A | B |
Abolitionists | Those who supported the end of slavery |
Alien and Sedition Acts | Restricted naturalization of immigrants and could not publish material critical of the government |
American Revolution | Colonists fought the British in an attempt to gain independence |
Anti-Federalists | Those who opposed ratification to the Constitution |
Armstrong, Neil | The first man to walk on the moon |
Articles of Confederation | First document to outline the government of the U.S. |
Assembly Line | Manufacturing technique invented by Henry Ford |
Atomic Bomb | Weapon of mass destruction created by splitting atoms |
Bacon’s Rebellion | 1675 uprising in Virginia caused by government unwillingness to provide protection on the Western frontier from Native Americans |
Balance of Powers | Different powers are delegated between the three branches of government |
Battle of New Orleans | The last battle fought during the War of 1812 that vaulted Andrew Jackson to national fame |
Bay of Pigs | Ill-fated secret mission to overthrow the communist Cuban government of Castro, authorized by Kennedy |
Bell, Alexander Graham | Invented the telephone in 1876 |
Berlin Airlift | American and British joint effort to supply a free city in the middle of E. Germany |
Berlin Wall | Constructed by the Soviet Union in 1961 to keep East Germans from leaving, and destroyed in 1989 |
Bill of Rights | First ten amendments to the Constitution |
Black Power | Militant movement in the 1960s by those who were frustrated with the slow progress of nonviolent civil rights measures |
“Bleeding Kansas” | Widespread violence preceded a vote on slavery in Kansas, including the massacre of slave owners by John Brown |
Boston Massacre | 1770 confrontation between colonists and British troops stationed in Boston |
Boston Tea Party | Group of colonists dressed as Mohawk Indians boarded British ships and dumped tea into the harbor. |
“Black Tuesday” | The day of the stock market crash and the beginning of the Great Depression |
Brown, John | Radical abolitionist leader who was part of the "Bleeding Kansas" massacre and led an 1859 raid on the Harpers Ferry arsenal |
Brown v. Board of Education | 1954 decision outlawing Jim Crow laws by mandating segregation in public schools |
Bull Moose Party | Progressive coalition led by Theodore Roosevelt following the nomination of Taft by the Republican party |
Bush, George | President from 1988-1992 who involved the U.S. in the Persian Gulf War |
Bush, George W. | Current President of the U.S. 2001-? |
California Gold Rush | Took place following a gold discovery in 1849. Those who hurried west were called forty-niners. |
Carpetbaggers | Derogatory term for Northerners who moved south during Reconstruction to make a profit |
Civil Rights Movement | ORganized campaign for African American rights from the 1950s through the 1960s |
Civil War | The War Between the Southern and Northern States |
Civil War Amendments | 13th (no slavery), 14th (due process and equal protection), and 15th (voting rights for African Americans) |
Cold War | Extended tensions between the US. and NATo and the USSR and the Warsaw Pact following WWII |
Columbus, Christopher | First European (other than the Vikings) to land in the New World (1492) |
“Common Sense” | Politcal pamphlet published by Thomas Paine in January 1776 |
Compromise of 1850 | Admitted California as a free state and passed the Fugitive Slave Act |
Confederate States of America | Formal name of the southern states that seceded from the Union during the Civil War |
Constitution | Document that povides the supreme law for the United States |
Constitutional Convention | Meeting to discuss the inherent problems of the Articles of the Confederation and to draft a new Constitution |
Containment | Cold War policy intended to stop the spread of communism anywhere that it sought to expand |
Counterculture | Youth movement of the 1960s that opposed the mainstream culture |
Cuban Missile Crisis | 1962 Cold War naval blockade (quarantine) of Cuba follwing the discovery of nuclear missles on the island |
Davis, Jefferson | President of the Confederate States of America during the Civil War |
D Day | Allied invasion of France in Normandy |
Declaration of Independence | Document written by Jefferson in 1776 declaring American independence |