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    Apush Fall Exam Guide

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    APUSH Fall Exam First John Marshall – Supreme Court chief appointed by John Adams; set many precedents for the way the US Constitution is currently interpreted. Henry Clay – a lawyer‚ politician‚ and skilled orator who represented Kentucky in both the Senate and in the House of Representatives. He opposed the idea of Manifest Destiny because he believed it would cause controversy over slavery and threaten stability of Union. (He was right). Two Party System – A major change in politics after

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    Janos Lobb April 3‚ 2013 APUSH Outline Chapter 28 – Progressivism I. Progressive Roots a. The progressive movements started in the 1870s and the 1890s with two parties. One was the Greenback Labor Party and the other was the Populists b. Early progressive movements were trying to change the corruption of bigwigs and their companies. Many different people explained what had happened in books c. Early reformers tried to make changes by voting. Besides voting‚ high-minded

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    apush chapter 1

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    Neha Rattu 09.06.2014 APUSH Chapter 1 1. Native Americans in the “New World” a. bad omens- lightning struck temple‚ blazing lights in the sky b. BAMM! White people are on the shores :O big shocker (let’s just welcome them‚ forgetting all the bad omens) c. HERNAN CORTES------ 1519 ----- shows his beautiful face to the Indians (key event in the discovery of the New World) d. WHYY DID HE COME? Well‚ in short‚ during the 1400-1500s in Europe‚ there was a lot of

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    Apush Key Terms

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    APUSH Key Terms Chapter One Conquistador- one of the Spanish conquerors of Mexico and Peru in the 16th century. Aztec Moctezuma- was the ninth tlatoani or ruler of Tenochtitlan‚ reigning from 1502 to 1520. The first contact between indigenous civilizations of Mesoamerica and Europeans took place during his reign‚ and he was killed during the initial stages of the Spanish conquest of Mexico Treaty of Tordesilas- signed at Tordesillas (now in Valladolid province‚ Spain)‚ 7 June 1494‚ divided

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    Prohibiting Prohibition “When I sell liquor‚ it’s called bootlegging; when my patrons serve it on Lake Shore Drive‚ it’s called hospitality. -Al Capone” Prohibition‚ also known as The Temperance Movement was introduced during in the 19th century and early 20th century. Prohibition was the result of generations of work and effort by temperance workers to close down bars and taverns which caused the drunkenness and misery in an age where social welfare did not exist. Prohibition was one of the biggest

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    Prohibition and the Rise of Organized Crime Peter H. Mitchell Neumann University Thesis: Although prohibition’s goal was to increase a sense of integrity in the United States‚ it encouraged normally law-abiding citizens to break the law‚ enabled the growth and influence of organized crime‚ and increased levels of corruption in government and law-enforcement. Outline: I. Introduction    A. Definition of Prohibition    B. Eighteenth Amendment    C. Medicinal Use D. Sacramental Use II. Affects

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    No alcohol! The prohibition act or the 18th amendment in 1920 banned the “manufacture‚ sale‚ or transportation of intoxicating liquors” (gilderlehrman) this was a big thing because the consumption of alcohol was a big part of daily life in the 1920’s. The prohibition was known as the “noble experiment” (Mark Thornton) this was because people couldn’t see a life with liquor. Then the idea of prohibition was born because groups like the “Woman’s Christian Temperance Union” were very concerned about

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    Despite the United States Government putting prohibition into effect to reduce criminal activity‚ corruption‚ and social problems‚ it actually caused more damage. Coker‚ Joe L. Liquor in the Land of the Lost Cause Southern White Evangelicals and the Prohibition Movement. Lexington‚: U of Kentucky‚ 2007. 345. Print. This book is about the people who wanted to clean up American and bring it back to a society that went to church and had honest and good morals. It focuses on the southern states and

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    Salvatore Norge Tim Walsh English 101-L01 3 November 2010 Arguing Positions: Prohibition of Alcohol Alcohol abuse is an extremely ravaging calamity‚ and many resolutions have developed as a result of its effects. The eighteenth amendment was ratified in 1920‚ and eliminating the legal use of alcohol was adopted. Also known as the prohibition of alcohol‚ it became effective in the United States of America. Its intentions were to prevent the manufacture‚ import‚ export‚ sales‚ and consumption

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    APUSH DBQ1 Labor Unions

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    Vincent Vo Period 6 Buers APUSH DBQ 1: Labor Unions Three decades following the Civil War‚ America was a conflicted time of both poverty and prosperity. While there were indeed a number of powerful men‚ such as Rockefeller and Carnegie‚ the majority of the population consisted of the working class. Entire families worked for exhaustingly long hours in dangerous and unsanitary conditions. Eventually‚ people of the working class started to advertise reforms and form unions. The movement towards organized

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