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Chapter 1 - 'Men Prone to Wonder': America Before 1600 Chapter 2 - The European Settlement of North America: The Atlantic Coast to 1660 Chapter 3 - Empires: 1660-1702 Chapter 4 - Benjamin Franklin's World: Colonial North America, 1702-1763 Chapter 5 - Toward Independence, 1764-1783 Chapter 6 - Inventing the American Republic: The States Chapter 7 - Inventing the American Republic: The Nation Chapter 8 - Establishing the New Nation Chapter 9 - The Fabric of Change, 1800-1815 Chapter 10 - A New Epoch: 1815-1828 Chapter 11 - Political Innovation in a Mechanical Age: 1828-1840 Chapter 12 - Worker Worlds in Antebellum America Chapter 13 - The Benevolent Empire: Religion and Reform, 1825-1846 Chapter 14 - National Expansion, Sectional Division: 1839-1850 Chapter 15 - A House Dividing: 1851-1860 Chapter 16 - Civil War: 1861-1865 Chapter 17 - Reconstruction, 1865-1877 Chapter 18 - The Rise of Big Business and the Triumph of Industry: 1870-1900 Chapter 19 - An Industrial Society: 1870-1910 Chapter 20 - Politics, Industrialism, and the State: 1876-1900 Chapter 21 - A New Place in the World: 1865-1914 Chapter 22 - The Progressive Era Chapter 23 - War, Prosperity, and the Metropolis: 1914-1929 Chapter 24 - The New Deal Chapter 25 - Whirlpool of War Chapter 26 - Fighting for Freedom Chapter 27 - From Hot War to Cold War Chapter 28 - Korea, Eisenhower, and Affluence Chapter 29 - Renewal of Reform Chapter 30 - Years of Rage Chapter 31 - Conservative Revival Chapter 32 - The Reagan Revolution Chapter 33 - Inventing a New Order
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I) The Nation After the Civil War
  1. The Nation After the Civil War
    1. Critical Issues Settled by the North’s Victory
      1. Southern states would not secede
      2. Slavery would be abolished
    2. Lingering Questions
      1. Readmission of the Confederate states to the Union
      2. Treatment of ex-Confederate leaders
      3. Fate of former slaves
    3. The Rest of the Nation
      1. Rise of industry and manufacturing to political and economic prominence
      2. Opening of the trans-Mississippi West
  2. The Fate of the Union
    1. Reconstruction in Wartime
      1. The slavery question
        1. Emancipation Proclamation
        2. Thirteenth Amendment
      2. Reconstituting the Union
        1. Lincoln’s Ten-Percent Plan
        2. Wade-Davis Bill
      3. Aid for freed slaves
        1. efforts at land confiscation
        2. federal experiments in land and labor policy
        3. creation of the Freedmen’s Bureau
    2. Andrew Johnson and Presidential Reconstruction
      1. Johnson’s background and political beliefs
      2. Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction
        1. amnesty for former Confederates
        2. restitution of property, except slaves
        3. state governments
      3. The white South’s defiance
        1. ex-Confederates elected
        2. Black Codes
      4. Congressional Republicans’ response
        1. expanding and extending the Freedmen’s Bureau
        2. Civil Rights Bill
        3. Congress vs. Johnson
    3. The Fourteenth Amendment
      1. Provisions
        1. defines citizenship and its rights
        2. enshrines principle of "equality before law"
      2. Impact on 1866 midterm elections
    4. Radical Reconstruction and the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
      1. Congressional Radicals’ Reconstruction plan
        1. reinstituted military authority, except in Tennessee
        2. required states to ratify Fourteenth Amendment
        3. embraced black suffrage
      2. Tenure of Office Act
      3. Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
        1. reasons
        2. trial and acquittal
    5. Defeat of Land Reform
      1. Reasoning of supporters
      2. Conflict with basic Republican values
      3. Rejection of Stevens’s plan
      4. Southern states readmitted to union
    6. Election of 1868
      1. Nomination and election of Ulysses Grant
      2. Fifteenth Amendment
  3. The Recovering South
    1. A Land Shattered by War
      1. Physical devastation
      2. Economic collapse
    2. The Experience of Freedom
      1. Ex-slaves’ reactions to emancipation
        1. moving
        2. family reunification
        3. churches
        4. schools
        5. challenging deference and segregation
      2. Southern whites’ reactions to emancipation
        1. fear of social equality
        2. race riots and the Ku Klux Klan
    3. Land and Labor
      1. Conflicting needs and desires of freedmen and southern whites
      2. The emergence of sharecropping
      3. The crop-lien system
      4. Stagnation of the southern economy
  4. The Road to Redemption
    1. Economic Boom in the North and West
    2. The Republican Party in the South
      1. Black voters and officeholders
      2. Reconstruction state governments
    3. The Grant Administration
      1. Civil service reform
      2. Governmental corruption
      3. The Enforcement Acts
    4. The Election of 1872
      1. Liberal Republican Party
      2. Grant’s victory
    5. Reconstruction in Retreat
      1. Redeemers score political victories
      2. Panic of 1873
      3. Supreme Court restricts interpretation of Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments
    6. The Election of 1876 and the Compromise of 1877
      1. Disputed returns
      2. Federal troops withdrawn from South
  5. Legacies
    1. The Fate of Freed Slaves
    2. Economic Legacies
    3. Political Legacies
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