PART I. THE COLONIAL PERIOD
PART II. CONFLICT AND INDEPENDENCE
PART III. THE UNION AND NATIONAL POLITICS
PART IV. THE WEST AND JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY
PART V. SECTIONAL CONFLICT AND RECONSTRUCTION
PART VI. NATIONAL GROWTH AND WORLD POLITICS
PART VII. PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRACY AND THE WORLD WAR
APPENDIX
POPULATION OF THE UNITED STATES, BY STATES: 1920, 1910, 1900
| States
|
|
Population
|
|
|
|
1920
|
1910
|
1900
|
| United States
|
105,708,771
|
91,972,266
|
75,994,575
|
| Alabama
|
2,348,174
|
2,138,093
|
1,828,697
|
| Arizona
|
333,903
|
204,354
|
122,931
|
| Arkansas
|
1,752,204
|
1,574,449
|
1,311,564
|
| California
|
3,426,861
|
2,377,549
|
1,485,053
|
| Colorado
|
939,629
|
799,024
|
539,700
|
| Connecticut
|
1,380,631
|
1,114,756
|
908,420
|
| Delaware
|
223,003
|
202,322
|
184,735
|
| District of Columbia
|
437,571
|
331,069
|
278,718
|
| Florida
|
968,470
|
752,619
|
528,542
|
| Georgia
|
2,895,832
|
2,609,121
|
2,216,331
|
| Idaho
|
431,866
|
325,594
|
161,772
|
| Illinois
|
6,485,280
|
5,638,591
|
4,821,550
|
| Indiana
|
2,930,390
|
2,700,876
|
2,516,462
|
| Iowa
|
2,404,021
|
2,224,771
|
2,231,853
|
| Kansas
|
1,769,257
|
1,690,949
|
1,470,495
|
| Kentucky
|
2,416,630
|
2,289,905
|
2,147,174
|
| Louisiana
|
1,798,509
|
1,656,388
|
1,381,625
|
| Maine
|
768,014
|
742,371
|
694,466
|
| Maryland
|
1,449,661
|
1,295,346
|
1,188,044
|
| Massachusetts
|
3,852,356
|
3,366,416
|
2,805,346
|
| Michigan
|
3,668,412
|
2,810,173
|
2,420,982
|
| Minnesota
|
2,387,125
|
2,075,708
|
1,751,394
|
| Mississippi
|
1,790,618
|
1,797,114
|
1,551,270
|
| Missouri
|
3,404,055
|
3,293,335
|
3,106,665
|
| Montana
|
548,889
|
376,053
|
243,329
|
| Nebraska
|
1,296,372
|
1,192,214
|
1,066,300
|
| Nevada
|
77,407
|
81,875
|
42,335
|
| New Hampshire
|
443,407
|
430,572
|
411,588
|
| New Jersey
|
3,155,900
|
2,537,167
|
1,883,669
|
| New Mexico
|
360,350
|
327,301
|
195,310
|
| New York
|
10,384,829
|
9,113,614
|
7,268,894
|
| North Carolina
|
2,559,123
|
2,206,287
|
1,893,810
|
| North Dakota
|
645,680
|
577,056
|
319,146
|
| Ohio
|
5,759,394
|
4,767,121
|
4,157,545
|
| Oklahoma
|
2,028,283
|
1,657,155
|
790,391
|
| Oregon
|
783,389
|
672,765
|
413,536
|
| Pennsylvania
|
8,720,017
|
7,665,111
|
6,302,115
|
| Rhode Island
|
604,397
|
542,610
|
428,556
|
| South Carolina
|
1,683,724
|
1,515,400
|
1,340,316
|
| South Dakota
|
636,547
|
583,888
|
401,570
|
| Tennessee
|
2,337,885
|
2,184,789
|
2,020,616
|
| Texas
|
4,663,228
|
3,896,542
|
3,048,710
|
| Utah
|
449,396
|
373,351
|
276,749
|
| Vermont
|
352,428
|
355,956
|
343,641
|
| Virginia
|
2,309,187
|
2,061,612
|
1,854,184
|
| Washington
|
1,356,621
|
1,141,990
|
518,103
|
| West Virginia
|
1,463,701
|
1,221,119
|
958,800
|
| Wisconsin
|
2,632,067
|
2,333,860
|
2,069,042
|
| Wyoming
|
194,402
|
145,965
|
92,531
|
APPENDIX
TABLE OF PRESIDENTS
| Num. |
Name |
State |
Party |
Year in Office |
Vice-President
|
| 1
|
George Washington
|
Va.
|
Fed.
|
1789-1797
|
John Adams
|
| 2
|
John Adams
|
Mass.
|
Fed.
|
1797-1801
|
Thomas Jefferson
|
| 3
|
Thomas Jefferson
|
Va.
|
Rep.
|
1801-1809
|
Aaron Burr
George Clinton
|
| 4
|
James Madison
|
Va.
|
Rep.
|
1809-1817
|
George Clinton
Elbridge Gerry
|
| 5
|
James Monroe
|
Va.
|
Rep.
|
1817-1825
|
Daniel D. Tompkins
|
| 6
|
John Q. Adams
|
Mass.
|
Rep.
|
1825-1829
|
John C. Calhoun
|
| 7
|
Andrew Jackson
|
Tenn.
|
Dem.
|
1829-1837
|
John C. Calhoun
Martin Van Buren
|
| 8
|
Martin Van Buren
|
N.Y.
|
Dem.
|
1837-1841
|
Richard M. Johnson
|
| 9
|
Wm. H. Harrison
|
Ohio
|
Whig
|
1841-1841
|
John Tyler
|
| 10
|
John Tyler[20]
|
Va.
|
Whig
|
1841-1845
|
|
| 11
|
James K. Polk
|
Tenn.
|
Dem.
|
1845-1849
|
George M. Dallas
|
| 12
|
Zachary Taylor
|
La.
|
Whig
|
1849-1850
|
Millard Fillmore
|
| 13
|
Millard Fillmore[20]
|
N.Y.
|
Whig
|
1850-1853
|
|
| 14
|
Franklin Pierce
|
N.H.
|
Dem.
|
1853-1857
|
William R. King
|
| 15
|
James Buchanan
|
Pa.
|
Dem.
|
1857-1861
|
J.C. Breckinridge
|
| 16
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
Ill.
|
Rep.
|
1861-1865
|
Hannibal Hamlin
Andrew Johnson
|
| 17
|
Andrew Johnson[20]
|
Tenn.
|
Rep.
|
1865-1869
|
|
| 18
|
Ulysses S. Grant
|
Ill.
|
Rep.
|
1869-1877
|
Schuyler Colfax
Henry Wilson
|
| 19
|
Rutherford B. Hayes
|
Ohio
|
Rep.
|
1877-1881
|
Wm. A. Wheeler
|
| 20
|
James A. Garfield
|
Ohio
|
Rep.
|
1881-1881
|
Chester A. Arthur
|
| 21
|
Chester A. Arthur[20]
|
N.Y.
|
Rep.
|
1881-1885
|
|
| 22
|
Grover Cleveland
|
N.Y.
|
Dem.
|
1885-1889
|
Thomas A. Hendricks
|
| 23
|
Benjamin Harrison
|
Ind.
|
Rep.
|
1889-1893
|
Levi P. Morton
|
| 24
|
Grover Cleveland
|
N.Y.
|
Dem.
|
1893-1897
|
Adlai E. Stevenson
|
| 25
|
William McKinley
|
Ohio
|
Rep.
|
1897-1901
|
Garrett A. Hobart
Theodore Roosevelt
|
| 26
|
Theodore Roosevelt[20]
|
N.Y.
|
Rep.
|
1901-1909
|
Chas. W. Fairbanks
|
| 27
|
William H. Taft
|
Ohio
|
Rep.
|
1909-1913
|
James S. Sherman
|
| 28
|
Woodrow Wilson
|
N.J.
|
Dem.
|
1913-1921
|
Thomas R. Marshall
|
| 29
|
Warren G. Harding
|
Ohio
|
Rep.
|
1921-
|
Calvin Coolidge
|
--
POPULATION OF THE OUTLYING POSSESSIONS: 1920 AND 1910
| AREA
|
1920
|
1910
|
| United States with outlying possessions
|
117,857,509
|
101,146,530
|
| Continental United States
|
105,708,771
|
91,972,266
|
| Outlying Possessions
|
12,148,738
|
9,174 264
|
| Alaska
American Samoa
Guam
Hawaii
Panama Canal Zone
Porto Rico
Military and naval, etc., service abroad
Philippine Islands
Virgin Islands of the United States
|
54,899
8,056
13,275
255,912
22,858
1,299,809
117,238
10,350,640[22]
26,051[24]
|
64,356
7,251[21]
11,806
191,909
62,810[21]
1,118,012
55,608
7,635,426[23]
27,086[25]
|
A TOPICAL SYLLABUS
As a result of a wholesome reaction against the purely chronological treatment of history, there is now a marked tendency in the direction of a purely topical handling of the subject. The topical method, however, may also be pushed too far. Each successive stage of any topic can be understood only in relation to the forces of the time. For that reason, the best results are reached when there is a combination of the chronological and the topical methods. It is therefore suggested that the teacher first follow the text closely and then review the subject with the aid of this topical syllabus. The references are to pages.
Immigration
II. Colonial immigration.
1. Diversified character: English, Scotch-Irish, Irish, Jews, Germans and other peoples (
6-
12).
2. Assimilation to an American type; influence of the land system (
23-
25,
411).
3. Enforced immigration: indentured servitude, slavery, etc. (
13-
17).
III. Immigration between 1789-1890
1. Nationalities: English, Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians (
278,
302-
303).
2. Relations to American life (
432-
433,
445).
IV. Immigration and immigration questions after 1890.
1. Change in nationalities (
410-
411).
2. Changes in economic opportunities (
411).
3. Problems of congestion and assimilation (
410).
4. Relations to labor and illiteracy (
582-
586).
5. Oriental immigration (
583).
6. The restriction of immigration (
583-
585).
Expansion of the United States
I. Territorial growth.
1. Territory of the United States in 1783 (
134 and
color map).
3. Florida purchase, 1819 (
204).
4. Annexation of Texas, 1845 (
278-
281).
5. Acquisition of Arizona, New Mexico, California, and other territory at close of Mexican War, 1848 (
282-
283).
6. The Gadsden purchase, 1853 (
283).
7. Settlement of the Oregon boundary question, 1846 (
284-
286).
8. Purchase of Alaska from Russia, 1867 (
479).
9. Acquisition of Tutuila in Samoan group, 1899 (
481-
482).
10. Annexation of Hawaii, 1898 (
484).
11. Acquisition of Porto Rico, the Philippines, and Guam at close of Spanish War, 1898 (
493-
494).
12. Acquisition of Panama Canal strip, 1904 (
508-
510).
13. Purchase of Danish West Indies, 1917 (
593).
14. Extension of protectorate over Haiti, Santo Domingo, and Nicaragua (
593-
594).
II. Development of colonial self-government.
III. Sea power.
1. In American Revolution (
118).
2. In the War of 1812 (
193-
201).
3. In the Civil War (
353-
354).
4. In the Spanish-American War (
492).
5. In the Caribbean region (
512-
519).
7. The rôle of the American navy (
515).
The Westward Advance of the People
I. Beyond the Appalachians.
1. Government and land system (
217-
231).
4. Relations with the East (
230-
236).
II. Beyond the Mississippi.
1. The lower valley (
271-
273).
2. The upper valley (
275-
276).
III. Prairies, plains, and desert.
2. The free homesteads (
432-
433).
IV. The Far West.
1. Peculiarities of the West (
433-
440).
3. Relations to the East and Europe (
443-
447).
4. American power in the Pacific (
447-
449).
The Wars of American History
II. Early colonial wars: King William's, Queen Anne's, and King George's (
59).
III. French and Indian War (Seven Years' War), 1754-1763 (
59-
61).
IV. Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 (
99-
135).
V. The War of 1812, 1812-1815 (
193-
201).
VI. The Mexican War, 1845-1848 (
276-
284).
VII. The Civil War, 1861-1865 (
344-
375).
VIII. The Spanish War, 1898 (
485-
497).
IX. The World War, 1914-1918 [American participation, 1917-1918] (
596-
625).
Government
I. Development of the American system of government.
1. Origin and growth of state government.
a. The trading corporation (
2-
4), religious congregation (
4-
5), and proprietary system (
5-
6).
b. Government of the colonies (
48-
53).
c. Formation of the first state constitutions (
108-
110).
d. The admission of new states (
see Index under each state).
e. Influence of Jacksonian Democracy (
238-
247).
f. Growth of manhood suffrage (
238-
244).
h. The doctrine of secession (
345-
346).
i. Effects of the Civil War on position of states (
366,
369-
375).
j. Political reform—direct government—initiative, referendum, and recall (
540-
544).
2. Origin and growth of national government.
a. British imperial control over the colonies (
64-
72).
b. Attempts at intercolonial union—New England Confederation, Albany plan (
61-
62).
c. The Stamp Act Congress (
85-
86).
d. The Continental Congresses (
99-
101).
f. The formation of the federal Constitution (
143-
160).
g. Development of the federal Constitution.
(1) Amendments 1-11—rights of persons and states (
163).
(2) Twelfth amendment—election of President (
184,
note).
(4) Sixteenth amendment—income tax (
528-
529).
(5) Seventeenth amendment—election of Senators (
541-
542).
(6) Eighteenth amendment—prohibition (
591-
592).
(7) Nineteenth amendment—woman suffrage (
563-
568).
3. Development of the suffrage.
a. Colonial restrictions (
51-
52).
b. Provisions of the first state constitutions (
110,
238-
240).
c. Position under federal Constitution of 1787(
149).
d. Extension of manhood suffrage (
241-
244).
e. Extension and limitation of negro suffrage (
373-
375,
382-
387).
II. Relation of government to economic and social welfare.
1. Debt and currency.
a. Colonial paper money (
80).
b. Revolutionary currency and debt (
125-
127).
c. Disorders under Articles of Confederation (
140-
141).
e. First United States bank notes (
167).
f. Second United States bank notes (
257).
g. State bank notes (
258).
h. Civil War greenbacks and specie payment (
352-
353,
454).
i. The Civil War debt (
252).
j. Notes of National Banks under act of 1864 (
369).
k. Demonetization of silver and silver legislation (
452-
458).
l. The gold standard (
472).
m. The federal reserve notes (
589).
2. Banking systems.
a. The first United States bank (
167).
b. The second United States bank—origin and destruction (
203,
257-
259).
c. United States treasury system (
263).
e. The national banking system of 1864 (
369).
f. Services of banks (
407-
409).
g. Federal reserve system (
589).
3. The tariff.
a. British colonial system (
69-
72).
b. Disorders under Articles of Confederation (
140).
c. The first tariff under the Constitution (
150,
167-
168).
d. Development of the tariff, 1816-1832 (
252-
254).
f. Tariff and nullification (
254-
256).
g. Development to the Civil War—attitude of South and West (
264,
309-
314,
357).
h. Republicans and Civil War tariffs (
352,
367).
i. Revival of the tariff controversy under Cleveland (
422).
j. Tariff legislation after 1890—McKinley bill (
422), Wilson bill (
459), Dingley bill (
472), Payne-Aldrich bill (
528), Underwood bill (
588).
a. British imperial regulations (
69-
72).
b. Confusion under Articles of Confederation (
140).
c. Provisions of federal Constitution (
150).
d. Internal improvements—aid to roads, canals, etc. (
230-
236).
e. Aid to railways (
403).
f. Service of railways (
402).
5. Land and natural resources.
a. British control over lands (
80).
b. Early federal land measures (
219-
221).
e. Conservation of natural resources (
523-
526).
6. Legislation advancing human rights and general welfare (
see Suffrage).
a. Abolition of slavery: civil and political rights of negroes (
357-
358,
373-
375).
b. Extension of civil and political rights to women (
554-
568).
d. Control of public utilities (
547-
549).
e. Social reform and the war on poverty (
549-
551).
f. Taxation and equality of opportunity (
551-
552).
Political Parties and Political Issues
I. The Federalists
versus the Anti-Federalists [Jeffersonian Republicans] from about 1790 to about 1816 (
168-
208,
201-
203).
1. Federalist leaders: Hamilton, John Adams, John Marshall, Robert Morris.
2. Anti-Federalist leaders: Jefferson, Madison, Monroe.
3. Issues: funding the debt, assumption of state debts, first United States bank, taxation, tariff, strong central government versus states' rights, and the Alien and Sedition acts.
II. Era of "Good Feeling" from about 1816 to about 1824, a period of no organized party opposition (
248).
III. The Democrats [former Jeffersonian Republicans]
versus the Whigs [or National Republicans] from about 1832 to 1856 (
238-
265,
276-
290,
324-
334).
1. Democratic leaders: Jackson, Van Buren, Calhoun, Benton.
2. Whig leaders: Webster and Clay.
3. Issues: second United States bank, tariff, nullification, Texas, internal improvements, and disposition of Western lands.
1. Democratic leaders: Jefferson Davis, Tilden, Cleveland, Bryan, and Wilson.
2. Republican leaders: Lincoln, Blaine, McKinley, Roosevelt.
3. Issues: Civil War and reconstruction, currency, tariff, taxation, trusts, railways, foreign policies, imperialism, labor questions, and policies with regard to land and conservation.
V. Minor political parties.
1. Before the Civil War: Free Soil (
319) and Labor Parties (
306-
307).
The Economic Development of the United States
I. The land and natural resources.
1. The colonial land system: freehold, plantation, and manor (
20-
25).
2. Development of the freehold in the West (
220-
221,
228-
230).
3. The Homestead act and its results (
368,
432-
433).
4. The cattle range and cowboy (
431-
432).
5. Disappearance of free land (
443-
445).
6. Irrigation and reclamation (
434-
436).
7. Movement for the conservation of resources (
523-
526).
II. Industry.
1. The rise of local and domestic industries (
28-
32).
2. British restrictions on American enterprise (
67-
69,
70-
72).
3. Protective tariffs (see above,
648-
649).
4. Development of industry previous to the Civil War (
295-
307).
5. Great progress of industry after the war (
401-
406).
6. Rise and growth of trusts and combinations (
406-
412,
472-
474).
III. Commerce and transportation.
1. Extent of colonial trade and commerce (
32-
35).
2. British regulation (
69-
70).
3. Effects of the Revolution and the Constitution (
139-
140,
154).
4. Growth of American shipping (
195-
196).
5. Waterways and canals (
230-
236).
6. Rise and extension of the railway system (
298-
300).
7. Growth of American foreign trade (
445-
449).
IV. Rise of organized labor.
1. Early phases before the Civil War: local unions, city federations, and national unions in specific trades (
304-
307).
2. The National Trade Union, 1866-1872 (
574-
575).
3. The Knights of Labor (
575-
576).
4. The American Federation of Labor (
573-
574).
a. Policies of the Federation (
576-
577).
b. Relations to politics (
579-
581).
c. Contests with socialists and radicals (
577-
579).
d. Problems of immigration (
582-
585).
5. The relations of capital and labor.
b. Company unions and profit-sharing (
571-
572).
American Foreign Relations
I. Colonial period.
1. Indian relations (
57-
59).
2. French relations (
59-
61).
II. Period of conflict and independence.
2. Establishment of connections with European powers (
128).
3. The French alliance of 1778 (
128-
130).
4. Assistance of Holland and Spain (
130).
III. Relations with Great Britain since 1783.
1. Commercial settlement in Jay treaty of 1794 (
177-
178).
2. Questions arising out of European wars [1793-1801] (
176-
177,
180).
3. Blockade and embargo problems (
193-
199).
5. Monroe Doctrine and Holy Alliance (
205-
207).
6. Maine boundary—Webster-Ashburton treaty (
265).
8. Attitude of Great Britain during Civil War (
354-
355).
9. Arbitration of
Alabama claims (
480-
481).
10. The Samoan question (
481-
482)
11. The Venezuelan question (
482-
484).
12. British policy during Spanish-American War (
496-
497).
13. Controversy over blockade, 1914-1917 (
598-
600).
IV. Relations with France.
1. The colonial wars (
59-
61).
2. The French alliance of 1778 (
128-
130).
3. Controversies over the French Revolution (
128-
130).
4. Commercial questions arising out of the European wars (
176-
177,
180,
193-
199).
5. Attitude of Napoleon III toward the Civil War (
354-
355).
6. The Mexican entanglement (
478-
479).
V. Relations with Germany.
1. Negotiations with Frederick, king of Prussia (
128).
2. The Samoan controversy (
481-
482).
3. Spanish-American War (
491).
4. The Venezuelan controversy (
512).
VI. Relations with the Orient.
1. Early trading connections (
486-
487).
2. The opening of China (
447).
3. The opening of Japan (
448).
4. The Boxer rebellion and the "open door" policy (
499-
502).
5. Roosevelt and the close of the Russo-Japanese War (
511).
6. The Oriental immigration question (
583-
584).
VII. The United States and Latin America.
1. Mexican relations.
a. Mexican independence and the Monroe Doctrine (
205-
207).
b. Mexico and French intervention—policy of the United States (
478-
479).
c. The overthrow of Diaz (1911) and recent questions (
594-
596).
2. Cuban relations.
a. Slavery and the "Ostend Manifesto" (
485-
486).
b. The revolutionary period, 1867-1877 (
487).
c. The revival of revolution (
487-
491).
d. American intervention and the Spanish War (
491-
496).
e. The Platt amendment and American protection (
518-
519).
3. Caribbean and other relations.
a. Acquisition of Porto Rico (
493).
b. The acquisition of the Panama Canal strip (
508-
510).
c. Purchase of Danish West Indies (
593).
e. Extension of protectorate over Haiti, Santo Domingo, and Nicaragua (
513-
514,
592-
594).
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1930.
The longest-living author of this work died in 1948, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 76 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
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