Big Ideas Rhetoric Racism Oppression Colonization Imperialism Reform Revolution Genocide Cultural Genocide

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Unit I: The Early Americas and Colonization Rhetoric Racism Oppression Colonization Imperialism Reform Revolution Genocide Cultural Genocide Chapter 1: The First Americans: (pages 2-19) Chapter 2: Exploration: (pages 25-36) Chapter 3: English Colonies are Created: (pages 47-62) Chapter 4: A Struggle for Power: (pages 69-81) Howard Zinn on Columbus Howard Zinn on Jamestown The Scarlet Letter The Crucible Pocahontas America: The Story of Us: Rebels Colonial House The Scarlet Letter The Crucible 500 Nations The Devil s Playground In Who s Honor? Key Native American Groups 1. Aztecs 2. Incans 3. Mayans 4. Anasazi 5. Cahokian 6. Descendants of the Mississippians 7. Plains 8. Northwest People Spanish Conquistadores and Colonization 1. Arawaks/Tainos and Christopher Columbus (1492) 2. Conquistadores and Missionaries 3. Amerigo Vespucci (1502) 4. Ponce de Leon (1513) 5. Vasco Nunez de Balboa (1513) 6. Aztec Empire/Montezuma and Hernan Cortez (1521) 7. Incan Empire and Francisco Pizarro (1528) 8. The Mayan Empire 9. The Columbian Exchange 10. Encomienda System 11. Small Pox French Colonization 1. Samuel de Champlain (1608) 2. Louis Joliet and Jacques Marquette (1673) 3. Robert de LaSalle (1682) British Colonization 1. Roanoke and Sir Walter Raleigh 2. The Southern Colonies --Jamestown --Joint-stock companies --Virginia Company --John Smith --Powhatan Nation --Pocahontas --Starving Time --John Rolfe --Cash crop --Indentured servants --Triangle trade --Middle passage --Slave trade 3. The New England Colonies --Puritans --Separatists --Pilgrims --Mayflower Compact --Plymouth Colony --Massachusetts Bay Colony --Thanksgiving (1621) 4. The Middle Colonies 5. French and Indian War (1754-1763) --Proclamation of 1763

Unit II: The American Revolution and the United States Constitution Taxation without Representation Unalienable Rights Preamble to the Declaration of Independence Bill of Rights Writers/Speeches Activity: Identify and post examples throughout US history when the US violates the ideas upon which it was founded. Chapter 5: A New Nation Begins to Grow: (pages 91-103) Chapter 6: A New Nation Begins to Grow: (pages 109-125) Chapter 7: A Government is Formed: (pages 131-147) Speech by Patrick Henry The Declaration of Independence The Crossing America: The Story of Us: Rebels America: The Story of Us: Revolution 1. Colonist 2. Patriot 3. Loyalist 4. Monarchy 5. Taxation without Representation 6. Preamble 7. Tyranny 8. Unalienable rights 9. Self-government 10. Liberty 11. Red Coats 12. Guerilla warfare 13. Militia 14. Hessian/Mercenary 1. King George III 2. John Hancock 3. Patrick Henry 4. Paul Revere 5. Benjamin Franklin 6. George Washington 7. Thomas Jefferson 8. Samuel Adams 9. Friedrich Von Steuben 10. Thomas Paine 11. Charles Cornwallis 12. Marquis de Lafayette 13. Casmir Pulaski 14. Benedict Arnold 15. John Adams 16. Daniel Shays 1. Proclamation Line of 1763 2. Quartering Act (1765) 3. Stamp Act (1765) 4. Townshend Acts (1767) 5. Boston Massacre (1770) 6. Boston Tea Party (1773) 7. Coercive Acts/Intolerable Acts (1774) 8. Lexington and Concord (1775) 9. Bunker Hill (1775) 10. Common Sense (1776) 11. Declaration of Independence 12. Battle of Saratoga (1777) 13. Valley Forge (1777-78) 14. Yorktown (1781) 15. Treaty of Paris (1783) The United States Constitution 1. Articles of Confederation 2. Shays Rebellion 3. Land Ordinance of 1785 4. Northwest Ordinance of 1787 5. Federalists 6. Anti-federalists 7. Great Compromise 8. Legislative branch 9. Executive branch 10. Judicial branch 11. Electoral college 12. Congress 13. Senate 14. House of Representatives 15. Supreme Court 16. Three-fifths Compromise 17. Elastic clause 18. Extradition 19. Habeas corpus 20. Due process of law 21. Suffrage 22. Naturalization 23. Double Jeopardy 24. Judicial Review 25. Implied Powers 26. Checks and Balances 27. Veto 28. Impeachment 29. Ratify 30. Amendment 31. Bill of Rights

Unit III: Land Expansion and Native Americans The Frontier Westward Expansion Native Americans Oregon Trail Cowboys Chapter 8: Political Parties Develop (pp. 155-173) Chapter 9: The Young Nation Goes to War: (pages 179-189) Chapter 10: A New Spirit of Expansion: (pages 199, 203-204, 206) Chapter 11: Political Changes Take Place: (pp. 225-226) Chapter 13: The Country Grows Larger: (pp. 259-267) Chapter 12: America More Democratic: (pp. 236-244) Chapter 18: Settling the Western Frontier: (pages 359-373) American Indian Boarding Schools The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian Dances with Wolves Into the West 30 Days: Life on an Indian Reservation TED: Aaron Huey: America s native prisoners of war 1. Cabinet 2. Federalist 3. Anti-federalist 4. Foreign Affairs 5. Impressment 6. Manifest Destiny 7. Reservations 8. Assimilation/Americanization 9. Boarding School 1. George Washington 2. John Adams 3. Alexander Hamilton 4. Thomas Jefferson 5. Henry Knox 6. James Madison 7. Andrew Jackson 8. Meriwether Lewis 9. William Clark 10. Sacagawea 11. Robert Fulton 12. Joseph Glidden 13. Colonel J.M. Chivington 14. Sitting Bull 15. Crazy Horse 16. George Armstrong Custer Foreign Affairs 1. French Revolution of 1789 2. XYZ Affair 3. Alien & Sedition Acts 4. War of 1812 Expansion 1. Louisiana Purchase (1803) 2. Missouri and Maine (1819) 3. Florida (1819) 4. Texas and the Mexican War (1845) 5. 54-40 or Fight (1846) 6. California (1849) Inventions 1. National Road 2. Steam Engine 3. Erie Canal 4. Railroads (1828) 5. Telegraph Americans Move West 1. Oregon Trail 2. Homestead Act 3. Trail Drives 4. Cowboys 5. Mining Native Americans 1. Trail of Tears 2. Indian removal Act 3. Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851) 4. Sand Creek Massacre (1864) 5. Medicine Lodge Creek Treaty (1867) 6. Battle of Little Bighorn 7. Wounded Knee 8. Dawes Act

Unit IV: Race Slavery Slave Trade Middle Passage Sectionalism Abolitionism States Rights Civil War Reconstruction Civil Rights Movement Chapter 14: Political Changes Take Place (pp. 227-284) Chapter 15: The Country Separates (pp. 291-298 and 300-301) Chapter 16: The Civil War (pp. 307-326) Chapter 17: Reconstruction (pp. 333-349) Civil Rights Movement: (pp. 402-404, 572-574, 589-591, and 598-599) Jim Crow Laws The History of the Ku Klux Klan The Help Slavery and the Middle Passage America: The Story of Us: Division Glory America: The Story of Us: Civil War Aftershock: Beyond the Civil War Rosewood The Help MLK Mississippi Burning Remember the Titans 1. Tariff 2. Internal Improvements 3. Abolitionists 4. Popular Sovereignty 5. Secession 1. John C. Calhoun 2. Stephen A. Douglas 3. David Wilmot 4. John Calhoun. 5. Frederick Douglass 6. Harriet Beecher Stowe 7. Nat Turner 8. William Lloyd Garrison 9. Harriet Tubman 10. Eli Whitney 11. John Brown 12. Abraham Lincoln 13. Jefferson Davis 14. Ulysses S. Grant 15. Robert E. Lee 16. William Sherman 17. John Wilkes Booth 18. Martin Luther King 19. Thurgood Marshall 20. Chief Justice Vinson 21. Earl Warren 22. Robert Kennedy 23. Rosa Parks 24. Emmett Till 25. Malcolm X Civil War 1. Dred Scott decision 2. Election of 1860 3. Battle of Bull Run 4. Battle of Antietam 5. Emancipation Proclamation 6. Battle of Vicksburg 7. Battle of Gettysburg 8. Sherman's "March to the Sea" 9. Election of 1864 10. Appomattox Court House Reconstruction 1. Radical Republicans 2. 13th Amendment 3. 14th Amendment 4. 15th Amendment 5. KKK 6. Black Codes 7. Johnson's Impeachment 8. Lincoln's Plan for Reconstruction 9. Johnson's Plan for Reconstruction Civil Rights Movement 1. Non-violent Resistance 2. "I have a Dream" speech 3. March on Washington 4. Sit-ins 5. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 6. Voting Rights Act of 1965 7. Brown v Board of Education 8. Plessy v Ferguson 9. Brown v Board of Education 10. President Eisenhower and Little Rock, AR