Sunday, December 14, 2008

BWAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAH!
Please say hello to Peggy Eaton... The hot one who messed up all the fun.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Terms & Names: Chapter 12

Sacajawea: woman who accompanied the Lewis and Clark Expedition, led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, wife of "guide" Toussaint Charbonneau

Meriwether Lewis and William Clark: men who guided the exploration of the Pacific Northwest, what land was attained in the Louisiana purchase

Sioux: involved in Dakota war of 1862, originally allied with French fur traders,

Second Bank of the United States: chartered in 1816 by Madison in attempt to save currency problem, failed, was dissolved by Jackson 1833

Panic of 1819: economic freak out resultant from the Bank of US refusing to take anything other than specie and the repercussions of that

Missouri Compromise: agreement passed in 1820 which settled the conflict over whether Missouri should be slave or free, it was slave and they added Maine, and the provision that slavery was abolished above the bottom of Missouri, or at the parallel 36°30' north

James Tallmadge: introduced, as an amendment to the bill authorizing the people of Missouri to form a state organization, a proposition to exclude slavery from that state when admitted to the Union.

Thomas Proviso: the compromise introduced by Tallmadge- If the north would admit Missouri as a slave state, the South would agree to outlaw slavery above a line extending from the southern border of Missouri to spanish territtory.

Era of good Feelings: period in United States political history in which partisan bitterness abated. The phrase was coined by Benjamin Russell, in the Boston newspaper, Columbian Centinel, on July 12, 1817, following the good-will visit to Boston of President James Monroe.

John Quincy Adams: democratic republican president elected in 1825 amid much controversy and the supposedly corrupt bargain

Adams-Onis Treaty: aka Transcontinental Treaty of 1819, settled a border dispute in North America between the United States and Spain, US got Florida

Monroe Doctrine: December 2, 1823, Monroe says Europe can't interfere in Western Hemisphere, that US wouldn't do anything to its south, unless if Europe comes in.

William Crawford: leading candidate for the Democratic-Republican presidential nomination in 1824, but a massive stroke in 1823 ended his chances.

"Corrupt Bargain": the 1824 election when Adams was elected despite Jackson's winning the popular vote.

Martin Van Buren: organizer of the Democratic Party, a dominant figure in the Second Party System, eighth president of US

Tariff of 1828: aka Tariff of Abominations to protect industry in the northern United States from having to compete with European goods by increasing the prices of European products because imported goods were much cheaper than the ones that were made in the U.S. North was happy because they bought, south was not because they sold.

John C Calhoun: South Carolinian advocate of slavery, states' rights, limited government, and nullification, wrote laws for S.C. to be first state with universal white male suffrage, favored War of 1812, corrupt bargain forced him to reverse from nationalism to states' rights.

Nullification: the idea that states should individually be able to determine whether to accept federal laws

Force Bill: 1833 authorized U.S. President Andrew Jackson's use of whatever force necessary to enforce tariffs, intended to suppress South Carolina's nullification of tariffs.

"Spoils System": basically nepotism but not family, where Jackson put only close friends and political supporters into his cabinet

Peggy Eaton: central role in the Petticoat Affair that disrupted the cabinet of Andrew Jackson, in which wifes of Cabinet were mad at her sudden status up and refused to party with her, Jackson had to redo his whole cabinet b/c

Bank Veto Message: 1832 Jackson refuses to renew the Charter of the Second Bank of US which screws up his presidency by a long run and also makes everything weewa

Nicholas Biddle: president of Second Bank of US

Specie Circular: aka Coinage Act, was an executive order issued by U.S. President Andrew Jackson in 1836 and carried out by President Martin Van Buren, required payment for government land to be in gold and silver currency.

Pet Banks: the banks of states Jackson favored and subsiquently distributed the 1833 surplus to.

American System: economic plan consisting of a high tariff to support internal improvements such as road-building, and a national bank to encourage productive enterprise and form a national currency.

Whigs: 33-56 supported the supremacy of Congress over the Executive Branch and favored a program of modernization and economic protectionism.

Gag Rule: limit/forbiddance of raising, consideration or discussion of a particular topic by members of a legislative body ie anti-slavery petitions by Congress occurred from 1835 to 1844

Nat Turner: slave who started the largest slave rebellion in the antebellum southern United States, in Southampton County, Virginia. His methodical slaughter of white civilians during the uprising makes his legacy controversial.

Denmark Vesey Conspiracy: slave purchased his freedom, planned what would have been one of the largest slave rebellions in the United States. Word of the plans was leaked, and Charleston, South Carolina authorities arrested the plot's leaders before the uprising could begin. Vesey and others were tried, convicted and executed.

(Five) Civilized Tribes:Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole, considered civilized by white settlers during that time period because they adopted many of the colonists' customs and had generally good relations with their neighbors.

Worcester v. Georgia: United States Supreme Court held that Cherokee Native Americans were entitled to federal protection from the actions of state governments which would infringe on the tribe's sovereignty.

Indian Removal Act of 1830: supported in the South, where states were eager to gain access to lands inhabited by the "Five Civilized Tribes". In particular, Georgia, the largest state at that time, was involved in a contentious jurisdictional dispute with the Cherokee nation. IE Trail of Tears

Trail of Tears: forced relocation of Native Americans from their homelands to Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma) in the Western United State in 1831.

Arkansas Territory: organized territory of the United States from July 4, 1819, until June 15, 1836, when the territory was admitted to the Union as the state Arkansas, the 25th U.S. state.

Panic of 1837: speculative fever. The bubble burst on May 10, 1837 in New York City, when every bank stopped payment in specie (gold and silver coinage).

Depression of 1837:The Panic was followed by a five-year depression, with the failure of banks and record high unemployment levels.

"Subtreasurey": system for the retaining of government funds in the United States Treasury and its subtreasuries, independently of the national banking and financial systems. In one form or another, it existed from 1846 to 1921.

Log Cabin Campaign: 1840 Presidential campaign of William Henry Harrison.

"Tippecanoe and Tyler Too": campaign song of the colorful Log Cabin Campaign in the 1840 United States presidential election. Its lyrics sung the praises of Whig candidates William Henry Harrison (the "hero of Tippecanoe") and John Tyler, while denigrating incumbent Democrat Martin Van Buren.

...Read more

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Terms & Names: Chapter 11

democratic party:cultural traditionalists, people that didn't benefit from the market revolution. Poor and isolated towns. Jeffersonian formula grounded in fierce defense of liberty and equality of white men with minimal, inexpensive, decentralized government.

whig party: supported by centers of Market Revolution and NE evangelicals, Norther Cities and Towns, urban elite, native-born factory workers. Wanted government to develop economy, called for moral regulation, and bible based schools. [Think of these guys as the new Federalists.]

Horace Mann: Whig reformer that created advanced, expensive, centralized state school systems, believed schools' main purpose was character building and whig protestant culture, trained kids to respect authority.

American anti-slavery society: formed by abolitionists, demanded the rights for blacks, staged a series of campaigns to force the government to face problem of slavery.

New York Herald:Whig supported publication. Claimed that a person that "quietly attends to his business" and is still morally acceptable, will rise in society, while someone who makes a fuss will end up in prison.

Sojourner Truth: American abolitionist and women's rights activist, famous speech: "Ain't I a woman?" delivered in 1851 at the Ohio Women's rights Convention.

Auburn System: prisoners slept in solitary cells, factory work, military style, lived in complete silence

George Bancroft: Radical Democrat from Massachusetts, wanted to get rid of social class because a true republic didn't have it. Thought government control benefited insiders only. Wary of government improvements.

William Seward: Whig governor of New York, supported transportation projects because they broke down neighborhood isolation and developed Market Society, which fostered morality, piety and knowledge.

Philadelphia System:Prison system that put solitary prisoners into cells to contemplate their misdeeds and plot a new life. Led to few reformations and many suicide attempts.

Native American Party: In 1844, with endorsement of the whigs, won the New York City elections. American Nativist party that was anti-immigrant, originally the American Republican Party.

Female Moral Reform Society: set up by reformers from failed NY Magdalen society. Taught prostitutes morality and household skills. Tried to convert them to evangelical middle class. Effort failed.

Dorthea Dix: Boston humanitarian, leading advocate of humane treatment of the mentally ill. Stressed rehabilitation not punishment. Patients would not be abused or yelled at.

New York Magdalen Society: 1828 a band of Sunday school teachers initiated an informal mission to prostitutes, grew into the New York Magdalen Society.

American Temperance Society: established in Boston in 1826, contributed to a reform sentiment, promoted abolition of slavery, expanding women's rights, temperance and the improvement of society.

The Advocate of Moral Reform: The newspaper of the Female Moral Reform Society. Circulated through the evangelical North, reaching 555 auxiliary societies, 20,000 readers.

Washington Temperance Society: Six drunk guys were converted to temperance. It started a National movement in which members were generally working class, nonreligious, and rejected politics and legislation. Collapsed toward the end of the 1840s.

Sarah Grimke: abolitionist writer and suffragist. Reached conclusion that they were human beings first and women second. Cited the bible for support of female equality.

American Colonization Society: only organized opponent to slavery before 1831. Led by wealthy, conservative Northern Churchmen. Proposed sending free blacks to West Africa.

Women's Rights Convention: met in Seneca Falls, NY 1848. Held ties to anti slavery. Only male delegate was Frederick Douglas. Most attendees were white women. Demands for equality based on moral and legal arguments and on the spirit of republican institutions.

The Liberator: The newspaper published by radical abolitionists and women's rights leader William Lloyd Garrison. First example of radical abolitionism, Northern culture.

William Lloyd Garrison: publisher of The Liberator. Condemned slavery as a national sin and demanded immediate emancipation, or a start towards emancipation.

Fifteen-Gallon Law: Massachusetts's sort-lived law that prohibited purchases of hard liquor in quantities less than fifteen gallons. Made to discourage gathering at bars. Bar tenders and drinkers found a way around prohibitory laws

Daniel Webster: -- self-made Whig, used as an example to prove that good people would rise in society and only mean-spirited, lazy people would doubt an activist government.
...Read more

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Chapter 9 & 10 Terms and Names are Up!


OH, and I just found this magnificent picture of Walt Whitman...

Terms & Names: Chapter 10

Middle class: mostly prevalent in the north, had strong evangelical base, were into sentimentality and domesticity, fine arts, nature and art, and scenic tourism. Arose from the market revolution.

Evangelicalism: belief in the need for personal conversion (or being "born again"), some expression of the gospel through evangelism, a high regard for Biblical authority, and an emphasis on the death and resurrection of Jesus to be key characteristics.

Charles Grandison Finney: a minister of the gospel who became an important figure in the Second Great Awakening, known for his innovations in preaching and religious meetings.

Sunday school: prior to 1820, was used to teach children about Christianity, after used as a form of preparation for conversion

Millennialism: not a big deal to poor, middle-class evangelicals were postmillennialists: believed that Christ’s coming would occur at the end of one thousand years of social perfection brought about by missionary conversion of the world, premillennialists believed that the end would come when God chose but looked for signs of the approaching millennium in thunderstorms, shooting stars, eclipses, economic panics, and depressions, William Miller predicted world would end during the year following March 1843

Ralph Waldo Emmerson:an American essayist, philosopher, poet, and leader of the Transcendentalist movement, part of the Nature/Art movement

Herman Melville: an American novelist, short story writer, essayist and poet. MOBY DICK! Significant because a part of the art/trivial things obsession that comes along with having a middle class.

Walt Whitman: an American poet, essayist, journalist, and humanist. He was a part of the transition between Transcendentalism and realism.

Nathaniel Hawthorne: American novelist and short story writer.

Sentimentality: improvements in printing, distributing, and marketing led to outpouring of popular literature, much of it by and for women,cookbooks, etiquette books, manuals on housekeeping, sermons, and sentimental novels,sentimental novels upheld middle-class domesticity, women assumed role of evangelical ministers, demonstrating Christian living by precept, example, and moral suasion, conflict between female moral influence and the male world of politics and the marketplace, most successful sentimental novel of 1850s was Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin


Uncle Tom's Cabin: by Harriet Beecher Stowe, indicts slavery as a system of absolute power at odds with domesticity and Christian love, based solidly on revival Christianity, reverses the power relations of this world, home is ultimate locus of good, marketplace moved to periphery.

Harriet Beecher Stowe: author of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Come on, seriously?

Niagra Falls: a big waterfall. People went to visit it because they were idiots following the opening of the Erie Canal, epitomized the new scenic tourism.

Thomas Cole: founder of the Hudson River School, known for its realistic and detailed portrayal of American landscape and wilderness, which feature themes of romanticism and naturalism.

Southern Code of Honor: drew rigid distinctions between men and women and whites and blacks. Basically, YAY MEN! And you didn't have to be rich for us to like you, your lineage did though. Oh, and you had to be a man...

Seventh-Day Adventists: William Miller predicted world would end during the year following March 1843, prediction did not come true, and remaining followers formed Seventh-Day Adventist Church in the 1860s

Book of Mormon: "bible" of Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, patriarchal faith based on restored theocratic government, male dominance ?, and democracy among fathers, unified thousands of families, including Smith’s own

Joseph Smith: Family financial hardship led to loss of homestead, religious visions led him to discover The Book of Mormon, founded Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1830, church ruled not by professional clergy but by elaborate hierarchy of adult males

Blood sports: Popular in urban working-class neighborhoods, included cock fighting, ratting, and dog fighting, grew in popularity during the 1850s and were often staged by saloonkeepers

Minstrel show: white actors in "blackface" portrayed blatantly racist story, which perpetuated racist bigotry, while still depicting afro-american culture that would otherwise go unnoticed by white Americans

Penny press: Working-class readers discovered a similarly untrustworthy world in cheap fiction, introduced readers to seduction, rape, transvestitism, child pornography, necrophilia, miscegenation, group sex, homosexuality, and women with criminal minds and insatiable sexual appetites (that is quoting from the chapter outline), many popular fictions were melodramatic contests between good and evil, evil described in terms reminiscent of original sin

Denmark Vesey: After purchasing his freedom, he planned what would have been one of the largest slave rebellions in the United States. Word of the plans was leaked, and Charleston, South Carolina authorities arrested the plot's leaders before the uprising could begin. Vesey and others were tried, convicted and executed.

Quaker City: A novel written by George Lippand that was a fictional account of the hypocrisy, lust, and cruelty of the outwardly genteel Christian elite of Philadelphia.

Nat Turner: Baptist lay preacher who believed he was an instrument of God, revolt began in Southampton County, Virginia in Feb 1831, bloody and hopeless revolt that ended in mass murder, failure, and the execution of Turner and his followers

Camp meeting: Majority of southerners were Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, or Disciples of Christ, camp meeting during antebellum years usually limited to only one denomination, meetings were conducted with more decorum than in the past and served as social occasions, churches that grew out of southern revivals reinforced localistic neighborhoods and the patriarchal family

William Miller: predicted world would end during the year following March 1843, prediction did not come true, and remaining followers formed Seventh-Day Adventist Church in the 1860s


...Read more

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Terms & Names: Chapter 9

Second Bank of the United States: Henry Clay led drive for neo-Federalist program in Congress, called for protective tariffs, internal improvements, and a national bank, would foster economic growth and link sections of country together, congress chartered Bank of the United States in 1816, hold government deposits, gov’t would accept Bank notes for gov’t land, taxes, and other transactions, gov’t would buy one-fifth of Bank’s stock, approved due to fiscal horrors created by War of 1812, no discussion of whether Bank was constitutional

American System: um... there's both the bank and tariff system

John C Calhoun: advocated slavery, states' rights to nullify federal laws they deemed unconstitutional, advocated war with Britain in 1812. 



Internal Improvements: 

Dartmouth College v. Woodward: (1816) New Hampshire wanted to make Dart\mouth a state school, but their charter was private issued by the British King, and the Supreme court decided you couldn't change the charter. Protected charters against state interference.  

McCulloch v. Maryland: (1816) McCulloch was a clerk at a Maryland federal bank, and the state tried to tax the bank. Resulted in denial of states' rights to tax the federal government. 

Gibbons v. Ogden: (1824) State of New York attempted to grant monopoly to a steam boat company on the transport from New York to New Jersey. Decision: prohibited state-run monopolies that interfered with interstate commerce. 

Baltimore and Ohio Railroad: "common carrier" railroad which was located primarily in Maryland. Symbolized the modernization resultant from the Market Revolution. 

Robert Fulton: inventor of the steamship, which had massive impact in perpetuating the market revolution, inspired the channel craze. 

Natchez Trace: a 440 mile long path extending from Mississippi to Nashville, linking the Mississippi and Cumberland rivers. Traditional Native American trail, later used by Europeans as trade and transit route. 

Cash-Crop Business: cultivat
ing only one crop and selling it as opposed to sustaining oneself with agriculture. 

McCormick Reaper: cutting, tractor, multipurpose agriculture tool pulled by a horsie. Invented by Cyrus McCormick in 1831. 

Richard Arkwright: (1769) inventor of the water frame, a textile spinner which was way more efficient than people doing it. 

Frederick Law Olmsted: american landscape designer and father of American landscape architecture, famous for designing well-know urban parks, including Central Park. 

Paternalism: exploitation of slave labor after 1820 became both more systematic and more humane, planters paid close attention to slave discipline, clothed discipline in a larger attempt to make North American slavery into a system that was both paternalistic and humane, sprang from both planter self-interest and a genuine attempt to exert a kindly, paternal control, slaves’ material standards rose, alone among the slave populations of the Western Hemisphere, births outnumbered deaths among North American slaves

Tariff of 1816: after war of 1812, british goods were cheaper than American, so people bought them, so Fed introduced a tax on import goods. The north liked it, they produced goods now competitive with British, the south hated it, they now more expensive consumed British goods.

National Road: point of contention under internal improvements, connected chesapeake with trans-Appalachian West.

Erie Canal: New York State funded canal linking Hudson river and Lake Erie, opened passage to Niagra Falls for tourism, commerce.

Lancaster Turnpike: first used in 1795, is the first long-distance, paved road built in the United States

DeWitt Clinton: early American politician who served as United States Senator and Governor of New York. In this last capacity he was largely responsible for the construction of the Erie Canal.

Main Line Canal: a railroad and canal system built by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the 19th century.

Peter Cartwright: a missionary who helped start the Second Great Awakening. He was a minister who preached benevolence.

Farmer's Almanac: ounded in Morristown, New Jersey, in 1818 by editor David Young and publisher Jacob Mann, weather predictions and astronomical data, as well as its trademark blend of humor, trivia, and advice on gardening, cooking, fishing, and human-interest crusades.

Boston Associates: a loosely linked group of investors including Nathan Appleton, Abbott Lawrence, and Amos Lawrence, often related directly or through marriage, they were based in Boston, Massachusetts, established banksand invested in others. Controlled 40% of banking capital in Boston, 40% of all insurance capital in Massachusetts, and 30% of Massachusetts' railroads. Tens of thousands of New Englanders received employment from these investors, working in any one of the hundreds of their mills.

Waltham System: Boston Associates in Massachusetts developed a different textile system, factories were heavily capitalized and as fully mechanized as possible, workers were young, single women from the farms of northern New England, desired to build a profitable textile industry without creating a permanent working class, women policed their own behavior and shunned fellow workers whose behavior was questionable, produced self-respecting sisterhood of independent, wage-earning women

Samuel Slater: brought British textile technology to America, built first water powered mill in america.

Metropolitan Industrialization: largest handicrafts came to be divided into skilled and unskilled segments, created a large urban working class, high rents and the lack of water power made it impossible to set up large factories in cities, some trades, like needlework and shoe making, became “sweated”, most of the work for mass consumption done by women who worked long hours for low piece rates, wage rates and gendered tasks reflected the old family division of labor, members of the middle class entertained notions of gentility based on the distinction between manual and nonmanual work

Yeomen and Planters: as the price of slaves and good land rose, fewer and fewer owners shared in the profits of the cotton economy, and wealth became more concentrated, dual economy emerged with plantations at the commercial center and a white yeomanry on the fringes, some small farmers were tied to the plantation economy and vested in its continuance, most small farmers, though, lived away from the plantations, built yeomen society that shared many of the characteristics of the eighteenth-century countryside



...Read more

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

DO NOT FORGET:

The CRITICAL REVIEW papers for the outside reading books are DUE sometime in early November.

  1. Pick a book from that list Tucker gave out.
  2. Read the spark notes.
  3. Write essay using these directions:
The critical review for your book shall be typed (double spaced) with 12 point type. Include the information specified below. Edit your drafts and keep a copy of your final effort. Final drafts should be 2 to 3 pages in length. Your paper should be 7 paragraphs in length after the bibliographic data. Use one paragraph for each of the following points.

1. Give the bibliographic data for your book using MLA format. Place it at the top of the first page.

2. Describe the book in general terms. What subjects does it cover? What years does it span?

3. Identify the major thesis. The major thesis would reflect the author's general point of view or belief.

4. Explain the author's main contentions and discuss them giving evidence (concrete details and analysis).

5. What were your chief objections and summarize any shortcomings. If you find errors, mention important ones.

6. Address the following:
a. How does the book change your conception of the topic?
b. What additional work needs to be done in order to clear up any doubtful points?
c. What gaps still need to be filled?

7. Give information about the author (background, experience, other books written).

8. End your critique by summarizing your opinion of the merits and faults of the book.