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AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
Manifest Destiny
1. Manifest Destiny2. Convention of 18183. Adams-Onis Treaty
(Transcontinental Treaty), 1819
4. Webster-Ashburton Treaty, 1842
5. railroad and telegraph expansion
6. Panic of 18377. Great American
Desert8. Far West9. Overland Trails:
(Oregon, Santa Fe)10. mountain men11. Stephen Austin
12. Antonio López de Santa Anna
13. Sam Houston14. Texas Revolution,
1835—183615. Alamo16. Battle of San Jacinto17. Wilmot Proviso
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
The Mexican-American War
1. William Henry Harrison [President, 1841]
2. John Tyler [President, 1841—1845]
3. Texas Annexation4. Presidential Election
of 1844
5. “Fifty-four Forty, or Fight”
6. James K. Polk [President, 1845—1849]
7. Oregon Treaty, 18468. Mexican War, 1846
—18489. Zachary Taylor
10. Winfield Scott11. John C. Frémont12. “Bear Flag Revolt”13. Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo, 184814. Mexican Cession
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
The Compromise of 1850
1. Presidential Election of 1848
2. Zachary Taylor, [President, 1849—1850]
3. Stephen Douglas
4. popular sovereignty5. “Great Debate”6. Henry Clay7. John C. Calhoun8. Daniel Webster9. Compromise of 1850
10. Fugitive Slave Act of 1850
11. Millard Fillmore, [President, 1850—1853]
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
Sectional Conflict: Regional Differences
1. Northern Industry v. Southern Agriculture
2. Free Soil Party3. Abolitionist
Movement4. Uncle Tom’s Cabin,
1852
5. Harriett Beecher Stowe
6. George Fitzhugh7. Conscience Whigs8. Presidential Election
of 1852 (Issues)
9. Franklin Pierce [President, 1853—1857]
10. Harriett Tubman11. Underground
Railroad
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
Failure of Compromise
1. Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854
2. Republican Party3. “Bleeding Kansas”4. John Brown5. Pottawatomie
Massacre
6. “Crime Against Kansas Speech”
7. Charles Sumner8. Preston Brooks9. Presidential Election
of 1856 (Issues)10. John C. Frémont11. James Buchanan,
[President,1857—1861]
12. Roger Taney13. Dred Scott v.
Sandford, 185714. Lincoln-Douglas
Debates
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
15. “House Divided” Speech
16. Harper’s Ferry Raid
Election of 1860 and Secession
1. Presidential Election of 1860 (issues)
2. John Bell (Union-South)
3. John C. Breckenridge (Democrat-South),
4. Stephen Douglas (Democrat-North)
5. Abraham Lincoln (Republican)
6. secession
7. Confederate States of America (CSA)
8. Jefferson Davis9. Abraham Lincoln
[President, 1861—1865]
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
10. First Inaugural Address
Military Conflict in the Civil War
1. Border States (DE, MD, MO, KY)
2. Fort Sumter 3. First Battle of Bull Run, 1861
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
4. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson
5. Winfield Scott6. Anaconda Plan7. George B. McClellan8. Robert E. Lee9. Battle of Shiloh, 186210. Battle of Antietam,
1862
11. Battle of Fredericksburg, 1862
12. Battle of Chancellorsville, 1863
13. Monitor v. Merrimac14. Ulysses S. Grant15. Battle of Gettysburg,
186316. Siege of Vicksburg,
1863
17. Siege of Atlanta, 1864
18. Sherman’s “March to the Sea”
19. Appomattox Court House
20. Women in nursing21. 54th Massachusetts
Infantry
Government Policies in the Civil War
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
1. Republicans and “Big Business”
2. expanded executive power
3. suspension of habeas corpus
4. Morrill Tariff, 18615. Morrill Land Grant,
1862
6. Pacific Railway Act, 1862
7. Homestead Act, 1862
8. Emancipation Proclamation, 1862
9. “Gettysburg Address”
10. draft riots
11. Presidential Election of 1864
12. George B. McClellan13. “Copperheads”14. Lincoln’s Second
Inaugural Address 15. Thirteenth
Amendment, 1865
Reconstruction
AP—United States HistoryAP Exam ReviewPERIOD 5, 1844—1877Manifest Destiny through Reconstruction
1. Presidential Reconstruction
2. Wade-Davis Bill (1864)
3. “Ten-Percent Plan”4. Andrew Johnson5. Freedmen’s Bureau6. John Wilkes Booth7. Lincoln’s
assassination8. Black Codes9. Congressional
Reconstruction10. “Radical
Republicans”11. Charles Sumner12. Thaddeus Stephens
13. Benjamin Wade14. Reconstruction Acts,
186715. Tenure of Office Act,
186716. Edwin Stanton17. impeachment18. “Scalawags”19. “Carpetbaggers”20. Blanche K. Bruce21. Hiram Revels22. Sharecropping23. tenant farming24. Ku Klux Klan25. Force Acts, 1870,
187126. Amnesty Act, 1872
27. Andrew Johnson [President, 1865—1869]
28. Presidential Election of 1868
29. Ulysses Grant [President, 1869-1877]
30. patronage31. Thomas Nast32. Liberal Republicans33. Horace Greeley34. Panic of 187335. “Redeemers”36. Rutherford B. Hayes37. Samuel J. Tilden38. Compromise of 1877