tribes of hunter-gatherers; others were sedentary and agricultural civilizations. Many formed new tribes or confederations in response to European colonization. Well-known groups included the Huron‚ Apache Tribe‚ Cherokee‚ Sioux‚ Delaware‚ Algonquin‚ Choctaw‚ Mohegan‚ Iroquois (which included the Mohawk nation‚ Oneida tribe‚ Seneca nation‚ Cayuga nation‚ Onondaga and later the Tuscarora tribe) and Inuit. Though not as technologically advanced as the Mesoamerican civilizations further south‚ there were
Premium United States
US AP – Old Book -- CHAPTER 9: JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY I - “Democratizing” Politics -Jackson’s inauguration symbolized the triumph of “democracy” -the achievement of place and station by “the common man” -Jackson felt that everyone was as competent and politically important as his neighbor -difference between Jeffersonian democracy and Jacksonian was more of attitude than of practice -Jefferson believed that ordinary citizens could be educated to determine right from wrong
Free Andrew Jackson John Quincy Adams Martin Van Buren
Laurence Mandin Professor Charles Turner M.A. J.D. History 18 25 March 2011 Midterm Question #1 part 2: What impact did the English view of race have on American society? (Worth 50 points) note: I felt it was more logical for my purposes to place part 2 first. The English view of race developed directly from their perceptions of themselves‚ from the ideas of their own racial origins‚ their own ethnocentricity. This perception became a concept that had its roots in 16th and 17th Century England
Premium Slavery Atlantic slave trade
-New France · 1698 - exploration led by Samuel de Champlain o Settlements by Quebec along the St. Lawrence River · Befriended many tribes o Montagnais + Hurons = tribes that allied with French · Alliances with tribes in the St. Lawrence led to battles with the Iroquois o France played an effective role in keeping peace to ensure the security of New France · Jesuits- missionaries that forced Christianity down the Indian’s throats -Development of New France · King Louis XIV disbanded the Company
Premium United States Canada Europe
of white settlers during the early years of the United States. The most notable removal came after the Indian Removal Act of 1830. The Cherokee‚ whose journey was known as the ’"’Trail of Tears’"’‚ and the four other civilized tribes‚ Chickasaw‚ Choctaw‚ Creek and Seminole‚ were forced to emigrate to lands west of the Mississippi River‚ to
Premium Native Americans in the United States United States Tennessee
As many as 75 million indigenous people lived in the Americas right before European contact. This was about the same as the population of Europe at that time. The majority of these peoples are thought to have come over via the Bering Strait region from 100‚000 to 14‚000 years ago during the periods when Ice Ages caused land bridges to form between Siberia and Alaska. Other possible origins include Polynesia and South Africa. Theorists such as Thomas Jefferson believed they originated here in America
Premium Indigenous peoples of the Americas Colonialism North America
AP U.S. Summer Assignment Mr. O’handley Nicholas West Due Date: Sept. 5 2012 AP U.S. Summer Assignment Nicholas West Mr. O’handley 7/27/12 OUTLINES CH 1-5 “With the dawn of the 16th century‚ there came together in Europe both the motivation and the means to explore and colonize territory across the sea.” -Trade- the concurring of the Inca Empire led by Francisco Pizarro led to the shipping of tons of gold and silver to
Premium United States Europe Americas
PENGUIN BOOKS AMERICAN COLONIES Alan Taylor’s previous books include William Cooper’s Town: Power and Persuasion on the Frontier of the Early American Republic‚ which won the 1996 Bancroft and Pulitzer prizes for history. He is a professor of history at the University of California at Davis. American Colonies is the first volume in the Penguin History of the United States‚ edited by Eric Foner‚ award-winning author o f Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution and the DeWitt Clinton
Premium Colonialism Americas North America
The American Pageant‚ 13th Edition Textbook Notes Chapter 01 - New World Beginnings I. The Shaping of North America 1. Recorded history began 6‚000 years ago. It was 500 years ago that Europeans set foot on the Americas to begin colonization 2. The theory of Pangaea exists suggesting that the continents were once nestled together into one mega-continent. They then spread out as drifting islands. 3. Geologic forces of continental plates created the Appalachian and Rocky Mountains. 4. The
Premium United States Americas Native Americans in the United States
Matthew Barbosa Period 7-8 Chapter 15 Outline: Jacksonian Democracy at Flood Tide I. “Nullies” in South Carolina 1. The Tariff of 1828 continued to irritate with hot-blooded South Carolinians a. They persisted it not only as an economically punitive in the short run‚ but as a possible wedge for later federal interference with slavery in the southern states b. In protest‚ some South Carolinians took action; the nullifiers‚ also known as “nullies” c. They tried to assemble the necessary two-thirds
Premium American Civil War United States Southern United States