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A Difficult Past- How the Americas Change Lisa Daleiden
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Page 1: How the americas change

A Difficult Past- How the Americas Change

Lisa Daleiden

Page 2: How the americas change

Background Readings• During the late 18th- early 19th century

almost all lands in the Western Hemisphere won independence from European colonial power.

• Canada built a federal state under British Canadian leadership.

– Canada gained independence from Britain without war.

• 1780’s = Constitution.– Responsibility to federal government.– Local issues dealt with by individual states.

• 1803 = Louisiana Purchase.• Trial of Fears (1837-1838)- forced Cherokee

from eastern woodlands to Oklahoma.• 1836 = Texas declared independence from

Mexico.– Led to Mexican-American war from 1845-

1848.– Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848).

• U.S paid Mexico for parts of Texas, California and New Mexico.

• Missouri Compromise of 1820- maintain balance between slave and free states.

Page 3: How the americas change

Background Readings Continued

• 11 southern states withdrew from the Union in 1860-1861.

• 1863 – Lincoln signed Emancipation Proclamation and ended slavery.

– Victory for Northern states.• British North American Act of 1867- joined

Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick and recognized them as the Dominion of Canada.

– Alberta and Saskatchewan joined the Dominion in 1905 and New Found land joined in 1949.

• Latin American elites divided in to different camps.

– Liberals or Conservatives.– Centralists or Federalists.– Secularists or Roman Catholics.

• Mexican Revolution= 1911-1920. – Broke out to overthrow dictator Porfirio Diaz.

• The government gained control.– Mexican Constitution addressed in 1917.

Page 4: How the americas change

The Little Ice Age• The Little Ice Age= 14th-19th century.• Collection of climate shifts.• Climate affect war.• Climate change led to dieses epidemics.• Climate effected crows and food supplies.• In 1400’s global temperature dropped four

degrees.• Forces that caused Little Ice Age unknown.• Witches were said to be one cause of

climate change.• Europe blamed Vikings for climate change.• Climatologist theories.• Volcanoes.• Oceanic conveyor belt changed by warmer

temperature (glaciers melt and affect Conveyor belt).

• Could we see another Little Ice Age today?• Global Warming.• Hurricanes.• Floods.

Page 5: How the americas change

The Louisiana Purchase• 1803- The U.S purchase the

Louisiana Territory from France (Napoleon).

– 15 million dollars.– Louisiana Territory later split into

six states.• 1682 – French claim Louisiana

and name it after King Louie the 14th.

• In 1762 after French and Indian War, the French give Louisiana to Spanish as a token of gratitude for aid in war.

– French later reclaim Louisiana.• Napoleon makes deal with

Spanish.

• Port city of New Orleans important because of its position on Mississippi River.

Page 6: How the americas change

The North American Frontier • By 1821 two republics claimed

most of the west.– Mexico and U.S.

• Indians claimed land but different tribes challenged each other for the land (Black Hills).

– Blackfeet, Arapaho, Crow, La Cottas, Cree and Siox.

• Mexico won it’s Independence in 1821 and allowed Americans into Texas.

– Texas became Republic of Texas and separated from Mexico in 1836.

• Texas, Oregon, Washington, California, New Mexico and Idaho become part of the Union.

Page 7: How the americas change

Crossroads of Freedom• In the American Civil War, 11

states of the Confederacy established a government at Richmond in May of 1861.

• General George B. McClellan took charge of Army of Potomac.

– The “Young Napoleon”.• Jefferson Davis was inaugurated

to his full six-year-term as President on February 22, 1862.

• CSS Virginia (Merrimac) and USS Monitor- first battle between ironclad ships on March 8th, 1862.

– CSS Virginia sank the USS Cumberland.

• Cotton embargo- states blockade, “cotton famine”.

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Crossroads of Freedom Continued

• Thomas J. Jackson- Confederate general.

– “Stonewall”– Became the most renowned

commander in the South and most feared in the North until his death in June of 1862.

• General Robert E. Lee- important general for the Southern states.

– Known as “Granny Lee”, “Evacuating Lee and “King of Spades”.

• Milita Act passed on July 17, 1862.– Authorized the President to call state

milita into federal service for nine months and to draft them if a state failed to fulfill it’s quota.

• August 6, 1861- passing of Confiscation Act.

– Authorized the seizure of all property.

Page 9: How the americas change

Crossroads of Freedom Continued

• In 1861-1862 nearly all Northern Democrats supported restoration of the Union.

• The party divided into “war” and “peace” Democrats.

• Many men at this time in the war suffering from “battle fatigue”.

• Stress, exhaustion and illness.• McClellan (Northern

commander) continued to be under scrutiny.

• Lincoln and others in the North did not trust in his decision making.

Page 10: How the americas change

Crossroads of Freedom Continued

• Emancipation Proclamation- warning Confederate states that unless they returned to the Union by January 1st, 1863, their slaves would be free.– Proclamation would only apply

to states in rebellion.

• September 24,1862- Writ of Habeas Corpus.– Authorized military trials for

rebels and insurgents, aides and abettors, resisting milita drafts, all persons discouraging volunteer enlistments and those guilty of disloyal practices.