Correlations
The American Nation: A History of the United States, 11th Edition ©2003
Mark C. Carnes and John A. Garraty
Correlated to AP* History, United States, May 2002, May 2003
ST = Student textbook pages
- Discovery and Settlement of the New World, 1492–1650
- Europe in the sixteenth century
ST: 15–16, 26–28, 31–32
- Spanish, English, and French exploration
ST: 20–22, 28–29
- First English settlements
- Jamestown
ST: 29–31
- Plymouth
ST: 32–33
- Spanish and French settlements and long-term influence
ST: 21–22, 39–40, 50–51
- American Indians
ST: 7–14, 22–26, 34–35, 45
- America and the British Empire, 1650–1754
- Chesapeake country
ST: 40–42, 51–57
- Growth of New England
ST: 34–39, 61–74
- Restoration colonies
ST: 40–41
- Mercantilism; the Dominion of New England
ST: 83–87
- Origins of slavery
ST: 53–54
- Colonial Society in the Mid-Eighteenth Century
- Social structure
- Family
ST: 59–63
- Farm and town life; the economy
ST: 52–58, 71–76
- Culture
- Great Awakening
ST: 87–89
- The American mind
ST: 76–77, 89–91
- "Folkways"
ST: 59–63, 66–74
- New immigrants
ST: 36, 74–75
- Road to Revolution, 1754–1775
- Anglo-French rivalries and Seven Years' War
ST: 91, 94–97
- Imperial reorganization of 1763
- Stamp Act
ST: 101–104
- Declaratory Act
ST: 104, 105
- Townshend Acts
ST: 104–105
- Boston Tea Party
ST: 108
- Philosophy of the American Revolution
ST: 108–110
- The American Revolution, 1775–1783
- Continental Congress
ST: 109–110, 114–115
- Declaration of Independence
ST: 116–118, A3–A4
- The war
- French alliance
ST: 121–123
- War and society; Loyalists
ST: 119–120
- War economy
ST: 130
- Articles of Confederation
ST: 129–130
- Peace of Paris
ST: 125, 128–129
- Creating state governments
- Political organization
ST: 131
- Social reform: women, slavery
ST: 131–134
- Constitution and New Republic, 1776–1800
- Philadelphia Convention: drafting the Constitution
ST: 145–150, A9–A13
- Federalists versus Anti-Federalists
ST: 150–151, 154–155
- Bill of Rights
ST: 156, A14
- Washington's presidency
- Hamilton's financial program
ST: 156–159
- Foreign and domestic difficulties
ST: 159–163
- Beginnings of political parties
ST: 161–162
- John Adams' presidency
- Alien and Sedition Acts
ST: 166–167
- XYZ Affair
ST: 165–166
- Election of 1800
ST: 171–174
- The Age of Jefferson, 1800–1816
- Jefferson's presidency
- Louisiana Purchase
ST: 177–180
- Burr conspiracy
ST: 187
- The Supreme Court under John Marshall
ST: 176–177, 237, 244–246, 249, 260
- Neutral rights, impressment, embargo
ST: 187–192
- Madison
ST: 195–196
- War of 1812
- Causes
ST: 196–198
- Invasion of Canada
ST: 199–201
- Hartford Convention
ST: 203
- Conduct of the war
ST: 198–200
- Treaty of Ghent
ST: 202–203
- New Orleans
ST: 203–204
- Nationalism and Economic Expansion
- James Monroe; era of Good Feelings
ST: 208–209
- Panic of 1819
ST: 211
- Settlement of the West
ST: 209–213
- Missouri Compromise
ST: 216–218
- Foreign affairs: Canada, Florida, the Monroe Doctrine
ST: 205–208
- Election of 1824; end of Virginia dynasty
ST: 213–216, 218–219
- Economic revolution
- Early railroads and canals
ST: 238–244, 356–358
- Expansion of business
- Beginnings of factory system
ST: 226–228
- Early labor movement; women
ST: 230–233
- Social mobility; extremes of wealth
ST: 228–232
- The cotton revolution in the South
ST: 234–236
- Commercial agriculture
ST: 234–236
- Sectionalism
- The South
- Cotton Kingdom
ST: 340–343
- Southern trade and industry
ST: 349–350
- Southern society and culture
- Gradations of white society
ST: 340–342
- Nature of slavery: "peculiar institution"
ST: 340–349
- The mind of the South
ST: 347–349
- The North
- Northeast industry
- Labor
ST: 350–351
- Immigration
ST: 328–329, 351–352
- Urban slums
ST: 352–353
- Northwest agriculture
ST: 319–321
- Westward expansion
- Advance of agricultural frontier
ST: 319–321, 464–466
- Significance of the frontier
ST: 320–321
- Life on the frontier; squatters
ST: 238–239, 320–321, 453–454
- Removal of the American Indians
ST: 454–458
- Age of Jackson, 1828–1848
- Democracy and the "common man"
- Expansion of suffrage
ST: 250–251
- Rotation in office
ST: 252–254
- Second party system
- Democratic Party
ST: 251–252, 263–270, 321–322
- Whig Party
ST: 264–270, 371–374
- Internal improvements and states' rights: the Maysville Road veto
ST: 257–258
- The Nullification Crisis
- Tariff issue
ST: 260–262
- The Union: Calhoun and Jackson
ST: 257–258
- The Bank War: Jackson and Biddle
ST: 255–257, 260–262
- Martin Van Buren
- Independent treasury system
ST: 265–266
- Panic of 1837
ST: 262–265
- Territorial Expansion and Sectional Crisis
- Manifest Destiny and mission
ST: 318–320
- Texas annexation, the Oregon boundary, and California
ST: 317–318, 320–321
- James K. Polk and the Mexican War; slavery and the Wilmot Proviso
ST: 321–327, 330–331
- Later expansionist efforts
ST: 331–336
- Creating an American Culture
- Cultural nationalism
ST: 305–308, 309–312
- Education reform/professionalism
ST: 303–304, 308–309
- Religion; revivalism
ST: 277–281
- Utopian experiments: Mormons, Oneida Community
ST: 281–283
- Transcendentalists
ST: 295–297
- National literature, art, architecture
ST: 293–303
- Reform crusades
- Feminism; roles of women in the nineteenth century
ST: 288–291
- Abolitionism
ST: 285–288
- Temperance
ST: 284–285
- Criminals and the insane
ST: 283–284
- The 1850s: Decade of Crisis
- Compromise of 1850
ST: 332–336
- Fugitive Slave Act and Uncle Tom's Cabin
ST: 365–369
- Kansas-Nebraska Act and realignment of parties
- Demise of the Whig Party
ST: 371–373
- Emergence of the Republican Party
ST: 373–375
- Dredd Scott decision and Lecompton crisis
ST: 377–379
- Lincoln-Douglas debates, 1858
ST: 381–383
- John Brown's raid
ST: 383–384
- The election of 1860; Abraham Lincoln
ST: 384–386
- The secession crisis
ST: 386–388
- Civil War
- The Union
- Mobilization and finance
ST: 393–396
- Civil liberties
ST: 404–408
- Election of 1864
ST: 414–415
- The South
- Confederate constitution
ST: 386–388
- Mobilization and finance
ST: 398
- States' rights and the Confederacy
ST: 393–395
- Foreign affairs and diplomacy
ST: 398
- Military strategy, campaign, and battles
ST: 392–396, 398–402, 408–410, 414–416
- The abolition of slavery
- Confiscation Acts
ST: 403
- Emancipation Proclamation
ST: 402–404
- Freedmen's Bureau
ST: 424–425, 433–435
- Thirteenth Amendment
ST: 423–425
- Effects of war on society
- Inflation and public debt
ST: 411–412
- Role of women
ST: 412–413
- Devastation of the South
ST: 433–435
- Changing labor patterns
ST: 435–437
- Reconstruction to 1877
- Presidential plans: Lincoln and Johnson
ST: 421–423
- Radical (congressional) plans
- Civil rights and the Fourteenth Amendment
ST: 426
- Military reconstruction
ST: 423–427
- Impeachment of Johnson
ST: 428
- African-American suffrage; the Fifteenth Amendment
ST: 428–429
- Southern state governments: problems, achievements, weaknesses
ST: 429–433
- Compromise of 1877 and the end of Reconstruction
ST: 441–442
- New South and the Last West
- Politics in the New South
- The Redeemers
ST: 429, 432–433
- White and African Americans in the New South
ST: 437–438, 450–453
- Subordination of freed slaves: Jim Crow
ST: 437–438, 450–451
- Southern economy; colonial status of the South
- Sharecropping
ST: 435–437
- Industrial stirrings
ST: 436–437
- Cattle kingdom
- Open-range ranching
ST: 468–471
- Day of the cowboy
ST: 469–470
- Building of the Western railroad
ST: 466–468
- Subordination of American Indians: dispersal of tribes
ST: 454–458
- Farming the plains; problems in agriculture
ST: 464–466, 696–697
- Mining bonanza
ST: 458–459, 462–464
- Industrialization and Corporate Consolidation
- Industrial growth: railroads, iron, coal, electricity, steel, oil, banks
ST: 476–488
- Laissez-faire conservatism
- Gospel of Wealth
ST: 476
- Myth of "self-made man"
ST: 485–489
- Social Darwinism; survival of the fittest
ST: 446–447, 451, 454, 491, 509, 526–527, 533–534, 663–665
- Social critics and dissenters
ST: 490–492
- Effects of technological development on worker/work-place
ST: 501–503
- Union movement
- Knights of Labor and American Federation of Labor
ST: 493–496
- Haymarket, Homestead, and Pullman
ST: 494–497
- Urban Society
- Lure of the city
ST: 507–509
- Immigration
ST: 507–510
- City problems
- Slums
ST: 511–513, 516–518
- Machine politics
ST: 550–552
- Awakening conscience; reforms
- Social legislation
ST: 512–518
- Settlement houses: Jane Addams and Lillian Wald
ST: 521–523
- Structural reforms in government
ST: 565–569
- Intellectual and Cultural Movements
- Education
- Colleges and universities
ST: 530–533
- Scientific advances
ST: 533
- Professionalism and the social sciences
ST: 533–536
- Realism in literature and art
ST: 537–547
- Mass culture
- Use of leisure
ST: 518–520
- Publishing and journalism
ST: 528–530
- National Politics, 1877–1896: The Gilded Age
- A conservative presidency
ST: 552–557
- Issues
- Tariff controversy
ST: 556–557
- Railroad regulation
ST: 492–493
- Trusts
ST: 487–488, 493, 556, 586–587
- Agrarian discontent
ST: 504–505
- Crisis of 1890s
- Populism
ST: 557–562
- Silver question
ST: 562–564
- Election of 1896: McKinley versus Bryan
ST: 565–568
- Foreign Policy, 1865–1914
- Seward and the purchase of Alaska
ST: 602
- The new imperialism
- Blaine and Latin America
ST: 603, 605–606
- International Darwinism: missionaries, politicians, naval expansionists
ST: 602–604
- Spanish-American War
- Cuban independence
ST: 606–611
- Debate on Philippines
ST: 611–613
- The Far East: John Hay and the Open Door
ST: 618–619
- Theodore Roosevelt
- The Panama Canal
ST: 619–621
- The Roosevelt Corollary
ST: 617–618
- Far East
ST: 604–605, 621
- Taft and Dollar Diplomacy
ST: 621–622, 626
- Wilson and Moral Diplomacy
ST: 626–627
- Progressive Era
- Origins of Progressivism
- Progressive attitudes and motives
ST: 572–577
- Muckrakers
ST: 573–574
- Social Gospel
ST: 521, 573–574
- Municipal, state, and national reforms
- Political: suffrage
ST: 580–584
- Social and economic: regulation
ST: 578–579
- Socialism: alternatives
ST: 574–576
- Black America
- Washington, Du Bois, and Garvey
ST: 594–597, 671–672
- Urban migration
ST: 639–640, 670, 672
- Civil rights organizations
ST: 594–595
- Women's role: family, work, unionization, and suffrage
ST: 580–584
- Roosevelt's Square Deal
- Managing the trusts
ST: 585–587
- Conservation
ST: 589–591
- Taft
- Pinchot-Ballinger controversy
ST: 590–591
- Payne-Aldrich tariff
ST: 590
- Wilson's New Freedom
- Tariffs
ST: 593–594
- Banking reform
ST: 593–594
- Antitrust Act of 1914
ST: 593–594
- The First World War
- Problems of neutrality
- Submarines
ST: 628–630
- Economic ties
ST: 632–633, 636
- Psychological and ethnic ties
ST: 627–628
- Preparedness and pacifism
ST: 630–632
- Mobilization
- Fighting the war
ST: 641–644
- Financing the war
ST: 636–637
- War boards
ST: 636–637
- Propaganda, public opinion, civil liberties
ST: 637–638
- Wilson's Fourteen Points
- Treaty of Versailles
ST: 644–645
- Ratification fight
ST: 645–647
- Postwar mobilization
- Red scare
ST: 648–649
- Labor strife
ST: 636
- New Era: The 1920s
- Republican governments
- Business creed
ST: 682–683
- Harding scandals
ST: 683–684
- Economic development
- Prosperity and wealth
ST: 674–675, 684
- Farm and labor problems
ST: 648–649
- New culture
- Consumerism: automobile, radio, movies
ST: 659–661, 675–676
- Women, the family
ST: 656–659
- Modern religion
ST: 663–665
- Literature of alienation
ST: 668–670
- Jazz age
ST: 656
- Harlem Renaissance
ST: 670–674
- Conflict of cultures
- Prohibition, bootlegging
ST: 665–666
- Nativism
ST: 510
- Ku Klux Klan
ST: 666–667
- Religious fundamentalism versus modernists
ST: 663–665
- Myth of isolation
- Replacing the League of Nations
ST: 645–647, 688, 756
- Business and diplomacy
ST: 682–683, 685–688
- Depression, 1929–1933
- Wall Street crash
ST: 691–692
- Depression economy
ST: 692–700
- Moods of despair
- Agrarian unrest
ST: 696–697
- Bonus march
ST: 695, 698
- Hoover-Stimson diplomacy; Japan
ST: 688
- New Deal
- Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Background, ideas
ST: 705–706
- Philosophy of New Deal
ST: 709
- 100 Days; "alphabet agencies"
ST: 705–709
- Second New Deal
ST: 714–716
- Critics, left and right
ST: 721–722
- Rise of CIO; labor strikes
ST: 717, 720–721
- Supreme Court fight
ST: 716–717
- Recession of 1938
ST: 720–721
- American people in the Depression
- Social values, women, ethnic groups
ST: 722–723
- Indian Reorganization Act
ST: 724–725
- Mexican-American Deportation
ST: 695
- The racial issue
ST: 723–724
- Diplomacy in the 1930s
- Good Neighbor Policy: Montivideo, Buenos Aires
ST: 687–688
- London Economic Conference
ST: 688
- Disarmament
ST: 726
- Isolationism: neutrality legislation
ST: 725–727
- Aggressors: Japan, Italy, and Germany
ST: 727–730
- Appeasement
ST: 727–728
- Rearmament; Blitzkrieg; Lend-Lease
ST: 729–731
- Atlantic Charter
ST: 755
- Pearl Harbor
ST: 735–736
- The Second World War
- Organizing for war
- Mobilizing production
ST: 737–739
- Propaganda
ST: 737–739
- Internment of Japanese Americans
ST: 742–743
- The war in Europe, Africa, and the Mediterranean; D Day
ST: 745–751
- The war in the Pacific: Hiroshima, Nagasaki
ST: 751–753
- Diplomacy
- War aims
ST: 755–757
- War-time conferences: Teheran, Yalta, Potsdam
ST: 757
- Postwar atmosphere; the United Nations
ST: 754–756
- Truman and the Cold War
- Postwar domestic adjustments
ST: 763–765
- The Taft-Hartley Act
ST: 762–763
- Civil rights and the election of 1948
ST: 771–772
- Containment in Europe and the Middle East
- Truman Doctrine
ST: 765, 768, 772–773
- Marshall Plan
ST: 769–770
- Berlin crisis
ST: 769–770
- NATO
ST: 772
- Revolution in China
ST: 770–773
- Limited war: Korea, MacArthur
ST: 773–775
- Eisenhower and Modern Republicanism
- Domestic frustrations; McCarthyism
ST: 776–777
- Civil rights movement
- The Warren Court and Brown v. Board of Education
ST: 782–784
- Montgomery bus boycott
ST: 795–796
- Greensboro sit-in
ST: 796–797
- John Foster Dulles's foreign policy
- Crisis in Southeast Asia
ST: 794–795
- Massive retaliation
ST: 781–782
- Nationalism in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Latin America
ST: 779–780, 782
- Khruschev and Berlin
ST: 769–771
- American people: homogenized society
- Prosperity: economic consolidation
ST: 819, 825
- Consumer culture
ST: 817–819
- Consensus of values
ST: 819–820
- Space race
ST: 789–790
- Kennedy's New Frontier; Johnson's Great Society
- New domestic programs
- Tax cut
ST: 789–790
- War on poverty
ST: 799–800
- Affirmative Action
ST: 795–797
- Civil rights and civil liberties
- African Americans: Political, cultural, and economic roles
ST: 795–797
- The leadership of Martin Luther King, Jr.
ST: 825–827
- Resurgence of feminism
ST: 836–838, 848–849
- The New Left and the Counterculture
ST: 834–836
- Emergence of the Republican party in the South
ST: 824–826
- The Supreme Court and the Miranda decision
ST: 823–825
- Foreign policy
- Bay of Pigs
ST: 790
- Cuban missile crisis
ST: 790–794
- Vietnam quagmire
ST: 794–795
- Nixon
- Election of 1968
ST: 802–804
- Nixon-Kissinger foreign policy
- Vietnam: escalation and pullout
ST: 804–806
- China: restoring relations
ST: 807
- Soviet Union: détente
ST: 807–808
- New Federalism
ST: 802–804
- Supreme Court and Roe v. Wade
ST: 838, 876
- Watergate crisis and resignation
ST: 810–813
- The United States since 1974
- The New Right and the conservative social agenda
ST: 898
- Ford and Rockefeller
ST: 844–845
- Carter
- Deregulation
ST: 846–847
- Energy and inflation
ST: 847–848
- Camp David Accords
ST: 849
- Iranian hostage crisis
ST: 849–851
- Reagan
- Tax cuts and budget deficits
ST: 857–859
- Defense buildup
ST: 854–855
- New disarmament treaties
ST: 851–852, 855
- Foreign crises: the Persian Gulf and Central America
ST: 853, 859, 862
- Society
- Old and new urban problems
ST: 866–868
- Asian and Hispanic immigrants
ST: 874–875
- Resurgent fundamentalism
ST: 884–887
- African Americans and local, state, and national politics
ST: 878