Term
How did geography effect the development of the different Native American cultures? |
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Definition
The different Native American culture groups relied on their geography to provide them with everything they needed to survive, it was the center of their cultures. |
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Term
What were the causes of the Age of Exploration? |
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Definition
The Crusades and Renaissance introduced Europe to new exotic goods, ideas, technology, and increased the general curiosity of European population. |
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Term
Describe the Effects of the Age of Exploration |
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Definition
Death, Disease, Slavery, Spread of Christianity, The Columbian Exchange. |
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Term
What role did geography play in the economy of the different colonial regions of the Colonies? |
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Definition
Geography was central to the development of the 3 regions. New England-The Sea, Middle-The Bread Basket, Southern-Cash Crops (Rice, Indigo, Cotton) |
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Term
Describe the Triangular Trade and how it benefited the three points of the triangle? |
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Definition
Europe recieved raw materials, Colonies and Africa Recieved manufactured products and defense, Africa gave up large numbers of slaves. |
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Term
Describe the middle passage. |
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Definition
Journey from Freedom into slavery, from Africa to the Colonies. dangerous, disgusting, deadly, dirty, etc. |
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Term
Why did teh British impose new taxes on the American Colonists? |
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Definition
To pay for the French and Indian War and their future defense. |
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Term
Why were the Colonists opposed to the British Taxes and Acts? |
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Definition
No Taxation without Representation |
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Term
What drove the Colonists to want independence from Britian? |
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Definition
Increased involvment in colonial affairs by the British government, Colonists were losing the Self-Government that they had previously been granted. |
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Term
Explain the significance of the Declaration of Independence. |
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Definition
Let the world know that people are Created Equal and born with their Natural Rights that governments are created to protect. Further it spelled out the reasons for the colonists independence. |
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Term
Why is the Battle of Saratoga considered the turning point of the American Revolution? |
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Definition
From that point on the colonists were winning the war, it gained them recognition and support from France. |
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Term
What were the main weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation? |
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Definition
Unable to Tax, No executive or Judicial branches, could not enforce its own laws. |
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Term
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Definition
Division of power between the State and Federal governments, powers are delegated to the national government, reserved for the states or shared by both. |
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Term
How does the Constitution divide the powers of the national government? |
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Definition
3 Branches- Legislative: Makes the Laws, Executive: Carries out the Laws, Judicial: decides if the laws are fair. |
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Term
What is guaranteed by the Bill of Rights? |
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Definition
The rights of the individual are protected ie, Freedom of Speech, religion, etc. |
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Term
What precedents did George Washington set as the 1st President? |
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Definition
Two-Term limit, Cabinet, "Mr. President", Policy of Neutrality |
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Term
What is the purpose of political parties? |
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Definition
It is a group of people who join together to promote a common set of political ideas, power in numbers |
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Term
How did the United States Achieve Manifest Destiny? |
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Definition
A series of land acquisitions, Louisiana purchase, Texas Annexation, Mexican Cession, Gasden Purchase. |
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Term
What new methods of transportation did America develop in the mid-1800's |
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Definition
Canals, toll roads, railroads |
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Term
How did Industrialization, Urbanization, and technology affect the North? |
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Definition
It shifted the north from a rural farming society into an urban industrial society that produced finish products rather than raw materials. |
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Term
How did the invention of the cotton gin affect the South? |
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Definition
It increased the demand and profitability of cotton, which inturn increased the demand for land and slaves to work the land. |
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Term
How did abolitionists try to bring and end to slavery? |
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Definition
Underground RR, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Bleeding Kansas, John Brown's raid, Speeches, Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass |
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Term
What were the political, social, and economic causes of the Civil War? |
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Definition
Political- State's Rights vs. National Power. Social- Abolition vs. Slavery Economic- viability of Slave labor |
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Term
How did individual events increase the tension between the North and South? |
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Definition
Events such as Bleeding Kansas, the Dred Scott decision, and John Brown's raid convinced people that the two sides could not get along and compromise any longer. |
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Term
What were the political, social, and economic effects of the Civil War? |
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Definition
13, 14, and 15th amendments, death, destruction, Freedman's Bureau, Plessy v. Ferguson, Segregation, Racism, Cycle of Poverty. |
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Term
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Definition
What Leg of the Triangular Trade would be an example of Mercantilism? |
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Term
Who did the Emancipation Proclamation attempt to Free? |
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Definition
All Slaves in the Confederacy. |
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