US History Reconstruction to Present A Unit 1 Key Terms

Post date: Jan 03, 2012 8:7:20 PM

For this project you must define the terms listed below and explain each term's significance to the unit/era being studied. Your definition should be 2-3 sentences long and may be copied and pasted from a source like Wikipedia, but the significance of the term must be in your own words and based on your own understanding. To fill out a term's significance, ask yourself, "Why is this item included in my study of this unit? Why is this term in a history book?" The answer to this question is your term's significance. 

Unit 1 Key Terms:

3/5th Compromise                       

Uncle Tom's Cabin                         

Election of 1860                            

Battle of Gettysburg

Fugitive Slave Act of 1793            

Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854     

Confederate States of America     

Anaconda Plan

Compromise of 1820                    

Frederick Douglass                     

Battle of For Sumter                     

Wilderness Campaign

Slavery Abolition Act of 1833       

Harper's Ferry                              

Battle of Antietam                         

Sherman's March to the Sea

Eli Whitney                                    

Lincoln Douglas Debates             

Emancipation Proclamation           

John Wilkes Booth

Below is an example of a key term done with the proper format:

William the Conqueror: William I (c. 1028[2] – 9 September 1087), also known as William the Conqueror (Guillaume le Conquérant), was the first Norman King of England from Christmas 1066 until his death. He was also Duke of Normandy from 3 July 1035 until his death, under the name William II. Before his conquest of England, he was known as William the Bastard because of the illegitimacy of his birth.To press his claim to the English crown, William invaded England in 1066, leading an army of Normans, Bretons, Flemings, and Frenchmen (from Paris andÎle-de-France) to victory over the English forces of King Harold Godwinson at the Battle of Hastings, and suppressed subsequent English revolts in what has become known as the Norman Conquest.[3] (I copied and pasted this definition from Wikipedia)

Significance: William the Conqueror is significant because his conquest of England created the first nation state in Europe. His rearrangement of English feudal territories to give himself dramatically more power than the the barons and nobles around him caused him to be the most powerful monarch in Europe and eventually led to the rise of other nation states over the next few centuries. (These are my words based on my knowledge of English and European history.)