The Rise of Democracy and the Transformation of Political Culture
63. Fanny Wright on Equality (1830).
64. Daniel Webster’s Second Reply to Robert Y. Hayne (1830).
65. Commentary on Elections in Jacksonian America (1832).
66. The American System (1832).
67. Andrew Jackson’s Bank Veto Message (1832). Continuing -- Jacksonian Democracy, Native American Removal
68. The Cherokee Phoenix on Georgia Policy toward the Cherokee (1832).
69. South Carolina Nullifies the Tariff (1832).
70. Images of Jacksonian Politics Week Ten: Nov 10 The Market Economy and Industry in the North 71. Promoting the Erie Canal (1818).
72. Differing Views of a Changing Society (1827, 1836).
73. Charles G. Finney Describes the Rochester Revival (1830– 1831).
74. American Mania for Railroads (1834).
75. “Americans on the Move” (1835).
76. Petition to Integrate the Schools (1842).
77. Women Workers Protest “Lowell Wage Slavery” (1847).
78. “On Irish Emigration” (1852). Social Reform
79. “Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World” (1829).
80. William Lloyd Garrison on Slavery (1831).
81. Evidence against the Views of the Abolitionists (1833).
82. Sarah Grimké Argues for Gender Equality (1837).
83. The Temperance Crusade (1818, 1846).
84. “Declaration of Sentiments,” Seneca Falls Convention (1848). Week Eleven: Nov 17 Slavery, North and South George FitzHugh, “Cannibals All” (Excerpt).
95. The Alabama Frontier (1821).
96. The Trial of Denmark Vesey (1822).
97. A Reaction to the Nat Turner Revolt (1831).
98. The Plantation Labor Force (1838–1839).
99. Labor at the Tredegar Iron Works (1847). Inside the Plantation Household, Inside the Slave Community (Paper Due)
100. Martin Delany and African American Nationalism (1852).
101. A Slave Describes Sugar Cultivation (1853).
102. A Defense of Southern Society (1854).
103. Images of Slave Life (1858, 1860).
104. The Southern Yeomen (1860). 6 Week Twelve: Nov 22 (Tue.) Manifest Destiny and the Westward Experiment
85. Mid-Nineteenth-Century Images of Race and Nation.
86. Texas and California Annexation (1845).
87. American Description of Mexican Women in Santa Fe (1845).
88. Life on the Overland Trail (1846).
89. Mexican View of U.S. Occupation (1847).
90. Mormons Describe Entering the Salt Lake Valley (1848).
91. Local Reaction to the Gold Rush (1848).
92. Images of Chinese Immigrants (1852, 1860).
93. “Civil Disobedience” (1849).
94. The Question of Cuban Annexation (1853). Nov 24 THANKSGIVING RECESS – NO CLASS Week Thirteen: Dec 1 The Sectional Challenge
105. An African American Minister Responds to the Fugitive Slave Law (1851).
106. Southern Review of Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852).
107. American (Know Nothing) Party Platform (1856).
108. Charles Sumner on “Bleeding Kansas” (1856).
109. Chicago Tribune on the Dred Scott V. Sanford Decision (1857).
110. Sensible Hints to the South (1858).
111. Frederick Douglass on John Brown (1859).
112. Cartoonists Depict the Issues of the Day (1857-1860).
113. Inaugural Address of South Carolina Governor Francis Pickens (1860).
114. Northern Participation in the Slave Trade (1862). Origins of The Civil War (Debate: North Versus South)
115. Mary Boykin Chesnut, The Attack on Fort Sumter (1861).
116. “A War to Preserve the Union” (1861).
117. Jefferson Davis Responds to the Emancipation Proclamation (1862).
118. Images of African Americans in the Civil War (1863, 1864).
119. George Pickett on the “Charge” (1863).
120. New York City Draft Riots (1863).
121. The Southern Home Front (1863). Week Fourteen: Dec 8 The Civil War
122. General William T. Sherman on War (1864).
123. Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address (1865).
124. A Northern Teacher’s View of the Freedmen (1863-1865).
125. Charleston, South Carolina at the Conclusion of the Civil War (1865).
126. African-Americans Seek Protection (1865). Reconstruction and the New South
127. Thaddeus Stevens on Reconstruction and the South (1865).
128. A White Southern Perspective on Reconstruction (1868).
129. African American Suffrage in the South (1867, 1876).
130. An African American Congressman Calls for Civil Rights (1874). 131. The Situation for African Americans in the South (1879).
Each article has five questions, please use one or two sentences to answer it.