Professional Documents
Culture Documents
USA History (Edited)
USA History (Edited)
USA Notes
for CSS 2017
Compiled and Edited by Aamir Mahar
www.CSSExamPoint.substack.com
Contents:
01. America at a Glance
02. Facts about America
03. Presidents of America
04. Study Plan for History of USA
05. History of USA (Timeline)
06. Notes In Brief (National Officers Academy)
07. Short Notes (Revised Syllabus)
08. Questions and their Answers (Outlines)
09. History of USA (Summary)
10. Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)
A Critical Summary
Of
USA History Subject
Dear Aspirants,
History of the United Sates as a subject in the CSS Examination is very
easy and informative subject. It has a great similarity with International
Relations, Current Affairs, and topics you prepare for Essay. The
examiner demands you to answer around 22 different questions rather
than 22 Areas of American History. Out of 22 Questions, 14 are purely
from Current Affairs and International Relations as per revised syllabus
of FPSC. If you start analyzing questions in the Syllabus of USA History
Subject- the examiner demands you to have critical approach of those 14
issues that are having high level of resemblance with day-to-day
knowledge (Current Affairs & International Relations). It isn’t typical
3 style of history oriented subjects rather a story of the nation. The syllabus
is very short compared to any subject in CSS Exam except Gender
Studies. As for as MCQs are concerned the examiner ask ten MCQs from
history and ten from Current Affairs.
USA HISTORY SUBJECT
A) Historical Perspective
B) Current Scenario
Presidents of America
1. George Washington 23. Benjamin Harrison
2. John Adams 24. Grover Cleveland
3. Thomas Jefferson 25. William McKinley
4. James Madison 26. Theodore Roosevelt
5. James Monroe 27. William Howard Taft
6. John Quincy Adams 28. Woodrow Wilson
7. Andrew Jackson 29. Warren G. Harding
8. Martin Van Buren 30. Calvin Coolidge
THOMAS JEFFERSON
1. Thomas Jefferson described his election to the American Presidency in 1800 as
“the Second American Revolution”. Was the claim justified? Support your answer
with evidence. (2001)
2. Discuss Jefferson's decision to purchase the Louisiana Territory, and explain the
political and economic impact of this decision on the United States. (2004)
3. Thomas Jefferson was termed “a bull in the china closet” by the Federalists when
8 he became the President of the United States of America but his policies and
performance negated this impression. Discuss. (2009)
4. In what ways did the philosophy and purposes of Jacksonian democracy differ
from those of the Jeffersonian democrats? (2011)
5. Discuss Thomas Jefferson as president, politician and political theorist. (2013)
6. In what respect did the philosophy and rationale of Jackosnian democracy differ
from those of Jeffersonian? (2015)
MONROE DOCTRINE
1. Monroe Doctrine was a Charter of America’s Isolation. Still what circumstances
compelled U.S.A. to plunge into the World Wars. (2000)
2. What is Monroe Doctrine? On what occasions has it been enforced and with what
results? (2005)
3. Note: The Monroe Doctrine (2001-07)
ANDREW JACKSON
1. In what way did the philosophy and purpose of Jacksonian democracy differ from
those of the Jeffersonian democrats? (2002)
2. What are the Salient features of Andrew Jackson's Presidency and Democracy?
(2004)
3. “President Andrew Jackson was a people’s president.” Discuss. (2006)
4. How did Jeffersonian Democratic thinking differ in philosophy and purpose from
the Jacksonian democracy? (2007)
5. What were the factors that ushered in the democratic era and the rise of the
common man with the election of Andrew Jackson to the presidency in 1928?
(2007)
6. Note: Andrew Jackson (2008)
7. Jackson has been called the first modern President because he was the first to see
the power which a President might exercise – Discuss. (2008)
8. “President Andrew Jackson was a People’s President.” Discuss. (2010)
9. In what ways did the philosophy and purposes of Jacksonian democracy differ
from those of the Jeffersonian democrats? (2011)
10. Discuss impact of Jacksonian presidency on American politics of the time.
(2013)
11. In what respect did the philosophy and rationale of Jackosnian democracy differ
from those of Jeffersonian? (2015)
RONALD REAGAN
1. What economic problems were faced by Ronald Reagan and how his
government dealt with economic problems? (2016)
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
9 1. Evaluate the Presidency of the Abraham Lincoln. (2001)
WOODROW WILSON
2. Note: Woodrow Wilson (2001)
3. Note: Wilson’s Fourteen Points (2002)
4. Woodrow Wilson had said, "We had a chance to gain the leadership for the world.
We have lost it, and soon we shall be witnessing the tragedy of it all". Comment
upon America's attitude towards Treaty of Versailles. (2004)
5. Assess the contributions of President Woodrow Wilson to the problem of world
peace and security. (2005)
6. President Woodrow Wilson said in 1917, “The world must be made safe for
democracy. Its peace must be planted upon tested foundations of political liberty.
We have no selfish ends to serve. We desire no conquest, no dominion …” Discuss
what your consider to be the main reason for the United States entry into World War
I. Give reasons for your choice. (2007)
7. What were the tribulations of the USA president Woodrow Wilson in the post
WW I era to convince the other three associates to his own point of view? (2012)
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
1. Evaluate the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt. (2002)
2. Note: President F D Roosevelt. (2004 - 06)
3. President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933 said “This great nation will endure as it
has endured, will revive and prosper”. Explain in light of the FDR presidency and
the New Deal. (2007)
DWIGHT EISENHOWER
1. Note: Eisenhower Doctrine (2000) (2016)
RICHARD NIXON
1. Critically evaluate Richard Nixon's accomplishments and failures during his
presidency. (2012)
2. Richard Nixon had many accomplishments as well as failures as the President of
US. Critically evaluate. (2014)
AMERICAN REVOLUTION
1. The American Revolution was the child of Enlightenment. Comment.
(2003)(2016)
2. Some American historians insist that the American Revolution was a social
upheaval as well as a political revolt. Discuss the social and economic results of the
Revolutionary years. (2005)
3. Some American historians insist that the American Revolution was a social
upheaval as well as a political revolt. Discuss the social and economic results of the
Revolutionary Years. (2011)
US CONSTITUTION
1. The American Constitution is a system of “Checks and Balances”. Discuss. (2001)
2. Describe the salient features of the constitution of USA. (2006)
3. Give the salient features of the Constitution of the USA. (2008)
4. What were the major flaws in the Articles of Confederation (the first constitution
of the United States of America) that led to the Philadelphia Convention and the
drafting of a new constitution? Discuss the salient features of the present constitution
11 of the United States of America. (2009)
5. The American Constitution is a system of “checks and balances.” Discuss. (2010)
WAR OF INDEPENDENCE
1. “The American War of Independence was a revolt against Mercantilism.” Discuss.
(2006)
2. Describe the reasons that lead to the war of Independence. What part did the
dislike of mercantilism play in this war? (2008)
3. Discuss the factors that led to the war of American Independence. Also analyze
the reasons for the growing popularity of Independence. (2010)
4. The American first war with the Britain made them independent; the second made
them a formidable power. Discuss. (2012)
5. The Declaration of Independence 1776 actually shapes the way Americans live
their lives. Discuss. (2014)
SLAVERY ISSUE
1. Critically examine the significance of the issue of Slavery in American history.
(2001)
2. One of the bitterest fruits of westward expansion was the intensification of the
slavery controversy. Do you agree with this statement? Support your answer with
specific incidents. (2002)
3. Note: Issue of Slavery in America. (2004) (2006)
4. Compare and contrast the views of each of the following towards the institution of
slavery in the United States. Charles Summer, Stephen A. Douglas, Abraham
Lincoln. (2005)
COLD WAR
1. Note: Cold War (2000) (2006)
FOREIGN POLICY
2. Discuss, ‘War against Terror’ as an instrument of US foreign policy. (2002)
3. Highlight salient aspects of American foreign policy since World War II. (2005)
4. Discuss briefly the USA relations with Pakistan from the earliest time. (2006)
5. How do you think the foreign Policy of USA concerning Europe and Japan
between the two world wars can be held responsible for the World War II? (2006)
12 6. How has the American foreign policy strategy been altered by America’s war on
terror? How has this influenced American relation with Pakistan? (2008)
7. The U.S. foreign policy in the light of 9/11 and the War on Terror (2009)
8. Write comprehensively on the American Foreign Policy towards Pakistan in the
light of 9/11 and War on Terror. (2010)
9. Discuss American foreign policy towards Afghanistan since 9/11 and her exit
strategy. (2011)
MARSHAL PLAN
1. ‘The United States would do whatever it is able to do to assist in the return of
normal economic health in the world, without which there can be no political
stability and no assured peace.’ Discuss in the light of Marshall Plan. (2002)
2. Note: The Truman Doctrine and the Marshal Plan (2009)
WAR OF 1812
1. Note: War with England 1812 (2005)
2. What developments lead to the war of 1812? How did the war increase American
prestige? (2008)
3. The American first war with the Britain made them independent; the second made
them a formidable power. Discuss. (2012)
BUSH DOCTRINE
1. The Bush Doctrine is the name given to a set of foreign policy guidelines first
unveiled by President George Bush in his commencement speech to the
graduating class of West Point given on June 1, 2002. Explain with arguments.
(2007) (2016)
2. Note: The Bush doctrine (2008)
COLONIAL PERIOD
1. Describe in detail the colonial period in the history of United States of America.
(2008)
2. Account for America's emergence as an imperialist -colonialist power after 1898.
(2004)
3. Explain the characteristics of Colonial assemblies and representative government
from 1776 to 1789. (2004)
4. Why England failed to take the initiative in the colonization of the American
continent? What factors were responsible for the British interest in establishing their
colonies in the areas that are now part of the United States of America? (2009)
5. Discuss the conditions that led Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, Connecticut and
New Haven Colonies to form New England Confederation in 1643. (2014)
WESTWARD EXPANSION
1. Since the Declaration of Independence Westward expansion is a story of
13 annexations cessions and purchases. Elaborate. (2002)
2. Since the Declaration of Independence, the Westward expansion was a story of
annexations, concession and purchases. Discuss. (2015)
FEDERALIST
1. Who were FEDERALISTS? What were their political views and economic vision
for the US? (2003)
2. Write comprehensively about the struggle between the Federalists and anti-
Federalists from 1787 to 1800 in the USA. (2006)
3. Discuss the struggle between the Federalists and anti-Federalists in America
(1787-1800). What were their respective political and economic ideas? (2010)
4. Discuss the trends and causes leading to the expansion of federal government's
power in the U.S. (2015)
GREAT DEPRESSION
1. Note: The great depression 1929 (2006)
2. Discuss in the details the causes and effects of the Great Depression on the
people and society of the United States of America. (2009) (2016)
PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT
1. Discuss the progress of the Progressive Movement in the United States between
1900 -1916. (2001)
2. Note: Progressive Movement. (2004)
WATERGATE SCANDAL
1. What do you know about the Water Gate Scandal? What lesson the American
national had learnt from it? (2010)
US AS A MELTING POT
2. Americans are called ‘a Nation of Nations’ very briefly describe the different
waves of immigrants that came to the US. Has America been a ‘melting pot’ or a
‘mixing bowl’? (2003)
3. Discuss evolution of Muslim Community in the US. (2011)
US INVASION OF IRAQ
1. Evaluate the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. How far the American policymakers
remained successful in achieving their goals? (2015)
OBAMA’S ADMINISTRATION
1. Discuss US financial crises and Obama policy to put the house in order. (2011)
2. The US President can quite literally be called the President of the world. Examine
14 this statement in the light of the events of late 20th and early 21st centuries. (2014)
21st CENTURY
1. Will the 21st century as well be an American century or will the USA be obscured
by new superpowers like China or the EU? (2012)
2. The US President can quite literally be called the President of the world. Examine
this statement in the light of the events of late 20th and early 21st centuries. (2014)
US FINANCIAL SYSTEM
1. What are the sources of government Revenues and Funds in U.S.A.? Is it true to
say that the Americans pay taxes for civilized society? (2000)
2. Trace out the grounds of augmentation of the US financial system in the post WW
II epoch. (2012)
3. What are the Sources of Revenues and Funds of Government in the U.S.? Is it true
to say that the Americans pay taxes for civic facilities? (2015)
MISCELLANEOUS
1. Describe Pan-Americanism with special reference to Latin American Republics.
(2000)
2. Evaluate briefly America’s political and military involvement in Iraq since Iran-
Iraq War. (2001)
3. Between 1877 and 1900 the American Society was transformed from being
agrarian and rural to being industrial and urban. What factors and forces helped to
bring about this change? (2003)
15 4. After World War-II the dominant focus of the U.S. policy had been anti-
Communism on global scale. Discuss. (2004)
5. What do you understand by ‘Manifest Destiny’? What fruits it bore in the shape of
expansion of United States? (2005)
6. Discuss the internal and external factors that led the U.S on an imperialist path at
the end of the 19th century. (2013)
7. Compare the Lockean philosophy with the American Political thought. (2015)
8. How urban life was affected in USA during two stages of Industrialization?
(2016)
SHORT NOTES
1. Note: Dollar Diplomacy (2000) (2016)
2. Note: U-2 Incident (2000) (2016)
3. Note: Waterloo Scandal (2001)
4. Note: Missouri Compromise 1820 (2002)
5. Note: New World Order (2002)
6. Note: POPULSM of the 1890s. (2003)
7. Note: The Jazz Age. (2003)
8. Note: McCarthyism (2003)
9. Note: Watergate Scandal. (2004), (2009)
10. Note: Compromise of 1850 (2005)
11. Note: Jay’s Treaty (2005)
12. Note: NATO (2005)
13. Note: The Declaration of Independence(2007)
14. Note: Navigation Act of 1660(2007)
15. Note: The Scandals and controversies involving President William Jefferson
Bill Clinton (2009)
16. Note: George Washington (2010)
17. Note: The issue of slavery (2010)
18. Note: The Great Depression (2010)
19. Note: U.Z Incident (2010)
20. Note: The Atlantic Charter. (2011)
21. Note: The Monroe Doctrine (2011)
22. Note: War of 1812 (2011)
23. Note: Malcolm-X (2011)
24. Note: the beginning and the end of the cold war (2012)
25. Note: what was the Dulles Doctrine? (2012)
26. Note: the Japanese American internment (2012)
27. Note: the modern feminism in the USA (2012)
28. Note: Benjamin Franklin (2013)
29. Note: Marbury vs Madison (2013)
30. Note: Korean war (2013)
31. Note: Watergate scandal (2013)
16 32. Note: George Washington (2014)
33. Note: Desert Storm (2014)
34. Note: Tammany Hall (2014)
35. Note: Federal Securities (2015)
36. Note: Natural Aristocracy of Thomas Jefferson (2015)
37. Note: Monroe Doctrine (2015)
History of USA
Early Recorded History (10th Century-1619)
17 10th Century America 1st discovered by Norsemen, Scandinavians
1457 Birth of Columbus
1470 Columbus went to Lisbon for studies
1492 Discovery of America
1496 Columbus 2nd Voyage
1497 John Cabot reaches present day Massachusetts
1498 Columbus 3rd Voyage
1502 Columbus 4th Voyage
1506 Death of Columbus
1507 Continent named America on Italian Mariner Amerigo
1519 Alvarez de Pineda may have discovered the Mississippi River
1524 Giovanni de Verrazano enters New York harbor
1539 Father marcos de Niza explores Southwest, brags of cities of gold
1540 Francisco Vasquez de Coronado's great party begins exploration of Southwest
1541 Hernando de Soto reaches the Mississippi River
1542 Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo discovers San Diego Bay
1565 St. Augustine, Florida, founded
1570 (approx.) Iroquois Federation founded
1579 Sir Francis Drake explores Pacific coast
1586 Drake plunders St. Augustine
1587 First English colony in North America is established in North Carolina, at
Roanoke
1598 Don Juan de Onate explores Southwest
1607 Jamestown, Virginia founded; first permanent English settlement in North
America
1607 First ship constructed in the Americas, Popham, Maine
1609 Santa Fe, New Mexico, founded
1609 Henry Hudson explores the Hudson River
1609 Samuel de Champlain explores the Northeast
1614 Captain John Smith explores New Hampshire region
1619 House of Burgesses formed in Jamestown
1975 - Ella T. Grasso of Connecticut becomes first woman elected governer without
family ties
1976 - Bicentennial recognized with extensive national celebrations
1976 - Agreement makes Mariana Islands a U.S. commonwealth
1976 - Legionnaire's disease identified
1977 - First landing of Concorde SST in United States
1977 - Singer Elvis Presley dies
1977 - Trans-Alaska pipeline opens
1978 - Hannah Gray becomes president of University of Chicago, first woman to
head a major U.S. university
1979 - Three Mile Island nuclear power plant malfunctions in Pennsylvania
1980 - Ronald Reagan is elected president
1980 - First woman graduates from U.S. Military Academy at West Point
1980 - Mt. St. Helens erupts in Washington; ash covers 120 square miles
1980 - Former Beatle John Lennon is shot and killed
1981 - Iran releases 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days
1981 - Reagan is shot and wounded
1981 - First space shuttle is launched
1981 - Sandra Day O'Connor is sworn in as first woman on the Supreme Court
1983 - Bomb destroys U.S. Marine headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon, killing 241
service persons
1983 - Sally Ride is first U.S. woman in space
1986 - Space shuttle Challanger explodes; six astronauts and teacher Christa
McAuliffe killed
1986 - Congressional hearings begin into Iran / Contra affair
1989 - U.S. forces invade Panama, overthrow Manuel Noriega
1989 - Largest oil spill in U.S. history at Prince William Sound, Alaska
1989 - L. Douglas Wilder of Virginia is first African-American elected governor of a
U.S. state since Reconstruction
1990 - U.S. forces reach Persian Gulf to defend area against Iraq
COLONIZATION
1607 Virginia 1620 to 30 Massachusetts
1622 New Hampshire
1626 New York
1632 Mary Land
1636 Rhodes Island
1636 Connecticut
1638 Delaware
1663 North Carolina
1663 South Carolina
1664 New Jersey
1681 Pennsylvania
1732 Georgia
MERCANTILISM
1651 Navigation Act
1660 Enumerated Act
29 1663 Staple Act
1673 Duty Act
1696 Enforcement Act
1733 Molasses Act
1764 Sugar Act
WAR OF INDEPENDANCE
Intolerable Act
1730-40 Great Awakening
1730-40 Albany Congress
1754-63 French Indian War
1763 Royal Proclamation
2nd Mar 1770 Boston Massacre
1773 Boston Tea Party
1774 1st Continental Conference
1775 2nd Continental Conference
4th July 1776 Declaration of Independence
1776 Common Sense
3rd Sep 1783 Treaty of Paris
GEORGES WASHINGTON
May 1787 CONSTITUTION MAKING OF AMERICA
22nd Feb, 1732 Birth of Washington
1789-1801 Federalist Regime
1789-1797 George Washington‘s Presidency
1789 Judiciary Act
1791 Bill of Rights
1791 Excise Act
1791 Whisky Rebellions
1793 Genet Mission
1794 Jay’s Treaty
1794 Pinckney Treaty
THOMAS JEFFERSON
13th April 1743 Birth of Jefferson
1800 Louisiana Purchase
1801-1809 Presidency
ANDREW JACKSON
15th Mar, 1768 Birth of Jackson
30
DETAILED NOTES
Table of Content
1) Early America
2) Exploration of America
3) Colonization in the New Continent
4) Road to Independence
5) Mercantilism
6) Other Causes of War of Independence
7) Problems in Formation of National Government
8) Federalist vs. Anti-Federalist
9) Constitution of United States of America
10) The Amendment Process
11) Salient Features of the American Constitution
12) Amendments in American Constitution
13) System of Check and Balance in American Constitution
14) George Washington (1789-1801)
15) Thomas Jefferson (1801-1809)
16) The Louisiana Purchase
17) War of 1812
18) Missouri Compromise (1820)
19) Monroe Doctrine (1823)
20) Andrew Jackson (1829-1837)
21) Abraham Lincoln (1861-1865)
22) Civil War
23) Progressivism (1890-1920)
24) Woodrow Wilson (1914-1919)
25) America and World War I
26) Causes of American entry to World War I
27) 14 Points of Woodrow Wilson
28) Great Depression (1930)
29) Effects of the Great Depression Facts
31 30) Great Depression Facts
31) Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1932-1945)
32) The New Deal
33) New Deal Initiative
34) Government Expenditures
35) America and World War II
36) John F Kennedy (1961-1963)
37) Richard Nixon (1969-1974)
38) Nixon Watergate Scandal
39) Slavery in America
Early America
At the height of the most recent Ice Age, about 35,000 years ago, much of
the world‘s water was locked up in vast continental ice sheets. A land
bridge as much as 1,500 km wide connected Asia and North America. By
12,000 years ago, humans were living throughout much of the Western
Hemisphere. The first Americans crossed the land bridge from Asia and
were believed to have stayed in what is now Alaska for thousands of years.
They then moved south into the land that was to become the United States.
They settled along the Pacific Ocean in the Northwest, in the mountains
and deserts of the Southwest, and along the Mississippi River in the Middle
West.
Others chiefly British, Dutch, French, and Spanish came later to claim the
lands and riches of what they called the ―New World.
Exploration of America
Europe towards Exploration of the New Land
Until the 15th century nobody knew that there was a continent across the
Atlantic. The first and most famous of these explorers was Christopher
Columbus whose voyage of exploration finally brought the Americans and
Europeans in contact. Columbus was born in 1447 in Genoa, Italy; he was
a son of a wool comber. He spent eight years seeking to be financed for his
trip to explore the Indies across Atlantic Ocean. Christopher Columbus, a
Genoese sailor, believed that sailing west across the Atlantic Ocean was the
shortest sea route to Asia. Ignorant of the fact that the Western Hemisphere
lay between Europe and Asia and assuming the earth's circumference to be
a third less than it actually is, he was convinced that Japan would appear
on the horizon just three thousand miles to the west. Like other seafarers of
his day.
Columbus was ready to sail for whatever country would pay for his voyage.
Either because of his arrogance (he wanted ships and crews to be provided
at no expense to himself) or ambition (he insisted on governing the lands he
discovered), he found it difficult to find a patron. He was twice rejected by
Portuguese, and the rulers of England and France were not interested. With
influential supporters at court, Columbus convinced King Ferdinand and
Queen Isabella of Spain to partially underwrite his expedition. In 1492,
Granada, the last Muslim stronghold on the Iberian Peninsula, had fallen to
the forces of the Spanish monarchs.
Voyages of Columbus
o 1st voyage, 1492: San Salvador, The Bahamas, Cuba, Hispaniola
o 2nd voyage, 1493: Dominica, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Jamaica
o 3rd voyage, 1498: St. Vincent, Grenada, Trinidad, Margarita, Venezuela
o 4th voyage, 1502: St. Lucia, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama
33 Once Columbus landed in America he discovered that there were
already civilizations living in America. He named the Native of America as
Red Indians, thinking that he had landed in India and those peoples are
Indian.
Native Americans
Before Europeans there were four civilizations living in America and they
were
o Red Indians
o Mayas
o Aztecs
o Incas
John Cabot
John Cabot of Venice came five years later on a mission for the king of
England. His journey was quickly forgotten, but it provided the basis for
British claims to North America.
Name of America
After the death of Columbus in 1506, Amerigo Vespucci, another Italian
navigator, sailed extensively along the American coast and is considered to
be the first to realize that the Indies were in fact a ―New World‖ and not
part of Asia. The first map that identified known parts of the Western
Hemisphere as ―America, after Vespucci, was published in 1507.
34
Colonial Period
Most settlers who came to the British colonies in the 1600s were English.
Others came from The Netherlands, Sweden, Germany, France, and later
from Scotland and Northern Ireland. Some left their homelands to escape
war, political oppression, religious persecution, or a prison sentence. Some
left as servants who expected to work their way to freedom. Black Africans
were sold into slavery and arrived in shackles.
By 1690, the population was 250,000. Less than 100 years later, it had
climbed to 2.5 million. The settlers had many different reasons for coming
35 to America, and eventually 13 distinct colonies developed here. Differences
among the three regional groupings of colonies were even more marked.
Causes of Colonization
1. Improvement in Technology: In Europe, there occurred a rebirth of
classical learning. Columbus and other navigators lived in the time
when the creativity was vitally at the peak and navigator and mariners
were being financed to find out the shortest and safest routes to Asia.
Europeans were improving in technology from gun powder to the
sailing compass. There were also major improvements in ship
building and map makings.
Role of Blacks
The blacks were the slaves of British master and they were also the once
who were suffering from the hands of British. George Washington asked for
their help in war and promised them to be freed after the victory.
Approximately 5000 black supported America in the war.
37
Mercantilism
Mercantilism is economic nationalism for the purpose of building a wealthy
and powerful state. Adam smith coined the term "Mercantile system" to
describe the system of political economy that enriched the country by
restraining imports and encouraging exports. The goal was to achieve a
"favorable" balance of trade that would bring gold and silver into the
country, and maintain domestic employment.
This was a famous economic theory which was used by British to exploit its
colonies. According to this theory ― the colonies only existed for the
benefit of their mother countries.‖ Mercantilism was a cause of frequent
Europeans wars during 16th to 18th century and some schools of thought
even suggest that mercantilism was one of the supreme causes which led the
colonies to fight for their independence. Few important acts passed in
mercantilism are as follow:
1) Navigation Act of 1651
This act stated that all the goods that were carried to England will
now only be carried in British owned ships.
2) Enumerated Act of 1660
This act imposed ban on the colonies export. Now the commodities
such as sugar, cotton, tobacco and dyes were only to be exported to
either England or its colonies only.
3) Staple Act of 1663
These act provided that all the European exports to American
colonies must be brought to English port and be reshipped after the
payment of duty.
4) Duty Act of 1673
This act aim at the enforcement of all earlier acts through the services
38 of custom collectors
5) Enforcement Act of 1696
This act provided strict measures for checking smuggling and all the
colonial ship were now necessarily to be registered in England.
6) Molasses Act 1733
This Act imposed ban on the import of French West Indian molasses
into the English colonies.
7) The Sugar Act of 1764
The Sugar Act of 1764 placed taxes on luxury goods, including coffee,
silk, and wine, and made import of rum illegal.
8) The Currency Act of 1764
The Currency Act of 1764 prohibited the printing of paper money in
the colonies.
9) The Quartering Act of 1765
The Quartering Act of 1765 forced colonists to provide food and
housing for royal troops.
10) The Stamp Act of 1765
The Stamp Act of 1765 required the purchase of royal stamps for all
legal documents, newspapers, licenses, and leases. Colonists objected
to all these measures, but the Stamp Act sparked the greatest
organized resistance
39
42
Problems in Formation
of
National Government
a) No Constitution
b) No common currency;
c) No national military force;
d) Little centralized control over foreign policy
e) No national system for imposing and collecting taxes.
f) Differences between Federalist and Anti-federalist.
g) Foreign Policy
h) Economic Weakness
i) Slavery
43 j) Powers and election of president
Anti-Federalist
1. Strong States
2. Equal Representation
3. In favor of Bill of Rights
4. Opposed Constitution because wanted more powers for state.
5. Equal distribution of wealth
Constitution of United States of America
“A Constitution consists of those fundamental rules which determine &
distribute functions & powers among the various organs of the
Government’’ (Oxford Dictionary)
Article of Confederation
44 The Articles of Confederation was unanimously adopted in 1781 once
Maryland agreed. Over the previous four years, it had been used by
Congress as a ―working document‖ to administer the early United States
government.
The Delegation
The delegation of 55 men met in Philadelphia headed by George
Washington. Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, John Dickenson
and James Madison (father of American Constitution) were the other well
known politicians in the delegation of 55 men. Where as John Jay, Tomas
Jefferson, John Adams and Thomas Paine were on a diplomatic business
trip abroad therefore they were not the part of delegation.
Connecticut Compromise
Connecticut compromise was composed by William Samuel Johnson which
allowed both plans to work together. It suggested that there should be two
houses of congress
1. House of Representative (Representation on population)
2. Senate (Equal Representation)
The compromise suggested representation on the basis of population in
―House of Representative‖ and equal representation in Senate with 2
Senators from each state. Even the Connecticut compromise was not
sufficient enough to bring constitution in working form as 9/13 states had
to ratify it. But the small farmers, New York and Virginia were not happy
with the idea until the Bill of Rights was added to the constitution.
Bill of Rights
Bill of Rights were the 1st ten amendments in the American constitution
granting rights to the ordinary people of America. Following are the
amendments if the bill:
1. Freedom of religions, speech, assembly, press and petition
2. Right to possess arms
3. No quartering of soldiers during peacetime
4. No search and seizure of people‘s property
5. No criminal case to stand twice for same crime
6. Speedy trail of cases
7. Right to jury in case of 20 dollars and above
8. No excessive bails and cruel punishments
9. Rights not mentioned in constitution lies with peoples
10. Powers not mentioned in constitution will be exercised by states
46
The Amendment Process
There are essentially two ways spelled out in the Constitution for how to
propose an amendment. One has never been used.
The first method is for a bill to pass both houses of the legislature, by a two-
thirds majority in each. Once the bill has passed both houses, it goes on to
the states. This is the route taken by all current amendments. Because of
some long outstanding amendments, such as the 27th, Congress will
normally put a time limit (typically seven years) for the bill to be approved
as an amendment.
The Legislative Branch has the following checks over the Judicial Branch:
o Creates lower courts
o May remove judges through impeachment
o Senate approves appointments of judges
The Executive Branch has the following checks over the Judicial Branch:
o President appoints Supreme Court and other federal judges
The Judicial Branch has the following checks over the Legislative Branch:
o Courts can judge legislative acts to be unconstitutional.
52
Conclusion
The American system of checks and balances has worked well over the
course of America's history. Even though some huge clashes have occurred
when vetoes have been overridden or appointees have been rejected, these
occasions are rare. The system was meant to keep the three branches in
balance. Even though there have been times when one branch has risen
preeminent, overall the three branches have achieved a workable balance
with no one branch holding all the governmental power.
George Washington (1789-1801)
George Washington was the unanimous choice as the 1st president of
America after winning the war of independence. He was born on 22nd Feb
1732 in Virginia to an English family. His brother‘s mirage to a royal family
helped him enter politics. He was a soldier with exceptional skills and led
the army of 13 colonies in war of independence against British. Initially a
staunch supporter of reconciliation with British but he also felt that there
should be no discrimination in the salaries and ranks of continental and the
royal army. He was a more of military General than a politician but still
good enough to drive the nascent America out of its crisis as the 1st
president of America.
Domestic Achievements
53 1. Hamilton Financial Plan
America was going through one of the most crucial financial crisis
after its birth. In the meanwhile Alexander Hamilton was appointed
as the secretary state of treasury. He gave a comprehensive plan to
promote and stable the financial condition of America.
1) Revenue generation via taxation
2) Payment of national and state debts ($54 million State Debts)
3) Establishment of National Bank on the basis of Bank of England
4) Establishment of Uniform Currency in all states of USA
2. Whiskey Rebellion
In western Pennsylvania a group of farmers refused to pay federal
excise duty on whiskey which was a challenge to the American
constitution and the government itself. Farmers insisted they won‘t be
able to bear the burden to pay tax on the distilled whiskey from
surplus corn.
Washington responded by federalizing 15,000 men in the state militia under
the supervision of Alexander Hamilton. This led to the collapse of whiskey
rebel without any bloodshed. This act of Washington was appreciated by
the entire country.
3. Westwards Expansion
Due to the treaty of Greenville and Jays, US government controlled
vast lands. Congress passed a Public Land Act in 1796 for rapid
settlement of land and selling federal land at reasonable price.
This also allowed process of adding new states to the union and in 1791
Vermont became the 1st newly added stated followed by Kentucky and
Tennessee.
4. Judicial Act
This act was passed in 1789 and laid the foundation of judicial system
of United States of America. It laid stress that the states judiciary
should be under the control of federal judiciary. Further points, it
discussed are as under
a) One Chief Justice
b) 5 Associate Judges
c) 13 Districts
d) Federal District Court along with Attorney General
5. Treaty of Greenville
The Native Americans were defeated by the American army lead by
General Anthony Wayne and in the battle of Fallen Timber in
Northwestern Ohio which led them to sign the ―Treaty of Greenville‖ in
which the natives surrendered their claims on the Ohio territory.
54
Foreign Policy
1. French Revolution
Americans had humble feeling towards France because of the French
Revolution and France was the country that supported America in the
war of independence against British but when the revolution of
France turned into violence. The American decided to be neutral and
sidelined from the internal affairs of France.
2. Citizen Genet Edmond
Genet was a French minister who came to America and asked for US
assistance in French cause as per treaty of 1778. Genet was so
outrageous with his conduct that even Jefferson approved
Washington to ask French government to remove the offending
diplomat. Once recalled by French government Genet chose to live in
USA, where he married and became a US citizen.
3. Jays Treaty
Washington sent his Chief justice on a special mission to Britain that
they should stop the offensive practice of searching and seizing
American Ships and impressing seamen in British Navy. After a year
of negotiation, John Jay brought back a treaty in which British agreed
to evacuate US post in western frontier but did not said any thing
about search and seizure of US ships.
4. Proclamation of Neutrality
A war between England and France broke out. Washington referred
his cabinet whether he should remain neutral or support France in the
war. Majority of votes went in favor of neutrality as America it self
was a nascent country.
On 22nd April 1973 Washington issued Proclamation of Neutrality.
5. Pinckney Treaty
Spain was in desperate need to have good relations with America
because of tense relations with Britain. Realizing the situation,
America sent their minister Thomas Pinckney to Madrid where he
signed the “Treaty of Son Lorenzo”.
This gave Americans the access to lower Mississippi and New
Oreland.
6. XYZ affairs
The Americans were angered by the reports of US merchant ships
search and seizure by France. America sent its minister to France to
hold talks with French government. Certain French ministers known
as X, Y, and Z met the delegation from US in Paris and demanded a
large sum of bribe to enter negotiations. American Delegation refused
and returned back.
55 “Millions for defense but not a single cent for tribute to France” became
the slogan in America. the condition were so severe that Alexander
Hamilton demanded to wage a war against France in North America but
John Adam refused saying that the American Army and Navy was not that
powerful and neither in the position to wage war against France.
7. Convention of 1800
Napoleon came into power in 1800 and there was a threat that he
might wage a war against America. America sent another mission to
France to revive the treaty of 1778. The mission was successful this
time as napoleon too was eager to have good relations with America
and a convention was signed on 30th Sep 1800 which removed the
peril of war between the two countries.
8. Two Party System
Washington himself was appointed as a unanimous president of
America and it became a popular belief that the political parties are
not needed as nothing was mentioned about the political parties in the
constitution also. But this soon proved wrong as the debates between
federalist and anti-federalist indicated that the two party system
would emerge in America as the permanent feature of politics.
Democratic Republicans
Federalist
Washington Farewell Address
At the time of his retirement he wrote a farewell which was publish in 1796
in the newspapers. This message had an enormous effect because of
Washington’s prestige. The president spoke of the policies that he consider
as unwise and warned Americans
1) Not to get involved in European affairs
2) Not to form political parties
3) Not to avoid sectionalism
4) Not to make any permanent foreign alliance
“Thomas Jefferson was the most brilliant man ever occupied the
American Presidency”
- John F. Kennedy
War of 1812
The war of 1812 is recorded as a military conflict between the British and
Americans. This probably was the 2nd war fought between the two
countries after the war of independence. Britain at first was on the defensive
mode as it was busy in the war with Napoleon in Europe but once the war
with France ended in 1814 British adopted aggressive strategy and send
59 large invasion armies to fight America.
The nation went to war bitterly divided. While the south and west favored
the conflict. The U.S. military was weak. The army had fewer than 7,000
regular soldiers, distributed in widely scattered posts along the coast, near
the Canadian border, and in the remote interior. The state militias were
poorly trained and undisciplined. But yet they decided to declare the war
against Britain.
Causes of War
From US point of view, pressure leading to war came from two sides the
continued US neutral rights on sea and troubles with Britain on western
frontier.
Free Sea and Trade
As a trading nation America was dependant upon the free flow of ship over
the Atlantic Ocean. Yet the belligerents of Europe France and Britain had
no interest in neutral rights respect for each other. Due to support from
France in American War of Independence and French Revolution
Americans had a soft corner toward France but the British violation was
taken very blatantly.
Impressments of American
Merchants in Royal Navy British was involved in capturing and impressing
the US sailors in to the royal navy which was another cause that led USA
to enter the war with Britain.
British Support to Red Indians
British were providing military and financial assistance to the Red Indians
to fight against the Americans which was denting the situation in America.
War Hawks
In 1810 there was a group of young republicans in congress. Many of them
were from frontier states were very eager to fight a war with Britain. They
were led by John Calhoun and Henry Clay and they quickly gained
significant influence in House of Representatives
Declaration of War
America invited British to held talks on the neutral rights but British
delayed. Bothe the political pressure and British delay in talks led Madison
to seek the declaration of war in June 1812.
60 Invasion of Canada
A poorly equipped American army led the expansion of Canada from three
parts on 1812. The forces captured Canada from Detroit, Niagara and Lake
Champlain. The American raid on Toronto and burnt officials buildings
there but they British army easily repulsed them out and gained control.
Burning of White House By the spring of 1814, the defeat of Napoleon in
Europe enabled British to be more aggressive in war against US and they
send more troops toward North America. At the Chesapeake campaign,
British troops marched and captured Washington D.C and set white house
and other official building on fire.
Treaty of Ghent
British Having fought Napoleon for more than a decade; they now were in
desperate need of peace in Europe. At the same time Madison and America
recognized that America will be unable to get a decisive victory. Therefore
American peace commissioner traveled to Ghent, Belgium in 1814 to held
peace talk with Britain and finally a Treaty of Ghent was signed between
the two countries.
The American new boundary lines were being drawn during the presidency
of James Monroe. The population of America by that time was 10 millions.
During this period of explosive growth new states were being added almost
every year and the issue of slavery was increasingly dividing the nation.
1st Point: Missouri would be admitted to the union as a slave state, but
would be balanced by the admission of MAINE, a free state, that had long
wanted to be separated from Massachusetts.
2nd Point: slavery was to be excluded from all new states in the Louisiana
Purchase north of the southern boundary of Missouri.
3rd Point: Ban on Slavery over the north of Missouri
The period of 1817 to 1829 can be divided in two phases. The 1st period
belongs to James Monroe who brought peace and security in the country
therefore his period is known as era of good feelings. The period of John
Quincy Adams was considered to be the period of hardship and difficulties.
Thus it was known as era of hard feelings
1817-1824
Era of Good Feelings
1825- 1829
Era of Hard feelings
Effects
The effects of the Monroe Doctrine on Europe were mixed. While Spain
did not attempt to restore empire in Latin America, Britain continued as a
dominant trade power there. Some Latin American nations resented the
implications that the United States was somehow responsible for their well-
being. It was not until the 1880s and the development of the U.S. Navy that
the U.S. actually had the military power to enforce the Monroe Doctrine.
65 Andrew Jackson (1829-1837)
The era of emergence of popular politics in 1820‘s and the presidency of
Andrew Jackson (1829-1837) is often called as the Age of Common Man, or
the Era of Jacksonian Democracy.
Andrew Jackson was born to a Scottish family on the border of South and
North Carolina on 15th March, 1768. He was a son of Saddle maker and
was groomed in extreme poor condition. He became orphan at the age of 14
years and tasted all the hardships in his life during his childhood. Jackson
was a brilliant student of Law. He was very much enthusiastic to be
military men and served the military from 1813 to 1400.
He was made Major General after defeating Greeks and he also defeated
British in the battle of New Orland. In 1828 he became the president of
America defeating John Quincy Adams. He was described as ―Old
Hickory.
1. Popular Leadership
A poll was released in February 2009. This poll was sponsored by C-
SPAN and consisted of a survey of 65 historians. The participants
were asked to rank the presidents in ten categories ranging from
public persuasion and economic management to international
relations and moral authority. Abraham Lincoln finished first, George
Washington was second, and Franklin Roosevelt was third.
2. Abolition of Slavery
Abraham Lincoln is remembered for his vital role as the leader in
preserving the Union during the Civil War and beginning the process
that led to the end of slavery in the United States. The actual fact is
that legal freedom for all slaves in the United States did not come
until the final passage of the Thirteenth Amendment in December of
1865. Lincoln was a strong supporter of the amendment, but he was
assassinated before its final enactment.
3. Lincoln and Domestic Society
President Lincoln's domestic policies included support for the
Homestead Act. This act allowed poor people in the East to obtain
land in the West. He signed the Morrill Act which was designed to
aid in the establishment of agricultural and mechanical colleges in
each state. Also, Lincoln signed legislation entitled the National
Banking Act which established a national currency and provided for
the creation of a network of national banks. In addition, he signed
tariff legislation that offered protection to American industry and
signed a bill that chartered the first transcontinental railroad.
69 4. Wisest US President
Politicians love to quote Abraham Lincoln because Lincoln is
considered America's wisest president. A major effect Lincoln has on
the U.S. today is simply through the good example he set when it
came to leadership and integrity.
5. Fugitive Slave Act
To soften the attitude of peoples in south Lincoln supported the
Fugitive Slave Law or Fugitive Slave Act which was passed in 1850.
This was one of the most controversial acts of the 1850 compromise
and heightened Northern fears of a "slave power conspiracy". It
declared that all runaway slaves will be brought back to their masters.
6. Good Relations with Cabinet
Lincoln managed excellent relations with his advisors, cabinet and
military. When ever, there was disagreement among advisors and he,
his leadership style often involved telling a story that demonstrated
his point. Lots of times this method worked, and cabinet admired and
respected him for it. He could virtually disarm his enemies with his
highly moralistic, skillful leadership. Lincoln possessed qualities of
kindness and compassion combined with wisdom. In fact, one of his
nicknames was "Father Abraham."
7. Foreign Policy
The Major achievement of Lincoln foreign policy was that it geared
toward preventing foreign intervention in the Civil War. He was a
very shrewd diplomat and an excellent negotiator. Many countries
would have entered the American civil war, had there been no
Abraham Lincoln as the President of Union by that time. Some of his
major achievements in foreign policy were:
1) Made Great Britain neutral in Civil War
2) Not opted for any political support to abolish slavery from America.
3) Maintained better trade relations with neighboring countries and
Europe.
70
Civil War
In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected president of the United States. He
defeated Stephen Douglas because of the greater northern population.
Southerners were angered by the growing abolitionist movement, and when
Lincoln was elected, they feared that their way of life was in jeopardy.
South Carolina seceded on December 20, 1860. Within the next two weeks,
six other southern states had left the union (Alabama, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas). Little did people know that a very
bloody four year war was to come.
PEOPLE
North (Union) South (Confederacy)
Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis
U.S. Grant Robert E Lee
William T Sherman Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson
1) The nation was reunited and the southern states were not allowed to
secede.
2) The South was placed under military rule and divided into military
districts. Southern states then had to apply for readmission to the Union.
3) The Federal government proved itself supreme over the states.
4) Slavery was effectively ended. While slavery was not officially outlawed
until the passage of the 13th amendment, the slaves were set free upon the
end of the war.
5) Reconstruction, the plan to rebuild America after the war, began.
6) Industrialism began as a result of the increase in wartime production and
the development of new technologies.
72
Progressivism (1890-1920)
Introduction
By the beginning of the twentieth century, muckraking journalists were
calling attention to the exploitation of child labor, corruption in city
governments, the horror of lynching, and the ruthless business practices
employed by businessmen like John D. Rockefeller.
Efforts to improve society were not new to the United States in the late
1800s. A major push for change, the First Reform Era, occurred in the years
before the Civil War and included efforts of social activists to reform
working conditions and humanize the treatment of mentally ill people and
prisoners. The second reform era began during Reconstruction and lasted
until the American entry into World War I. The struggle for women's rights
and the temperance movement were the initial issues addressed. A farm
movement also emerged to compensate for the declining importance of
rural areas in an increasingly urbanized America.
Progressives Presidents
o Theodore Roosevelt (1901 – 1909)
o Howard Taft (1909 – 1913)
o Woodrow Wilson (1913 – 1917)
A. Political Reforms
o Tried to put more power into the hands of the people
o Innovative changes in city government
o Direct Election of Senators
o the Vote for Women
B. Social Reforms
74 o Child labor laws
o Ten-hour work days
o Minimum safety standards on the job
o Immigration Restriction
o Little Help for Blacks NAACP (1909)
Success of Progressives
Successes were many, beginning with the Interstate Commerce Act (1887)
and the Sherman Antitrust Act (1890). Progressives never spoke with one
mind and differed sharply over the most effective means to deal with the ills
generated by the trusts; some favored an activist approach to trust-busting,
others preferred a regulatory approach.
Vocal minority supported socialism with government ownership of the
means of production. Other progressive reforms followed in the form of a
conservation movement, railroad legislation, and food and drug laws. The
progressive spirit also was evident in new amendments added to the
Constitution (text), which provided for a new means to elect senators,
protect society through prohibition and extend suffrage to women. Urban
problems were addressed by professional social workers who operated
settlement houses as a means to protect and improve the prospects of the
poor. However, efforts to place limitations on child labor were routinely
thwarted by the courts. The needs of African Americans and Native
Americans were poorly served or served not at all — a major shortcoming
of the progressive movement.
Progressive reforms were carried out not only on the national level, but in
states and municipalities. Such reforms as the direct primary, secret ballot,
and the initiative, referendum, and recall were effected. Local governments
were strengthened by the widespread use of trained professionals,
particularly with the city manager system replacing the frequently corrupt
mayoral system.
77
Enetente Powers
(France, Britain and Russia)
Centrist Powers
(Germany, Turkey, Austria-Hungary)
4. Russian Revolution
In 1917, the ruler of Russia ―Czar‖ was dethroned in the Russian
revolution and the communist party led by Lenin was all set to take
up the new system of government in Russia. America was of the view
that the communist revolution will not be favorable to American
system.
6. Declaration of War
In his powerful war message of 2 April 1917, Wilson condemned the
German submarine campaign as ―warfare against mankind, and
urged Americans to fight, in his famous phrase, to make the world
safe for democracy.
80
4. Reduction of armaments.
Reduction of armaments to the lowest point consistent with public
safety.
3. War Debts
At the end of World War I, European nations owed over $10 billion
to their former ally, the United States. Their economies had been
devastated by war and they had no way of paying the money back.
The U.S. insisted their former allies pay the money. This forced the
allies to demand Germany pay the reparations imposed on her as a
result of the Treaty of Versailles. All of this later led to a financial
crisis when Europe could not purchase goods from the U.S. This debt
contributed to the Great Depression.
4. High Tariffs
In 1922, the U.S. passed the Fordney-Mc Cumber Act, which
instituted high tariffs on industrial products. A tariff is a tax on
imports. Other nations soon retaliated and world trade declined
helping bring on the great depression.
5. Overproduction in Industry
Factories were producing products; however wages for workers were
not raising enough for them to buy. Few workers could afford to buy
the factory output. The surplus products could not be sold overseas
due to high tariffs and lack of money in Europe.
6. Farm Overproduction
Due to surpluses and overproduction, farm incomes dropped
throughout the 1920‘s. The price of farm land fell from $69 per acre
in 1920 t0 $31 in 1930. In 1929 the average annual income for an
American family was $750, but for farm families it was only $273.
The problems in the agricultural sector had a large impact since 30%
of Americans still lived on farms.
85
Roosevelt was born in 1882 at Hyde Park, New York. He attended Harvard
University and Columbia Law School.
By March there were 13,000,000 unemployed, and almost every bank was
closed. In his first "hundred days," he proposed, and Congress enacted, a
sweeping program to bring recovery to business and agriculture, relief to the
unemployed and to those in danger of losing farms and homes, and reform,
especially through the establishment of the Tennessee Valley Authority.
Government Expenditures
The total cost of the current bailout. It has cost more than all of these
government expenditures combined. Figures in parentheses have been
adjusted for inflation:
Marshall Plan
92 Cost: $12.7 billion ($115.3 billion)
Louisiana Purchase
Cost: $15 million ($217 billion)
Race to the Moon
Cost: $36.4 billion ($237 billion)
S&L Crisis
Cost: $153 billion ($256 billion)
Korean War
Cost: $54 billion ($454 billion)
The New Deal
Cost: $32 billion est. ($500 billion EST.)
Invasion of Iraq
Cost: $551billion ($597 billion)
Vietnam War
Cost: $111 billion ($698 billion)
NASA
Cost: $416.7 billion ($851.2 billion)
America and World War II
For the second time in the 20th century, the United States became involved
in a devastating world conflict. The mobilization effort of the government
in World War II eclipsed even that of World War I. With major operations
in both the Atlantic and Pacific theaters, American industries literally
fueled two wars simultaneously. The social and economic consequences
were profound. The Great Migration of African Americans from the rural
South to the industrial North was accelerated. New opportunities opened
for women. Americans finally enjoyed a standard of living higher than the
pre-Depression years.
But the war effort also had a darker side. Civil liberties were compromised,
particularly for the 110,000 Japanese Americans who were forcibly
uprooted from their West Coast homes to be sent to remote relocation
93
camps. In both Europe and Asia, the Axis powers had established a firm
foothold prior to American entry into the conflict. Slowly, but surely the
Allies closed the ring on Nazi Germany after turning points at El Alamein
and Stalingrad. Once Italy quit the Axis and the Allies landed successfully
at Normandy, it was only a matter of time before the Nazi machine was
smashed. Similar failures marked the early war in the Pacific, as the
Japanese captured the Philippines. But once Japanese offensive capabilities
were damaged at Midway, the United States "Island Hopped" its way to the
Japanese mainland.
New technologies emerged during the war as well. RADAR helped the
British locate incoming German planes, and SONAR made SUBMARINE
detection much more feasible. German v-1 and v-2 rockets ushered in a new
age of long-range warfare. But no weapon compared in destructive capacity
to the atomic bomb, developed after a massive, secret research project
spearheaded by the United States government. World War II was fought
over differences left unresolved after World War I.
Causalities
Over 400,000 Americans perished in the four years of involvement, an
American death rate second only to the Civil War. Twelve million victims
perished from Nazi atrocities in the holocaust. The deaths of twenty million
Russians created a defensive Soviet mindset that spilled into the postwar
era. After all the blood and sacrifice, the Axis powers were defeated, but the
Grand Alliance that emerged victorious did not last long. Soon the world
was involved in a 45-year struggle that claimed millions of additional lives
— the Cold War.
John F. Kennedy was born into a rich, politically connected Boston family
of Irish- Catholics. He and his eight siblings enjoyed a privileged childhood
of elite private schools, sailboats, servants, and summer homes. During his
childhood and youth, "Jack" Kennedy suffered frequent serious illnesses.
Nevertheless, he strove to make his own way, writing a best-selling book
while still in college. After a short stint as a journalist, Kennedy entered
politics, serving in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1947 to 1953
and the U.S. Senate from 1953 to 1961.
Kennedy was the youngest person elected U.S. President and the first
Roman Catholic to serve in that office. For many observers, his presidency
came to represent the ascendance of youthful idealism in the aftermath of
94 World War II. The promise of this energetic leader was not to be fulfilled,
as he was assassinated near the end of his third year in office. For many
Americans, the public murder of President Kennedy remains one of the
most traumatic events in memory—countless Americans can remember
exactly where they were when they heard that President Kennedy had been
shot. His shocking death stood at the forefront of a period of political and
social instability in the country and the world.
Foreign Policy
1. The Bay of Pigs Invasion
The most high-profile and obvious failure was the Bay of Pigs
Invasion. In this incident, the US clearly failed to bring off the
invasion of Cuba. This made JFK look weak because he allowed the
invasion but failed to support it enough to make it work.
Domestic Affairs
Kennedy called his domestic program the "New Frontier". It ambitiously
promised federal funding for education, medical care for the elderly,
economic aid to rural regions, and government intervention to halt the
recession.
4. Controlling Unemployment
Kennedy passed a program worth $435 millions to solve the ever
growing problem of unemployment. The workers in poor health
conditions were retained to new jobs with better working
environment. He passed a Society Security Act which intended to
bring the provision of insurance for unemployed by enlarging
payments
5. Space program
“We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things,
not because they are easy, but because they are hard."
The Apollo program was conceived early in 1960, during the Eisenhower
administration. While NASA went ahead with planning for Apollo,
funding for the program was far from certain given Eisenhower's opposition
to manned spaceflight. Kennedy's advisors speculated that a moon flight
would be prohibitively expensive, but he postponed the decision out of
deference to his vice president.
Assassination
President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas, at 12:30 pm Central
Standard Time on November 22, 1963, while on a political trip to Texas.
He was shot once in the upper back and killed with a final shot to the head.
He was taken to Parkland Hospital for emergency medical treatment, but
pronounced dead at 1:00 pm. Only 46, President Kennedy died younger
than any U.S. president to date.
96
Richard Nixon (1969-1974)
2. Civil Rights
In addition to reconcile public schools, Nixon implemented the
Philadelphia Plan in 1970 the first significant federal affirmative
action program. He also endorsed the Equal Rights Amendment after
it passed both houses of Congress in 1972 and went to the states for
ratification. Nixon had campaigned as an ERA supporter in 1968.
Nixon also Passed Equal Employment Opportunity Act and
Comprehensive Child Development Act 1970 (universal child care bill)
which helped in eradication of child labor from American society.
3. New Federalism
New Federalism is a political ideology that feels certain powers
should be transferred from the Federal Government back to the State
Government. It would restore some of the autonomy and power the
states had before FDR's New Deal and the Civil Rights Acts of the
1960's.
4. Space Program
After a nearly decade-long national effort, the United States won the
race to land astronauts on the moon on July 20, 1969, with the flight
of Apollo 11 landed on the moon and Neil Armstrong, Edwin Eldrin,
and Michal Collin became the first to land on the moon. These
historic scenes were telecasted live worldwide.
2. Vietnam War
Vietnam War Started in 1969 at was at its peak when Nixon was in
office. He adopted a process of gradual withdrawal of American
troops from Vietnam to save American life and expenses. The
President withdrew 70,000 US troops from Vietnam in 1972.
Evidence found on one of the burglars implied a possible link to the White
100 House and prompted an investigation. Over the next two years, the
unlawful acts were committed on behalf of the Committee to Re-elect the
President (CRP), which was later referred to as CREEP. The reputations of
many politicians were tarnished by the scandal, which ultimately resulted in
the resignation of President Richard Nixon.
Nixon Resignation
Nixon resigned from office on August 9, 1974, and Gerald Ford became
president.
Slavery in America
Follow the timeline to learn more about the history of slavery in the United
States, including the arrival of the first African slaves to America, the
federal banishment of slave importation, and the abolishment of slavery in
the United States.
1793 Eli Whitney's invention of the cotton gin greatly increases the demand
for slave labor.
1793 A federal fugitive slave law is enacted, providing for the return slaves
who had escaped and crossed state lines.
1850 The continuing debate whether territory gained in the Mexican War
should be open to slavery is decided in the Compromise of 1850: California
is admitted as a Free State, Utah and New Mexico territories are left to be
decided by popular sovereignty, and the slave trade in Washington, DC is
prohibited. It also establishes a much stricter fugitive slave law than the
original, passed in 1793.
1857 The Dred Scott case holds that Congress does not have the right to
ban slavery in states and, furthermore, that slaves are not citizens.
103 1861 The Confederacy is founded when the deep South secedes, and the
Civil War begins.
Role of Malcolm X
Ku-Klux-Klan Movement
SHORT NOTES
Table of Content
1) Introduction: From ancient times to 1492
2) Introduction: Advent of the Europeans to British supremacy (1492-
104
1606)
3) USA as a British Colony (1606-1783).
4) USA as an Independent Country (1783 - 1819)
5) Expansion of USA: From 13 to 50 States (1820 - 1949)
6) Constitution of the USA: Salient Features
7) Civil War between the North and the East (1850 - 1869)
8) Industrialization and its emergence as one of the world powers
(1870 -1916)
9) USA’s role in the Two World Wars (1914 – 1918 & 1939 - 1945)
10) Civil Rights Movement
11) Separation of Powers: Check and Balances
Remaining:
12) Post 1945 world scenario and emergence of USA and USSR as the
Two World Powers.
13) American Role in patronizing UNO and International Organizations
(1945 – 2012)
14) American Role in Cold War and its emergence as the Sole Super
Power (1945 -1990).
15) International Concerns of USA: An Overview.
16) The War on Terror: The Role of Pakistan and USA (2001 - 2012)
17) Global perceptions of the USA.
18) Progressive Era: Reforms of Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow
Wilson,
19) The Great Depression and the New Deal
20) United States’ role in International Conflicts
21) US Presidential Election
22) The US Congress: Role and Functions
105
Assalam-e-Alaikum!
Topic 2
109 Introduction: Advent of the Europeans to British supremacy
(1492-1606)
1) Introduction
2) Timeline
i. 1492: Christopher Columbus sails across the Atlantic Ocean and
reaches an island in the Bahamas in the Carribean sea
ii. 1496: 2nd Voyage of Columbus
iii. 1498: 3rd Voyage; John Cobalt sailed the Eastern shore near
present day Worcester Country
iv. 1502: Columbus’s 4th voyage
v. 1506: Death of Columbus
vi. 1507: “America” is first used on Italian Amerigo Vespucci
vii. 1513: Juan Ponce De Leon explores Florida coast
viii. 1524: Giovanni de Verrazano explores the coast from
Carolina North to Nova Scotia, enters new York Harbour
ix. 1540: Francisco Vasquezde Coronado explores south west
x. 1541: Hernando de Soto of Spain discovers Mississipi River
xi. 1565: St Augustine, Florida, the first town established by
Europeans in America is founded by Spanish and later burned by
English in 1586
xii. 1585: First English settlement established at RANOKE
ISLAND, NORTH CAROLINA
xiii. 1588: In Europe, the defeat of Spanish Armada by English
results in Great Britain replacing Spain as dominant world power
and leads to gradual decline of Spanish influence in the New
World and widening of English imperial interests.
xiv. 1600: Nations interest in Americe
xv. 1606: King James I granted charter to Virginia company to
establish colony
3) Early America
i. First Americans crossed the land bridge from Asia
ii. They Lived in (now) Alaska for 1000 years
iii. They moved south in today’s mainland U.S.
iv. Lived by the Pacific Ocean in the Northwest, in mountains and
deserts of South west and along Mississipi River
v. Early Groups called; Adenans, Hopewillians, Anasazi and
Hohokam.
vi. After Marco Polo came back with stories of China and its riches,
110 Europeans began to explore. First, they set up settlements in
Africa, near the coast, where they used African slaves to work on
plantations.
vii. In 1498, Vasco da Gama reached India, opening a sea route
to the Far East.
viii. Complications and dangers of this eastern sea route
influenced Christopher Columbus to sail west. In doing so, he
inadvertently discovered the Americas, though he never knew it.
ix. The Portuguese were first to settle in America, but the Spanish
later became the dominant nation in the Americas. Spanish
Conquistadores swept through Latin and South America,
destroying the Aztecs and the Incas. Meanwhile, Magellan’s crew
sailed around the world in 1519, becoming the first voyage to do
so. As the chapter ended, Spain was very much in control of
much of the Americas, though other countries were beginning to
challenge the Spanish dominance.
4) Important People
i. Cristopher Columbus
i. Most Famous explorer
ii. Was an Italian, but Queen Isabella of Spain paid for his trips
iii. Landed in 1492 in Bahamas island near Carribean Sea
iv. Believed that sailing West across Atlantic Ocean was
shortest route to asia
v. Ignorant of the Fact that western Hemisphere lay between
Europe and Asia and assuming circumference a third less
than actual
vi. Convinced that Japan would appear on horizon just 3000
miles to west
ii. Native Americans; red Indians, Mayas, Aztecs, and Incas
iii. John Cabot
i. Explorer sailing for England, landed in Eastern Canada in
1497
ii. Arrival established a British claim to land in North America
5) Spanish Dominance in 1500’s
i. Spain explored and claimed more land in America than any other
country
ii. In 1513, Juan Ponce de Leon landed in Florida
111 iii. A Florentine who sailed for the French, Verrazano made landfall
in North Carolina in 1524, then sailed north along the Atlantic
coast past what is now New York harbor.
iv. Hernando De Soto landed in Florida and explored the way to
Mississipi river in 1541
v. Spain conquered Mexico in 1522.
vi. Established by Spain in mid 1500’s at St Augustine in Florida;
Within 40 years, Spanish adventurers had carved out a huge
empire in Central and South America.
6) England’s Imperial Stirrings
i. North America
i. North America in 1600 was largely unclaimed, though the
Spanish had much control in Central and South America.
ii. Spain had only set up Santa Fe, while France had founded
Quebec and Britain had founded Jamestown.
iii. In the 1500s, Britain didn’t really colonize because of
internal conflicts.
1. King Henry VIII broke with the Roman Catholic
Church in the 1530s and launched the English
Protestant Reformation.
2. After Elizabeth I became queen, Britain became
basically Protestant, and a rivalry with Catholic Spain
intensified.
3. In Ireland, the Catholics sought Spain’s help in
revolting against England, but the English crushed the
uprising with brutal atrocity, and developed an
attitude of sneering contempt for natives.
7) Elizabeth Energizes England
i. Colonization
i. After Britain basically defeated Spain (i.e. Spanish Armada
defeat), British swarmed to America and took over lead in
colonization and power.
1. Sparked new literature, like Shakespeare
ii. After Drake circumnavigated the globe, Liz I knighted him
on his ship.
iii. However, English tries at colonization in the New World
failed often and embarrassingly.
iv. Britain and Spain finally signed a peace treaty in 1604.
8) England on the Eve of the Empire
i. Reasons for Emigration
i. In the 1500s, Britain’s population was mushrooming.
112 ii. Farmers were enclosing land for farming.
iii. Puritanism took a strong root in the woolen districts of
western and eastern England.
iv. Younger sons of rich folk (who couldn’t inherit money) tried
their luck with fortunes elsewhere, like America.
v. By the 1600s, the joint-stock company was perfected, being a
forerunner to today’s corporations.
9) England Plants the Jamestown Seedling; First European Settlement
i. Jamestown
i. In 1606, the Virginia Company received a charter from King
James I to make a settlement in the New World.
ii. However, story of colonization started from settlement
farther North along the Atlantic Coast in Virginia,
Massachusetts, NY and 10 other areas due to the growing
tide of immigrants from Europe.
10) Conclusion
113
Topic 3
USA as a British Colony
(1606-1783)
1) Introduction
2) England Plants the Jamestown Seedling
a. Jamestown
i. In 1606, the Virginia Company received a charter from King
James I to make a settlement in the New World.
b. The charter of the Virginia Company guaranteed settlers the same
rights as Englishmen in Britain.
1. On May 24, 1607, about 100 English settlers disembarked
from their ship and founded Jamestown.
a. Forty colonists perished during the voyage.
b. In mosquito-ridden Virginia, disease was rampant. It
didn’t help that a supply ship shipwrecked in the
Bahamas in 1609 either.
2. Luckily, in 1608, a Captain John Smith took over control
and whipped the colonists into discipline.
a. He had been kidnapped by local Indians and forced
into a mock execution by the chief Powhatan and had
been “saved” by Pocahantas.
b. The act was meant to show that Powhatan wanted
peaceful relations with the colonists.
3. Still, the colonists were reduced to eating cats, dogs, rats,
even other people.
4. Finally, in 1610, a relief party headed by Lord De La Warr
arrived to alleviate the suffering.
5. By 1625, out of an original overall total of 8000 would-be
settlers, only 1200 had survived.
3) Cultural Clash in the Chesapeake
B. The Indian’s Begin to Lose Power
1. At first, Powhatan possibly considered the new colonists
potential allies and tried to be friendly with them, but as
time passed and colonists raided Indian food supplies,
relations deteriorated and eventually, war occurred.
2. The First Anglo-Powhatan War ended in 1614 with a
peace settlement sealed by the marriage of Pocahontas to
colonist John Rolfe.
3. Eight years later, in 1622, the Indians struck again with a
114 series of attacks that left 347 settlers, including John Rolfe,
dead.
4. The Second Anglo-Powhatan War began in 1644, ended in
1646, and effectively banished the Chesapeake Indians
from their ancestral lands.
5. After the settlers began to grow their own food, the Indians
were useless, and were therefore banished.
4) Virginia: Child of Tobacco
C. Tobacco Info
1. Tobacco created a greed for land, since it heavily depleted
soil and ruined the land.
2. King James I detested tobacco.
3. Representative self-government was born in Virginia, when
in 1619, settlers created the House of Burgesses.
4. Slavery in the Americas was also born in 1619.
5) Maryland: Catholic Heaven
D. Religious Diversity
1. Founded in 1634 by Lord Baltimore, Maryland was the
second plantation colony and the fourth overall colony to
be formed.
2. It was a place for persecuted Catholics to find refuge.
3. However, Maryland prospered with tobacco.
4. It had a lot of indentured servants. Black slavery became
popular
6) The West Indies: Way Station to Mainland America
E. Their Use
1. As the British were colonizing Virginia, they were also
settling in the West Indies (Spain’s declining power opened
the door).
2. By mid-1600s, England had secured claim to several West
Indies islands, including Jamaica in 1655.
7) Colonizing the Carolinas
F. Restoration Period
1. In England, King Charles I had been beheaded. Oliver
Cromwell had ruled for ten years before tired Englishmen
restored Charles II to the throne.
2. The bloody period had interrupted colonization.
3. Carolina was named after Charles II, and was formally
created in 1670.
4. Carolina flourished by developing close economic ties with
the West Indies.
5. Many original Carolina settlers had come from Barbados.
6. Despite violence with Spanish and Indians, Carolina
115 proved to be too strong to be wiped out.
8) The Emergence of North Carolina
G. Conflict
1. Many newcomers to Carolina were “squatters,” people
who owned no land.
2. North Carolinians developed a strong resistant to
authority, due to geographic isolation from neighbors.
3. In 1712, North and South Carolina were officially
separated.
9) Late-Coming Georgia: The Buffer Colony
H. Georgia’s Purpose
1. Georgia was intended to be a buffer between the British
colonies and the hostile Spanish settlements in Florida and
the enemy French in Louisiana.
2. Founded in 1733 by a high-minded group of
philanthropists, it was the last colony founded.
3. Named after King George II of England, Georgia was also
meant to be a haven for wretched souls in debt.
4. James Oglethorpe, the ablest of the founders and a
dynamic soldier-statesman, repelled Spanish attacks.
5. All Christians except Catholics enjoyed religious
toleration, and many missionaries came to try to convert
the Indians.
a. John Wesley was one of them, and he later returned to
England and founded Methodism.
6. Georgia grew very slowly.
10) The Plantion Colonies
I. Comparisons and Contrasts
1. Slavery was found in all the plantation colonies.
2. Growth of cities was often stunted by forests.
3. Establishment of schools and churches was difficult.
4. In the South, the crops were tobacco and rice.
5. All the plantation colonies permitted some religious
toleration.
6. Confrontations with Native Americans was often.
11) France Finds a Foothold in Canada
a. Like England and Holland, France was a latecomer in the colony
race.
i. It was convulsed in the 1500s by foreign wars and domestic
strife.
ii. In 1598, the Edict of Nantes was issued, allowing limited
116 toleration to the French Huguenots.
b. When King Louis XIV became king, he took an interest in
overseas colonies.
c. In 1608, France established Quebec, overlooking the St. Lawrence
River.
d. Samuel de Champlain, an intrepid soldier and explorer, became
known as the “Father of New France.” He entered into friendly
relations with the neighboring Huron Indians and helped them
defeated the Iroquois.
e. Unlike English colonists, French colonists didn’t immigrate to
North America by hordes. The peasants were too poor, and the
Huguenots weren’t allowed to leave.
12) New France Fans Out
a. New France’s (Canada) one valuable resource was the beaver.
b. French Catholic missionaries zealously tried to convert Indians.
c. To thwart English settlers from pushing into the Ohio Valley,
Antoine Cadillac founded Detroit (“city of straits”) in 1701.
d. Louisiana was founded, in 1682, by Robert de La Salle, to thwart
Spanish expansion into the area near the Gulf of Mexico.
e. The fertile Illinois country, where the French established forts and
trading posts at Kaskaskia, Cahokia, and Vincennes, became the
garden of France’s North American empire.
13) The Clash of Empires
a. King William’s War and Queen Anne’s War (two different fights)
i. The English colonists fought the French coureurs de bois and
their Indian allies.
ii. Neither side considered America important enough to waste
real troops on.
iii. The peace deal in Utrecht in 1713 gave Acadia (renamed
Nova Scotia), Newfoundland, and Hudson Bay to England,
pinching the French settlements by the St. Lawrence. It also
gave Britain limited trading rights with Spanish America.
b. The War of Jenkin’s Ear
i. An English Captain named Jenkin’s had his ear cut off by a
Spanish commander, who had sneered at him to go home
crying (essentially).
ii. This war was confined to the Caribbean Sea and Georgia.
iii. This war soon merged with the War of Austrian Succession
and came to be called King George’s War in America.
iv. France allied itself with Spain, but England’s troops
captured the reputed impregnable fortress of Cap Breton
Island.
v. However, peace terms of this war gave Louisbourg, which
117 the New Englanders had captured, back to France,
outraging the colonists, which feared it.
c. George Washington Inaugurates War with France
i. The Ohio Valley became a battleground among the Spanish,
British, and French.
ii. It was lush and very good land.
iii. In 1754, the governor of Virginia sent 21 year-old George
Washington to the Ohio country as a lieutenant colonel in
command of about 150 Virginia minutemen.
iv. He was permitted to march his men away with the full
honors of war.
14) Global War and Colonial Disunity
a. The fourth of these wars between empires started in America,
unlike the first three.
b. The French and Indian War (aka Seven Years’ War) began with
Washington’s battle with the French.
c. It was England and Prussia vs. France, Spain, Austria, and Russia.
d. In previous wars, the Americans were not unified, but now they
were.
e. In 1754, an intercolonial congress was held in Albany, New York.
f. Franklin helped unite the colonists in Albany, but the Albany plan
failed because it compromised too much.
g. The 1759 Battle of Quebec ranks as one of the most significant
engagements in British and American history, and when Montreal
fell in 1760, that was the last time French flags would fly on
American soil.
h. In the peace treaty at Paris in 1763, Britain got all of Canada, but
the French were allowed to retain several small but valuable sugar
islands in the West Indies and two never-to-be-fortified islets in the
Gulf of St. Lawrence for fishing stations.
i. France’s final blow came when they gave Louisiana to Spain to
compensate for Spain’s losses in the war.
j. Great Britain took its place as the leading naval power in the
world, and a great power in North America.
15) Restless Colonials
a. The colonists, having experienced war firsthand and come out
victors, were very confident. However, the myth of British
invincibility had been shattered.
b. Ominously, friction developed between the British officers and the
colonial “boors.”
c. During the French and Indian War, though, Americans from
different parts of the colonies found, surprisingly to them, that they
had a lot in common (language, ideals), and barriers of disunity
118 began to melt.
16) Americans: A People of Destiny
a. Now that the French had been beaten, the colonists could now
roam freely, and were less dependent upon Great Britain.
b. The French consoled themselves with the thought that if they
could lose such a great empire, maybe the British would one day
lose theirs too.
c. Spain was eliminated from Florida, and the Indians could no
longer play the European powers against each other, since it was
only Great Britain in control now.
d. Now, land-hungry Americans could now settle west of the
Appalachians, but in 1763, Parliament issued its Proclamation of
1763, prohibiting any settlement in the area beyond the
Appalachians.
e. In 1765, an estimated on thousand wagons rolled through the
town of Salisbury, North Carolina, on their way “up west” in
defiance of the Proclamation.
f. The British, proud and haughty, were in no way to accept this
blatant disobedience by the lowly Americans, and the stage was set
for the Revolutionary War.
g. In 1700, there were about 250,000 European and African settlers
in North America’s thirteen English colonies. By 1775, on the eve
of revolution, there were nearly 2.5 million. These colonists did
not have much in common, but they were able to band together
and fight for their independence.
17) Causes of Colonization
a. Improvement in Technology
b. Renaissance in Europe
c. Religious Conflicts in Europe
d. Expanding trade
e. Search for New Routes
f. Pressure of population
g. Trade and Agriculture
h. Desire for wealth
i. Imperial Rac; Imperialistic Designs and Aims
j. Royal Proclamation; Treaty of Westphalia was signed in 1648,
between Spain and Dutch republic by which each state would have
the right to determine the religion of his own state and also
colonial claims were adjusted.
18) Conclusion
119
Topic 4
USA as an Independent Country (1783 - 1819)
1) Introduction
I. As a result of the Treaty of Paris of 1783, the new nation
controlled all of North America from the Atlantic Ocean to the
Mississippi River between Canada and Florida. Canada, to the
north, remained British territory. Great Britain returned Florida to
Spain, and Spain continued to control the area west of the
Mississippi River.
II. The original 13 colonies made up the first 13 states of the United
States. Eventually, the American land west of the Appalachian
Mountains was divided into territories.
III. At the end of the American Revolution, the new nation was still a
loose confederation of states. But in 1787, American leaders got
together and wrote the Constitution of the United States. The
Constitution became the country's basic law and welded it together
into a solid political unit. The men who wrote it included some of
the most famous and important figures in American history.
Among them were George Washington and James Madison of
Virginia, Alexander Hamilton of New York, and Benjamin
Franklin of Pennsylvania. The authors of the Constitution, along
with other early leaders such as Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, won
lasting fame as the Founding Fathers of the United States.
IV. At the start of its history, the United States faced severe financial
problems. But before long, the skill of its leaders and the spirit and
hard work of its people put the country on a sound economic
footing. Early America also faced threats from powerful European
120 nations. ut masterful diplomacy by Washington and other leaders
guided the country through its early years in peace. The peace
ended with the War of 1812, in which the United States and Great
Britain fought again. After the war, America focused its attention
on its development, and entered a period of bustling economic
growth.
2) Establishing a government: The American people began setting up a
new system of government as soon as they declared their independence.
Each of the new states had its own constitution before the American
Revolution ended. The state constitutions gave the people certain
liberties, usually including freedom of speech, religion, and the press. In
1781, the states set up a federal government under laws called the
Articles of Confederation.
3) Background to the Constitution.
I. The Articles of Confederation gave the federal government the
power to declare war and manage foreign affairs. But the Articles
did not allow the government to collect taxes, regulate trade, or
otherwise direct the activities of the states.
II. Under the Articles, each state worked independently for its own
ends. Yet the new nation faced problems that demanded a strong
federal government. The United States had piled up a huge
national debt during the American Revolution. But since the
federal government could not collect taxes, it was unable to pay
the debt and put the country on a sound economic footing. The
government even lacked the means for raising money to provide
for national defence. The federal government had no power to
regulate the nation's trade. In addition, some states issued their
own paper money, causing sharp changes in the value of currency
and economic chaos.
4) Creating the Constitution.
I. In 1787, delegates from every state except Rhode Island met in
Philadelphia to consider revisions to the Articles of Confederation.
The delegates agreed to write an entirely new Constitution.
II. The delegates debated long and hard over the contents of the
Constitution. Some of them wanted a document that gave much
power to the federal government. Others wanted to protect the
121 rights of the states and called for a weak central government.
Delegates from large states claimed their states should have greater
representation in Congress than the small states. But small-state
delegates demanded equal representation in Congress.
III. The delegates finally reached agreement on a new Constitution on
Sept. 17, 1787. The document they produced has often been called
a work of political genius. The authors worked out a system of
government that satisfied the opposing views of the people of the
1780's. At the same time, they created a system of government
flexible enough to continue in its basic form to the present day.
IV. The Constitution provided for a two-house legislature--a House of
Representatives and a Senate. Representation in the House was
based on population in order to satisfy the large states. All states
received equal representation in the Senate, which pleased the
small states. The Constitution gave many powers to the federal
government, including the rights to collect taxes and regulate
trade. But the document also reserved certain powers for the states.
The Constitution provided for three branches of government: the
executive, headed by a president; the legislature, made up of the
two houses of Congress; and the judiciary, or federal court system.
The creators of the Constitution provided for a system of checks
and balances among the three branches of government. Each
branch received powers and duties that ensured that the other
branches would not have too much power.
5) Adopting the Constitution: Before the Constitution became law, it
needed ratification (approval) by nine states. Some Americans still
opposed the Constitution, and fierce debate over ratification broke out.
Finally, on June 21, 1788, New Hampshire became the ninth state to
ratify.
6) The Bill of Rights: Much opposition to the new Constitution stemmed
from the fact that it did not specifically guarantee enough individual
rights. In response, 10 amendments known as the Bill of Rights were
added to the document. The Bill of Rights became law on Dec. 15, 1791.
Among other things, it guaranteed freedom of speech, religion, the press,
and the rights to trial by jury and peaceful assembly.
7) Setting up the government: The Constitution provided that the
president be elected by an Electoral College, a group of people chosen by
122 the states. In 1789, the Electoral College unani-mously chose
Washington to serve as the first president. It reelected him unanimously
in 1792. The government went into operation in 1789, with its
temporary capital in New York City. The capital was moved to
Philadelphia in 1790, and to Washington, D.C., in 1800.
8) Early problems and politics: Solving financial problems.
I. Americans were divided over how to deal with the financial
problems that plagued the new government. One group, led by
Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, wanted the federal
government to take vigorous action. Another group, headed by
Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, opposed government
participation in economic affairs.
II. Hamilton proposed that the federal government increase tariffs
and tax certain products made in the United States. The
government would use the tax money to pay both its debts and the
debts of the states. Hamilton also proposed a government-
supported national bank to control government finances.
III. Jefferson and his followers, who included many Southerners,
finally agreed to support some of Hamilton's financial proposals.
In return, Hamilton agreed to support a shift of the national capital
to the South. Congress approved Hamilton's financial plan and
agreed to locate the capital in the South. As a result of this
compromise, the capital moved to Washington, D.C., in 1800.
Jefferson continued to oppose the national bank proposal. But in
1791, Congress chartered a national bank for 20 years.
9) Early problems and politics: Foreign affairs.
I. The new government also faced problems in foreign affairs. In
1793, France went to war against Britain and Spain. France had
helped the Americans in the American Revolution, and it now
expected U.S. assistance in its war. Americans disagreed over
which side to support. Jefferson and his followers wanted the
United States to back France, while Hamilton and his group
favoured the British.
II. President Washington insisted that the United States remain
neutral in the European war. He rejected French demands for
support, and also sent diplomats to Britain and Spain to clear up
problems with those countries. Chief Justice John Jay, acting for
123 Washington, negotiated the Jay Treaty with Britain in 1794. The
treaty's many provisions included a trade agreement with Britain
which--in effect--ended American trade with France. It also
included a British promise to remove troops still stationed on U.S.
territory. In 1795, Thomas Pinckney negotiated the Pinckney
Treaty, or Treaty of San Lorenzo, with Spain. This treaty settled a
dispute over the Florida border between the United States and
Spain and also gave the United States free use of the Mississippi
River.
III. In 1796, Washington--annoyed by the disputes within his
Administration--refused to seek a third term as president. John
Adams succeeded him in 1797. At about that time, French
warships began attacking American merchant vessels. Adams, like
Washington, hoped to use diplomacy to solve foreign problems.
He sent diplomats to France to try to end the attacks. But three
agents of the French government insulted the diplomats with
dishonourable proposals, including a demand for a bribe. The
identity of the agents was not revealed. They were simply called X,
Y, and Z, and the incident became known as the XYZ Affair.
IV. The XYZ Affair created a furore in the United States. Hamilton
and his followers demanded war against France. But Adams was
determined to keep the peace. In 1799, he again sent diplomats to
France. This time, the United States and France reached a
peaceful settlement.
10) Establishing political parties: Washington and many other early
American leaders opposed political parties. But in the 1790's, the
disputes over government policies led to the establishment of two
political parties in the United States. Hamilton and his followers, chiefly
Northerners, formed the Federalist Party. The party favoured a strong
federal government and generally backed Great Britain in international
disputes. Jefferson and his followers, chiefly Southerners, established the
Democratic-Republican Party. The party wanted a weak central
government and generally sided with France in foreign disputes.
11) The Alien and Sedition Acts.
I. The XYZ Affair had a major impact on American internal policies
and politics. After the affair, the Federalist Party denounced the
Democratic-Republicans for their support of France. The
124 Federalists had a majority in Congress. They set out to silence
their critics, who included Democratic-Republicans and foreigners
living in the United States. In 1798, the Federalist Congress and
President Adams--also a Federalist--approved the Alien and
Sedition Acts. These laws made it a crime for anyone to criticize
the president or Congress, and subjected foreigners to unequal
treatment.
II. A nationwide outcry against these attacks on freedom followed.
The most offensive parts of the Acts soon expired or were
repealed. However, the Alien and Sedition Acts gave the
Federalists the reputation as a party of oppression.
12) Jeffersonian democracy
I. Public reaction to the Alien and Sedition Acts helped Thomas
Jefferson win election as president in 1800 and again in 1804.
Jefferson's political philosophy became known as Jeffersonian
democracy. Jefferson envisioned the United States as a nation of
small farmers. In Jefferson's ideal society, the people would lead
simple, but productive, lives and be able to direct their own affairs.
Therefore, the need for government would decline. Jefferson took
steps to reduce government expenses and the national debt. But in
spite of his beliefs and practices, Jefferson found that as president
he could not avoid actions that expanded the role of government.
II. The Louisiana Purchase, the first major action of Jefferson's
presidency, almost doubled the size of the United States. In 1801,
Jefferson learned that France had taken over from Spain a large
area between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains
called Louisiana. Spain was a weak nation, and did not pose a
threat to the United States. But France--then ruled by Napoleon
Bonaparte--was powerful and aggressive. Jefferson viewed French
control of Louisiana as a danger to the United States.
III. In 1803, Jefferson arranged the purchase of the area from France.
The Louisiana Purchase added 2,144,476 square kilometres of
territory to the United States.
13) Jefferson and foreign policy.
I. In 1803, Great Britain and France went to war again, and both
nations began seizing American merchant ships. The British also
impressed American seamen, seizing them and forcing them into
125 British service.
II. Jefferson again found it necessary to use government powers, this
time to protect American shipping. At his request, Congress
passed trade laws designed to stop the British and French
interfering with American trade. But the warring nations
continued to interfere.
14) The War of 1812
I. James Madison succeeded Jefferson as president in 1809. France
soon promised to end its interference with American shipping, but
Britain did not. Also, people believed the British were encouraging
Indians to attack American pioneers moving westward. For these
reasons, many Americans demanded war against Britain. They
were led by members of Congress from the West and South called
War Hawks. Other Americans, especially New Englanders,
opposed the War Hawks' demand. But on June 18, 1812, at
Madison's request, Congress declared war on Britain and the War
of 1812 had begun.
II. Neither side gained much advantage early in the war. But on Aug.
24, 1814, British troops captured Washington, D.C., and burned
the Capitol and other government buildings. This British action
made Americans realize their nation's survival was at stake. Large
numbers of American volunteers rushed into service, and helped
stop the British offensive. The Treaty of Ghent of Dec. 24, 1814,
officially ended the War of 1812. Neither side won the war and
little was gained from the struggle.
15) Growing nationalism: A strong spirit of nationalism swept
through the United States following the War of 1812. The war itself gave
rise to increased feelings of self-confidence and unity. The peace that
followed enabled the nation to concentrate on its own affairs. The
bitterness that had marked political disputes eased with the breakup of
the Federalist Party. Meanwhile, the nation expanded westward, new
states entered the union, and the economy prospered. Historians
sometimes call the period from about 1815 to the early 1820's The Era of
Good Feeling because of its relative peace, unity, and optimism.
16) Nationalism and the economy.
I. After the War of 1812, nationalist politicians proposed economic
measures that came to be called the American System. They said
126 the government should raise tariffs to protect American
manufacturers and farmers from foreign competition. Industry
would then grow and employ more people. More employment
would lead to greater consumption of farm products, and so
farmers would prosper and buy more manufactured goods. In
addition, tariff revenues would enable the government to make
needed internal improvements.
II. The government soon put ideas of the American System into
practice. In 1816, Congress enacted a high tariff, and it chartered
the second Bank of the United States, to give the government more
control over the economy. The government also increased its
funding of internal projects, the most important of which was the
National Road. Begun in 1811, the road stretched from
Cumberland, Maryland, to Vandalia, Illinois, when completed. It
became an important route for the shipment of goods and the
movement of settlers westward.
17) A national culture. Many early Americans had tried to model
their culture on European civilization. Architects, painters, and writers
tended to imitate European models. But in the late 1700's and early
1800's, art and culture more and more reflected American experiences.
Architects designed simple, but beautiful, houses that blended into their
surroundings. Craftworkers built sturdy furniture that was suited to
frontier life, yet so simply elegant as to be considered works of art. The
nation's literature flourished when it began reflecting American
experiences. Political writings such as the works of Thomas Paine had
high literary merit. The works of Washington Irving, one of the leading
early authors, helped gain respect for American literature.
18) Decline of the Federalists. In 1814 and 1815, New England
Federalists held a secret political meeting in Hartford, Connecticut.
Their opponents charged that they had discussed the secession
(withdrawal) of the New England States from the Union. The Federalists
never recovered from the charge, and the party broke up in about 1816.
James Monroe, the Democratic-Republican presidential candidate in the
election of 1820, was unopposed.
19) New territory. The United States gained two new pieces of
territory between 1815 and 1820. In 1818, a treaty with Britain gave the
country the Red River Basin, north of the Louisiana Territory. Spain
127 ceded Florida to the United States in 1819.
20) "A fire bell in the night." The Era of Good Feeling did not mean
an end to all the country's disputes. The issue of slavery was causing
deep divisions among the people. Many Northerners were demanding an
end to slavery, while Southerners were defending it more and more.
Jefferson, then retired, accurately viewed the growing dispute as a
warning of approaching disaster, "like a fire bell in the night."
Topic 5
Expansion of USA: From 13 to 50 States (1820 - 1949)
1) Introduction
i. Between 1821 and 1859, the following States became part of the
Union: Missouri (1821), Arkansas (1836), Michigan (1837), Texas
(1845), Florida (1845), Iowa (1846), Wisconsin (1848), California
(1850), Minnesota (1858) and Oregon (1859). Kansas (1861),
Nevada (1864), Nebraska (1867), Colorado (1876), Dakota
Territory was split in two (1889),; Montana Territory (1889),
Washington (1889), Idaho (1890), Wyoming (1890), Utah(1896),
Oklahoma (1907), New Mexico (1912), Arizona (1912), Alaska
(1959)
2) Fate of Indian Territories
i. In the 1820s, the USA government began moving what it called
the "Five Civilized Tribes" of South East America (Cherokee,
Creek, Seminole, Choctaw, and Chickasaw) to lands west of the
Mississippi River.
ii. The 1830 Indian Removal Act gave the President authority to
designate specific lands for the Indians (native Americans).
iii. The 1834 Indian Intercourse Act called the lands Indian
Territory and specified where they were: all of present-day
Oklahoma North and East of the Red River, as well as Kansas and
Nebraska.
iv. But, in 1854 the territory was cut down when Kansas and
128 Nebraska territories were created. White settlers continued to
invade the West and half the remaining Indian Territory (West
Oklahoma) was opened to whites in 1889.
v. In 1907 Oklahoma became a state of the USA, and Indian
Territory was no more.
3) Timeline
i. August 10, 1821; The southeastern corner of Missouri Territory
was admitted to the US as the 24th state, Missouri. The remainder
became unorganized. Missouri did not include its northwestern
triangle at this point, that being added later in the Platte Purchase
ii. October 4, 1824; The 1824 Constitution of Mexico was enacted,
creating the United Mexican States and replacing the Mexican
Empire, which had collapsed on March 19, 1823.
iii. November 15, 1824; Arkansas Territory was shrunk, the western
portion becoming unorganized
iv. June 30, 1834: A large portion of unorganized land was added to
Michigan Territory, corresponding to present-day Iowa, western
Minnesota, and eastern North Dakota and South Dakota.
v. June 15, 1836: Arkansas Territory was admitted to the US as the
25th state, Arkansas. It continued to claim Miller County, with
increasing irrelevance.
vi. March 2, 1836: The Treaties of Velasco signified the end of the
Texas Revolution on May 14, 1836, creating the Republic of
Texas.
vii. July 4, 1836: Wisconsin Territory was split off from Michigan
Territory, consisting of present-day Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa,
and eastern North and South Dakota.
viii. January 26, 1837: Michigan Territory was admitted to the US as
the 26th state, Michigan
ix. March 3, 1845: Florida Territory was admitted to the US as the
27th state, Florida.
x. December 29, 1845: The Republic of Texas was admitted to the
US as the 28th state, Texas.
xi. December 28, 1846: The southeast portion of Iowa Territory was
admitted to the US as the 29th state, Iowa. The remainder became
unorganized.
xii. May 29, 1848: The southeastern portion of Wisconsin Territory
was admitted to the US as the 30th state, Wisconsin. The
remainder became unorganized.
xiii. March 2, 1853: Washington Territory was split from Oregon
Territory, consisting of present-day Washington, northern Idaho,
and the western tip of Montana, leaving Oregon Territory with all
129 of Oregon, southern Idaho and a portion of Wyoming.
xiv. May 11, 1858: The eastern portion of Minnesota Territory was
admitted to the US as the 32nd state, Minnesota.
xv. February 14, 1859: The western portion of Oregon Territory was
admitted to the US as the 33rd state, Oregon.
xvi. January 29, 1861: The eastern portion of Kansas Territory was
admitted as the 34th state, Kansas.
xvii. March 4, 1861: The Confederate States of America (CSA) was
formed. The Southern states seceded at different dates and joined
the CSA at different dates; Its claim to be a separate country was
later denied by its surrender at the end of the Civil War.
xviii. March 4, 1863: Idaho Territory was created from portions of
Washington, Dakota, and Nebraska Territories, consisting of
present-day Idaho, Montana, and most of Wyoming.
xix. October 31, 1864: Nevada Territory was admitted to the US as the
36th state, Nevada
xx. March 1, 1867; Nebraska Territory was admitted to the US as the
37th state, Nebraska.
xxi. August 1, 1876: Colorado Territory was admitted to the US as the
38th state, Colorado.
xxii. November 2, 1889; Dakota Territory was split in two, and it was
admitted to the US as the 39th state, North Dakota, and 40th state,
South Dakota.
xxiii. November 8, 1889; Montana Territory was admitted to the US as
the 41st state, Montana.
xxiv. November 11, 1889; Washington Territory was admitted to the
US as the 42nd state, Washington.
xxv. July 3, 1890; Idaho Territory was admitted to the US as the 43rd
state, Idaho.
xxvi. July 10, 1890; Wyoming Territory was admitted to the US as
the 44th state, Wyoming.
xxvii. January 4, 1896: Utah Territory was admitted to the US as the
45th state, Utah.
xxviii. November 16, 1907: Oklahoma Territory and Indian Territory
were combined and admitted to the US as the 46th state,
Oklahoma.
xxix. January 6, 1912: New Mexico Territory was admitted to the US as
the 47th state, New Mexico.
xxx. February 14, 1912: Arizona Territory was admitted to the US as
the 48th state, Arizona.
xxxi. 1948: Air Force Island, Prince Charles Island, and Foley Island
130 are discovered and added to Northwest Territories.
xxxii. January 3, 1959: Alaska Territory was admitted to the US as the
49th state, Alaska.
4) Conclusion
Topic 6
Constitution of the USA: Salient Features
1) Introduction
i. “A Constitution consists of those fundamental rules which
determine & distribute functions & powers among the various
organs of the Government’’
ii. Adopted at Philadelphia convention held in 1787; Came into force
in 1789; Originally 7 articles, but 26 amendments so far
iii. Classic example of rigidity; Theory of separation of powers
combined with remarkable system of checks and balance
iv. Lord Bryce remarked; “yet after all deductions, it ranks above
every other written constitution for the intrinsic excellence of its
scheme, its adaptation to the circumstances of the people, its
simplicity and precision of language, its judicious mixture of
definiteness in principles with elasticity in details.”
2) Salient Features
i. Bill of Rights: Constitution guarantees fundamental rights of
131 person, property and liberty, Incorporated in the first ten
amendments. Rights of citizens are enforceable by the recourse of
judiciary, these rights cannot be modified or suspended except by a
constitutional amendment. Part and Parcel of constitution;
i. Freedom of Speech
ii. Freedom of Worship
iii. Habeas Corpus
iv. No unreasonable search
v. No unreasonable seizure
ii. Checks and Balances: One of the most powerful weapons in the
US constitution which makes it one of the most important written
documents in world is the system of check and balance between
the three tiers of state i.e. executive, legislative and judiciary.
iii. Brief & Simple: The US Constitution hardly consists of 6000 and
is less than 12 pages in length which makes it one of the shortest
and simply written constitutions of the world.
iv. Written Constitution: The US constitution is in the written form
and comprises of 7 articles and 27 amendments had been made
since the constitution was made in 1787.
v. Dual Citizenship: The peoples living in America are authorized
to have dual citizenship according to their constitution. The 1st
citizenship of being an American and the 2nd is of the state which
a citizen belongs to.
vi. Secular State: Since the constitution declares America as a secular
state. Therefore no law can be made which prohibits or dents any
religion in the country.
vii. Supremacy of the Constitution: The US Constitution is the
supreme document as described in the article IV. The constitution
is declared superior over the entire citizens, law making agencies
and the government. No law can be passed contrary to the
constitution.
viii. Strong Federation: Article I, section 789 declares the federal form
of government in America. The stress is laid upon the strong
center and relatively weaker states. Bill Of Rights: Bill of rights
were the 1st ten amendments in the US constitution which defined
the rights of the peoples living in America.
ix. Rigid Constitution: US constitution is a rigid constitution
because it requires a difficult procedure to amend it. Every
132 amendment, which can be moved in two different ways, must be
ratified by three-fourths of the states. consequently, stood the
rigors of industrial of industrial revolution and democratic
upsurge, the turmoil of civil and global wars and economic crises
of thirties.
x. Separation of Powers: The constitution is based on the doctrine
of separation of powers. According to the constitution the national
powers are divided into three departments i.e. executive,
legislature and judiciary.
xi. Bicameralism: American parliament is known as Congress. It
consists of two chambers. Upper house is the Senate and lower
house is the House of Representatives.
xii. Independent Judiciary: The president of USA appoints the
judges but he has no power to remove them. It is only the
legislature according to Article 1 Section 6, which can impeach the
judge of Supreme Court.
xiii. Universal Suffrage: The Constitution has given right to vote to
every citizen who is 18 years old without any distinction of male
or female. Division of Powers: As the Federal Government
requires a double set of Government. That of center and those of
states there must be a division of powers between the two parts.
All those powers which are not stated in the constitution are to be
exercised by the states.
xiv. Spoils System: This system was introduced by President Andrew
Jackson. According to this system the new president appoints all
important official of the government sacking the previous
administration. This system is known as the ―Spoilt System‖
because the jobs are distributed among the party men regardless of
their merit, experience and talent.
xv. Presidential form of government: The Constitution establishes a
presidential form of government. The constitution vests all
executive powers to the president .The president is the head of the
state as well as the government.
xvi. Republicanism: There would be Republicanism in the political
structure of the US. Laws made by the legislature shall be supreme
as it represents the will of the people. The people who made those
laws are elected by the people themselves. Sovereignty of the
People: The preamble of the US Constitution emphasizes the
theory of popular sovereignty i.e. the ultimate authority has been
vested in the people of the USA.
133 xvii. Popular Sovereignty: “We the people of U.S.”, ultimate
sovereignty is thus attributed to people
xviii. Dual Citizenship: An American is the citizen of U.S and also of
the State, where he is domiciled
3) Amendments in American Constitution
i. 1st Ten Bill of Rights
ii. 11th Immunity of states from suits from out-of-state citizens and
foreigners not living within the state borders. Lays the foundation
for sovereign immunity
iii. 12th Revises presidential election procedures
iv. 13th Abolishes slavery and involuntary servitude, except as
punishment for a crime 14th Defines citizenship, contains the
Privileges or Immunities Clause, the Due Process Clause, the
Equal Protection Clause, and deals with post-Civil War issues
v. 15th Prohibits the denial of suffrage based on race, color, or
previous condition of servitude
vi. 16th Allows the federal government to collect income tax
vii. 17th Establishes the direct election of United States Senators by
popular vote
viii. 18th Establishes Prohibition of alcohol (Repealed by Twenty-first
Amendment)
ix. 19th Establishes women's suffrage
x. 20th Fixes the dates of term commencements for Congress
(January 3) and the President (January 20); known as the "lame
duck amendment"
xi. 21st Repeals the Eighteenth Amendment
xii. 22nd Limits the president to two terms, or a maximum of 10 years
(i.e., if a Vice President serves not more than one half of a
President's term, he or she can be elected to a further two terms)
xiii. 23rd Provides for representation of Washington, D.C. in the
Electoral College
xiv. 24th Prohibits the revocation of voting rights due to the non-
payment of poll taxes
xv. 25th Codifies the Tyler Precedent; defines the process of
presidential succession
xvi. 26th Establishes the official voting age to be 18 years old.
xvii. 27th Prevents laws affecting Congressional salary from taking
effect until the beginning of the next session of Congress.
134
Topic 7
Civil War between the North and the East (1850 - 1869)
I. Civil War
i. In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected president of the United
States. He defeated Stephen Douglas because of the greater
northern population. Southerners were angered by the growing
abolitionist movement, and when Lincoln was elected, they feared
that their way of life was in jeopardy. South Carolina seceded on
December 20, 1860. Within the next two weeks, six other southern
states had left the union (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, and Texas). Little did people know that a very bloody
four year war was to come.
II. PEOPLE
i. North(Union), South(Confederacy)
ii. Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis , Robert E Lee , Thomas
"Stonewall" Jackson
135 iii. U.S. Grant: William T Sherman
III. Causes Leading to Civil war
i. Election of Lincoln
ii. Discrimination of race
iii. Slavery
iv. The abolitionist (people who wanted to stop slavery) movement
v. Difference in economy
vi. Western expansion
IV. Consequences of the Civil War
i. Physical Devastation: The American Civil War lasted four years.
Measured in physical devastation and human lives, it was the
costliest war the American people have experienced the war killed
over 620,000 men and at least that many more had been wounded
in a nation of about 35 million.
ii. Spread of Disease and Sickness: North lost a total of about
364,000 soldiers (nearly one of every four soldiers). Also more
than 37,000 black soldiers lost their lives fighting for freedom
during the American Civil War. The conditions of the war were so
bad more men died of disease and sickness than on the battlefield.
iii. Hunger and Homelessness: After the war, over 4 million slaves
were freed. They didn't know what the future had in store for
them. With freedom came hunger and homelessness. Some slaves
stayed on the plantations, but others went north. Either way,
thousands of former slaves were without homes, clothes, food,
jobs, and didn't have any education. The Freedman's Bureau
helped both blacks and whites after the war by providing them
with food and medical care.
V. Effects of the Civil War
i. The Civil War was one of the most tragic wars in American
history. More Americans died then in all other wars combined.
Brother fought against brother and the nation was torn apart. In
the end, we must look at the important consequences of the
conflict. There may be others, but this is a good list to work off.
ii. The nation was reunited and the southern states were not allowed
to secede.
iii. The South was placed under military rule and divided into military
districts. Southern states then had to apply for readmission to the
136 Union.
iv. The Federal government proved itself supreme over the states.
v. Slavery was effectively ended. While slavery was not officially
outlawed until the passage of the 13th amendment, the slaves were
set free upon the end of the war.
vi. Reconstruction, the plan to rebuild America after the war, began.
vii. Industrialism began as a result of the increase in wartime
production and the development of new technologies.
Course of War
I. Introduction Bull Run Ends the “Ninety-Day War”
1. When President Abraham Lincoln called for 75,000 militiamen on
April 15, 1861, he and just about everyone else in the North
expected a swift war lasting about 90 days, with a quick
suppression of the South to prove the North’s superiority and end
this foolishness.
2. On July 21, 1861, ill-trained Yankee recruits swaggered out toward
Bull Run to engage a smaller Confederate unit.
i. The atmosphere was like that of a sporting event, as
Congressmen gathered in picnics.
ii. However, after initial success by the Union, Confederate
reinforcements arrived and, coupled with Stonewall
Jackson’s line holding, sent the Union soldiers into disarray.
3. The Battle of Bull Run showed both sides that this would not be a
short, easy war.
II. “Tardy George” McClellan and the Peninsula Campaign
1. Later in 1861, command of the Army of the Potomac (name of
the Union army) was given to 34 year old General George B.
McClellan, an excellent drillmaster and organizer of troops but
also a perfectionist who constantly believed that he was
outnumbered, never took risks, and held the army without moving
for months before finally ordered by Lincoln to advance.
2. Finally, he decided upon a water-borne approach to Richmond,
called the Peninsula Campaign, taking about a month to capture
Yorktown before coming to the Richmond.
i. At this moment, President Lincoln took McClellan’s
expected reinforcements and sent them chasing Stonewall
Jackson, and after “Jeb” Stuart’s Confederate cavalry rode
completely around McClellan’s army, Southern General
Robert E. Lee launched a devastating counterattack—the
137 Seven Days’ Battles—on June 26 to July 2 of 1862.
ii. The victory at Bull Run ensured that the South, if it lost,
would lose slavery as well, and it was after this battle that
Lincoln began to draft an emancipation proclamation.
3. The Union strategy now turned to total war:
i. Suffocate the South through an oceanic blockade.
ii. Free the slaves to undermine the South’s very economic
foundations.
iii. Cut the Confederacy in half by seizing control of the
Mississippi River.
iv. Chop the Confederacy to pieces by marching through
Georgia and the Carolinas.
v. Capture its capital, Richmond, Virginia.
vi. Try everywhere to engage the enemy’s main strength and
grind it to submission.
III. The War at Sea
1. The Union blockade started leakily at first, but it clamped down
later.
2. Britain, who would ordinarily protest such interference in the seas
that she “owned,” recognized the blockade as binding, since
Britain herself often used blockades in her wars.
3. Blockade-running, or the process of smuggling materials through
the blockade, was a risky but profitable business, but the Union
navy also seized British freighters on the high seas, citing “ultimate
destination” [to the South] as their reasons; the British relented,
since they might have to do the same thing in later wars (as they
did in World War I).
4. The biggest Confederate threat to the Union came in the form of
an old U.S. warship reconditioned and plated with iron railroad
rails: the Virginia (formerly called the Merrimack), which threatened
to break the Union blockade, but fortunately, the Monitor arrived
just in time to fight the Merrimack to a standstill, and the
Confederate ship was destroyed later by the South to save it from
the North.
IV. The Pivotal Point: Antietam
1. In the Second Battle of Bull Run, Robert E. Lee crushed the
arrogant General John Pope.]
2. After this battle, Lee hoped to thrust into the North and win,
hopefully persuading the Border States to join the South and
foreign countries to intervene on behalf of the South.
i. At this time, Lincoln reinstated General McClellan.
3. McClellan’s men found a copy of Lee’s plans and were able to
stop the Southerners at Antietam on September 17, 1862 in one of
138 the bloodiest days of the Civil War.
i. Jefferson Davis was never so close to victory as he was that
day, since European powers were very close to helping the
South, but after the Union army displayed unexpected
power at Antietam, that help faded.
ii. Antietam was also the Union display of power that Lincoln
needed to announce his Emancipation Proclamation, which
didn’t actually free the slaves, but gave the general idea; it
was announced on January 1, 1863.
iii. Now, the war wasn’t just to save the Union, it was to save
the slaves a well.
V. A Proclamation without Emancipation
1. The Emancipation Proclamation freed the slaves in not-yet-
conquered Southern territories, but slaves in the Border States and
the conquered territories were not liberated; Lincoln freed the
slaves where he couldn’t and wouldn’t free the slaves where he
could.
2. The proclamation was very controversial, as many soldiers refused
to fight for abolition and deserted.
3. However, since many slaves, upon hearing the proclamation, left
their plantations, the Emancipation Proclamation did succeed in
one of its purposes: the undermine the labor of the South.
4. Angry Southerners cried that Lincoln was stirring up trouble and
trying to have a slave insurrection.
VI. Blacks Battle Bondage
1. At first, Blacks weren’t enlisted in the army, but as men ran low,
these men were eventually allowed in; by war’s end, Black’s
accounted for about 10% of the Union army.
2. Until 1864, Southerners refused to recognize Black soldiers as
prisoners of war, and often executed them as runaways and rebels,
and in one case at Fort Pillow, Tennessee, Blacks who had
surrendered were massacred.
i. Afterwards, vengeful Black units swore to take no prisoners,
crying, “Remember Fort Pillow!”
3. Many Blacks, whether through fear, loyalty, lack of leadership, or
strict policing, didn’t cast off their chains when they heard the
Emancipation Proclamation, but many others walked off of their
jobs when Union armies conquered territory that included the
plantations that they worked on.
VII. Lee’s Last Lunge at Gettysburg
1. After Antietam, A. E. Burnside (known for sideburns) took over
the Union army, but he lost badly after launching a rash frontal
attack at Fredericksburg, Virginia, on Dec. 13, 1862.
139 2. “Fighting Joe” Hooker (known for his girls, aka prostitutes) was
badly beaten at Chancellorsville, Virginia, when Lee divided his
outnumbered army into two and sent “Stonewall” Jackson to
attack the Union flank, but later in that battle, Jackson’s own men
mistakenly shot him during dusk, and he died.
3. Lee now prepared to invade the North for the second and final
time, at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, but he was met by new General
George G. Meade, who by accident took a stand atop a low ridge
flanking a shallow valley and the Union and Confederate armies
fought a bloody and brutal battle in which the North “won.”
i. In the Battle of Gettysburg (July 1-3, 1863), General
George Pickett led a hopeless, bloody, and pitiful charge up
a hill that ended in the pig-slaughter of Confederates.
ii. A few months later, Lincoln delivered his Gettysburg
Address.
VIII. The War in the West
1. Lincoln finally found a good general in Ulysses S. Grant, a
mediocre West Point graduate who drank a lot and also fought
under the ideal of “immediate and unconditional surrender.”
2. Grant won at Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, but then lost a hard
battle at Shiloh (April 6-7, 1862), just over the Tennessee border.
3. In the spring of 1862, a flotilla commanded by David G. Farragut
joined with a Northern army to seize New Orleans.
4. At Vicksburg, Mississippi, U.S. Grant besieged the city and
captured it on July 4, 1863, thus securing the important
Mississippi River.
5. The Union victory at the Battle of Vicksburg came the day after
the Union victory at Gettysburg, and afterwards, the Confederate
hope for foreign intervention was lost.
IX. Sherman Scorches Georgia
1. After Grant cleared out Tennessee, General William Tecumseh
Sherman was given command to march through Georgia, and he
delivered, capturing and burning down Atlanta before completing
his famous “march to the sea” at Savannah.
i. His men cut a trail of destruction one-mile wide, waging
“total war” by cutting up railroad tracks, burning fields, and
destroying everything.
X. The Politics of War
1. The Congressional Committee on the Conduct of the War was
created in 1861 was dominated by “radical” Republicans and gave
Lincoln much trouble.
140 2. The Northern Democrats split after the death of Stephen Douglas,
as “War Democrats” supported Lincoln while “Peace
Democrats” did not.
i. Copperheads were those who totally against the war, and
denounced the president (the “Illinois Ape”) and his “nigger
war.”
ii. The most famous of the copperheads was Clement L.
Valandigham, who harshly denounced the war but was
imprisoned, then banished to the South, then came back to
Ohio illegally but was not further punished, and also
inspired the story “The Man without a Country.”
XI. The Election of 1864
1. In 1864, the Republicans joined the War Democrats to form the
Union Party and renominated Abe Lincoln despite a bit of
opposition, while the Copperheads and Peace Democrats ran
George McClellan.
i. The Union Party chose Democrat Andrew Johnson to
ensure that the War Democrats would vote for Lincoln, and
the campaign was once again full of mudslinging, etc…
ii. Near Election Day, the victories at New Orleans and
Atlanta occurred, and the Northern soldiers were pushed to
vote, and Lincoln killed his opponent in the Electoral
College, 212-21.
iii. The popular vote was closer: 2,206,938-1,803,787.
XII. Grant Outlasts Lee
1. Grant was a man who could send thousands of men out to die just
so that the Confederates would lose, because he knew that he
could afford to lose many men while Lee could not.
i. In a series of wilderness encounters, Grant fought Lee, with
Grant losing about 50,000 men.
ii. At Cold Harbor, Union soldiers with papers pinned on their
backs showing their names and addresses rushed the fort,
and over 7000 died in a few minutes.
iii. The public was outraged and shocked over this kind of gore
and death, and demanded the relief of General Grant, but
Ulysses stayed.
2. Finally, Grant and his men captured Richmond, burning it, and
cornered Lee at Appomattox Courthouse at Virginia in April of
1865, where Lee formally surrendered; the war was over.
XIII. The Martyrdom of Lincoln
XIV. The Aftermath of the Nightmare.
1. The Civil War cost 600,000 men, $15 billion, and wasted the
cream of the American crop.
2. However it gave America a supreme test of its existence, and the
141 U.S. survived, proving its strength and further increasing its
growing power and reputation; plus, slavery was also destroyed,
which was great.
3. It paved the way for the United States’ fulfillment of its destiny as
the dominant republic of the Western Hemisphere—and later, the
world.
Topic 8
Industrialization and its emergence as one of the World Powers
(1870 -1916)
1) Introduction
I. The industrial growth had major effects on American life. The new
business activity centered on cities. As a result, people moved to
cities in record numbers, and the cities grew by leaps and
bounds. The sharp contrast between the rich and the poor and other
features of American life stirred widespread discontent. The
142 discontent triggered new reform movements.
II. The industrial growth centred chiefly on the North. The war-torn
South lagged behind the rest of the country economically. In the
West, frontier life was ending.
III. America's role in foreign affairs also changed during the late 1800's
and early 1900's. The country built up its military strength and
became a world power.
2) The rise of big business
I. The value of goods produced by American industry increased
almost tenfold between 1870 and 1916. Many interrelated
developments contributed to this growth.
II. Improved production methods. The use of machines in
manufacturing spread throughout American industry after the Civil
War. With machines, workers could produce goods many times
faster than they could by hand. The new large manufacturing firms
hired hundreds, or even thousands, of workers. Each worker was
assigned a specific job in the production process. This system of
organizing labourers, called the division of labour, also sped up
production.
III. Development of new products. Inventors created, and business
leaders produced and sold, a variety of new products. The products
included the typewriter (1867), barbed wire (1874), the telephone
(1876), the phonograph (early form of record player) (1877), the
electric light (1879), and the petrol-engine car (1885).
IV. Natural resources. America's rich and varied natural resources
played a key role in the rise of big business. The nation's abundant
water supply helped power the industrial machines. Forests
provided timber for construction and wooden products. Miners took
large quantities of coal and iron ore from the ground.
V. A growing population. More than 25 million immigrants entered
the United States between 1870 and 1916. Immigration plus natural
growth caused the U.S. population to more than double during the
same period, rising from about 40 million to about 100 million.
VI. Distribution and communication. In the late 1800's, the American
railway system became a nationwide transportation network. The
total distance of all railway lines in operation in the United States
soared from about 14,500 kilometres in 1850 to almost 320,000
143 kilometres in 1900. A high point in railway development came in
1869, when workers laid tracks that joined the Central Pacific and
Union Pacific railways near Ogden, Utah. This event marked the
completion of the world's first transcontinental railway system. The
system linked the United States by rail from coast to coast.
VII. The new railways spurred economic growth. Mining companies
used them to ship raw materials to factories over long distances
quickly. Manufacturers distributed their finished products by rail to
points throughout the country. The railways became highly
profitable businesses for their owners.
VIII. Advances in communication provided a boost for the
economy. Railways replaced such mail-delivery systems as the
stagecoach. In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell invented the
telephone. These developments, along with the telegraph, provided
the quick communication that is vital to the smooth operation of big
business.
IX. Investment and banking. The business boom triggered a sharp
increase in investments in the stocks and bonds of corporations. As
businesses prospered, people eager to share in the profits invested
heavily. Their investments provided capital that companies needed
to expand their operations.
X. New banks sprang up throughout the country. Banks helped finance
the nation's economic growth by making loans to businesses. Some
bankers of the era assumed key positions in the American economy
because of their ability to provide huge sums of capital.
3) The South and the West
I. The war-torn South. After the Civil War, Americans in the South
faced the task of rebuilding their war-torn society. The South lagged
behind the rest of the nation economically. Some industry
developed in the region, but the South remained an agricultural area
throughout the period of industrialization.
II. Many Southern farmers--both black and white--owned the land they
worked. But in general, the land of these small, independent farmers
was poor. The best land was given over to tenant farming--a system
in which labourers farm the land and pay rent in money or crops to
the owner. The tenant farming system had neither the virtues of the
plantation system of pre-Civil War days nor of the independent
144 owner system. The tenant farmers lacked the incentive to improve
land that was not their own, and the owners did not have full
control over production. For these and other reasons, agriculture
remained more backward in the South than elsewhere.
III. The end of the Western frontier. The long process of settling the
United States from coast to coast drew to a close after the Civil
War. In 1862, Congress passed the Homestead Act, which offered
public land to people free or at very low cost. Thousands of
Americans and immigrants started farms in the West under the
provisions of the act.
IV. After 1870, settlement became so widespread in the West that it was
no longer possible to draw a continuous frontier line. The United
States Census of 1890 officially recognized the fact that America's
frontier had ended.
V. The settlement of the West brought an end to the American Indian
way of life. Farmers occupied and fenced in much of the land.
White people moving westward slaughtered buffalo herds on which
Indians depended for survival. Some Indians retaliated against the
whites by attacking wagon trains and homes. But, as in earlier days,
the federal government sent soldiers to crush the Indian uprisings. In
the end, the Indians were no match for the soldiers and their
superior weapons. Over the years, the federal government pushed
more and more Indians onto reservations.
4) Life during the industrial era
I. The industrial boom had major effects on the lives of the American
people. The availability of jobs in industries drew people from farms
to cities in record numbers. In 1870, only about 25 per cent of the
American people lived in urban areas. By 1916, the figure had
reached almost 50 per cent.
II. The lives of people in the cities contrasted sharply. A small
percentage of them had enormous wealth and enjoyed lives of
luxury. Below them economically, the larger middle class lived
comfortably. But at the bottom of the economic ladder, a huge mass
of city people lived in extreme poverty.
III. The wealthy. The business boom opened up many opportunities for
financial gain. The economic activity it generated enabled many
people to establish successful businesses, expand existing ones, and
145 profit from investments. Some business leaders and investors were
able to amass huge fortunes. The number of millionaires in the
United States grew from perhaps about 20 in 1850 to more than
3,000 in 1900.
IV. The middle class. Other city people prospered enough to live lives
of comfort, if not wealth. They included owners of small businesses,
and such workers as factory and office managers. They became part
of America's growing middle class.
V. The underprivileged. The laborers who toiled in factories, mills,
and mines did not share in the benefits of the economic
growth. They usually worked at least 60 hours a week for an
average pay of about 20 cents an hour, and had no fringe benefits.
VI. As the nation's population grew, so did the competition for
jobs. The supply of workers outstripped the demand. The
oversupply of workers led to high unemployment. In addition,
depressions slowed the economy to a near standstill in 1873, 1884,
1893, and 1907.
VII. The everyday life of the city poor was dismal and drab. The poor
lived crowded together in slums. Much of their housing consisted of
cheap apartment buildings called tenements. The crowded slum
neighbourhoods bred crime. Overwork, poor sanitation, and
inadequate diet left slum dwellers vulnerable to disease. Many poor
children received little or no education, because they had to work to
contribute to their families' welfare.
VIII. The farmers. American farmers also suffered hardships after the
Civil War. Advances in agricultural equipment and techniques had
enabled most of the farmers to increase their production. However,
middlemen between the farmers and the consumers took a large
share of the money earned from farm products. The middlemen
included owners of railways, mills, and gins.
IX. The Gilded Age. American author Mark Twain called the era of
industrialization "The Gilded Age." Twain used this term to
describe the culture of the newly rich of the period. Lacking
tradition, the wealthy developed a showy culture supposedly based
on the culture of upper-class Europeans. The enormous mansions of
the newly rich Americans imitated European palaces. The wealthy
filled the mansions with European works of art, antiques, rare
146 books, and gaudy decorations.
X. Most Americans, however, had a far different idea of culture. They
enjoyed fairs that exhibited industrial machines, the latest
inventions, and other items related to America's material
progress. The American people were eager spectators at circuses,
vaudeville shows, and sporting events. Baseball became so popular
after 1900 that it was called the national pastime. Also after 1900, a
new kind of entertainment, the cinema, began attracting public
interest.
XI. Government and the people. After the Civil War, the Democratic
and Republican parties developed strong political
machines. Members of these organizations kept in contact with the
people, and did them favours in return for votes. But in general,
political leaders strongly favoured business interests.
XII. Government of the era was also marked by widespread
corruption. Ulysses S. Grant became president in 1869. Members of
Grant's administration used their government positions for their
own financial gain. Corruption also flourished in state and local
government.
5) Reform
I. A strong spirit of reform swept through the United States during the
late 1800's and early 1900's. Many Americans called for changes in
the country's economic, political, and social systems. They wanted
to reduce poverty, improve the living conditions of the poor, and
regulate big business. They worked to end corruption in
government, make government more responsive to the people, and
accomplish other goals. By 1917, the reformers had brought about
many changes. Some reformers called themselves progressives. As a
result, the period of American history from about 1890 to about
1917 is often called the Progressive Era.
II. Early reform efforts included movements to organize labourers and
farmers. In 1886, skilled labourers formed the American Federation
of Labor (AFL)--now the American Federation of Labor-Congress
of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO). Led by Samuel Gompers,
this union bargained with employers and gained better wages and
working conditions for its members. Farmers founded the National
Grange in 1867 and Farmers' Alliances during the 1870's and 1880's.
147 These groups helped force railways to lower their charges for
hauling farm products and assisted the farmers in other ways.
III. The drive for woman suffrage became strong after the Civil War. In
1869, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton founded the
National Woman Suffrage Association. The Territory of Wyoming
gave women the right to vote the same year. Soon, a few states
allowed women to vote, but only in local elections.
IV. The Progressive Era. The outcry for reform increased sharply after
1890. Members of the clergy, social workers, and others studied life
in the slums and reported on the awful living conditions there.
Educators criticized the nation's school system. Increasingly,
unskilled workers resorted to strikes in an attempt to gain
concessions from their employers. Often, violence broke out
between strikers and strikebreakers hired by the
employers. Socialists and others who opposed the U.S. economic
system of capitalism supported the strikers and gained a large
following.
V. As public support for reform grew, so did the political influence of
the reformers. In 1891, farmers and some labourers formed the
People's, or Populist, Party. The Populists called for government
action to help farmers and labourers. They gained a large following,
and convinced many Democrats and Republicans to support
reforms.
VI. Reformers won control of many city and some state
governments. They also elected many people to Congress who
favoured their views. In addition, the first three presidents elected
after 1900--Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and
Woodrow Wilson--supported certain reform laws.
VII. Local and state legislation. Reformers in local and state
government passed many laws to help the poor. Such laws provided
for tenement house inspection, playgrounds, and other
improvements of life in the slums. Some reform governments
expanded public education and forced employers to protect workers
against fires and dangerous machinery in factories.
VIII. Federal legislation. Theodore Roosevelt, who became president in
1901, was a liberal Republican who called for a "square deal" for all
Americans. Roosevelt became the first president to help labourers in
148 a strike against employers. In 1902, the United Mine Workers struck
for better wages and working conditions. Roosevelt asked the
miners and the mine owners to settle their differences through
arbitration, but the mine owners refused. Angered, the president
threatened to have the army take over the mines. The owners gave
in, and reached a compromise with the miners.
IX. Republican William Howard Taft succeeded Roosevelt in
1909. Although a conservative, Taft helped further the cause of
reform. In 1912, conservative Republicans backed Taft for their
party's presidential nomination, and liberal Republicans supported
Roosevelt. Taft won the nomination. The liberals then formed the
Progressive, or "Bull Moose," Party and nominated Roosevelt for
president. The Republican split enabled reform Democrat Woodrow
Wilson to win the presidency.
X. The reform movement flourished under Wilson. The many reform
measures passed during Wilson's presidency included the
Underwood Tariff Act of 1913, which lowered a high tariff that
protected American business from foreign competition.
6) Foreign affairs
I. During the 1870's and 1880's, the United States paid relatively little
attention to foreign affairs. In comparison to such European nations
as France, Germany, and Great Britain, the United States was weak
militarily and had little influence in international politics. During
the 1890's and early 1900's, however, the United States developed
into a world power and took a leading role in international affairs.
II. The Spanish-American War of 1898 marked a turning point in
United States foreign policy. Spain ruled Cuba, Puerto Rico, the
Philippines, and other overseas possessions during the 1890's. In the
mid-1890's, Cubans revolted against their Spanish rulers. Many
Americans demanded that the United States aid the rebels. On Feb.
15, 1898, the United States battleship Maine blew up off the coast of
Havana, Cuba. No one was certain what caused the explosion, but
many Americans blamed the Spaniards. On April 25, 1898,
Congress declared war on Spain. The United States quickly defeated
Spain, and the Treaty of Paris of Dec. 10, 1898, officially ended the
war. Under the treaty, the United States received Guam, Puerto
Rico, and the Philippines from Spain. Also in 1898, the United
149 States annexed Hawaii.
III. A world power. After he became president in 1901, Roosevelt
expressed his foreign policy strategy with the slogan, "Speak Softly
and Carry a Big Stick." Roosevelt meant that the country must back
up its diplomatic efforts with military strength. In 1903, the
president used a threat of force to gain the right to dig the Panama
Canal. America took over the finances of the Dominican Republic
in 1905 to keep that country stable and free from European
intervention. These and other actions showed that the United States
had emerged as a world power.
IV. War clouds in Europe. In 1914, long-standing problems among
European nations led to the outbreak of World War I. Before long,
events would drag the United States into war and test its new role as
a world power.
7) Conclusion
Topic 9
USA’s role in the Two World Wars
1) 1914 – 1918
2) 1939 - 1945
150
1) Introduction: A new place in the world (1917-1929)
I. The United States stayed out of World War I until 1917. But then,
German acts of aggression convinced most Americans of the need
to join the war against Germany. For the first time in its history, the
United States mobilized for a full-scale war on foreign territory.
II. The decade following World War I brought sweeping changes. The
economy entered a period of spectacular--though uneven--
growth. The booming economy and fast-paced life of the decade
gave it the nickname of the Roaring Twenties. But the good times
ended abruptly. In 1929, a stock market crash triggered the worst
and longest depression in America's history.
2) World War I and the peace
I. The United States in the war. After World War I began in 1914,
the United States repeatedly declared its neutrality. But increasingly,
German acts of aggression brought America closer to joining the
Allies. On May 7, 1915, a German submarine sank the British
passenger ship Lusitania. The attack killed 1,198 people, including
128 Americans. Woodrow Wilson won reelection to the presidency
in November 1916, using the slogan, "He Kept Us Out of War." But
three months later, German submarines began sinking American
merchant ships. This and other acts of aggression led the United
States to declare war on Germany on April 6, 1917.
II. The American people rallied around their government's decision to
go to war. Almost 2 million men volunteered for service, and about
3 million were conscripted. On the home front, the spirit of
patriotism grew to a fever pitch. Americans willingly let the
government take almost complete control of the economy for the
good of the war effort.
III. World War I ended in an Allied victory with the signing of an
armistice on Nov. 11, 1918.
IV. The peace conference and treaty. In 1919, the Allies held the Paris
Peace Conference to draw up the terms of the peace with Germany.
Wilson viewed the conference as an opportunity to establish lasting
peace among nations. But the other leading Allies were chiefly
interested in gaining territory and war payments from
Germany. They adopted the Treaty of Versailles, which ignored
almost all of Wilson's proposals.
151 V. The Treaty of Versailles did make provision for one of Wilson's
proposals--an association of nations (later called the League of
Nations) that would work to maintain peace. But the U.S. Senate
failed to ratify (approve) the Treaty of Versailles. Thus, the Senate
rejected U.S. participation in the League of Nations.
3) Life during the Roaring Twenties
I. In many ways, the 1920's marked the point at which the United
States began developing into the modern society it is today.
II. The role of American women changed dramatically during the
1920's. The 19th Amendment to the Constitution, which became
law on Aug. 26, 1920, gave women the right to vote in all
elections. In addition, many new opportunities for education and
careers opened up to women during the decade.
III. Social change and problems. Developments of the 1920's
broadened the experiences of millions of Americans. The mass
movement to cities meant more people could enjoy such activities as
films, plays, and sporting events. Radio broadcasting began on a
large scale. The car gave people a new way to get around. Cinemas
became part of almost every city and town. The new role of women
also changed society. Many women who found careers outside the
home began thinking of themselves more as the equal of men, and
less as housewives and mothers.
IV. The modern trends of the 1920's brought about problems as well as
benefits. Many Americans had trouble adjusting to the impersonal,
fast-paced life of cities. This disorientation led to a rise in juvenile
delinquency, crime, and other antisocial behaviour.
V. The 18th Amendment to the Constitution, called the prohibition
amendment, caused unforeseen problems. It outlawed the sale of
alcoholic beverages throughout the United States as of Jan. 16,
1920. Many otherwise law-abiding citizens considered prohibition a
violation of their rights. They ignored the law and bought alcohol
provided by underworld gangs.
VI. Looking backward. Not all Americans saw the changes brought
about during the Roaring Twenties as being desirable. Many people
yearned for a return to old American traditions, a trend that was
reflected in many areas of life. In politics, it led to the return of a
conservative federal government. In his successful presidential
152 campaign of 1920, Warren G. Harding used the slogan "A Return to
Normalcy." To many people, returning to "normalcy" meant ending
the strong role of the federal government that marked the early
1900's. It also meant isolation, a turning away from the affairs of the
outside world.
VII. In religion, the trend toward tradition led to an upsurge of
revivalism (emotional religious preaching). Revival meetings were
most common in rural areas, but also spread to cities.
VIII. The Ku Klux Klan had died out in the 1870's, but a new Klan
gained a large following during the 1920's. The new Klan had easy
answers for Americans who were troubled by modern problems. It
blamed the problems on "outsiders," including blacks, Jews, Roman
Catholics, foreigners, and political radicals.
4) The economy- boom and bust
I. During the 1920's, the American economy soared to spectacular
heights. Wartime government restrictions on business
ended. Conservatives gained control of the federal government and
adopted policies that aided big business.
II. But in spite of its growth and apparent strength, the economy was
on shaky ground. Only one segment of the economy--
manufacturing--prospered. Business executives grew rich, but
farmers and labourers became worse off. Finally, in 1929, wild
speculation led to a stock market crash.
III. Government and business. The American people grew tired of the
federal government's involvement in society that marked the
Progressive Era and the war years. They elected to Congress
conservatives who promised to reduce the role of government. Also,
all three presidents elected during the 1920's--Harding, Calvin
Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover--were Republicans who agreed with
the policy.
IV. Technology enabled American manufacturers to develop new
products, improve existing ones, and turn out goods much faster
and more cheaply than ever before. Sales of such items as electric
washing machines, refrigerators, and radios soared. But the
manufacturing boom depended most heavily on the growth of the
car industry. Before and during the 1920's, Henry Ford and others
153 refined car manufacturing to a science. The cost of cars continued to
drop and sales soared. In just 10 years between 1920 and 1930, the
number of cars registered in the United States almost tripled,
growing from about 8 million to 23 million.
V. Agriculture and labour did not share in the prosperity. A reduced
market for farm goods in war-torn Europe and a slowdown in the
U.S. population growth led to a decline in the demand for American
farm products. Widespread poverty among farmers and labourers
cut into the demand for manufactured goods, a contributing factor
to the forthcoming depression.
VI. Investments, speculation, and the crash. The economic growth of
the 1920's led more Americans than ever to invest in the shares of
corporations. The investments, in turn, provided companies with a
flood of new capital for business expansion. As investors poured
money into the stock market, the value of shares soared. The
upsweep led to widespread speculation, which pushed the value of
shares far beyond the level justified by earnings and dividends.
VII. Such unsound investment practices led to the stock market crash of
1929. In late October, a decline in share prices set in. Panic selling
followed, lowering share prices drastically and dragging investors to
financial ruin. The stock market crash combined with the other
weaknesses in the nation's economy to bring on the Great
Depression of the 1930's.
5) Depression and a world in conflict (1930-1959)
I. The United States suffered through the Great Depression that
followed the stock market crash of 1929 for more than 10
years. During the depression, millions of workers lost their jobs and
large numbers of farmers were forced to abandon their
farms. Poverty swept through the nation on a scale never before
experienced.
II. The Great Depression was not limited to the United States. It struck
almost every other country in the world. In some countries, the hard
times helped bring to power dictators who promised to restore the
economy. The dictators included Adolf Hitler in Germany and a
group of military leaders in Japan. Once in power, both Hitler and
the Japanese rulers began conquering neighbouring lands. Their
actions led to World War II, the most destructive conflict in world
154 history. The United States fought in the war from 1941 to 1945, and
played a key role in defeating Germany and Japan.
III. Victory in World War II brought a spirit of great relief and joy to the
United States. The postwar economy boomed. More people shared
in the prosperity than ever before, creating a huge, well-to-do middle
class. Even so, Americans still faced problems. Chief among them
were the new threat of nuclear war, the growing strength of
Communism, and discontent among Americans who did not share
in the prosperity.
6) The Great Depression
I. The road to ruin. The stock market crash sent shock waves through the
American financial community. Banks greatly curtailed their loans to
businesses, and businesses then cut back on production. Millions of
people lost their jobs because of the cutbacks. Spending then dwindled,
and businesses suffered even more. Factories and shops shut down,
causing even higher unemployment. Consumption of farm products
declined, and farmers became worse off than ever. Thousands of banks
failed and foreign trade decreased sharply. By the early 1930's, the
nation's economy was paralysed.
II. The depression and the people. At the height of the depression in 1933,
about 13 million Americans were out of work, and many others had only
part-time jobs. Farm income declined so sharply that more than 750,000
farmers lost their land. The Dust Bowl, the result of a terrible drought on
the western Great Plains, also wiped out many farmers. Hundreds of
thousands of people lost their life savings as a result of the bank failures.
III. Throughout the depression, many Americans went hungry. People stood
in "bread lines" and went to "soup kitchens" to get food provided by
charities. Often, two or more families lived crowded together in a small
apartment. Some homeless people built shacks of tin and scraps of wood
on waste ground.
IV. Roosevelt, recovery, and reform. Early in the Great Depression,
President Herbert Hoover promised that prosperity was "just around the
corner." But the depression deepened as the election of 1932
approached. The Republicans supported Hoover for reelection. The
Democrats chose Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In his campaign,
Roosevelt promised government action to end the Great Depression and
reforms to avoid future depressions. The people responded, and
155 Roosevelt won a landslide victory.
V. Roosevelt's programme was called the New Deal. Its many provisions
included public works projects to provide jobs, relief for farmers,
assistance to manufacturing firms, and the regulation of banks.
VI. Roosevelt's efforts to end the depression made him one of the most
popular U.S. presidents. The voters elected him to four terms. No other
president won election more than twice. Roosevelt's New Deal was a
turning point in American history. It marked the start of a strong
government role in the nation's economic affairs that has continued and
grown to the present day.
7) The United States in World War II
I. World War II began on Sept. 1, 1939, when German troops overran
Poland. France, Great Britain, and other nations (called the Allies) went
to war against Germany. At first, America stayed out of the war. But on
Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese planes bombed the U.S. military base at Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii. The United States declared war on Japan on December
8, and three days later Germany and Italy--Germany's chief ally--
declared war on the United States.
II. The war effort. The American people backed the war effort with fierce
dedication. About 15 million American men served in the armed
forces. About 338,000 women served in the armed forces. At home,
factories were converted into defence plants where aeroplanes, ships,
weapons, and other war supplies were made. The country had a shortage
of civilian men, and so thousands of women worked in the defence
plants. ven children took part in the war effort. Boys and girls collected
used tin cans, old tyres, and other "junk" that could be recycled and used
for war supplies.
III. Allied victory. On May 7, 1945, after a long, bitter struggle, the Allies
forced the mighty German war machine to surrender. Vice President
Harry S. Truman had become president upon Roosevelt's death about a
month earlier. The Allies demanded Japan's surrender, but the Japanese
continued to fight on. Truman then made one of the major decisions in
history. He ordered the use of the atomic bomb, a weapon many times
more destructive than any previous weapon. An American aeroplane
dropped the first atomic bomb used in warfare on Hiroshima, Japan, on
Aug. 6, 1945. A second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki on
156 August 9. Japan formally surrendered on September 2, and the war was
over.
8) Conclusion
Topic 10
Post 1945 world scenario and emergence of USA
and USSR as the Two World Powers
1) The Threat of Communism
I. The United States and the Soviet Union both fought on the side of
the Allies during World War II. But after the war, the two
countries became bitter enemies. The Soviet Union, as a
Communist country, opposed democracy. It helped Communists
take control of most of the countries of Eastern Europe and also
aided Communists who seized control of China.
II. The Soviet Union and China then set out to spread Communism
to other lands. The United States, as the world's most powerful
democratic country, took on the role of defending non-Communist
nations threatened by Communist take-over. The containment of
Communism became the major goal of U.S. postwar foreign
policy.
III. The Cold War and foreign policy. The postwar struggle between
the American-led non-Communist nations and the Soviet Union
and its Communist allies became known as the Cold War. The
conflict was so named because it did not lead to fighting, or a "hot"
war, on a major scale.
IV. Both the United States and the Soviet Union built up arsenals of
nuclear weapons. The nuclear weapons made each nation capable
of destroying the other. The threat of nuclear war made both sides
cautious. As a result, Cold War strategy emphasized threats of
force, propaganda, and aid to weak nations. The United Nations
(UN), founded in 1945, provided a forum where the nations could
try to settle their Cold War disputes.
V. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower, the first two presidents of the
Cold War era, pledged American military support to any nation
threatened by Communism. Also, the United States provided
billions of dollars to non-Communist nations.
VI. The Korean War resulted from the Cold War friction. On June 25,
1950, troops from Communist North Korea, equipped by the
157 Soviet Union, invaded South Korea. The UN called on member
nations to help restore peace. Truman sent American troops to aid
South Korea, and the UN sent a fighting force made up of troops
from many nations. The war lasted for three years, ending in a
truce on July 27, 1953.
VII. Communism and internal friction. The spread of Communism
caused deep divisions within the United States. Conservatives
blamed the Roosevelt and Truman administrations for allowing
the Communist postwar gains. They also claimed that
Communists were infiltrating the American government. The
charges led to widespread investigations of--and debate over--the
extent of Communist influence in American government and
society. Conservatives believed the investigations were needed to
save the country from Communist control. Liberals charged the
conservatives with conducting "witch hunts"; that is, trying to fix
guilt on people without evidence.
2) Postwar society
I. After World War II, the United States entered the greatest period of
economic growth in its history. Periods of inflation (rapidly rising
prices) and recession (mild business slumps) occurred. But overall,
prosperity spread to more Americans than ever before, resulting in
major changes in American life. However, millions of Americans--
including a high percentage of the nation's blacks--continued to live in
poverty. The existence of poverty amid prosperity brought on a period
of active social protest that has continued to the present day.
II. Prosperity returns. Military spending during World War II drew the
United States out of the Great Depression. Major industries, such as
car manufacturing and housing construction, had all but stopped
during the war. After the war, these industries resumed production on
a much larger scale than ever. elatively new industries such as
electronics, plastics, frozen foods, and jet aircraft became booming
businesses.
III. The shortage of goods during the war and other factors combined to
create a vast market for American products. A population boom
increased the number of consumers. Between 1950 and 1960 alone, the
population of the United States grew by about 28 million. Trade unions
became stronger than ever, and gained high wages and other benefits
158 for their members. Wage laws and other government regulations also
helped give workers a greater share of the profits of business. These
developments also meant that more Americans had more money to
spend on goods.
IV. A new life style resulted from the prosperity. After the war, millions of
people needed, and were able to afford, new housing. Construction
companies quickly built huge clusters of houses in suburbs around the
nation's cities. Vast numbers of Americans moved from cities to
suburbs. The suburbs attracted people for many reasons. They offered
newer housing, more open space, and--usually--better schools than the
inner cities.
V. A rise in car ownership accompanied the suburban growth. Increased
car traffic led to the building of a nationwide network of motorways.
The car and prosperity enabled more people than ever to take holidays.
New motels, fast-service restaurants, and petrol stations sprang up to
serve the tourists.
VI. Prosperity and technological advances changed American life in other
ways. Television--an experimental device before the war--became a
feature of most American homes during the 1950's. This wonder of
modern science brought scenes of the world into the American living
room at the flick of a switch. New appliances made house work easier.
They included automatic washing machines, driers, dishwashers, and
waste disposal units.
VII. Poverty and discrimination. In spite of the general prosperity, millions
of Americans still lived in poverty. The poor included members of all
ethnic groups, but the plight of the nation's poor blacks seemed
especially bleak. Ever since emancipation, blacks in both the North and
South had faced discrimination in jobs, housing, education, and other
areas. A lack of education and jobs made poverty among blacks
widespread.
VIII. During the early 1900's, blacks, joined by many whites, had begun a
movement to extend civil rights to blacks. The movement gained
momentum after World War II. Efforts of civil rights leaders resulted
in several Supreme Court decisions that attacked discrimination. In the
best-known case, Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954), the
court ruled that compulsory segregation in state schools was illegal.
IX. In spite of the gains, many civil rights leaders became dissatisfied with
159 the slow progress of their movement. In 1955, Martin Luther King, Jr.,
a Baptist minister, began organizing demonstrations protesting against
discrimination. Before long, the public protest would become a major
tool of Americans seeking change.
3) Conclusion
Topic: 11
Civil Rights Movement (1954–65)
1. Introduction
a) The American civil rights struggle is an ongoing fight for the
personal rights, protections, and privileges granted all U.S.
citizens by the Constitution and Bill of Rights.
b) At the end of the American Civil War (1861–65), constitutional
amendments were enacted to protect African Americans recently
released from slavery.
c) The Fourteenth Amendment (1868) declared that all former
slaves were U.S. citizens and received equal protection under the
laws of state and federal governments.
d) The Fifteenth Amendment (1870) assured equal voting rights to
all citizens, regardless of race. Until the 1950s, however, the civil
rights of African Americans were systematically denied,
particularly in the South where the majority of black Americans
resided. A remarkable era of nonviolent
e) African American activism began in 1954, known today simply
as the civil rights movement. It was launched by the Brown v.
Board of Education decision in 1954, in which the Supreme
Court ruled that segregation in the public schools was illegal.
This phase of the civil rights struggle ended with the passage in
1965 of the Voting Rights Act, which nearly a century after the
Fifteenth Amendment had already done so once again assured
voting rights to all citizens.
2. Background of the movement
a) After the Reconstruction Era (1865–77), a period after the Civil War
in which the federal government controlled the southern states that
had se- ceded (withdrawn) from the Union, whites in the South
enacted the Jim Crow laws.
b) These were a series of laws throughout the South that required
segregation, the separation of the races in public places.
160 c) White southern state legislatures limited African American rights to
own land, to enter certain occupations, and to gain access to the
courts.
d) By 1900, southern whites had accomplished the disfranchisement
(exclusion from voting) of most southern blacks.
e) In the early twentieth century, because it was too dangerous to
effectively resist racial injustice in the South, most civil rights
struggles were carried out in the North.
f) In 1905, black scholar and author W. E. B. Du Bois (1868–1963) and
other black leaders began the Niagara movement, named after their
meeting place near the Niagara River bordering the United States and
Canada, to fight racial injustice. Their organization eventually
became the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP), which fought for racial equality mainly through
the courts and the press.
g) Until World War II (1939–45), the NAACP’s progress was slow.
After the war, a new sense of urgency prevailed in American black
communities. Soldiers who had risked their lives to fight for the
country expected equal treatment when they returned home.
h) More than one mil- lion African Americans migrated from the rural
South to northern cities in the first decades of the century. Over two
million blacks had registered to vote by the late 1940s.
i) In December 1948, President Harry S. Truman (1884–1972; served
1945–53) ran for his second term as president on a strong civil rights
plank. Although some southern whites quickly abandoned him, he
received 70 percent of the northern black vote and won the election.
Two years later, he began to desegregate the armed forces.
j) By the late 1940s, the NAACP’s chief legal counsel, Thurgood
Marshall (1908–1993), brought the principle of segregation in public
education before the Supreme Court. Marshall argued that
segregation denied blacks equal protection of the laws as guaranteed
by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution.
k) In 1954, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled against segregation in
public schools in Brown v. Board of Education.
3. The aftermath of Brown
a) Brown’s most immediate effect was to intensify the resistance of white
southerners to civil rights progress.
161 b) The Ku Klux Klan, a secret society of white southerners in the United
States that uses terrorist tactics to suppress African Americans and other
minorities, stepped up its violent intimidation of African Americans.
c) Southern congressmen and governors vowed to resist desegregation. In
1957, when nine black students at- tempted to attend classes at a
formerly all-white school in Little Rock, Arkansas, federal troops were
required to protect them from the furious white mobs. Even so, Brown
provided the spark that ignited a movement.
d) African Americans across the country recognized that the highest court
had up- held their rights; leaders began to prepare bolder assaults on
segregation in the South. One common form of protest is a boycott, an
organized re- fusal to do business with someone.
e) In December 1955, blacks in Montgomery, Alabama, organized a bus
boycott after the former NAACP secretary of the Montgomery branch,
Rosa Parks (1913–2005), was arrested for refusing to yield her seat to a
white man.
f) The boycott leader was Martin Luther King Jr. (1929–1968).
g) Only twenty-six years old, the minister from Atlanta was an inspiring
speaker who invoked Christian morality, American ideals of liberty, and
the ethic of nonviolent resistance in his campaign against racial injustice.
h) In November 1956, despite growing Special counsel for the NAACP
Thurgood Marshall argued that segregation denied blacks equal
protection of the laws as guaranteed by the Constitution.
i) White violence, the bus boycott triumphed when a Supreme Court
decision overturned Montgomery’s laws enforcing bus segregation.
4. Nonviolent activists organize
a) In 1957, Congress passed the first Civil Rights Act since the
Reconstruction Era. African Americans, however, had seen that
court decisions and federal acts had consistently failed to make
changes, so during the late 1950s they moved their struggle for
equality to the streets.
b) In January 1957, King organized the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference (SCLC), a network of nonviolent civil rights activists
drawn mainly from African American churches.
c) In 1960, four African American students began the sit-in movement,
162 when they sat at the lunch counter at a Woolworth’s store in
Greensboro, North Carolina, which served only whites.
d) The store closed down the lunch counter. Later that year, several
hundred student activists gathered in Raleigh, North Carolina, to
form the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC,
pronounced “snick”) to promote nonviolent resistance to Jim Crow
laws.
e) By the summer of 1960, the sitins had desegregated dozens of lunch
counters and other public accommodations, mainly in southern
border states.
f) Guided by King and other nonviolent activist leaders, protesters
courageously endured insults, intimidation, violence, and arrest
without striking back.
g) The Kennedy administration Black protests intensified during the
presidency of John F. Kennedy (served 1961–63), a Democrat elected
in 1960 with heavy black support. Kennedy had started out his
administration avoiding civil rights measures that might trigger
southern white racial violence and political retaliation.
h) Civil rights leaders stepped up campaigns to pressure Kennedy to
fulfill his campaign promises. In 1961, a nonviolent civil rights group
called the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) organized the
freedom rides, in which volunteers rode buses through Sitins,
peaceful demonstrations outside and inside businesses, helped
desegregate several lunch counters and other public
accommodations.
i) The South, testing compliance with a Supreme Court order to
desegregate interstate bus terminal facilities. White mobs beat the
riders in Birmingham and Montgomery, Alabama. As several
hundred more volunteers stepped in to continue the project, Kennedy
quietly persuaded southern communities to desegregate their bus
terminals.
j) In 1962, Kennedy again was forced into action. He sent federal
marshals to protect a black student named James Meredith who had
registered at the all-white University of Mississippi at Oxford. After
mobs killed two people at the campus and besieged the marshals, the
president reluctantly called in more troops to restore order. In 1963,
163 demonstrations throughout the South led to fifteen thou- sand arrests
and widespread white violence.
k) On May 3 and for several days afterward, police in Birmingham beat
and unleashed attack dogs on nonviolent followers of King, in full
view of television news cameras. The resulting public revulsion over
the Birmingham protests spurred Kennedy to urge Congress to enact
a strong civil rights law.
5. I Have a Dream
a) A coalition of African American groups and their white allies sponsored
a march on Washington, D.C., on August 28, 1963, to advance the civil
rights bill then before Congress.
b) Standing before the Lincoln Memorial, King delivered his famous plea
for interracial brotherhood in his “I Have a Dream” speech, enthralling
several hundred thousand blacks and whites.
c) On July 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, which barred segregation in public accommodations, ended
federal aid to segregated institutions, outlawed racial discrimination in
employment, sought to strengthen black voting rights, and extended the
life of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
d) Voting rights in the South In 1964, SNCC initiated Freedom Summer, a
massive black voter registration and education campaign aimed at
challenging white supremacy in the deep South, starting in Mississippi.
About one thousand college students, most of them white, volunteered.
The freedom workers were not well received by a segment of
Mississippi’s white population.
e) Three volunteers were murdered by a mob led by the deputy sheriff of a
Mississippi town. Nevertheless, the project continued.
f) In 1965, King led a march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, to
extend voting rights to black Americans. State and local police almost
immediately attacked the black marchers, stopping the march. The
televised scenes of violence brought about strong national support for the
protection of blacks attempting to vote.
g) Ten days later, twenty-five thousand black and white marchers reached
Montgomery escorted by federal troops. After the Selma-Montgomery
march, Johnson signed a strong Voting Rights Act, which authorized the
attorney general to send federal voting examiners to make sure that
African Americans were free to register. The examiners were granted the
164 power to enforce national law over local regulations wherever
discrimination occurred.
6. Black power
a) After 1965, the civil rights movement began to fragment, primarily
over the nonviolent tactics of King and his supporters and the goal of
integration into the dominant society. Malcolm X , a leader of the
religious and sociopolitical group the Nation of Islam, questioned the
value of integration into a society that had exploited and abused
African Americans for centuries.
b) He did not believe that the sit-ins, marches, or other tactics of civil
rights activists were effective tools with which to gain rights,
especially when confronted with violent resistance in the South. In
1966, SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael (also known as Kwame Ture
ridiculed nonviolent efforts and demanded “black power,” a militant
slogan that alienated white liberals and divided blacks.
c) The focus of the Black Power Movement began to shift to eco- nomic
injustices in the North. Violent ghetto riots began to break out in
large cities like Detroit and Los Angeles.
d) On April 4, 1968, the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
touched off riots that left Washington, D.C., in flames for three days.
The movement would continue, but this initial remarkable phase of
the nonviolent civil rights struggle was over.
7. A revolutionary movement
a) The central goal of the African American civil rights movement full
equality between blacks and whites remains a distant vision.
Neighborhoods, private schools, and jobs remain segregated along
racial lines; African American incomes remain significantly lower
than those of whites; and job and educational opportunities are not
distributed equally. Nonetheless, the civil rights movement of 1954–
65 transformed American race relations.
b) In communities throughout the South, “whites only” signs that had
stood for generations vanished from hotels, rest- rooms, theaters, and
other facilities. By the mid-1970s, school desegregation had become
fact as well as law in more than 80 percent of all southern public
schools (a better record than in the North, where residential
segregation remains pronounced).
165 c) The protection of the right to vote represents the civil rights
movement’s greatest success: When Congress passed the Voting
Rights Act in 1965, barely 100 African Americans held elective office
in the country; by 2000 there were more than 9,000.
Topic: 12
Separation of Powers: Check and Balances
1. Introduction
a) Checks and Balances Checks and balances refers to a system of
separation of powers within a government.
b) The framework of separation is intended to balance govern- mental
power to prevent any part of the government from overreaching its
defined responsibilities.
c) The Constitution of the United States, writ- ten in 1787 and adopted
in 1788, established a system of checks and bal- ances for the U.S.
federal government.
Conclusion
1. Introduction
o Exploration of America
o Christopher Columbus
o His Visits to America
o Natives American (their groups)
2. Causes of Colonization
o Improvement in Technology
o Renaissance in Europe
o Religious Conflicts in Europe
o Expanding trade
o Search for New Routes
o Pressure of population
o Trade and Agriculture
o Desire for wealth
o Imperial Race
o Royal Proclamation
3. Critical Analysis
4. Conclusion
169
War of Independence
1. Introduction
2. Role of Spain and France
3. Role of Blacks
4. School of Thoughts
5. Mercantilism (If required in details)
o Navigation Act of 1651
o Enumerated Act of 1660
o Staple Act of 1663
o Duty Act of 1673
o Enforcement Act of 1696
o Molasses Act 1733
o The Sugar Act of 1764
o The Currency Act of 1764
o The Quartering Act of 1765
o The Stamp Act of 1765
6. Other Causes of War of Independence
o Letters of Samuel Adams
o French Indian War
o Royal Proclamation of 1763
o The Coercive Act/ Intolerable Act
o Self-Government
o Great Awakening
o Boston Tea Party
o British Action on Massachusetts
o 1st Continental Conference
o 2nd Continental Conference
o Declaration of Independence
170 o Common Sense by Thomas Paine
o Sons of Liberty
o Boston Massacre
7. Critical Analysis
8. Conclusion
1. Introduction
2. Jacksonian democracy v/s Jeffersonian democrats
o Political
a. Universal Suffrage
b. citizens considered eligible for office holding
c. candidates for president chosen
o Economic
d. Chosen Class
e. Industrialization
f. Attitude toward the Bank of the United States
o Social
g. Views on education
h. attitude toward equality for women
i. attitude toward American Indians
j. attitude toward slavery?
o Religious
k. To what extent was separation of church and state accomplished in each
period?
3. Critical Analysis
4. Conclusion
171
1. Introduction
2. Flaws in AOC
o One house congress
o No separate executive
o Considerable powers to state
o Lack system of judiciary
o Central government had insufficient power to regulate commerce.
o It could not tax, generally impotent in setting commercial policy
o It could not effectively support a war effort
o It had little power to settle quarrels between states
3. Salient feature of US Constitution
o Checks and Balances:
o Brief & Simple:
o Written Constitution:
o Dual Citizenship:
o Secular State:
o Supremacy of the Constitution:
o Strong Federation:
o Bill Of Rights:
o Rigid Constitution:
o Separation of Powers:
o Bicameralism:
o Independent Judiciary:
172 o Universal Suffrage:
o Division of Powers:
o Spoils System:
o Presidential form of government:
o Republicanism:
o Sovereignty of the People
4. Critical Analysis
5. Conclusion
1. Introduction
The national government is divided into three branches:
1. Legislative
2. Executive
3. Judicial
2. Critical Analysis
3. Conclusion
1. Introduction
"My Presidency is the 2nd American Revolution"
The answer to the 1st question will discuss the difference between federalist and
anti federalist to prove that Jefferson Victory as the president was 2nd American
Revolution.
"Thomas Jefferson was the best man ever to occupy American Presidency"
John F. Kennedy
177
2. Economic
Concepts of the “Chosen Class”?
178 Jefferson - Yeoman farmer as the “chosen class”
Jackson - included planters, farmers, laborers, and mechanics in “chosen class”
Industrialization?
Jefferson - Originally feared the consequences of industrialization
Jackson - Accepted industry as essential to American economy
How did the Charles River Bridge vs Warren Bridge decision affect the access
to corporate charters prevalent in Jefferson’s time?
Jefferson - In J’s time corporate charters were granted to favorites of state
legislators & often implied monopoly rights to a business
Jackson - Roger Taney, Jackson’s appointee as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court,
ruled in Charles River Bridge decision that corporate charters should be available
to all who chose to risk starting a business
3. Social
Education?
Jefferson - An educated man himself, believed education was necessary for office-
holding and for preparing citizens for participation in a democracy
Jackson - Had little education & believed education was relatively unimportant
179 4. Religion
The first permanent settlement in the present United States was Saint Augustine
(Florida), founded in 1565 by the Spaniard Pedro Menéndez de Avilés. Spanish
control came to be exercised over Florida, West Florida, Texas, and a large part of
the Southwest, including California. For the purposes of finding precious metals
and of converting heathens to Catholicism, the Spanish colonies in the present
United States were relatively unfruitful and thus were never fully developed. The
French established strongholds on the St. Lawrence River (Quebec and Montreal)
and spread their influence over the Great Lakes country and along the Mississippi;
the colony of Louisiana was a flourishing French settlement. The French
181 government, like the Spanish, tolerated only the Catholic faith, and it implanted the
rigid and feudalistic seignorial system of France in its North American
possessions. Partly for these reasons, the French settlements attracted few
colonists.
Religious motives were important in the founding of these colonies. The colonists
of Massachusetts Bay brought with them from England the charter and the
governing corporation of the colony, which thus became a corporate one, i.e., one
controlled by its own resident corporation. The corporate status of the Plymouth
Colony, evinced in the Mayflower Compact, was established by the purchase
(1626) of company and charter from the holders in England. Connecticut and
Rhode Island, which were offshoots of Massachusetts, owed allegiance to no
English company; their corporate character was confirmed by royal charters,
granted to Connecticut in 1662 and to Rhode Island in 1663. A third type of colony
was the proprietary, founded by lords’ proprietors under quasi-feudal grants from
the king; prime examples are Maryland (under the Calvert family) and
Pennsylvania (under William Penn).
The religious and political turmoil of the Puritan Revolution in England, as well as
the repression of the Huguenots in France, helped to stimulate emigration to the
English colonies. Hopes of economic betterment brought thousands from England
as well as a number from Germany and other continental countries. To obtain
passage across the Atlantic, the poor often indentured themselves to masters in the
colonies for a specified number of years. The colonial population was also swelled
by criminals transported from England as a means of punishment. Once established
as freedmen, former bondsmen and transportees were frequently allotted land with
which to make their way in the New World.
Colonial America
182 The colonies were subject to English mercantilism in the form of Navigation Acts,
begun under Cromwell and developed more fully after the Stuart Restoration. As
shown by C. M. Andrews, G. L. Beer, and later historians, the colonies at first
benefited by these acts, which established a monopoly of the English market for
certain colonial products. Distinct colonial economies emerged, reflecting the
regional differences of climate and topography. Agriculture was of primary
importance in all the regions.
In New England many crops were grown, corn being the closest to a staple, and
agricultural holdings were usually of moderate size. Fur trade was at first
important, but it died out when the New England Confederation defeated Philip in
King Philip's War and the Native Americans were dispersed. Fishing and
commerce gained in importance, and the economic expansion of Massachusetts
encouraged the founding of other New England colonies.
In the middle colonies small farms abounded, interspersed with occasional great
states, and diverse crops were grown, wheat being most important. Land there was
almost universally held through some form of feudal grant, as it was also in the
South. Commerce grew quickly in the middle colonies, and large towns flourished,
notably Philadelphia and New York.
By the late 17th century, small farms in the coastal areas of the South were
beginning to give way to large plantations; these were developed with the slave
labor of Africans, who were imported in ever-increasing numbers. Plantations were
almost exclusively devoted to cultivation of the great Southern staples—tobacco,
rice, and, later, indigo. Fur trade and lumbering were long important. Although
some towns developed, the Southern economy remained the least diversified and
the most rural in colonial America.
As the 18th century, progressed, colonial grievances were exacerbated. The British
mercantile regulations, beneficial to agriculture, impeded the colonies' commercial
and industrial development. However, economic and social growth continued, and
by the mid-18th cent. There had been created a greater sense of a separate,
thriving, and distinctly American, albeit varied, civilization. In New England,
Puritan values were modified by the impact of commerce and by the influence of
the Enlightenment, while in the South the planter aristocracy developed a lavish
mode of life. Enlightenment ideals also gained influential adherents in the South.
Higher education flourished in such institutions as Harvard, William and Mary,
and King's College (now Columbia Univ.). The varied accomplishments of
Benjamin Franklin epitomized colonial common sense at its most enlightened and
productive level.
185
Washington, Adams, and Jefferson
The first person to be elected President under the Constitution was the hero of the
Revolution, George Washington. Washington introduced many government
practices and institutions, including the cabinet. Jay's Treaty (1794) allayed friction
with Great Britain. Hamilton, as Washington's Secretary of the Treasury,
promulgated a strong state and attempted to advance the economic development of
the young country by a neomercantilist program; this included the establishment of
a protective tariff, a mint, and the first Bank of the United States as well as
assumption of state and private Revolutionary debts. The controversy raised by
these policies bred divisions along factional and, ultimately, party lines.
Hamilton and his followers, who eventually formed the Federalist party, favored
wide activity by the federal government under a broad interpretation of the
Constitution. Their opponents, who adhered to principles laid down by Thomas
Jefferson and who became the Democratic Republican or Democratic party,
favored narrow construction—limited federal jurisdiction and activities. To an
extent these divisions were supported by economic differences, as the Democrats
largely spoke for the agrarian point of view and the Federalists represented
propertied and mercantile interests.
Extreme democrats like Thomas Paine had ebullient faith in popular government
and popular mores; Joel Barlow, too, envisioned a great popular culture evolving
in America. From such optimists came schemes for broad popular education and
participation in government. Men like John Adams had mixed views on the good
sense of the masses, and many more conservative thinkers associated the “people”
with vulgarity and ineptitude. The Federalists generally represented a pessimistic
and the Democrats an optimistic view of man's inherent capacity to govern and
develop himself; in practice, however, the values held by these two groups were
often mixed. That a long road to democracy was still to be traveled is seen in the
fact that in the late 18th cent. few but the economically privileged took part in
political affairs.
The Federalists were victorious in electing John Adams to the presidency in 1796.
Federalist conservatism and anti-French sentiment were given vent in the Alien
and Sedition Acts of 1798 and in other acts. Deteriorating relations with France
were seen in the XYZ Affair and the “half war” (1798–1800), in which U.S.
warships engaged French vessels in the Caribbean. The so-called Revolution of
1800 swept the Federalists from power and brought Jefferson to the presidency.
Jefferson did bring a plainer and more republican style to government, and under
him the Alien and Sedition Acts and other Federalist laws were allowed to lapse or
were repealed.
186
Jefferson moved toward stronger use of federal powers, however, in negotiating
the Louisiana Purchase (1803). In foreign policy he steered an officially neutral
course between Great Britain and France, resisting the war sentiment roused by
British impressment of American seamen and by both British and French
violations of American shipping. He fostered the drastic Embargo Act of 1807 in
an attempt to gain recognition of American rights through economic pressure, but
the embargo struck hardest against the American economy, especially in New
England.
The same policies were continued under James Monroe. The Monroe Doctrine
(1823), which proclaimed U.S. opposition to European intervention or colonization
in the American hemisphere, introduced the long-continuing U.S. concern for the
integrity of the Western Hemisphere. Domestically, the strength of the federal
government was increased by the judicial decisions of John Marshall, who had
already helped establish the power of the U.S. Supreme Court. By 1820, however,
sectional differences were arousing political discord. The sections of the country
had long been developing along independent lines.
In the North, merchants, manufacturers, inventors, farmers, and factory hands were
busy with commerce, agricultural improvements, and the beginnings of the
Industrial Revolution. In the South, Eli Whitney's cotton gin had brought in its
wake a new staple; cotton was king, and the new states of Alabama, Louisiana, and
Mississippi were the pride of the cotton kingdom. The accession of Florida (1819)
further swelled the domain of the South. The American West was expanding as the
frontier rapidly advanced. Around the turn of the century settlement of territory W
of the Appalachians had given rise to the new states of Kentucky, Tennessee, and
Ohio. Settlers continued to move farther west, and the frontier remained a molding
187 force in American life.
The Missouri Compromise (1820) temporarily resolved the issue of slavery in new
states, but under the presidency of John Quincy Adams sectional differences were
aggravated. Particular friction, leading to the nullification movement, was created
by the tariff of 1828, which was highly favorable to Northern manufacturing but a
“Tariff of Abominations” to the agrarian South. In the 1820s and 30s the advance
of democracy brought manhood suffrage to many states and virtual direct election
of the President, and party nominating conventions replaced the caucus. Separation
of church and state became virtually complete.
Although in the dispute with Great Britain over the Columbia River country,
Americans demanded “Fifty-four forty or fight,” under President Polk a peaceful if
more modest settlement was reached. Thus the United States gained its Pacific
Northwest, and “manifest destiny” was virtually fulfilled.
Vigorous antislavery groups like the Free-Soil party had already arisen, and as the
conflict became more embittered it rent the older parties. The Whig party was
shattered, and its Northern wing was largely absorbed in the new antislavery
Republican party. The Democrats were also torn, and the compromise policies of
Stephen A. Douglas were of dwindling satisfaction to a divided nation. Moderation
could not withstand the impact of the decision in the Dred Scott Case, which
denied the right of Congress to prohibit slavery in the territories, or the provocation
of John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry (1859). The climax came in 1860 when the
Republican Abraham Lincoln defeated three opponents to win the presidency.
Southern leaders, feeling there was no possibility of fair treatment under a
Republican administration, resorted to secession from the Union and formed the
Confederacy. The attempts of the seceding states to take over federal property
within their borders (notably Fort Sumter in Charleston, S.C.) precipitated the Civil
War (1861–65), which resulted in a complete victory for the North and the end of
all slavery.
The latter part of the 19th century, also saw the rise of the modern American city.
Rapid industrialization attracted huge numbers of people to cities from foreign
countries as well as rural America. The widespread use of steel and electricity
allowed innovations that transformed the urban landscape. Electric lighting made
cities viable at night as well as during the day. Electricity was also used to power
streetcars, elevated railways, and subways. The growth of mass transit allowed
people to live further away from work, and was therefore largely responsible for
the demise of the “walking city.” With the advent of skyscrapers, which utilized
steel construction technology, cities were able to grow vertically as well as
horizontally.
Into the “land of promise” poured new waves of immigrants; some acquired
dazzling riches, but many others suffered in a competitive and unregulated
economic age. Behind the facade of the “Gilded Age,” with its aura of peace and
general prosperity, a whole range of new problems was created, forcing varied
groups to promulgate new solutions. In the 1870s the expanding Granger
movement attempted to combat railroad and marketing abuses and to achieve an
element of agrarian cooperation; this movement stimulated some regulation of
utilities on the state level. Labor, too, began to combine against grueling factory
conditions, but the opposition of business to unions was frequently overpowering,
and the bulk of labor remained unorganized.
Some strike successes were won by the Knights of Labor, but this union,
discredited by the Haymarket Square riot, was succeeded in prominence by the less
divisive American Federation of Labor. Massachusetts led the way (1874) with the
first effective state legislation for an eight-hour day, but similar state and national
legislation was sparse, and the federal government descended harshly on labor in
the bloody strike at Pullman, Ill., and in other disputes. Belief in laissez faire and
the influence of big business in both national parties, especially in the Republican
party, delayed any widespread reform.
The Presidents of the late 19th century, were generally titular leaders of modest
political distinction; however, they did institute a few reforms. Both Hayes and his
successor, James A. Garfield, favored civil service reforms, and after Garfield's
death Chester A. Arthur approved passage of a civil service act; thus the vast,
troublesome presidential patronage system gave way to more regular, efficient
administration. In 1884 a reform group, led by Carl Schurz, bolted from the
191 Republicans and helped elect Grover Cleveland, the first Democratic President
since before the Civil War. Under President Benjamin Harrison the Sherman
Antitrust Act was passed (1890).
The Federal Reserve System and the Federal Trade Commission were established,
and the Adamson Act and the Clayton Antitrust Act were passed. Perhaps more
than on the national level, progressivism triumphed in the states in legislation
beneficial to labor, in the furthering of education, and in the democratization of
electoral procedures. Wilson did not radically alter the aggressive Caribbean policy
of his predecessors; U.S. marines were sent to Nicaragua, and difficulties with
Mexico were capped by the landing of U.S. forces in the city of Veracruz and by
the campaign against Francisco (Pancho) Villa.
World War I
The nation's interest in world peace had already been expressed through
participation in the Hague Conferences, and when World War I burst upon Europe,
Wilson made efforts to keep the United States neutral; in 1916 he was reelected on
a peace platform. However, American sympathies and interests were actively with
the Allies (especially with Great Britain and France), and although Britain and
Germany both violated American neutral rights on the seas, German submarine
attacks constituted the more dramatic provocation. On Apr. 6, 1917, the United
States entered the war on the side of the Allies and provided crucial manpower and
supplies for the Allied victory.
Wilson's Fourteen Points to insure peace and democracy captured the popular
imagination of Europe and were a factor in Germany's decision to seek an
armistice; however, at the Paris Peace Conference after the war, Wilson was
thwarted from fully implementing his program.
The majority of Republican Senators, led by Henry Cabot Lodge, insisted upon
amendments that would preserve U.S. sovereignty, and although Wilson fought for
193 his original proposals, they were rejected. Isolationist sentiment prevailed during
the 1920s, and while the United States played a major role in the naval conferences
for disarmament and in the engineering of the Kellogg-Briand Pact, which
outlawed war, its general lack of interest in international concerns was seen in its
highly nationalistic economic policies, notably its insistence (later modified) on
collecting the war debts of foreign countries and the passage of the Hawley-Smoot
Tariff Act.
Harding's administration, marred by the Teapot Dome scandal, gave way on his
death to the presidency of Calvin Coolidge, and the nation embarked on a
spectacular industrial and financial boom. In the 1920s the nation became
increasingly urban, and everyday life was transformed as the “consumer
revolution” brought the spreading use of automobiles, telephones, radios, and other
appliances. The pace of living quickened, and mores became less restrained, while
fortunes were rapidly accumulated on the skyrocketing stock market, in real estate
speculation, and elsewhere. To some it seemed a golden age. But agriculture was
not prosperous, and industry and finance became dangerously overextended.
In 1929 there began the Great Depression, which reached worldwide proportions.
In 1931, President Herbert Hoover proposed a moratorium on foreign debts, but
this and other measures failed to prevent economic collapse. In the 1932 election
Hoover was overwhelmingly defeated by the Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt. The
new President immediately instituted his New Deal with vigorous measures. To
meet the critical financial emergency he instituted a “bank holiday.” Congress,
called into special session, enacted a succession of laws, some of them to meet the
economic crisis with relief measures, others to put into operation long-range social
and economic reforms. Some of the most important agencies created were the
National Recovery Administration, the Agricultural Adjustment Administration,
the Public Works Administration, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and the
Tennessee Valley Authority. This program was further broadened in later sessions
with other agencies, notably the Securities and Exchange Commission and the
Works Progress Administration (later the Work Projects Administration).
Laws also created a social security program. The program was dynamic and, in
many areas, unprecedented.
194 It created a vast machinery by which the state could promote economic recovery
and social welfare. Opponents of these measures argued that they violated
individual rights, besides being extravagant and wasteful. Adverse decisions on
several of the measures by the U.S. Supreme Court tended to slow the pace of
reform and caused Roosevelt to attempt unsuccessfully to revise the court.
Although interest centered chiefly on domestic affairs during the 1930s, Roosevelt
continued and expanded the policy of friendship toward the Latin American
nations which Herbert Hoover had initiated; this full-blown “good-neighbor”
policy proved generally fruitful for the United States.
World War II
The ominous situation abroad was chiefly responsible for Roosevelt's continuance
at the national helm. By the late 1930s the Axis nations (Germany and Italy) in
Europe as well as Japan in East Asia had already disrupted world peace. As wars
began in China, Ethiopia, and Spain, the United States sought at first to bulwark its
insular security by the Neutrality Act. As Axis aggression led to the outbreak of the
European war in Sept., 1939, the United States still strove to stay out of it, despite
increasing sympathy for the Allies. But after the fall of France in June, 1940, the
support of the United States for beleaguered Britain became more overt. In Mar.,
1941, lend-lease aid was extended to the British and, in November, to the Russians.
The threat of war had already caused the adoption of selective service to build the
armed strength of the nation. Hemisphere defense was enlarged, and the United
States drew closer to Great Britain with the issuance of the Atlantic Charter.
In Asian affairs the Roosevelt government had vigorously protested Japan's career
of conquest and its establishment of the “Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.”
After the Japanese takeover of French Indochina (July, 1941), with its inherent
threat to the Philippines, the U.S. government froze all Japanese assets in the
United States. Diplomatic relations grew taut, but U.S.-Japanese discussions were
still being carried on when, on Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese bombs fell on Pearl Harbor.
The United States promptly declared war, and four days later Germany and Italy
declared war on the United States. (For an account of military and naval events).
The country efficiently mobilized its vast resources, transforming factories to war
plants and building a mighty military force which included most able-bodied
young men and many young women. The creation of a great number of
government war agencies to control and coordinate materials, transportation, and
manpower brought unprecedented government intervention into national life.
Rationing, price controls, and other devices were instituted in an attempt to prevent
195 serious inflation or dislocation in the civilian economy.
The war underscored the importance of U.S. resources and the prestige and power
of the United States in world affairs. A series of important conferences outlined the
policies for the war and the programs for the peace after victory; among these were
the Moscow Conferences, the Casablanca Conference, the Cairo Conference, the
Tehran Conference, and the Yalta Conference, at which Roosevelt, Winston
Churchill, and Joseph Stalin planned for postwar settlement. Roosevelt was also a
key figure in the plans for the United Nations.
After Roosevelt's sudden death in April, 1945, Harry S. Truman became President.
A month later the European war ended when Germany surrendered on May 7,
1945. Truman went to the Potsdam Conference (July–August), where various
questions of the peacetime administration of Europe were settled, many on an ad
interim basis, pending the conclusion of peace treaties. Before the war ended with
the defeat of Japan, the United States developed and used a fateful and
revolutionary weapon of war, the atomic bomb. The Japanese surrender,
announced Aug. 14, 1945, and signed Sept. 2, brought the war to a close.
Peacetime readjustment was successfully effected. The government's “G.I. Bill”
enabled many former servicemen to obtain free schooling, and millions of other
veterans were absorbed by the economy, which boomed in fulfilling the demands
for long-unobtainable consumer goods. The shortening of the postwar factory work
week and the proportionate reduction of wages precipitated a rash of strikes,
causing the government to pass the Taft-Hartley Labor Act (1947).
In the Korean War, U.S. forces played the chief part in combating the North
Korean and Chinese attack on South Korea. Thus the United States cast off its
traditional peacetime isolationism and accepted its position as a prime mover in
world affairs.
Two decades of Democratic control of the White House came to an end with the
presidential election of 1952, when Dwight D. Eisenhower was swept into office
over the Democratic candidate, Adlai E. Stevenson. Although it did not try to roll
back the social legislation passed by its Democratic predecessors, the Eisenhower
administration was committed to a laissez-faire domestic policy. By the mid-
1950s, America was in the midst of a great industrial boom, and stock prices were
skyrocketing. In foreign affairs the Eisenhower administration was internationalist
in outlook, although it sternly opposed Communist power and threatened “massive
retaliation” for Communist aggression. Some antagonism came from the neutral
nations of Asia and Africa, partly because of the U.S. association with former
colonial powers and partly because U.S. foreign aid more often than not had the
effect of strengthening ruling oligarchies abroad.
In the race for technological superiority the United States exploded (1952) the first
hydrogen bomb, but was second to the USSR in launching (Jan. 31, 1958) an
artificial satellite and in testing an intercontinental guidedmissile. However,
spurred by Soviet advances, the United States made rapid progress in space
exploration and missile research. In the crucial domestic issue of racial integration,
the U.S. Supreme Court in a series of decisions supported the efforts of African-
American citizens to achieve full civil rights. In 1959, Alaska and Hawaii became
the 49th and 50th states of the Union. Despite hopes for “peaceful coexistence,”
negotiations with the USSR for nuclear disarmament failed to achieve accord, and
Berlin remained a serious source of conflict.
In 1961, the older Eisenhower gave way to the youngest President ever elected,
John F. Kennedy, who defeated Republican candidate Richard M. Nixon. President
197 Kennedy called for “new frontiers” of American endeavor, but had difficulty
securing Congressional support for his domestic programs (integration, tax reform,
medical benefits for the aged). Kennedy's foreign policy combined such
humanitarian innovations as the Peace Corps and the Alliance for Progress with the
traditional opposition to Communist aggrandizement.
After breaking relations with Cuba, which, under Fidel Castro, had clearly moved
within the Communist orbit, the United States supported (1961) an ill-fated
invasion of Cuba by anti-Castro forces. In 1962, in reaction to the presence of
Soviet missiles in Cuba, the United States blockaded Soviet military shipments to
Cuba and demanded the dismantling of Soviet bases there. The two great powers
seemed on the brink of war, but within a week the USSR acceded to U.S. demands.
In the meantime, the United States achieved an important gain in space exploration
with the orbital flight around the earth in a manned satellite by Col. John H. Glenn.
The tensions of the cold war eased when, in 1963, the United States and the Soviet
Union reached an accord on a limited ban of nuclear testing.
Other manifestations of social upheaval were the increase of drug use, especially
among youths, and the rising rate of crime, most noticeable in the cities.
Opposition to American involvement in the Vietnam War so eroded Johnson's
popularity that he chose not to run again for President in 1968.
The institution of draft reform, the continued withdrawal of U.S. soldiers from
Vietnam, and a sharp decrease in U.S. casualties all contributed toward dampening
antiwar sentiment and lessening the war as an issue of public debate. Racial flare-
ups abated after the tumult of the 1960s (although the issue of the busing of
199 children to achieve integration continued to arouse controversy). The growing
movement of women demanding social, economic, and political equality with men
also reflected the changing times. A dramatic milestone in the country's space
program was reached in July, 1969, with the landing of two men on the moon, the
first of several such manned flights. Significant unmanned probes of several of the
planets followed, and in 1973 the first space station was orbited.
In domestic policy Nixon appeared to favor an end to the many reforms of the
1960s. He was accused by civil-rights proponents of wooing Southern support by
seeking delays in the implementation of school integration. Such actions by his
administration were overruled by the Supreme Court. Nixon twice attempted to
appoint conservative Southern judges to the U.S. Supreme Court and was twice
frustrated by the Senate, which rejected both nominations. In an attempt to control
the spiraling inflation inherited from the previous administration, Nixon
concentrated on reducing federal spending. He vetoed numerous appropriations
bills passed by Congress, especially those in the social service and public works
areas, although he continued to stress defense measures, such as the establishment
of an antiballistic missiles (ABM) system, and foreign aid.
Federal budget cuts contributed to a general economic slowdown but failed to halt
inflation, so that the country experienced the unprecedented misfortune of both
rising prices and rising unemployment; the steady drain of gold reserves after
almost three decades of enormous foreign aid programs, a new balance-of-trade
deficit, and the instability of the dollar in the international market also affected the
economy. In Aug., 1971, Nixon resorted to the freezing of prices, wages, and rents;
these controls were continued under an ensuing, more flexible but comprehensive
program known as Phase II. Another significant move was the devaluation of the
dollar in Dec., 1971; it was further devalued in 1973 and again in 1974.
In keeping with his announced intention of moving the United States from an era
of confrontation to one of negotiation, Nixon made a dramatic visit to the People's
Republic of China in Feb., 1972, ending more than 20 years of hostility between
the two countries and opening the way for a normalization of relations. A trip to
Moscow followed in the spring, culminating in the signing of numerous
agreements between the United States and the Soviet Union, the most important
being two strategic arms limitations accords, reached after lengthy talks begun in
1969. The attainment of a degree of friendly relations with China and the USSR
was especially surprising in view of the provocative actions that the United States
was taking at that time against North Vietnam. Although U.S. ground troops were
being steadily withdrawn from Vietnam, U.S. bombing activity was increasing.
Finally Congress halted the bombing and limited Nixon's power to commit troops.
A cease-fire in Vietnam was not achieved until Jan., 1973.
200 In the presidential election of 1972, the Democratic party reforms that increased
the power of women and minority groups in the convention resulted in the
nomination of Senator George S. McGovern for President. Senator McGovern
called for an immediate end to the Vietnam War and for a drastic cut in defense
spending and a guaranteed minimum income for all citizens. His candidacy was
damaged by the necessity to replace his original choice for Vice President and by
the continuing perception of McGovern as a radical. Nixon was reelected (Nov.,
1972) in a landslide, losing only Massachusetts and the District of Columbia.
But Nixon's second term was marred, and finally destroyed, by the Watergate
affair, which began when five men (two of whom were later discovered to be direct
employees of Nixon's reelection committee) were arrested after breaking into the
Democratic party's national headquarters at the Watergate apartment complex in
Washington, D.C. Nixon resigned on Aug. 9, the first president in the history of the
republic to be driven from office under the threat of impeachment.
Ford's popularity suffered a sharp setback when he granted Nixon a complete and
unconditional pardon for any crimes that Nixon may have committed during his
term as President. The public disapproval of this decision, along with the
deteriorating economy, contributed to a sharp reversal in Republican fortunes in
the elections of 1974.
In Dec., 1974, Nelson A. Rockefeller, a former governor of New York, was sworn
in as Vice President following extensive hearings before Congressional
committees. Thus, neither the President nor the Vice President had been popularly
elected, both having been chosen under the terms of the Twenty-fifth Amendment.
Ford's tenure as President was hindered by difficult economic times and an
inability to work with the Democrat-controlled Congress. Ford vetoed dozens of
201 bills, many of which were overridden by Congress to provide funding for social
programs. Ford also lacked broad support within his own party, as former
California governor (and future President) Ronald Reagan made a strong challenge
for the Republican presidential nomination.
States with large energy industries such as Texas, Louisiana, Wyoming, and
Colorado all benefited from extremely high energy prices throughout the 1970s.
Alaska's economy also boomed as the Alaska pipeline began transporting oil in
1977. Soaring oil prices as well as increased foreign competition dealt a severe
blow to American industry, especially heavy industries such as automobile and
steel manufacturing located in America's Rust Belt. Central cities in the United
States experienced great hardship in the 1960s and 70s. Rising crime rates and
racial unrest during the 1960s accelerated the outmigration of people and
businesses to the suburbs. By the late 1970s, many large cities had lost their middle
class core populations and suffered severe budgetary problems.
Carter's pledge to stand against nations that abused human rights resulted in a grain
and high-technology embargo of the Soviet Union in response to the Soviet
202 invasion of Afghanistan. Carter also organized a boycott of the 1980 Moscow
Olympics. His decision in 1979 to allow Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi, the
deposed leader of Iran, to receive medical treatment in the United States inflamed
the already passionate anti-American sentiment in that nation. On Nov. 4, 1979, a
group of militants seized the U.S. embassy in Iran, taking 66 hostages. The Iran
hostage crisis destroyed Carter's credibility as a leader and a failed rescue attempt
(1980) that killed eight Americans only worsened the situation. (The hostages were
only released on Jan. 20, 1981, the day Carter left office.) With the hostage crisis
omnipresent in the media and the nation's economy sliding deeper into recession,
Carter had little to run on in the 1980 presidential election. Republican nominee
Ronald Reagan promised to restore American supremacy both politically and
economically.
In labor disputes, Reagan was decidedly antiunion. This was never more evident
than in 1981 when he fired 13,000 striking air traffic controllers. In Mar., 1981,
Reagan was wounded in an assassination attempt but fully recovered, dispelling
doubts regarding his age and health. The U.S. economy continued to worsen; in
1983 the unemployment rate reached its highest point since the Great Depression
at almost 11%. By the end of that year, however, oil prices began to drop, slowing
the inflation rate and helping the economy to begin a recovery.
Reagan's deregulaton of the banking, airline, and many other industries spurred
enormous amounts of economic activity. In 1984 the unemployment rate fell and
the dollar was strong in foreign markets. With the economy recovering, Reagan
was unstoppable in the 1984 presidential election.
At the same time the United States was secretly mining Nicaraguan harbors.
In 1983 241 U.S. marines stationed in Beirut, Lebanon as part of a UN
peacekeeping force were killed by terrorists driving a truck laden with explosives
in a suicide mission. Later that year Reagan ordered the invasion of the tiny
Caribbean nation of Grenada; the action was roundly criticized by the world
community, but succeeded in toppling the pro-Cuban regime. In 1986 the space
shuttle Challenger exploded shortly after liftoff, killing the entire seven-person
crew, including six astronauts and a civilian schoolteacher. Reagan's aggressive
policies in the Middle East worsened already bad relations with Arab nations; he
ordered (1986) air strikes against Libya in retaliation for the Libyan-sponsored
terrorist attack in West Berlin that killed two American servicemen.
Although the president had vowed never to negotiate with terrorists, members of
his administration did just that in the Iran-contra affair. Against the wishes of the
Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense, Reagan officials arranged the
illegal sale of arms to Iran in exchange for the release of American hostages in the
Middle East. The profits from the sales were then diverted to the Contra rebels in
Nicaragua. Reagan improved his image before he left office, however, by agreeing
to a series of arms reduction talks initiated by Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev.
Reagan was also able leave a powerful legacy by appointing three conservative
Supreme Court justices, including Sandra Day O'Connor, the first woman to serve
on the high court.
Bush's major military action, however, was the Persian Gulf War. After Iraq
invaded Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990, Bush announced the commencement of
Operation Desert Shield, which included a naval and air blockade and the steady
deployment of U.S. military forces to Saudi Arabia. In November the United
Nations Security Council approved the use of all necessary force to remove Iraq
from Kuwait and set Jan. 15, 1991, as the deadline for Iraq to withdraw.
A few days before the deadline Congress narrowly approved the use of force
against Iraq. By this time the United States had amassed a force of over 500,000
military personnel as well as thousands of tanks, airplanes, and personnel carriers.
Less than one day after the deadline, the U.S.-led coalition began Operation Desert
Storm, beginning with massive air attacks on Baghdad. Iraqi troops were
devastated by continual air and naval bombardment, to the point that it took only
100 hours for coalition ground forces to recapture Kuwait. On Feb. 27, with the
Iraqi army routed, Bush declared a cease-fire.
The quick, decisive U.S. victory, combined with an extremely small number of
American casualties, gave President Bush the highest public approval rating in
history. Mounting domestic problems, however, made his popularity short-lived.
When Bush took office, he announced a plan to bail out the savings and loan
industry, which had collapsed after deregulation during the Reagan administration.
In 1991 it was estimated that it would cost taxpayers $500 billion to save the
industry.
The United States went through a transitional period during the 1980s and early
90s, economically, demographically, and politically. The severe decline of
traditional manufacturing which began in the 1970s forced a large-scale shift of the
economy to services and other sectors. States with large service, trade, and high-
technology industries (such as many Sun Belt states) grew in population and
thrived economically. Meanwhile, states heavily dependent on manufacturing,
including much of the Midwest, suffered severe unemployment and outmigration.
Midwestern states grew less than 5% during the 1980s while Sun Belt states grew
between 15% and 50%.
205 In addition, the end of the Cold War, precipitated by the dissolution of the Warsaw
Pact and the collapse of Soviet Communism, resulted in a reduction of the U.S.
armed forces as well as the opening of new markets in an increasingly global
economy. In Apr., 1992, after the severe police beating of an African American,
one of the worst race riots in recent U.S. history erupted in Los Angeles, killing 58,
injuring thousands, and causing approximately $1 billion in damage. Smaller
disturbances broke out in many U.S. cities. After the Persian Gulf War the nation
turned its attention to the domestic problems of recession and high unemployment.
Bush's inability to institute a program for economic recovery made him vulnerable
in the 1992 presidential election to the Democratic nominee, Arkansas governor
Bill Clinton.
Clinton won the election, gaining 43% of the popular vote and 370 electoral votes.
Incumbent Bush won 38% of the popular vote and 168 electoral votes. Although
independent candidate H. Ross Perot did not win a single electoral vote, he made a
strong showing with 19% of the popular vote, after a populist campaign in which
he vowed to eliminate the $3.5 trillion federal deficit. Clinton, generally
considered a political moderate, was particularly successful in appealing to voters
(especially in the Midwest and West) who had previously abandoned the
Democratic party to vote for Reagan. Bush, for his part, was unable to convince
voters that he could transform his success in international affairs into domestic
recovery. One of his last actions as president was to send (Dec., 1992) U.S. troops
to Somalia as part of a multinational peacekeeping force administering famine
relief.
The economy gradually improved during Clinton's first year in office, and this,
along with a tax increase and spending cuts, caused some easing of the budget
deficit. The North American Free Trade Agreement, signed by the United States,
Canada, and Mexico in 1992 and designed to make its participants more
competitive in the world marketplace, was ratified in 1993 and took effect Jan. 1,
1994.
During his first two years in office, Clinton withdrew U.S. troops from Somalia
after they had suffered casualties in an ill-defined mission; he also sent troops to
Haiti to help in reestablishing democratic rule there. The president proposed a
major overhaul of the way American health care is financed, but it died in
Congress. Clinton's problems with Congress were exacerbated in 1994 after the
Republicans won control of both the Senate and the House and attempted, largely
unsuccessfully, to enact a strongly conservative legislative program, dubbed the
“Contract with America.” There were prolonged stalemates as the president and
Congress clashed over the federal budget; in Apr., 1996, a fiscal 1995 budget was
agreed upon after seven months of stopgap spending measures and temporary
government shutdowns.
206
In Apr., 1995, in the worst act of terrorism ever on American soil, a bomb was
exploded at the federal building in Oklahoma City, Okla., killing 169 people. Late
in 1995, the antagonists in the Yugoslavian civil war accepted a U.S.-brokered
peace plan, which U.S. troops were sent to help monitor. U.S. efforts also
contributed to Arab-Israeli acceptance of agreements to establish limited
Palestinian self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza.
By 1996, President Clinton had improved his standing in the polls by confronting
House Republicans over the federal budget, and he subsequently adopted a number
of Republican proposals, such as welfare reform, as his own, while opposing the
more conservative aspects of those proposals. Clinton won his party's renomination
unopposed and then handily defeated Republican Bob Dole and Reform party
candidate Ross Perot in the November election.
As his second term began, Clinton's foes in and out of Congress pursued
investigation of Whitewater and other alleged improprieties or abuses by the
president. By late 1997 independent prosecutor Kenneth Starr had been given
information that led to the Lewinsky scandal, which burst on the national scene in
early 1998. Battle lines formed and remained firm through Clinton's impeachment
(Oct., 1998), trial (Jan., 1999), and acquittal (Feb., 1999), with a core of
conservative Republicans on one side and almost all Democrats on the other. The
American people seemed to regard the impeachment as largely partisan in intent.
Lying behind their attitude, however, was probably the sustained economic boom,
a period of record stock-market levels, relatively low unemployment, the reduction
of the federal debt, and other signs of well-being (although critics noted that the
disparity between America's rich and poor was now greater than ever). This,
combined with the afterglow of “victory” in the cold war, continued through the
end of the 1990s.
In foreign affairs, the United States (as the only true superpower) enjoyed
unprecendented international influence in the late 1990s, and in some areas it was
able to use this influence to accomplish much. There was steady, if sometimes
fitful, progress toward peace in the Middle East, and George Mitchell, a U.S.
envoy, brokered what many hoped was a lasting peace in Northern Ireland. On the
other hand, America had little influence on Russian policy in Chechnya, and it
remained locked in a contest of wills with Iraq's President Saddam Hussein nine
years after the end of the Persian Gulf War. The reluctance of the Congress to pay
the country's UN dues nearly led to the embarrassment of the loss of the American
General Assembly vote in 1999 even as Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed a
desire for greater American involvement in the organization.
Meanwhile, in Kosovo the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, led by the United
207 States, was unable to prevent a Yugoslav campaign against Kosovar Albanians but
ultimately forced Yugoslavia (now Serbia and Montenegro) to cede contral of the
province; U.S. and other troops were sent into Kosovo as peacekeepers. That
conflict showed that the United States was again reluctant to commit military
forces, such as its army, that were likely to suffer significant casualties, although it
would use its airpower, where its great technological advantages enabled it strike
with less risk to its forces.
Negotiations in the Middle East, which continued in 2000, broke down, and there
was renewed violence in Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank late in the year. The
Clinton administration worked to restart the negotiations, but the issues proved
difficult to resolve. In the United States, the Nasdaq Internet and technology stock
bubble, which had begun its rise in 1999, completely deflated in the second half of
2000, as the so-called new economy associated with the Internet proved to be
subject to the rules of the old economy. Signs of a contracting economy also
appeared by year's end.
The 2000 presidential election, in which the American public generally appeared
uninspired by the either major-party candidate (Vice President Al Gore and the
Republican governor of Texas, George W. Bush) ended amid confusion and
contention not seen since the Hayes-Tilden election in 1876. On election night, the
television networks called and then retracted the winner of Florida twice, first
projecting Gore the winner there, then projecting Bush the winner there and in the
race at large. The issue of who would win Florida and its electoral votes became
the issue of who would win the presidency, and the determination of the election
dragged on for weeks as Florida's votes were recounted. Gore, who trailed by
several hundred votes (out of 6 million) in Florida but led by a few hundred
thousand nationally, sought a manual recount of strongly Democratic counties in
Florida, and the issue ended up being fought in the courts and in the media.
Ultimately the U.S. Supreme Court called a halt to the process, although its split
decision along ideological lines was regarded by many as tarnishing the court.
Florida's electoral votes, as certified by the state's Republican officials, were won
by Bush, who secured a total of 271 electoral votes (one more than needed) and
48% of the popular vote (Gore had 49% of the popular vote). Bush thus became
the first person since Benjamin Harrison in 1888 to win the presidency without
achieving a plurality in the popular vote.
The slowing economy entered a recession in Mar., 2001, and unemployment rose,
leading to continued interest rate reductions by the Federal Reserve Bank. The
Bush administration moved quickly to win Congressional approval of its tax-cut
program, providing it with an early legislative victory, but other proposed
legislation moved more slowly. The resignation of Senator Jeffords of Vermont
from the Republican party cost it control of the Senate, a setback due in part to
208 administration pressure on him to adhere to the party line. Internationally, the
United States experienced some friction with its allies, who were unhappy with the
Bush administration's desire to abandon both the Kyoto Protocal (designed to fight
global warming) and the Antiballistic Missile Treaty (in order to proceed with
developing a ballistic missile defense system). Relations with China were briefly
tense in Apr., 2001, after a Chinese fighter and U.S. surveillance plane collided in
mid-air, killing the Chinese pilot.
The politics and concerns of the first eight months of 2001 abruptly became
secondary on Sept. 11, when terrorists hijacked four planes, crashing two into the
World Trade Center, which was destroyed, and one into the Pentagon; the fourth
crashed near Shanksville, Pa. Some 3,000 persons were killed or missing as a
result of the attacks. Insisting that no distinction would be made between terrorists
and those who harbored them, Bush demanded that Afghanistan's Taliban
government turn over Osama bin Laden, a Saudi-born Islamic militant whose Al
Qaeda group was behind the attacks. The U.S. government sought to build an
international coalition against Al Qaeda and the Taliban and, more broadly, against
terrorism, working to influence other nations to cut off sources of financial support
for terrorists.
In October, air strikes and then ground raids were launched against Afghanistan by
the United States, with British aid. Oman, Pakistan, and Uzbekistan permitted the
use of their airspace and of bases within their borders for various operations. The
United States also provided support for opposition forces in Afghanistan, and by
December the Taliban government had been ousted and its and Al Qaeda's fighters
largely had been routed. Bin Laden, however, remained uncaptured, and a force of
U.S. troops was based in Afghanistan to search for him and to help with mopping-
up operations.
The terrorist attacks stunned Americans and amplified the effects of the recession
in the fall. Events had a severe impact on the travel industry, particularly the
airlines, whose flights were temporarily halted; the airlines subsequently suffered a
significant decrease in passengers. Congress passed several bills designed to
counter the economic effects of the attacks, including a $15 billion aid and loan
package for the airline industry. A new crisis developed in October, when cases of
anthrax and anthrax exposure resulted from spores that had been mailed to media
and government offices in bioterror attacks.
Although consumer spending and the stock market rebounded by the end of the
year from their low levels after September 11, unemployment reached 5.8% in
Dec., 2001. Nonetheless, the economy was recovering, albeit slowly, aided in part
by increased federal spending. In early 2002 the Bush administration announced
plans for a significant military buildup; that and the 2001 tax cuts were expected to
209 result in budget deficits in 2002–4. Prompted by a number of prominent corporate
scandals involving fraudulent or questionable accounting practices, some of which
led to corporate bankruptcies, Congress passed legislation that overhauled
securities and corporate laws in July, 2002.
The fighting in Afghanistan continued, with U.S. forces there devoted mainly to
mopping up remnants of Taliban and Al Qaeda forces. U.S. troops were also based
in Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan to provide support for the forces in
Afghanistan. In the Philippines, U.S. troops provided support and assistance to
Philippine forces fighting guerrillas in the Sulu Archipelago that had been linked to
Al Qaeda, and they also trained Georgian and Yemeni forces as part of the war on
terrorism.
The November election resulted in unexpected, if small, gains for the Republicans,
giving them control of both houses of Congress. After the election, Congress voted
to establish a new Department of Homeland Security, effective Mar., 2003. The
department regrouped most of the disparate agencies responsible for domestic
security under one cabinet-level official; the resulting government reorganization
was the largest since the Department of Defense was created in the late 1940s.
Dec., 2002, saw the negotiation of a free-trade agreement with Chile (signed in
June, 2003), regarded by many as the first step in the expansion of NAFTA to
include all the countries of the Americas. President Bush ordered the deployment
of a ballistic missile defense system, to be effective in 2004; the system would be
designed to prevent so-called rogue missile attacks. In advance of this move the
United States had withdrawn from the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty with Russia in
June. North Korea, often described as one of the nations most likely to launch a
rogue attack, had admitted in October that it had a program for developing nuclear
weapons, and the United States and other nations responded by ending fuel
shipments and reducing food aid. In the subsequent weeks North Korea engaged in
a series of well-publicized moves to enable it to resume the development of nuclear
210 weapons, including withdrawing from the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. The
United States, which had first responded by refusing to negotiate in any way with
North Korea, adopted a somewhat less confrontational approach in 2003.
President Bush continued to press for Iraqi disarmament in 2003, and expressed
impatience with what his administration regarded as the lack of Iraqi compliance.
In Feb, 2003, however, the nation's attention was pulled away from the growing
tension over Iraq by the breakup of the space shuttle Columbia as it returned to
earth. Seven astronauts were killed in this second shuttle mishap, and focus was
once again directed toward the issues of the safety of the space shuttle and the
dynamics of the decision-making process at NASA.
The cost of the military campaign as well as of the ongoing U.S. occupation in Iraq
substantially increased what already had been expected to be a record-breaking
U.S. deficit in 2003 to around $374 billion. The size of the deficit, the unknown
ultimate cost of the war, and the continued weak U.S. economy (the unemployment
rate rose to 6.4% in June despite some improvement in other areas) were important
factors that led to the scaling back of a tax cut, proposed by President Bush, by
more than half to $350 billion.
In Aug., 2003, a massive electrical blackout affected the NE United States. Much
of New York and portions of Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, and neighboring Ontario, Canada, lost power, in
many cases for a couple days. The widespread failure appeared to be due in part to
strains placed on the transmission system, its safeguards, and its operators by the
increased interconnectedness of electrical generation and transmission facilities
and the longer-distance transmission of electricity. An investigation into the event,
211 however, laid the primary blame on the Ohio utility where it began, both for
inadequate system maintenance and for failing to take preventive measures when
the crisis began.
The economy improved in the latter half of the 2003. Although the unemployment
rate inched below 6% and job growth was modest, overall economic growth was
robust, particularly in the last quarter. A major Medicare overhaul was enacted and
signed in December, creating a prescription drug benefit for the first time. The
same month the Central American Free Trade Agreement was finalized by the
United States, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua, and in early
2004, Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic agreed to become parties to the
accord. The United States also reached free-trade agreements with Australia and
Morocco.
U.S. weapons inspectors reported in Jan., 2004, that they had failed to find any
evidence that Iraq had possessed biological or chemical weapons stockpiles prior
to the U.S. invasion. The assertion that such stockpiles existed was a primary
justification for the invasion, and the report led to pressure for an investigation of
U.S. intelligence prior to the war. In February, President Bush appointed a
bipartisan commission to review both U.S. intelligence failures in Iraq and other
issues relating to foreign intelligence; the commission's 2005 report criticized
intelligence agencies for failing to challenge the conventional wisdom about Iraq's
weapon systems, and called for changes in how U.S. intelligence gathering is
organized and managed. The Senate's intelligence committee, reviewing the
situation separately, concluded in its 2004 report that much of the CIA's
information on and assessment of Iraq prior to the war was faulty.
Also in February, U.S., French, and Canadian forces were sent into Haiti to
preserve order. Haitian president Jean-Bertrand Aristide had resigned under U.S.-
French pressure after rebel forces had swept through most of the country and
threatened to enter the capital. U.S. forces withdrew from Haiti in June when
Brazil assumed command of a UN peacekeeping force there.
By March, John Kerry had all but secured the Democrat nomination for president.
With both major party nominees clear, the focus of the political campaigns quickly
shifted to the November election. Both Bush and Kerry had elected not to accept
government funding, enabling them each to raise record amounts of campaign
funding, and the post-primary advertising campaign began early. In July, Kerry
chose North Carolina senator John Edwards, who had opposed him in the
primaries, as his running mate.
U.S. forces engaged in intense fighting in Iraq in Apr., 2004, as they attempted to
remove Sunni insurgents from the town of Falluja. The battling there was the
212 fiercest since the end of the invasion, and ultimately U.S. forces broke off without
clearing the fighters from the city, a goal that was not achieved until after similar
fighting in November. Guerrilla attacks by Sunni insurgents continued throughout
the year. Also in April a radical cleric attempted to spark a Shiite uprising, and
there was unrest and fighting in a number of other Iraqi cities. By mid-April the
Shiite militia was in control only in the region around An Najaf, but the militia did
not abandon its hold there until after intense battling in August. At the end of June,
Paul Bremer, the head of the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority, turned over
sovereignty to an Iraqi interim government.
Nonetheless, the unrest called into question the degree to which Iraq had been
pacified, and the 160,000 U.S.-led troops still in Iraq were, for the time being, the
true guarantor of Iraqi security. Meanwhile, the prestige of the U.S. military had
been damaged by revelations, in May, that it had abused Iraqis held in the Abu
Ghraib prison during 2003–4.
In July, 2004, the U.S. commission investigating the terror attacks of Sept. 11,
2001, criticized especially U.S. intelligence agencies for failings that contributed to
the success of the attacks, and called for a major reorganization of those agencies,
leading to the passage of legislation late in the year. In the following months the
country's focus turned largely toward the November presidential election, as the
campaigns of President Bush and Senator Kerry and their surrogates escalated their
often sharp political attacks. In a country divided over the threat of terrorism and
the war in Iraq, over the state of the economy and the state of the nation's values,
election spending reached a new peak despite recent campaign financing
limitations, and fueled a divisive and sometimes bitter mood. Ultimately, the
president appeared to benefit from a slowly recovering economy and the desire of
many voters for continuity in leadership while the nation was at war. Amid greatly
increased voter turnout, Bush secured a clear majority of the popular vote, in sharp
contrast to the 2000 election that first made him president. Republicans also
increased their margins of control in both houses of Congress, largely through
victories in the more conservative South.
The very active 2005 hurricane season saw several significant storms make landfall
on the U.S. coast. In August, Hurricane Katrina devastated the Mississippi and SE
Louisiana coasts, flooded much of New Orleans for several weeks, and caused
extensive destruction inland in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, making it the
most expensive natural disaster in U.S. history. The following month, Hurricane
Rita caused devastation along the SW Louisiana coast and widespread destruction
in inland Louisiana and SE Texas.
The perceived failings in the federal response to Katrina seemed to catalyze public
dissatisfaction with President Bush, as Americans became increasingly unsettled
by the ongoing war in Iraq, the state of the U.S. economy, and other issues less
than a year after Bush had been solidly reelected. Congress, meanwhile, passed a
$52 billion emergency spending bill to deal with the effects of Katrina, but did not
make any significant spending cuts or reductions in tax cuts to compensate for the
additional outlays until Feb., 2006, when Congress passed a bill cutting almost $40
billion from a variety of government benefit programs, including Medicare,
Medicaid, and student loans.
Internationally and domestically, the United States government was the subject of
condemnation from some quarters for aspects of its conduct of the “war on terror”
in the second half of 2005. In Aug., 2005, Amnesty International denounced the
United States for maintaining secret, underground CIA prisons abroad. Subsequent
news reporting indicated that there were prisons in eight nations in E Europe and
Asia, and in December the United States acknowledged that the International
Committee of the Red Cross had not been given access to all its detention facilities.
A Swiss investigator for the Council of Europe indicated (Dec., 2005) that reports
that European nations and the United States had been involved in the abduction
and extrajudicial transfer of individuals to other nations were credible, and he
accused (Jan., 2006) the nations of “outsourcing” torture. In Jan., 2006, the New
York–based Human Rights Watch accused the U.S. government of a deliberate
policy of mistreating terror suspects.
In Dec., 2005, the National Security Agency was revealed to be wiretapping some
214 international communications originating in the United States without obtaining
the legally required warrants. The practice had begun in 2002, at the president's
order. The administration justified it by asserting that the president's powers to
defend the United States under the Constitution were not subject to Congressional
legislation and that the legislation authorizing the president to respond to the Sept.,
2001, terror attacks implicitly also authorized the wiretapping. Many politicians,
former government officials, and legal scholars, however, criticized the practice as
illegal or unconstitutional. The revelations and assertions did not derail the renewal
of those parts of the USA PATRIOT Act, a sometimes criticized national security
law originally enacted in 2001 after the Sept. 11th attacks; with only minor
adjustments most of the law was made permanent in Mar., 2006.
Leading imports include ores and metal scraps, petroleum and petroleum products,
215 machinery, transportation equipment (especially automobiles), and paper and paper
products. The major U.S. trading partners are Canada (in the world's largest
bilateral trade relationship), Mexico, Japan, the United Kingdom, South Korea, and
Germany. The volume of trade has been steadily increasing. The gross domestic
product has continued to rise, and in 1998 it was easily the largest in the world at
about $8.5 trillion. The development of the economy has been spurred by the
growth of a complex network of communications not only by railroad, highways,
inland waterways, and air but also by telephone, radio, television, computer
(including the Internet), and fax machine. This infrastructure has fostered not only
agricultural and manufacturing growth but has also contributed to the leading
position the United States holds in world tourism revenues and to the ongoing shift
to a service-based economy. In 1996 some 74% of Americans worked in service
industries, a proportion matched, among major economic powers, only by Canada.
Government
The government of the United States is that of a federal republic set up by the
Constitution of the United States, adopted by the Constitutional Convention of
1787.
There is a division of powers between the federal government and the state
governments. The federal government consists of three branches: the executive, the
legislative, and the judicial. The executive power is vested in the President and, in
the event of the President's incapacity, the Vice President. (For a chronological list
of all the presidents and vice presidents of the United States, including their terms
in office and political parties, see the table entitled Presidents of the United States.)
The executive conducts the administrative business of the nation with the aid of a
cabinet composed of the Attorney General and the Secretaries of the Departments
of State; Treasury; Defense; Interior; Agriculture; Commerce; Labor; Health and
Human Services; Education; Housing and Urban Development; Transportation;
Energy; and Veterans' Affairs.
The Congress of the United States, the legislative branch, is bicameral and consists
of the Senate and the House of Representatives. The judicial branch is formed by
the federal courts and headed by the U.S. Supreme Court. The members of the
Congress are elected by universal suffrage as are the members of the electoral
college, which formally chooses the President and the Vice President.
216
219
222
86. Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life among the Lowly is an anti-slavery novel
by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Published in 1852
87. Gadsden purchase was conducted in 1853 with Mexico, ratified by
senate in 1854, to build a transcontinental railroad
88. Kansas-Nebraska act was passed in 1854, proposed by Stephen
Douglas, an attempt to legalese the doctrine of Popular Sovereignty. It
repealed Missouri compromise, giving states right to decide the status.
89. Eventually both Kansas and Nebraska entered as Free states.
90. The 1854 Ostend Manifesto was an unsuccessful Southern attempt to
annex Cuba as a slave state
91. Appeal of independent democrats of Congress was written by Chase,
signed by Free-Soil Democrats
92. In Kansas, two opposing constitutions, Topeka Constitution (anti-
slavery- 1855) and Lecompton Constitution (pro-slavery- 1857) were
proposed. In Congress debate (1858), former won and Kansas entered
union as Free state (1861)
93. In 1856, Pottawatomie massacre took place- free men under John
Brown attacked Pro-Salves
94. Kansas-Nebraska act had huge impact on 1856 election in which
Buchanan, a democrat, won
95. In 1857, Supreme Court heard the famous Dred Scot vs. Sanford case -
ruled in favor of slave owners and also declared Missouri Compromise
unconstitutional plus declared Negros as Non-Citizens of US. This
decision was later overruled by 15th amendment(1870)
96. Lincoln-Douglas debate took place in 1858, as a contest for Senate seat
from Illinois
97. In 1859, John Brown’s Raid on Harper Ferry took place- An attempt to
eradicate slavery by armed slave revolt
223
98. According to 1860 census, population was 31.4 Mn
99. 1860 election was won by Abraham Lincoln- a republican; democrats
were divided on nomination (Douglas was main nominee). Another party
called Constitutional Union Party also participated Civil War
100. First state to secede was South Carolina (20 Dec 1860) and by Feb, 6
more states seceded. In Feb 1861, 7 states -SAFMGTL (Some apples feel more
good than lemon)–met at Montgomery (Alabama) and formed a Confederate
state of America with Jefferson Davis of Mississippi as president.
Richmond (Virginia) was selected as capital. This happened even before
Lincoln took office (4thMarch 1861).
101. 4 more states – VNAT (Very Tasty And Nectarous)- joined confederation
later to make total 11 states
102. Union had 25 states on its side
103. War started with attack of Southern forces on Fort Sumter on 12th April
1861. War was conducted on 2 fronts- east and west. Lincoln called for
75,000 volunteers
104. 1st battle of Bull Run/Manassas was conducted in east in 1861, a failed
attempt by US to take Richmond.
105. 2nd attempt at Richmond was conducted in 1862(7 days war), driven
back by confederation
106. 2nd battle of Bull Run/Manassas was conducted in 1862
107. Confederation got a ship Alabama from GB, it sunk 63 US ships
108. Battle of Gettysburg (1863) was the battle with most (50,000) causalities
in war. It was conducted near Pennsylvania, and put t halt to General Lee’s
invasion of North
109. Final battle of civil war took place in Appomattox, Confederation
surrendered in April 1865
110. Lincoln changed 5 generals during the war
111. Confederation resorted to conscription in 1862, US in 1863
112. Prominent generals of US were
a. McDowell (Lost 1st battle of Bull Run)
b. McClellan (Led 2ndsiege at Richmond)
c. Sherman (notorious march through Georgia, 1864)
d. Grant (Chief of US forces in Civil War, won final battle at
Appomattox)
113. Prominent generals of confederation were
224
a. Beauregard (Initiated war with Fort Sumter attack, won
first battle of Bull run)
b. Johnston (won first battle of Bull run, injure in 2nd siege
on Richmond)
c. Robert E. Lee (Lost Final battle)
114. GB stayed Neutral though it wanted to help Southerners, France too
stayed neutral following GB, because of timid leader Napoleon 3. Russia
supported US by sending 12 vessels
115. Trent affair occurred in 1861 between US and GB
116. Proclamation of Emancipation was read by Lincoln in 1862,
operational from 1st Jan, 1863. It freed slaves only in South
117. Congress passed National Banking Acts in 1863 and 1864 to stimulate
sale of war bonds
118. Gettysburg address was given by Lincoln in Nov 1863
119. War-time nurses were called Angels of the Battlefields
120. Charles and Mary Beard called Civil war as second American
revolution
121. William Seward was Lincoln’s Secretary of State
122. 6 volumes of "Medical and Surgical History of the War of the
Rebellion" were published. It was prepared under the direction of Joseph
Barnes
123. Lincoln’s Sect of war was Edwin Stanton
124. 10 percent plan was given by Lincoln for admission of Southern states in
union
125. Assassination of Lincoln occurred on 12th April 1865, at hands of John
Wilkes Booth, a Maryland actor, while Lincoln was watching a drama Our
American Cousin at Ford Theatre. Booth shouted SIC SEMPER
TYRANNIS. ASSASSINATORS WERE TRIALED BY A MILITRY
TRIBNAL “HUNTER COMISSION”
126. Andrew Johnson was a democrat
127. Ban on slavery all over US (except as punishment)was added in
constitution as 13th Amendment in 1865
128. Hiram Rhodes Revels was first ever African-American in US Congress
(Senate)
129. Alaska was purchased from Russia in 1867 for $ 7.2 Mn, became
49thstate in 1959
225
130. National Labor Union was founded in 1866, dissolved in 1873
131. 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868. It is about equal protection for all
citizens under law. This amendment was later used in the Supreme Court
Case: Brown vs. Board of Education
132. Ku Klux Klan was formed in Tennessee in 1868
133. Democrats called themselves as Redeemers
134. Andrew Johnson was the first president to be impeached in 1868.
Blame was "Violation of Office Tenure act high crimes and
misdemeanors. Impeachment failed
135. 15th Amendment was ratified in1870. It grants citizenship (right to
vote) to all residents no matter which race or color. This amendment
overruled the decision of SC on Dred Scott case (1857 )
136. Thomas Edison invented Phonograph in 1877
137. Rise and Fall of Confederate govt. was written in 1881 by Jefferson
Davis
138. In 1886, France gifted USA with Statue of Liberty, at the time of
president Grover Cleveland. It was designed by French sculptor Fredric
Bartholdi and symbolized immigrants
226
Uptill 1977
193. New Hampshire was the first state to adopt a constitution in 1776
194. On July 8, 1776, Liberty Bell rang from the tower of Independence Hall
summoning the citizens of Philadelphia to hear the Declaration of
Independence by Colonel John Nixon.
195. Thomas Paine wrote a book Common Sense (1776) which aroused the
public revolutionary spirit
196. Virginia Statute of religious freedom was drafted by Jefferson in 1777,
included in Virginia’s state law in 1786
197. Benjamin Franklin was a Pennsylvanian Radical
198. Samuel Adams, John Adams and John Hancock were Massachusetts’
radicals
199. George Washington, Madison, Thomas Jefferson and Patrick Henry
were Virginian radicals
200. Alexander Hamilton and Robert Livingston were New York radicals
201. American capitals were
a. Philadelphia (1st and 2nd Continental Congress)
b. Then due to WOI it was changed frequently to Baltimore, Lancaster
and York and finally again back to Philadelphia
c. Under AOC it was changed to New York City
d. Under US Constitution, first ever capital was New York City, changed
to Philadelphia (1790) and finally to Washington DC (1800)where
congress held its first meeting In 1800
230 202. ROBERT MORRIS became the Congress' superintendent of finance in
1781 and setup Bank of North America
203. Continental congress issued paper money called “Continental”
204. Annapolis Convention, presided by John Dickinson, was held in
September 1786, first attempt to modify the AOC to give Congress more
control, but failed. It called for Philadelphia convention.
205. Shay’s rebellion took place in 1786-87in Massachusetts
206. Three-fifth compromise was suggested by James Wilson and Roger
Sherman.
207. Benjamin Franklin is called the “sage of constitutional convention”
208. The committee of detail was headed by John Rutledge
209. The preamble of constitutionwaswritten by Committee of Style
210. Anti-federalists were led by Patrick Henry, federalists by Alexander
Hamilton
211. Constitution was ratified by 9th stateson June 21, 1788,New Hampshire
being that state; became operational on 4th March 1789 with first
meeting of congress and repealing of AOC on 3rd March
212. George Washington is the only president not to belong to any political
party; he called political parties “factions”
213. Bill of rights (9 proposed by Massachusetts, 12 proposed by GW, but 10
accepted amendments), sent to states on 25th Sep, 1789, ratified by 9
states and became operational in Dec 1791. Connecticut and Georgia
ratified them in 1941
a. 1st Amendment: Freedom of speech, no religion established
b. 2nd Amendment: A state militia and right to keep arms
c. 9th Amendment: Rights not listed will be protected
d. 10th Amendment: Powers not enlisted in constitution are reserved by
states
214. Supreme Court of USA was established in 1789
215. Population of US according to census of 1790 was 3.9 Mn
216. First cotton mill was established in 1790by Samuel Slater
217. The First Bank of USwas established in 1791 at Philadelphiaas a
private corporation with an expiration date of 20 years.Bank would
have $ 10 Mn capital one-fifth of which will be provided by
government. Bank would have 25 directors (one-fifth appointed by
govt.)
218. National currency was issued in 1792 (Mint Act) by establishing a mint
231
at Philadelphia
219. 11th amendment in US Constitution was passed by Congress in 1794,
ratified in 1795 was in order to overrule the U.S. Supreme Court's
decision in Chisholm v. Georgia
220. Jay’s treaty was signed with UK in 1794
221. Washington DC was previously called Federal City
222. French Revolution broke out in 1789
223. Anglo-French war broke out in 1792
224. Ellen Whitney invented Cotton Gin in 1793
225. First party system ranges from almost 1794 to 1828. Two major parties
were Federalists and Democratic-republicans (Jeffersonian).
226. Election of 1796 was the first election where candidates at all levels ran
from well-organized partiesand the only electionwhere POTUS and VP
were from opposing parties
227. Alien and sedition acts passed in 1798, contained 4 sub-laws and
expired in 1801
228. Virginia resolution (1798-Madison) and Kentucky resolutions(1798 &
99-Jefferson) were passed in state legislatures, in opposition of Alien &
Sedition Acts and the principles incorporated in theme became known as
principles of ‘98
229. George Washington died in 1799
History of USA
Solved MCQS - 2012
230. FDR highest vote in which term? 2nd Term
231. Harvard was established in which year? 1636
232. How many states signed Declaration of Independence? 13 Colonies
233. Ronald Reagan said Evil Empire about which state? USSR
234. Fourth Constitution Amendment is about? Search and Seizure
235. Paris Treaty in which year? 1783
236. First US Consensus in which year? 1790
237. Fourteen points of Wilson deals with? Germany
238. NASA US space shuttle Colombia in which year? 1981
239. Intermediate Range Nuclear Treaty signed between Reagan and
232 Gorbachev in which year? 1987
240. I have a dream speech by Martin Luther in which year? 1963
241. Capital Punishment in America is followed in how many states? 35
242. Malcolm X killed in which year? 1965
243. National Organization of Women was established in which year? 1966
244. American Bar Association established in 1878.
245. Miranda rule pertains to warn you in advance before arresting you.
246. Truman doctrine was to contain communism in Greece and Turkey.
247. Reader Digest was introduced in America in 1922.
GENERAL OBJECTIVES
248. The term muckraker is closely associated with reform-oriented
journalists who wrote continued a tradition of investigative journalism
reporting, and emerged in the United States after 1900.
250. Clara Barton was a famous nurse in Civil War, made American Red
Cross.
259. USA has an area of3.79 million square miles (9.83 Million Km square).
264. In US constitution:
Article 1: Legislature (also census)
Article 2: Executive
Article 3: Judiciary
Article 4: Relations between states
Article 5: Amendments
Article 6: Central Govt
Article 7: Ratification