US History concept chart major concepts & themes across US History: Difference between revisions
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=== & push-pull factors === | === & push-pull factors === | ||
* opportunity | '''Push factors''' from England: | ||
* poverty/ lack of land ownership (rents) | |||
* religious persecution | |||
* escape debt or criminality | |||
* lack of economic or social opportunity | |||
* primogeniture | * primogeniture | ||
** 2nd sons didn't inherent titles or property | |||
* limits imposed by British social and economic class system | |||
'''Push factors''' to American colonies | |||
* economic opportunity (trade) | |||
* adventurism | |||
* religious freedom | |||
* land ownership | |||
* start new life | |||
* political opportunity | |||
* merit-based opportunity | |||
=== American colonial perceptions viz Britain === | === American colonial perceptions viz Britain === |
Revision as of 20:38, 29 May 2021
US History concept chart major concepts & themes across US History
Objective:
- overview of core ideas for understanding historical times, persons, places, and events in U.S. History
Index
U.S. History course pages:
Periods, timeline, and major concepts[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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BIG IDEAS What does it MEAN?
causality
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"The American Experience"[edit | edit source]
state colonialism[edit | edit source]
click EXPAND for chart of types/ purposes of colonial charters/ establishment
& push-pull factors[edit | edit source]Push factors from England:
Push factors to American colonies
American colonial perceptions viz Britain[edit | edit source]
|
Founding documents & political philosophies[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
---|---|---|
Enlightenment ideas[edit | edit source]Declaration of Independence[edit | edit source]faction & disagreement[edit | edit source]
Constitution[edit | edit source]
Bill of Rights[edit | edit source]
Electoral College[edit | edit source]Two-party system[edit | edit source] |
Cultural, social & political intersections[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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self-governance/ self-government[edit | edit source]
- extents and limits of self-government
- to consider:
- what does it mean and how do different people & times interpret it?
- what is democracy? How can it work? What are its limits? How does it empower people?
private v public lives of Americans[edit | edit source]
slavery[edit | edit source]
- Northwest Ordinance, 178>> << banned slavery in NW Territory
- expansion of slavery
- experience of slaves
- consequences of slavery
- upon slaves and former slaves
- upon slave-owners
- upon white non-slave owners
- 1791 Vermont state constitution forbade slavery
"frontier" western expansion[edit | edit source]
- >>details
religious awakenings[edit | edit source]
- >>details
politics & democracy[edit | edit source]
- Tocqueville
- cultural expression
- news and journalism, “pamphleteering”
- radio/ tv
- political participation
reform movements[edit | edit source]
- public and private
- religious awakenings
- agitation for reform
- reform (public/ private)
- fear, crisis, opportunism
Economic concepts & themes[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
---|---|---|
economics[edit | edit source]
panics, recessions, depressions[edit | edit source]
to do/ sort[edit | edit source]
distance and time
land grants act 1850s overseas wars foreign involvement nicauragia wwi cold war women's rights in west b/c of fewer women in the population
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Territorial & commercial expansion[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
---|---|---|
1763 Treaty of Paris
1783 Treaty of Paris
1791 Vermont Republic
1802 Louisiana Purchase
1815 Treaty of Ghent
1818 Treaty of 1818
1819 Adams-Onis Treaty
1842 Webster–Ashburton Treaty
1846 Oregon Treaty
1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
1853 Gadsden Purchase
1867 Alaska Purchase
1898 Treaty of Paris
1898 Annexation of Hawaii
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BIG IDEAS What does it MEAN?
Push & pull factors
Colonial expansion
Exploration, fur trade, land
Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Manifest Destiny
Civil War impact
Impact of technologies
Overseas expansion & acquisitions
Expansion via acquisition from European powers
Expansion via acquisition or war with Native Americans
Twentieth Century US overseas interventions
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=== British colonial expansion ===
US territorial expansion[edit | edit source]
Acquisition or takeover of Native American lands[edit | edit source]
Pacific Island and other acquisitions[edit | edit source]
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