People
Westward Expansion 5+6
Civil War
Slavery/Reconstruction
Migration
100

white abolitionist who attempted to seize a federal weapons arsenal at Harper's Ferry bc he believed he was chosen by God to incite a slave rebellion; failed and was hanged but regretted nothing

John Brown

100

Concept that [white] Americans had a God-given right to expand westward across the entire continent; that it was already theirs, they just had to claim it

Manifest Destiny

100

issued by Abraham Lincoln in 1863, declared that enslaved people in Confederate states were free, but freed not many immediately. Goal was to try to entice the South back into the union.

Emancipation Proclamation

100

Term/phrase used to refer to the mythical (never fully realized) idea of reparations and land redistribution from Confederate land owners to newly freed enslaved people. Formally known as Sherman's Special Field order No. 15

40 acres and a mule

100

anti-immigrant Ideology put forth by the American Party, also known as the Know-Nothing party that has existed (ironically) throughout US history despite the US being a nation of immigrants and the descendants of immigrants

nativism

200

This Confederate general led the Army of Northern Virginia and surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Court House in 1865.

Robert E Lee

200

Route many pioneers took in covered wagons to the Willamette Valley in the 1830s, 40s, and 50s.

Oregon Trail

200

Turning point of Civil War; bloodiest battle of the Civil War lasted 3-days; inspires Lincoln to give a speech changing the reason for the war

Battle of Gettysburg 1863

200
This Reconstruction organization's biggest success was establishing schools and providing education for the formerly enslaved; its first headquarters in WNC was in Rutherfordton

Other than education, it was largely a failure

Freedmen's Bureau

200

Occured in 1848 after a discovery on John Sutter's land in the California territory; in the year that followed it prompted a mass westward movement of settlers and businessmen seeking profit ('49ners)

Gold Rush

300

enslaved person who sued for his freedom in court - led to controversial decision that enslaved people are property and therefore have no rights in court as well as rendered all previous laws regarding expansion of slavery into the territories null and void

Dred Scott

300

Conflict over westward expansion triggered by the U.S. annexation of Texas and border disputes and slavery in Texas; "remember the alamo" and Davy Crockett

Mexican-American War

300

This 1861 battle, also known as the First Manassas, was the first major land battle of the Civil War and ended in a surprising Confederate victory, shattering Union hopes for a quick war

First Battle of Bull Run
300

These laws, passed by many Southern states after the Civil War, attempted to restrict the freedom and rights of formerly enslaved people.

Black Codes (formerly Slave Codes)

300

These were the most common type of immigrants to the US prior to the Civil War (1861) - aka "Old Immigrants"

Irish and German

400

Name a president associated w westward expansion

James K Polk

400

1848 Agreement that ended the Mexican-American War. Mexico ceded parts of modern-day California, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming to the U.S. in exchange for $15 million

Treaty of Guadelupe Hidalgo 1848

400

This wartime strategy, used by Union General Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman, involved destroying Southern infrastructure and civilian resources.

total war / scorched earth / March to the Sea

400

This controversial 1850 law required citizens to help capture escaped enslaved people and return them to bondage. Enraged northerners 

Fugitive Slave Act

400

These were the most common type of immigrants to the US after to the Civil War (1861) aka "New Immigrants"

Italian and Eastern European

500

proponent of popular sovereignty for slavery in westward expansion, debated Abraham Lincoln and introduced the Kansas-Nebraska Act

Stephen Douglas

500

Act that aimed to assimilate Native Americans by breaking up tribal lands into individual plots, forcing an agricultural lifestyle, and dissolving communal land ownership. Starts the "Americanization" period and the boarding school era. 

Dawes Act 1887

500

this name was given to Northern Democrats who opposed the Civil War, criticized Lincoln’s policies, and called for immediate peace with the Confederacy

Copperheads

500

Explain the Compromise of 1877

- controversial election, results disputed

- the north got their president (Hayes), the south got the military to pull out, ends Reconstruction, all-white redeemer govts fully take over and Jim Crow begins

500

type of poor housing situation created by the rapid growth of cities due to an influx of immigrants in both the early and late 1800s

tenements

M
e
n
u