Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose...

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Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010

Transcript of Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose...

Page 1: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Amanda Emmerich

AP US History

April 2010

Page 2: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Thesis

• Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great as those witnessed in political change like eight presidencies and countless revolts along with conventions campaigning for more equal rights.

Page 3: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.
Page 4: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Literature

• Walt Whitman composed “Leaves of Grass” which was a volume of twelve poems in which he developed a new, modern type of poetry that was controversial for his time, while Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote the “Scarlet Letter” about a time period of the past.

Page 5: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Literature

• Herman Melville published his sixth novel “Moby-Dick” in 1851 and floundered when translated because people who read it were expecting something totally different.

Page 6: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

John Brown

• John Brown was a big antislavery person who organized the antislavery massacre in 1856 which became known as “Bleeding Kansas,” and lead the raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia.

•John Brown was captured and hung after his1859 raid on Harper’s Ferry.

Page 7: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Harriet Beecher Stowe

• Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin as a response to the strengthened Fugitive Slave Act and in it she elucidated that slavery was immoral.

Page 8: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Minority Groups

• Chinese immigrants arrived in San Francisco during the Gold Rush to find gold, but instead found work, and after the Irish Potato Famine, many Irish Catholic came to the United States seeking refuge.

•The Chinese immigrants working to find gold.

Page 9: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.
Page 10: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Women’s Right Convention

• July 19, 1848 was the Women’s Right Convention in Seneca Falls, New York, where Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were the leaders in the First Women’s Right Convention for equality for men and women.

Page 11: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Jim Crow Laws

• The first Jim Crow Law passed in Massachusetts in 1841 and segregated railroad cars.

Page 12: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Eight Presidencies

Between 1841 and 1860, there were 8 presidents: William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, James K. Polk, Zachary Taylor, Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, and Abraham Lincoln (the winner of the 1860 Presidential election).

Page 13: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

New States Admitted

• During this time, seven new states were admitted to the United States of America and they were, Florida- 1845, Texas (slave)- 1845, Iowa- 1846, Wisconsin- 1848, California- 1850, Minnesota- 1858, and Oregon- 1859.

Page 14: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Compromise of 1850

• Introduced a strengthened Fugitive Slave Law and California became a free state, while Utah and New Mexico were left to be determined by the process of popular sovereignty.

Page 15: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Kansas-Nebraska Act

• The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, repealed the Missouri Compromise and in determining the slave or free status of each, the territories were opened to popular sovereignty.

Page 16: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Dred Scott v. Sanford

• The Dred Scott Case nullified the Missouri Compromise, stated that Congress had no right to prohibit slavery in the territories, and also declared that slaves, even if in a free state or territory, were property and not citizens.

Page 17: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Election of 1860

• Lincoln campaigned to contain slavery in the territories which ensured that some of the Southern states would secede and a reason he won was because the democratic party split into Northern and Southern Democrats.

•Abraham Lincoln won 40% of the electoral vote.

Page 18: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Republican Party

• The Republican Party was established in 1856 and was composed of the remnants from both the Free Soil party and the Whig party.

Page 19: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.
Page 20: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Communist Manifesto

• “…all the surplus that goes to the capitalist as profits is in reality the ‘property’ of the working class who created that wealth.”

• Written by Friedrick Engels and Karl Marx in 1848 and discussed the ideas behind communism but also predicted the downfall of the capitalist system by reasoning the flaws which the system possessed.

Page 21: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Manifest Destiny

• Starting in 1845, to help the economy, “manifest destiny” was used to describe the United States destiny and duty to expand to the west- “From sea to shining sea.”

Page 22: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Railroads

• The addition of new lands would lead to a newer and more efficient transportation system of railroads that would help the economy boom by shipping goods and people quicker.

Page 23: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Gold Rush

• 1848- many people moved west to California in search for gold that was there and many had hoped to get enough to be very wealthy and be helped economically.

Page 24: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Conclusion

•Between 1841 and 1860, many changes transpired that changed the American nation through economic suggestions and social development in literature and discrimination, but none were as greatly changed as the political aspects in America like countless changes in presidents and new laws to from a greater America.

Page 25: Amanda Emmerich AP US History April 2010. Thesis Throughout 1841 to 1860, many changes arose socially and also in the economy, but none were as great.

Works Cited• http://www.hudsonvalley.org/education/Background/Timeline/Complete/complete.html• http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_a410Qj7cNb0/SvYMLebUGuI/AAAAAAAAAS4/Bt7fu8c69p

4/s400/harriet_beecher_stowe-uncle_toms_cabin.jpg

• http://www.animatedatlas.com/timeline.html

• http://images.google.com

• http://www.indepthinfo.com/communist-manifesto/analysis.shtml

• The American Pageant Textbook (Book)- Thomas A. Bailey, David M. Kennedy, Lizabeth Cohen

• 5 Steps To A 5: AP U.S. History (Book)- Stephen Armstrong