AP USH Retake: Period 4: 1800-1848
All work must be completed in a timely basis. If you have any questions, feel free to email me.
Summative Retake
The work is due by Tuesday December 13th.
A NEW MC & DBQ
Have ALL practice work and additional work ready to be checked onTuesday December 13th. No exceptions
How to
- Thorough Completion of Practice Work & Weekly Assessments
- Period 4Amsco Chapters Outlined
- All weekly assessments completed
- Additional Practice:
- Multiple choice &/ or DBQ
- Period 4 Term identifications(found on pg.2): (a) Provide a summary of each term in 2-3 sentences and (b) the terms significance in another sentence, with (c) the page number listed from AMSCO and/or YAWP. These ids must be thorough and Handwritten. If they are not thorough, they will not be accepted.
- Advice
- Review the completed practice work. You want to significantly improve your score on the Retake.
- Tutoring is available.
- Sample DBQ essays can be located on the Brooks website.
- Videos: John Green Crash Course & practice online quizzes
Have all work ready practice work and additional work ready to be checked on TuesdayDecember 13th.
Period 4 Content Terms
For each, write a 2-3 sentence definition, and then a sentence on what the significance of the term is - why it matters in its context and/or in American history. Make sure to have page number from Foner or Amsco, YAWP (specify which). These terms must be HANDWRITTEN.
1. “Revolution of 1800” (election)
- “We are al Republicans, we are all Federalists”
2. Marbury v. Madison (judicial review)
3. Barbary Pirates
4. Louisiana Purchase
5. War of 1812 Causes
- Impressment
- Chesapeake and Leopard
- Tecumseh/Tippacanoe
- War Hawks
6. Embargo Act
7. Treaty of Ghent
8. Hartford Convention
9. War of 1812 Effects
10. The American System
- Bank of US
- Protective Tariff
- Internal Improvements
- Positive effect of TJ’s embargo
11. James Monroe and “Era of Good Feelings”
12. Adams-Onis Treaty
13. Missouri Compromise
14. The Marshall Court (John Marshall)
- Dartmouth v. Woodward
- McCulloch v. Maryland
- Gibbons v. Ogden
15. Monroe Doctrine
16. “Spoils System”
17. Nullification Crisis
- Tariff of Abominations
- Calhoun’s SC Exposition
- Webster-Hayne Debate (what did each believe)
- Force Bill
18. Indian Removal Act/Trail of Tears
- Worcester v. Georgia
19. Jackson’s Bank Veto
- Pet Banks
- Specie Circular
- Panic of 1837
20. The Whigs/Election of 1840 (2nd party system)
- The Whig Platform
21. Jacksonian Democracy and “the common man”
22. New Technology during Market Revolution
- Eli Whitney/Cotton Gin
- John Deere/Steel Plow
- Cyrus McCormick/Mechanical Reaper
- Samuel Morse/Telegraph
23.. Market Revolution/Market Economy
24. Transportation during Market Revolution
- Roads
- Steamboats
- Canals
- RR's
25. The Lowell System
26. "Old Immigrants"
- Irish vs. German – reasons for immigration, where they settled, responses to their immigration
27. Nativism / "Know Nothing Party"
28. Deism
29. Second Great Awakening
- Burned-Over District
30. Mormons / Joseph Smith
31. Transcendentalism / Emerson and Thoreau
32. Horace Mann
33. Temperance
- American Temperance Union
- Maine Laws
34. Dorothea Dix
35. Cult of Domesticity
- Seneca Falls Convention
- Declaration of Sentiments
36. Utopian Communities and perfectionism
- Shakers / Ann Lee
- Oneida Community / John Humphrey Noyes
- New Harmony / Robert Owen
- Brooke Farm
37. Characteristics of the Old South
- Demographics (race/ethnicity)
- Economy/agriculture – role of market economy
38. Southern Social Structure
- Planters vs. subsistence farmers
- Poor Whites
- Slaves and Freed slaves
39. Slave Rebellions
- Gabrielle Prosser
- Denmark Vessey (421, 587-588)
- Nat Turner
- David Walker Appeal to the Colored Citizens
40. American Colonization Society
41. William L. Garrison/The Liberator
42. American Antislavery Society
- Role of women?
43. Frederick Douglass
44. Sojourner Truth
45. “Gag Rule”
46. Paternalism