C's Flashcards

1
Q

John Cabot

A

In 1497, sponsored by the king of England in search of a Northwest Passage, he became the first European since the Viking voyages more than four centuries earlier to reach the mainland of North America, which he claimed for England

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2
Q

John C. Calhoun

A

A South Carolina Representative in the House, a South Carolina Senator, Vice President in the Adams administration, and Secretary of State in the Tyler administration

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3
Q

California

A

A former Spanish territory that essentially lost ties to any government after the Mexicans gained independence from Spain in 1821 and paid little attention to it; California experienced substantial immigration of Americans, especially in the 1830s and beyond; along with New Mexico and Mexico, its status in relation to American expansion and the issue of slavery became a source of concern by American politicians

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4
Q

California Trail

A

A branch from the Oregon Trail that turned southwest in the Rockies and crossed Nevada along the Humboldt River

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5
Q

Carolina

A

A proprietary colony including all land south of Virginia and north of Spanish Florida that the king of England granted in 1663 to eight loyal noblemen who planned for it an ultimately unworkable hierarchical - almost feudal - society

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6
Q

Carpetbaggers

A

The Southern name for Northerners who came to the South to participate in Reconstruction governments

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7
Q

Jacques Cartier

A

Authorized by the king of France, he led three expeditions (1534-1542) to the area of the St. Lawrence River as far as Montreal, which he believed might be the Northwest Passage

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8
Q

Cerror Gordo

A

What has been called “the most important single battle of the [Mexican-American] war,” in which General Winfield Scott soundly defeated a superior Mexican force in a seemingly impregnable position, after which he went on to win several more battles and enter Mexico City

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9
Q

Charles River Bridge vs Warren Bridge

A

An 1837 case whose decision was delivered by Andrew Jackson’s new Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Roger Taney, who ruled that a state could abrogate a grant of monopoly if that original grant had ceased to be in the best interests of the community

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10
Q

Chattel

A

Lifelong slaves whose status was inherited by their children

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11
Q

Chesapeake Colonies

A

Colonies that had less stable societies than those of New England, partly because of the large number of indentured servants, who were disproportionately men, and had short lifespans as a result of mistreatment by their masters

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12
Q

“Chesapeake - Leopard” Affair

A

The 1807 incident in which the British ship H.M.S. “Leopard” stopped the U.S.S. “Chesapeake” off the coast of Virginia, and four alleged British deserters were taken off the ship

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13
Q

Christmas night 1776

A

The night on which General George Washington and his small army, which was melting away as demoralized soldiers deserted, boldly crossed the Delaware River and defeated the Hessians at Trenton

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14
Q

“Civil Disobedience”

A

An essay written by Henry David Thoreau, who was jailed for his refusal to pay his taxes in protest of the Mexican-American War

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15
Q

Civil War

A

The bloody conflict (1850-1860) between the North and the South

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16
Q

Henry Clay

A

Speaker of the House of Representatives who formulated a package that both the House and the Senate could accept regarding the admission of Missouri as a state in the Union

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17
Q

Coercive Acts

A

The British Parliament’s response to the 1773 incident in which Bostonians, who were thinly disguised as Indians, boarded British Royal Navy ships and threw the ships’ cargo, tea, into Boston Harbor

18
Q

“Common Sense”

A

A pamphlet written by Thomas Paine that called for the immediate independence of the American colonies

19
Q

Compromise of 1850

A

Henry Clay’s eight-part proposal intended to lessen the ongoing friction between the North and the South

20
Q

Compromise of 1877

A

An agreement whereby Rutherford Hayes promised to show consideration for Southern interests, end Reconstruction, and withdraw the remaining federal troops from the South in exchange for Democratic acquiescence in his election

21
Q

Concord

A

The Massachusetts town in which General Thomas Gage led 700 British troops on a 1775 mission to find and destroy a reported stockpile of colonial arms and ammunition, sparking the Battles of Lexington and Concord, beginning the American War of Independence

22
Q

Concurrent Majority

A

The concept that, according to John C. Calhoun in 1828, a federal law deemed harmful to the interests of an individual state could be declared null and void within that state; later, in 1836, Calhoun expanded this concept to extend to a dual presidency that would ensure that the South would be independent of Northern dominance and would forever keep majority rule at bay`

23
Q

Confederate States of America

A

The states that had seceded from the Union

24
Q

Connecticut

A

A colony founded by the Puritans who had slight religious disagreements with the leadership of Massachusetts

25
Q

Conquistadores

A

Independent Spanish adventurers who led the powerful Spanish army to conquer the Americas for Spain

26
Q

Conscription Act

A

An 1863 law that imposed a draft so that the Union could obtain adequate manpower for the huge armies that would be needed to defeat the South

27
Q

Constitution

A

The document written at the Constitutional Convention in 1787 and ratified in 1788 that sets forth the framework of the government of the United States

28
Q

Constitutional Convention

A

A 1787 meeting in Philadelphia of representatives of states, including James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, Gouverneur Morris, Robert Morris, John Dickinson, and Benjamin Franklin, and presided over by George Washington, whose purpose was to address the inadequacy of the Articles of Confederation

29
Q

Continentals

A

Paper money bills printed by the American Congress to finance the War of Independence

30
Q

Copperheads

A

Northerners who opposed the war and denounced Lincoln as a tyrant and would-be-dictator

31
Q

Lord Charles Cornwallis

A

The British General who first served under General William Howe and later continued the Southern Campaign

32
Q

Vasquez de Coronado

A

A Spanish conquistador who led an expedition (1540-1542) from Mexico, north across the Rio Grande, and through New Mexico, Arizona, Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas; he and some of his men were the first Europeans to see the Grand Canyon

33
Q

Corrupt Bargain

A

The rallying cry of supporters of Andrew Jackson after the election of 1824, in which Jackson won 43 percent of the popular vote, but the four-way split among the candidates meant that he received only 38 percent of the electoral votes; under the provisions of the Twelfth Amendment, the top three candidates were voted on by the House of Representatives - leaving candidate Henry Clay out of the running, and he threw his support to John Quincy Adams, who appointed Clay as Secretary of State almost immediately upon becoming the new president

34
Q

Hernando Cortes

A

A Spanish conquistador who, in 1519, led a dramatic expedition against the Aztecs of Mexico that destroyed the Aztec empire and won enormous riches for Spain

35
Q

Cotton Kingdom

A

The lands in the Southwest, made up of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, that were ideal for the production of short-staple cotton

36
Q

Crackers

A

(also called “sandhillers”) in the second half of the nineteenth century, approximately a half-million white, underclass Southerners who lived on the edge of the agrarian economy in varying degrees of poverty- sometimes in squalor worse than slaves - and who occupied the barren soils of the red hills or sandy bottoms

37
Q

Credit Mobilier Scandal

A

A scheme in which officials of the Union Pacific Railroad used a dummy construction company called “Credit Mobilier” to skim off millions of dollars of the subsidies that the government was paying for the Union Pacific for building the transcontinental railroad and bribe many members of Congress

38
Q

Crime Against Kansas

A

A two-day speech made by Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts in which he not only denounced slavery, but also made degrading personal references to aged South Carolina Senator Andrew Butler, resulting in physical violence in the Senate

39
Q

Crime of ‘73

A

The name that supporters of inflation during the Panic of 1873 gave to Congress’s demonetization of silver

40
Q

Cult of Domesticity

A

A shift in family responsibilities in the 1860s in which the father was out of the home working, and the burden of childrearing fell more heavily on the mother

41
Q

Cultural Nationalism

A

A feeling by Jeffersonians that their young republic represented the “final stage” of civilization, the “last great hope of mankind”

42
Q

Currency Act of 1764

A

AA law, pushed through the British Parliament by Prime Minister George Greenville, that forbade any colonial attempts to issue currency not redeemable in gold or silver