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