by : http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/hyper_titles.cfm
          An interactive, multimedia history of  the United States from the Revolution to the present.
      Interactive  Timelines
The key events that made American  History.
  Guided Readings:
               | The First Americans | 
        | No aspect of our past is more  enshrouded in myth and misconceptions than the history of Native  Americans. This chapter examines the rich and diverse cultures of the  first Americans and the far-reaching consequences of their encounter  with Europeans. | 
      
   | Exploration and Discovery | 
        | The fifteenth and sixteenth century  voyages of discovery brought Europe, Africa, and the Americas into  direct contact, producing an exchange of foods, animals, and diseases  that scholars call the “Columbian Exchange.” | 
      
   | Colonization | 
        | Here, you will learn about the  economic, religious, and social developments that led Europeans to  colonize new lands; the differences between Spanish, French, and English  colonization; and the difficulties they encountered as a result of the  varied climates and topographies. | 
      
   | The Origins and Nature of New World Slavery | 
        | Slave labor played an indispensable  role in the settlement and development of the New World. This chapter  examines slavery in the ancient, medieval, and early modern world; the  process of enslavement; the Middle Passage; and the evolution of slavery  in colonial, revolutionary, and antebellum America. | 
      
   | Patterns of Change 1700-1775 | 
        | In this chapter you will learn about  England’s efforts to create an empire based on mercantilist principles  and the conflicts that these efforts to assert control produce.  You  will also learn about the forces that transformed colonial life,  including an expanding population, economic stratification, the  Enlightenment, and the Great Awakening. | 
      
   | The American Revolution | 
        | This chapter examines the series of  events that ruptured relations between Britain and the American  colonies, and the long and bitter war that the colonists waged in order  to gain independence. | 
      
   | The Founders | 
        | This chapter examines the key figures  who led the struggle for independence and drafted the U.S. Constitution  and the Bill of Rights. | 
      
   | The Critical Period: America in the 1780s | 
        | In this chapter, you learn abut the  internal difficulties besetting the new republic, such as financing war  debts, the threat of a military coup, and popular demand for tax relief,  as well as efforts to expand freedom of religion, make land more  readily available, increase women’s educational opportunities, and  address the problem of slavery. | 
      
   | The US Constitution and the Bill of Rights | 
        | This chapter examines the creation of a  new government based on the principles of popular sovereignty, rule of  law, and legislation enacted by elected representatives. | 
      
   | The First New Nation | 
        | During the first 12 years under the  Constitution, the United States established the machinery of government,  defined the office and powers of the president, enacted a financial  program that secured the nation’s credit and stimulated the economy, and  created the first political parties to involve the voting population in  national politics. | 
      
   | Antislavery | 
        | This chapter examines the growth of  antislavery thought, the colonization movement, the emergence of  immediatist abolition, and political antislavery. | 
      
   | Jeffersonian Republicanism | 
        | Here you will learn about Thomas  Jefferson’s efforts to reestablish republican government by reducing the  federal budget and Federalist influence over the judiciary, the  emergence of the doctrine of judicial review, and the Louisiana  Purchase, as well as British and French threats to American shipping and  the causes and significance of the War of 1812. | 
      
   | The Era of Good Feelings | 
        | The War of 1812 stirred a new sense of  nationalism, evident in a series of landmark Supreme Court decisions and  in foreign policy, especially the Monroe Doctrine.  Paradoxically,  these years also exacerbated political and sectional conflicts. The  financial Panic of 1819 produced new political divisions and the  Missouri crisis contributed to a sectional split between North and  South. | 
      
   | Jacksonian Democracy | 
        | Between 1820 and 1840 property  qualifications for voting and officeholding were repealed, voter  participation increased, and a new two-party system emerged. President  Andrew Jackson opened Indian lands to white settlement, destroyed the  Second Bank of the United States, and denied a state the right to  nullify the federal tariff. | 
      
   | Pre-Civil War American Culture | 
        | Before the Civil War, American  literature began to employ native scenes and characters; the  Transcendentalists popularized a philosophy that emphasized each  person’s potentialities and glorified nature as a creative force; and a  popular commercial culture emerged, including the penny press, the  minstrel show, and the western adventure novel. | 
      
   | Pre-Civil War Reform | 
        | This chapter examines the social,  intellectual, and religious roots of early 19th century  reform  movements, and the efforts of reformers in the areas of education,  criminal justice, the treatment of the mentally ill; and the  abolitionist and women’s rights movements. | 
      
   | The Roots of American Economic Growth | 
        | After the War of 1812, the economy grew  at rapid pace, as the nation overcame obstacles that stood in the way  of sustained economic growth.  Improved transportation and  communication, technological innovation, the rise of the factory system,  and mass immigration transformed the United States into an industrial  leader. | 
      
   | Westward Expansion | 
        | During the 1830s and 1840s, the United  States acquired vast new territories in the West. This chapter describes  the Native Americans and Mexicans who inhabited the region; the forces  that drove traders, missionaries, and pioneers westward; and the  acquisition of western lands by annexation, negotiation, and war. | 
      
   | The Pre-Civil War South | 
        | This chapter critically evaluates  stereotypes about the “Old” South, analyzes the impact of slavery on the  southern economy, traces the decline of antislavery sentiment in the  South, and examines the efforts of Southern nationalists to promote  industry and a distinctive southern identity. | 
      
   | The Impending Crisis | 
        | During the 1850s, the political system  became incapable of resolving the sectional disputes between the North  and South. This chapter analyzes the Compromise of 1850, including the  Fugitive Slave Law; the demise of the Whig Party and the emergence of  the Republican party; the Kansas-Nebraska Act; the Dred Scott decision;  and John Brown’s raid. | 
      
   | The Civil War | 
        | This chapter examines the election of  1860, the secession crisis, the relative strengths and weaknesses of the  Union and the Confederacy, the military history of the war, as well as  the economic and social changes the war produced. | 
      
   | Reconstruction | 
        | Here you will learn about President  Lincoln’s and President Johnson’s plans to readmit the Confederate  states to the Union; the more stringent Congressional plan; the struggle  between President Johnson and Congress, including the impeachment vote;  the Reconstruction era’s contributions to civil rights; the reasons for  Reconstruction’s demise; and the emergence of sharecropping. | 
      
   | Along the Color Line | 
        | This chapter examines African American  life in the South after Reconstruction.  It analyzes lynching, the  convict lease system, segregation and disfranchisement, the judicial  response to Jim Crow, and responses to Booker T. Washington’s policy of  racial accommodation. | 
      
   | Closing the Western Frontier | 
        | This chapter chronicles the  construction of the transcontinental railroad; the settlement of the  Great Plains; the mining, cattle, and farming frontiers; the oil  industry’s birth; and popular culture’s treatment of the Western  frontier. | 
      
   | Industrialization and the Working Class | 
        | This chapter examines the impact of and  responses to industrialization among American workers, including the  attempt to form labor unions despite strong opposition from many  industrialists and the courts. | 
      
   | The Huddled Masses | 
        | In this chapter you learn about the new  immigrants from eastern and southern Europe and the anti-immigrant  reaction. | 
      
   | The Making of Modern America | 
        | The late 19th century saw the advent of  new communication technologies, including the phonograph, the  telephone, and radio; the rise of mass-circulation newspapers and  magazines; the growth of commercialized entertainment, as well as new  sports, including basketball, bicycling, and football, and appearance of  new transportation technologies, such as the automobile, electric  trains and trolleys. | 
      
   | The Rise of Big Business | 
        | This chapter traces the rise of the  corporation as the dominant form of business organization in the United  States.  It describes the economic, legal, and technological factors  that encouraged rapid industrialization, the history of business  consolidation, and the growth of new management techniques. | 
      
   | The Rise of the City | 
        | This chapter traces the changing nature  of the American city in the late 19th century, the expansion of cities  horizontally and vertically, the problems caused by urban growth, the  depiction of cities in art and literature, and the emergence of new  forms of urban entertainment. | 
      
   | The Struggle for Women's Suffrage | 
        | This chapter traces the 72-year-long  struggle for women’s suffrage and the suffrage movement’s impact, as  well as the campaign for birth control. | 
      
   | The Gilded Age | 
        | The 1880s and 1890s were years of  unprecedented technological innovation, mass immigration, and intense  political partisanship, including disputes over currency, tariffs,  political corruption and patronage, and railroads and business trusts. | 
      
   | United States Becomes a World Power | 
        | This chapter examines the reasons why  the United States adopted a more aggressive foreign policy at the end of  the 19th century; the causes, military history, and consequences of the  Spanish American War; and early 20th century U.S. involvement in China,  the Caribbean, and Latin America. | 
      
   | The Political Crisis of the 1890s | 
        | The 1890s were turbulent years that saw  labor violence, racial tensions, unrest among farmers, and discontent  among the unemployed.  Particular attention is paid to the problems  facing the nation’s farmers, farmers’ efforts to organize, and the  critical election of 1896. | 
      
   | The Progressive Era | 
        | This chapter examines the sources of  the progressive movement; progressivism at the municipal, state, and  national levels, and the influence of progressive ideas on foreign  policy. | 
      
   | The Twentieth Century | 
        | An overview of the far-reaching  economic and social changes that transformed American society in the  20th century, including innovations in science and technology, economic  productivity, mass communication and mass entertainment, health and  living standards, the role of government, gender roles, and conceptions  of freedom. | 
      
   | America at War: World War I | 
        | This chapter examines the war’s causes,  the reasons why the United States intervened in the conflict, how  American industry was mobilized for war, wartime propaganda and  political repression, and the social changes and unrest produced by the  war. | 
      
   | The Jazz Age: The American 1920s | 
        | The 1920s was a decade of major  cultural conflicts as well as a period when many features of a modern  consumer culture took root.  In this chapter, you will learn about the  clashes over alcohol, evolution, foreign immigration, and race, and also  about the growth of cities, the rise of a consumer culture, and the  revolution in morals and manners. | 
      
   | 1930s | 
        | This section examines why the seemingly  boundless prosperity of the 1920s ended so suddenly and why the  Depression lasted as long as it did. It assesses the Depression's human  toll and the policies adopted to combat the crisis. It devotes  particular attention to the Depression's impact on African Americans,  the elderly, Mexican Americans, labor, and women. In addition to  assessing the ideas that informed the New Deal policies, this chapter  examines the New Deal's critics, and evaluate the New Deal's impact. | 
      
   | America at War: World War II | 
        | In this chapter, you will learn about  the war’s causes, the Holocaust, the military history of the war, the  impact of the war on women and racial and ethnic minorities, the  internment of Japanese Americans, and the dawn of the atomic age. | 
      
   | Postwar America: 1945 - 1960 | 
        | The chapter examines the origins of the  Cold War; the implementation of the Containment policy; the Korean War;  and fear of Communist subversion at home. It also traces the beginnings  of the Civil Rights movement; the emergence of youth culture; and  postwar cultural critics, including the Beats. | 
      
   | America in Ferment: The Tumultuous 1960s | 
        | This chapter examines the Civil Rights  struggle against segregation and racial equality; the feminist fight for  equal educational and employment opportunity; the Mexican American  battle against discrimination in voting, education, and employment; the  Native American campaign for tribal sovereignty and land rights; the gay  and lesbian drive to end discrimination based on sexual preference; and  the environmentalist campaign to reduce pollution and promote  conservation. | 
      
   | Vietnam War | 
        | This chapter discusses how American  became involved in southeast Asia; the escalation of American  involvement in the Vietnam war; reactions to the war on the homefront;  President Nixon’s strategies for ending the war; and cultural reactions  to the war. | 
      
   | The Past Three Decades: Years of Crisis - Years  of Triumph | 
        | This chapter examines the impact of the  collapse of Communism on international stability; the resurgence of the  American economy during the 1990s; the presidencies of George Bush,  Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush; and American responses to the  terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. | 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment