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Chapter 8.  I. History A.The ancestors of today’s American Indians first settled North America at least 14,000 years ago by crossing the Ice-Age land.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8.  I. History A.The ancestors of today’s American Indians first settled North America at least 14,000 years ago by crossing the Ice-Age land."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8

2  I. History A.The ancestors of today’s American Indians first settled North America at least 14,000 years ago by crossing the Ice-Age land bridge that linked Asia and Alaska. B.Spanish explorers reached the continent about 500 years ago. The Spanish were soon followed by the English and French.

3  C. Many Native American place-names are still used throughout the United States. Ex: Appalachians and Mississippi D. In the 1600s and 1700s Spanish settlers migrated north from Mexico into Texas, New Mexico, and California. Because of the Southwest’s dry environment, the Spanish founded settlements along rivers and the coast.

4  E. French fur trappers were among the first to reach the Great Lakes and Midwest. The French explored the country by traveling along the Mississippi and St. Lawrence rivers. French place-names include New Orleans and St. Louis

5  F. The British became the major influence on the early history of the United States. In the early 1600s the British set up 13 colonies along North America’s east coast. A colony is a territory controlled by people from a foreign land. In 1619 Europeans began bringing enslaved Africans to the colonies.

6 6 1.New Hampshire 2.Massachusetts 3.Rhode Island 4.Connecticut 5.New York 6.New Jersey 7.Pennsylvania 8.Delaware 9.Maryland 10. Virginia 11. North Carolina 12. South Carolina 13. Georgia 13 Colonies

7  G. American colonies developed regional economies. In the southern colonies, the climate and soil were ideal for growing tobacco and cotton. Colonies in the north became centers for trade, shipbuilding, and fishing. Colonists grew increasingly unhappy with British control and in 1776 they began a successful rebellion against colonial rule, which led to independence for the United States.

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10  H. The United States set up a federal system of government which divided power amongst state, local, and national governments. At all levels of government is the idea that ultimate power rests with the people.

11  I.By 1830, settlers had crossed the Mississippi River and settled as far south as Texas. Many settlers came to California after gold was discovered in 1848. The pioneers moved westward, they began to have bitter conflicts with American Indians. Settlers pushed American Indians farther west and onto reservations.

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14  J.By 1830 the northeastern United States was industrializing. In the South, the economy was based on crops like tobacco and cotton. Farmers grew these crops on plantations; which were large farms that produced one major crop with the use of slave labor. Economic differences led to the Civil War; this war lasted from 1861 to 1865 and ended with the defeat of the southern, or Confederate, states.

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16  K. With new agricultural machinery, farms could produce more food using fewer people than before. The development of industry attracted more people to the country’s growing cities. By 1920 more Americans lived in cities than in rural areas.

17  L.In the 1900s the United States experienced major social, economic, and technological changes. 1. World War I (1917-1918) 2. Great Depression (1930s) 3. World War II (1941-1945) After WWII, the United States and the Soviet Union became rivals in the Cold War. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the U.S. and Russia have had friendlier relations.


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