APUSH Unit Five (1844-1877) Identification (ID’S) (2 points each: 1pt. for definition; 1 pt. for significance) 1) Tejano 2) Stephen F. Austin 3) German and Irish immigrants 4) Nativism 5) Commonwealth v. Hunt 6) Oregon Country 7) Californios 8) Santa Fe Trail 9) Alamo 10) Sam Houston 11) John Tyler 12) Annexation of Texas 13) James K. Polk 14) Manifest Destiny 15) Zachary Taylor 16) Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 17) Wilmot Proviso 18) Free-Soil Party 19) California gold rush 20) Harper’s Ferry 21) Fort Sumter 22) John Brown 23) Free Soil 24) Popular Sovereignty 25) “High Law” 26) Stephen A. Douglas 27) Compromise of 1850 28) Fugitive Slave Act 29) Uncle Tom’s Cabin 30) Franklin Pierce 31) Kansas-Nebraska Act 32) Slave Power 33) Know-Nothings 34) Republican Party 35) Charles Sumner 36) Dred Scott v. Sandford 37) Lecompton Constitution 38) Abraham Lincoln 39) Confederate States of America 40) Cooperheads 41) Conscription 42) Charles Francis Adams 43) Legal Tender Act 44) National Bank Act 45) Jefferson Davis 46) Radical Republicans 47) Anaconda Plan 48) First Battle of Bull Run 49) Robert E. Lee 50) Battle of Antietam 51) Ulysses S. Grant 52) William T. Sherman 53) “March to the Sea” 54) Battle of Shiloh 55) “Cotton Diplomacy” 56) Emancipation Proclamation 57) Freedmen’s Bureau 58) Battle of Gettysburg 59) Battle of Vicksburg 60) Homestead Act 61) Morrill Land Grant Act 62) New York City Draft Riots 63) United States Sanitary Commission 64) Woman’s National Loyal League 65) Thirteenth Amendment 66) Appomattox Court House 67) Charles Sumner (Ch. 16 Importance) 68) Thaddeus Stevens 69) Andrew Johnson 70) “Ten Percent Plan” 71) Wade-Davis Bill 72) Presidential Reconstruction 73) “Black Codes” 74) Civil Rights Act of 1866 75) Fourteenth Amendment 76) Reconstruction Act of 1867 77) Tenure of Office Act 78) Fifteenth Amendment 79) William H. Seward 80) Hiram Revels 81) Blanche K. Bruce 82) Susan B. Anthony 83) Ku Klux Klan 84) Enforcement Acts 85) Civil Rights Act of 1875 86) Sharecropping 87) Liberal Republicans 88) Greenback Party 89) Slaughterhouse Cases 90) “Exodusters” 91) Compromise of 1877 92) Plains Indians 93) Battle of Little Big Horn 94) Sandcreek Massacre 95) Chief Joseph 96) Oklahoma Land Rush/”sooners” 97) William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody 98) Fort Laramie Treaty 99) Sitting Bull 100) Helen Hunt Jackson 101) Dawes Severalty Act 102) Ghost Dance 103) Wounded Knee 104) Edmunds-Tucker Act 105) White Caps 106) Comstock Lode 107) Cattle Drives 108) Nat Love 109) Curtis Act 110) Wild West Show 111) Owen Wister 112) John Wesley Powell 113) Yellowstone National Park 114) George Perkins Marsh 115) John Muir Short Response (10 points each) Grading will be on an A/F/zero score. (will discuss) 1) Was the Mexican War inevitable? Could the United States have achieved its objective in any other manner? How? 2) Discuss the major elements of the Compromise of 1850 and how they were an attempt to balance the requirements of pro-slavery and antislavery factions in the United States. 3) Describe the effects of the Civil War on the “home front” of the North and South. Did one side benefit more than the other? Explain. 4) How did freed slaves react to their new status after the Civil War? What did most African Americans soon realize about the reality of their freedoms? 5) Describe the major military confrontations between Native Americans and whites on the post-Civil War frontier.