People
Government
Military
Culture
General
100

explorer who reached the Americas in 1492 while sailing for Spain

Christopher Columbus

100

first ten amendments protecting individual freedoms.

Bill of Rights    

100

incident where British soldiers killed five colonists in 1770.

Boston Massacre

100

pride and loyalty toward one’s nation.

nationalism

100

English settlers who came to America for religious freedom and founded Plymouth Colony

Pilgrims

200

Commander of the Continental Army and first U.S. president.

George Washington

200

U.S. purchase of French territory that doubled the nation’s size.

 Louisiana Purchase

200

colonial protest in which tea was dumped into Boston Harbor.

Boston Tea Party

200

loyalty to one’s region rather than the entire nation.

sectionalism

200

first permanent English colony in North America, founded in 1607

Jamestown

300

main author of the Declaration of Independence and third U.S. president.

Thomas Jefferson

300

British law taxing sugar and molasses in the colonies.

Sugar Act

300

American colonists who supported independence from Britain.

Patriots

300

religious revival that encouraged emotional worship and individual faith.

Great Awakening

300

secret network helping slaves escape to freedom

Underground Railroad

400

president who led the Union during the Civil War

Abraham Lincoln

400

British law requiring colonists to pay taxes on printed materials.

Stamp Act

400

American colonists who remained loyal to Britain during the Revolution.

Loyalists

400

movement emphasizing reason, science, and natural rights.

Enlightenment

400

trade system between Europe, Africa, and the Americas

triangular trade

500

commander of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia

Robert E. Lee

500

supporters of the U.S. Constitution and a stronger federal government.

Federalists

500

war fought from 1861–1865 between the Union and the Confederacy

Civil War

500

Christian revival that inspired social reform efforts in the 1830s-1850s

Second Great Awakening

500

country formed by the seceded Southern states

Confederate States of America

600

leading Union general who later became president

Ulysses S. Grant

600

Opponents of the Constitution who feared a strong national government.

Antifederalists

600

a major Union victory considered the turning point of the Civil War

Battle of Gettysburg

600

movement to end slavery

abolition

600

when goods began being made in factories rather than the home

Market Revolution

700

Federalist leader who created the national financial system.

Alexander Hamilton

700

first constitution of the United States with a weak central government.

Articles of Confederation

700

period of restructuring the South after the Civil War

Reconstruction

700

belief that the United States should expand across North America

manifest destiny

700

amendment prohibiting denial of voting rights based on race

Fifteenth Amendment

800

hero of the Battle of New Orleans, president known for expanding democracy

 Andrew Jackson

800

pamphlet encouraging American independence from Britain.

Common Sense

800

war from 1946-1948 that resulted in large U.S. territorial gains in the Southwest

Mexican War

800

Lincoln’s order declaring slaves in Confederate territory free

Emancipation Proclamation

800

amendment granting citizenship and equal protection under the law

Fourteenth Amendment

900

philosopher who argued people have natural rights.

John Locke

900

policy warning European nations that the Americas is the U.S.’ sphere of influence

Monroe Doctrine

900

war between the U.S. and Britain that secured U.S. independence

War of 1812

900

amendment that ended slavery in the United States

Thirteenth Amendment

900

Supreme Court case that ruled slavery cannot be prohibited in the territories

Dred Scott decision

1000

Quaker leader who founded Pennsylvania as a place for religious tolerance.

William Penn    

1000

agreement balancing free and slave states while limiting slavery north of 36-30

Missouri Compromise

1000

war between Britain and France in North America from 1754–1763.

French and Indian War

1000

first major women’s rights convention in the United States

Seneca Falls Convention

1000

agreement that ended Reconstruction

Compromise of 1877