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Amendment A minor change in a document, an article added to the United States Constitution
Assimilate Take in information to understand fully
Bias prejudice in favor of one thing, person, or group compared with another, usually to be unfair
Bicameral having two branches or chambers (in the legislative body)
Blockade To prevent supplies from entering or leaving port
Boomtown A town undergoing rapid growth due to sudden prosperity
Capitalism An economic and political system in which in country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by state
Captain of Industry Ingenious and industrious leaders who transformed the American economics with their business skills
Checks and Balances A way to keep the government from getting to powerful in one branch
Congress Congress is the bicameral legislature of the federal United States and consists of two houses: the Senate and House of Representatives
Due process of law Fair treatment through the judicial system, especially for the citizens rights
Economics The branch of knowledge concerned with the production, consumption, and transfer of wealth
Emancipated To free from bondage (slavery)
Enfranchise Give the right to vote
Enumerated Un-listed
Federalism In this government system power is divided between Federal, National, and State governments
Forty-niners A San Francisco football rush who gained their name from the California Gold Rush in 1849
Free Enterprise An economic system in which private businesses operates in competitive for profit with minimal governmental regulation
Habeas Corpus A law requiring a person under arrest to be brought before a judge or into court
Industry economic activity concerned with the processing of raw materials and manufacture of goods in factories
Judicial Of, by, or appropriate to a court or judge
Ku Klux Klan A secret society organized in the South after the Civil War to reassert white supremacy by means of terrorism
Manifest Destiny A period of American expansion westward from coast to coast, with the belief it was from God
Martyr Killed because of a persons religion or beliefs
Monopoly The exclusive possession or control of the supply or trade in a service
Nomadic Anything that has to do with moving around a lot
Override If the president veto's a bill it cam still become a law if two-thirds of both houses vote to override the veto.
Popular Sovereignty People are the source of the government's power
Ratify to approve
Radical A group of Northern congressman who favored using the Federal Government's power to create a new order in the South and promote full citizenship fro free African Americans
Republicanism People elect their political representatives
Robber Baron Cruel, ruthless business men who would stop at nothing to achieve wealth, often accused of working people to hard
Rural Country, off the beaten path
Separation of Powers Each of the three branches of government has it's own responsibilities
Social Darwinism The theory that individuals, groups, and people are subject to the same Darwinian laws of natural selection as plants and animals
Suffrage The right to vote in political elections (mainly for women)
Supreme Court The highest judicial court in a country or state The highest court in the U.S. consisting of nine justices
Tariff A tax or duty to be paid on a particular class of imports or exports
Taxation without Representation A situation in which a government imposes taxes on a particular group of citizens, despite a delivery on their knowledge of it happening
Trade Union Another term used for labor union a union of work throughout age groups
Urban In the city
Veto The presidents rejection to a bill
Tomas Jefferson An American Founding Father, the principal author of the Declaration of Independence, and the third president of the United States
Andrew Johnson 17th president of the United States, taking Linclon's place, democratic
Sacagawea Is known for accompanying the Lewis and Clark expedition. She served as a guide, translater and interpreter. She was also a mother.
James K. Polk "Mr. Manifest Destiny" 11th president
Frederick Douglass Former slave, escaped slavery Wrote the diary of Frederick Douglass Abolitionist leader Published the newspaper "The North Star"
Harriet Beecher Stowe Had/witnessed multiple slave stories published over 30 books wrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin"
John Brown A white American abolitionist who believed armed insurrection was the only way to overthrow the institution of slavery in the United States
Robert E. Lee An American soldier who commanded the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia in the American Civil War from 1862-1865 which was when he surrendered
Andrew Jackson 7th president of the United States of America
Susan B. Anthony Mostly known for an American social reformer and feminist who played a pivotal role in the women's suffrage movement
Sitting Bull Was a holy man who led his people as a tribal chief during years of resistance to United States government policies
George Cluster A United States Army officer and cavalry commander in the American Civil War and the American Indian Wars
Cornelius Vanderbilt A philanthropist who 'built America" by making his money off of railroads and shipping.
John Rockefeller Was a man who dominated in the oil industry and was the first great U.S. business trust
Andrew Carnegie Led an enormous expansion in the American steel industry, and was one of the best known philanthropist
Jamestown -Started from nothing -Built in the middle of a Native American Empire -Without 2 years there is a mass production of tobacco -Slaves play a huge role in the production -Spreads agriculture
Plymouth -Mayflower brought settlers here seeking religious freedom -The governor of the community was William Bradford -The first feast (Thanksgiving) was here
Lexington and Concord held the first military engagements of the American Revolutionary War
Erie Canal connected to Lake Erie, the great lakes system, and the Hudson River western states were able to use this as a way to direct access to the Atlantic Ocean without shipping goods downstream
The Alamo A place in Texas where a battle between a small group of U.S. soldiers and a large Mexican Army took place, all U.S. soldiers died but their brave efforts are still remembered today
Harper's Ferry An attempt led by John Brown to start an armed slave revolt and destroy the institution of slavery, in Harper's Ferry, Virginia
Fort Sumter On April 12, 1861 the Confederate Army fires on this Fort, the fort surrenders the next day and there are no casualities
Gettysburg On July 1-3 1863 Robert E. Lee divided his army to push back the union army and this was the greatest victory for the Confederate Army
Appomattox Courthouse The last battle of the Civil War was fought here on April 9, 1865, where Robert E. Lee made his surrender official to the Union Army
Ford's Theater A theater in Washington D.C where president Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth
Promontory Point, Utah Cape or southernmost point of peninsula formed where Promontory Mountains projected into Northern Great Salt Lake
Ellis Island and Angel Island In 1905 held the Immigration Station
Declaration of Independence Signed on July 4, 1776, by the second American Continental Congress, this document asserted freedom and independence of the 13 colonies
Revolutionary War This was A war to gain American Independence from Britain. The first battle took place at Lexington and Concord in 1775 and lasted through the Battle of Yorktown in 1781
Articles of Confederation The original constitution of the U.S., ratified in 1781, which was replaced by the U.S. constitution in 1789
Great Compromise This gave people the right to have 2 representatives no matter the size of population. The House of Representatives and the Senate agreed to this compromise
Passing the Constitution Passing this was a way to increase federal authority while still protecting the basic rights of its citizens
Adding the Bill of Rights Adding this gave the first 10 amendments in the United States Constitution
Louisiana Purchase In 1803 France sold Louisiana Territory to the United States, they sold 800,000square miles for only $0.04 per acre. This made the total price $15 million and this created 15 states (AR, MO, IA, OK, NB, ND, SD, NM, WY, CO, KS, TX, MT, MN, LA)
Missouri Compromise This banded slavery in the Louisiana Territory and made Missouri a slave state and Maine a free state
Indian Removal Acts Signed by Andrew Jonson on May 28, 1830 these Acts gave the president the right to grant unsettled lands West of the Mississippi in exchange for Indian lands within state borders. Some went peacefully however some did not.
Mexican-American War A war fought between the U.S. and Mexico from 1846-1848
California Gold Rush This, happening in 1849, shaped Americas wealth history, news would spread quickly and gold minors would come to California to mine for gold
Homestead Acts This was a law passed that offered up to 160 acres of land to any head of a family who paid a registration fee, used the land for 5 years, or built onto the land
Industrial Revolution A time where the economy boomed into an expansion of factories and factory workers
Underground Railroad Led by Harriet Tubman this helped many slaves escape slavery and was meant to be kept a secret
Seneca Falls Convention The first women's rights convention, an attempt to make the overall women have more social, civil, and religious rights
Compromise of 1850 California would be determined a free state, New Mexico would be a slave state. This would also ban slave trade and improve the Fugitive Slave Acts
Kansas-Nebraska Act This allowed residents to determine if slavery was legal in their state or not. In this Act it created much violence and people began moving territories
Dred Scott vs. Sanford This was a court case when a former freed slave wanted to gain his freedom from his master because his master moved him to a place where slavery at the time was not legal, but continued to have him be his slave
Fugitive Slave Act A law passed (in relation to the compromise of 1850) that provided slaveholders with legal weapons to capture slaves who had escaped or been released to free states
Bleeding Kansas Led by abolitionist John Brown this time had very violent encounters between anti-slavery people, pro-slavery people, and free-staters
Civil War This war between 1861 and 1865 determined what our nation would be today, fought between the Union and Confederacy ending in a surrendered victory to the Union (Confederacy surrendered)
Emancipation Proclamation An order given by Abraham Lincoln to free all slaves in the "rebellion" states
Civil War Draft Riots These could help people get out of serving in the military. However richer people had an advantage because they could pay these easier, rather than poor people who could not pay in off. Therefore they would have to serve
Gettysburg Address This was a speech that was given by Abraham Lincoln. It was halfway through the war when many in the Union were thinking about giving up. It also honored those who were killed at Gettysburg.
Reconstruction The time period following the Civil War in which congress passed laws designed to rebuild the country and bring the Southern States back into the Union
Civil War Amendments The 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments were also known as this. In which they abolished slavery, granted African Americans citizenship, and allowed African American men the right to vote
Completion of the Transcontinental Railroad Allowed goods and people to be shipped from across the continent. It was faster, easier, and safer
Indian Wars These were multiple conflicts between American settlers or the United States government and the Native peoples of North America in the earliest colonial settlement until 1890.
Gilded Age Refers to a superficial period of intense economic growth. Many people were involved who could be classified as Captains of Industry or Robber Barons
Populist Party People just like the common folk that were against interests of railroads, bankers, corporations, and the politicians who supported them
Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court case ruled separate but equal facilities between whites and blacks was okay in 1896
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