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AP US Fall term final exam review cards
Just what the title says.
113
History
11th Grade
11/15/2014

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Term
Columbian exchange (1491-1607)
Definition
Exchange of crops, animals, diseases, and ideas between Europe and colonies of the Western Hemisphere that developed in the aftermath of the voyages of Columbus
Term
Puritans (1607-1650)
Definition
Group of religious dissidents who came to the New World so they would have a location to establish a "purer" church than the one that existed in England
Term
Separatists (1607-1650)
Definition
Religious group that also opposed the Church of England; this group first went to Holland, and then some went on to the Americas.
Term
Indentured servants (1607-1650)
Definition
Individuals who exchanged compulsory service for free passage to the American colonies.
Term
Mercantilism (1650-1750)
Definition
Economic system practiced by European powers in the late seventeenth century stating that economic self-sufficiency was crucial; as a result, colonial empires were important for raw materials.
Term
Navigation Acts (1650-1750)
Definition
Acts passed by the British Parliament increasing the dependence of the colonies on the English for trade; these acts caused great resentment in the American colonies but were not strictly enforced.
Term
Triangular trade system (1650-1750)
Definition
Complex trading system that developed in this era between Europe, Africa, and the colonies.
Term
Middle Passage (1650-1750)
Definition
Voyage taken by African slaves on overcrowded ships from Africa to America
Term
Salutary neglect (1650-1750)
Definition
early eighteenth-century British policy relaxing the strict enforcement of trade policies in the American colonies.
Term
First Great Awakening (1650-1750)
Definition
A movement in which ideas questioning religious authority took place. The Great Awakening reinforced the idea that the questioning of political authority was also acceptable.
Term
Molasses Act (1650-1750)
Definition
And act which tightened British control over colonial trade.
Term
French and Indian War (1750-1775)
(7 years war)
Definition
A conflict between the British and the French that also involved Native Americans and colonial militias. French defeat in this war greatly decreased their influence in the colonies.
Term
Stamp Act (1750-1775)
Definition
An act that dictated that all legal documents in the colonies had to be issued on officially stamped paper. This act created strong resentment in the colonies and was later repealed.
Term
Townshend Acts (1750-1775)
Definition
British legislation that forced colonies to pay duties on most goods coming from England.
Term
Sons of Liberty (1750-1775)
Definition
Radical group that organized resistance against British policies in Boston in the 1760's and 1770s.
Term
Boston Tea Party (1750-1775)
Definition
a response to British taxes on tea, in which Boston radicals disguised as Native Americans threw chests of tea into Boston Harbor; important symbolic act of resistance to British economic control of the colonies.
Term
First Continental Congress (1750-1775)
Definition
Meeting in Philadelphia at which colonists vowed to resist further efforts to tax them without their consent
Term
Second Continental Congress (1775-1787)
Definition
Meeting that authorized the Creation of a Continental army; many delegates still hoped that conflict could be avoided with the British.
Term
Common Sense (1775-1787)
Definition
Pamphlet written by Thomas Paine attacking the system of government by monarchy.
Term
Battle of Yorktown (1775-1787)
Definition
Defeat of the British in Virginia, ending their hopes of winning the Revolutionary War.
Term
Treaty of Paris (1775-1787)
Definition
Treaty ending the Revolutionary War; by this treaty Great Britain recognized American independence.
Term
Articles of Confederation (1775-1787)
Definition
Document establishing the first government of the United States; the federal government was given limited power and the states much power.
Term
Northwest Ordinances (1775-1787)
Definition
Bills authorizing the sale of lands in the Northwest Territory to raise money for the federal government.
Term
Virginia Plan (1787-1800)
Definition
Plan proposing a bicameral legislature with representatives determined by proportional representation.
Term
New Jersey Plan (1787-1800)
Definition
Plan proposing one legislative body for the country with each state having one vote.
Term
Great Compromise (1787-1800)
Definition
Plan that stated that one house of the Congress would be based on population (the House of Representatives) while in the other house all states would have equal representation (The Senate).
Term
Electoral College (1787-1800)
Definition
Procedure for electing the president and vice-president of the United States as outlined in the Constitution.
Term
Three-Fifths Compromise (1787-1800)
Definition
as the Constitution was being created, the plan that stated that slaves would be counted as three-fifths of a free person.
Term
Federalists (1787-1800)
Definition
party in the first years of the republic that favored a larger national government; was supported by commercial interests.
Term
Alien and Sedition Acts (1787-1800)
Definition
an act that gave the president power to expel "dangerous' aliens and outlawed "scandalous" publications against the government
Term
Declaration of Neutrality (1787-1800)
Definition
A document which allowed American merchants to prosper by trading with both sides.
Term
Whiskey Rebellion (1787-1800)
Definition
Rebellion inspired by the French Revolution, opposing a tax placed on distilled alcohol, which reduced the profits made on Whiskey
Term
National Bank (1787-1800)
Definition
A bank that could provide loans to developing industries; proposed by Alexander Hamilton.
Term
Marbury v. Madison (1800-1820)
Definition
Supreme Court decision that established the principle of judicial review, stating that the Supreme Court has the right to review all federal laws and decisions and declare whether or not they are constitutional
Term
Louisiana Purchase (1800-1820)
Definition
Purchase from Emperor Napoleon of France that doubled the size of the United States.
Term
War of 1812 (1800-1820)
Definition
War between the British and the Americans over British seizure of American ships, connections between the British and Native American tribes, and other tensions. The treaty ending the war merely restored diplomatic relations between the two countries.
Term
American System (1800-1820)
Definition
Plan proposed to make America economically independent by increasing industrial production in the United States and by creating a second national Bank.
Term
Missouri Compromise (1800-1820)
Definition
Political solution devised to keep the number of slave states and free states equal.
Term
Judiciary Act (1800-1820)
Definition
Act creating a large number of new federal courts.
Term
Monroe Doctrine (1820-1845)
Definition
Proclamation that countries of the Wester Hemisphere are not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European Powers.
Term
Removal Act of 1830 (1820-1845)
Definition
Congressional act that authorized the removal of all Native American tribes east of the Mississippi to the west.
Term
The Liberator (1820-1845)
Definition
Abolitionist newspaper began by WilliamLloyd Garrison in 1831.
Term
Spoils system (1820-1845)
Definition
System used most during the presidency of Andrew Jackson where political supporters of the winning candidate are given jobs in the government.
Term
Nullification (1820-1845)
Definition
A process by which individual states could rule on the constitutionality of federal laws.
Term
Whig Party (1820-1845)
Definition
Political party that emerged in the 1830s in opposition to the Democratic party; Whigs favored policies that promoted commercial and industrial growth.
Term
Temperance Movement (1820-1845)
Definition
Movement developed in this period, urging the working class to not drink in excess.
Term
Abolitionist movement (1820-1845)
Definition
Group that considered slavery to be a sin.
Term
Manifest Destiny (1835-1860)
Definition
Concept stating that it was the God-given mission of the United States to expand westward.
Term
Mexican-American War (1835-1860)
Definition
War fought over possession of Texas, which gave the United States the northern part of the Texas territory and the territories of New Mexico and California.
Term
Compromise of 1850 (1835-1860)
Definition
Act temporarily ending tensions between the North and the South.
Term
Fugitive Slave Act (1835-1860)
Definition
part of the Compromise of 1850, legislation that set up special commissions in northern states to determine if accused runaway slaves were actually that. Many northern state legislatures attempted to circumvent this law.
Term
Kansas-Nebraska Act (1835-1860)
Definition
Compromise that allowed settlers in Kansas and Nebraska to vote to decide if they would enter the Union as free states or slave states.
Term
Dred Scott Case (1835-1860)
Definition
Supreme Court ruling that stated that slaves were property and not people; as a result they cuold not seek a ruling from any court. The ruling also stated that Congress had no legal right to ban slavery in any territory.
Term
Uncle Tom's Cabin (1835-1860)
Definition
Written by Harriet Beecher, this was written as a response to the Fugitive Slave Act. Stowe demonstrated the immorality of slavery in her novel.
Term
Know Nothing Party (1835-1860)
Definition
Party that developed in response to the rising immigration from Ireland and Germany, which had begun in the late 1840s. Strongly Nativist party.
Term
Reconstruction Era
(1865-1877)
Definition
Period after the Civil War during which Northern political leaders created plans for the governance of the South and a procedure for former Southern states to rejoin the Union.
Term
Radical Republicans
(1865-1877)
Definition
Congressional group that wished to punish the South for its secession from the Union.
Term
Reconstruction Act(1865-1877)
Definition
Act placing Southern states under military rule and barring former supporters of the Confederacy from voting.
Term
Carpetbaggers(1865-1877)
Definition
Northerners who moved to the South during the Reconstruction Era.
Term
Ku Klux Klan(1865-1877)
Definition
Group founded in Tennessee in 1866; their violent actions during the Reconstruction Era represented the resentments felt by many Southern whites toward changing political conditions.
Term
Conpromise of 1877(1865-1877)
Definition
Political compromise ending the disputed presidential election of 1876,
Term
Homestead Act (1860-1895)
Definition
Bill that did much to encourage settlers to move west.
Term
Dawes Act (1860-1895)
Definition
Act designed to break up Native American tribes by offering individual Native Americans land to be used for either farming or grazing.
Term
Farmers' Alliances (1860-1895)
Definition
Organization that united farmers at the statewide and regional levels; policy goals of this organization included more readily available farm credits and federal regulation of the railroads.
Term
Populist party (1860-1895)
Definition
Formed in 1892 by members of the Farmers' Alliances, this party was designed to appeal to workers in all parts of the country. Populists favored a larger role of government in American society, a progressive income tax, and more direct methods of democracy.
Term
Turner Thesis (1860-1895)
Definition
Thesis by the historian Frederick Jackson Turner suggesting that the innovations practiced by western settlers gradually became ingrained into the fabric of American society; democracy and self improvement were also central to western expansion. Turner suggested that many of the characteristics of the "American character" were created by westward expansion.
Term
Taylorism (1870-1910)
Definition
Following management practices of the industrial engineer Frederick Taylor, the belief that factories should be managed in a scientific manner.
Term
Horizontal integration (1870-1910)
Definition
Strategy of gaining as much control over a single industry as possible (ex: John D. Rockefellar)
Term
Vertical integration (1870-1910)
Definition
Strategy of gaining as much control over a single industry as possible by controlling the production, marketing, and distribution of the finished product. (Ex: Andrew Carnegie)
Term
Gospel of wealth (1870-1910)
Definition
Philosophy of Andrew Carnegie who believed that wealthy industrialists had an obligation to help local communities and philanthropic organizations.
Term
Knights of Labor (1870-1910)
Definition
Established in the 1880's this was the major union of that decade. It was made up of unions of many industries and accepted unskilled workers
Term
Gilded Age (1870-1910)
Definition
Depiction of late nineteenth-century America that emphasizes a surface of great prosperity hiding problems of social inequality and cultural shallowness
Term
American Federation of Labor (1870-1910)
Definition
National labor union formed with the goal of organizing skilled workers by craft.
Term
Pendleton Civil Service Act (1870-1910)
Definition
Federal act that established a civil service system at the federal level. Not all government jobs would be political appointments
Term
Tammany Hall (1870-1910)
Definition
Political machine that ran New York City Democratic and city politics beginning in 1870.
Term
Open Door policy (1890-1913)
Definition
Policy supported by the United States beginning in 1899 that stated that all major powers, including the United States, should have an equal right to trade with China.
Term
Social Darwinism(1890-1913)
Definition
Philosophy used to justify the vast differences between the rich and the poor in the late nineteenth century.
Term
Spanish-American War(1890-1913)
Definition
War that began in 1898 against the Spanish over treatment of Cubans by Spanish troops that controlled the island. As a result of this war, the United States annexed the Philippines, making America a major power in the Pacific.
Term
Yellow Journalism (1890-1913)
Definition
Method of journalism that utilized sensationalized accounts of the news to sell newspapers. This approach helped to whip up nationalistic impulses that led to the Spanish American war.
Term
U.s.s. Maine (1890-1913)
Definition
U.S. naval ship that sank in Havana harbor following an explosion. The incident was used to increase calls for war against Spain.
Term
Panama Canal (1890-1913)
Definition
Canal across Panama that enabled America to expand its economic and Military influence.
Term
Roosevelt Corollary (1890-1913)
Definition
Policy that warned Europeans against intervening in the affairs of Latin America and that claimed the rights of the United States to intervene in the affairs of Latin American nations if "Wrong doing" was taking place.
Term
Dollar Diplomacy (1890-1913)
Definition
Foreign policy supported by William Howard Taft and others that favored increased American investment in the world as a way of increasing American influence.
Term
Social Gospel movement (1895-1914)
Definition
Movement originating in the Protestant church that aimed to help the urban poor; many Progressives were influenced by this movement.
Term
Muckrakers (1895-1914)
Definition
Writers who exposed unethical practices in both government and business during this era; newspaper editors discovered that these types of stories increased circulation
Term
Initiative process (1895-1914)
Definition
This progressive-supported process allowed any citizen to propose a law. If enough supporters' signatures could be procured, the proposed law would appear on the next ballot.
Term
Hull House (1895-1914)
Definition
Settlement house in Chicago founded by Jane Addams; Hull house became a model for settlement houses around the country.
Term
National American Woman Suffrage Association (1895-1914)
Definition
Created in 1890 by a merger of two women's suffrage organizations; was instrumental in demanding women's rights to vote
Term
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire (1895-1914)
Definition
Fire in NYC that killed 150 Female factory workers. It was later found that the workers had been locked in the factory; as a result, many factory reforms were enacted.
Term
The Jungle (1895-1914)
Definition
Novel writted by Upton Sinclair that highlighted numerouse problems of the meatpacking industry and inspired the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act.
Term
American Expeditionary Force (1914-1921)
Definition
American force that landed in France in June 1917. Both women and blacks served in the American army during the war, although black units were segregated and usually had white officers.
Term
War Industries Board (1914-1921)
Definition
Board that regulated American industry during World War 1; it attempted to stimulate war production by allocating raw materials to factories that aided the war effort.
Term
Committee on Public Information (1914-1921)
Definition
Agency created during the war whose mission was to spread pro Allied propaganda through the press and through newsreels; newspapers were asked to print only articles that were helpful to the war effort
Term
Fourteen Points (1914-1921)
Definition
Plan for the postwar world that Woodrow Wilson brought to the Paris Peace Conference; Wilson's plan proposed open peace treaties, freedom of the seas, arms reductions, and a League of Nations.
Term
League of Nations (1914-1921)
Definition
World body proposed by Woodrow Wilson. The League was created but without the participation of Germany, the Soviet Union, and the USA. The League was relatively ineffective.
Term
Red Scare (1920)
Definition
After World War 1, the fear of the spread of communism in the United States.
Term
Palmer Raids (1920)
Definition
As part of the Red Scare, thousands of Americans not born in the United States were being arrested.
Term
National Origins Act (1920)
Definition
Anti Immigration federal legislation that took the number of immigrants from each country in 1890 and stated that immigration from those countries could now be no more than 2 percent of that. Immigration from Asia was also halted.
Term
Scopes Trial (1920)
Definition
Trial of teacher John Scopes for teaching evolution. Teachings of evolution vs the Bible.
Term
Jazz Age (1920)
Definition
Images of the 1920s that emphasized the more relaxed social attitudes of the decade.
Term
Flapper (1920)
Definition
"New Women" of the 1920s who were pictured as having bobbed hair, a shorter skirt, and liberated sexual attitudes. Flappers were mostly in Urban areas and were hard to find in small towns.
Term
Lost Generation (1920)
Definition
Group of post World War 1 writers who in their works expressed deep dissatisfaction with mainstream American culture.
Term
Harlem Renaissance (1920)
Definition
1920s black literary and cultural movement that produced many works depicting the role of blacks in contemporary American society.
Term
Hoovervilles (1929-1939)
Definition
Settlements of shacks found of the outskirts of many American cities beginning in the early 1930s
Term
Dust Bowl (1929-1939)
Definition
Name given to regions where severe drought and poor farming practices caused massive dust storms. By the end of the decade, nearly 60 percent of all farms there were ruined or abandoned.
Term
Hawley Smoot Tariff (1929-1939)
Definition
Tariff Act that imposed severe tariffs on all incoming goods; European countries responded with their own high tariffs. Most historians say this tariff did little to help the American Economy.
Term
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (1929-1939)
Definition
Federal agency established during the "First Hundred Days" of the New Deal in 1933 in an effort to halt panic over bank closings.
Term
Civilian Conservation Corps (1929-1939)
Definition
the CCC eventually provided jobs for 2.5 million young Americans in forest and conservation programs.
Term
National Industry Recovery Act (1929-1939)
Definition
New Deal legislation requiring owners and labor unions in various industries to agree upon hours, wages, and prices; as a result, wages did go up for many workers.
Term
Works Progress Administration (1929-1939)
Definition
New Deal program that employed nearly 8 million Americans.
Term
Wagner Act (1929-1939)
Definition
Critical piece of New Deal legislation that protected the right of workers to form unions and utilize collective bargaining.
Term
Social Security Act (1929-1939)
Definition
New Deal legislation providing pensions for workers reaching retirement age. Both workers and employers pay into the fund that provides this benefit.
Term
New Deal Coalition (1929-1939)
Definition
The political coalition created by FDR that, by and large, kept the Democratic Party in power from the 1930s through the 1960s.
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