2 nd Semester Study Guide. Andrew Jackson (‘Old Hickory’) and the treatment of the Cherokee People.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
5th Grade Civil War Study Guide
Advertisements

VS7-Civil War SOL Jeopardy.
Why can’t we all just get along?
Chapter 5: Causes of the Civil War
AHSGE Standard IV. Prelude to War o What congressional solution made California a free state and gave popular sovereignty to the New Mexico and Utah territories?
Chapter 21 A Dividing Nation.
Social Studies Unit 3 Lesson 1 Progress As A State.
Ch. 5: Causes of the Civil War
Dred Scott Decision, March 1857 Dred Scott was a slave who moved from a Missouri a slave state to free states Illinois and Wisconsin In 1846 Scott sues.
Writing Assignment Of the six causes that Stampp presents, which one do you feel was the leading cause of the war? 8-12 sentence paragraph.
In the argument over slavery, the Northern states wanted to Make slavery illegal.
Raid at Harper’s Ferry. 1. Who was John Brown? an abolitionists from the North 2. Where did the raid happen? Harper’s Ferry, Virginia 3.When did the raid.
Unit 3: The Civil War-A Nation Divided
Civil War UNIT FIVE. From the NORTH or SOUTH? William T. Sherman.
Abraham Lincoln Andrew Johnson Andrew Jackson James K. Polk.
The Road to the American Civil War- Day 1. Early Attempts to Contain Slavery: REVIEW 1820: Missouri Compromise divides the nation at the 36 30’ parallel.
Review 2 By JG. US Constitution Where was the Constitution Convention held?
Virginia Studies Review VS.6 & VS.7 ©2012 Henrico County Public Schools - J. Stanley.
The Civil War Chapter 1 Lessons 1-4.
 Election of Abraham Lincoln  Slavery  States’ rights.
Road Map of Civil War Uncle Tom’s Cabin Harper’s Ferry Dred Scott Election of 1860 First Event Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote a book titled Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
People Final Exam Review Jeopardy! Battles Laws etcUnion or Confederacy Potpourri.
Civil War People & Battles SS5H1. Civil War People & Battles Abraham Lincoln was elected president in He was a northern politician who opposed slavery.
SECTIONALISM IN ANTEBELLUM UNITED STATES IN Route to Civil War.
Choice1Choice 2Choice 3Choice
A Nation Divided. After the Mexican-American War Wilmot Proviso – a proposed law that would ban all slavery in all territory gained in the Mexican Cession.
Social Studies Chapter 3 Review. What two things caused sectionalism? A. slavery and tar B. cotton prices and slavery C. slavery and immigration D. slavery.
North and South Divided.  Northwest Ordinance (1787) – Prohibited slavery in the Northwest Territory  1808 – International Slave Trade banned  Missouri.
Underground Rail Road Underground Rail Road- Moving slaves to freedom. Stations-Places to hide slaves Conductors-people who helped hide slaves Harriet.
Conflict Leads to Crisis: The Causes of the U.S. Civil War.
ACOS # 12: Identify causes of the Civil War from the northern and southern viewpoints. ACOS # 12a: Describe the importance of the Missouri Compromise,
Civil war By: kydesha carmichael. Abraham Lincoln? president of the united states during the civil war after his election is 1860 southern states.
Use the maps on pages 221, 227,283 to draw lines, trails and notes name: _______ Notes and keys:
The American Civil War The Causes.
Background to the Conflict Pre-Civil War Days. The Slave Economy & King Cotton Many people began to turn against slaveryMany people began to turn against.
Unit 5 Jeopardy – Civil War Final Jeopardy GAPIEDMONT ATLANTACHEROKEE WOODSTK Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500.
Civil War By Theodore Quinn and Ryan Johnston. Events Kansas - Nebraska Act Compromise of 1850 Fugitive Slave Act Uncle Tom’s Cabin Dred Scott Decision.
Causes of the Civil War 5 th Grade Social Studies Chapter 12 Lesson 1 Worlds Apart.
What was the North like during this time? More factories People from other countries moved to the North Population grew rapidly to over 19 million PEOPLE.
Expansion of Slavery in the South
Chapter 10 The Civil War Lesson 3 The Nation Divides.
Slavery Definition: Slavery The practice of owning slaves.
This Is…. JEOPARDY CIVIL WAR ©P.Olivieri (Mrs. O’s Rockin Resources), 2012.
$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200.
Jump Start Explain how popular sovereignty was involved in the Kansas-Nebraska Act How did the Kansas-Nebraska Act lead to increased division between the.
Keep Studying!.
Unit 3: The Civil War-A Nation Divided
Kansas Nebraska Act (1854).
Causes of the Civil War.
Union soldiers are known as Yanks or Yankees
Chapter 12, Lesson 4 ACOS # 12: Identify causes of the Civil War from the northern and southern viewpoints. ACOS # 12a: Describe the importance of the.
Events Leading to Secession and the Civil War
Causes of the Civil War.
Final Exam.
BINGO: Antebellum.
Civil War Study Guide.
Road to Civil War.
Unit 4: The Civil War A Nation Divided
The Road to the American Civil War- Day 3
Conflict Leads to Crisis: The Causes of the U.S. Civil War
Causes of the Civil War.
The Civil War-A Nation Divided
Civil War review.
Unit 3: The Civil War-A Nation Divided
Final Exam.
The Coming Crisis 1850 to 1861.
Final Exam.
Final Exam.
2017 Civil War Review What were 5 causes of the Civil War?
Sectionalism TEST.
Presentation transcript:

2 nd Semester Study Guide

Andrew Jackson (‘Old Hickory’) and the treatment of the Cherokee People

(5 W’s) Cherokee People (Trail of Tears) and Andrew Jackson  Andrew Jackson (‘Old Hickory’) (pages and )  Who: Frontiersman, soldier, frontier lawyer, peoples choice for president of the U.S. (he believed that the government should be controlled by ‘ordinary’ people.  When: 1824  Where: He was from the South.  What: Indian Removal Act – the eventual forcible removal of over 4000 Cherokee from their homes in the East (Georgia) and move West to the new Indian Territory. Many walked barefoot during the winter for hundreds of miles on a journey which became known as the Trail of Tears.  Why: To make room for white settlers in Georgia.  Cherokee People and the Trail of Tears (pages )  Who: Thousands of Cherokee who had lived and worked in Georgia for generations.  When:  Where: From Georgia (in the East) to the new Indian Territory (further west to Texas – map on page 266)  What: The Cherokee learned to speak and write English, printed newspapers, developed laws, and assimilated into ‘white’ culture to the best of their ability.  Why: President Andrew Jackson had them forcibly removed from their homes to Indian Territory to make room for white settlers.

Draw a map of U. S. expansion during the 1800’s: The Gadsden Purchase and the Mexican Cession (pages 279 and 290)

Map or Chart Lewis and Clark Expedition Routes (pages )

Gold Rush (1849) (page and 311)

American Gold Rush (pages and 311)  Who: The Forty-niners. They were gold seekers from all over the world.  When: 1849 (duh!)  Where: Northern California  What: Trying to make their fortune in gold or profit off gold seekers!  Why: Gold discovered!

Eli Whitney – Cotton Gin (page 358)

Eli Whitney and the Cotton Gin (page 358)  Who: Inventor of the Cotton Gin  When: 1793  Where: The South  What: This technology made the process of separating cotton fiber from the seeds quicker and easier than doing it by hand.  Why: This was an attempt to make the slaves lives easier. It did NOT make their lives easier! Rather, it caused cotton to become the most important crop in the South and made the institution of slavery more profitable than ever.

Differences between the Railroads in the North and South (page 364)

Differences Between Railroads in the North and South (page 364)  Notice that the railroad lines in the North connect to one another more than those in the South.  EQ: How might this difference have affected the growth of trade and industry in these two areas?

John Brown – the raid at Harpers Ferry, Virginia (pages 411 and )

John Brown (pages 411 and )  Who: Abolitionist  When: 1859 – just before the start of the Civil War  What: A failed attempt to incite a slave rebellion.  Why: Some say this event started the Civil War!

Abraham Lincoln – his “House Divided” speech (pages )  Before the Civil War, Lincoln had warned, “A house divided against itself cannot stand.”  However, the nation did divide and people took sides, North or South.  For some, especially in the border states, the decision was a difficult and painful.  Not only was the nation divided, but many families were, too.

The Fugitive Slave Act (pages 408 and )  Who: Passed by Congress  When:1850 (11 years before the start of the Civil War  Where: The United States  What: A person arrested as a runaway slave had almost no legal rights. Also, any person who helped a slave escape, or even refused to help slave catchers, could be jailed.  Why: North and South continued to argue over the issue of slavery the South was angry that their ‘property’ was escaping to the free north. Northerners refused to support this law!

Harriet Tubman

The Underground Railroad (pages 384 and )  Who: Harriet Tubman, along with a whole secret network of free blacks and sympathetic whites provided transportation and ‘safe houses’ where runaway slaves could hide.  When: Between (approx.)  What: Helped runaway slaves escape to freedom.

Southern Secession from the Union’s Point-of-View (pages 416 and 423)  Who: Southern states withdrew from the United States after the election of Abraham Lincoln in  What: They formed a new nation called the Confederate States of America.  When: After the election of Abraham Lincoln and before the start of the Civil War.  Where: The American South beginning with South Carolina  Why: They did not want the federal government to interfere with their ability to govern their states (interfere with slavery).

The Gettysburg Address (page 431)

Gettysburg Address

General William T. Sherman (pages )  Who: Union General William Tecumseh Sherman  When: 1864  What: “Make Georgia howl!  Why: To inflict as much damage against Southern war resources as possible - especially in Atlanta, Georgia – the South’s most important rail and manufacturing center.

William T. Sherman (cont.)

W. T. Sherman’s – March to the Sea (cont.)

W.T. Sherman (cont.) Sherman’s Neckties

Total War (page 435)  Who: Commander of the Union Army and General William Tecumseh Sherman  When: 1864  What: War on the enemy’s will to fight and it’s ability to support an army. Sherman cut a path of destruction through Georgia 60 miles wide from Atlanta to Savannah.  Why: They hoped this strategy would end the war quickly!

Total War (cont.)

Fort Sumter (pages and 423)  Who: Confederate's attacked Fort Sumter off the coast of South Carolina  When: April 12, 1861  What: The official start of the Civil War  Why: Southern states had seceded and were angry that the Northern army would not leave “their” fort.