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Assignment 4
Diana Bruce
History 141
October 3, 2011
•   Age of independence for the United States,
    Canada and Latin America

•   Legacy of Enlightenment was the effort to
    build societies based on freedom, equality
    and a constitutional government and proved
    to be a monumental challenge

•   An era characterized by continuous mass
    migration and explosive economic growth,
    occasional deep economic stagnation, civil
    war, ethnic violence, class conflict and
    battles for racial and sexual equality

•   With the purchase of the Louisiana territory,   •   The Sioux, Comanche, Pawnee and Apache
    the United States doubled in size                   fought encroachment by Euro-American
                                                        settlers on their lands. By 1870, U.S. forces
•   After the Lewis and Clark expedition                were using cannons and deadly rapid-fire
    settlers began to move west in search of            guns that broke the native resistance and
    cheap land. By the 1840s westward                   opened the western plains to Euro-American
    expansion was well underway.                        expansion
                                                    •   Emancipation Proclamation signed by
                                                        Abraham Lincoln in 1863, sparking the Civil
                                                        War. After four years in battle, the northern
                                                        states won and ended slavery.
•   The Canadian Dominion acquired
    independence without war. There were two
    dominant ethnic groups, the British
    Canadians and French Canadians
•   Until eighteenth century, French Canadians
    outnumbered British Canadian. French
    followed Roman Catholic church and
    French civil law, while British Canadians
    were Protestant and followed British law.
•    In 1781 British loyalists in the United
    States sought refuge in Canada and greatly
    enlarging the English speaking community       •   Argentine and Chilean forces brought modern
    there.                                             weapons and conquered the indigenous peoples
•   The British North America Act of 1867              of South America
    joined Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, New       •   Juan Manuel de Rosas, most notable caudillos
    Brunswick and recognized them as the               (regional military leaders), ruled as a despot
    Dominion of Canada                                 through his own army.
•   Latin American leaders had little experience   •   In the form of division, rebellion, caudillo rule,
    with self-government, since Spanish and            and civil war, instability and conflict plagued
    Portuguese regimes were far more                   Latin America throughout the 19th century
    autocratic.
•   Napoleon’s plans to take Louisiana
    back from Spain failed because ships
    were trapped in the harbor in Holland
    due to ice
•   George Washington crossed the
    Delaware and surprised the British in
    Trenton, where the Continental Army
    won the battle.
•   Vikings explored the coast of North
    America and put down settlements;
    eventually their colony in Greenland
    grew to over 3000 people. But as the
    Little Ice Age set in, the Viking culture
    of seafaring was destroyed; much of the
    year, their ships were trapped at home.
    Their North American settlers were cut
    off and eventually lost completely.
    With the Vikings out of business, it fell
    to the more southerly European
    countries–Spain, Portugal, France, and
    England–to colonize the Americas.
•   American merchants used the Mississippi
    River to transport goods and stored them
    for export at the port of New Orleans
•   Thomas Jefferson threatens an alliance with
    Britain if France sends military forces to
    New Orleans. Napoleon Bonaparte plans to
    invade Britain and fears this alliance
•   Spain had not finalized transfer of
    Louisiana to France. Out of anger and a
    need for war money, Bonaparte decides to
    sell the Louisiana Territory to the U.S.
•   In 1803 the U.S. acquires Louisiana
    Territory from the French for $11,250,000
    plus the cancellation of debts worth
    $3,750,000 - less than 3 cents per acre
•   The Louisiana Purchase encompassed all or
    part of 15 current U.S. states and two
    Canadian provinces. Jefferson allowed
    slavery in the acquired area
•   Saint-Domingue was the most
    profitable colony owned by the
    French. 60 percent of world’s coffee
    and 40 percent of world’s sugar
    produced in Saint-Domingue
•   African slaves labored hard under
    abusive situations. Slaves outnumbered
    free people 10-1
•   The French Revolution sparked the
    slave rebellion in Saint-Domingue
    because white plantation owners
    refused to comply with civil equality for
    people of color.
•   The French were defeated by guerilla
    warfare used by the slaves and yellow
    fever. General Toussaint L ‘Ouverture
    led the slaves in revolution
•   The Haitian Revolution (1791-1804)
    eliminated slavery in Saint-Domingue
    and was the founding of the Haitian
    republic. This is a defining moment in
    the history of Africans in the New World
•   In 1807 Britain became the first major
    power to permanently abolish the
    slave trade
• The battle of Antietam (to Southerners,
  Sharpsburg) made the event of
  September 17, 1862 the bloodiest day
  in American history and changed the
                                                                    General George B. McClellan
  course of the Civil War.
• The Civil War began as a fight to
  preserve the United States as a whole
  nation - a Union of all states. Lincoln
  delayed his proposed Emancipation
  Proclamation for a military victory.
• Antietam was the first of Confederate
  General Robert E. Lee’s attempt to
  carry the war into the North. 40,000
                                            General Robert E. Lee
  Southerners were pitted against 87,000
  men of the Federal Army of the
  Potomac under General George B.
  McClellan. The course of the Civil
  War had been greatly altered.
   Thomas J. Jackson, known as
    “Stonewall” won five battles, with the
    main victory at Winchester on May 25,
    which drove Union General Nathanial
    Bank’s division across the Potomac
    into Maryland. This caused great
    frustration and panic in the North.
   McClellan was timid and irresolute in
    action and missed a series of
    opportunities to claim victory for the
    North. His troops numbered 100,000,
    while Lee’s numbered 90,000.
   The Seven Days Battles was a great
    strategic victory that kept Richmond,
    the capital of the Confederacy, in the
    Confederates hands.
   The South’s success gained foreign
    recognition, which was dependent on
    the South’s cotton crop. The North
    feared British and France intervention.
•   The British abolished slavery in 1833 and
    the French did the same in 1848. This put
    pressure on Lincoln to commit to
    emancipation in 1862.
•   Frederick Douglass pressed Lincoln to turn
    the war for Union into a war for freedom.
    As a strategic maneuver, this would
    weaken the South’s army and be a
    powerful advantage for the North.
•   The Republican majority in Congress
    enacted a new article of war on March 13,
    1862, forbidding army officers to return
    escaped slaves to their masters
•   Congress passed an initiative to offer
    economic aid to any state which may
    adopt gradual abolishment of slavery. This
    offer was aimed at border states, with the
    idea that their commitment to
    emancipation would deprive the
    Confederacy and shorten the war.
•   The second battle of Bull Run was a defeat
    with greater potential danger to the Union
    cause. Confederate Stonewall Jackson’s
    army was stopped by the Union General
    John Pope at Chantilly, fifteen miles from
    Washington.
•   McClellan disobeyed orders from Halleck
    and did not send 10,000 troops towards
                                                      •   Antietam was not the decisive Union
    Manassas (Bull Run), leaving Pope on his              victory which Lincoln hoped for; it did give the
    own. Lincoln was appalled by his actions.             President an opportunity to strike at the Confederacy
•   After his great victory at Manassas, Lee
                                                          politically, psychologically and economically. The
    marched his army into Maryland hoping to              Emancipation Proclamation was issued on
    find vitally needed men and supplies.                 September 22
•   McClellan obtained a copy of the
    Confederate battle plan and followed Lee into
    Frederick. By September 15, both armies had
    established new battle lines west and east of
    Antietam Creek near the town of Sharpsburg.
•   McClellan missed a series of opportunities
    for the success by failing to commit his forces
    to battle on September 15th and 16th. He
    failed to deliver a knockout blow to destroy
    Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia.
    McClellan’s decision allowed Lee to
    withdraw to the safety of the Virginia shore.

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The Long 19th Century

  • 1. Assignment 4 Diana Bruce History 141 October 3, 2011
  • 2. Age of independence for the United States, Canada and Latin America • Legacy of Enlightenment was the effort to build societies based on freedom, equality and a constitutional government and proved to be a monumental challenge • An era characterized by continuous mass migration and explosive economic growth, occasional deep economic stagnation, civil war, ethnic violence, class conflict and battles for racial and sexual equality • With the purchase of the Louisiana territory, • The Sioux, Comanche, Pawnee and Apache the United States doubled in size fought encroachment by Euro-American settlers on their lands. By 1870, U.S. forces • After the Lewis and Clark expedition were using cannons and deadly rapid-fire settlers began to move west in search of guns that broke the native resistance and cheap land. By the 1840s westward opened the western plains to Euro-American expansion was well underway. expansion • Emancipation Proclamation signed by Abraham Lincoln in 1863, sparking the Civil War. After four years in battle, the northern states won and ended slavery.
  • 3. The Canadian Dominion acquired independence without war. There were two dominant ethnic groups, the British Canadians and French Canadians • Until eighteenth century, French Canadians outnumbered British Canadian. French followed Roman Catholic church and French civil law, while British Canadians were Protestant and followed British law. • In 1781 British loyalists in the United States sought refuge in Canada and greatly enlarging the English speaking community • Argentine and Chilean forces brought modern there. weapons and conquered the indigenous peoples • The British North America Act of 1867 of South America joined Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, New • Juan Manuel de Rosas, most notable caudillos Brunswick and recognized them as the (regional military leaders), ruled as a despot Dominion of Canada through his own army. • Latin American leaders had little experience • In the form of division, rebellion, caudillo rule, with self-government, since Spanish and and civil war, instability and conflict plagued Portuguese regimes were far more Latin America throughout the 19th century autocratic.
  • 4. Napoleon’s plans to take Louisiana back from Spain failed because ships were trapped in the harbor in Holland due to ice • George Washington crossed the Delaware and surprised the British in Trenton, where the Continental Army won the battle. • Vikings explored the coast of North America and put down settlements; eventually their colony in Greenland grew to over 3000 people. But as the Little Ice Age set in, the Viking culture of seafaring was destroyed; much of the year, their ships were trapped at home. Their North American settlers were cut off and eventually lost completely. With the Vikings out of business, it fell to the more southerly European countries–Spain, Portugal, France, and England–to colonize the Americas.
  • 5. American merchants used the Mississippi River to transport goods and stored them for export at the port of New Orleans • Thomas Jefferson threatens an alliance with Britain if France sends military forces to New Orleans. Napoleon Bonaparte plans to invade Britain and fears this alliance • Spain had not finalized transfer of Louisiana to France. Out of anger and a need for war money, Bonaparte decides to sell the Louisiana Territory to the U.S. • In 1803 the U.S. acquires Louisiana Territory from the French for $11,250,000 plus the cancellation of debts worth $3,750,000 - less than 3 cents per acre • The Louisiana Purchase encompassed all or part of 15 current U.S. states and two Canadian provinces. Jefferson allowed slavery in the acquired area
  • 6. Saint-Domingue was the most profitable colony owned by the French. 60 percent of world’s coffee and 40 percent of world’s sugar produced in Saint-Domingue • African slaves labored hard under abusive situations. Slaves outnumbered free people 10-1 • The French Revolution sparked the slave rebellion in Saint-Domingue because white plantation owners refused to comply with civil equality for people of color. • The French were defeated by guerilla warfare used by the slaves and yellow fever. General Toussaint L ‘Ouverture led the slaves in revolution • The Haitian Revolution (1791-1804) eliminated slavery in Saint-Domingue and was the founding of the Haitian republic. This is a defining moment in the history of Africans in the New World • In 1807 Britain became the first major power to permanently abolish the slave trade
  • 7. • The battle of Antietam (to Southerners, Sharpsburg) made the event of September 17, 1862 the bloodiest day in American history and changed the General George B. McClellan course of the Civil War. • The Civil War began as a fight to preserve the United States as a whole nation - a Union of all states. Lincoln delayed his proposed Emancipation Proclamation for a military victory. • Antietam was the first of Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s attempt to carry the war into the North. 40,000 General Robert E. Lee Southerners were pitted against 87,000 men of the Federal Army of the Potomac under General George B. McClellan. The course of the Civil War had been greatly altered.
  • 8. Thomas J. Jackson, known as “Stonewall” won five battles, with the main victory at Winchester on May 25, which drove Union General Nathanial Bank’s division across the Potomac into Maryland. This caused great frustration and panic in the North.  McClellan was timid and irresolute in action and missed a series of opportunities to claim victory for the North. His troops numbered 100,000, while Lee’s numbered 90,000.  The Seven Days Battles was a great strategic victory that kept Richmond, the capital of the Confederacy, in the Confederates hands.  The South’s success gained foreign recognition, which was dependent on the South’s cotton crop. The North feared British and France intervention.
  • 9. The British abolished slavery in 1833 and the French did the same in 1848. This put pressure on Lincoln to commit to emancipation in 1862. • Frederick Douglass pressed Lincoln to turn the war for Union into a war for freedom. As a strategic maneuver, this would weaken the South’s army and be a powerful advantage for the North. • The Republican majority in Congress enacted a new article of war on March 13, 1862, forbidding army officers to return escaped slaves to their masters • Congress passed an initiative to offer economic aid to any state which may adopt gradual abolishment of slavery. This offer was aimed at border states, with the idea that their commitment to emancipation would deprive the Confederacy and shorten the war. • The second battle of Bull Run was a defeat with greater potential danger to the Union cause. Confederate Stonewall Jackson’s army was stopped by the Union General John Pope at Chantilly, fifteen miles from Washington.
  • 10. McClellan disobeyed orders from Halleck and did not send 10,000 troops towards • Antietam was not the decisive Union Manassas (Bull Run), leaving Pope on his victory which Lincoln hoped for; it did give the own. Lincoln was appalled by his actions. President an opportunity to strike at the Confederacy • After his great victory at Manassas, Lee politically, psychologically and economically. The marched his army into Maryland hoping to Emancipation Proclamation was issued on find vitally needed men and supplies. September 22 • McClellan obtained a copy of the Confederate battle plan and followed Lee into Frederick. By September 15, both armies had established new battle lines west and east of Antietam Creek near the town of Sharpsburg. • McClellan missed a series of opportunities for the success by failing to commit his forces to battle on September 15th and 16th. He failed to deliver a knockout blow to destroy Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. McClellan’s decision allowed Lee to withdraw to the safety of the Virginia shore.