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APUSH MIDTERM REVIEW (PERIOD 1-5)
Composite Sentence Exercise
In one clear concise sentence identify the following AND indicate their historical significance (frequently the change
over time they represent). Both elements are to be included in ONE clear concise sentence. If you do not know an
item, look it up!!
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
Indentured Servants
Proclamation of 1763
Fugitive Slave Law
Salutary Neglect
Popular Sovereignty
Pinckney’s Treaty
Seneca Falls Convention
Puritans
Marbury v. Madison
Wilmot Proviso
Great Awakening
Second Great Awakening
Compromise of 1850
Connecticut Compromise
Whiskey Rebellion
Worcester v. Georgia
Loose v. Strict Constitutionalist
Apologist View of Slavery
Manifest Destiny
Virginia/Kentucky Resolutions
American System
Nullification
Headright System
Cult of Domesticity
Tariff of Abominations
Compromise of 1877
XYZ Affair
French & Indian War
Nat Turner’s Rebellion
Embargo
Virtual Representation
13th, 14th, 15th Amendments
Know-Nothing Party
Dred Scott v. Sandford
35.
36.
37.
38.
Embargo
William Lloyd Garrison
Battle of Saratoga
“54-40 or Fight!”
In the blank to the left of the items, place a number from 1 to 10 (1=earliest, 10=most recent), placing
the items in the correct chronological order. Then, in the blank to the right of the items, write the
decade in which the event occurred.
Set one
Set two
_____ French and Indian War
________
_____
Establishment of the BUS
________
_____ Intolerable Acts
________
_____
The Embargo
________
_____ Boston Tea Party
________
_____
Alien and Sedition Acts
________
_____ Stamp Act
________
_____
Midnight Appointments
________
_____ Bacon’s Rebellion
________
_____
Chesapeake Affair
________
_____ Declaration of Independence
________
_____
Quasi War with France
________
_____ Great Awakening
________
_____
Louisiana Purchase
________
_____ Battle of Saratoga
________
_____
Pinckney Treaty
________
_____ Articles of Confederation
________
_____
Jay Treaty
________
_____ Halfway Covenant
________
_____
Adams-Onis Treaty
________
Set three
Set four
_____ Monroe Doctrine
_______
_____
XYZ Affair
_______
_____ Marbury v Madison
_______
_____
Ratification of the Constitution
_______
_____ Invention of the Cotton Gin
_______
_____
Second Great Awakening
_______
_____ McCullock v. Maryland
_______
_____
Trail of Tears
_______
_____ Corrupt Bargain
_______
_____
The Dominion of New England
_______
_____ Treaty of Ghent
_______
_____
Compromise of 1850
_______
_____ Chartering of the Second BUS
_______
_____
Northwest Ordinance
_______
_____ Mr. Madison’s War
_______
_____
Manifest Destiny
_______
_____ Tariff of Abominations
_______
_____
Bleeding Kansas
_______
_____ Missouri Compromise
_______
_____
“City on a Hill”
_______
Set five
Set six
_____ California admission
_______
_____
Northwest Ordinance
_______
_____ Republican Party formed
_______
_____
First American Party System
_______
_____ Kansas-Nebraska Act
_______
_____
Articles of Confederation
_______
_____ Lincoln-Douglas Debates
_______
_____
Common Sense
_______
_____ Dred Scott v Sandford
_______
_____
Townshend Acts
_______
_____ Harper’s Ferry
_______
_____
Compromise of 1850
_______
_____ Mexican-American War
_______
_____
Indian Removal Act
_______
_____ Wilmot Proviso
_______
_____
Battle of Yorktown
_______
_____ Summer-Brooks Affair
_______
_____
Oregon acquired
_______
_____ Crittenden Compromise
_______
_____
Bank War
_______
_____
Halfway Covenant
________
Set seven
Set eight
_____ Compromise of 1877
________
_____
Northwest Ordinance
________
_____ Embargo
________
_____
Alien and Sedition Acts
________
_____ Nullification Crisis
________
_____
Compromise of 1850
________
_____ Sumner-Brooks Affair
________
_____
Pinckney Treaty
________
_____ Declaration of Independence
________
_____
French and Indian War
________
_____ Mexican American War
________
_____
Salem Witch Trials
________
_____ Adams-Onis Treaty
________
_____
Gadsden Purchase
________
_____ Virginia-Kentucky Resolutions
________
_____ Monroe Doctrine
________
_____
Emancipation Proclamation
________
Set nine
Set ten
_____ Bacon’s Rebellion
_______
_____ Marbury v Madison
_______
_____ Whiskey Rebellion
_____
XYZ Affair
_______
_______
_____
Stamp Act
_______
_____ Nat Turner’s Rebellion
_______
_____
Military Reconstruction
_______
_____ Missouri Compromise
_______
_____
The Dominion of New England
_______
_____ Battle of Saratoga
_______
_____
Annexation of Texas
_______
_____ Uncle Tom’s Cabin
_______
_____
City on a Hill
_______
_____ Mr. Madison’s War
_______
_____ Corrupt Bargain
_______
_____
Great Awakening
_______
_____
Founding of Jamestown
_______
Cause/Effect Matching
____introduction of a cash crop
1.
Maine enters the Union as a free state
____religious intolerance in Massachusetts Bay
2.
Intolerable (Coercive) Acts
____failure of indentured servant system
3.
Lack of congressional authority to regulate slavery
____declining Puritan church membership
4.
John Quincy Adams elected President
5.
End of Reconstruction
6.
Jamestown survival
____British victory in the French and Indian War
____Boston Tea Party
____Virginia agreeing to give up western land claims
____Jay Treaty
____XYZ Affair
____Chesapeake Incident
____Missouri Compromise
7. Halfway Covenant
____Corrupt Bargain
8. Secession of South Carolina
____Alien and Sedition Acts
9. Ratification of the Articles of Confederation
____Compromise of 1850
____Dred Scott decision
____Lincoln’s election as president
____Antietam
10. California enters as a free state
____Compromise of 1877
11. Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
12. Separation of church and state in Rhode Island
13. British evacuation of the northwest forts
14. Entrenchment of the institution of slavery
15. Emancipation Proclamation
16. Quasi (Undeclared) war with France
17. Proclamation Act (Line)
18. Embargo
Defend each of the following dates as a turning point in American History. Explain why each could
legitimately be called a turning point in U.S. History. Then pick one and defend it as a better indication
of a watershed year than the other.
1789 v. 1800:
1789:
1800:
Best choice:
1828 v. 1844:
1828:
1844:
Best choice:
1848 v. 1850:
1848:
1850:
Best choice:
1860 v. 1865:
1860:
1865:
Best choice:
1865 v. 1877:
1865
1877:
Best Choice:
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