APUSH Unit One (1491-1607)

advertisement
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.
Download