Colonial & Revolutionary America
19th Century Reforms
Manifest Destiny & Civil War
Reconstruction & Rights
Industrialization & Progressivism

100

This economic activity was key in the Southern colonies, especially in areas like Virginia and the Carolinas.

Cash crop farming

100

This movement sought to end slavery in the United States.

Abolition

100

This belief that the U.S. was meant to expand across the continent guided 19th-century policy.

Manifest Destiny

100

This amendment ensured all people born in the U.S. had full citizenship.

14th Amendment

100

This federal law encouraged western settlement by offering 160 acres of free land.

Homestead Act

200

After this 18th-century war, British efforts to stop colonial migration west of the Appalachians caused resentment.

French and Indian War

200

He believed schools were essential for preparing citizens for democracy.

Horace Mann

200

The U.S. gained California and New Mexico after defeating this nation in war.

Mexico

200

This labor system kept many freedmen economically dependent on former slaveowners.

sharecropping

200

These two industrial leaders of steel and oil industries defended their fortunes using the idea of “survival of the fittest.”

Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller

300

This 1754 image urged colonists to unite for mutual strength and defense.

"Join, or Die"

300

Held in New York in 1848, this gathering marked a major step for women’s rights.

Seneca Falls Convention

300

This 1854 law reopened the slavery debate by allowing settlers to vote on it

Kansas-Nebraska Act

300

This Supreme Court ruling legalized segregation under “separate but equal.”

Plessy v. Ferguson

300

This philosophy justified the success of the wealthy by claiming they were naturally superior.

Social Darwinism

400

Signed aboard a ship in 1620, this agreement laid the foundation for self-rule in Plymouth.

Mayflower Compact

400

This novel depicted the brutal reality of slavery, influencing many in the North.

Uncle Tom’s Cabin

400

At the start of the Civil War, Lincoln’s top priority was this.

Preserving the Union

400

These amendments were meant to secure freedom and equality for African Americans after the Civil War.

13th and 14th Amendments

400

Roosevelt’s presidency included this major effort to break up corporate monopolies.

trustbusting under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act

500

This 1765 colonial argument stated that only elected representatives could impose taxes on citizens.

Stamp Act Resolves

500

Many factory workers in New England, especially young women, protested due to these difficult conditions.

Low wages and unsafe environments 

500

This African American unit earned fame for its valor in battle despite discrimination.

Massachusetts 54th Regiment

500

Despite legal protections, African Americans were still segregated in public areas. How was this legal?

Jim Crow Laws

500

This slogan summed up laborers’ demand for a balanced daily schedule.

"Eight hours for work, eight for rest, and eight for what we will”