LATE NINETEENTH CENTURY AMERICA
Fri. 1/26 NATIVE PEOPLE STRUGGLE FOR SURVIVAL
Due: read pp. 606-613, 630-639 Out of the Many
Identify:
Five Tribes
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Sand Creek Massacre
“Custer’s Last Stand”
Chief Joseph
“Buffalo Bill” Cody
Helen Hunt Jackson
Ghost Dance
Massacre at Wounded Knee
Questions to guide your reading:
1. How did the Oklahoma land rush affect the native people living there?
2. How did native peoples adapt to invading Europeans over the years?
3. How did the slaughter of buffalo affect the Plains Indians?
4. Describe the responses of artists, naturalists, and conservationist to the western landscape. How did their photographs, paintings, and stories shape perceptions of the West in the East?
5. Why were Indians unable to successfully resist white incursion?
6. Reformers considered the Dawes Severalty Act to be a humanitarian gesture. Why did it turn out to be so terrible for the Indians?
Tues. 1/30/07 POPULISM: The Farmer’s Plight in the late 19th Century
Due: 1) read pp. 619-630 2) read pp. 689-691 to "Workers Search..."3) read pp. 694 from the top-695 bottom of page
Identify:
Long drive
“range wars”
Homestead Act
Morrill Act of 1862
the Grange (p. 689) and Granger movement
Populist Movement (People’s Party)
Farmers’ Alliance
Coxey’s Army
Questions to guide your reading:
1. What was life like for a cowboy in the late nineteenth century?
2. What role did the Homestead Act play in western expansion?
3. How did farm families on the Great Plains divide chores among their members?
4. What factors determined the likelihood of economic success or failure?
5. What were some of the major technological advances in mining and in agriculture that promoted the development of the western economy of California and other western states?
6. What environmental damage did farmers do to the habitat?
7. What was the role of women in both the Grange and in the People’s Party? (689)
8. What did the Populist Party want? (694)
9. What were the causes and consequences of the depression of 1893?
Thurs. 2/1 THE PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT: AN ANSWER TO ALL THE PROBLEMS?
Due : 1) read pp. 722-736 OM, 2) read pp. 744-746 OM
Terms:
Lillian Wald
Henry Street Settlement
Jane Addams
Hull House
“Fighting Bob” LaFollette
initiative
referendum
recall
muckraking
John Dewey
Oliver Wendell Holmes
WCTU and prohibition
Questions to guide your reading:
1. What IS the Progressive Movement ? What are the political, social and intellectual roots of progressive reform?
2. What were the two strains of progressive thought and how did they differ?
3. Why did so many women get involved in the progressive movement?
4. What was wrong with the urban machine, from the progressives' point of view? Were we better off with it than without it?
5. Make a list of the various political reforms that the progressive movement sought to make.
6. How were southern progressives racist in their “reform” efforts?
7. Why were reformers so interested in changing the behavior of the poor? Would we have been better off if they had minded their own business?
Mon. 2/5/07 NATIONAL PROGRESSIVISM
DUE: 1) Read pp. 748 to 750 in OM 2) Read Ch. 10, in After the Fact, "USDA Government Inspected"
Terms:
"bully pulpit"
Northern Securities v. United States (1904)
Hepburn Act
Food and Drug Act
The Jungle
Upton Sinclair
Wed. 2/7/07 US IMPERIALISM AND THE SPANISH AMERICAN WAR
Due: In Out of Many read pp. 750-752 to "the election", 703-715 762-765 bottom of page
Terms:
Gifford Pinchot
John Muir
Sierra Club
Hetch Hetchy
New Nationalism
William Howard Taft
Election of 1908
Good Neighbor policy
Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan
Boxer Rebellion
USS Maine
Teller Amendment
Platt Amendment
Anti-Imperialist League
"big stick"
Roosevelt Corollary
Open Door policy
Questions to guide your reading:
1. How did proponents of imperialism justify colonization?
2. How did the Chicago World's Fair in 1893 display the racism of American culture?
3. How did Christian missionaries prepare the way for American imperialism in foreign lands?
4. In what ways was the annexation of Hawaii controversial?
5. Why did the US intervene in Cuba and the Philippines? What were some of the arguments for and against overseas expansion?
6. What did the US gain with victories in Cuba and in the Philippines?
7. What was controversial about the building of the Panama Canal?
Fri. 2/9/07 WOODROW WILSON: "HE KEPT US OUT OF WAR"
DUE: read pp. 752-754, 766-778 in Out of Many
Terms:
Election of 1912
New Freedom
Eugene V. Debs
Sixteenth Amendment
Federal Reserve Act
Clayton Antitrust Act
FTC
Dollar Diplomacy
militarism
imperialism
Triple Alliance
Triple Entente
Archduke Franz Ferndinand
Lusitania
Committee on Public Information
Selective Service Act
General John J. Pershing and the AEF
Questions to guide your reading:
1. To what extent is Woodrow Wilson a "Progressive" in his domestic policies?
2. How did US military involvement between 1865-1933 shape Mexico and the Caribbean?
3. Why did most Americans oppose US involvement in World War I in 1914?
4. To what extent was the US military prepared to fight a world war?
5. Why did Wilson finally take us into war by 1917?
6. Which Americans were most likely to support entry into war and why? Which were more likely to oppose it and why?
7. What role did African-American soldiers play in this war?
Tues. 2/13/07 THE WAR TO END ALL WARS: WWI and Its Results
Due: Nothing due...no homework weekend!! Don't forget that your interview must be arranged by Thurs. 2/15!!
Thurs. 2/15 Meet at the Small Computer Lab for class: you will have time to research so that you can turn in a bibliography next week.
Due:
1) Turn in interview sheet which includes contact with your interviewee, specific focus/topic for your research
2) read pp. 778-794 in Out of Many
Terms:
War Industries Board
Food Administration
Herbert Hoover
Liberty Bonds
National War Labor Board
Espionage Act
Alice Paul
NAWSA
influenza epidemic
Espionage Act 1917
Sedition Act
Schenck v. United States
great migration
Fourteen Points
League of Nations
Russian Revolution
Red Scare
A. Mitchell Palmer
Questions to guide your reading:
1. What are the long and short term effects of the war on the US economy?
2. What were the reasons behind the regional differences in supprot of woman suffrage? How does the war impact the suffrage movement?
3. How does the war impact the temperance movement? public health?
4. How did the war affect political life in the US? What techniques were used to stifle dissent? What was the war’s political legacy?
5. How does the war affect the lives of African Americans? Does it improve their status and treatment in society?
6. How does the war affect the labor movement, during the war and after the war
7. Why did Wilson have trouble getting what he wanted in Versailles? Why did he have trouble getting the Senate to ratify the final treaty?
Tues. 2/20/07 Test: Native Peoples and Frontier, Populism, Progressivism Imperialism and World War I