war effort for factories * Rosie the Riveter was a fictional character in order to present female workers in a positive light * This campaign was successful and by 1945, ⅓ of the workforce was female * WWII and the Status of African Americans in American Society * African Americans, during WWII, mounted direct challenge to Jim Crow segregation, both through their participation in the armed forces and in war-related industries * They put the issue of race on the national agenda * African Americans and War Production * Although war industries were reluctant to hire African Americans, African American labor leader Randolph planned a public demonstration in DC to protest discrimination * FDR issued Executive Order 8802, banning discrimination in war-related industries * The Great Migration continued, with African Americans moving toward industrial centers * The Japanese Relocation * In 1942, FDR issued Executive Order 9066, authorizing the government to remove more than 100,000 Japanese Americans (both American born and immigrants) and place them into camps * SCOTUS ruled in Korematsu v. United States that the relocation was acceptable on the grounds of national security Migration and Mobilization * Mexicans and WWII * The Bracero program was initiated to bring temporary contract workers from Mexico - and the Mexican government pushed the US to guarantee that these workers would not be drafted * More than 200,000 Mexicans participated, however, they were the object of discrimination, harassment, and violence during WWII ===== World War II: Military ===== The Stakes Involved in WWII * The Nazi Regime and the Holocaust * In 1939, Hitler began his execution for the final solution of the Jewish question - the Holocaust, which also included Slavic people, gypsies, the disabled, and homosexuals * They were organized into ghettos, then moved to concentration camps where they would be killed * The American Response to the Holocaust * American officials resisted pleas to admit large numbers of Jewish refugees fleeing Europe * In 1939, German ship St. Louis carrying nearly 1000 escaped German Jews, was turned away by the US * Such resistance to refugees continued during the war * Japanese Wartime Atrocities * Americans saw Japanese wartime actions as a militarist ideology that threatened to undermine democratic traditions * The Nanjing Massacre (Rape of Nanking) ocurred in 1937, where Japanese troops killed thousands of civilians in China, resulting in 80,000-300,000 deaths Staffing the Military During WWII - Opportunities and Debate * Staffing the Military * FDR administration looked to staff the military even before Pearl Harbor * The Selective Service Act, passed in September 1940, created the first peacetime draft in US history * By 1941, 1 ½ million men were in the armed forces * Women in the Military * Many women served as nurses, and more than 150,000 joined the Women’s Army Corps * African Americans in the Armed Forces - The “Double V Campaign” * The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People encouraged African Americans to take part in the “Double V” campaign - victory against facism abroad and victory against racism in the US * The most famous segregated black units were the Tuskegee Airmen and the 761st Tank Battalion * Their effectiveness on the battlefield encouraged Truman to desegregate the armed services in 1948 with Executive Order 9981 The Allied Victory over the Axis Powers in WWII * War in the Pacific Theater * Although the defeat of Hitler was a top priority for the US, it was Japan that had directly attacked the US, causing them to send more troops to Japan than Europe * By 1942, Japan controlled a massive Pacific empire, causing setbacks for US forces * The Battles of Coral Sea and Midway * The US turned the tide of war in the Pacific with these two battles * After Midway, the US steadily began to push Japanese forces back toward the Japanese home islands * Island Hopping * This strategy was employed by the US to capture key Japanese-held islands * They would avoid attacking some of the most heavily fortified islands, and focus on islands that were most important - such as airfields, or key positions to block or attack enemy naval movements * The US cut off islands it had hopped over by blockading supply ships * War in Europe * Before 1944, most of the fighting against Germany was carried out by the USSR and Stalin * He urged the US and Britain to open a second front in Western Europe against Germany * The Washington and Casablanca Conferences * FDR and Churchill met twice to discuss strategy, agreeing not to invade through France but to open a front in North Africa, followed by an attack on the “soft underbelly” of the Axis - Italy * Fighting in North Africa * By 1943, North Africa was in Allied hands, with some of Hitler’s best troops defeated by British forces and American forces led by Eisenhower * The “Soft Underbelly” of the Axis * ¼ million Allied troops landed in Sicily in 1943 * They captured the city and dismissed Mussolini, and Italy’s new government left the Axis and joined the Allies * Germany was not ready to accept this, and Hitler sent reinforcements into Italy * Allies finally marched into Rome in 1944, but the rest of the advance up Italy was defended by German troops; Italy was no soft underbelly * D-Day and the Allied Assault on Europe * In 1944, the Allies stormed the beaches of Normandy, France, and began pushing Hitler’s forces back toward Germany * On D-Day, nearly 200,000 Allied troops landed with more than 1 million troops arriving over the next weeks * By August, Eisenhower and Allied forces liberated Paris from Nazi occupation * V-E Day * Hitler made one last attempt to stop the Allied assault; where German forces counterattacked Allied lines in Belgium in the Battle of the Bulge * American and British troops approached Germany from the west as Soviet troops approached from the east * On April 30, Hitler committed suicide, and on May 7, Germany surrendered: Victory in Europe Day * Victory in the Pacific * By 1945, American forces had taken control of most of Japan’s Pacific empire * More than 7,000 Americans in the battle for Iwo Jima, and the struggle for Okinawa was even more deadly - approximately 12,000 Americans died while Japan lost 140,000 * The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb, and the Japanese Surrender * Truman succeeded FDR after his sudden death * The US used the atomic bomb twice on Japan - on Hiroshima and Nagasaki * 226,000 people died, and Japan swiftly surrendered * The atomic bomb did not generate much public debate at the time, as it ended a bloody conflict that had consumed 50 million lives * Critics now argue that the Japanese were on the verge of surrender ===== Postwar Diplomacy ===== The United States and the Postwar World * Tehran Conference * Stalin, Churchill, and FDR met in Tehran, Iran, in November 1943 * They agreed to launch D-Day with a Society offensive, and Stalin pledged that the Soviet Union would join the war in Asia following the defeat of Germany * They agreed to forming an international peacekeeping organization (in theory) * Bretton Woods Conference * 44 nations met to discuss the basis of the global economy * The International Monetary Fund was established at this meeting * Yalta Conference * Most significant, and last, meeting of Churchill, Stalin, and FDR * They agreed to divide Germany into 4 military zones of occupation (the fourth occupied by France) * Stalin also allowed free elections in Poland, and was secretly allowed control of Outer Mongolia, the Kuril Islands, parts of Sakhalin Island, as well as Soviet railroad rights in Manchuria * Critics later FDR and Churchill for abandoning Poland and Eastern Europe to Communist forces * However, there was little they could do to dislodge the Red Army from Eastern Europe without starting an all out war * Potsdam Conference * The final meeting between these three countries was attended by Truman and Atlee (successor to Churchill) * They resolved the denazification of Germany, which led to the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials against the Nazis * Many defended themselves by claiming that they were merely following orders ===== Subject to Debate ===== * The Nature of American Imperialism * Critics often discuss the US as if it were a “colossus”, imposing its will on the world - protecting democracy is an excuse for its economic exploitation * Others hold a “realpolitik” approach that America must expand if it wants to maintain its current standard of living * A third view is the “international good guy” approach - that the US is truly driven by altruism * Progressivism and Progressive Historians * There are some questions to be raised about the movement - its assumptions, its effectiveness, and its relationship to Jim Crow policies * The Progressive Movement and the Business Community * Industry leaders initiated reform in the meat-packing industry to restore confidence in their industry * Another critique of the Progressive movement was their attitude toward the poor - trying to impose their idea of proper behavior on others * Ex. Prohibition - telling working class people they should not drink, this crusade against immoral behavior raises the issue of elitism * WWI in Public Memory * WWII is characterized as a good fight carried about by the greatest generation, whereas WWI is tucked away into a corner * One of the reasons that WWI is ignored, is that there is no clearly identifiable “evil” that the US was trying to defeat - this does not read like a morality play * As the war ended in 1919, America became violently conservative - the “Red Scare” was paving the way for the resurgence of the KKK, restrictions on immigration, and attacks on secularism * Consensus Historians and Intolerance in the 1920s * According to them, Americans share a belief in democracy and individual liberties, they believe that hard work leads to advancement, but do not try to impose their beliefs on others - they are a tolerant people * They would argue that the labor battles of the Gilded Age was not a battle between the high and low classes, but rather that they were strikers wanting a greater share of the wealth that the economy was generating * They have a great deal of difficulty explaining the 1920s and the KKK - 3 million Americans joined a violent, racist, intolerant, anti-Semitic organization - difficult to fit into the traditional consensus model of American history * Handling the Great Depression: Hoover vs. FDR * Hoover is not as incompetent as he is often portrayed * When the Depression hit, he implemented the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which provided needed funds to key sectors of the economy * Critics portray the New Deal as creeping socialism * The New Deal - Successful or Ineffective? * Some historians noted that the New Deal did not solve the problems of the Depression * Historians also note that the Depression only ended when the US began producing materials for WWII * Others argue that the New Deal restored hope among the American people and prevented more widespread suffering * Organized labor also made great strides because of New Deal legislation * Mortality and Justice in the WWII Era * Some historians insist that the US could have done more to save European Jews, such as allowing ships carrying refugees to dock * The debate over the use of the atomic bomb is also controversial, considering that Japan was likely ready to surrender by the time the bomb was used ===== Period 8 ===== ===== The Cold War from 1945 to 1980 ===== Forging a New Foreign Policy In the Postwar World * They sought to contain Communism by building a system of international security, maintaining a stable global economy, and bolstering non-Communist states * Origins of the Cold War * Tensions existed between the US and the USSR from the Russian Revolution, when America opposed the Bolsheviks * The Cold War began from the end of WWII * The US believed the Soviets were intent upon extending their control over Europe - as the war ended, the USSR left its Red Army troops occupying Eastern Europe where the countries became Soviet satellites, and they installed a puppet regime in Poland where they said they would allow free elections * Containment and the Truman Doctrine * Truman issued the Truman Doctrine (1947) in which he said the goal of the US was to contain Communism * The containment approach was spelled out in an article in Foreign Affairs “Sources of Soviet Conduct”, aka the “X Article” * Later it was learned that George Kennan, a diplomat who had served in the US embassy in Moscow, wrote the article - however, he later reversed himself and recommended dialogue with the USSR * However, the Cold war had begun * Military Aid to Greece and Turkey * As a part of containment, the US extended aid to Greece and Turkey, helping the Greek monarchy put down a Communist-influenced rebel movement movement * This quieted Republican criticism of Truman and allowed him to win reelection the following year * The Marshall Plan * Developed by Secretary of State Marshall, the plan allocated almost $13 billion for war-torn Europe to rebuild * West Germany, France, and Britain received the bulk of it, and this stabilized the capitalist economies of Western Europe * The Berlin Blockade and the Berlin Airlift * In 1948, the US decided to challenge the Soviet blockade of the Western-occupied section of Berlin * This enclave, occupied by Allied troops after WWII, was cut off from the West within Communist-controlled East Germany * The goal was for the USSR to cut off West Berlin’s food and supplies and make it part of East Germany * Over the next year, Truman sent more than 278,000 flights to supply western Berlin - “Berlin Airlift” - prevented the USSR from taking over the city * The Formation of NATO * The crisis over Berlin caused the US, Canada, and Western Europe to form a mutual defense pact * NATO was formed to resist any aggressive actions by the Soviet Union and created a standing army for this purpose * This was the first time the US joined a formal peacetime alliance * In response, the USSR formed an alliance with the COmmunist countries of Eastern Europe - the Warsaw Pact * Many countries that had been part of the Warsaw Pact joined NATO over the course of the Cold War Carrying out the Policy of Containment * NSC-68 * A National Security Council Paper, known as NSC-68, called for a more aggressive defense policy for the United States * It asserted that the US must assume a sole leadership position among the non-Communist nations * It recommended raising taxes and devoting more funds to military spending - largely shaping US foreign policy during the Cold War * The Cold War in Asia * The US successfully ushered Japan toward democracy and economic self-sufficiency * It also granted independence to the Philippines in 1946, however, Communist China was a difficult problem for Truman * Communism in China * China had been roiled by an ongoing civil war in the 1930s * After WWII, the US allied with the Nationalist side led by Jiang Jieshi * However, the Communist Party, led Mao Zedong amassed a huge following among the poor, rural population of China * Mao’s forces won in 1949 and the People’s Republic of China was established - the news that one of the biggest nations in the world had become Communist shocked many Americans who accused Truman of losing China * The Korean War (1950-53) * Korea had been divided at the 38th parallel after WWII, with the US administering the southern half, and the USSR administering the northern half * In 1948, they became North and South Korea * In 1950, North Korean troops, using Soviet equipment, invaded South Korea * United Nations forces, led by US General MacArthur pushed North Korean forces into North Korea, but China pushed back 150,000 troops over the Yalu River to push them back, settling on the 38th Parallel * The Firing of General MacArthur * During the Korean War, MacArthur made it clear that he thought the United States could invade China and roll back Communism * Truman was convinced that a wider war, so soon after WWII, would be disastrous and fired MacArthur for insubordination * Armistice in Korea * An armistice was reached and the Korean ended as it began - divided at the 38th Parallel * President Eisenhower, the “New Look” in Foreign Policy, and “Massive Retaliation” * Eisenhower pursued a policy labeled the “New Look” - emphasizing the development of strategic nuclear weapons as a deterrent to potential threats from the USSR * “Massive Retaliation” was an idea put forth by Secretary of State Dulles - designed to deter conventional as well as nuclear strikes by the USSR * Brinkmanship was the idea that the USSR needed to be aware that the USSR was willing to go to the brink of war with its nuclear arsenal * MAD * The Launching of Sputnik * Race for supremacy → exploration of outer space/space race * The Russians got to space first with Sputnik, which alarmed US officials, because this could be used to deliver atomic weapons to any location on Earth * The Space Race * After, the US created NASA after Sputnik (1958), and Kennedy announced the goal of landing a man on the moon * The goal was accomplished in 1969, when the US was the first nation to successfully land a spacecraft and men on the moon * Espionage and the U-2 Incident * The US maintained an extensive program of spying on the military capabilities of the Soviet Union * At first, the government denied the program existed, but in 1960, a high-altitude U-2 spy plane was shot down over Soviet territory * Eisenhower admitted the program existed and defended its goals * Cuban Missile Crisis * 1962 when a U-2 spy plane discovered that Cuba was preparing bases for installing Soviet nuclear missiles * Kennedy declared these missiles to be unacceptable and demanded that the Soviet premier, Nikita Khrushchev, halt the operation and withdraw, whereas Khrushchev insisted the USSR had the right to install these missiles * Finally, a deal was reached where the USSR would abandon its Cuban missile program and the United States would recognize Cuba’s sovereignty (The US also agreed to remove missiles from Turkey) The Cold War - From Confrontation to Detente * Eisenhower and Khrushchev Pursue Coexistence * Eisenhower and Khrushchev held a summit after the death of Stalin, however, the launch of Sputnik and the Soviet test of an ICBM pushed the two nations further apart * Just before Khrushchev and Eisenhower had scheduled a summit to sign a nuclear test ban, but just before they met, the American U-2 spy plane was shot down in the USSR, scuttling any potential argument * US Soviet Relations Under Kennedy * In wake of the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Partial Test Ban Treaty was signed by the US * The ban exempted underground nuclear tests * Detente with China and the USSR * Nixon’s policy of detente represented a thawing in the Cold War and an improvement of relations with the USSR * In 1971, Nixon initiated an agreement with the USSR where they accepted the independence of West Berlin and the US recognized East Germany * The 1972 Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) led to two arms-control agreements, and although tensions existed, detente led to discussions between two sides and to cultural exchanges * In 1972, Nixon visited China, making it the first time an American president visited the People’s Republic of China ===== The Red Scare ===== Containment and the Domestic Red Scare * The Strike Wave of 1946 and the Taft-Hartley Act (1947) * Immediately after WWII, the US experienced the largest strike wave in history (5 million workers) * Unions, who had refrained from striking during the war, feared that the gains they made during the war would be taken away * This was largely successful, boosting wages for factor workers and allowing them to partake in consumer culture * The Taft-Hartley Act was designed to monitor and restrict the activities of organized labor, making it more difficult to strike * It also let states pass “right to work” laws, banning union shops (workplaces where all workers were required to join a union if voted by the majority) * It also required union leaders to pledge they were not Communists * Federal Employee Loyalty and Security Program (1947) * Barred Communists and fascists from serving in federal government positions * Executive Order 9835 also allowed investigations to be held for current employees - forcing them to promise to uphold the Constitution and to swear they were not Communists * The McCarran Internal Security Act (1950) * Mandated that Communist groups in the US register with the government, allowing for the arrest of suspected security risks during national emergencies * Truman saw this as a threat to civil liberty and vetoed it, however, Congress passed it over his veto * Senator Joseph McCarthy * A Republican senator from Wisconsin, he rose to national prominence in 1950 when he announced he had a list of 205 “known Communists” who were working in the State Department * Although this number was later reduced to 57, he encouraged a mindset where people began to suspect those around them as Communists * The anti-Communist movmement of the 1950s is often referred to as McCarthyism * The Attack on Hollywood * Anti-communist Senate and House members put effort into investigating the film and broadcast industries, fearing that Communists would subtly get their messages out via media * In 1947, several famous directors and writers were called (“Hollywood Ten”) to testify in Washington but refused, citing the 1st Amendment * These ten, and others who refused to cooperate, were blacklisted, preventing them from finding work in Hollywood * The Threat of Nuclear War * Many Americans, because of the Cold War and conventional proxy wars, built bomb shelters in their basements or backyards * There were civil defense programs to build public bomb shelters and prepare the population for a nuclear emergency * Duck and Cover * The government issued a series of air-raid drills in public schools * When an alarm sounded, students would be ushered to a fallout shelter or be ordered to duck and cover * The Rosenberg Case * Many were convinced that Communists in the US provided the USSR with information, leading them to build and test a nuclear bomb in 1949 * The Rosenbergs were an American couple (members of the Communist Party) accused of such * They insisted on their innocence but were sent to the electric chair * The Smith Act and the Communist Party * Government prosecutors used the WWII Smith Act to arrest leading members of the Communist Party in several states on the grounds they conspired to organize the overthrow of the government by force * Between 1949-1957, more than 140 Communists were arrested, including their leader Eugene Dennis * The Fall of McCarthyism * Eventually, critics asserted that some anti-Communist measures violated people’s constitutional right to freedom of speech * McCarthy himself went too far, accusing members of the military establishment of being members of the Communist Party * After finding his accusations were baseless, the Senate vowed to censure McCarthy in 1954, ending this “witch hunt” * In Yates v. United States (1957), SCOTUS overturned the convictions of Communists that had been found guilty under the Smith Act ===== The Economy after 1945 ===== The Growth of the Middle Class * The GI Bill * Also known as the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act (1944), this provided low-interest loans for veterans to purchase homes and attend college * The Baby Boom * For several years before 1946, the birthrate was relatively low, due to the Great Depression and WWII * However, the return of veterans soon led to many more children * This baby boom would require states to spend more money on public education in the 1950s-60s and on expanding college enrollment in the 1960s-70s * Childrearing in the 1950s * The parents of the baby boom generation were enthusiastic readers of child-rearing guides * The most influential was Benjamin Spock’s Baby and Child Care (1946) * This book urged parents to treat children as individuals, let them develop at their own pace, and to focus less on discipline and more on affection * Conservative critics cited this book and causing baby boomers to join the counterculture movement of the 1960s (hippies) Suburban Growth and the Rise of the Sun Belt * The Growth of Suburbia * A series of factors after the war contributed to the unprecedented growth of these communities * There was a housing crunch created by all the returning WWII soldiers, many of whom married and had children and were looking for affordable housing * Many white people also did not want to live in the urban neighborhoods with the African Americans that had migrated in search of work - the move to suburbia is coined “white flight” * Levittown and Suburban Development * Innovative developer William Levitt, president of Lefitt and Songs, took large tracts of land outside major cities and built huge developments of nearly identical, modest houses * His company applied the techniques of mass production, building these houses rapidly and cheaply, Levittown becoming synonymous with these mass-produced communities * There were also critics of these communities - monotonous life * The Interstate Highway Act * Highway initiatives made suburbia attractive, as one could drive into cities from the suburbs quickly * The National Interstate and Defense Highways Act (1956) allowed the government to initiate a massive highway building project that resulted in the interstate highway system * The act was also promoted as a defense measure, allowing for the rapid movement of military equipment and personnel * White Flight and the Decline of Older Cities * As middle-class families left urban centers, cities saw their tax bases shrink dramatically * With scarce funds, cities had to cut back on basic services such as policing and education, leading to more crime and leading more middle class families to move out * By the 1960s, entire sections of cities became slums * Urban Renewal * To address the decline of older cities, the government developed a set of initiatives called the urban renewal program * A central piece was the Title I: Housing Act of 1949, which provided federal financing for slum clearance programs * However, this program displaced thousands of urban residents, and frequently, nothing was built to replace the demolished neighborhoods * Low income urban housing projects often proved to simply breed crime and unsanitary conditions, and Title I was often used to clear land to build highways rather than additional housing * Most cities were left in a worse shape than before the programs ===== Culture After 1945 ===== Cultural Conformity and Its Discontents * Conformity in a Conservative Decade * There were societal pressures toward conformity in the 1950s * Part of this is due to the Cold War and McCarthyism - many Americans were intimidated and were reluctant to appear nonconformist * Americans were more eager to mold their ideas to societal standards than think independently * Whyte’s The Organization Man (1956) described the modern corporation where employees were expected to think like a group * Wilson’s The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1955) depicted a businessman trapped in the materialistic commercial world of the 1950s * J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye (1951) railed at the “phonies” who had achieved success in mainstream 1950s society (against conformity) * Television * By the end of the 1950s, nearly 90% of American homes owned a television * The most emblematic genre of the 50s was the sitcom - with a wise father figure, stay home mother, and obedient children such as Leave It to Beaver and Father Knows Best * There were also westerns and soap operas - many genres carrying over from the radio * The Ed Sullivan Show, a variety show which aired from 1948-71 became a cultural touchstone for millions of Americans every Sunday evening * Rock ‘n’ Roll Music * Extremely popular among young people in the 50s, it was developed primarily in the African-American community * It was dubbed “race music” and was deemed dangerous by mainstream white commentators, fearing that it would encourage racial mixing as well as sexually-suggestive dancing * Presley became a huge cultural force in America, following in the footsteps of African-American performers * This music was part of a distinct youth culture ushering in a generational divide in American society * Beat Generation Literature * The beats represented a rejection of mainstream social values - the suburban lifestyle, the consumer society, patriotism * On the Road, by Jack Kerouac (1957) is a stream of consciousness screed, depicting a life of spontaneity and freedom * Ginsberg’s book, Howl and Other Poems (1956) ripped apart at the foundations of Cold War, materialistic American society * Abstract Expressionism * Centered in NYC, this movement emphasized spontaneity, emotion, and intensity over realistic reproductions of the visible world * The most famous was Jackson Pollock ===== Early Steps in the Civil Rights Movement (1940s and 50s) ===== Origins, Strategies, and Tactics of the Civil Rights Movement * The Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s * Blossomed in the 1950s; it challenged both the legal basis of segregation and the pervasive racism in society - the racism that had justified slavery and the persistence of Jim Crow segregation * A more receptive federal government gave support and backing to civil rights activism * It forced America to examine its most cherished institutions and reevaluate ingrained patterns of thought * At the same time, there was an intense backlash among whites in the South * WWII and the Origins of the Civil Rights Movement * WWII was a transformative experience for blacks - many returning soldiers who had taken part in the Double V campaign felt a sense of empowerment and engagement * The injustices of American life seemed reprehensible to men who had just risked their lives serving their country * In addition, the migration from rural to urban centers strengthened their appetite for change and justice * Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955-56) * The catalyst for the boycott was Rosa Parks, an active member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), who refused to give up her seat to a white person * Although this was not the first time this had happened, civil rights leaders thought the time was right and used her as a public persona for the campaign against segregation * The movement created the Montgomery Improvement Association to direct the campaign and selected MLK to head the organization * MLK Jr. and Nonviolent Civil Disobedience * He soon became the central figure in the civil rights movement of the 50s and 60s * He advocated civil disobedience to directly challenge unjust practices, rather than violence Government Responses to Civil Rights Activism * Truman and Civil Rights * He was an early supporter of civil rights, creating the Committee on Civil Rights and issuing Executive Order 9981 (banning segregation in the military) * However, he felt he should not go too far because he would lose the support of southern Democrats * A Favorable Supreme Court * This iteration was far more liberal than in 1896 when it issued Plessy v. Ferguson * The NAACP and its lead lawyer, Thurgood Marshall, thought the time was right to bring a key civil rights case to the court * The Case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) * Reverend Brown’s daughter had to go to school a mile away rather than the nearby white school * There was evidence showing the psychological impact of segregation (Brandeis Brief) * SCOTUS ruled that the separate but equal doctrine of Plessy had to end, and that separate educational facilities are inherently unequal * This was a great encouragement to the civil rights movement, believing that the government was in favor of civil rights, however, they were met with opposition by southern whites Challenges for the Civil Rights Movement * Massive Resistance in Little Rock Crisis and Beyond * There was a violent backlash by many southern whites * An example was in Little Rock, where authorities allowed 9 black students to enroll in Central High School * Governor Faubus refused to cooperate, which led to mob action and violence outside the high school * He sent the National Guard to bar them from entering the school, and when this reached national news coverage, Eisenhower sent federal troops * However, Eisenhower’s administration was very reluctant to take action in regard to civil rights for African Americans in general ===== America as a World Power ===== United States Actions in Latin America * Regime Change in Guatemala * In Guatemala, the US orchestrated the ousting of the democratically elected Jacobo Arbenz in 1954 * He was a reform minded leader who began a land redistribution program * He was looking to nationalize some of the landholdings of the American-owned United Fruit Company, who grew Chiquita bananas * He planned to nationalize lands that were not under cultivation and buy them to distribute them to poverty-stricken peasants * The company refused and the CIA organized a coup, training an opposition army, that would oust Arbenz and install a military dictatorship in his place * The bitter feelings left contributed to civil war in Guatemala that lasted until the 90s * Hostilities with Cuba * From 1933-59, Cuba had been run as a military dictatorship with close ties to the US, but in 1959, Castro overthrew the government * Since then, the US and Cuba grew further apart while Cuba got closer to the USSR * In the final months of the Eisenhower administration, carrying over into Kennedy who adopted the plan, the US trained, armed, and aided a group of Cuban exiles to overthrow Castro * They landed in the Bay of Pigs in 1961, but were quickly captured by Cuban forces * Intervention in the Dominican Republic * Just before Vietnam, Johnson intervened in the Dominican Republic, whose repressive military ruler, General Trujilo, had been assassinated in 1961 * In 1965, when it appeared that left nationalist leader, Juan Bosch, might ascend to power, Johnson dispatched 30,000 Marines claiming that Bosch was a Communist The Military-Industrial Complex and the Arms Race * The Military Industrial Complex * Popularized by Eisenhower, the term implied a close-knit relationship between government officials, military leaders, and corporate interests * Policy decisions might be made to advance the interests of the military industrial complex, which might be at odds with other foreign policy goals * Challenging America’s Nuclear Policy * Even before people protested America’s military involvement in Vietnam, some were critical of America’s nuclear weapons policy * Policymakers had to accept MAD, but organizations such as the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE) in 1957 challenged the nuclear tests of the Eisenhower Administration * In 1961, the newly formed Women’s Strike for Peace inspired more than 50,000 women to march for peace Decolonization, Nationalism, and US Policy in the Middle East and Africa * Decolonization and US Foreign Policy * A wave of nationalist movements developed throughout Asia and Africa * For example, India gained independence in a movement led by Gandhi * US foreign policy evolved - on one hand, the US professed support for the concept of self-determination, granting the Philippines independence in 1946, but on the other hand, it had strong ties with many European powers who had colonies * As the Cold War intensified, the Truman and Eisenhower administrations became concerned that the newly independent countries would end up in the orbit of the USSR * The US encouraged European powers to negotiate with their colonies to ensure peaceful paths to independence * The US also established the Peace Corps in 1961 to extend aid packages and assistance to these countries, also resorting to military force and covert operations to install regimes favorable to US interests * Iran and the CIA * In 1951, the left leaning, reform-minded Mohammad Mosaddegh was elected prime minister, and he nationalized oil fields and refineries, angering Western oil interests * He also challenged Iran’s hereditary ruler Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, who was close to Western Oil interests * Eisenhower authorized the CIA, with the support of the MI6 agents, to instigate a coup against Mosaddegh, restoring the Shah’s power * This event would later come back to haunt the US a generation later in the aftermath of the 1979 Iranian Revolution * The Eisenhower Doctrine * Eisenhower, becoming concerned about events in the Middle East after Colonel Nasser took power in Egypt, after the ousting of King Farouk (who was close to Great Britain) * Nasser established close relations with the USSR and seized control of the British and French owned Suez Canal * Eisenhower, the UN, and the USSR pressured France, Great Britain, and Israel invading Egypt to retake control of the canal to withdraw * Afterward, Eisenhower pledged he would support any Middle Eastern country threatened by “any nation controlled by international Communism” * It was invoked in 1958 when a rebel movement friendly to Nasser emerged in Lebanon ===== The Vietnam War ===== The War in Vietnam * Background to American Involvement in Vietnam * From mid 1800s - mid 1900s, Indochina, including Vietnam, was a French possession * It was occupied by Japan during WWII, and then reoccupied by France when the Japanese left * A resistance movement led by Ho Chi Minh defeated the French at Dien Bien Phu, and france withdrew * Vietnam was divided at the 17th parallel between COmmunist North Vietnam, led by Ho Chi Minh, and Western South Vietnam * Rebel fighters, known as the Vietcong, fought to defeat a corrupt and dictatorial South Vietnam * American observers concluded that, without outside help, South Vietnam would likely fall to the Communists * The Domino Theory * It asserts that when a nation adopts Communism, its neighbors are likely to become Communist as well * This presumes that Communism is imposed on a country from outside, not developing as a result of internal conditions * The US Sends Advisors to Vietnam * US aid went to South Vietnam to fight anti-government rebels * The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution * Johnson announced in 1964 that American destroyers had been fired upon by North Vietnamese gunboats in the Gulf of Tonkin, which was questionable, but it gave Johnson a blank check to engage in military operations without a formal declaration of war * This can be considered the beginning of the Vietnam War * The Tet Offensive * This was a major attack on South Vietnamese, US, and allied bases and towns by the Vietcong in 1968 * This left 9,000 allied forces dead, and 40,000 Vietcong dead * The offensive was defeated, but it demonstrated the ability of the Vietcong to organize a coordinated strike in South Vietnamese territory * The My Lai Massacre * In 1968, a company of American troops killed almost everyone in the village of My Lai despite finding no enemy forces * In 1971, Lieutenant William Calley was found guilty of the massacre, which led many Americans to question the morality of the war * Vietnamization of the Vietnam War * Nixon promised the people that he had a plan for peace with honor in the war when he ran for president * However, he widened the war to Cambodia, beginning a policy of Vietnamization - replacing American troops with South Vietnamese troops * Nixon could not lead american forces to victory, so the US pulled out in 1973, and by 1975, South Vietnam was defeated and Vietnam was reunited as a Communist Country Debates Over Executive Power * The War Powers Act * Many members of Congress were frustrated with the actions of both presidents during the war - Johnson and Nixon * They considered Nixon expanding the war into Cambodia and Laos taking away Congress’s authority to declare war * The War Powers Act (1973) was an attempt to check presidential power, requiring the president to report any troop deployments to Congress and giving them the ability to force the withdrawal of US troops after 60 days ===== The Great Society ===== Poverty Amid Affluence * Abundance in Postwar America * America saw unprecedented growth in GDP from 1945-1960, from $200 → $500 billion * There was a dramatic rise in the middle class - home and car ownership, a college education, and a comfortable income * The Other America * Harrinton’s The Other America: Poverty in the US (1962) revealed the existence of pervasive poverty in society to Americans, including Kennedy * He noted that many of the technological advancements associated with economic growth resulted in job displacement and 50 million Americans living in poverty - in decaying urban slums or rural towns * This helped the domestic agendas of Kennedy and Johnson The Liberal Agenda in the 1960s * The Elements of 1960s Liberalism * Liberalism, called the “Great Society”, was the domestic agenda of LBJ; however, liberalism has deep roots and drew on a number of sources * The liberal belief in the efficacy of government initiatives in addressing social problems can be traced back to the Progressive agenda as well as the New Deal * Liberals sided with economist Keynes, who encouraged government expenditures to stimulate economic activity as well as to address broader social and economic goals * They sided with moderate labor leaders who had purged the labor movement of Communists and radicals after WWII * In terms of foreign policy, liberalism was decidedly anti-Communist * Although they condemned the excess of witch-hunting, they attempted to contain international Communism; and while some embraced Communism in the 30s, the violence of Stalinism pushed them toward an anti-Communist position * Liberalism in the White House - From Kennedy to Johnson * Kennedy’s election was a break with conservatism and an embrace of liberalism * His domestic agenda was called the “New Frontier” and are embodied in the Peace Corps, established to assist underdeveloped countries, with their volunteers working for 2 years as teachers, health workers, or advisors * He also created the Agency for International Development to coordinate aid to foreign countries, and the Alliance for Progress, a series of development projects in Latin America * LBJ passed a host of domestic programs that rivaled the New Deal, however, his administration’s reputation was ruined by a costly and unpopular war in Vietnam The Great Society Advances the Liberal Agenda * The Great Society * A major goal of LBJ was to end poverty - Great Society programs developing Medicare and Medicaid, welfare programs, and public housing * The Office of Economic Opportunity would oversee these programs, however, they had limited success because the cycle of poverty was too difficult to break in a short period of time * The war in Vietnam also became increasingly costly, diverting billions of dollars Immigrations Reform and the Great Society * Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 * The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 continued to limit the number of immigrants, but it eliminated the quota system based on national origins * Exemptions were set for those who had family members already in the US, and preference was also given to immigrants with particular skills needed in the US ===== The African-American Civil Rights Movement (1960s) ===== Civil Rights Activism in the 1960s * The Lunch Counter Sit-ins (1960) * Students in TE and NC began sitting in a lunch counters to protest segregation * The movement began in Greensboro, NC, when 4 black students challenged the whites only policy of Woolworth’s lunch counter * This got to the front page of newspapers, and eventually pressured companies to end the practice * The Freedom Rides (1961) * Even after SCOTUS ruling that state laws separating races on interstate transportation facilities were unconstitutional, states maintained Jim Crow segregation laws that separated passengers * In 1961, the Congress on Racial Equality organized a city of bus rides with blacks riding alongside whites to challenge these laws * Violence broke out in the South, slashing the tires and firebombing the buses, leading to Kennedy sending marshals to protect the Freedom Riders and to enforce the federal law * “Bull” Connor and the Birmingham Campaign (1963) * MLK and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference launched a major campaign in Birmingham, Alabama, to protest racial segregation * This was a turning point in the push for federal legislation - public safety commissioner Eugene “Bull” Connor used violent tactics to break up the children’s march * Images of police brutality helped to bring public sympathy to the side of the civil rights movement * King wrote “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, insisting that the legal system needed to address the issue of racial injustice; this campaign would pave the way for the Civil Rights Act * The March on Washington (1963) * More than 200,000 people gathered to demonstrate, listening to MLK’s “I Have a Dream” speech * The Selma to Montgomery March (1965) * With the Civil Rights Act, the movement became increasingly focused on voting rights * Organizers with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference worked to challenge restrictions on black voter registration in Selma, Alabama * MLK put himself in jail to gain publicity, and LBJ spoke in favor of the campaign * In response to the death of protester Jackson by the police, organizers organized a march from Selma to Montgomery * County and state police blocked their path, ordering them to turn back, and attacked them with clubs and tear gas * This incident, known as Bloody Sunday, was broadcast on national television and roused many Americans Debate Within the Civil Rights Movement * From “Freedom Now!” to “Black Power!” * As the civil rights movement achieved success in ending legal segregation, there were still patterns of segregation enforced by custom, as well as the poverty, poor housing, and lack of decent jobs that continued to plague black communities * The call switched from Freedom Now! to Black Power! * A group known as the Black Panther Party took up this cry but their actions grew increasingly more militant * Malcolm X * He was a central figure in the more militant turn the civil rights movement took * He was a member and leader of the Nation of Islam, an African-American group that shared certain practices with Islam, and advocated that blacks organize among themselves, separate from whites * After making a pilgrimage to Mecca, Malcolm X revised his views about black separatism and left the Nation of Islam, however, he was killed by their assassins, but his words continued to inspire the movement * Urban Rioting * In Harlem, 1964, a police officer shot a 15 year old black boy, leading to riots in LA (1965), Detroit (1967), and Newark, NJ (1967) * A series of riots ensued after the assassination of MLK * The riots in Detroit were the deadliest of all the riots that comprised “the long hot summer of 1967” * LBJ formed the Kerner Commission to investigate the causes of rioting in black communities - the root of which was poverty and segregation * The report noted that America was moving towards separate societies, “one black one white - separate and unequal” * The Assassination of King (1968) * He was killed in 1968, and it was a source of national mourning and an indicator of the decline of the African-American civil rights movement of the era Major Federal Legislative Victories for the Civil Rights Movement * Kennedy, Johnson, and the Politics of Civil Rights * Democrats had walked a fine line in civil rights - Democrats after FDR believed that black rights were correct and just, but the party did not want to alienate its southern wing * When civil rights leader Medgar Evans was murdered, Kennedy called civil rights a “moral issue” and pledged to support civil rights legislation * LBJ took up the cause of civil rights and pressured reluctant Democratic legislators to support it * Civil Rights Act (1964) * Passed and signed by LBJ in 1964 - intended to end discrimination based on race and gender * It guaranteed equal access to public accommodations, public education, and voting * It banned discrimination in employment based on race and gender * The Voting Rights Act (1965) * The federal government was able to oversee voter registration in counties with low African-American registration * It outlawed literacy and poll taxes, and by 1968, black voters jumped from 1 million to 3 million The Warren Court and the Expansion of Civil Rights * The Warren Court * Under Warren as chief justice, SCOTUS moved in a liberal direction, including cases such as Brown * It continued to protect the rights of minorities, reinforced separation of church and state, established an individual’s right to privacy, and protected the rights of those accused of crimes * Expanding the Rights of the Accused * In Mapp v. Ohio (1961), SCOTUS ruled that evidence obtained in violation of the law must be excluded from criminal prosecutions * In Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) SCOTUS ruled that states must provide impoverished defendants with court-appointed attorneys * In Miranda v. Arizona (1966), SCOTUS ruled that arrested people must be read their basic rights, now known as Miranda Rights * The Right to Privacy * In Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), the Court ruled that laws forbidding the use of birth-control devices were unconstitutional * Roe v. Wade insisted that states allow abortions during the first two trimesters of pregnancy * Free Speech * In Tinker v. Des Moines (1969), SCOTUS ruled that a school prohibiting against students wearing black armbands in protest of the war in Vietnam was unconstitutional * In Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969), SCOTUS ruled that the government cannot restrict inflammatory speech unless that speech is likely to incite unlawful action * Freedom of the Press * In New York Times v. Sullivan (1964), SCOTUS overturned the decision of Sullivan who sued The New York Times for running an ad calling attention to the violence being committed in the South against civil rights demonstrators * He contended that the ad defamed him, however, SCOTUS ruled that publications must have exhibited “actual malice” * Reapportionment and “One-person, One-vote” * In Baker v. Carr (1966), SCOTUS ruled that legislative districts must be redrawn to have equal numbers of people - without reapportionment, urban areas would be grouped into one district and underrepresented, violating the principle of one-person, one-vote * Prayer in Public Schools and the Separation of Church and State * In Engel v. Vitale (1962), SCOTUS ruled that the Regents’ Prayer, a prayer recited by public school children in NY state, was unconstitutional because it violated separation of church and state ===== The Civil Rights Movement Expands ===== Latinos, American Indians, and Asian Americans, Press For Justice * American Indians Resistance to Termination * American Indians grew increasingly bitter toward federal policies in regard to tribes - in 1953, the government passed a policy of termination, where the government would encourage Indians to assimilate into white culture and would then terminate recognition of tribes as legal entities * This weakened the influence of tribal authorities and oled to resistance, and although Eisenhower moved away from an active enforcement of the policy, in 1961 several tribes met and wrote a manifesto called the Declaration of Indian Purpose * The American Indian Movement * AIM was founded in 1968 and began protests, occupying the headquarters of the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs in DC and demonstrated at Wounded Knee, SD, calling for a change in the administration of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation * AIM was successful in making change - in 1972, Nixon promised Indians greater autonomy over tribal lands, and in 1978, SCOTUS ruled in United States v. Wheeler that Congress could not “terminate” tribes * Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers * He founded the United Farm Workers to protect migrant farmers * They organized a nationwide boycott of grapes to pressure farm owners to pay their workers a decent wage, which resulted in a wage increase in 1970 * The Asian-American Civil Rights Movement * Focused on several issues - the creation of ethnic studies programs in universities, an end to the Vietnam War, and reparations for Japanese Americans * Uyematsu’s “The Emergence of Yellow Power” cited Black Power as a catalyst for Asian American empowerment * Student strikes were led at SFSU and Cal which resulted in extensive studies programs * Japanese Americans were given reparations in 1988 when Reagan signed legislation distributing $20,000 in reparations to each internee Movements for Women’s Rights and Gay Liberation * The Women’s Liberation Movement * This emerged in the 1960s, challenging inequities in the job market, representations of women in the media, violence against women, and an ingrained set of social values * They realized their contributions to society and families were deemed less important than those of men * Many were inspired by Betty Firedan’s 1963 The Feminine Mystique which challenged traditional options in life * Friedan was one of several women to found the National Organization for Women * Many women had come out of New Left activist organizations, empowered to fight for a better world, but were frustrated with the treatment women received in these organizations * Protest at the Miss America Pageant * This was the first time many Americans heard about this movement * This pageant exemplified, to protesters, society’s attitude that women were valued for their looks above all else * Title IX (1972) * This banned gender discrimination in all aspects of education, such as faculty hiring and admissions * This led to major funding for female sports activities at the high school and college levels * The Gay Liberation Movement * Born in 1969 when patrons at the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in NY, resisted a raid by the police * This brought the discrimination that gay men and women were suffering from to light Feminism, the Counterculture, and the Rethinking of Gender Norms * The Sexual Revolution * The 60s witnessed development of more tolerant attitudes towards sexual behavior * The pill was introduced into the market, and many states looked to impede the distribution of information and products related to birth control * SCOTUS invalidated such laws like in Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), ruling that robidding the use of birth control devices were unconstitutional because they violated the privacy rights of individuals * Roe v. Wade (1973) * SCOTUS declared that states shall not prohibit women from having an abortion during the first two trimesters of pregnancy, affirming people the right to privacy * The “Quiet Revolution” * The percentage of women engaged in the workforce has grown from the 70s to the present * The women’s liberation movement challenged traditional gender expectations, women had greater control over productive lives, and many women made the decision to focus on a career first ===== Youth Culture of the 1960s ===== Youth Culture and the Movement Against the Vietnam War * The Draft * The Selective Service System began increasing the number of young men drafted to serve in the armed forces, almost doubling monthly totals * This made the Vietnam War an immediate concern for millions of young men * A “Living Room War” * This was the first war where Americans were able to see images of warfare in their living rooms on TV * This caused many to question the justness of the war * A Working Class War * 80% of the troops in Vietnam were working class and poor * Middle-class youths often managed to get college deferments or had connections to get a stateside position in the National Guard * The Unraveling of the Vietnam War * In 1968, the war in Vietnam seemed increasingly unwinnable, with the Vietcong launching the Tet Offensive * Opponents of the war became increasingly vocal, especially after the My Lai Massacre was exposed to the public * The Antiwar Movement * Several antiwar groups had emerged out of the growing protest movement, with the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (1967) organizing large gatherings in DC that brought ½ million people to the nation’s capital * Vietnam Veterans Against the War * This organization harnessed the frustrations of returning veterans of the conflict; many soldiers questioned the tactics and the purpose of the war * Some soldiers would rebel by throwing live grenades at their commanding officers in the field * The Shootings at Kent State and Jackson State * During a demonstration at Kent State University against Nixon’s decision to invade Cambodia, Ohio National Guardsmen killed 4 and wounded 10 * 11 days later, two black students were killed by state police at Jackson State University * Publication of the Pentagon Papers * This was a study leaked by Daniel Ellsberg; the Nixon administration tried to block the NYT and Washington Post from publishing the papers * SCOTUS, in New York Times Co. v. United States (1971) upheld the right of the newspapers to publish the information * This is the origin of many of the antiwar movement’s suspicions The New Left * Students for a Demoncratic Society and the Rise of the New Left * SDS had chapters at major college campuses across the country * They adopted a guiding manifesto - the Port Huron Statement - which was an important document in the development of the New Left, stressing participatory democracy and direct action * New Left vs. Old Left * Old left focused more on workplace issues while the New Left focused on participatory democracy and cultural, social, economic, and political issues * The Old Left was closely associated with the Communist Party but both embraced the struggle for black civil rights Countercultural Values and American Culture * Bob Dylan and the Folk Revival * His music attracted listeners who found the pop songs of the era repetitive * Some of his songs became protest anthems, and his wide-ranging poetic lyrics earned him the 2016 Nobel Prize in Literature * The British Invasion * The Beatles and the Rolling Stones transformed American culture, drawing from African American music - from rhythm and blues to rock ‘n roll * Conservatives were troubled by the Beatlemania and their long hair, allusions to drug use, interest in Eastern religions, and challenges to traditional notions of moral values * The “Hippie Movement” and Haight-Ashbury * This movement was visible in neighborhoods like San Fran.’s Haight-Ashbury and NY’s Greenwich Village * This counterculture was a complete rejection of materialistic conformity * Encouraged urban and rural communal living, DIY, mystic spiritual experiences, drug use, experimental music, and avant-garde art * They organized “be-ins” - gatherings of young people that were part political protest and part Spiritual and artistic festival * Woodstock and Altamont * Counterculture reached its peak in 1969 * The Woodstock Festival attracted ½ million attendees to a farm in upstate NY, providing a glimpse of a utopian future * Promoters tried to duplicate this at the Altamont Speedway in CA, however, one concertgoer was stopped and stabbed to death by a member of the concert’s security detail as the Rolling Stones performed ===== The Environment and Natural Resources from 1968 to 1980 ===== The Middle East, Oil, and National Energy Policy * The US, Israel, and the Arab World * Since the founding of Israel in 1948, tensions have existed in the Middle East, with Arab nations refusing to recognize Israel’s right to exist; the US was a strong ally of Israel * In 1973, OPEC cut off exports to the US and increased the price of oil, retaliating for US support of Israel in the 1973 Yom Kippur War * The Camp David Accords (1978) * Jimmy Carter provided a foundation for a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel * These accords are one of the few triumphs for Carter’s presidency * In 1977, the Egyptian president Anwar Sadat broke with the other leaders of the Arab world and met Israeli prime minister Meachem Begin * They were invited by Carter to a presidential retreat in Maryland, and a peace treaty emerged between Egypt and Israel; tensions still remained between Israel and other nations * The Energy Crisis and the Limits of Growth * Because of the OPEC oil embargo, America was forced to confront the reality that there were limited fossil fuels, and that most of it came from the Middle East * Until the 1970s, Americans assumed petroleum was a cheap, inexhaustible commodity, but the 70s saw a dramatic spike in prices at gas pumps * The Iranian Revolution and the Iran Hostage Crisis * The 1979, the US supported leader of Iran, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi was ousted by Muslim religious leader, the Ayatollah Khomeini * When the US admitted the Shah to the US for medical treatment, angry Iranian students took over the US embassy and kept the personnel there hostage * The Carter Doctrine * This stated that the US would repel any outside force that attempted to gain control of the Persian Gulf region * This would keep an eye on protecting oil interests as well as halting any steps by the USSR on expanding into this region * This more aggressive stance in the Middle East was brought about by the Iranian Revolution (1979) and Soviet intervention of Afghanistan * The USSR sent troops into Afghanistan to prop up a pro-Soviet government in the face of a rebellion led by the Afghani Mujahideen rebel group * The USSR initiated a coup, installed a new government, and remained in the country for a decade * Carter saw this as a threat to American interests in the region * Toward a National Energy Policy * While some were looking for alternative ways the US could access petroleum, others were looking for ways to reduce energy consumption * Starting in the 1950s, the US increased its reliance on nuclear power, and Carter with the Department of Energy encouraged conservation measures, such as turning down thermostats and turning off lights * He also encouraged investment in renewable energy * Americans were very opposed to adopting conservation measures, however * The 55 Miles Per Hour Speed Limit and the Truckers’ Rebellion * In response to the energy crisis, Nixon proposed a reduced national speed limit, which was passed by Congress as the National Maximum Speed Law in 1974 * The law was unpopular with many drivers as coupled with rising fuel prices, truckers were especially affected * A widespread truckers’ strike would occur in 1974 organized by makeshift groups such as the Owner-Operator and Independent Drivers Association of America, using citizen band radios * Despite these efforts, the speed limit stayed in place until the 1980s * Nuclear Energy * Some Americans put faith in nuclear energy as an alternative to fossil fuels * Although uranium did not produce emissions and was cheap, the nuclear waste was hard to dispose of and there was always the risk of accidents like Three Mile Island happening * Moreover, nuclear power did not achieve the level of energy generation that planners had hoped for Growth of the Environmental Movement * The Environmental Movement * Environmental issues were brought to the public attention by Carson’s 1962 Silent Spring which described how modern society was poisoning the Earth * Many participants in the movement were veterans of the New Left and the movement to end the Vietnam War - New Left = critique of corporate power and influence * The counterculture hippie movement also encouraged people to rid themselves of material possessions * The Nixon administration created the Environmental Protection Agency in 1970 and approved the Clean Air Act to set standards for air quality * Love Canal and the Establishment of the Superfund * Calls for greater federal environmental regulation of the environment emerged after evidence of deadly toxic pollutants appeared at Love Canal, a waterway near Niagara Falls * Residents noticed unusually high levels of birth defects and miscarriages in the area * Carter declared a state of emergency, which led to the creation of the federal Superfund program to investigate and clean up contaminated sites * The Dangers of Nuclear Energy and Three Mile Island * Groups such as the Clamshell Alliance and the Abalone Alliance attracted thousands, gaining strength after a partial meltdown cased a release of radiation at Three Mile Island in 1979 * In 1986, an explosion led to the release of large amounts of radiation in Chernobyl * More recently, in 2011, an earthquake and a tsunami led to the meltdowns at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan ===== Society in Transition ===== The Conservative Response to Rapid Social and Economic Change * The Origins of the Conservative Movement * It came of age with the victory of Reagan in 1980, however, it is visible in the 60s as well, with many Americans dismayed by protests against Vietnam, counterculture, civil rights movement, and the changing nature of the American family and the rise in divorce rates * The conservative movement can be split in two: a “massive resistance” movement in the South, the John Birch Society, and the 1968 candidacy of Geroge Wallace for president; and a more mainstream conservatism, evident in National Review, edited by Buckley and the candidacy of Barry Goldwater in 1964 * Young Americans for Freedom * Founded by Conservatives in 1960s, its founding document, the Sharon Statement, brought together a correlation between free markets and personal freedom, an emphasis on anti-Communism, and a push toward limiting the size and scope of government * Barry Goldwater and the Origins of the New Right * Despite losing the LBJ, there was a great deal of grassroots enthusiasm behind Goldwater’s campaign, representing the beginning of modern conservatism The Decline of Public Trust in the 1970s * Stagflation * While high unemployment is a sign of a stagnant economy and high inflation is a sign of an active economy, the 1970s experienced high levels of both, dubbed stagflation, continuing throughout the 70s * Whip Inflation Now * Ford’s solutions were mostly inadequate, his most public initiative being the Whip Inflation Now campaign (WIN), encouraging people to be more disciplined with their money and to wear WIN buttons * Foreign Policy Failures of the 1970s * Although successful in pursuing peace in the Middle East, his foreign policy results were mixed when it came to the Panama Canal Zone and the Iran hostage crisis * Republicans would assert that Carter had left the US in a weaker position * The Panama Canal * The Panama Canal Treaty called for the US to turn over control of the canal to Panama by December 31, 1999; and the other asserted that the canal shall remain neutral and open to shipping of all nations, reserving the right of the US to intervene if this was not the case * Critics were furious that the US surrendered direct control of a major strategic asset Clashing Political Values * Watergate, the Undoing of President Nixon, and the Limits of Presidential Power * The Watergate scandal began in 1972 when five men were caught breaking into the headquarters of the Democratic Party at the Watergate hotel in DC * Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward of the Washington Post would reveal Nixon’s role in stealing documents and wiretapping the phones of his political rivals; for his reelection campaign * In 1974, the House Judiciary Committee voted in favor of articles of impeachment against Nixon, however, before the House of Representatives could address the article,s, Nixon resigned * Clashes over Equal Rights * There was a push to add an Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution, galvanizing the women’s liberation movement * However, there was conservative backlash, arguing that it would destroy the traditional American family unit * The amendment was approved by both House and Senate, but failed to get states’ ratification * Clashing Views of Affirmative Action * In 1961, Kennedy issued an executive order mandating that projects using federal funds take “affirmative action” to make sure that employers do not discriminate based on race * In 1965, LBJ went further, mandating that federal contractors and subcontractors make efforts to hire “protected class, underutilized” candidates * When it came to affirmative action, white applicants felt that they were being punished for wrongs done by others; Bakke was denied admission at UCC Medicine * In Bakke v. University of California (1978), SCOTUS ruled that the specific quotas for minorities violated the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, however, they asserted that race could be a factor in admissions decisions * Christian Fundamentalism and the Religious Right * Opposition to Roe v. Wade * Brought together Protestants and Catholics to create a broad Chistian conservative movement * The “Moral Majority” and Focus on the Family * The Moral Majority was founded by Reverend Jerry Falwell in 1979, who embarked on a series of I Love America rallies, breaking a traditional Baptist principle of separating religion from politics * Focus on the Family was founded in 1977 by psychologist James Dobson, and promotes an abstinence only approach to sex education, the reintroduction of prayer into schools, reinforcement of traditional gender roles, and opposition to LGBTQ+ marriage ===== Subject to Debate ===== * Assessing American and Soviet Actions in the Cold War * During the Cold War, historians evaluated American actions as standing for democracy, freedom, and progress while the USSR stood for repression and coercion * Now, some actions by the US such as the 1954 coup in Iraq that installed the Shah complicate the picture; and when considering the attacks on Russia that had come through Eastern Europe, their moves become less reprehensible * Evaluating American Communism * Historians used to believe that the Communist Party as victims of an irrational witch hunt * However, damning evidence has been found against the Communist Party, such as evidence that implicates the Rosenbergs as being genuine spies, forcing a reevaluation of the assumption that Communists were innocent victims * Avoiding Reductionism - 1920s and 1950s * There is a tendency to reduce decades to a single image, however, they are more complex than a single image * The 1920s, characterized by “The Roaring Twenties”, with The Great Gatsby, martinis, flappers, and speakeasies; but there were still KKK rallies * The 1950s, characterized by conformity and bland TV programs, also had the civil rights movement, the birth of the beat movement, popularity of rock ‘n roll, and folk music revival * The Civil Rights Movement: Top Down or Grassroots? * Historians who favor a traditional top down interpretation elevate the importance of powerful institutions - the courts, police, officials - in shaping events * Some New Left historians focus on the agency of ordinary people - ex. the Birmingham civil rights campaign that prompted Kennedy and Johnson to take action and push for the 1964 Civil Rights Act * The Nature of the Vietnam War * Some believe the Vietnam war as a struggle by the indigenous Vietcong and its peasant supporters against an oppressive regime while others believe it was North Vietnam and China fomenting chaos in South Vietnam; the role of US intervention is dependent wholly on perspective * Some believe that the war was unwinnable while others believe that the war was winnable and Nixon abandoned the fight at the wrong moment * Debating Nixon * Although Watergate overshadows some of his accomplishments, he still promoted detente with China and the USSR and avoided social and religious issues that characterized subsequent Republican administrations * Others insist that his legacy is ruined by the bombing of civilians in Southeast Asia ===== Period 9 ===== ===== Reagan, Conservatism, and Partisan Divisions ===== The Ascendancy of the New Right * Anatomy of the New Right * The conservative movement had three distinct tendencies * Cold War conservatives: focused on containing or rolling back communist regimes abroad * Pro-business economic conservatives: argue for lower corporate taxes, deregulation, and an economic atmosphere friendly to big business (laissez faire in terms of environmental regulations but willing to use the power of government to further their interests, aka. extend military contracts to large corporations) * Religious and cultural wing: grassroots support = victory for Reagan (twice), HW Bush (once), and W Bush (twice) → gained steam as tradition-minded people grew frustrated with counterculture (women’s liberation, gay liberation, assertiveness of African Americans, and illegal drug use) * The New Right and the Election of Ronald Reagan * A New Deal Democrat, anti-communist, and governor of California (1967-75), his victory can be attributed to immediate causes * Carter was seen as ineffective by not securing the quick release of hostages held at the American embassy in Tehran, but Reagan projected hope and optimism for the US * His presidency saw tremendous military growth and the end for the USSR and the Communist Bloc which could not match US arms spending; he also gave voice to the New Right movement * Reaganomics * Similar to Hoover’s approach to the Great Depression, he supported economic policies that favored big business * Believed in supply-side economics: stimulating the supply side of the economy - manufacturers, banks, insurance corporations in hopes that this would lead to general economic growth * Demand-side economics would argue for increased wages and the expansion of welfare and unemployment benefits * Reagan cut taxes for corporations and reduced regulations on industry, arguing for increased deregulation - he came under criticism for weakening much of the environmental legislation of the 70s * Contract with America (1994) * In 1994, Republicans gained control of the House and Senate - they had not had control of the House since 1954 * House Republicans signed and issued “Contract with America” weeks before the 1994 election - it was a call to arms for Republicans and called for tougher anti-crime measures, tort reform, and welfare reform * Many died in the Senate, some were vetoed by Clinton, some implemented, and some reworked * The Impeachment of President Clinton * Clinton was accused of having an affair with Monica Lewinsky, a White House intern, denying accusations before a federal grand jury * When he later admitted to the affair, Republicans accused him of lying to a grand jury and obstruction of justice * Clinton was impeached by the House, but found not guilty by the Senate, reflecting the tense relationship between the two major political parties * The Election of 2000 * The voting in Florida was split almost evenly between Al Gore and Bush, and without Florida, neither candidate had 270 electoral votes * SCOTUS reversed Florida’s decision to do a hand recount of several counties, breaking with its tendency to assert the power of states within the federal system * Bush v. Gore ended the dispute with Bush slightly ahead of Gore, securing Bush’s presidency * The Presidency of George W. Bush * A major victory for the New Right, he ushered the country through the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, but by the end of Bush’s second term, public approval of his presidency was at a historic low, hampering chances of the Republicans to hold onto the White House * No Child Left Behind * It mandated that states set learning standards, students attain proficiency in reading and math by 2014, and that teachers be highly qualified in the subject area * This allowed the state to take over schools and districts that did no meet new guidelines, but it was criticized for its lack of funding to reach these goals, and many educators questioned the increased reliance on standardized tests The Deepening of Partisanship in the 21st Century * The Election of President Barack Obama (2008) * This was a milestone for the civil rights movement, and his victory was the result of a series of factors * The Obama campaign was able to harness the power of the Internet, as well as Obama’s charisma, to build a large base * The Rise of the Tea Party Movement * Heavily promoted by Fox, the election of Obama generated a vocal opposition movement known as the Tea Party (referring to American action against British tyranny) * This represented a grassroots sense of discontent with big government; however, this movement often exhibited hyperbolic language, predicting the onset of tyranny, fascism, and Communism * The Election of Donald Trump (2016) * His blunt style of speaking was appealing, perceived as speaking his mind, unencumbered by political correctness * Days before the elections, the FBI reopened its investigations of Clinton’s emails; and accusations were made that the Russian government interfered with the 2016 election on behalf of Trump * Nevertheless, he won the majority of votes in the electoral college, however, he did not win the popular vote * The Presidency of Donald Trump * His initial attempts to undo the Affordable Care Act failed to win congressional support and set a travel ban on Muslim countries * The Trump administration’s first major victory was a major overhaul of the tax code, with major cuts in corporate taxes and significant reductions in the tax rates of the wealthy * He also rolled back environmental regulations put in place during the Obama administration, and undid regulations in the financial industry * The Impeachment of President Trump * In 2019, the House passed articles of impeachment against Trump, accusing him from putting his personal political interest above the country, abused the powers of the presidency by enlisting Ukraine to get dirt on Biden * He was also accused of obstruction of Congress, asserting that Trump violated the House’s sole Power of Impeachment by directing the defiance of subpoenas and seeking to control the impeachment process * The Senate declared him not guilty however Reducing Big Government: Rhetoric and Reality * The Expansion of Medicare and Medicaid * Medicare provides health insurance to those over 65 and those with disabilities * Medicaid is a government insurance program for low-income people * As people live longer, the costs to the Medicare program increase * In the 1980s, Reagan led the effort to pass a Social Security reform bill designed to ensure the long-term solvency of the program * Growth of the Federal Deficit * By cutting corporate taxes and taxes on the wealthy, Reagan was cutting government revenues, however, he increased spending on armaments * This led to a doubling of the national debt - hindering economic growth to some degree since and forced careful considerations of American debt for future administrations Debates over the Scope of Government and International Trade * NAFTA and the Push Toward Free Trade * Clinton broke with organized labor and environmental groups by embracing NAFTA, eliminating all trade barriers and tariffs among the US, Canada, and Mexico * This generated controversy as free-trade supporters promised global prosperity as more nations participated in the global economy, however, opponents argued that nations would no longer be able to implement environmental regulations, ensure workers’ rights, or protect fledgling industries from foreign competition * The General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT) * It was an international trade agreement that sought to encourage countries to participate in the global economy by reducing barriers to trade * Issues of globalization and free trade have inspired protests - some believe that these agreements have caused the decline of industrial jobs in the midwest while others cite the ready availability of inexpensive consumer products as evidence of the success of the free-trade ethos * Challenges to Globalization * Labor organizations argue that eliminating trade barriers will lead to loss of American jobs as businesses gravitate toward cheap labor, and environmentalists worry that free-trade treaties will prevent participating countries from enacting strong environmental protections * These opponents came together in Seattle to protest at a meeting of the World Trade Organization * Changes in the Welfare System * Clinton adopted one of the planks of “Contract with America” in 1996 by ending welfare as a federal program and shifting its administration to the state level, shocking many liberal Democrats * They had pushed for federal entitlement programs since the New Deal, however, Clinton perceived that many Americans were growing tired of programs that did not seem to reduce poverty * Toward Healthcare Reform * Clinton put forth the idea of a federal health insurance plan that would provide subsidized insurance to many of the 39 million uncovered Americans and would bring down health insurance costs for everyone * This was vigorously opposed by the pharmaceutical and insurance industries and was ultimately shot down by a Republican filibuster * Debates over Social Security Reform * Many worry that when the baby boomers become senior citizens, Medicare and Social Security will be unable to stay financially solvent * Republicans pushed for privatization of the system whereas Democrats pushed for increased funding streams to ensure future viability * Reform of the Financial Sector * Republicans argue for deregulation of major industries, including financial firms, and resist calls for increased government oversight * They argue that excessive regulation impede risk-taking, competition, and economic growth * Democrats argue that regulation is necessary to check reckless behavior on the part of the financial industry and to protect the economy from rapid fluctuations * The Savings and Loan Crisis and Bailout * In the 80s, the nation’s savings and loan associations suffered from a spate of irresponsible and risky investments and a downturn in the housing market * Their situation was made worse by deregulation of the industry, and legislation widened their investment options, paving the way for riskier investments * By 1989, more than 700 S&Ls had become insolvent, and HW Bush signed a bailout bill that extended billions of dollars to the industry * Some economists believe that the bailout created a moral hazard, in which people are more willing to take risks, seeing a connection between between this and the subprime mortgage crisis of 2007 * The Housing Crisis and the Great Recession * This led to high unemployment, falling wages, and a housing crisis characterized by widespread foreclosures * Many see the crisis in the housing market as an important cause of the Great Recession - in the 2000s, lending institutions devised new methods of borrowing money after the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999, removing regulatory constraints on the banking industry * Banks lured first time home buyers to take out mortgages for home purchases that were beyond their means and to people whose ability to repay and whose credit rating were less than prime * These lenders would sell these mortgages to Wall Street, and Wall Street would bundle these mortgages into stock offerings, and many funds invested in these offerings * In 2007, this bubble burst as the real-estate market weakened and interest rates increased → many subprime borrowers found themselves underwater - the market value of their homes sank below the amount they owed on their mortgages * Their only option was to walk away from their homes, leading to widespread foreclosures * Major financial institutions that had invested in risky mortgages found themselves in desperate straits, major banks cut back on lending money, business activity slowed, and consumer spending was drastically reduced * Government Responses to the Great Recession * The W Bush administration and the Federal Reserve Bank took a number of steps to address the economic crisis and prevent a collapse of major economic institutions * The Fed outlined a loan program for the country’s largest banks to borrow Treasury securities at discounted rates * The Troubled Asset Relief Program was created to strengthen the financial sector and restore confidence in the securities market * Critics claimed that the government did not tie this money to any guidelines to ensure this money would be used for recovery * Bailout of the Automobile Industry * The automobile industry also went into financial crisis in 2008, partly as a result of reduced consumer spending and a result of rising fuel prices * Bush agreed to lend $17.4 billion to GM and Chrysler to keep them afloat, and Obama continued to extend those loans * The bailout was successful; the automobile industry recovered and paid back $71 billion of the $82 billion used in the bailout * The Stimulus Package * Obama addressed the Great Recession with a major stimulus bill - the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (2009) * This provided $800 billion to state and local governments to be used for infrastructure, projects, schools, and hospitals * This reflected Keynes, who wrote The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, arguing that during times of recession, the government should increase spending * Unemployment went down during Obama’s time in office, however, it is not clear how much of that was because of the stimulus package and how much of it was due to a generally improving economy * The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act * Designed to regulate financial markets and protect consumers * It established the Financial Services Oversight Council to examine new and risky practices by large corporations * It was designed in part to end the concept of too big to fail, to avert having a company whose failure would have devastating consequences on the economy, and to stop these companies from having a reliance on the government bailout * After the election of Trump, congressional Republicans began pushing to roll back many of the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act * President Obama and Health Care Reform * This was one of his first major domestic initiatives * The Patient Protection and Affordable Care was challenged in several federal courts - 3 upheld it and 2 deemed parts of it unconstitutional * In 2012, SCOTUS upheld the constitutionality of the act’s individual mandate as an exercise of Congress’s taxing power * The act has generated opposition from Republicans, even as more Americans have begun participating in Obamacare * Impact of the Affordable Care Act * This dramatically reduced the number of uninsured Amerians, providing insurance to 24 million, driving the uninsured rate from 16 in 2010 to 8.9 in 2016 * At the same time, premium costs for some increased, especially for those upper class who do not receive federal subsidies for their insurance plans, and because there was less choice of insurance providers because some pulled out of certain marketplaces Debates Around Identity and Social Issues * Redefining Family Structures * Growth of nontraditional families - non-married households rose from 26% in 1972 to 47% in 1998 * Liberals have called for measures to extend rights and services to such households, and conservatives have called for a return to traditional family values * Women in Professions * The quiet revolution of women entering the workplace in larger numbers continued * The push for government-funded day care and for greater participation by men in child-rearing led to advances, however, women still earn less on average than men * Activism by Women in the Trump Era * Following Trump’s inauguration, the Women’s March on Washington drew between 3 and 5 million participants * The women’s rights movement also called attention to sexual harassment and assault through the #MeToo Movement, shedding light on workplace dynamics and empowered women to break the silence around these issues * The movement gained prominence in the aftermath of accusations of sexual abuse by movie producer Harvey Weinstein * The Gay Rights Movement and Changing Public Perceptions * This grew in intensity after the Stonewall riots of 1969, and with strong conservative backlash against gay rights, this has shaped debates around LGBTQ rights * The AIDS Crisis * In 1981, there was a mysterious disease that seemed to disproportionately affect gay men called AIDS - the cause of which was HIV * It was not until 1987 that the NIH established a committee to research the impact of HIV * AIDS swept through gay communities - many Christian fundamentalists saw AIDS as God’s punishment as God’s punishment for sinful behavior * On the other hand, the crisis galvanized the gay community, and staged protests for more resources to be devoted to AIDS research and treatment * Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell * This was a policy adopted by the military in 1994 that allowed LGBTQ members to serve as long as they remained closetted - this was protested by the LGTBQ community on the grounds of discrimination and limiting freedom of speech and expression * It was repealed by Congress and signed by Obama in 2011 * Same-Sex Marriage * In 1993, the Hawaii Supreme Court in Baehr v. Lewin ruled that the state ban on same-sex marriage was discriminatory, which led to opposition by conservatives * Conservatives passed an amendment allowing the Hawaii state legislature to ban same-sex marriage, and many states followed * Congress passed the Defense of Marriage Act in 1996 which allowed states to not recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states * The tide turned in 2003, when the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that the state may not forbid same-sex couples from legally marrying - several other state courts followed * In 2013, in United States v. Windsor, a section of DOMA that defined marriage as between a man and woman was struck down * By 2015, SCOTUS ruled in Obergefell v. Hodges that marriage is a fundamental right that must be guaranteed to same-sex couples * Race and Economics in the Post-Civil Rights Era * On one hand, opportunities in housing and employment opened up, and high school graduation rates as well as college have both increased * On the other hand, poverty continues to be an issue for many African-Americans - a declining industrial sector and reductions in government services have hit this segment of the black community hard * A study in 2018 found that 22% of blacks were living in poverty whereas only 13% of all Americans were - blacks in poverty are much more likely to live in neighborhoods with overall high poverty rates * Policing, Incarceration, and Race * In 1965, LBJ urged Congress to engage in an effective war against crime, Nixon’s tough on crime policies further criminalized the possession and use of illegal drugs, and the drug war was a major goal of Reagan * The Anti-Drug Abuse Act (1986) took a punitive stance towards drugs and enacted new mandatory minimum sentences for drugs * The 1994 anti-crime bill signed by Clinton is seen by many as contributing to the increase in prison population * Blacks are incarcerated at more than 5x the rate of whites and comprise over 35% of people in correctional facilities * Under Obama, the Justice Department found longtime patterns of discrimination and violations of constitutional protections in Ferguson (where an unarmed black 18 year old Brown was shot) * BLM emerged in 2013 in response to the acquittal of Zimmerman, a Florida man who shot Martin, a black teenager * BLM also because associated with street protests against police shoots, racial profiling, police brutality, and racial and economic inequality * The Debate Around Gun Violence and Gun Control * Shootings in Sandy Hook left 27 dead in 2012; 2017 - Las Vegas - 58 dead, 413 wounded; 2018 - Parkland - 17 dead, 17 injured * Congress failed to pass bills banning assault weapons and calling for expanded background checks for gun purchases * The NRA has lobbied against any type of gun control, citing the importance of the Second Amendment ===== The End of the Cold War ===== The United States and the World During the Reagan Administration * Soviet-American Relations from Detente to Confrontation * Relations between the US and USSR, which had been improving since Nixon’s attempts at detente, soured after the USSR invaded Afghanistan (1979) * Carter suspended grain sales to the USSR and pushed for a US boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow * Reagan denounced the USSR using pointedly ideological language, labeling them an evil empire * Increased Military Spending * He vowed to close “a window of vulnerability” - the ability of Soviet missiles to strike before the US could respond, beginning the Strategic Defense Initiative - dubbed Star Wars by critics - and initiated the costly MX missile program * The Reagan Doctrine * Reagan’s administration supported governments that were anti-Communist, even if they were undemocratic or repressive, sending troops to Grenada in 1983 to topple to Marxist leaders of the country, and supporting the dictatorial regime of the Philippines led by Marcos, despite reports of electoral fraud * Central American and the Iran-Contra Scandal * Reagan tried to undermine the left-wing Sandinista government in Nicaragua who took power in 1979 after overthrowing the US backed dictatorship of Somoza * The US funded and trained a military group known as the Contras, but Congress, in 1982, alarmed at reports of human rights abuses by the Contras, passed the Boland Amendment to halt US aid to the group * However, an elaborate scheme was developed to secretly sell weapons to Iran and use funds from these sales to support the Contras * Details of this affair became public in 1986, and 14 members of the Reagan administration were tried for violating US law - Reagan claimed to have had no direct knowledge of the program * Critics labeled him the Teflon president because accusations of wrongdoing did not stick to him The Fall of the Soviet Union and the Collapse of Communism * The Fall of the Berlin Wall and the End of the Cold War * In the 1980s, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev began to enact a series of political and economic reforms in the USSR, in many ways, these reforms opened the way for protests and challenges that ultimately undid Soviet Communism * He introduced glasnost, a dismantling of the repressive apparatus of the USSR, and perestroika, the introduction of elements of capitalism to the sluggish Soviet economy * Mass public protests had begun to weaken the governments in Poland and East Germany, especially when it was clear that Gorbachev would not intervene militarily to halt this development * By the end of 1989, everyone Communist government in Europe was either toppled or transformed into a non-Communist regime * The tearing of the wall, separating West from East Berlin, was a symbol of the rift between the Communist Bloc and the Western countries * By 1991, the Soviet Union had collapsed, ending Communism in Europe The United States in the Post-Cold War Period * President George Bush and the Persian Gulf War * HW Bush’s main accomplishments were in foreign affairs - it was during his presidency that the Berlin Wall came down and the Soviet Union collapsed * After Iraq, under Saddam Hussein, invaded Kuwait in 1990 to gain more control over oil, Bush organized a 34 nation coalition to challenge the move * When Hussein failed to comply with Bush’s 6 week deadline to withdraw, the coalition initiated Operation Desert Storm, defeating Iraqi forces and driving them from Kuwait * During the Persian Gulf War, significant numbers of women served in combat roles for the first time * Chaos in Somalia * Clinton deployed US forces to aid a UN humanitarian mission in Somalia in 1993 - troubles had begun a year earlier when the government was overthrown and a civil war ensued between competing factions, leading to famine and ½ million deaths * Much of the food delivered by the UN to Somalia was stolen by the factions and sold for weapons * Bush approved the use of US troops to aid UN relief activities, but the mission ended in a US withdrawal after American forces suffered 19 deaths in Mogadishu * Democracy in Haiti * Clinton took the lead in ensuring a transition to democracy in Haiti in 1994 after democratically elected Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted by a Haitian general * Former president Carter was dispatched to try to negotiate an end to military rule, and he was successful - Aristide returned to power in 1995 * Intervention in the Former Yugoslavia * Clinton became increasingly concerned about violence in former Yugoslavia - after Communism fell in 1989, the country split into smaller nations * Ethnic violence developed as Serbain forces attempted to gain control of areas of Bosnia with large Serbian populations - they would try to remove Bosnians through a campaign of ethnic cleansing * As the media reported on Serbian brutality, the US decided to take action, with Clinton bringing leaders from Bosnia, Serbia, and Croatia, together in 1995 to sign the Dayton Agreement, with 60,000 NATO troops dispatched to enforce it * President Clinton and the Conflict in the Middle East * Since the Six-Day War in 1967, Israel has occupied adjacent lands where Palestinians live, including the West Bank of the Jordan, the Gaza Strip, and Eastern Jerusalem * Israel resisted agreeing to the formation of a Palestinian state as long as Palestinians launched attacks on Israel, with the growht of Jewish settlements in teh West Bank complicating matters * Clinton invited Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak to Camp David, but the conflict still remains unresolved ===== A Changing Economy ===== The Economy in the Digital Age * The Digital Revolution * Apple launched a PC in 1977 and IBM followed; in the early 1980s, Microsoft developed operating systems, and through the 1980s, PC became ubiquitous in workplaces * Economic Productivity in the Digital Age * Economists cite an increase in productivity growth as due to the widespread use of information technologies and the increase in the speed of communications across the globe * However, economists have noted that the increase in overall economic productivity has not led to the expected increases in standards of living * Some cite the costs of replacing outdated equipment as a countervailing factor, while others cite the changing nature of work and the growing income gap as factors that prevent many ordinary Americans from enjoying the fruits of the digital revolution New Technologies, New Behaviors * The Development and Spread of the Internet * The origins of the Internet date from the 1960s as the Department of Defense sought to create a computer system that would allow far-flung military installations to exchange computer information * In the late 1980s, universities in the US created a computer network to facilitate the sharing of research while in Switzerland, engineers developed the World Wide Web * Internet use grew rapidly in the 1990s and changed the way of life - email rendered letter writing obsolete, file sharing of music and video have forced the entertainment industry to rethink its business model, and traditional news outlets have been forced to compete with the instantaneous information available on the Internet * It allowed for virtual business meetings and allowed users to browse merchandise on their personal computers and purchase items without leaving their homes - making shopping easier but also driving many brick and mortar stores out of business * Obama’s campaign demonstrated the power of the Internet to build a grassroots network of activists and contributors, and Twitter has served as a primary method for Trump to communicate with the public * Critics note that smartphones tend to distract users from tasks such as driving and social interactions in front of them Economic Shifts: The Decline of Manufacturing and the Rise of the Service Sector * The Deindustrialization of America * From the 1960s onward, large numbers of factories have closed in cities such as NY, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Detroit, and Chicago * Since the 1980s, there has been a rapid shift of the manufacturing sector out of the US and into less-developed parts of this world - a trend accelerated by free-trade agreements * The rise of the private manufacturing sector in Communist China has also played a major role - because firms in China are able to produce goods at lower costs, American imports from China grew dramatically in the late 20th and early 21st century * Decline of Union Membership * In 1954, union membership in the US peaked at 35% while it is currently at 10% * A major turning point toward unionized workers came in 1981 under Reagan when he fired air traffic controllers who went on strike - this broke their union, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers’ Organization, and was consistent with helping big business * Every year, there were fewer strikes and lockouts * More recently, states passed right-to-work laws where workers can opt out of paying union dues, even while being represented by the union * In addition, unions representing public workers have come under attack in several states, where legislation cut collective bargaining rights and benefits of public employees * Median wages and benefits have fallen for teachers in states where this legislation has passed * The Growth of the Service Sector * It grew significantly from 1980 to present - the primary sector includes the extraction and production of raw materials and the secondary sector is considered manufacturing; the service sector is considered the tertiary sector which involves the production of services rather than end products * The service sector includes shipping and trucking, banking services, IT, waste disposal, education, government, healthcare, legal services, and a whole host of retail and food-service operations * Currently, 70% of jobs in the US are in the service sector, representing a shift in the economy from the production of things to the providing of services * The growth of low wage jobs in the retail and fast-food fields has contributed to the stagnation of wages and to a growing income gap - and efforts to unionize workers in these fields have almost all failed due to anti-union activities by the corporations * The goal of a $15 minimum wage has been a rallying cry of this movement * The Growth of the “Gig Economy” * The growth of the Internet has contributed to the growth of the “Gig Economy” * TaskRabbit and Uber are prominent companies - 36% of American workers are involved in the gig economy * For some, gig work supplements their current income, others join the gig economy because they cannot find full-time employment * Although this may provide flexibility, the gig economy does not provide employee benefits or worker protections, and often results in low pay Increasing Wealth Inequality * The Growth of the Income Gap * The incomes for the top earning one percent of households increased by about 275% between 1979 and 2007, while the middle of 60% of wage-earners saw their income rise by just under 40% * Many economists cite the disappearance of higher-paying manufacturing jobs and the growth of low-wage service-sector jobs and “gig” work * Other factors include the decline of union movement and changes in the tax code, including massive tax cuts initiated by W Bush, and the Great Recession * The growth of the gig economy has tended to depress income for workers, and calls for a fundamental restructuring of the economy in order to challenge economic inequality have formed the basis of the Occupy Wall Street movement and the campaigns of Sanders ===== Migration and Immigration, 1980 to Present ===== Immigration and the Growth of the Sun Belt * Growth of the Sun Belt * The states in the sun belt - CA, TX, AZ, NV, FL - have seen remarkable growth since WWII when defense related industries there attracted large numbers of workers * As these states grew, their political power also increased, generally faring well for the Republican Party as conservatives have gained seated in the South and the West whereas liberal states of the Midwest and Northeast lost power in Congress Asian and Latin American Immigration * Post-1965 Immigration Patterns * After the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, immigration increased significantly from Asia, Lat. Am., Africa, and the Middle East * Currently, immigration accounts for a third of population growth - immigration has been an important factor in the growth of the Southwestern states * The Changing Ethnic Makeup of the US * It is estimated that by 2042, non-Hispanic whites will no longer constitute a majority of the population of the United States Immigration Policy * Debates Around Immigration * Some americans have a more welcoming attitude toward immigration, focusing on its positive social and economic impacts; others fear that large numbers of immigrants (many illegal) will take jobs from Amricans and draw on public resources * Republicans have generally sided with anti-immigrant sentiment, arguing for a more secure border with Mexico and passing the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, forcing employers to ensure that their workforce was composed of only legal immigrants * Immigration Policy Under President Obama * He pushed for comprehensive immigration reform but was met with opposition from Republicans * He achieved limited success in 2012 with the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which protected minors whose parents did not enter legally * Although he tried to create pathways to legal status for undocumented immigrants, he also increased the number of deportations * Immigration Policy Under President Trump * He instituted a ban in 2017 against the entry of 7 Muslin countries into the united states, as well as indefinitely suspending the entry of Syrian refugees * This led to many protests and replaced the executive order, which maintained a travel ban but made exceptions for green card and visa holders ===== Defining America’s Role in the World in the 21st Century ===== The Terrorist Attacks of 2001 and the US Response * Terrorist Attacks Against the United States * 19 terrorists from al-Qaeda hijacked 4 domestic airplanes, crashing into the Pentagon, Pennsylvania, and the World Trade Center in NYC * Approximately 3000 people died in total * War in Afghanistan * The 2001 attacks were followed by W Bush initiating military action in Afghanistan and Iraq * American forces overthrew the Taliban, the government that had given refuge to al-Qaeda * Even though Obama’s administration was able to kill bin Laden, it was not able to end the war in Afghanistan, and military violence continues today * War with Iraq * Operation Iraqi Freedom began in 2003; it was the US military campaign to remove President Saddam Hussein from power and create a more democratic government in Iraq * Without evidence, W Bush claimed that Hussein was developing weapons of mass destruction and that there was connection between Hussein and the 2001 attacks * Defeating Hussein and the Iraqi army was an easy task, but creating stability in Iraq was not - attacks by insurgents continued and Operation Iraqi Freedom hurt Bush’s approval ratings and created tensions between the US and some European nations Liberty, Security, and Human Rights in the War on Terrorism * The Patriot Act * It greatly expanded the government’s authority in the fight against terrorism * Many criticized the use of National Security Letters, which allow the FBI to search telephone, email, and financial records without a court order * Department of Homeland Security * The creation of this department was a result of the 2001 attacks, responsible for protecting the US from terrorist attacks and natural disasters * Tactics in the War on Terrorism * The release of photographs of US army personnel abusing prisoners at a prison in Iraq cast light on the US handling of prisoners * Army personnel were given permission to use “enhanced interrogation” techniques, including waterboarding and torture * In Hamdan v. Rumsfeld (2006), ruled that the Bush administration could not hold detainees indefinitely without due process * Congress passed the Military Commission Act (2006) intended to address concerns, but still allows for the removal of procedural safeguards ordinarily employed in judicial trials * President Obama and the War on Terrorism * Concerns about the way the war on terrorism was being carried out under Bush helped elevate Obama over McCain * Although Obama carried out the killing of bin Laden, he continued many of the controversial antiterrorism policies begun in the Bush administration, and had not closed down the prison at Guantanamo Bay Energy Policy, Consumption, and the Limits to Growth * Climate Change and Energy Policy * After the Arab oil embargo of 1973 and the energy crisis that followed the 1979 Iranian Revolution, American policymakers began to look for ways for the US to reduce its consumption of energy, which has been augmented by concerns over climate change * More recently, the US played an important role in the Paris Agreement, however, Trump ended the USA's participation in it * Communities are passing legislation to reduce gas emissions, encouraging bicycling and mass transit * However, many critics are saying that these steps are not enough to stop climate change United States Foreign Policy in the 21st Century * President George W. Bush and the Withdrawal from the International Community * Bush distrusted many of the multilateral entities in which the US had participated, withdrawing from the Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement on environmental goals, the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty so that the US could develop a space-based missile-defense system, and the UN’s International Criminal Court * The Bush Doctrine * He put forth a more aggressive approach in the fall of 2002 that called for pre-emptive strikes against nations perceived as threat to the US * Bush identified an axis of evil consisting of Iraq, Iran, and North Korea * This reliance on preemptive warfare is known as the Bush Doctrine * President Obama and the Middle East * He was eager to initiate a “new partnership based on mutual respect and mutual interest” with the Muslim world * Obama spoke favorably about the Arab Spring protests which spoke out against oppressive regimes and low living standards * However, most authoritarian regimes reasserted power in the Arab Winter * The Iran Nuclear Deal * Obama prioritized preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons - negotiations between the US and Iran entitled the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (2015): removing sanctions on Iran in exchange for Iran’s promise not to produce a nuclear bomb * This deal was seen as an opportunity to making the world a safer place, but was condemned by Republicans and Israeli prime minister Netanyahu * In 2018, Trump removed the US from the deal and in 2020, the US killed Iranian major general Qasem Soleimani * Tensions with Russia * Putin was opposed to the Iraq War and the expansion of NATO into Eastern Europe, seeing both events as an expansion of American and Western influence * Russia’s actions against neighboring countries have led to criticism and increased tensions with the US * Relations soured again in 2012 when Russia supported Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian Civil War despite his brutal treatment of his opposition * In 2014, Putin occupied Crimea with Russian troops, which was seen as illegal by the US, and Obama imposed sanctions on several wealthy advisors close to Putin * The Mueller report noted eleven episodes of possible obstruction of justice on the part of Trump and Russia’s attempt to interfere in the election on behalf of him * Normalizing Relations with Cuba * Obama announced in 2015 that the US and Cuba would resume diplomatic relations and that the United States would open an embassy in Havana * Trump suspended the Obama-era policy of granting Cuba relief from sanctions, but he did not rescind diplomatic relations between the two countries ===== Subject to Debate ===== * The Legacy of President Ronald Reagan * On one side, critics cite rising budget deficits, an increase in homelessness along with cuts to social services, an increase in the wealth gap resulting from tax cuts, and attack on unionized workers as characterizing Reagan’s presidency * His defenders focus on his initiation of a massive military buildup that led to the fall of Communism in Europe * Causes of the Rise of the New Right * The New Right stands for its opposites - conservative approaches to sexuality, respect for authority and discipline, and unifying patriotism * Putting the Recent Past into Context * One topic that historians begin to wrestle with is the origins of the toxic partisan atmosphere - some look to the impeachment against Clinton as a turning point * Historians also note the closeness of each party - each party feels as though victory is in its grasp - proved by the closeness of elections such as Bush v. Gore **Condensed Review** Terms: SCOTUS = Supreme Court of the United States USFG = US Federal Government Roosevelt = Theodore Roosevelt FDR = Franklin Delano Roosevelt LBJ = Lyndon B. Johnson ===== Period 1 (Natives and Exploration) ===== ===== Native Americans ===== |**Location**|**Economic**|**Social**| |**Southwest**|Maize, hunting, gathering|The Pueblo Tribes, Navajo, and Apache deserted the area in 1300 CE because of crop failures| |**West**|Hunting, gathering, fishing - provided goods to trade|Sedentary villages (different villages for different hunting/gathering seasons - they would stay at one and go to another when the season changed)| |**Northeast**|Three-sister farming: squash, beans, corn|Permanent and large villages in the Ohio River Valley\\ Iroquois League curbed intertribal violence\\ | |**Southeast**| |Organized urban centers\\ Five Civilized Tribes made alliances with the colonists (Jamestown)\\ | |**Plains**|Corn, hunting, gathering|Sedentary villages\\ They were the victims of colonists’ westward expansion; native groups forced out of the east settled with Plains natives and led to increased competition\\ | ===== European Interaction ===== |**Causes**|**Effects**| |• GGG|• Columbian Exchange\\ • Treaty of Tordesillas\\ • Encomienda System → Repartimiento/use of black slaves\\ • Virginia Company and Jamestown\\ | ===== Big Ideas ===== * Native Americans developed distinct and increasingly complex societies in diverse environments * European nations’ efforts for exploration stemmed from GGG * The Columbian Exchange brought new crops to Europe from the Americas, stimulating European population growth, and new sources of mineral wealth, which facilitated the European shift from feudalism to capitalism * Europeans and Native Americans asserted divergent worldviews in terms of religion, gender roles, family, land use, and power ===== Period 2 (Colonization) ===== ===== Differences Between Countries’ Colonies ===== | |**England**|**France**|**Spain**| |**Economic**|Agriculture|Fur|Gold/Silver| |**Population**|Men and Women|Jesuit Priests/Fur Traders (Men)|Conquistadors (Men)| |**Native Relationships**|Hostile/conflict|Friendly/Alliances|Convert/exploit| |**Intermarriage**|No|Yes|Yes| |**Political**|Self-government (Burgesses, Mayflower Compact)|Viceroy|Viceroy| |**Diversity**|Different ethnic/religious|No non-Catholics|No non-Catholics| |**Population Density**|Centered around coast|Spread over Canada|Spread over South America| ===== Colonies ===== |**New England**|**Middle**|**Southern**| |• Puritans and Pilgrims\\ • Rocky soil → subsistence farming\\ • Whaling, fishing, shipbuilding, logging\\ • Bradford - Plymouth\\ • Winthrop - Massachusetts Bay\\ |• Breadbasket (grain, oats)\\ • Fur trade, lumber, shipbuilding\\ • Religious tolerance\\ • William Penn - Pennsylvania (Quakers) = freedom of religion, high immigration\\ |• Indentured servants and slave labor\\ • Rice, indigo, and tobacco\\ • Chattel slavery (slave’s children = slaves)\\ • Jamestown\\ • Lord Baltimore - Maryland\\ • Headright system - 50 acres for paying for indentured servant’s passage\\ | |**Causes of Slavery**|**Effects of Slavery**| |Bacon’s Rebellion:\\ • Former indentured servants grew resentful of taxes they had to pay and burned down homes of the elite\\ • Virginians turned to slaves instead of unreliable indentured servants\\ |Stono Rebellion\\ • Led to the deaths of 20 slave owners\\ • Tightened slave codes\\ • Lesser rebellion: working slowly, breaking tools, keeping cultural ties to Africa\\ | ===== Native American Conflict ===== |**Native Attacks**|• 1st Powhatan War: Indian assaults led to the death of 347 colonists\\ • 2nd Powhatan War: Indian attempts to drive the colonists out fail\\ • Susquehannock War: Indians attack colonists → Bacon’s Rebellion\\ | |**Colonist Attacks**|• King Philip’s War: English encroachment on Indian lands, English cattle destroy cornfields\\ ◦ Half of New England towns destroyed, 1/10 colonists dead\\ | |**Spanish**|• Pueblo Revolt: Encomienda system disrupted native economy, Pueblo religion was banned → 300+ Spanish died, Spanish were driven out for 12 years| ===== Britain and the Colonies ===== |**Economic**|Mercantilism:\\ - Colonies should benefit the mother country (exports > imports) - so need\\ colony to supply raw materials\\ -\\ Wool, Hat, Iron Act established to prevent the development of manufacturing in the colonies| |**Religious**|1st Great Awakening:\\ - An\\ emotional manifestation of religion - preachers held large meetings in rural areas (George Whitfield)\\ - Promoted a\\ democratic sense - everyone should have religious experience\\ - Led to weakening of established churches, rejection of overly intellectual clergy,\\ first unifying experience of the colonies| |**Social**|Trans-Atlantic Print Culture:\\ - Most\\ news that came from Britain appealed to merchants - commodity prices, ship arrivals, European politics\\ - Regulated by public officials: fear of undermining British authority\\ - By 1776, more than 50% of men were literate\\ - Enlightenment = confidence about attacking government in newspaper\\ - Franklin’s almanac\\ | |**Intellectual**|Enlightenment:\\ - John Locke: people have natural rights, including the\\ right to rebel under a tyrannical government\\ - Montesquieu: separation of powers and\\ checks and balances\\ - Radical Whig Ideology: Whig pamphlets were spread to the US - concentrated power = threat to liberty, balance between legislature and king\\ | ===== Big Ideas ===== * The goals and patterns of colonization varied among the British, French, Spanish, and Dutch empires * The British colonies developed into different regions based on geography, types of settlers, motives for settling, and reliance on slavery * European nations had varying types of relations with natives - sometimes allies and sometimes enemies * Colonies were connected to Britain, but began drifting away ===== Period 3 (Revolution, America in Infancy) ===== ===== Causes of Revolution ===== **Political Cause: French and Indian War** |**Causes**|- Land disputes in the Ohio River Valley → forts built and skirmishes → French and Indian War| |**Timeline**|- Local affair - continuation of skirmishes between British and French colonists\\ -\\ Full takeover of the war by Britain, seizing supplies and forcing colonists to join the war - the colonists resisted\\ - British government tried to work with the colonies and reinforced the troops with British soldiers → French surrendered in 1761\\ | |**Effects**|- Treaty of Paris (1763): France surrendered its North American empire - Canada and east of Mississippi to Britain and West of Mississippi River to Spain\\ -\\ Sugar, Stamp, Quartering Act\\ -\\ Pontiac’s Rebellion: colonists occupied Ottawa land, clash with natives\\ -\\ Proclamation Act of 1763: Britain ordered colonists not to settle beyond the Appalachians; many colonists had already migrated because they believed they deserved the land for the sacrifices they made in the war| **Economic Causes: Acts** |**Incident**|**Reaction**| |**Stamp Act**|• Stamp Act Congress: delegates wrote a list of grievances: No taxation without representation\\ • Committees of Correspondence: shadow governments that worked to undermine royal governors\\ • Sons of Liberty harassed Stamp Act agents, stores were ransacked if they did not boycott British goods\\ | |**Townshend Act**: Taxed imported goods|• Called for boycotts, Americans sought locally produced goods\\ • Boston Massacre: Britain deployed troops to quell riots, when heckled, they shot Bostonians\\ | |**Tea Act**: allowed British East India Company monopoly|• Boston Tea Party: dumped $2 million of tea in the harbor to protest| |**Intolerable Acts**: Put MA under British rule, closed Boston’s ports, expanded the Quartering Act, can move trials from MA to Britain|• Continental Congress: passed resolutions on nonimportation, nonexportation, and nonconsumption to cut off all trade with Britain\\ • Committees of Safety: enforced the agreements and recommended military preparations\\ | **Intellectual Causes** |**Protestant Evangelicalism**|Focused on individual conversion, ministers projected the American Revolution as a struggle against godless tyranny| |**Enlightenment**|Ideas of Locke and Montesquieu| |**Common Sense**|Argued that independence was the only path for the colonies| |**Declaration of Independence**|Most colonists at the beginning of the war did not want full independence; the Declaration listed grievances and formally declared independence from Britain, after being passed by the Continental Congress| ===== Revolution ===== |**Britain’s Advantages**|**Colonies’ Advantages**| |• Highly trained, professional army\\ • Strongest navy\\ • Financial resources\\ • Support of Loyalists\\ • Offered freedom to slaves who joined Britain\\ • Native American alliances\\ • Continental army was underfunded because Congress could not levy taxes, tried to print money → inflation\\ |• Allied with the French\\ • British were far from home\\ • Fighting a defensive war\\ • Patriot soldiers believed in their cause\\ • Strong leadership: Washington, Nathanael Greene, Henry Knox\\ | |**Phase 1**|The British thought that the revolution was started by a minority, and suffered heavy losses (although they won) in the Battle of Bunker Hill, and retreated from New England| |**Phase 2**|The British tried to gain control of New York to isolate New England and drove Washington and his troops out of New York in 1776\\ However, they were defeated at the Battle of Saratoga, which convinced France to lend a hand\\ | |**Phase 3**|In the South, Britain hoped to rally Loyalist sentiments and the resentment of the slaves, but French aid led Cornwallis to surrender at the Battle of Yorktown| ===== Articles of Confederation (Effect of Revolution) ===== **Issues** |**Lack of Political Power**|• Loose collection of states\\ • No power to enforce laws\\ • Could only request money and troops from the states\\ | |**Lack of Economic Power**|• No power to impose taxes, tariffs, or regulate interstate commerce\\ •\\ Shay’s Rebellion: veterans had not been paid for the war and were being taxed → rebellion| **Northwest Ordinance of 1787**: Set up a process where territories could apply to become states and banned slavery north of the Ohio River ===== Constitution ===== |**Constitutional Convention**|**Responses**| |• ⅗ Compromise counted slaves as ⅗ of a man for representation\\ • Great Compromise meshed the Virginia and New Jersey plans to create the Senate and House\\ • Division of Power - Congress, SCOTUS, President\\ |• Bill of Rights: Antifederalists agreed to ratify if it was passed, protecting rights of states and the people\\ • 10th Amendment left all undelegated power to states\\ •\\ Federalist Papers: Written by Madison, Jay, and Hamilton who urged ratification| ===== America in Infancy ===== |**Federalists**|**Democratic Republicans**| |• John Adams, Hamilton\\ • Favored a powerful national government\\ • Merchants, bankers, landowners\\ • Centered in New England\\ • Government should be controlled by rich, well born, well educated\\ • Distrusted the common man\\ •\\ Loose interpretation of Constitution\\ • Tended to favor Britain (criticized as the monarchist party)\\ |• Madison, Jefferson\\ • Favored limited role of national government\\ • Shop owners, city workers, farmers\\ • Support based in South and West\\ • Government controlled by capable leaders\\ • Favored individual liberties\\ •\\ Strict interpretation of Constitution (elastic clause)\\ • Tended to favor France\\ | |**Washington**|• Precedent: chose secretaries of state, war, and treasury; served no more than 2 terms; peaceful transfer of power\\ • Maintained neutrality: French Revolution\\ • Pinckney’s Treaty (Spain): US gets right of deposit of the Mississippi River\\ | |**Hamilton**|• National Bank to hold government tax revenues and stabilized the economy - use elastic clause to achieve this\\ • Insisted that national war debt (bonds) be paid back in full to enhance the bank’s legitimacy and assume states’ debts - met with opposition by states that did not have large debt\\ • Encouraged manufacturing by imposing tariffs on foreign goods\\ • Whiskey (Excise) Tax - Hit grain farmers hard → Whiskey Rebellion (put down by Washington’s troops)\\ | |**Adams**|• XYZ Affair: American negotiators (to stop the seizure of American ships) were offered a bribe by French agents\\ • Quasi War: undeclared war - instilled respect for America’s navy\\ • Alien and Sedition Acts: allowed deportation of aliens and silenced government criticism during the Quasi War\\ • Kentucky/Virginia Resolutions: Jefferson and Madison asserted that states could nullify government laws if they were unconstitutional\\ | ===== Big Ideas ===== * Overview * America begins as the colonial partner of Britain * French and Indian War expenses led to increasing conflict between the mother country and the colonies * Ideas about independence inspired patriots to declare independence * Americans experimented with forms of government - state constitutions, Articles, and Constitution * Washington and Adams breathed life into the Constitution and created institutions for the American experiment * Power of national government * British government vs. Colonies * Articles vs. Constitution * Federalists vs. Democratic Republicans ===== Period 4 (Era of Jefferson and Jackson) ===== ===== Jefferson ===== **Change and Continuity of Jefferson with past Federalist presidents** |**Change**|**Continuity**| |• Repealed the Whiskey tax, naturalization Act, Judiciary Act of 1801 (midnight judges appointed by Adams)\\ • Pardoned those convicted under Sedition Act\\ • Sent navy to fight Barbary pirates\\ •\\ Louisiana Purchase - first purchase of territory by a president\\ • Lewis and Clark expedition\\ |• Peaceful transfer of power\\ • Maintained bank, funding, and assumption policies\\ • Louisiana Purchase - elastic clause\\ • Chesapeake Affair (European interference in American trade)\\ •\\ Embargo Act - an attempt to avoid war (cut trade with Britain and France to stop impressment but failed and crippled America’s mercantile sector)| ===== War of 1812 ===== |**Causes**|• Impressment of sailors\\ • Resentment of British leftover from the Revolution\\ • Belief that British were arming/inciting Indians in west\\ • British did not abandon posts and forts in North America\\ • War-hawks elected to Congress in 1812\\ • American territorial ambitions for Florida and Canada\\ | |**Timeline**|• The war lasted 2 ½ years - Britain won early battles at Fort Dearborn and Fort Detroit, but in 1813, the US burned the city of York and won the Battle of the Thames in Canada where they defeated British and Indian forces and killed the Indian leader Tecumseh| |**Effects**|• Hartford Convention: Federalists meet to oppose fighting the war, but seem traitorous when Americans win - **ends the Federalist Party**\\ • Treaty of Ghent: No territorial changes,\\ impressment not addressed\\ • Growth of American Nationalism\\ | **Postwar America Politics and Policies** |**American System**|• Henry Clay’s 3 part plan: protective tariff, 2nd National Bank, building roads and canals\\ • Plan was to have the South exchange agricultural goods with the North’s manufactured goods\\ | |**Missouri Compromise**|• Admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state to keep the balance\\ • Divided the Louisiana territory at the 36 30 line - slavery was banned north of the line\\ | |**Monroe Doctrine**|• Banned the Western hemisphere from European Colonization\\ • European attempts to intervene would be seen as dangerous\\ | |**Era of Good Feelings**|• Monroe was elected with support from all sections\\ • Federalists had disappeared\\ • John Marshall SCOTUS:\\ Marbury v. Madison upheld judicial review, the court’s ability to declare laws unconstitutional| ===== Market Revolution ===== |**Technological**|• Agricultural efficiency: steel plow, automatic reaper, cotton gin\\ • Eli Whitney’s interchangeable parts →\\ assembly line factory\\ • Steam power came from Britain → steam boats\\ •\\ Telegraph lines| |**Infrastructure**|• Construction of canals and roads were done by private entities with government subsidies\\ •\\ Railroad tracks connected the entire country by 1860 → lowered cost of transportation| |**Social**|• Immigration: Irish (potato famine) and German (failed revolution by German states) immigrants\\ • Westward migration\\ • Free labor ideology: Northerners touted the idea that wage earners could eventually own their own land as the standard of living increased, however, many were stuck in the factory\\ • Development of labor unions - collective bargaining with employer\\ • Cult of Domesticity and republican motherhood put women in a separate sphere, maintaining the house and caring for the children\\ | ===== Jacksonian Democracy ===== |**Whigs**|**Democrats**| |Led by Henry Clay|Led by Andrew Jackson| |Politics of the elite and educated|Politics of the common man - universal male suffrage| |American system: manufacturing, business, trade, banking|Agriculture| |Strong central government that promotes economic and social goals|Weak federal government, opposed to government action and spending| |Supported by northerners and cities|Supported by southerners and countryside| |Tariffs|No tariffs| **Jackson’s Administration** |**Election of 1824**|• Although Jackson had the most electoral votes, it was not enough to be elected and the House elected John Q. Adams instead\\ • Ended Era of Good Feelings\\ | |**Jackson’s Policies**|• Expanded role of President: used veto 12 times\\ • Specie Circular (because of suspicion of bankers and credit, government land could only be sold for hard currency) and\\ destruction of the 2nd National Bank led to the Panic of 1837 (economic crisis that stopped infrastructure building, led to business collapse, and high unemployment)\\ • Indian Removal Act - relocated them to Oklahoma (Trail of Tears)\\ | |**Nullification Crisis**|• When SC passed a resolution nullifying the Tariff Act of 1828 (as they depended heavily on cotton exports), he authorized military action against them| ===== Age of Reform ===== **Second Great Awakening (Cause of Reform)** * At beginning of the 1800s, many clergy members worried that Americans were more captivated by politics than God and Salvation, and Americans felt a yearning for a more immediate religious experience * Second Great Awakening ministers such as Finney told people they could control their eternal life, much different from predestination, which encouraged individual redemption and even societal reformation * It acted as a springboard for a variety of reform movements ---- **Reforms** |**Temperance**|• Many women were troubled by their husbands spending all their income on alcohol and domestic abuse\\ • Tried to limit or ban the sale and consumption of alcohol\\ • Temporarily reduced alcohol consumption by ½ in the US, but did not last through the 1870s\\ • EXAMPLE\\ | |**Asylum**|• Dorothea Dix advocated for the rights of the mentally ill, and created the first mental asylums in the US| |**Education**|• Horace Mann, the secretary of the education, led a movement for free public education, which was seen as essential to democratic participation| |**Abolition**|• Led by free African Americans like Frederick Douglass and benevolent white Americans like William Lloyd Garrison\\ •\\ Uncle Tom’s Cabin - Harriet Beecher Stowe - written to depict the brutality of slavery| |**Women’s Rights**|• Seneca Falls Convention organized by Elizabeth Stanton and Lucretia Mott to discuss the rights of women\\ • Declaration of Sentiments: “All men and women created equal”\\ | ===== Big Ideas ===== * SCOTUS established that federal laws take precedence over state laws * America underwent an economic and technological revolution - cotton gin, steam engine, factory system, and railroads and canals * The US expanded after the Louisiana Purchase - wanted to be a major player in foreign trade * The debate over slavery raged on - the Missouri Compromise resolved some tension for the next 3 decades * By the 1820s and 30s, new parties arose - the Democrats (Andrew Jackson) and the Whigs (Clay) - that disagreed about the role and powers of the federal government and issues such as the national bank, tariffs, and federally funded internal improvement * The rise of democratic and individual beliefs, rationalism, and changes caused by the market revolution, along with greater social and geographical mobility, contributed to various reform movements ===== Period 5 (Manifest Destiny, Civil War, Reconstruction) ===== ===== Manifest Destiny ===== |**Causes**|• Population increase\\ • Economic depressions - 1819 and 1837 (Panics)\\ • Abundance of cheap (or free) land in West\\ • Expansion offered opportunities for new commerce\\ • People began moving over new trails like Santa Fe Trail and Oregon Trail\\ | |**Timeline**|• Belief that God determined America should stretch from Atlantic to Pacific\\ • Believed that US had mission to extend boundaries of freedom to others by sharing idealism and democratic institutions\\ •\\ James K. Polk = Manifest Destiny\\ •\\ Mexican American War: US gained the Mexican Cession - debate over whether or not to permit slavery in these territories; Wilmot Proviso would ban slavery in Mexican Cession| |**Effects**|• Increased tensions between settlers and natives, abolitionists and slaveholders\\ •\\ Sectionalism\\ •\\ Compromise of 1850: stricter Fugitive Slave Law, admission of CA as free state, popular sovereignty in NM and UT| ===== Civil War ===== **Causes** |**Slavery / Sectionalism**|• Dred Scott decision: Dred Scott sues on the basis that he lived in a free state and was a free man, and was being forced into slavery\\ • SCOTUS ruled that Scott was still a slave and could not initiate a lawsuit, and declared that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional and that Congress cannot ban slavery in any territory\\ | |**Extremism**|• John Brown raided the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry to arm and incite a generalized slave revolt in the south; was executed and became a martyr\\ •\\ Senator Sumner was beat with a cane after condemning slavery acts in Kansas| |**Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854**|• Let Kansas and Nebraska determine slaves by popular sovereignty (even though they were above the Missouri Compromise line)\\ •\\ Bleeding Kansas: Pro-slavery border ruffians came into these states to vote, violence broke out, Pierce ended up recognizing the pro-slavery governments\\ • Formation of Republican Party: dedicated to stopping the expansion of slavery into “free” soil; defended “free labor” ideology\\ | |**Election of 1860/Secession**|• Lincoln was elected in 1860\\ • SC and 6 other states seceded the following year, forming the Confederate States of America\\ • Confederacy fired on Fort Sumter, and Lincoln rallied 75,000 troops after Confederates\\ | |**North Advantages**|**South Advantages**| |• Greater population (much of the southern population was slaves)\\ • Greater military capacity\\ • Border States were loyal to Union\\ • Extensive railroad network\\ • This allowed the Union to resupply its troops and bring reinforcements as the war dragged on\\ |• Fighting a defensive war\\ • Did not have to invade the North to win, just had to fight on home soil\\ • South’s rich military tradition - had able generals and a cohort of military men to draw from\\ | **Union’s 3 Part Strategy** - Anaconda Plan: The navy would blockade southern ports to prevent supplies from reaching the South and prevent Southern exports to stifle economy - Divide Confederate territory in half by taking control of the Mississippi River - Troops march on the confederate capital of Richmond, VA to achieve victory ---- **Trajectory of the War** |**Beginning**|• Union suffered many defeats: First/Second Battle of Bull Run, etc.\\ • Lincoln went through many incompetent generals before\\ Grant\\ • Battle of\\ Antietam: Slight Union victory, McClellan repels Confederate forces in bloodiest day of fighting\\ • Successfully execute Anaconda Plan\\ | |**Turning Point**|• Battle of Gettysburg: Confederacy was now on the retreat| |**End**|• Victory at Vicksburg: gained control of Mississippi River\\ • Sherman’s\\ March to the Sea: military campaign designed to raid and loot civilians; destroy their morale so they would beg for the war to end\\ • Robert E. Lee surrenders to Grant at the Appomattox Courthouse\\ | **Abraham Lincoln** |**Emancipation Proclamation**|• Waited until Union achieved a victory (Antietam)\\ • Freed slaves in states of\\ rebellion (not border states that were part of Union)\\ • Not universally applauded by North\\ | |**Gettysburg Address**|• Framed the war as fulfilling the US’s democratic goals\\ • After Civil War, US was referred to as a nation, not just a union of states\\ | |**10% Plan**|• If 10% of the voting population in Southern states swore loyalty to the Union, they would be let back in| ===== Reconstruction (Effect of the War) ===== **Effects of Reconstruction** Reconstruction: process of readmitting the former Confederate states into the Union - Cities, towns, and farms ruined - High food prices and crop failures → many southerners faced starvation - Confederate money because worthless → Banks failed and merchants became bankrupt → people couldn’t pay their debts ---- **Amendments** |**13th**|Declared slavery illegal in America| |**14th**|Granted citizenship to everyone born in the US; equal protection of the law| |**15th**|Granted black men the right to vote| **Andrew Johnson** |**Policy**|• Pro-slavery, did not care for emancipation or black equality\\ • Tried to veto all bills giving civil rights to blacks\\ | |**Reconstruction Act of 1867**|• Passed by the Radical Republicans, it divided the South into 5 military districts\\ • To be readmitted, states would have to ratify the 14th Amendment\\ | |**Impeachment**|• Opposed to Reconstruction, tried to remove Secretary of War\\ • Impeached, but not removed from office\\ • Impeachment made it so that he could not act while the Reconstruction Acts were being passed\\ | **Slavery** |**Freedmen's Bureau**|• Blacks faced many needs - owners no longer had to feed and shelter them\\ • The Bureau was created to undertake the relief effort and help educate them\\ | |**Resistance**|• Black Codes\\ • KKK\\ • Redeemers (wanted to redeem white supremacy)\\ | **Compromise of 1877** * Election of 1876: Neither Hayes or Tilden had enough electoral votes to be declared the winner * Compromise: Hayes (Republican) was declared president in exchange for the removal of federal troops from the South - end of Reconstruction ---- ===== Big Ideas ===== * Americans enthusiastically supported Western expansion in hopes of finding economic opportunities - Manifest Destiny * The Compromise of 1850, Kansas-Nebraska Act, and Dred Scott decision were precursors to the Civil War * Debates about slavery led to a widening gap between North and South * Due to superior military strategy, more resources, larger population, and better infrastructure, the Union defeated the Confederacy * After the Civil War, the 13th Amendment officially ended slavery, and the 14th and 15th Amendments further expanded the rights of blacks ===== Period 6 (Postwar South, Gilded Age/Industrialization) ===== ===== Postwar South ===== **Characteristics** |**New South**|• Coined by Henry Grady, he urged the South to abandon its longstanding agrarian economy for a modern economy grounded in factories, mines, and mills\\ • Largely a\\ failure, income in the South was less than the national average and rural poverty persisted| |**Legalized Slavery**|• Sharecropping took the place of slavery → put black and poor white farmers in poverty → Southern economy stagnated\\ •\\ Black Codes forbid blacks from owning property or businesses\\ •\\ Literacy tests restricted them from voting while uneducated whites had grandfather clauses\\ •\\ Jim Crow laws: segregation of facilities\\ •\\ Plessy v. Ferguson: SCOTUS ruled Jim Crow constitutional under the equal protection of the 14th amendment, as long as blacks had “separate but equal” facilities| ===== Westward Migration ===== **Causes** - Transcontinental Railroads - Homestead Act: gave away free land for westbound settlers - Mining: gold and silver - Ranching/Farming ---- **Characteristics** |**Mining Boomtowns**|• Most mining was done with expensive equipment by large mining firms, most prospectors did not get rich\\ • Towns next to mines\\ grew rapidly → as mining became more industrial, they began to resemble the industrial towns of the East| |**Chinese Immigration**|• Chinese immigrants originally drawn by CA gold rush\\ • Discrimination pushed them away from mining → railroads\\ •\\ 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act: banned Chinese immigration| |**Native Conflict**|• With westward migration came conflict with natives\\ • Battle of Little Big Horn: defeat of the largest and fiercest Plains Indian tribes was a major\\ turning point in controlling Plains Indians\\ • President Grant: policy of native\\ assimilation → eventually be citizens| ===== Gilded Age ===== **Characteristics** * Industrial Age from 1870-1900 * Era of industrialization: railroads, steel industry, and oil industry dominated both the economy and politics * Gilded Age was an era of political corruption → policies favorable to Big Business (laissez faire) ---- **Innovation** |**2nd Industrial Revolution**|A revolution of mass production, and ways of making and shipping and communicating about business transactions and materials| |**Bessemer Process**|Made the production of steel commercially viable| |**Telephone**|Made business transactions possible on the spot| |**Railroads**|Connected the nation; intranational train travel| **Industrial Capitalization** |**Managerial Revolution**|• Large corporations development management systems that separated top executives and managers\\ • New managers: accounting, marketing, sales, etc.\\ | |**Consumer Change**|• Retail outlets and department stores replaced small local stores\\ • Because of mail-order catalogs, you no longer had to live near a metropolitan center/actual store\\ •\\ Home → commercial production; ex. Home grown produce → canned food| |**Robber Barons**|• Term given to men who controlled major industries in the US\\ •\\ Andrew Carnegie: dominated the steel industry by investing in all aspects of production, Gospel of Wealth\\ • Vertical integration: Carnegie Steel company performed all key aspects - controlled the mills where steel was made, the mines that supplied coal, and the mines that supplied iron ore\\ • Consolidation: a\\ trust consisted of several companies merging to gain monopoly control of an industry\\ •\\ Rockefeller: owned a trust called Standard Oil\\ •\\ J.P. Morgan: a financier who gained control of the economy through financing railroads| **Labor** |**Working Class**|• Fierce industrial competition worsened working conditions\\ • Panics, child labor, and immigrants led to decreases in wages\\ • Production/separation of processes led to an increase in unsafe and unsanitary conditions\\ • Also led to unskilled tasks → women and children entered into the workforce\\ • However, industrialization did lead to a decrease in the price of goods\\ | |**Strikes and Unions**|• Labor battles were almost always won by management because of their economic and political power, and backing of the government\\ •\\ American Federation of Labor (AFL): federation of unions of skilled workers that argued for better wages, hours, and conditions\\ •\\ Great Railroad Strike of 1877: a strike at McCormick Reaper Works led to jobs of striking workers being given to replacements (scabs); police fired on strikers rallying in Haymarket Square\\ •\\ Homestead Strike: fight erupted between union workers and hired Pinkerton guards in Carnegie’s steel plant\\ •\\ Pullman Strike: Railroad workers went on strike, causing trains to come to a standstill; federal troops killed 25 and put the strike down| **Immigration** |**Pull Factors** (what attracted them to the US)|**Push Factors** (what made them leave home)| |1. Freedom\\ 2. Economic opportunity\\ 3. Abundant land\\ |1. Population growth (overcrowding)\\ 2. Agricultural changes\\ 3. Crop failures\\ 4. Industrial revolution\\ 5. Religious and political turmoil\\ | ===== Big Ideas ===== * Large scale industrialization and advances in technology gave rise to capitalism and the era of big business (Robber Barons) * Due to the rise of big business, many groups such as farmers and unions called for stronger governmental protections to regulate the economy and safeguard the rights of workers * Migration increased, both to and within the US; cities became areas of economic growth that attracted blacks and migrants from Asia and Europe * Debates intensified over citizens’ rights, especially over gender and race ===== Period 7 (Imperialism, Progressivism, WWI, New Deal, WWII) ===== ===== Imperialism ===== **Causes** |**1. Industrial Revolution**|Needed new resources, markets, places to invest surplus capital| |**2. Close of Frontier**|No more land to be discovered → search for new opportunity| |**3. European Example**|2nd wave of European colonization - Asia and Africa| |**4. American Nationalism**|Big navyism - global trade requires navy| |**5. White Man’s Burden**|Social Darwinism, American “duty” to help the weak| **Causes of the Spanish American War** |**Cuban Revolution**|A movement trying to end Spanish rule was suppressed by cruel tactics/concentration camps| |**Yellow Journalism**|brought this to attention of American public, US intervened| **Effects** |**Treaty of Paris 1898**|• US annexed Puerto Rico and Guam, gained control of the Philippines\\ • Do constitutional rights apply to those in US territories?\\ | |**Platt Amendment**|• Allowed US to intervene militarily in Cuba when they saw fit - so that their economic interests could never be threatened| |**Philippine Insurrection**|• Philippinos rebelled because they thought the US would give them freedom| |**Involvement in Asia**|• Intervened in China with the Open Door policy: allowed the US to gain a foothold in trade; missionaries → Boxer Rebellion| |**Involvement in the Caribbean**|• US caused a revolution in Panama to gain independence from Colombia, Panama agrees to let the US gain rights to build the Panama Canal| |**Imperialist POV**|**Anti-Imperialist POV**| |• The US needs colonies to compete economically\\ • US needs colonies and naval bases to be a world power\\ • It is America’s duty to care for weak people\\ • To abandon territories makes US cowardly\\ • Honorable to keep the land that Americans lost their lives to obtain\\ |• Supporting an empire would eb financial burden\\ • The US should focus on solving problems at home\\ • Nonwhites cannot be assimilated into American society\\ • An empire would involve the US in more wars\\ • Violation of democratic principles to annex land and not offer its people the same Constitutional rights\\ | ===== Progressivism ===== |**Muckraking**|• “Investigative journalism”: using the power of the mass media to shed light on social ills| |**Women**|• Progressivism provided a means for women to be involved in public issues - framed this as “social housekeeping”\\ • 19th Amendment, supported by Wilson, granted them suffrage\\ | |**Segregation**|• Du Bois called for full political equality, whereas Booker T. Washington had a more conciliatory approach - confrontation would end badly for blacks| |**Temperance**|• Women’s Christian Temperance Movement\\ • Saloons were seen as parasites to working class communities\\ •\\ 18th Amendment banned the production/sale of alcohol| |**Democratic Reforms**|• Direct Presidential primaries\\ • Referendum: directly vote on bills\\ • Direct election of senators: 17th Amendment\\ • Secret ballots: privacy\\ | |**Industry Regulation**|• The Jungle by Upton Sinclair exposed the meat-packing industry → creation of the FDA\\ •\\ History of Standard Oil by Ida Tarbell led to USFG breaking up Standard Oil\\ • Roosevelt as “\\ Trust Buster” - passed the Sherman Antitrust Act to break up monopolies\\ • Wilson passed the\\ Federal Reserve Act - created the Federal Reserve Bank which would raise and lower interest rates on loans, controlling the economy\\ • Wilson passed the\\ Clayton Antitrust Act, exempting labor unions from being targeted by antitrust actions| |**Environment**|• Roosevelt championed environmental protection, expanding the national park system\\ • Conservation: nature/resources should be used in a responsible way\\ • Preservation: nature should be hands off to society\\ | ===== WWI ===== **Causes of Joining WWI** |**Lusitania**|Germany sunk the passenger ship Lusitania; signs Sussex Pledge but still begins unrestricted submarine warfare again| |**British Blockade**|Britain’s Blockade on Germany was a cause of unrestricted sub warfare| |**Zimmerman Note**|Germany would help Mexico regain territory it lost to the US if Mexico joined the war| **Effects** |**1. Booming Industry**|• Munitions industry: US selling weapons to Britain and France\\ • War Industries Board: production and price regulations on industry\\ | |**2. The Draft**|• Selective Service Act| |**3. Labor**|• Hired in large numbers because of labor shortage (draft)\\ •\\ Great Migration: blacks left South to find work in the North\\ • National War Labor Board: US government mediated discussion between industry and unions to avoid strikes\\ | |**4. Patriotism**|• Liberty bonds - regular people financed the war\\ • Victory gardens - people grew their own produce to help ration\\ | |**5. Unpatriotic Acts**|• Congress stifled dissent\\ • Espionage and Sedition Acts: could be jailed for interfering with the draft or say anything disloyal about the war effort\\ | ===== Mass Culture ===== |**Red Scare**|• Cause by the Bolshevik Revolution; Communist Party formed in the US\\ • Attorney General\\ Palmer hunted down suspected communists and trampled on people’s civil rights\\ • Labor union membership declined because of the correlation to communism\\ | |**Radio and Movies**|• Became an extremely popular medium for American people - sermons, music, comedy, soap operas\\ • ¾ Americans going to the movies\\ • Created a more homogenous culture\\ | |**KKK**|• Had a resurgence, a genuine mass movement devoted to white supremacy| |**Cars**|• Led to the growth of steel and oil\\ • Led more Americans to settle in suburban communities\\ | ===== Great Depression ===== **Causes** |**1. Overproduction and Underconsumption**|• Assembly line and scientific management increased industrial output\\ • Consumption could not keep up with production\\ • Farmers increased production for WWI, but they were left in a cycle of overproduction and falling commodity prices\\ | |**2. Overspeculation**|• Inflated stock market because people bought stocks with the promise to pay the price later\\ • Because the stock market did not match up with the actual valuation of the company, investors began panic selling\\ • Stock market crashed in 1929\\ | |**3. Availability of Easy Credit**|• Installment plans left many in debt| |**4. Uneven Distribution of Income**|• Industries and corporations controlled the economy\\ • The fall of these companies led to a downturn in the economy that the government could not prevent\\ | ===== New Deal ===== |**First New Deal**|• National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA): Drew up a set of codes designed to shorten hours, establish min. wage, and promote fair business practices\\ ◦ This increased the popularity of unions\\ •\\ Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA): paid farmers to grow fewer crops - reduce production to bolster falling commodity prices and strengthen the agricultural sector\\ •\\ Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC): employed 2.75 million men in infrastructure projects| |**Second New Deal**|• Works Progress Administration (WPA): created millions of jobs for the unemployed\\ •\\ Social Security Act: designed to help the unemployed, elderly, and disabled, funded by taxes on workers and employees| **Critics of the New Deal** |**Left**|• Upton Sinclair wanted more socialist solutions\\ • Huey Long proposed taxing the rich and redistributing their wealth\\ | |**Right**|• SCOTUS: declared NIRA and AAA unconstitutional| **Rollback of the New Deal** |**Roosevelt Recession**|• By 1937, the US showed signs of improvement and FDR cut back spending on the New Deal → led to further downturn in the economy\\ • Critics argue that the New Deal did little to improve the Great Depression and that it was increased manufacturing for WWII that brought the US out of recession\\ | |**Keynesian Economics**|• Argues that government deficit spending was desirable if it was stimulating the economy: using the tools of the government to influence economic activity| ===== WWII ===== **Causes of Joining WWII** |**Dictatorships vs. Isolationism**|• Mussolini and the Fascists took power in Italy in 1922, Hitler and the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, and Japan fell under military rule\\ • Made it hard for the US to maintain isolationism\\ • Many Americans believed that Hitler had to be stopped before he reached the US; did not support isolationism\\ | |**British Relations**|• Lend-Lease Act: allowed the US to send arms to Britain in their own ships\\ • Atlantic Charter: solidified alliance between Britain and US\\ | |**Pearl Harbor**|• Trigger for entering WWII| **Wartime America** |**The Home Front**|• Rationing policies gave ration books and stamps to families\\ • Funded the war effort through war bonds and increase in taxes\\ • Unemployment of the 1930s ended because of arms manufacturing\\ | |**Women**|• Rosie the Riveter: government campaign to recruit women into factories| |**African Americans**|• Executive Order 8802 banned discrimination in war-related industries\\ •\\ Double V Campaign: victory against facism abroad and victory against racism in the US| |**Japanese**|• Executive Order 9066 authorized the government to relocate more than 100,000 Japanese Americans to internment camps| **Timeline** |**Island Hopping**|• Avoided heavily fortified islands, only attacked key islands - naval bases, airfields\\ • US cut off islands it had hopped over by blockading supply ships\\ | |**Underbelly of the Axis**|• ¼ million Allied troops landed in Sicily and tried to enter the Axis through Italy| |**D-Day**|• Allies stormed Normandy, France and pushed Hitler’s forces back to Germany, liberating Paris from Nazi occupation| |**V-E Day**|• Victory in Europe Day: After Hitler’s last attempt to stop the Allies at the Battle of the Bulge failed, Germany surrendered| |**Atomic Bomb**|• Unleashed on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan swiftly surrendered\\ • It did not generate much controversy at the time as it ended a conflict that had taken 50 million lives; modern critics argue that Japan was already on the verge of surrender\\ | **Effects** |**Yalta Conference**|• Divided Germany into zones controlled by the US, USSR, France, and Britain\\ • US and Britain allowed Stalin to remain in Eastern Europe\\ • FDR and Churchill were later criticized for abandoning Eastern Europe to communist forces; however, they could not dislodge the Red Army from Europe without starting a war\\ | |**Potsdam Conference**|• Resolved denazification of Germany → Nuremberg War Trials| ===== Big Ideas ===== * America became more globally involved with imperialism * Social change began with Progressivism to aspects of industry, environment, temperance, women, segregation, etc. * America’s culture became more homogenous with technology connecting the country * FDR’s reform with the New Deal shifted power away from big businesses and gave power to unions and workers * America’s economic system evolved into one of the leading industrial powers in the world * America became the leading defender of democracy * The US would no longer retreat into isolationism after WWII * The War was a turning point - for groups in the US, for migration patterns, and for the military ===== Period 8 (Cold War, New Culture, Civil Rights) ===== ===== Cold War ===== **Causes** * US believed that Soviets were intent on controlling Europe * When WWII ended, the USSR left its Red Army troops in Eastern Europe, taking those countries and making them Soviet satellites while installing a puppet regime in Poland ---- **Timeline** |**Truman Doctrine**|• Declared the goal of the US was to contain Communism| |**Marshall Plan**|• Allocated $13 billion for war-torn Europe to rebuild, stabilized the capitalist economies of Europe: West Germany, France, and Britain| |**Berlin Airlift**|• USSR wanted control Germany and keep Berlin isolated, blockading it from food and supplies until it joined East Germany\\ • US, Britain, and France sent food and supplies through planes instead\\ | |**NATO**|• US broke with its tradition of avoiding peacetime alliances\\ • Formed after Berlin - US, Canada, and Western Europe joined forces to resist aggression by the USSR\\ | |**Communism in China**|• US allied with the Nationalist side led by Jiang Jieshi\\ • Mao Zedong and the Communist Party had a huge following among the poor, rural population and established the People’s Republic of China\\ • Truman was accused of losing China to Communism\\ | |**Korean War**|• North Korean troops, using Soviet equipment, invaded South Korea\\ • UN forces repelled them; divided at the 38th parallel\\ | |**Eisenhower Doctrine**|• Egyptian President Nasser established close relations with the USSR and seized control of the British and French owned Suez Canal\\ • Eisenhower pressured France, Great Britain, and Israel who were looking to take control of the canal against invading Egypt\\ • Eisenhower pledged he would support any Middle Eastern country threatened by a Communist nation\\ | |**Space Race**|• The USSR were the first to reach space with Sputnik, alarming the US because of its capability to launch nuclear weapons to any location\\ • The US became the first to land a man on the moon\\ | |**MAD**|• Mutually Assured Destruction; US needed to be aware that the USSR was prepared to go to war and had to prepare a massive retaliation\\ • Leads to nuclear proliferation/arms race\\ | |**Detente with China and USSR**|• Detente: easing of tensions; thawing of the Cold War\\ • 1971: Nixon and USSR agreed to recognize East Germany and West Berlin, respectively\\ • 1972: Nixon visits China\\ | |**Bay of Pigs Invasion**|• Fidel Castro overthrew the government the US had put in Cuba\\ • The US trained a group of Cuban exiles to overthrow Castro - they landed in the Bay of Pigs but were captured by Cuban forces.\\ | |**Cuban Missile Crisis**|• A U-2 spy plane discovered that Cuba was preparing bases for Soviet missiles\\ • Kennedy made a deal with the USSR that they would abandon their missile program and the US would not attempt another invasion of Cuba\\ | **Timeline of the Vietnam War** |**Background**|• A resistance movement led by Ho Chi Minh defeated France at Dien Bien Phu to gain independence\\ • Rebel communists of the North: Vietcong, were fighting against a corrupt and dictatorial South Vietnam\\ | |**Domino Theory**|• When a nation is Communist, it is likely to spread to its neighbors\\ • US supported and sent aid to South Vietnam\\ | |**Tet Offensive**|• Major attack by the Vietcong on South Vietnam; thousands dead\\ • Demonstrated the Vietcong’s ability to organize a coordinated strike\\ | |**My Lai Massacre**|• A company of American troops killed everyone in a village despite finding no enemy forces\\ • Led many Americans to question the morality of the war\\ | |**[[https://imgur.com/OqYLGbM|US Pulls Out]]**|• Nixon adopted a policy of Vietnamization: replacing American troops with South Vietnamese troops\\ • The US pulled out in 1973 and Vietnam was united as a Communist nation\\ | **Second Red Scare** |**Red Fear**|• Growing fear of Communist spies in American institutions\\ • Fear that Hollywood might be Communist led HUAC to investigate many actors, writers, and directors\\ • Rosenbergs: a couple that was executed, accused of for leaking information about the nuclear bomb to the USSR\\ | |**McCarthy**|• Rose to prominence when he announced he had a list of 205 known Communists working in the State Department; inspired a mindset where Americans began to suspect people around them as Communists\\ • McCarthyism: anti-Communist movement of the 1950s\\ | |**Fall of McCarthyism**|• Eventually, critics asserted that anti-Communist measures violated people’s constitutional rights\\ • McCarthy went too far by accusing members of the military\\ • After finding his accusations baseless, the Senate censured McCarthy\\ | ===== American Culture and Counterculture ===== |**GI Bill**|• Provided low interest loans for veterans to purchase homes and attend college\\ •\\ Prevented a wave of unemployment that could have occurred after the war, drove the prosperity of the postwar era| |**Suburbia**|• Housing crunch created by returning veterans of WWII\\ • Levittown: mass produced communities of identical houses\\ • Growth of suburbs → reduction of cities’ tax bases → slums\\ | |**Interstate Highways**|• The Interstate Highway Act allowed the government to build an interstate highway system; promoted as a defensive measure, allowing for the rapid movement of military personnel| |**Conformity**|• Pressures to conform due to McCarthyism\\ • Television and the sitcom added to homogenous American culture\\ | |**Rock ‘n Roll**|• Extremely popular with young people in the 50s, generational divide\\ • Dubbed “race music” and dangerous by mainstream whites\\ | |**Literature and Art**|• Beats literature: rejection of mainstream social values - suburban lifestyle, consumer society, patriotism\\ •\\ Abstract Expressionism: emphasized emotion over realism (Jackson Pollock)| |**Living Room War**|• First war that was televised to the American public\\ • Caused many to question the justness of the war\\ | |**Beatlemania**|• Beatles and the Rolling Stones transformed American culture\\ • Feared by conservatives - challenge to traditional moral values\\ | |**Hippies**|• Rejection of materialistic conformity - encouraged urban and rural communities, mystical experiences, drug use, experimental music| **Great Society** |**Poverty**|• Dramatic rise in middle class - home and car ownership, college education, comfortable income\\ • Harrinton’s\\ The Other America: Poverty in the US revealed that technological advancements → job displacements and urban slums| |**Liberalism**|• Sided with Keynesian economics, also anti-Communist| |**New Frontier**|• Kennedy’s liberalist policy for advancing civil and economic rights for all: minimum wage, education, Peace Corps, equal pay for women| |**Great Society**|• LBJ’s attempt to end poverty: Medicare and Medicaid, welfare programs, and public housing| ===== Civil Rights ===== **Black Civil Rights** |**Jim Crow**|• Challenged the racism that justified Jim Crow Segregation| |**WWII**|• Many blacks who took part in the Double V Campaign were empowered| **Timeline** |**Rosa Parks**|• Refused to give up her seat for a white person → catalyst for the Montgomery Bus Boycott| |**MLK**|• Central figure of the civil rights movement who advocated peaceful civil disobedience| |**SCOTUS**|• Occupied by a liberal court, ruled in Brown v. Education Board of Topeka that the separate but equal doctrine of Plessy had to end| |**Freedom Rides**|• Organized buses with blacks riding next to whites to protest state segregation laws that ignored the Topeka ruling| |**Birmingham Campaign**|• “Bull” Connor violently broke up a march in Birmingham → images of police brutality helped bring public sympathy to civil rights| |**March on Washington**|• More than 200,000 people gathered to demonstrate; MLK’s “I Have a Dream Speech”| |**Civil Rights Act**|• Passed by LBJ: equal access to public education, accommodations, and voting; banned discrimination in employment on race and gender| |**Voting Rights Act**|• USFG could oversee voter registration\\ • Outlawed literacy tests and poll taxes\\ | **Expansion of Civil Rights** |**Women’s Liberation**|• Challenged inequities in the job market, representation of women in the media and in society\\ • Inspired by Firedan’s\\ The Feminine Mystique which challenged traditional options for women in life| |**Title IX**|• Banned gender discrimination in all aspects of education - faculty hiring and admissions; led to major funding for female sports| |**Roe v. Wade**|• Sexual Revolution: pill was introduced to the market\\ • SCOTUS prohibited states from banning abortions\\ | ===== Society Transitions ===== |**Stagflation**|• Stagnation of wages and inflation in prices caused by the cost of the Vietnam War and oil crisis to economic downturn| |**Camp David**|• These accords created a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel; considered a big success for Carter’s administration| |**Oil Crisis**|• OPEC cut off exports to the US and increased the price of oil, retaliating for US support of Israel in the Yom Kippur War| |**Carter Doctrine**|• Stated that the US would repel any force attempting to gain control of the Persian Gulf region; protected US oil interests| |**Energy Crisis**|• Oil embargo caused the US to reduce energy consumption\\ • Instated a 55mph speed limit; responded to by a truckers’ strike\\ • Incidents at 3 Mile Island and Chernobyl dissuaded people from nuclear energy\\ | |**Conservatism**|• Emergence of Conservatism: many Americans were dismayed by protests against the Vietnam War, counterculture, civil rights movement → came with the victory of Reagan| |**Watergate**|• Nixon was caught stealing documents and wiretapping phones of his political opponents for reelection; resigned before he could be impeached| ===== Big Ideas ===== * The US positioned itself as a global leader * Initially, there was major American support for an anti-Communist foreign policy * Civil rights activists energized a new nationwide movement for racial progress * Spurred by the civil rights movement, other social movements advocated their causes * In the 1960s, President Johnson’s Great Society program attempted to use the power of the federal government to eliminate poverty, end racial discrimination, and promote social justice * In the 1970s, the public grew increasingly distrustful of the government’s ability to solve problems ===== Period 9 (Modern) ===== ===== Politics ===== **Presidential Policy** |**New Right**|1. Focused on containing Communism\\ 2. Pro-business: lower corporate taxes, deregulation, laissez faire\\ 3. Grassroots support: traditional minded frustration with counterculture\\ | |**Reaganomics**|• Economic policies that favored big business\\ •\\ Cut taxes for corporations and reduced regulations on industry - tripling national debt| |**Clinton’s Impeachment**|• Accused of having an affair with a White House intern and of lying to a grand jury/obstruction of justice\\ • Impeached, but not removed from office\\ | |**Election of 2000**|• Without Florida, neither Al Gore or Bush had 270 electoral votes\\ •\\ Bush v. Gore ruled Bush ahead of Gore, securing his presidency| |**Election of Obama**|• Harnessed the power of the Internet to build a large base for his campaign\\ • Fox promoted the Tea Party Movement expressing discontent with big government; called for decreased government spending\\ | |**Election of Trump**|• Perceived as speaking his mind; appealed to many common Americans\\ • Attempted to undo the Affordable Care Act and set travel bans on Muslim countries, rolled back environmental regulations\\ • Tax code overhaul: cuts in taxes of corporations and the wealthy\\ • Impeached for abuse of power: enlisting Ukraine to get dirt on Biden, and incitement of insurrection: Capitol riots\\ | **End of Cold War** |**Reagan Doctrine**|• Provided aid to governments that were anti-Communist, even if they were undemocratic or repressive| |**Iran-Contra Affair**|• Reagan tried to overthrow a government in Nicaragua that had replaced the US backed dictatorship by training a military group (Contras), but Congress blocked this after reports of human rights abuses by the Contras\\ • A scheme was developed to sell weapons to Iran and use the money to fund the Contras\\ • Details of this affair became public; Reagan nicknamed the “Teflon President” because accusations did not stick to him\\ | |**Berlin Wall**|• Soviet leader Gorbachev introduced reforms that would dismantle the repressiveness of the USSR and introduce elements of capitalism\\ • Berlin Wall fell in 1989, and every government in Europe was non-Communist\\ | |**Gulf War**|• Iraq and Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait for oil\\ • H.W. Bush and a 34 nation coalition initiated\\ Operation Desert Storm, defeating Iraqi forces and driving them out of Kuwait| **America’s Role in the World** |**9/11**|• Terrorists from al-Qaeda hijacked planes, killing 3,000 people| |**Iran and Afghanistan**|• W. Bush initiated military action against Iran and Afghanistan\\ • American forces overthrew the Taliban in Afghan\\ • Operation Iraqi Freedom was launched to remove Hussein and create a more democratic government\\ • While defeating Hussein and the Iraqi army was easy, creating stability was not → this hurt Bush’s approval ratings\\ | |**Patriot Act**|• Criticized for the FBI’s ability to search information without a court order| |**Bush Doctrine**|• Preemptive warfare against threats to the US - axis of evil: Iraq, Iran, North Korea (W. Bush)| |**Iran Nuclear Deal**|• Obama agreed to remove sanctions on Iran for Iran’s promise not to produce a nuclear bomb\\ • Condemned by Republicans and the Israeli prime minister\\ | ===== Economics ===== **Crisis and Reform** |**Social Security**|• Reagan led the expansion of Medicare and Medicaid (insurance for the elderly, disabled, and low-income); ensured its long-term solvency| |**NAFTA**|• Eliminated all trade barriers and tariffs between US, Canada, Mexico\\ • Critics argued that nations would no longer be able to implement environmental regulations or ensure workers’ rights\\ | |**Saving and Loan Crisis**|• In the 80s, savings and loan associations suffered from risk investments and a downturn in the housing market\\ • H.W. Bush signed a bill, extending billions of dollars to bail the industry out\\ • Criticized for creating a\\ moral hazard - companies would be more incentivized to take risks knowing they would be bailed out| |**Housing Crisis**|• Banks lured first time home buyers who had low credit ratings to take out mortgages they could not pay back\\ • These lenders would be sold to Wall Street\\ • When the real estate market weakened in 2007, the bubble burst: many walked away from their homes, and financial institutions were ruined - business activity slowed and consumer spending decreased\\ | |**Great Recession Policies**|• W. Bush administration outlined a loan program for the country’s biggest banks to borrow at discounted rates\\ • The automobile industry that was hit as a result of reduced consumer spending was bailed out; it was a success and the industry recovered\\ • Obama created a\\ stimulus package, providing $800 billion to state and local governments for infrastructure, schools, hospitals, etc.\\ •\\ Dodd-Frank Act: regulated financial markets to prevent having a company whose single failure would devastate the economy| |**Healthcare Reform**|• Obama passed the Affordable Care Act, dramatically reducing the number of uninsured Americans| **Economic shift** |**Technology**|• Economists cite productivity growth as a result of information technology and the increased speed of communications\\ • Online shopping increased convenience but drove many brick and mortar stores out of business\\ • Allowed the rise of the “Gig industry” - Fiverr, Uber, delivery\\ | |**Deindustrialization**|• A large number of factories have closed due to a shift of the manufacturing sector out of the US and into underdeveloped countries, as well as the rise of manufacturing in China| |**Service Sector**|• 70% of jobs in the US are in the service sector, representing a shift in the economy from the production of things to the providing of services\\ • Low wage jobs in retail and fast-food → stagnation of wages and growing income gap; calling for $15 minimum wage\\ | ===== Society ===== **Reform** |**LGBTQ**|• In 1981, there was a disease that seemed to disproportionately affect gay men called AIDS caused by HIV\\ • NIH established a committee devoted to AIDS research\\ •\\ Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell: allowed LGBTQ members to serve in the military as long as they were closeted\\ ◦ Repealed by Obama in 2011\\ • SCOTUS ruled the legality of same-sex marriages\\ | |**Women’s Movement**|• Quiet Revolution of women entering the workplace in large numbers continued\\ • There was a push for government-funded day care\\ • Women’s Activism grew in the Trump Era through the #MeToo movement, calling attention to sexual harassment\\ | |**Policing**|• Blacks are incarcerated at 5x the rate of whites\\ • BLM emerged in response to the acquittal of a Florida man who shot a black teenager; associated with police brutality and racial profiling\\ • BLM resurged in 2020 after the death of George Floyd\\ | |**Gun Control**|• Shootings in Sandy Hook, Las Vegas, and Parkland left many dead\\ • NRA lobbied against gun control, citing the Second Amendment\\ | |**Immigration**|• Obama pushed for comprehensive immigration reform\\ • Republicans and Trump pushed against immigration, fearing that large numbers will take American jobs and draw on public resources\\ | ===== Big Ideas ===== * The end of the Cold War left the United States as the world’s major superpower * Tensions in the Middle East erupted after 9/11 and the Gulf War * The New Right and Reagan attempted to pass corporate tax cuts, and Wall Street institutions were bailed out during the Great Recession * The growth of technology has led to the spread of reform movements (BLM, #MeToo) and a change in the economy **Key Concepts** ===== Period 1 (1491 - 1607): 4-6% ===== - **​As native populations migrated and settled across the vast expanse of North America over time, they developed distinct and increasingly complex societies by adapting to and transforming their diverse environments.** - Different native societies adapted to and transformed their environments through innovations in agriculture, resource use, and social structure. - The spread of maize cultivation from present-day Mexico northward into the present-day American Southwest and beyond supported economic development, settlement, advanced irrigation, and social diversification among societies. * Ex. Pueblo, Navajo - Societies responded to the aridity of the Great Basin and the grasslands of the western Great Plains by developing largely mobile lifestyles. * Ex. Sioux, Apache - In the Northeast, the Mississippi River Valley, and along the Atlantic seaboard some societies developed mixed agricultural and hunter--gatherer economies that favored the development of permanent villages. * Ex. Iroquois Confederacy of the Northeast, Creek, Choctaw, or Cherokee of the Southeast - Societies in the Northwest and present-day California supported themselves by hunting and gathering, and in some areas developed settled communities supported by the vast resources of the ocean. * Ex. Chinook, Nez Perce, Shoshone - **Contact among Europeans, Native Americans, and Africans resulted in the Columbian Exchange and significant social, cultural, and political changes on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean.** - European expansion into the western hemisphere generated intense social, religious, policial, and economic competition and changes within European societies - European nations’ efforts to explore and conquer the New World stemmed from a search for new sources of wealth, economic and military competition, and a desire to spread Christianity. * Ex. “3 Gs”: Gold, God, and Glory, founding of St. Augustine (1565), Northwest Passage, Roanoke Island - The Columbian Exchange brought new crops to Europe from the Americas, stimulating European population growth, and new sources of mineral wealth, which facilitated the European shift from feudalism to capitalism. * Ex. Introduction of corn, potatoes, and tomatoes to Europe, growth of European nation-states - Improvements in maritime technology and more organized methods for conducting international trade, such as joint-stock companies, helped drive changes to economies in Europe and the Americas. * Ex. Caravel, sextant, joint-stock trading company - The Columbian Exchange and development of the Spanish Empire in the Western Hemisphere resulted in extensive demographic, economic and social changes - Spanish exploration and conquest were accompanied and furthered by widespread deadly epidemics that devastated native populations and by the introduction of crops and animals not found in the Americas. * Ex. Spread of smallpox; European introduction of horses, rice, wheat, and oxen to the New World; bison hunting on the Great Plains - In the encomienda system, Spanish colonial economies marshaled Native American labor to support plantation-based agriculture and extract precious metals and other resources. * Ex. Sugar plantations, silver mines, Black Legend - European traders partnered with some African groups who practiced slavery to forcibly extract slave labor for the Americas. The Spanish imported enslaved Africans to labor in plantation agriculture and mining. * Ex. Line of Demarcation, Middle Passage - The Spanish developed a caste system that incorporated, and carefully defined the status of, the diverse population of Europeans, Africans, and Native Americans in their empire. * Ex. Mestizo, Zambo, mulatto - In their interactions, Europeans and Native Americans asserted divergent worldviews regarding issues such as religion, gender roles, family, land use, and power. - Mutual misunderstandings between Europeans and Native Americans often defined the early years of interaction and trade as each group sought to make sense of the other. Over time, Europeans and Native Americans adopted some useful aspects of each other’s culture. * Ex. African religious traditions combined with Christian traditions, Maroon communities - As European encroachments on Native Americans’ lands and demands on their labor increased, native peoples sought to defend and maintain their political sovereignty, economic prosperity, religious beliefs, and concepts of gender relations through diplomatic negotiations and military resistance. * Ex. Spanish mission system, Juan de Onate, Acoma War and defeat of the Pueblo (1599) - Extended contact with Native Americans and Africans fostered debate among European religious and political leaders about how non-Europeans should be treated, as well as evolving religious, cultural, and racial justifications for the subjugation of Africans and Native Americans. * Ex. Juan de Sepulveda, Bartolome de Las Casas, communal nature of land, private vs. public ownership of land, animism. ===== Period 2 (1607 - 1754): 6-8% ===== - **Europeans developed a variety of colonization and migration patterns, influenced by different imperial goals, cultures, and the varied North American environments where they settled, and they competed with each other and American Indians for resources** - Spanish, French, Dutch, and British colonizers had different economic and imperial goals involving land and labor that shaped the social and political development of their colonies as well as their relationships with native populations. - Spanish efforts to extract wealth from the land led them to develop institutions based on subjugating native populations, converting them to Christianity, and incorporating them, along with enslaved and free Africans, into the Spanish colonial society. * Ex. Christopher Columbus, Cortez, Pizarro, conquistadores, mission system, encomienda system, New Spain, establishment of Santa Fe (1610) - French and Dutch colonial efforts involved relatively few Europeans and relied on trade alliances and intermarriage with American Indians to build economic and diplomatic relationships and acquires furs and other products for export to Europe. * Ex. Samuel de Champlain, Coureurs de bois, New Netherland, Jesuit missionaries, French alliance with Huron Indians - English colonization efforts attracted a comparatively large number of male and female British migrants, as well as other European migrants, all of whom sought social mobility, economic prosperity, religious freedom, and improved living conditions. These colonists focused on agriculture and settled on land taken from Native Americans, from whom they lived separately. * Ex. Jamestown (1607), starving time, head-right system, John Rolfe, tobacco as cash crop - In the 17th century, early British colonies developed along the Atlantic coast, with regional differences that reflected various environmental, economic, cultural, and demographic factors. - The Chesapeake and North Carolina colonies grew prosperous exporting tobacco — a labor-intensive product initially cultivated by white, mostly male indentured servants and later by enslaved Africans. * Ex. Middle Passage, indentured servants, Bacon’s Rebellion (1676), Chesapeake colonies, racial hierarchy - The New England colonies, initially settled by Puritans, developed around small towns with family farms and achieved a thriving mixed economy of agriculture and commerce. * Ex. Puritan work ethic, town meetings, expanded life expectancy in New England, social hierarchy, blue laws, subsistence farming, John Winthrop’s “city upon a hill”, Salem witch trials, trial of Anne Hutchinson, banishment of Roger Williams, establishment of Harvard College (1636) - The middle colonies supported a flourishing export economy based on cereal crops and attracted a broad range of European migrants, leading to societies with greater cultural, ethnic, and religious diversity and tolerance. * Ex. William Penn, Quakers, religious toleration, “middle way”, ethnic diversity, “bread-basket colonies” - The colonies of the southernmost Atlantic coast and the British West Indies used long growing seasons to develop plantation economies based on exporting staple crops. They depended on the labor of enslaved Africans, who often constituted the majority of the population in these areas and developed their own forms of cultural and religious autonomy. * Ex. rice as cash crop in Georgia and the Carolinas, sugar as cash crop in Barbados, slave codes, Gullah, ring-shout, spirituals - Distance and Britain’s initially lax attention led to the colonies creating self-governing institutions that were unusually democratic for the era. The New England colonies based power in participatory town meetings, which in turn elected members to their colonial legislatures; in the Southern colonies, elite planters exercised local authority and also dominated the elected assemblies. * Ex. Mayflower Compact (1620), Maryland Toleration Act (1649), House of Burgesses, Massachusetts General Court - Competition over resources between European rivals and American Indians encouraged industry and trade and led to conflict in the Americas. - An Atlantic economy developed in which goods, as well as enslaved Africans and American Indians, were exchanged between Europe, Africa, and theAmericas through extensive trade networks. European colonial economies focused on acquiring, producing, and exporting commodities that were valued in Europe and gaining new sources of labor. * Ex. Triangular trade routes, direct trade routes, Middle Passage - Continuing trade with Europeans increased the flow of goods in and out of American Indian communities, stimulating cultural and economic changes and spreading epidemic diseases that caused radical demographic shifts. * Ex. Praying towns, fur trade - Interactions between European rivals and American Indian populations fostered both accommodation and conflict. French, Dutch, British, and Spanish colonies allied with and armed American Indian groups, who frequently sought alliances with Europeans against other Indian groups. * Ex. Beaver Wars of the mid-1600s, Chickasaw Wars of the mid-1700s, King William’s War (1688-1697), Queen Anne’s War (1702-1713), King George’s War (1744-1748) - The goals and interests of European leaders and colonists at times diverged, leading to a growing mistrust on both sides of the Atlantic. Colonists, especially in British North America, expressed dissatisfaction over issues including territorial settlements, frontier defense, self-rule, and trade. * Ex. Bacon’s Rebellion (1676), revocation of Massachusetts’ charter, Navigation Acts/smuggling, protests against the Dominion of New England - British conflicts with American Indians over land, resources, and political boundaries led to military confrontations, such as Metacom’s War (King Philip’s War) in New England. * Ex. Anglo-Powhatan Wars (1610-1640s), Pequot War (1636-1637), King Philip’s War (1675-1676) - American Indian resistance to Spanish colonizing efforts in North America, particularly after the Pueblo Revolt, led to Spanish accommodation of some aspects of American Indian culture in the Southwest. * Ex. Caste system, mulattoes, mestizos, Pueblo Revolt (1680) - **The British colonies participated in policial, social, cultural, and economic exchanges with Great Britain that encouraged both stronger bonds with Britain and resistance to British control** - Transatlantic commercial, religious, philosophical, and political exchanges led residents of the British colonies to evolve in their political and cultural attitudes as they became increasingly tied to Britain and one another. - The presence of different European religious and ethnic groups contributed to a significant degree of pluralism and intellectual exchange, which were later enhanced by the First Great Awakening and the spread of European Enlightenment ideas. * Ex. Great Awakening, Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield, “new lights vs. old lights”, Enlightenment, John Locke - The British colonies experienced a gradual Anglicization over time, developing autonomous political communities based on English models with influence from inter-colonial commercial ties, the emergence of a trans-Atlantic print culture, and the spread of Protestant evangelicalism. * Ex. Anglicization, republicanism, salutary neglect, trial of John Peter Zenger - The British government increasingly attempted to incorporate its North American colonies into a coherent, hierarchical, and imperial structure in order to pursue mercantilist economic aims, but conflicts with colonists and American Indians led to erratic enforcement of imperial policies. * Ex. Mercantilism, Board of Trade, Navigation Act of the 1660s, Dominion of New England, Wool Act of 1699, Molasses Act of 1733 - Colonists’ resistance to imperial control drew on local experiences of self- government, evolving ideas of liberty, the political thought of the Enlightenment, greater religious independence and diversity, and an ideology critical of perceived corruption in the imperial system. * Ex. Widespread smuggling, Dominion of New England/Edmund Andros, First Great Awakening (J. Edwards & G. Whitefield), John Locke - Like other European empires in the Americas that participated in the Atlantic slave trade, the English colonies developed a system of slavery that reflected the specific economic, demographic, and geographic characteristics of those colonies. - All the British colonies participated to varying degrees in the Atlantic slave trade due to the abundance of land and a growing European demand forcolonial goods, as well as a shortage of indentured servants. Small New England farms used relatively few enslaved laborers, all port cities held significant minorities of enslaved people, and the emerging plantation systems of the Chesapeake and the southernmost Atlantic coast had large numbers of enslaved workers, while the great majority of enslaved Africans were sent to the West Indies. * Ex. Triangular trade, Middle Passage, plantation agriculture - As chattel slavery became the dominant labor system in many southern colonies, new laws created a strict racial system that prohibited interracial relationships and defined the descendants of African American mothers as black and enslaved in perpetuity. * Ex. Barbados slave code, Stone Rebellion of 1739, NYC slave revolt of 1741 - Africans developed both overt and covert means to resist the dehumanizing aspects of slavery and maintain their family and gender systems, culture, and religion. * Ex. Work slowdowns, runaway slaves, NYC slave revolt (1711), Stono Rebellion (1739) ===== Period 3 (1754 - 1800): 10-17% ===== - **British attempts to assert tighter control over its North American colonies and the colonial resolve to pursue self government led to a colonial independence movement and the Revolutionary War** - The competition among the British, French, and American Indians for economic and political advantage in North America culminated in the Seven years’ War (the French and Indian War), in which Britain defeated France and allied American Indians. - Colonial rivalry intensified between Britain and France in the mid-18th century, as the growing population of the British colonies expanded into the interior of North America, threatening French--Indian trade networks and American Indian autonomy. * Ex. French-Huron alliance, British-Iroquois alliance, French and Indian War, Albany Plan of Union, Treaty of Paris - Britain achieved a major expansion of its territorial holdings by defeating the French, but at tremendous expense, setting the stage for imperial efforts to raise revenue and consolidate control over the colonies. * Ex. End of salutary neglect, writs of assistance, use of admiralty courts to try smugglers, virtual representation of Parliament - After the British victory, imperial officials’ attempts to prevent colonists from moving westward generated colonial opposition, while native groups sought to both continue trading with Europeans and resist the encroachments of colonists on tribal lands. * Ex. Pontiac’s War, Proclamation of 1763, Iroquois Confederacy, Chief Little Turtle and the Western Confederacy (1793-1795) - The desire of many colonists to assert ideals of self-government in the face of renewed British imperial efforts led to a colonial independence movement and war with Britain - The imperial struggles of the mid-18th century, as well as new British efforts to collect taxes without direct colonial representation or consent and to assert imperial authority in the colonies, began to unite the colonists against perceived and real constraints on their economic activities and political rights. * Ex. Sugar Act (1764), Stamp Act (1765), Quartering Act (1765), Declaratory Act (1766), Townshend Acts (1767), Tea Act (1773), Intolerable Acts (1774), Quebec Act (1774) - Colonial leaders based their calls for resistance to Britain on arguments about the rights of British subjects, the rights of the individual, local traditions of self-rule, and the ideas of the Enlightenment. * Ex. Taxation without representation, consent of the governed, republicanism, bicameral colonial legislatures, natural rights - The effort for American independence was energized by colonial leaders such as Benjamin Franklin, as well as by popular movements that included the political activism of laborers, artisans, and women. * Ex. Otis Warren, Paul Revere, Mercy Otis Warren, John Hancock, Samuel Adams, John Adams, Sons of Liberty, Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania (John Dickinson), Stamp Act Congress (1765), Boston Tea Party, committees of correspondence, First and Second Continental Congress - In the face of economic shortages and the British military occupation of some regions, men and women mobilized in large numbers to provide financial and material support to the Patriot movement. * Ex. Committees of Correspondence, Minutemen of Massachusetts - Despite considerable loyalist opposition, as well as Great Britain’s apparently overwhelming military and financial advantages, the Patriot cause succeeded because of the actions of colonial militias and the Continental Army, George Washington’s military leadership, the colonists’ ideological commitment and resilience, and assistance sent by European allies. * Ex. Battle of Trenton, Battle of Saratoga, French Alliance, Battle of Yorktown - **The American Revolution’s democratic and republican ideas inspired new experiments with different forms of government** - The ideals that inspired the revolutionary cause reflected new beliefs about politics, religion, and society that had been developing over the course of the18th century. - Enlightenment ideas and philosophy inspired many American political thinkers to emphasize individual talent over hereditary privilege, while religion strengthened Americans’ view of themselves as a people blessed with liberty. * Ex. End of primogeniture laws, First Great Awakening, New Lights vs. Old Lights, consent of the governed, John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau - The colonists’ belief in the superiority of republican forms of government based on the natural rights of the people found expression in Thomas Paine’s Common Sense and the Declaration of Independence. The ideas in these documents resonated throughout American history, shaping Americans’ understanding of the ideals on which the nation was based. * Ex. Common Sense, Declaration of Independence, republicanism, natural rights - During and after the American Revolution, an increased awareness of inequalities in society motivated some individuals and groups to call for the abolition of slavery and greater political democracy in the new state and national governments. * Ex. Quakers, Abigail Adams’ “remember the ladies”, Pennsylvania gradual emancipation law (1780), Vermont constitution abolished slavery, reduction of state property requirements to vote, abolition societies, separation of church and state, Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom (1786) - In response to women’s participation in the American Revolution, Enlightenment ideas, and women’s appeals for expanded roles, an ideal of “republican motherhood” gained popularity. It called on women to teach republican values within the family and granted women a new importance in American political culture. * Ex. Republican motherhood, improved education for women, republican virtues of liberty and natural rights, - The American Revolution and the ideals set forth in the Declaration of Independence reverberated in France, Haiti, and Latin America, inspiring future independence movements. * Ex. French Revolution (1789-1799), US Neutrality Proclamation, Haitian Revolution (1791-1804) - After declaring independence, American political leaders created new constitutions and declarations of rights that articulated the role of the state and federal governments while protecting individual liberties and limiting both centralized power and excessive popular influence. - Many new state constitutions placed power in the hands of the legislative branch and maintained property qualifications for voting and citizenship. * Ex. Conventions to ratify constitutions, fundamental laws, strong state legislatures combined with weak governors and courts - The Articles of Confederation unified the newly independent states, creating a central government with limited power. After the Revolution, difficulties over international trade, finances, interstate commerce, foreign relations, and internal unrest led to calls for a stronger central government. * Ex. Unicameral legislature with no power to tax, draft soldiers, or regulate trade; lack of judicial or executive branch; tariff and currency disputes; Spanish restrictions on Mississippi River; British occupation of forts on US land; Shay’s Rebellion; Newburgh Conspiracy; Annapolis Convention - Delegates from the states participated in a Constitutional Convention and through negotiation, collaboration, and compromise proposed a constitution that created a limited but dynamic central government embodying federalism and providing for a separation of powers between its three branches. * Ex. Great (Connecticut) Compromise, checks and balances, separation of powers, Electoral College, Supreme Court, republicanism, federalism - The Constitutional Convention compromised over the representation of slave states in Congress and the role of the federal government in regulating both slavery and the slave trade, allowing the prohibition of the international slave trade after 1808. * Ex. Three-fifths compromise, slave trade compromise, fugitive slave clause - In the debate over ratifying the Constitution, Anti-Federalists opposing ratification battled with Federalists, whose principals were articulated in the Federalist Papers (primarily written by Alexander Hamilton and James Madison). Federalists ensured the ratification of the Constitution by promising the addition of a Bill of Rights that enumerated individual rights and explicitly restricted the powers of the federal government. * Ex. Federalist Papers, Bill of Rights, Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists - New forms of national culture and political institutions developed in the United States alongside continued regional variations and differences over economic, political, social, and foreign policy issues. - During the presidential administrations of George Washington and John Adams, political leaders created institutions and precedents that put the principles of the Constitution into practice. * Ex. Executive branch departments, Cabinet, Judiciary Act of 1789 - Political leaders in the 1790s took a variety of positions on issues such as the relationship between the national government and the states, economic policy, foreign policy, and the balance between liberty and order. This led to the formation of political parties — most significantly the Federalists, led by Alexander Hamilton, and the Democratic-Republican Party, led by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. * Ex. Hamilton’s financial plan, creation of the Bank of the US, elastic clause, strict vs. loose interpretation of the Constitution, formation of the Federalist Party, formation of the Democratic-Republican Party, Alien and Sedition Acts, Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions by Jefferson and Madison - The expansion of slavery in the deep South and adjacent western lands and rising antislavery sentiment began to create distinctive regional attitudes toward the institution. * Ex. Anti-slavery societies, limited rights of free blacks - Ideas about national identity increasingly found expression in works of art, literature, and architecture. * Ex. John Trumbull, Benjamin Banneker, US flag, growth of nationalism, Mercy Otis Warren’s History of the American Revolution, Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin - **Migration within North America and competition over resources, boundaries, and trade intensified conflicts among peoples and nations** - In the decades after American independence, interactions among different groups resulted in competition for resources, shifting alliances, and cultural blending. - Various American Indian groups repeatedly evaluated and adjusted their alliances with Europeans, other tribes, and the U.S., seeking to limit migration of white settlers and maintain control of tribal lands and natural resources. British alliances with American Indians contributed to tensions between the U.S. and Britain. * Ex. March of the Paxton Boys, Battle of Fallen Timbers (1794), Treaty of Greenville (1795) - As increasing numbers of migrants from North America and other parts of the world continued to move westward, frontier cultures that had emerged in the colonial period continued to grow, fueling social, political, and ethnic tensions. * Ex. Scots-Irish migration to the frontier, frontier vs. tidewater Virginia, Whiskey Rebellion, Regulator Movement - As settlers moved westward during the 1780s, Congress enacted the Northwest Ordinance for admitting new states; the ordinance promoted public education, the protection of private property, and a ban on slavery in the Northwest Territory. * Ex. Land Ordinance of 1785, Northwest Ordinance of 1787, Section 16, equal statement, abolition of slavery in Northwest Territory - An ambiguous relationship between the federal government and American Indian tribes contributed to problems regarding treaties and American Indian legal claims relating to the seizure of their lands. * Ex. Battle of Fallen Timbers, Treaty of Greenville - The Spanish, supported by the bonded labor of the local American Indians, expanded their mission settlements into California; these provided opportunities for social mobility among soldiers and led to new cultural blending. * Ex. Expansion of Spanish missions in California, Spanish vaqueros (cowboys) of the Southwest, mestizos - The continued presence of European powers in North America challenged the United States to find ways to safeguard its borders, maintain neutral trading rights, and promote its economic interests. - The United States government forged diplomatic initiatives aimed at dealing with the continued British and Spanish presence in North America, as U.S. settlers migrated beyond the Appalachians and sought free navigation of the Mississippi River. * Ex. Spanish control of Mississippi River, British occupation of US forts, impressment of US sailors, Jay Treaty (1794), Pinckney Treaty (1795) - War between France and Britain resulting from the French Revolution presented challenges to the United States over issues of free trade and foreign policy and fostered political disagreement. * Ex. French Revolution, US Proclamation of Neutrality, Citizen Genet Affair, XYZ Affair (1797-1798), Quasi-war with France, Convention of 1800 - George Washington’s Farewell Address encouraged national unity, as he cautioned against political factions and warned about the danger of permanent foreign alliances. * Ex. Political disagreements about aid to the French Revolution and the establishment of the Bank of the US, Farewell Address warned against entangling alliances and political parties. ===== Period 4 (1800 - 1848): 10-17% ===== - **The United States began to develop a modern democracy and celebrated a new national culture, while Americans sought to define the nation’s democratic ideals and change their society and institutions to match them** - The nation’s transformation to a more participatory democracy was achieved by expanding suffrage from a system based on property ownership to one based on voting by all adult white men, and it was accompanied by the growth of political parties. - In the early 1800s, national political parties continued to debate issues such as the tariff, powers of the federal government, and relations with European powers. * Ex. Election of 1800 (“Revolution of 1800”), First Party System, Louisiana Purchase (1803), 12th Amendment (1804), War with Tripoli (1801-1805), Chesapeake Leopard Affair (1807), Embargo Act of 1807, Non-intercourse Act (1809), Macon’s Bill #2 (1810), “War Hawks”, War of 1812 (impressment, desire for Canada, British occupation of US forts, British aid to Indians), Federalists and the Hartford Convention (1814), Treaty of Ghent (1815), Henry Clay’s “American System”, protective tariff of 1816, Second Band of the US, Era of Good Feelings, Madison’s veto of Bonus Bill (1817) - Supreme Court decisions established the primacy of the judiciary in determining the meaning of the Constitution and asserted that federal laws took precedence over state laws. * Ex. John Marshall, Marbury v. Madison, McCullough v. Maryland, Worcester v. Georgia, Gibbons v. Ogden, Dartmouth College v. Woodward - By the 1820s and 1830s, new political parties arose — the Democrats, led, by Andrew Jackson, and the Whigs, led by Henry Clay — that disagreed about the role and powers of the federal government and issues such as the national bank, tariffs, and federally funded internal improvements. * Ex. Corrupt bargain of 1824, Second Party System, opposition of Whigs to Democrat “King Andrew”, end of property requirements to vote by 1828, Jackson’s use of spoils system, universal manhood suffrage, “Age of the Common Man”, Webster Hayne Debate of 1830, Jackson’s veto of Maysville Road (1830), Jackson’s veto of Second Bank of US re-charter, Jackson’s use of “pet banks”, South Carolina Exposition and Protest by John Calhoun (1828), South Carolina nullification of Tariffs of 1828 and 1832, Jackson’s “Force Act” of 1833, Compromise Tariff of 1833 - Regional interests often trumped national concerns as the basis for many political leaders’ positions on slavery and economic policy. * Ex. John Calhoun’s “positive good” arguments, Missouri Compromise of 1820, sectional balance in the Senate, Indian Removal Act of 1830, South Carolina nullification of Tariffs of 1828 and 1832, Jackson’ Force Act of 1833, Compromise Tariff of 1833 - While Americans embraced a new national culture, various groups developed distinctive cultures of their own. - The rise of democratic and individualistic beliefs, a response to rationalism, and changes to society caused by the market revolution, along with greater social and geographical mobility, contributed to a Second Great Awakening among Protestants that influenced moral and social reforms and inspired utopian and other religious movements. * Ex. Charles Finney, Seneca Falls Convention (1848), Utopian communities (Brook Farm, Shakers, Mormons, Oneida), American, American Temperance Society, Dorothea Dix and prison reform, Horace Mann and education reform - A new national culture emerged that combined American elements, European influences, and regional cultural sensibilities. * Ex. Hudson River School of art; transcendental writers such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau; James Audubon, Knickerbocker writers such as Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper; Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language (1828) - Liberal social ideas from abroad and Romantic beliefs in human perfectibility influenced literature, art, philosophy, and architecture. * Ex. Romanticism, transcendentalism, Federal style of architecture, Thomas Jefferson’s rotunda - Enslaved blacks and free African Americans created communities and strategies to protect their dignity and family structures, and they joined political efforts aimed at changing their status. * Ex. surrogate families; covert resistance (work slowdowns, sabotage, and runaways); spirituals; Richard Allen’ African Methodist Episcopal Church (1816); American Colonization Society (1816); Benjamin Lunch’s Genius of Universal Emancipation (gradual emancipation); David Walker’s Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World (1829); William Lloyd Garrison’s “immediate and uncompensated” emancipation; American Anti-slavery Society (1833); Garrison’s Liberator (1831); Underground Railroad; Sojourner Truth; Frederick Douglass’ North Star (1847); Liberty Party (1840) - Increasing numbers of Americans, many inspired by new religious and intellectual movements, worked primarily outside of government institutions to advance their ideals. - Americans formed new voluntary organizations that aimed to change individual behaviors and improve society through temperance and other reform efforts. * Ex. American Temperance Society, American Anti-slavery Society, Seneca Falls Convention and the Declaration of Sentiments, Oberlin College - Abolitionist and antislavery movements gradually achieved emancipation in the North, contributing to the growth of the free African American population, even as many state governments restricted African Americans’ rights. Antislavery efforts in the South were largely limited to unsuccessful slave rebellions. * Ex. American Colonization Society, William Lloyd Garrison’s “immediate and uncompensated” emancipation, gradual emancipation, Denmark Vesey’s rebellion, Nat Turner’s rebellion - A women’s rights movement sought to create greater equality and opportunities for women, expressing its ideals at the Seneca Falls Convention. * Ex. Seneca Falls Convention, Declaration of Sentiments, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton - **Innovations in technology, agriculture, and commerce powerfully accelerated the American economy, precipitating profound changes to U.S. society and to national and regional identities** - New transportation systems and technologies dramatically expanded manufacturing and agricultural production. - Entrepreneurs helped to create a market revolution in production and commerce, in which market relationships between producers and consumers cameto prevail as the manufacture of goods became more organized. * Ex. John Deere’s steel plow, Cyrus McCormick’s mechanical reaper, Samuel Slater “Father of American Factory System”, Eli Whitney’s cotton gin and interchangeable part, Samuel Morse and the telegraph, Robert Fulton’s Clermont steamboat, Lowell system, Baldwin Locomotive Works of Pennsylvania - Innovations including textile machinery, steam engines, interchangeable parts, the telegraph, and agricultural inventions increased the efficiency of production methods. * Ex. Lowell system, steam locomotives, steamboats, spinning jenny, steamboats, interchangeable parts, cotton gin, telegraph, steel plow, mechanical reaper, improved roads/turnpikes - Legislation and judicial systems supported the development of roads, canals, and railroads, which extended and enlarged markets and helped foster regional interdependence. Transportation networks linked the North and Midwest more closely than either was linked to the South. * Ex. Lancaster Turnpike, regional specialization and interdependence, Erie Canal, Canal Era, Henry Clay’s American System, Cumberland (National) Road, protective tariff of 1816, Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge (1837) - The changes caused by the market revolution had significant effects on U.S. society, workers’ lives, and gender and family relations. - Increasing numbers of Americans, especially women and men working in factories, no longer relied on semi-subsistence agriculture; instead they supported themselves producing goods for distant markets. * Ex. Lowell mills, Industrial Revolution, factory system - The growth of manufacturing drove a significant increase in prosperity and standards of living for some; this led to the emergence of a larger middle class and a small but wealthy business elite but also to a large and growing population of laboring poor. * Ex. Income gap, social hierarchy, plantation aristocracy, “Yankee traders”, National Trades Union, Commonwealth v. Hunt - Gender and family roles changed in response to the market revolution, particularly with the growth of definitions of domestic ideals that emphasized the separation of public and private spheres. * Ex. Cult of domesticity, Lydia Child challenged cult of domesticity, Elizabeth Blackwell, Sojourner Truth’s Ain’t I a Woman?, Grimke sisters - Economic development shaped settlement and trade patterns, helping to unify the nation while also encouraging the growth of different regions. - Large numbers of international migrants moved to industrializing northern cities, while many Americans moved west of the Appalachians, developing thriving new communities along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. * Ex. Erie Canal, Lancaster Turnpike, German immigration, Irish immigration, Midwest farm goods traded for New England factory goods - Increasing Southern cotton production and the related growth of Northern manufacturing, banking, and shipping industries promoted the development of national and international commercial ties. * Ex. “King Cotton”, protective tariffs, textile industry, whaling and fishing industry, “Yankee traders”, Treaty of Wanghia (1844) expanded trade with China - Southern business leaders continued to rely on the production and export of traditional agricultural staples, contributing to the growth of a distinctive Southern regional identity. * Ex. Slow urban growth, planter aristocracy (“cottonocracy”), growth of the internal slave trade - Plans to further unify the U.S. economy, such as the American System, generated debates over whether such policies would benefit agriculture or industry, potentially favoring different sections of the country. * Ex. Protective tariffs of 1816 and 1824, Madison’s veto of the Bonus Bill, internal improvements, Cumberland (National) Road, Jackson’s veto of the Maysville Road, Second Bank of the US - **The U.S. interest in increasing foregin trade and expanding its national borders shaped the nation's foreign policy and spurred government and private initiatives** - Struggling to create an independent global presence, the United States sought to claim territory throughout the North American continent and promote foreign trade. - Following the Louisiana Purchase, the United States government sought influence and control over North America and the Western Hemisphere through a variety of means, including exploration, military actions, American Indian removal, and diplomatic efforts such as the Monroe Doctrine. * Ex. Rush Bagot Treaty (1817), Convention of 1818, Adams Onis Treaty (1819), Monroe Doctrine (1823), dispute over annexation of Texas (1836-1845), annexation of Texas by joint resolution (1845), Webster Ashburton Treaty (1842), Oregon Treaty with Britain (1846), Mexican American War (1846-1848), Manifest Destiny - Frontier settlers tended to champion expansion efforts, while American Indian resistance led to a sequence of wars and federal efforts to control and relocate American Indian populations. * Ex. Tecumseh’s Confederacy (1808-1813), Battle of Tippecanoe (1811), First Seminole War (1816-1818), Indian Removal Act (1830), Trail of Tears, Second Seminole War (1835-1842), Indian Territory - The United States’ acquisition of lands in the West gave rise to contests over the extension of slavery into new territories. - As over-cultivation depleted arable land in the Southeast, slaveholders began relocating their plantations to more fertile lands west of the Appalachians, where the institution of slavery continued to grow. * Ex. Cotton gin and growth of upland (short-staple) cotton, growth of the internal slave trade - Antislavery efforts increased in the North, while in the South, although the majority of Southerners owned no slaves, most leaders argued that slavery was part of the Southern way of life. * Ex. John Calhoun’s “positive good” arguments, Biblical justifications for slavery, Constitutional justifications for slavery (fugitive slave clause and three-fifths clause) - Congressional attempts at political compromise, such as the Missouri Compromise, only temporarily stemmed growing tensions between opponents and defenders of slavery. * Ex. Jefferson’s “firebell in the night” warning (1820), Webster Hayne Debate (1830) dispute over annexation of Texas (1836-1845), gag rule, Wilmot Proviso (1846) ===== Period 5 (1848 - 1877): 10-17% ===== - **The United States became more connected with the world, pursued an expansionist forieng policy in the Western Hemisphere, and emerged as the destination for many migrants from other countries** - Popular enthusiasm for U.S. expansion, bolstered by economic and security interests, resulted in the acquisition of new territories, substantial migration westward, and new overseas initiatives. - The desire for access to natural and mineral resources and the hope of many settlers for economic opportunities or religious refuge led to an increased migration to and settlement in the West. * Ex. Mormon settlements in Utah (1847), California gold rush (1848), Chinese immigration, Comstock Lode - silver mining in Nevada (1859), Pike’s Peak gold rush (1858-1861), decline of the buffalo - Advocates of annexing western lands argued that Manifest Destiny and the superiority of American institutions compelled the United States to expand its borders westward to the Pacific Ocean. * Ex. Manifest Destiny, Election of 1844, Slidell Mission (1845), US annexation of Texas (1845), Bear Flag Revolt (1846), Oregon Boundary Treaty (1846), Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848), Gadsden Purchase (1853), Pony Express (1860-1861) - The U.S. added large territories in the West through victory in the Mexican--American War and diplomatic negotiations, raising questions about the status of slavery, American Indians, and Mexicans in the newly acquired lands. * Ex. Wilmot Proviso (1846), Lincoln’s spot resolutions (1846), Free Soil Party (1848), Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau (1849), popular sovereignty, Ostend Manifesto (1854) - Westward migration was boosted during and after the Civil War by the passage of new legislation promoting Western transportation and economic development. * Ex. Gadsden Purchase (1853), Pacific Railway Act (1862), Homestead Act (1862), Homestead Act (1862), Morrill Land Grant Act (1862), completion of the Union Pacific Railroad (1869) - U.S. interest in expanding trade led to economic, diplomatic, and cultural initiatives to create more ties with Asia. * Ex. Clipper ships, Treaty of Wanghia (1846), Commodore Perry’s expedition to Japan (1852-1854), missionaries - In the 1840s and 1850s, Americans continued to debate questions about rights and citizenship for various groups of U.S. inhabitants. - Substantial numbers of international migrants continued to arrive in the United States from Europe and Asia, mainly from Ireland and Germany, often settling in ethnic communities where they could preserve elements of their languages and customs. * Ex. Old Immigration from North and Western Europe, Irish potato famine (1845-1851), parochial schools - A strongly anti-Catholic nativist movement arose that was aimed at limiting new immigrants’ political power and cultural influence. * Ex. Know-Nothing movement (1840s and 1850s), American Party (1854) - U.S. government interaction and conflict with Mexican Americans and American Indians increased in regions newly taken from American Indians and Mexico, altering these groups’ economic self-sufficiency and cultures. * Ex. Sand Creek Massacre (1864), Battle of Little Big Horn (Custer’s Last Stand - 1876), reservation system, Mariano Vallejo - **Intensified by expansion and deepening regional divisions, debates over slavery and other economic, cultural, and policial issues led the nation into civil war** - Ideological and economic differences over slavery produced an array of diverging responses from Americans in the North and the South. - The North’s expanding manufacturing economy relied on free labor in contrast to the Southern economy’s dependence on slave labor. Some Northerners did not object to slavery on principle but claimed that slavery would undermine the free labor market. As a result, a free-soil movement arose that portrayed the expansion of slavery as incompatible with free labor. * Ex. Bessemer process (1855), Oil drilling in Titusville, Pennsylvania (1859), Free Soil Party (1848-1852), Hinton Helper’s Impending Crisis of the South (1857) - African American and white abolitionists, although a minority in the North, mounted a highly visible campaign against slavery, presenting moral arguments against the institution, assisting slaves’ escapes, and sometimes expressing a willingness to use violence to achieve their goals. * Ex. William Lloyd Garrison’s Liberator and the American Antislavery Society, Liberty Party (1840-1844), Underground Railroad, Harriet Tubman (1849), Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852), John Brown’s Raid on Harpers Ferry (1859) - Defenders of slavery based their arguments on racial doctrines, the view that slavery was a positive social good, and the belief that slavery and states’ rights were protected by the Constitution. - Ex. “positive good” thesis, John C. Calhoun, states’ rights, nullification, George Fitzhugh’s Cannibals All! (1857), minstrel shows - Debates over slavery came to dominate political discussion in the 1850s, culminating in the bitter election of 1860 and the secession of Southern states. - The Mexican Cession led to heated controversies over whether to allow slavery in the newly acquired territories. * Ex. end of gag rule (1844), Wilmot Proviso (1846), Mexican Cession (1848), popular sovereignty - The courts and national leaders made a variety of attempts to resolve the issue of slavery in the territories, including the Compromise of 1850, the Kansas--Nebraska Act, and the Dred Scott decision, but these ultimately failed to reduce conflict. * Ex. Compromise of 1850, Fugitive Slave Act (1850), personal liberty laws, Kansas Nebraska Act (1854), “Crime against Kansas Speech” by Charles Sumner and attack by Preston Brooks (1856), Pottawatomie Creek, Dispute over Lecompton Constitution (1857), Bleeding Kansas (1856-1861), Dred Scott Supreme Court decision (1857) - The Second Party System ended when the issues of slavery and anti-immigrant nativism weakened loyalties to the two major parties and fostered the emergence of sectional parties, most notably the Republican Party in the North. * Ex. Formation of the Republican Party (1854), Lincoln’s support of free soil doctrine, Lincoln’s “House Divided Speech” (1858), Lincoln-Douglas debates (1858), Freeport Doctrine (1858) - Abraham Lincoln’s victory on the Republicans’ free-soil platform in the election of 1860 was accomplished without any Southern electoral votes. After a series of contested debates about secession, most slave states voted to secede from the Union, precipitating the Civil War. * Ex. Secession of seven southern states (1860-1861), Crittenden Compromise rejected (1860-1861), Fort Sumter and secession of four additional southern states (1861), Lincoln’s call for troops - **The Union victory in the Civil War and the contested Reconstruction of the SOuth settled the issues of slavery and secession, but left unresolved amny questions about the power fo the federal government and citizenship rights** - The North’s greater manpower and industrial resources, the leadership of Abraham Lincoln and others, and the decision to emancipate slaves eventually led to the Union military victory over the Confederacy in the devastating Civil War. - Both the Union and the Confederacy mobilized their economies and societies to wage the war even while facing considerable home front opposition. * Ex. Lincoln’s suspension of habeas corpus (1861), Morrill Tariff (1861), Southern Conscription Act (1862), National Bank Act (1863), Northern Conscription Act of 1863, “rich man’s war but a poor man’s fight”, NYC draft riots (1863), Radical Republicans, War Democrats, Peace Democrats, Copperheads, Order of the Sons of Liberty (1864) - Lincoln and most Union supporters began the Civil War to preserve the Union, but Lincoln’s decision to issue the Emancipation Proclamation reframed the purpose of the war and helped prevent the Confederacy from gaining full diplomatic support from European powers. Many African Americans fled southern plantations and enlisted in the Union Army, helping to undermine the Confederacy. * Ex. Trent Affair (1861), Alabama commerce raider (1862), Emancipation Proclamation (1863), enlistment of African Americans, Massachusetts 54th Regiment (1863), - Lincoln sought to reunify the country and used speeches such as the Gettysburg Address to portray the struggle against slavery as the fulfillment of America’s founding democratic ideals. * Ex. Battle of Gettysburg, Gettysburg Address (1863), “Four score and seven years…” - Although the Confederacy showed military initiative and daring early in the war, the Union ultimately succeeded due to improvements in leadership and strategy, key victories, greater resources, and the wartime destruction of the South’s infrastructure. * Ex. Anaconda Plan (1861), Antietam (1862), Gettysburg (1863), Vicksburg (1863), Union’s “total war” strategy, Sherman’s March to the Sea (1864), Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Courthouse (1865) - Reconstruction and the Civil War ended slavery, altered relationships between the states and the federal government, and led to debates over new definitions of citizenship, particularly regarding the rights of African Americans, women, and other minorities. - The 13th Amendment abolished slavery, while the 14th and15th Amendments granted African Americans citizenship, equal protection under the laws, and voting rights. * Ex. 13th Amendment (1865), 14th Amendment (1868), 15th Amendment (1870) - The women’s rights movement was both emboldened and divided over the 14th and 15th amendments to the Constitution. * Ex. Opposition of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, National Woman's Suffrage Association (1869), American Women’s Suffrage Association (1869) - Efforts by radical and moderate Republicans to change the balance of power between Congress and the presidency and to reorder race relations in the defeated South yielded some short-term successes. Reconstruction opened up political opportunities and other leadership roles to former slaves, but it ultimately failed, due both to determined Southern resistance and the North’s waning resolve. * Ex. Black codes, Ku Klux Klan (1866), Presidential vs. Radical Reconstruction (1865-1867), Military Reconstruction (1867-1877), carpetbaggers, scalawags, Senator Hiram Revels, Senator Blache K Bruce, Representative Robert Smalls, Johnson’s veto of Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Act of 1866, Tenure of Office Act (1867), impeachment of President Johnson (1868), Redeemer governments (Solid South), Enforcement Acts (1870-1871) - Southern plantation owners continued to own the majority of the region’s land even after Reconstruction. Former slaves sought land ownership but generally fell short of self-sufficiency, as an exploitative and soil-intensive sharecropping system limited blacks’ and poor whites’ access to land in the South. * Ex. black codes, sharecropping, tenant farming, crop-lien system, peonage system, Freedmen’s Bureau (1865) - Segregation, violence, Supreme Court decisions, and local political tactics progressively stripped away African American rights, but the 14th and 15th Amendments eventually became the basis for court decisions upholding civil rights in the 20th century. * Ex. Compromise of 1877, poll taxes, literacy tests to vote, Jim Crow laws, grandfather clauses. Civil Rights Cases (1883), Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) ===== Period 6 (1865 - 1898): 10-17% ===== - **Technological advances, large-scale production methods, and the opening of new markets encouraged the rise of industrial capitalism in the United States** - Large-scale industrial production — accompanied by massive technological change, expanding international communication networks, and pro-growth government policies — generated rapid economic development and business consolidation. - Following the Civil War, government subsidies for transportation and communication systems helped open new markets in North America. * Ex. Federal and state loans and land grants to transcontinental railroads, Credit Mobilier Scandal, transatlantic telegraph cable (1866) - Businesses made use of technological innovations, greater access to natural resources, redesigned financial and management structures, advances in marketing, and a growing labor force to dramatically increase the production of goods. * Ex. John D. Rockefeller (oil), J.P. Morgan (banking), Andrew Carnegie (Bessemer steel), Alexander Graham’s Bell (telephone), Cornelius Vanderbilt (railroads), Cyrus Field (transatlantic telegraph), Montgomery Ward mail order catalog - As the price of many goods decreased, workers’ real wages increased, providing new access to a variety of goods and services; many Americans’ standards of living improved, while the gap between rich and poor grew. * Ex. Gilded Age by Mark Twain (1873), Boss Tweed (1869-1876), tenement housing, Century of Dishonor by Helen Hunt Jackson (1881), How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis (1890) - Many business leaders sought increased profits by consolidating corporations into large trusts and holding companies, which further concentrated wealth. * Ex. near monopoly, Standard Oil Trust (1882), holding company, business pool, horizontal integration, vertical integration, - Businesses and foreign policymakers increasingly looked outside U.S. borders in an effort to gain greater influence and control over markets and natural resources in the Pacific Rim, Asia, and Latin America. * Ex. Purchase of Alaska (1867), Influence of Sea Power upon History by Alfred T. Mahan (1890) Turner Thesis (1893), Treaty of Paris (1898) and the acquisition of Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines, annexation of Hawaii (1898), John Hay’s Open Door Note (1899) - A variety of perspectives on the economy and labor developed during a time of financial panics and downturns. - Some argued that laissez-faire policies and competition promoted economic growth in the long run, and they opposed government intervention during economic downturns. * Ex. Laissez faire policies, Panic of 1873, Panic of 1893, Social Darwinism, Horatio Alger’s “rags to riches” dime novels, Andrew Carnegie’s Gospel of Wealth (1899), philanthropy - The industrial workforce expanded and became more diverse through internal and international migration; child labor also increased. * Ex. Farm mechanization led to increased migration to cities, “New Immigration” from Southern and Eastern Europe, Chinese immigration - Labor and management battled over wages and working conditions, with local workers organizing local and national unions and/or directly confronting business leaders. * Ex. Knights of Labor (1869), Terrence Powderly, Haymarket Square riot (1886), American Federation of Labor (1886), Samuel Gompers, “bread and butter” unionism, Mother Jones’ “March of the Children” (1903), yellow dog contracts, blacklists, Railway Strike of 1877, Homestead Strike of 1892, Pullman Strike of 1894 - Despite the industrialization of some segments of the Southern economy — a change promoted by Southern leaders who called for a “New South” — agriculture based on sharecropping and tenant farming continued to be the primary economic activity in the South. * Ex. “New South”, Henry Grady, textile mills in the South, James Duke - New systems of production and transportation enabled consolidation within agriculture, which, along with periods of instability, spurred a variety of responses from farmers. - Improvements in mechanization helped agricultural production increase substantially and contributed to declines in food prices. * Ex. Reapers, combines, bonanza farming, dry farming, barbed wire - Many farmers responded to the increasing consolidation in agricultural markets and their dependence on the evolving railroad system by creating local and regional cooperative organizations - Ex. Grange (1867), Granger laws, Wabash v. Illinois (1886), Southern Farmers’ Alliance (1875), National Farmers’ Alliance (1877), Colored Farmers’ Alliance (1886) - Economic instability inspired agrarian activists to create the People’s (Populist) Party, which called for a stronger governmental role in regulating the American economic system. * Ex. Ocala Platform of 1890, goals of the Populist Party, “free silver” movement, William Jennings Bryan - **The migrations that accompanied industrialization transformed both urban and rural areas of the United States and caused dramatic social and cultural changes** - International and internal migrations increased both urban and rural populations, but gender, racial, ethnic, religious, and socioeconomic inequalities abounded, inspiring some reformers to attempt to address these inequities. - As cities became areas of economic growth featuring new factories and businesses, they attracted immigrants from Asia and from southern and eastern Europe, as well as African American migrants within and out of the South. Many migrants moved to escape poverty, religious persecution, and limited opportunities for social mobility in their home countries or regions * Ex. Pap Singleton and the Exodusters (1879), New Immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe, Chinese immigration - Urban neighborhoods based on particular ethnicities, races, and classes provided new cultural opportunities for city dwellers. * Ex. Chinatowns, “Little Italy” - Increasing public debates over assimilation and Americanization accompanied the growth of international migration. Many immigrants negotiated compromises between the cultures they brought and the culture they found in the United States. * Ex. Assimilation, Ellis Island, Angel Island - In an urban atmosphere where the access to power was unequally distributed, political machines thrived, in part by providing immigrants and the poor with social services. * Ex. National American Woman Suffrage Association (1890), Women’s Christian Temperance Union (1874), Tammany Hall political machine, settlement houses, Jane Addams and Hull House (1889), General Federation of Women’s Clubs (1890) - Corporations’ need for managers and for male and female clerical workers as well as increased access to educational institutions, fostered the growth of a distinctive middle class. A growing amount of leisure time also helped expand consumer culture. * Ex. Conspicuous consumption, Harvard Annex for women (1879), Bryn Mawr College (1885) - Larger numbers of migrants moved to the West in search of land and economic opportunity, frequently provoking competition and violent conflict. - The building of transcontinental railroads, the discovery of mineral resources, and government policies promoted economic growth and created new communities and centers of commercial activity. * Ex. Pacific Railway Acts (1862 to 1866), federal and state government subsidies to transcontinental railroads, cattle trails, cow towns - In hopes of achieving ideals of self-sufficiency and independence, migrants moved to both rural and boomtown areas of the West for opportunities, such as building the railroads, mining, farming, and ranching. * Ex. Silver boom in Tombstone (1877-1890), Abilene, Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West show, Frederic Remington’s paintings, Edward Wheeler’s Deadwood Dick “dime novels”, “range wars” - As migrant populations increased in number and the American bison population was decimated, competition for land and resources in the West among white settlers, American Indians, and Mexican Americans led to an increase in violent conflict. * Ex. Sand Creek Massacre, Battle of Little Big Horn (1876), Battle of Bear Paw Mountain, Battle of Wounded Knee (1890) - The U.S. government violated treaties with American Indians and responded to resistance with military force, eventually confining American Indians to reservations and denying tribal sovereignty. * Ex. Surrender of Chief Joseph (1877), Surrender of Apaches led by Geronimo (1887), Great Sioux Reservation - Many American Indians preserved their cultures and tribal identities despite government policies promoting assimilation, and they attempted to develop self-sustaining economic practices. * Ex. Carlisle Indian School (1879), Dawes Act (1887), Ghost Dance movement (1890) - **The “Gilded Age” witnessed new cultural and intellectual movements in tandem with political debates over economic and social policies** - New cultural and intellectual movements both buttressed and challenged the social order of the Gilded Age. - Social commentators advocated theories later described as Social Darwinism to justify the success of those at the top of the socioeconomic structure as both appropriate and inevitable. * Ex. Social Darwinism, laissez faire policies, Russell Conwell’s Acres of Diamonds sermon, Horatio Alger’s “rags to riches” dime novels, American Protective Association (1887), Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) - Some business leaders argued that the wealthy had a moral obligation to help the less fortunate and improve society, as articulated in the idea known as the Gospel of Wealth, and they made philanthropic contributions that enhanced educational opportunities and urban environments. * Ex. Andrew Carnegie’s Gospel of Wealth (1899), Carnegie public libraries, Stanford University, Vanderbilt University - A number of artists and critics, including agrarians, utopians, socialists, and advocates of the Social Gospel, championed alternative visions for the economy and U.S. society. * Ex. Gilded Age by Mark Twain (1873), Henry George’s “single land tax” in Progress and Poverty (1879), Century of Dishonor by Helen Hunt Jackson (1881), Edward Bellamy’s “utopian socialism” in Looking Backward (1888), Andrew Carnegie’s Gospel of Wealth (1889), How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis (1890), social gospel movement (1890), Jacob Coxey’s “March on Washington” (1894) - Dramatic social changes in the period inspired political debates over citizenship, corruption, and the proper relationship between business and government. - The major political parties appealed to lingering divisions from the Civil War and contended over tariffs and currency issues, even as reformers argued that economic greed and self-interest had corrupted all levels of government. * Ex. patronage vs. civil service reform, Pendleton Civil Service Act (1883), regulation of railroads, Interstate Commerce Act (1887), McKinley Tariff of 1890, “free silver” issue, Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890), Greenback Labor Party (1874-1889), National Farmers’ Alliance, Populist Party (1891), regulation of trusts, Sherman Antitrust Act (1890) - Many women sought greater equality with men, often joining voluntary organizations, going to college, promoting social and political reform, and, like Jane Addams, working in settlement houses to help immigrants adapt to U.S. language and customs. * Ex. settlement houses, Jane Addams’ Hull House, “good government” movement, National American Woman Suffrage Association (1890), Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Carrie Catt, Margaret Sanger, coed colleges, normal schools, “city beautiful” movement. - The Supreme Court decision in Plessy v. Ferguson that upheld racial segregation helped to mark the end of most of the political gains African Americans made during Reconstruction. Facing increased violence, discrimination, and scientific theories of race, African American reformers continued to fight for political and social equality. * Ex. Jim Crow laws, poll taxes, grandfather clauses, literacy tests to vote, Impact of Plessy v. Ferguson, Booker T. Washington’s Atlanta Compromise (1895), Ida Wells-Barnett’s anti-lynching crusade, National Association of Colored Women (1896), Paul Lawrence Dunbar’s Lyrics of Lowly Life (1896), George Washington Carver ===== Period 7 (1898 - 1945): 10-17% ===== - **Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform U.S. society and its economic system** - The United States continued its transition from a rural, agricultural economy to an urban, industrial economy led by large companies. - New technologies and manufacturing techniques helped focus the U.S. economy on the production of consumer goods, contributing to improved standards of living, greater personal mobility, and better communications systems. - By 1920, a majority of the U.S. population lived in urban centers, which offered new economic opportunities for women, international migrants, and internal migrants. - Episodes of credit and market instability in the early 20th century, in particular the Great Depression, led to calls for a stronger financial regulatory system. - In the Progressive Era of the early 20th century, Progressives responded to political corruption, economic instability, and social concerns by calling for greater government action and other political and social measures - Some Progressive Era journalists attacked what they saw as political corruption, social injustice, and economic inequality, while reformers, often from the middle and upper classes and including many women, worked to effect social changes in cities and among immigrant populations. - On the national level, Progressives sought federal legislation that they believed would effectively regulate the economy, expand democracy, and generate moral reform. Progressive amendments to the Constitution dealt with issues such as prohibition and woman suffrage. - Preservationists and conservationists both supported the establishment of national parks while advocating different government responses to the overuse of natural resources. - The Progressives were divided over many issues. Some Progressives supported Southern segregation, while others ignored its presence. Some Progressives advocated expanding popular participation in government, while others called for greater reliance on professional and technical experts to make government more efficient. Progressives also disagreed about immigration restriction. - During the 1930s, policymakers responded to the mass unemployment and social upheavals of the Great Depression by transforming the U.S. into a limited welfare state, redefining the goals and ideas of modern American liberalism. - Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal attempted to end the Great Depression by using government power to provide relief to the poor, stimulate recovery, and reform the American economy. - Radical, union, and populist movements pushed Roosevelt toward more extensive efforts to change the American economic system, while conservatives in Congress and the Supreme Court sought to limit the New Deal’s scope. - Although the New Deal did not end the Depression, it left a legacy of reforms and regulatory agencies and fostered a long-term political realignment in which many ethnic groups, African Americans, and working- class communities identified with the Democratic Party - **Innovations in communications and technology contributed to the growth of mass culture, while significant changes occurred in internal and international migration patterns** - Popular culture grew in influence in U.S. society, even as debates increased over the effects of culture on public values, morals, and American national identity. - New forms of mass media, such as radio and cinema, contributed to the spread of national culture as well as greater awareness of regional cultures. - Migration gave rise to new forms of art and literature that expressed ethnic and regional identities, such the Harlem Renaissance movement. - Official restrictions on freedom of speech grew during World War I, as increased anxiety about radicalism led to a Red Scare and attacks on labor activism and immigrant culture. - In the 1920s, cultural and political controversies emerged as Americans debated gender roles, modernism, science, religion, and issues related to race and immigration. - Economic pressures, global events, and political developments caused sharp variations in the numbers, sources, and experiences of both international and internal migrants. - Immigration from Europe reached its peak in the years before World War I. During and after World War I, nativist campaigns against some ethnic groups led to the passage of quotas that restricted immigration, particularly from southern and eastern Europe, and increased barriers to Asian immigration. - The increased demand for war production and labor during World War I and World War II and the economic difficulties of the 1930s led many Americans to migrate to urban centers in search of economic opportunities. - In a Great Migration during and after World War I, African Americans escaping segregation, racial violence, and limited economic opportunity in the South moved to the North and West, where they found new opportunities but still encountered discrimination. - Migration to the United States from Mexico and elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere increased, in spite of contradictory government policies toward Mexican immigration. - **Participation in a series of global conflicts propelled the United States into a position of international power while renewing domestic debates over the nation’s proper role in the world** - In the late 19th century and early 20th century, new U.S. territorial ambitions and acquisitions in the Western Hemisphere and the Pacific accompanied heightened public debates over America’s role in the world. - Imperialists cited economic opportunities, racial theories, competition with European empires, and the perception in the 1890s that the Western frontier was “closed” to argue that Americans were destined to expand their culture and institutions to peoples around the globe. - Anti-imperialists cited principles of self-determination and invoked both racial theories and the U.S. foreign policy tradition of isolationism to argue that the U.S. should not extend its territory overseas. - The American victory in the Spanish--American War led to the U.S. acquisition of island territories in the Caribbean and the Pacific, an increase in involvement in Asia, and the suppression of a nationalist movement in the Philippines. - World War I and its aftermath intensified ongoing debates about the nation’s role in the world and how best to achieve national security and pursue American interests. - After initial neutrality in World War I, the nation entered the conflict, departing from the U.S. foreign policy tradition of noninvolvement in European affairs, in response to Woodrow Wilson’s call for the defense of humanitarian and democratic principles. - Although the American Expeditionary Forces played a relatively limited role in combat, the U.S.’s entry helped to tip the balance of the conflict in favor of the Allies. - Despite Wilson’s deep involvement in postwar negotiations, the U.S. Senate refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles or join the League of Nations. - In the years following World War I, the United States pursued a unilateral foreign policy that used international investment, peace treaties, and select military intervention to promote a vision of international order, even while maintaining U.S. isolationism. - In the 1930s, while many Americans were concerned about the rise of fascism and totalitarianism, most opposed taking military action against the aggression of Nazi Germany and Japan until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor drew the United States into World War II. - U.S. participation in World War II transformed American society, while the victory of the United States and its allies over the Axis powers vaulted the U.S. into a position of global, political, and military leadership. - Americans viewed the war as a fight for the survival of freedom and democracy against fascist and militarist ideologies. This perspective was later reinforced by revelations about Japanese wartime atrocities, Nazi concentration camps, and the Holocaust. - The mass mobilization of American society helped end the Great Depression, and the country’s strong industrial base played a pivotal role in winning the war by equipping and provisioning allies and millions of U.S. troops. - Mobilization and military service provided opportunities for women and minorities to improve their socioeconomic positions for the war’s duration, while also leading to debates over racial segregation. Wartime experiences also generated challenges to civil liberties, such as the internment of Japanese Americans. - The United States and its allies achieved military victory through Allied cooperation, technological and scientific advances, the contributions of servicemen and women, and campaigns such as Pacific “island-hopping” and the D-Day invasion. The use of atomic bombs hastened the end of the war and sparked debates about the morality of using atomic weapons. - The war-ravaged condition of Asia and Europe, and the dominant U.S. role in the Allied victory and postwar peace settlements, allowed the United States to emerge from the war as the most powerful nation on earth. ===== Period 8 (1945 - 1980): 10-17% ===== - **The United States responded to an uncertain and unstable postwar world by asserting and working to maintain a position of global leadership, with far-reaching domestic and international consequences** - After World War II, the United States sought to stem the growth of Communist military power and ideological influence, create a stable global economy, and build an international security system. - The United States developed a foreign policy based on collective security and a multilateral economic framework that bolstered non-Communist nations. - The United States sought to “contain” Soviet-dominated communism through a variety of measures, including military engagements in Korea and Vietnam. * Ex. development of hydrogen bomb, massive retaliation, space race - The Cold War fluctuated between periods of direct and indirect military confrontation and periods of mutual coexistence (or détente). - As the United States focused on containing communism, it faced increasingly complex foreign policy issues, including decolonization, shifting international alignments and regional conflicts, and global economic and environmental changes. - Postwar decolonization and the emergence of powerful nationalist movements in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East led both sides in the Cold War to seek allies among new nations, many of which remained non aligned. - Cold War competition extended to Latin America, where the U.S. supported non-Communist regimes with varying levels of commitment to democracy. - Ideological, military, and economic concerns shaped U.S. involvement in the Middle East, with several oil crises in the region eventually sparking attempts at creating a national energy policy. * Ex. Suez Canal Crisis, OPEC - Cold War policies led to continued public debates over the power of the federal government, acceptable means for pursuing international and domestic goals, and the proper balance between liberty and order. - Americans debated policies and methods designed to root out Communists within the United States even as both parties tended to support the broader Cold War strategy of containing communism. - Although the Korean conflict produced some minor domestic opposition, the Vietnam War saw the rise of sizable, passionate, and sometimes violent antiwar protests that became more numerous as the war escalated. - Americans debated the merits of a large nuclear arsenal, the “military-industrial complex,” and the appropriate power of the executive branch in conducting foreign and military policy. - **New movements for civil rights and liberal efforts to expand the role of government generated a range of political and cultural responses** - Seeking to fulfill Reconstruction-era promises, civil rights activists and political leaders achieved some legal and political successes in ending segregation, although progress toward equality was slow and halting. - Following World War II, civil rights activists utilized a variety of strategies — legal challenges, direct action, and nonviolent protest tactics — to combat racial discrimination. * Ex. Fannie Lou Hamer, John Lewis, Thurgood Marshall - Decision-makers in each of the three branches of the federal government used measures including desegregation of the armed services, Brown v. Board of Education, and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to promote greater racial justice. - Continuing white resistance slowed efforts at desegregation, sparking a series of social and political crises across the nation, while tensions among civil rights activists over tactical and philosophical issues increased after 1965. - Stirred by a growing awareness of inequalities in American society and by the African American civil rights movement, activists also addressed issues of identity and social justice, such as gender/sexuality and ethnicity - Activists began to question society’s assumptions about gender and to call for social and economic equality for women and for gays and lesbians. * Ex. The Feminine Mystique, Gloria Steinem - Latinos, American Indians, and Asian Americans began to demand social and economic equality and a redress of past injustices. - Despite the perception of overall affluence in postwar America, advocates raised awareness of the prevalence and persistence of poverty as a national problem, sparking efforts to address this issue. - As many liberal principles came to dominate postwar politics and court decisions, liberalism came under attack from the left as well as from resurgent conservative movements. - Liberalismreached its zenith with Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society efforts to use federal power to end racial discrimination, eliminate poverty, and address other social issues while attacking communism abroad. - Liberal ideals were realized in Supreme Court decisions that expanded democracy and individual freedoms, Great Society social programs and policies, and the power of the federal government, yet these unintentionally helped energize a new conservative movement that mobilized to defend traditional visions of morality and the proper role of state authority. * Ex. Griswold v. Connecticut, Miranda v. Arizona - Groups on the left also assailed liberals, claiming they did too little to transform the racial and economic status quo at home and pursued immoral policies abroad. * Ex. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), Black Panthers - **Postwar economics and demographic changes had far-reaching consequences for American society, politics, and culture** - Rapid economic and social changes in American society fostered a sense of optimism in the postwar years, as well as underlying concerns about how these changes were affecting American values. - A burgeoning private sector, continued federal spending, the baby boom, and technological developments helped spur economic growth, middle-class suburbanization, social mobility, a rapid expansion of higher education, and the rise of the “Sun Belt” as a political and economic force. - These economic and social changes, in addition to the anxiety engendered by the Cold War, led to an increasingly homogeneous mass culture, as well as challenges to conformity by artists, intellectuals, and rebellious youth. * Ex. Beat Movement, The Affluent Society, rock and roll music - Conservatives, fearing juvenile delinquency, urban unrest, and challenges to the traditional family, increasingly promoted their own values and ideology. - As federal programs expanded and economic growth reshaped American society, many sought greater access to prosperity even as critics began to question the burgeoning use of natural resources. - Internal migrants as well as migrants from around the world sought access to the economic boom and other benefits of the United States, especially after the passage of new immigration laws in 1965. - Responding to the abuse of natural resources and the alarming environmental problems, activists and legislators began to call for conservation measures and a fight against pollution. * Ex. Rachel Carson, Clear Air Act - New demographic and social issues led to significant political and moral debates that sharply divided the nation. - Although the image of the traditional nuclear family dominated popular perceptions in the postwar era, the family structure of Americans was undergoing profound changes as the number of working women increased and many social attitudes changed. - Young people who participated in the counterculture of the 1960s rejected many of the social, economic, and political values of their parents’ generation, initiated a sexual revolution, and introduced greater informality into U.S. culture. - Conservatives and liberals clashed over many new social issues, the power of the presidency and the federal government, and movements for greater individual rights. * Ex. Watergate, Bakke v. university of California, Phyllis Schlafly ===== Period 9 (1980 - Present): 4-6% ===== - **A newly ascendant conservative movement achieved several political and policy goals during the 1980s and continued to strongly influence public discourse in the following decades** - Reduced public faith in the government’s ability to solve social and economic problems, the growth of religious fundamentalism, and the dissemination of neoconservative thought all combined to invigorate conservatism. - Public confidence and trust in government declined in the 1970s in the wake of economic challenges, political scandals, foreign policy “failures,” and a sense of social and moral decay. * Ex. OPEC oil embargo, 1970s inflation, Iranian hostage crisis - The rapid and substantial growth of evangelical and fundamentalist Christian churches and organizations, as well as increased political participation by some of those groups, encouraged significant opposition to liberal social and political trends. * Ex. Moral Majority, Focus on the Family - Conservatives achieved some of their political and policy goals, but their success was limited by the enduring popularity and institutional strength of some government programs and public support for cultural trends of recent decades. - Conservatives enjoyed significant victories related to taxation and deregulation of many industries, but many conservative efforts to advance moral ideals through politics met inertia and opposition. * Ex. tax cuts passed under Ronal Reagan and George W. Bush, Contract with America, Planned Parenthood v. Casey - Although Republicans continued to denounce “big government,” the size and scope of the federal government continued to grow after 1980, as many programs remained popular with voters and difficult to reform or eliminate * Ex. expansion of Medicare and Medicaid, growth of the budget deficit - **Moving into the 21st century, the nation experienced significant technological, economic, and demographic changes** - The Reagan administration pursued a reinvigorated anti-Communist and interventionist foreign policy that set the tone for later administrations. - President Ronald Reagan, who initially rejected détente with increased defense spending, military action, and bellicose rhetoric, later developed a friendly relationship with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, leading to significant arms reductions by both countries. * Ex. “Star Wars” missile defense system, START I - The end of the Cold War led to new diplomatic relationships but also new U.S. military and peacekeeping interventions, as well as debates over the nature and extent of American power in the world. - Following the attacks of September 11, 2001, U.S. foreign policy and military involvement focused on a war on terrorism, which also generated debates about domestic security and civil rights. - In the wake of attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, U.S. decision-makers launched foreign policy and military efforts against terrorism and lengthy, controversial conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq. - The war on terrorism sought to improve security within the United States but also raised questions about the protection of civil liberties and human rights. - **The end of the Cold War and new challenges to U.S. leadership forced the nation to redefine its foreign policy and role in the world.** - The increasing integration of the U.S. into the world economy was accompanied by economic instability and major policy, social, and environmental challenges. - Economic inequality increased after 1980 as U.S. manufacturing jobs were eliminated, union membership declined, and real wages stagnated for the middle class. - Policy debates intensified over free trade agreements, the size and scope of the government social safety net, and calls to reform the U.S. financial system. * Ex. North American Free Trade Agreement, debates over health care reform, debates over Social Security reform - Conflict in the Middle East and concerns about climate change led to debates over U.S. dependence on fossil fuels and the impact of economic consumption on the environment. - The spread of computer technology and the Internet into daily life increased access to information and led to new social behaviors and networks. - The U.S. population continued to undergo significant demographic shifts that had profound cultural and political consequences. - After 1980, the political, economic, and cultural influences of the American South and West continued to increase as the population shifted to those areas, fueled in part by a surge in migration from regions that had not been heavily represented in earlier migrations, especially Latin America and Asia. - The new migrants affected U.S. culture in many ways and supplied the economy with an important labor force, but they also became the focus of intense political, economic, and cultural debates. - Demographic changes intensified debates about gender roles, family structures, and racial and national identity. * Ex. Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell debate **Practice Tests** ====== LINK: google drive folder w/tests ====== **How to Write: SAQ** ====== Preface: ====== The way you’re supposed to write an SAQ can vary depending on who you ask, so this technique and format comes straight from College Board, the “trusted” source. ====== Understanding the basics: ====== * 40 minutes to write * Know that SAQ is NOT a miniature essay * Scoring scale is 0-3 points (per SAQ) * There are 23 lines on an SAQ, if you go over it then it doesn’t count ====== Possible Approach: ====== * “Rule of 9”, use three sentences per letter (a, b, c) to make a total of 9 sentences for your response to the SAQ * 1 sentence responds to the question * 1 sentence provides specific evidence as support * 1 sentence elaborates the evidence you used **How to Write: LEQ** ====== Preface: ====== LEQ is only for those taking the in-person test and for those taking online you don’t have to look at this section. Information on how to write an LEQ is sourced from [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npQUgppYeiM&ab_channel=Heimler%27sHistory|Heimler's History]]. ====== Understanding the basics: ====== * Time is combined with DBQ - 1 hour and 40 minutes or 100 minutes for both * There will be 3 questions you can choose from in ranging time periods * Question 1: 1491-1800 * Question 2: 1800-1898 * Question 3: 1890-present ====== Possible Approach: ====== * Thesis (0-1 pt) * Despite [counterargument], because [evidence 1] and [evidence 2], [argument] * %%^%%^sets up complexity and fulfills the rubric requirements * Contextualization * 1 paragraph 3-4 sentences that sets the stage for your argument. Technically while you can write context anywhere in your LEQ it’s better to write it before your established argument since a majority of students have found that easier * Use specific historical evidence * Demonstrate how this evidence is related and sets up your argument * Evidence * Bare minimum of 2 pieces of evidence (I recommend not doing that unless you just can’t think of more than 2) * Describe and argue evidence * Describing: naming and defining * Arguing: set up topic sentence → describing evidence → weave the counterargument from thesis as an “argument” to strengthen your evidence and work towards earning complexity * Analysis and reasoning * Historical reasoning * Explain where the document sits in its larger historical context * Complexity * Weave counterargument throughout essay (as aforementioned above in evidence) **How to Write: DBQ** ====== Preface: ====== DBQ information is sourced from [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d807y5m8VRY&ab_channel=Heimler%27sHistory|Heimler's History]]. ====== Understanding the basics: ====== * Time is combined with LEQ - 1 hour and 40 minutes or 100 minutes for both * Recommended to take 15 minutes reading through all the documents and spend 45 minutes for writing ====== Possible Approach: ====== * When reading documents note: * What is the source of the document? * Who is speaking and to whom? * Where in the timelines does this document sit? * Summarize the main idea of each document, also categorize them in correspondence to the prompt * Thesis (0-1 pt) * Write one or two sentence which are historically defensible and establish a line of reasoning (AKA don’t restate the prompt) * Use specific historical evidence, remember that you aren’t creating an overarching umbrella like you do in AP Lang (hi Mr. V) * Example (the same as LEQ): * Despite [counterargument], because [evidence 1] and [evidence 2], [argument] * %%^%%^sets up complexity and fulfills the rubric requirements * Contextualization * 1 paragraph 3-4 sentences that sets the stage for your argument. Technically while you can write context anywhere in your DBQ it’s better to write it before your established argument since a majority of students have found that easier * Use specific historical evidence * Demonstrate how this evidence is related and sets up your argument * Evidence * Use all 7 documents (to be safe in case you interpret a document incorrectly) * Don’t quote the documents, the graders already know the documents like it’s the back of their hand. It’ll save you time NOT quoting the documents * Evidence beyond the documents * Using outside evidence not found in the documents (gets you one point) * Topic sentence * More of an overarching idea for the paragraph that your evidence will support * Analysis and reasoning * Historical reasoning * Explain where the document sits in its larger historical context * Audience * Analyze for whom this document was produced * Purpose * Discuss what this document was intended to do * Point of View * WHY are they saying WHAT they said in the WAY that they are said it * Complexity * Compare similarities and differences with outside evidence or the evidence found within the documents **MUST KNOW CONCEPTS** ====== Read: ====== * If you feel like you don’t have time to do anything and just need a quick review, here are what I believe the most crucial and important events that happened throughout APUSH ====== Content: ====== * seneca falls convention 1848 * largest feminist activist gathering up to that point that called for equal rights for all women and was the starting point for the suffragist movement. * Nat turner * leader of the Nat Turner rebellion (1831) which was a slave revolt. It made southerners live in fear of potential future rebellions and developed the culture of southern society in future years. * Emancipation proc * declaration by Lincoln that all slaves in the Confederate states were free (not border states b/c Lincoln didn’t want to anger them). Encouraged thousands of slaves to escape and cross over into Union lines. * harpers ferry * Raid on harpers ferry by John Brown in the hopes of inciting a slave rebellion. Even though Brown was captured and executed, southerners were now convinced that all northerners were as extremist as Brown to destroy southern society * manifest dest * supremacist belief in American citizens that they were destined by God to spread its ideals of liberty, freedom, and democracy across the North American continent. Used to justify expansion of territory during the mid 1800s. * marbury v madison * Supreme court case that established the Supreme Court’s power of “judicial review”. Judicial review is what gives the Supreme Court the final authority in interpreting the constitution to check the other branches of power. * columbian exchange * Transfer and exchange of crops, animals, diseases, humans, culture, ideas, etc. between the old world and new world * bacon’s rebellion * Uprising by poorer farmers and indentured servants in Virginia after the governor refused to protect them from American Indian attacks. Uprising was one of the reasons that plantation owners decided to switch to African slaves as labor sources * navigation acts (1651) * Laws passed by British parliament to regulate trade and shipping with their colonies. Declared that colonies could trade only with Britain, and could not engage in any other outside trade. However, colonists largely ignored this law through smuggling during the period of salutary neglect when these laws were rarely enforced * seven years war (1756-1763) * AKA French and Indian War in North America. Asserted British supremacy in North America over the French. One of the main political causes for the American Revolution. * revolutionary war * American War of Independence. Victory by the colonists in the war gave them the recognition of sovereignty and independence from Britain, and ended British influence in North America (except in Canada). * revolution of 1800 * Not a literal revolution - reference to the election of Democratic-Republican Thomas Jefferson over Federalist John Adams. But there was a peaceful transfer of power between the two parties, proving how the new American political system could work * henry clay's american system * Economic system by Henry Clay that had 3 parts: strong banking, protective tariffs, and new networks of roads and canals. This was all aimed to unite the American economy together and grow stronger together * indian removal act 1830 * The forcible removal of all American Indian tribes living East of the Mississippi to the new Indian Territories in Oklahoma and Arkansas. Ordered under President Andrew Jackson. * bleeding kansas - (1856-1861) * Period of violent civil war in the Kansas Territory between pro and anti-slavery groups. Often seen as a prelude to the actual Civil War when the debate on slavery would really be put on the line. * election 1860 * Election of Abraham Lincoln and the anti-slavery platform of the Republican party. Slave states were vehemently opposed to this, and South Carolina became the first state to secede as a result of Lincoln gaining the presidency. * secession of deep south * 11 states that seceded from the Union and created the Confederate States of America. Marked the beginnings of the Civil War after decades of dispute and tension between over the issue of slavery. * civil war (1861-1865) * War between the Union and Confederate States of America over the issue of secession and slavery. Ultimately ended in the dissolution of the CSA and the abolishment of slavery in the US. It also preserved and reinstated the Union under a single flag and provided the continued survival of the United States. * election 1896 * Victory of incumbent Republican President William McKinley over Democrat William Jennings Bryant. It brought the end of the third party system, and began the fourth party system - a period where Republicans dominated national issues like industrial regulation and labor concerns * turning point in us british relations, AKA venezuela boundary dispute * AKA Great Rapprochement, it was a point of reconciliation between Britain and the US towards the end of the 19th century. These ties would be further strengthened during WWI, and a strong alliance between the two countries became welded together. * progressive era (1896-1916) * An era of widespread social activism and political reform. Reforms began to see the complex inequalities affecting all Americans as a consequence of corruption and neglect during the Gilded Age. And so reformers came to expose and criticize the social injustices and inequalities they saw. * great migration * A huge demographic migration of African Americans from their historical roots in the rural south to urban cities in the North and West in an effort to escape the racial violence and find better economic opportunity. * Ww1 (1914 - 1918) * A mainly European conflict that gradually spread to the rest of the world, The late American entrance into the war on the side of the Allies helped them defeat the Axis Powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary. It also established the United States into a position of world leadership. * 19th amendment * Landmark victory in women’s suffrage, it granted all women the right to vote in the United States nearly 70 years after the Seneca Falls Convention * great depression (1929-1933) * The worst economic depression in the history of the world, it started after the stock market crashed in October of 1929. Thousands of banks across the nations collapsed, millions of people lost their jobs, and Americans fell into a period of poverty. * new deal * Economic and political policies by President Franklin Roosevelt that sought to fix the effects of the Great Depression. Included were providing relief for the unemployed by creating programs that would both stimulate the economy and create jobs, and introducing Progressive-era styled welfare programs like social security. * Ww2 * The second global war of the century, America joined the side of the Allies in an effort to combat and stop fascist Germany and Italy from world domination. Firmly established the United States place as a world superpower after its rapid military conversion, and the introduction of nuclear weapons. A direct cause of the Cold War. * pearl harbor * Surprise attack on Pearl Harbor by the Empire of Japan was the immediate cause that brought America into the war