Colonies
American Revolution and Government
Westward Expansion
Sectionalism
Civil War Causes
100

This colonial region's rocky soil and cold climate made it ideal for shipbuilding, fishing, and trade.

New England

100

"No taxation without..."

Representation

100

This 1803 land acquisition doubled the size of the U.S. and gave control of the Mississippi River.

Louisiana Purchase

100

This 1820 established the 36 30 line 

Missouri Compromise

100

This event in 1860 triggered southern states to secede from the Union.

Election of Lincoln

200

This 1620 agreement, signed on a ship coming to America , established a government based on the consent of the governed.

Mayflower Compact

200

This 1765 law required colonists to buy special paper for legal documents, newspapers, and licenses, angering many Americans.

Stamp Act

200

This 19th-century belief justified westward expansion, stating it was "God's will" that America expands from sea to sea

Manifest Destiny

200

This 1850 agreement admitted California as a free state and included a stricter fugitive slave law.

Compromise of 1850

200

This type of government power was cited by the South as a reason to secede.

States Rights
300

This legislative body in Virginia was the first example of representative government in the colonies.

Virginia House of Burgesses

300

This movement emphasized reason, natural rights, and the idea that governments exist to protect people’s freedoms.

The Enlightenment

300

This war gave the U.S. territories including California and Arizona.

Mexican-American War

300

This novel influenced Northern attitudes about slavery by showing the cruelty of the system

Uncle Tom's Cabin

300

Issued by Abraham Lincoln in 1863, this declared that all slaves in Confederate-held territory were free and allowed African Americans to join the Union army.

Emancipation Proclamation
400

These laborers worked for a set number of years in exchange for passage to America, unlike Africans brought to the colonies permanently.

Indentured servants

400

Delegates met here in 1787 to create a stronger national government after the Articles of Confederation proved ineffective.

Constitutional Convention

400

This 1823 policy warned European nations not to interfere in the Americas.

Monroe Doctrine

400

This idea let settlers in new territories decide about slavery themselves, leading to violence in Kansas.

Popular sovereignty

400

The North and South had different economies, cultures, and ways of life; these differences are called this.

Sectionalism

500

After this war, tensions grew between the colonies and Britain because the British taxed the colonies to pay for it.

French and Indian War

500

Anti-Federalists were worried this new U.S. governing document gave the national government too much power; their concerns were partially addressed with this addition.

Bill of Rights

500

This law forced Native Americans off their lands, resulting in the Trail of Tears.

Indian Removal Act

500

In this 1857 Supreme Court case, the court ruled that African Americans were not citizens, angering many in the North.

Dred Scott vs. Sandford 

500

Violence erupted in this territory as pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers fought over whether slavery would be allowed.

Bleeding Kansas

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