slides3 civil war to WWI


US history facts and terms II

The Civil War:

Lincoln and the Union

Jefferson Davis and the Confederate States of America

disproportions between Northern and Southern potential

Southern command: Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson

Northern generals: McClellan, Ulysses Grant

battles of Bull Run (1861), Shiloh, Antietam and Fredericksburg (1862)

battle of Antietam: 24,000 killed or wounded, more than on any single day in US history

Emancipation Proclamation

1863: battles of Chancellorsville, Vicksburg and Gettysburg

Lincoln's Gettysburg Address

1864: Chattannoga, General Sherman's March to the Sea; Grant v. Lee in battle of the Wilderness, at Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor

1865: April 2 Lee abandons Richmond

April 9, Confederate capitulation at Appomattox

April 14, Lincoln assassinated

Civil War casualties: 600,000 dead (120 thousand in WWI, 300,000 in WWII)

Northern and Southern society during the war:

economic and industrial boom in the North

draft and New York draft riots (1863)

Sand Creek massacre (1864)

disintegration of the South; food riots, desertions

the role of African Americans

Jefferson Davis's plans for emancipation

Reconstruction of the South:

Lincoln's plans for reconstruction: a “10 percent plan”

presidency and near impeachment of Andrew Johnson

Johnson's policy towards the South: abolition of slavery, but otherwise a lenient approach: amnesty oaths and pardons, no commitment to black suffrage

Johnson's support for 13th Amendment, but opposition to 14th Amendment to the Constitution

Black codes, “return of the Bourbons”

battle for 14th Amendment

citizenship rights for “freedmen”, “due process” clause

Republican control over Congress; the Radicals

Congressional Reconstruction: Reconstruction Act of 1867

15th Amendment: Constitutional right to vote for freedmen

Freedmen's Bureau

“scalawags” and carpetbaggers, KKK

Southern agriculture: sharecroppers

1876 elections: Tilden v. Hayes

end of Reconstruction in 1876

Jim Crow laws, Plessy vs. Ferguson and “separate but equal” doctrine

approximate number of blacks lynched between 1880 and 1918: 2400

Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois

NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People)

The West:

Homestead Act

end of open range and of the moving frontier

Buffalo Bill (Cody)

The Indians:

Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, General G. Custer

Little Big Horn

Dawes Severalty Act

Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee

The Gilded Age:

Alexander G. Bell, George Westinghouse,

Thomas Alva Edison

J. P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller and Standard Oil

Social Darwinism, laissez-faire

Andrew Carnegie and the Gospel of Wealth

Rags-to-riches myth, Horatio Alger and dime novels

William Hearst, Joseph Pulitzer and yellow press

Reform movements:

the Populist movement and the battle for the silver standard

Samuel Gompers, American Federation of Labor

Big Bill Haywood, Industrial Workers of the World

Eugene Debs, Upton Sinclair, The Jungle, muckrakers

Jane Addams and settlement house movement

life in tenements and Jacob Riis

Bosses and machines, Tammany Hall

Spoils system, assassination of James Garfield,

Civil Service Act

Progressives, Theodore Roosevelt, anti-trust regulations

Federal Reserve and Federal Trade Commission

Muller v. Oregon

Henry Ford, $5 and 8-hour work day; Model T, assembly line

Immigration:

between 1880 and 1920: 25 million immigrants

“New” immigration: South and Eastern Europeans

Chinese Exclusion Act, Ellis Island

Rise of American empire:

The Maine incident

Spanish-American war

Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Philippines, Cuba

Assassination of McKinley

Roosevelt's Corollary, Open Door, Dollar Diplomacy

Panama Canal

World War I:

Woodrow Wilson, intervention in Mexico

the Lusitania, unrestricted submarine warfare,

Zimmermann telegram

Preparedness and Americanization campaign

Committee for Public Information, War Industries Board

Espionage and Sedition laws, intervention in Russia; John Reed

Versailles treaty, Wilson's 14 points, League of Nations

US battle deaths in WWI: 53 thousand doughboys

Chicago and Houston race riots

Birth of a Nation and the resurgence of KKK

Suffragists, Alice Paul and National Women's Party

18th and 19th Amendments

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