Unit 1 (1491-1607)
Unit 2 (1607-1754)
Unit 3
(1754-1800)
Unit 4
(1800-1848)
Unit 5
(1844-1877)
100

The most important crop for many Native American tribes. Also called maize.

Corn

100

The first four European nations to colonize the Americas

Spain, France, The Netherlands, Great Britain

100

A law passed by British Parliament in 1773 to help the British East India Company by giving the company a monopoly on tea sales in the American colonies

The Tea Act

100
The purchase, made by Thomas Jefferson, of a vast area of western lands from France

The Louisiana Purchase

100

The belief that the United States should expand from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean

Manifest Destiny
200

The forced voyage of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean

The Middle Passage

200

The belief that God created the universe, then stepped back and let it run based on the laws of nature.

Deism

200

A British proclamation that prohibited colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains in an attempt to protect the colonists from Native American attacks

The Proclamation of 1763

200

The ability for all white males to vote, regardless of property ownership or religion 

Universal White Male Suffrage

200

The belief that new territories and states should decide for themselves whether or not to allow slavery

Popular Sovereignty

300

A leader in the Spanish conquest of the Americas; Spanish for conqueror. 

Conquistador

300

The industry that drove much of the early French and British exploration and colonization of North America

The Fur Trade

300

After effective boycotts caused the repeal of the Stamp Act, Parliament passed this law that stated that Parliament could make laws binding the American colonies "in all cases whatsoever"

The Declaratory Act

300

A compromise that maintained the balance between slave and free states by admitting Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state

The Missouri Compromise
300

The newspaper run by William Lloyd Garrison with the goal of supporting the Abolition Movement

The Liberator

400

The land bridge between Siberia and Alaska that humans crossed to populate the Americas

The Bering Land Bridge/Bering Strait 

400

The enslavement and ownership of human beings and their offspring as property

Chattel Slavery

400

A meeting of delegates from several colonies in which delegates attempted to repair their relationship with Great Britain while organizing a colonial defense

The Second Continental Congress

400

A political crisis in which South Carolina, angered by the Tariff of 1828, declared that the states had the power to nullify federal laws they did not like

The Nullification Crisis

400

The treaty that ended the Mexican-American War and added nearly 55% of Mexico's territory to the United States

The Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo

500

The European weapon that cleared the Native American population and allowed European colonization of the Americas to take place

Small Pox

500

A period of religious revival in Europe and the American colonies that occurred from the 1730s-1780s; Focused on the individual's connection to God

The First Great Awakening

500

The idea that power should be divided between branches of government as a safeguard against tyranny

Separation of Powers

500

A religious revival during the late 18th and early 19th centuries; Characterized by tent revivals and emotional, Evangelical preaching

The Second Great Awakening
500

The American author who urged American citizens to create American culture, instead of borrowing culture from Europe

Ralph Waldo Emerson

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