Unit 2: Colonies to Country
Units 3: The Constitution
Unit 4: Expansion & Division
Unit 5: Civil War & Reconstruction
Unit 6: Gilded Age & Progressivism
100

This 1783 agreement formally ended the Revolutionary War and secured U.S. independence.

 Treaty of Paris (1783)

100

 A supporter of ratifying the Constitution who favored a stronger national government.

Federalist

100

The 1803 land deal that doubled U.S. territory, bought from France.

Louisiana Purchase (1803)

100

1812 conflict whose later memory helped foster American nationalism and inspired a famous poem-turned-anthem.

War of 1812 (and "The Star-Spangled Banner")

100

Economic system where the government takes a hands-off approach and lets markets operate with little regulation.

Laissez‑faire capitalism

200

The system of slavery where people are owned as property and treated as movable assets is called this.

Chattel slavery

200

Opponents of the Constitution who feared centralized power and wanted stronger protections for states and individual rights.

 Anti-Federalist

200

President associated with Indian Removal and the rise of the modern Democratic Party.

Andrew Jackson

200

1820 agreement that drew a line limiting slavery in the territories north of 36°30' (except Missouri).

Missouri Compromise (1820)

200

1869 transportation achievement that connected the East and West coasts and accelerated national expansion.

Transcontinental Railroad (completed 1869)

300

The year often cited as the arrival of the first recorded enslaved Africans in English North America (Virginia) is this.

1619

300

Early U.S. document (ratified before the Constitution) that created a weak central government and encouraged calls for revision.

Articles of Confederation

300

The religious revival movement of the early 19th century that inspired social reform and reform-minded leaders.

Second Great Awakening

300

1854 law that opened new territories to popular sovereignty and effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise.

Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854)

300

1882 federal law that halted Chinese immigration for a period and reflected rising nativism.

Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)

400

Name the 1739 slave uprising in South Carolina that revealed deep resistance to slavery.

Stono Rebellion (1739)

400

Pamphlet by Thomas Paine that urged independence and persuaded many colonists to support breaking from Britain.

Thomas Paine’s "Common Sense"

400

1848 New York convention that launched an organized movement for women's rights in the U.S.

Seneca Falls Convention (1848)

400

1857 Supreme Court decision that ruled African Americans were not U.S. citizens and that Congress could not ban slavery in territories.

Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)

400

Labor organization founded in 1886 that focused on skilled workers and used strikes as a main tactic.

American Federation of Labor (AFL)  

500

Intellectual movement emphasizing reason, natural rights, and government by consent that influenced colonial leaders.

Enlightenment

500

1791 amendment package added to the Constitution to protect individual liberties; name this collective set. 

Bill of Rights (1791)

500

This invention by Eli Whitney transformed southern agriculture and expanded slavery’s profitability.

Cotton Gin

500

Name the raid in 1859 where an abolitionist attempted to seize a federal arsenal to spark a slave uprising.

John Brown’s raid at Harpers Ferry (1859)

500

Term for late-19th-century industrial leaders (e.g., Carnegie, Rockefeller) often used to describe both their power and wealth.

Robber barons / Captains of Industry

M
e
n
u