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Summary: This lesson covers significant events of the new nation: the change from Federalism to Republicanism, Revolution of 1800, Louisiana Purchase, Embargo of 1807, election of James Madison, War of 1812, Era of Good Feeling, significant Supreme Court decisions, and the Monroe Doctrine.Subject: James Monroe; Hartford Convention; Rush-Bago; Slavery; John Marshall; Florida; Westward Expansion; Seminole; Dartmouth College v. Woodward; McCulloch v. Maryland; Panic of 1819; Missouri Compromise; Slavery Debate; Early Nationhood; Frederick Jackson Turner; General Andrew Jackson; Political Parties; Louisiana Purchase; Jefferson Administration; Thomas Jefferson; Gibbons v. Ogden; Era of Good Feeling; Republicans; Democratic-Republicans; Revolution of 1800; Judiciary Act of 1801; American Indians; Strict Constructionism; Britain; France; Chesapeake; Native Americans; War Hawks; Embargo; Tecumseh; Andrew Jackson; Canada; U.S. Navy; Macon's Bill No. 2; Madison Administration; Tenskwatawa; Impressment; Fort McHenry; Non-Intercourse Act; James Madison; Star Spangled Banner; Agreement of 1871; Monroe Administration; Treaty of Ghent; Battle of New Orleans; Domestic Policy; William Henry Harrison; Harrision; Tippecanoe; Pan-Indian Movement
Course Name: U.S. History I Course Level: Level 3
Media Format: Webpage; Audio; Text; Animation; Image Typical Learning Time: 2.5 hours Date Created: 2008 License files: Original License Permalink: http://txcdk1.unt.edu/TCRR/handle/2188/998 Is Part of: Unit 2: http://txcdk1.unt.edu/TCRR/handle/2188/1147
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Summary: This unit covers English administration of the colonies, the Mercantilist System, development of colonial governments, imperial warfare, and the French and Indian war.Subject: Florida; American Revolution; Proclamation Line of 1763; Pinckney's Treaty; Two Treatises on Government; Restraining Acts; War of Jenkins' Ear; Scalping; Three-Fifths Compromise; U.S. Navy; Madisonian Model; Tarring and Feathering; Domestic Policy; King William's War; Pontiac's Rebellion; Slavery; Thomas Paine; Currency; Native Americans; Sugar Act; Virtual Representation; Minute Men; Sons of Liberty; Shays' Rebellion; U.S. Constitution; Suffolk Resolves; General Thomas Gage; Republicans; Declaration of the Rights and Grievances of the Colonies; Patrick Henry; Articles of Confederation; Breed's and Bunker Hills; Samuel Adams; Mercantilism; British Colonies; Art; Whigs; Connecticut Compromise; John Locke; Era of Good Feeling; Common Sense; Molasses Act; Women; Treaty of Paris; Virginia Resolution; Slavery Debate; William Pitt; Charles Townshend; Bicameral Legislature; The Federalist Papers; Political Parties; Benjamin Franklin; Adams Administration; Westward Expansion; Tippecanoe; Captain John Paul Jones; William of Orange; Battle of Fallen Timbers; Stamp Act; Washington Administration; Star Spangled Banner; Townshend Acts; Stamp Act Congress; African Americans; French Revolution; Massachusetts Government Act; France; John Marshall; Constitutional Convention; American Indians; Thomas Jefferson; Independence Day; Colonial Government; Government; John Dickinson; George Washington; Quartering Act; Judiciary Act of 1801; Intolerable Acts; McCulloch v. Maryland; Paul Revere; Kentucky Resolution; Act for the Impartial Administration of Justice; Yorktown; James Madison; Glorious Revolution; Treaty of Ghent; Britain; King Philip's War; Nathaniel Bacon; Boston Port Act; Frederick Lord North; Battle of Saratoga; Panic of 1819; Bacon's Rebellion; Alexander Hamilton; Macon's Bill No. 2; Nonconsumption Agreements; Gibbons v. Ogden; George Grenville; Seminole; Andrew Jackson; Revolution of 1800; Daughters of Liberty; Strict Constructionism; Non-Intercourse Act; Albany Plan; Revolutionary War; Iroquois Nation; Whiskey Rebellion; British Empire; Alien and Sedition Acts; Early Nationhood; Frederick Jackson Turner; English Civil War; Mercantile System; Satire; John Jay; Join or Die; James II; War Hawks; Adam Smith; Daniel Shays; Oliver Cromwell; King George III; Anti-Federalists; Loyalists; First Continental Congress; Impressment; East India Company; Pan-Indian Movement; Lexington and Concord; Boston Tea Party; Madison Administration; William Henry Harrison; Voting and Representation; Dartmouth College v. Woodward; Missouri Compromise; Declaration of American Rights; Prohibitory Act; John Adams; Monroe Doctrine; The Bill of Rights; Navigation Acts; Tecumseh; Queen Anne's War; Currency Act; The XYZ Affair; Battle of New Orleans; Olive Branch Petition; Democratic-Republicans; Embargo; Second Treatise of Civil Government; Jefferson Administration; Rush-Bagot Agreement of 1817; Second Continental Congress; War of 1812; Declaration of Independence; Federalists; National Bank; Monroe Administration; Boston Massacre; Coercive Acts; Hartford Convention; Creation of United States; Liberty Trees; King George's War; French and Indian War; Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms; Odwandiyag; Northwest Ordinance; French America
Course Name: U.S. History I Course Level: Level 4
Media Format: Image; Animation; Webpage; Video; Audio; Text Typical Learning Time: 10 hours Date Created: 2008 License files: Original License Permalink: http://txcdk1.unt.edu/TCRR/handle/2188/1147
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Summary: This is a single page in lesson 8 that describes the United States's actions in 1812, political decisions, and key battles.Subject: Battle of New Orleans; U.S. Navy; Star Spangled Banner; Treaty of Ghent; Hartford Convention; War of 1812; Non-Intercourse Act; Macon's Bill No. 2; Madison Administration; Andrew Jackson
Course Name: U.S. History I Course Level: Level 2
Media Format: Webpage; Animation; Image Typical Learning Time: 20 minutes Date Created: 2008 License files: Original License Permalink: http://txcdk1.unt.edu/TCRR/handle/2188/724 Is Part of: Lesson 8: Change of Power: http://txcdk1.unt.edu/TCRR/handle/2188/998
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