Correlations
America: Past and Present, 7th Edition, AP* Edition ©2005
Robert A. Divine, T. H. Breen, George M. Fredrickson, R. Hal Williams
Correlated with AP* History, United States, May 2004, 2005
1. Discovery and Settlement of the New World, 1492–1650
|
Chapters 1, 2 |
| Europe in the sixteenth century |
pp. 11–16 |
| Spanish, English, and French exploration |
pp. 17–25 |
| First English settlements |
pp. 34–41 |
| —Jamestown |
pp. 34–36 |
| —Plymouth |
p. 41 |
| Spanish and French settlements and long-term influence |
pp. 19–22 |
| American Indians |
pp. 4–10 |
2. America and the British Empire, 1650–1754
|
Chapters 2, 3 |
| Chesapeake country |
pp. 33–40 |
| Growth of New England |
pp. 41–48 |
| Restoration Colonies |
pp. 54–56 |
| Mercantilism; the Dominion of New England |
p. 77 |
| Origins of Slavery |
pp. 71–76 |
3. Colonial Society in the Mid-Eighteenth Century
|
Chapters 4, 5 |
| Social Structure |
pp. 62–71 |
| —Family |
pp. 62–69 |
| —Farm and town life; the economy |
pp. 68–72 |
| Culture |
pp. 62–63, 104–11 |
| —Great Awakening |
pp. 108–11 |
| —The American Mind |
pp. 104–06 |
| —"Folkways" |
pp. 62–63 |
| New Immigrants |
pp. 95–97 |
4. Road to Revolution, 1754–1775
|
Chapters 4, 5 |
| Anglo-French rivalries and Seven Years' War |
pp. 118–21 |
| Imperial reorganization of 1763 |
p. 120 |
| —Stamp Act |
pp. 132–34 |
| —Declaratory Act |
pp. 134, 138, 141 |
| —Townshend Act |
pp. 134–35 |
| —Boston Tea Party |
pp. 140–42 |
| Philosophy of the American Revolution |
pp. 125–36 |
5. The American Revolution, 1775–1783
|
Chapters 5, 6 |
| Continental Congress |
pp. 142–44 |
| Declaration of Independence |
p. 144 |
| The War |
pp. 145–52 |
| —French alliance |
pp. 149–50 |
| —War and society; Loyalists |
pp. 152–53 |
| —War economy |
pp. 171–72 |
| Articles of Confederation |
pp. 166–67 |
| Peace of Paris |
pp. 153–54 |
| Creating state governments |
pp. 164–66 |
| —Political organization |
pp. 164–66 |
| —Social reform: women, slavery |
pp. 160–62 |
6. Constitution and New Republic, 1776–1800
|
Chapters 6, 7 |
| Philadelphia Convention: drafting the Constitution |
pp. 175–76 |
| Federalists versus Anti-Federalists |
pp. 181–83 |
| Bill of Rights |
pp. 183–84 |
| Washington's presidency |
pp. 191–92 |
| —Hamilton's financial program |
pp. 196–99 |
| —Foreign and domestic difficulties |
pp. 207–08 |
| —Beginnings of political parties |
pp. 191–92 |
| John Adams' presidency |
pp. 208–13 |
| —Alien and Sedition Acts |
pp. 210–12 |
| —XYZ Affair |
pp. 209–10 |
| —Election of 1800 |
pp. 213–15 |
7. The Age of Jefferson, 1800–1816
|
Chapter 8 |
| Jefferson's presidency |
pp. 213–29 |
| —The Louisiana Purchase |
pp. 226–28 |
| —Burr Conspiracy |
pp. 234–35 |
| —The Supreme Court under John Marshall |
pp. 229–33 |
| —Neutral rights, impressments, embargo |
pp. 236–38 |
| Madison |
pp. 233–39 |
| War of 1812 |
pp. 240–42, 247–48 |
| —Causes |
pp. 238–39 |
| —Invasion of Canada |
pp. 239–41 |
| —Hartford Convention |
p. 242 |
| —Conduct of the war |
pp. 240–42 |
| —Treaty of Ghent |
pp. 242–44 |
| —New Orleans |
pp. 241–43 |
8. Nationalism and Economic Expansion
|
Chapter 9 |
| James Monroe; Era of Good Feelings |
pp. 263–64 |
| Panic of 1819 |
pp. 251, 260, 264, 269 |
| Settlement of the West |
pp. 248, 252–54 |
| Missouri Compromise |
pp. 264–66 |
| Foreign affairs: Canada, Florida, the Monroe Doctrine |
pp. 267–68 |
| Election of 1824: end of Virginia dynasty |
pp. 279–81 |
| Economic revolution |
pp. 256–62 |
| —Early railroads and canals |
pp. 259, 374–75 |
| —Expansion of business |
pp. 261–62, 267 |
| ——Beginnings of factory system |
pp. 261–62 |
| ——Early labor movement; women |
pp. 261–62 |
| ——Social mobility; extremes of wealth |
p. 279 |
| —The cotton revolution in the South |
pp. 259–60 |
| —Commercial agriculture |
pp. 259–60 |
9. Sectionalism
|
Chapters 9, 11, 13 |
| The South |
pp. 301–03, 322–24 |
| —Cotton Kingdom |
pp. 322–24 |
| —Southern trade and industry |
pp. 303–05 |
| —Southern society and culture |
pp. 302–03, 312–21 |
| ——Gradations of White society |
pp. 312–21 |
| ——Nature of Slavery: "peculiar institution" |
pp. 303–17 |
| ——The mind of the South |
pp. 321–26 |
| The North |
pp. 399–411 |
| —The Northeast industry |
pp. 375–78 |
| ——Labor |
p. 382 |
| ——Immigration |
pp. 380–81 |
| ——Urban slums |
p. 381 |
| —Northwest agriculture |
pp. 379–80 |
| Westward expansion |
pp. 251–56, 367–69 |
| —Advance of agricultural frontier |
p. 251 |
| —Significance of the frontier |
pp. 367–69 |
| —Life on the frontier; squatters |
pp. 254–56 |
| —Removal of American Indians |
pp. 252–53, 284–86 |
10. The Age of Jackson, 1828–1848
|
Chapter 10 |
| Democracy and the "common man" |
p. 274 |
| —Expansion of Suffrage |
p. 279 |
| —Rotation in office |
pp. 283–84 |
| Second party system |
pp. 296–97 |
| —Democratic Party |
pp. 282–83, 294–95 |
| —Whig Party |
pp. 291–92, 296–97 |
| Internal improvements and states' rights: the Maysville Road veto |
p. 287 |
| The Nullification Crisis |
pp. 286–88 |
| —Tariff issue |
p. 288 |
| —The Union: Calhoun and Jackson |
pp. 281–82, 286–88 |
| The Bank War: Jackson and Biddle |
pp. 288–91 |
| Martin Van Buren |
pp. 291–96 |
| —Independent treasury system |
p. 292 |
| —Panic of 1837 |
pp. 291–92 |
11. Territorial Expansion and Sectional Crisis
|
Chapter 13 |
| Manifest Destiny and mission |
pp. 367–69 |
| Texas annexation, the Oregon boundary, and California |
pp. 367–70 |
| James K. Polk and the Mexican War; slavery and Wilmot Proviso |
pp. 370–73, 388–89 |
| Later expansionist efforts |
pp. 360–66 |
12. Creating an American Culture
|
Chapters 9, 12 |
| Cultural nationalism |
pp. 243–44, 266–67 |
| Education reform/professionalism |
pp. 280, 338–40 |
| Religion; revivalism |
pp. 329–33 |
| Utopian experiments: Mormons, Oneida Community |
pp. 346–47, 365–66 |
| Transcendentalists |
pp. 347–50 |
| National literature, art, architecture |
pp. 276–78, 347–50 |
| Reform crusades |
pp. 351–52 |
| —Feminism; roles of women in the nineteenth century |
pp. 335–36 |
| —Abolitionism |
pp. 343–45 |
| —Temperance |
pp. 333–34 |
| —Criminals and the insane |
pp. 340–41 |
13. The 1850's: Decade of Crisis
|
Chapter 14 |
| The Compromise of 1850 |
pp. 391–93 |
| Fugitive Slave Act and Uncle Tom's Cabin |
pp. 391–92, 400–401 |
| Kansas–Nebraska Act and realignment of parties |
pp. 393–95 |
| —Demise of the Whig Party |
p. 395 |
| —Emergence of the Republican Party |
pp. 397–98 |
| Dred Scott decision and Lecompton crisis |
pp. 401–03, 414–16 |
| Lincoln-Douglas debates, 1858 |
pp. 403–04 |
| John Brown's raid |
pp. 404, 406–07 |
| The election of 1860; Abraham Lincoln |
pp. 405, 408–09, 419–20 |
| The secession crisis |
pp. 421–23 |
14. Civil War
|
Chapters 15, 16 |
| The Union |
pp. 427–31 |
| —Mobilization and finance |
pp. 430–31 |
| —Civil Liberties |
p. 431 |
| —Election of 1864 |
pp. 443–44 |
| The South |
pp. 427–31 |
| —Confederate constitution |
pp. 421–22 |
| —Mobilization and finance |
pp. 430–31 |
| —States' rights and the Confederacy |
pp. 421–25 |
| Foreign affairs and diplomacy |
pp. 436–37 |
| Military strategy, campaigns, and battles |
pp. 432–44 |
| The abolition of slavery |
pp. 438–39 |
| —Confiscation Acts |
pp. 438–39 |
| —Emancipation Proclamation |
pp. 437–38 |
| —Freedmen's Bureau |
pp. 461–65 |
| —Thirteenth Amendment |
p. 454 |
| Effects of war on society |
pp. 444–46, 478 |
| —Inflation and public debt |
pp. 430–31 |
| —Role of women |
pp. 444–46 |
| —Devastation of the South |
pp. 471–75 |
| —Changing labor patterns |
pp. 460–61 |
15. Reconstruction to 1877
|
Chapter 16 |
| Presidential Plans: Lincoln and Johnson |
pp. 453–56 |
| Radical (congressional) plans |
pp. 457–58 |
| —Civil rights and the Fourteenth Amendment |
pp. 456–57 |
| —Military reconstruction |
pp. 457–58, 462 |
| —Impeachment of Johnson |
pp. 459–60 |
| —African American suffrage: the Fifteenth Amendment |
pp. 466–68 |
| Southern state governments: problems, achievements, weakness |
pp. 458, 476–77 |
| Compromise of 1877 and the end of Reconstruction |
pp. 471–72 |
16. New South and the Last West
|
Chapters 16, 17 |
| Politics in the New South |
pp. 471–75 |
| —The Redeemers |
pp. 472–73 |
| —Whites and African Americans in the New South |
pp. 460–65 |
| —Subordination of freed slaves: Jim Crow |
pp. 473–75 |
| Southern economy; colonial status of the South |
p. 460 |
| —Sharecropping |
pp. 461–62 |
| —Industrial stirrings |
pp. 472–73 |
| Cattle Kingdom |
pp. 499–502 |
| —Open-range ranching |
pp. 494, 499–502 |
| —Day of the cowboy |
pp. 499–500 |
| Building the Western railroad |
pp. 512–18 |
| Subordination of American Indians: dispersal of tribes |
pp. 485–91 |
| Farming the plains; problems in agriculture |
pp. 504–05 |
| Mining bonanza |
pp. 496–99 |
17. Industrialization and Corporate Consolidation
|
Chapters 18, 19 |
| Industrial growth: railroads, iron, coal, electricity, steel, oil, banks |
pp. 510–36 |
| Laissez-faire conservatism |
pp. 578–79 |
| —Gospel of Wealth |
p. 531 |
| —Myth of the "self-made man" |
pp. 531, 589 |
| —Social Darwinism; survival of the fittest |
p. 560 |
| —Social Critics and dissenters |
pp. 552, 560–65 |
| Effects of technological developments on worker-workplace |
pp. 512, 516, 522–24 |
| Union movement |
pp. 531–33 |
| —Knights of Labor and American Federation of Labor |
pp. 532–33 |
| —Haymarket, Homestead, and Pullman |
pp. 532, 535, 585 |
18. Urban Society
|
Chapter 19 |
| Lure of the city |
pp. 550–60 |
| Immigration |
pp. 543–48 |
| City problems |
pp. 564–65 |
| —Slums |
pp. 562–63 |
| —Machine politics |
pp. 548–50 |
| Awakening conscience; reforms |
pp. 560–65, 664–65 |
| —Social legislation |
pp. 562, 564–65 |
| —Settlement houses: Jane Addams and Lillian Wald |
pp. 562–63 |
| —Structural reforms in government |
pp. 664–67 |
19. Intellectual and Cultural Movements
|
Chapters 19, 20 |
| Education |
pp. 555–57 |
| —Colleges and universities |
pp. 557–60 |
| —Scientific advances |
p. 557 |
| Professionalism and the social sciences |
pp. 657–58 |
| Realism in literature and art |
pp. 589–91 |
| Mass culture |
pp. 550–60 |
| —Use of leisure |
pp. 552–53 |
| —Publishing and Journalism |
pp. 614–15 |
20. National Politics, 1877–1896: The Gilded Age
|
Chapter 20 |
| A conservative presidency |
pp. 575–76, 587–88, 596 |
| Issues |
pp. 578–79 |
| —Tariff controversy |
pp. 606–08 |
| —Railroad regulation |
pp. 576, 584, 673–74 |
| —Trusts |
pp. 578–79 |
| Agrarian discontent |
pp. 580–81 |
| Crisis of 1890s |
pp. 579–96 |
| —Populism |
pp. 579–83, 595–96 |
| —Silver questions |
pp. 577–79, 594–95 |
| —Election of 1896: McKinley versus Bryan |
pp. 591, 594–96 |
21. Foreign Policy, 1865–1914
|
Chapters 21, 24 |
| Seward and the purchase of Alaska |
p. 607 |
| The new imperialism |
pp. 603–09, 617–21 |
| —Blaine and Latin America |
p. 607 |
| —International Darwinism: missionaries, politicians, and naval expansionists |
pp. 606–09 |
| —Spanish-American War |
pp. 611–20 |
| ——Cuban independence |
pp 601–02, 611–17 |
| ——Debate on Philippines |
pp. 620–22 |
| The Far East: John Hay and the Open Door |
pp. 623–24, 693–94 |
| Theodore Roosevelt |
pp. 669–72, 691–92 |
| —The Panama Canal |
pp. 691–92 |
| —Roosevelt Corollary |
pp. 692–93 |
| —Far East |
p. 693 |
| Taft and dollar diplomacy |
p. 693 |
| Wilson and moral diplomacy |
p. 694 |
22. Progressive Era
|
Chapters 22, 23 |
| Origins of Progressivism |
pp. 627–28 |
| —Progressive attitudes and motives |
pp. 627–28 |
| —Muckrakers |
pp. 627–28 |
| —Social Gospel |
pp. 658–59 |
| Municipal, state, and national reforms |
pp. 664–67 |
| —Political suffrage |
pp. 660–62 |
| —Social and economic: regulations |
p. 669 |
| Socialism: alternatives |
p. 662 |
| Black America |
pp. 558–59, 638–39 |
| —Washington, DuBois, and Garvey |
pp. 558–59, 638–39 |
| —Urban migration |
p. 539 |
| —Civil rights organizations |
pp. 582, 638–39, 660 |
| Women's role: family, work, education, unionization, and suffrage |
pp. 660–62 |
| Roosevelt's Square Deal |
pp. 668–69 |
| —Managing the trusts |
pp. 667–68 |
| —Conservation |
pp. 665–66, 671–72 |
| Taft |
pp. 673–75 |
| —Pinchot-Ballinger controversy |
p. 673 |
| —Payne-Aldrich Tariff |
p. 673 |
| Wilson's New Freedom |
pp. 675–78 |
| —Tariffs |
pp. 676–78 |
| —Banking reform |
p. 678 |
| —Antitrust Act of 1914 |
pp. 667–68, 677 |
23. The First World War
|
Chapter 24 |
| Problems of neutrality |
pp. 696–697 |
| —Submarines |
pp. 668–69, 689–90, 697–99 |
| —Economic ties |
pp. 696–97, 702 |
| —Psychological and ethnic ties |
pp. 696–97 |
| Preparedness and pacifism |
pp. 696–97, 699, 702 |
| Mobilization |
p. 701 |
| —Fighting the war |
pp. 700–703 |
| —Financing the war |
p. 708 |
| —War boards |
pp. 709, 722 |
| —Propaganda, public opinion, civil liberties |
pp. 688, 696–97, 706–08 |
| Wilson's Fourteen Points |
pp. 712–14 |
| —Treaty of Versailles |
pp. 712–16 |
| —Ratification fight |
pp. 713–15 |
| Postwar demobilization |
pp. 730, 736 |
| —Red Scare |
pp. 732–34 |
| —Labor strife |
pp. 722, 733 |
24. New Era: The 1920's
|
Chapter 25 |
| Republican governments |
pp. 721–22, 737–38 |
| —Business creed |
pp. 721–22 |
| —Harding scandals |
pp. 737–38 |
| Economic development |
pp. 721–23 |
| —Prosperity and wealth |
pp. 720–23 |
| —Farm and labor problems |
pp. 722, 739 |
| New culture |
pp. 720–23 |
| —Consumerism: automobile, radio, movies |
pp. 719–23 |
| —Women, the family |
pp. 724–25 |
| —Modern religion |
pp. 732–37 |
| —Literature of alienation |
pp. 727–32 |
| —Jazz age |
pp. 723–29 |
| —Harlem Renaissance |
pp. 729–32 |
| Conflict of cultures |
pp. 732–37 |
| —Prohibition, bootlegging |
pp. 734–35 |
| —Nativism |
pp. 736–37 |
| —Ku Klux Klan |
pp. 735–36 |
| —Religious fundamentalism versus modernists |
pp. 732–37 |
| Myth of isolation |
pp. 737–41 |
| —Replacing the League of Nations |
pp. 713–15, 737–38 |
| —Business and diplomacy |
pp. 737–41 |
25. Depression, 1929–1933
|
Chapter 26 |
| Wall Street crash |
p. 751 |
| Depression economy |
pp. 773–74 |
| Moods of despair |
pp. 750–61 |
| —Agrarian unrest |
pp. 758–59, 766 |
| —Bonus march |
p. 754 |
| Hoover-Stimson diplomacy; Japan |
pp. 779–81 |
26. New Deal
|
Chapter 26 |
| Franklin D. Roosevelt |
pp. 754–55, 761–62, 772–74 |
| —Background, ideas |
pp. 754–55 |
| —Philosophy of New Deal |
pp. 761–64 |
| 100 Days; "alphabet agencies" |
pp. 755–57 |
| Second New Deal |
pp. 768–69 |
| Critics; left and right |
pp. 762, 764, 768 |
| Rise of CIO; labor strikes |
pp. 764–56 |
| Supreme Court fight |
pp. 772–73 |
| Recession of 1938 |
p. 773 |
| American people in the Depression |
pp. 749–61 |
| —Social values, women, ethnic groups |
pp. 766–68 |
| —Indian Reorganization Act |
p. 767 |
| —Mexican American deportation |
pp. 753, 766–67 |
| —The racial issue |
p. 753 |
27. Diplomacy in the 1930s
|
Chapter 27 |
| Good Neighbor Policy: Montevideo, Buenos Aires |
pp. 779–80 |
| London Economic Conference |
pp. 784–85 |
| Disarmament |
pp. 783–84 |
| Isolationism: neutrality legislation |
pp. 782–83 |
| Aggressors: Japan, Italy, and Germany |
pp. 781, 784 |
| Appeasement |
pp. 783–84 |
| Rearmament; Blitzkrieg; Lend-Lease |
pp. 780, 784–85 |
| Atlantic Charter |
pp. 784–85 |
| Pearl Harbor |
pp. 787–88 |
28. The Second World War
|
Chapters 27, 28 |
| Organizing for war |
pp. 784–88 |
| —Mobilizing production |
pp. 792, 798 |
| —Propaganda |
pp. 792–94 |
| —Internment of Japanese Americans |
pp. 796–97 |
| The war in Europe, Africa, and the Mediterranean; D Day |
pp. 783–86, 788–92, 798 |
| The war in the Pacific: Hiroshima, Nagasaki |
pp. 786–88, 791–92, 802–03 |
| Diplomacy |
pp. 780–81, 788–89 |
| —War aims |
pp. 790–91 |
| —Wartime conferences: Tehran, Yalta, Potsdam |
pp. 799, 802, 807–08 |
| Postwar atmospheres; the United Nations |
pp. 808–10 |
29. Truman and the Cold War
|
Chapter 28 |
| Postwar economic adjustments |
pp. 822–23 |
| The Taft-Hartley Act |
p. 822 |
| Civil Rights and the election of 1948 |
pp. 814, 822, 850 |
| Containment in Europe and the Middle East |
pp. 811–15 |
| —Truman Doctrine |
pp. 811–12 |
| —Marshall Plan |
pp. 812–13 |
| —Berlin Crisis |
pp. 814–15 |
| —NATO |
pp. 813–14 |
| Revolution in China |
pp. 816–17 |
| Limited War: Korea, MacArthur |
pp. 817–21 |
30. Eisenhower and Modern Republicanism
|
Chapters 28, 29, 30 |
| Domestic frustrations; McCarthyism |
pp. 824–27 |
| Civil rights movement |
pp. 851–52 |
| —The Warren Court and Brown v. Board of Education |
pp. 850–52 |
| —Montgomery bus boycott |
pp. 852–53 |
| —Greensboro sit-in |
pp. 853–54 |
| John Foster Dulles' foreign policy |
pp. 828–31 |
| —Crisis in Southeast Asia |
pp. 829–30 |
| —Massive retaliation |
pp. 828–30 |
| —Nationalism in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Latin America |
pp. 828–31 |
| —Khrushchev and Berlin |
pp. 831–33 |
| American people: homogenized society |
pp. 836–39 |
| —Prosperity: economic consolidation |
pp. 839–41 |
| —Consumer Culture |
pp. 838–41 |
| —Consensus of values |
pp. 840–41 |
| Space Race |
pp. 846–47 |
31. Kennedy's New Frontier; Johnson's Great Society
|
Chapter 30 |
| New domestic programs |
pp. 864–69, 872–73 |
| —Tax Cut |
pp. 865–66 |
| —War on Poverty |
p. 871 |
| —Affirmative Action |
pp. 956–959 |
| Civil Rights and civil liberties |
pp. 866–68, 872–73 |
| —African Americans: political, cultural, and economic roles |
pp. 866–68, 872 |
| —The leadership of Martin Luther King, Jr. |
pp. 867–68 |
| —Resurgence of feminism |
pp. 871, 885 |
| —The New Left and the Counterculture |
pp. 880–81 |
| —Emergence of the Republican Party in the South |
pp. 888–89, 900 |
| —The Supreme Court and the Miranda decision |
p. 868 |
| Foreign Policy |
pp. 859–62, 876–77, 885–87 |
| —Bay of Pigs |
pp. 861–62 |
| —Cuban missile crisis |
pp. 862–64 |
| —Vietnam quagmire |
pp. 876–80, 885–89 |
32. Nixon
|
Chapter 31 |
| Election of 1968 |
pp. 885, 888–89 |
| Nixon–Kissinger foreign policy |
pp. 897–99 |
| —Vietnam: escalation and pullout |
pp. 898–99 |
| —China: restoring relations |
pp. 897–98 |
| —Soviet Union: détente |
pp. 897–98 |
| New Federalism |
pp. 895–97 |
| Supreme Court and Roe v. Wade |
pp. 910, 920–924 |
| Watergate Crisis and resignation |
pp. 893–94, 900–901 |
33. The United States since 1974
|
Chapters 32, 33 |
| The New Right and the conservative social agenda |
pp. 895–96, 927–28, 949 |
| Ford and Rockefeller |
pp. 912–13 |
| Carter |
pp. 913–14 |
| —Deregulation |
p. 932 |
| —Energy and Inflation |
pp. 901–04 |
| —Camp David Accords |
pp. 916, 940 |
| —Iranian hostage crisis |
pp. 916–17 |
| Reagan |
pp. 929–44 |
| —Tax cuts and budgets deficits |
pp. 933–36 |
| —Defense buildup |
pp. 933, 939, 944 |
| —New disarmament treaties |
pp. 943–44 |
| —Foreign crises: the Persian Gulf and Central America |
pp. 942–43, 952–53 |
| Society |
pp. 963–69 |
| —Old and new urban problems |
pp. 963–64 |
| —Asian and Hispanic immigrants |
pp. 962, 965–66 |
| —Resurgent fundamentalism |
p. 928 |
| —African Americans and local, state, and national politics |
pp. 929–30, 932 |