Test Bank for The American Pageant 17th by Kennedy

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Test Bank for The American Pageant 17th by Kennedy

Product details:

  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1337616222
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1337616225
  • Author: David M. Kennedy

You may not think that a history book could make you laugh, but THE AMERICAN PAGEANT just might. It’s known for being one of the most popular, effective and entertaining texts on American history. Colorful anecdotes, first-person quotations and the authors’ trademark wit bring history to life. Learning aids make the book as accessible as it is enjoyable: part openers and chapter-ending chronologies provide a context for the major periods in American history, while primary sources and introductions to key historical figures give you a front row seat to the nation’s past.

Table contents:

  1. Part 1: Peopling a Continent c. 33,000 b.c.e.-1700 c.e.
  2. Chapter 1: New World Beginnings 33,000 b.c.e.-1680 c.e
  3. 1-1 The Shaping of North America
  4. 1-2 Peopling the Americas
  5. 1-3 The Earliest Americans
  6. 1-4 Indirect Discoverers of the New World
  7. 1-5 Europeans Enter Africa
  8. 1-6 Columbus Comes upon a New World
  9. 1-7 When Worlds Collide
  10. 1-8 The Conquest of Mexico and Peru
  11. 1-9 Exploration and Imperial Rivalry
  12. Chapter Review
  13. Chapter 2: The Contest for North America 1500-1664
  14. 2-1 France Finds a Foothold in Canada
  15. 2-2 New France Fans Out
  16. 2-3 The Spanish in North America
  17. 2-4 England’s Imperial Stirrings
  18. 2-5 Elizabeth Energizes England
  19. 2-6 England on the Eve of Empire
  20. 2-7 England Plants the Jamestown Seedling
  21. 2-8 Cultural Clashes in the Chesapeake
  22. 2-9 Old Netherlanders at New Netherland
  23. 2-10 Friction with English and Swedish Neighbors
  24. 2-11 Dutch Residues in New York
  25. 2-12 The Indians’ New World
  26. Chapter Review
  27. Chapter 3: Settling the English Colonies 1619-1700
  28. 3-1 Virginia: Child of Tobacco
  29. 3-2 Maryland: Catholic Haven
  30. 3-3 The West Indies: Way Station to Mainland America
  31. 3-4 Colonizing the Carolinas
  32. 3-5 The Emergence of North Carolina
  33. 3-6 Late-Coming Georgia: The Buffer Colony
  34. 3-7 The Plantation Colonies
  35. 3-8 The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism
  36. 3-9 The Pilgrims End Their Pilgrimage at Plymouth
  37. 3-10 The Bay Colony Bible Commonwealth
  38. 3-11 Building the Bay Colony
  39. 3-12 Trouble in the Bible Commonwealth
  40. 3-13 The Rhode Island “Sewer”
  41. 3-14 New England Spreads Out
  42. 3-15 Puritans and Indians
  43. 3-16 English Interference and Neglect
  44. 3-17 Penn’s Holy Experiment in Pennsylvania
  45. 3-18 Quaker Pennsylvania and Its Neighbors
  46. 3-19 The Middle Way in the Middle Colonies
  47. Chapter Review
  48. Part 2: Building British North America 1607-1775
  49. Chapter 4: American Life in the Seventeenth Century 1607-1692
  50. 4-1 The Unhealthy Chesapeake
  51. 4-2 The Tobacco Economy
  52. 4-3 Frustrated Freemen and Bacon’s Rebellion
  53. 4-4 Colonial Slavery
  54. 4-5 Southern Society
  55. 4-6 The New England Family
  56. 4-7 Life in the New England Towns
  57. 4-8 The Half-Way Covenant and the Salem Witch Trials
  58. 4-9 The New England Way of Life
  59. 4-10 The Early Settlers’ Days and Ways
  60. Chapter Review
  61. Chapter 5: Colonial Society on the Eve of Revolution 1700-1775
  62. 5-1 A Continent in Flux
  63. 5-2 Conquest by the Cradle
  64. 5-3 A Mingling of Cultures
  65. 5-4 Africans in America
  66. 5-5 The Structure of Colonial Society
  67. 5-6 Workaday America
  68. 5-7 Clerics, Physicians, and Jurists
  69. 5-8 Horsepower and Sailpower
  70. 5-9 Dominant Denominations
  71. 5-10 The Great Awakening
  72. 5-11 Schools and Colleges
  73. 5-12 A Provincial Culture
  74. 5-13 Pioneer Presses
  75. 5-14 The Great Game of Politics
  76. 5-15 Colonial Folkways
  77. Chapter Review
  78. Chapter 6: The Road to Revolution 1754-1775
  79. 6-1 The Clash of Empires
  80. 6-2 George Washington Inaugurates War with France
  81. 6-3 Global War and Colonial Disunity
  82. 6-4 Braddock’s Blundering and Its Aftermath
  83. 6-5 Pitt’s Palms of Victory
  84. 6-6 Restless Colonists
  85. 6-7 War’s Fateful Aftermath
  86. 6-8 The Deep Roots of Revolution
  87. 6-9 Mercantilism and Colonial Grievances
  88. 6-10 The Merits and Menace of Mercantilism
  89. 6-11 The Stamp Tax Uproar
  90. 6-12 Forced Repeal of the Stamp Act
  91. 6-13 The Townshend Tea Tax and the Boston “Massacre”
  92. 6-14 The Seditious Committees of Correspondence
  93. 6-15 Tea Brewing in Boston
  94. 6-16 Parliament Passes the “Intolerable Acts”
  95. 6-17 Bloodshed
  96. 6-18 Imperial Strength and Weakness
  97. 6-19 American Pluses and Minuses
  98. 6-20 A Thin Line of Heroes
  99. Chapter Review
  100. Part 3: Founding a New Nation 1775-1800
  101. Chapter 7: America Secedes from the Empire 1775-1783
  102. 7-1 Congress Drafts George Washington
  103. 7-2 Bunker Hill and Hessian Hirelings
  104. 7-3 The Abortive Conquest of Canada
  105. 7-4 Thomas Paine Preaches Common Sense
  106. 7-5 Paine and the Idea of “Republicanism”
  107. 7-6 Jefferson’s “Explanation” of Independence
  108. 7-7 Patriots and Loyalists
  109. 7-8 The Loyalist Exodus
  110. 7-9 General Washington at Bay
  111. 7-10 Burgoyne’s Blundering Invasion
  112. 7-11 Revolution in Diplomacy?
  113. 7-12 The Colonial War Becomes a Wider War
  114. 7-13 Blow and Counterblow
  115. 7-14 The Land Frontier and the Sea Frontier
  116. 7-15 Yorktown and the Final Curtain
  117. 7-16 Peace at Paris
  118. 7-17 A New Nation Legitimized
  119. Chapter Review
  120. Chapter 8: The Confederation and the Constitution 1776-1790
  121. 8-1 A Shaky Start toward Union
  122. 8-2 Constitution Making in the States
  123. 8-3 Economic Crosscurrents
  124. 8-4 Creating a Confederation
  125. 8-5 The Articles of Confederation: America’s First Constitution
  126. 8-6 Landmarks in Land Laws
  127. 8-7 The World’s Ugly Duckling
  128. 8-8 The Horrid Specter of Anarchy
  129. 8-9 A Convention of “Demigods”
  130. 8-10 Patriots in Philadelphia
  131. 8-11 Hammering Out a Bundle of Compromises
  132. 8-12 Safeguards for Conservatism
  133. 8-13 The Clash of Federalists and Antifederalists
  134. 8-14 The Great Debate in the States
  135. 8-15 The Four Laggard States
  136. 8-16 A Conservative Triumph
  137. 8-17 The Pursuit of Equality
  138. Chapter Review
  139. Chapter 9: Launching the New Ship of State 1789-1800
  140. 9-1 Growing Pains
  141. 9-2 Washington for President
  142. 9-3 The Bill of Rights
  143. 9-4 Hamilton Revives the Corpse of Public Credit
  144. 9-5 Customs Duties and Excise Taxes
  145. 9-6 Hamilton Battles Jefferson for a Bank
  146. 9-7 The Edges of the Nation
  147. 9-8 Mutinous Moonshiners in Pennsylvania
  148. 9-9 The Emergence of Political Parties
  149. 9-10 The Impact of the French Revolution
  150. 9-11 Washington’s Neutrality Proclamation
  151. 9-12 Embroilments with Britain
  152. 9-13 Jay’s Treaty and Washington’s Farewell
  153. 9-14 John Adams Becomes President
  154. 9-15 Unofficial Fighting with France
  155. 9-16 Adams Puts Peace above Party
  156. 9-17 The Federalist Witch Hunt
  157. 9-18 The Virginia (Madison) and Kentucky (Jefferson) Resolutions
  158. 9-19 Federalists versus Democratic-Republicans
  159. Chapter Review
  160. Part 4: Building the New Nation 1800-1860
  161. Chapter 10: The Triumphs and Travails of the Jeffersonian Republic 1800-1812
  162. 10-1 Federalist and Republican Mudslingers
  163. 10-2 The Jeffersonian “Revolution of 1800”
  164. 10-3 Responsibility Breeds Moderation
  165. 10-4 Jeffersonian Restraint
  166. 10-5 The “Dead Clutch” of the Judiciary
  167. 10-6 Jefferson, a Reluctant Warrior
  168. 10-7 The Louisiana Godsend
  169. 10-8 Louisiana in the Long View
  170. 10-9 Changes in the West
  171. 10-10 A Precarious Neutrality
  172. 10-11 The Hated Embargo
  173. 10-12 Madison’s Gamble
  174. 10-13 Tecumseh and the Prophet
  175. 10-14 Mr. Madison’s War
  176. Chapter Review
  177. Chapter 11: The War of 1812 and the Upsurge of Nationalism 1812-1824
  178. 11-1 On to Canada over Land and Lakes
  179. 11-2 Washington Burned and New Orleans Defended
  180. 11-3 The Treaty of Ghent
  181. 11-4 Federalist Grievances and the Hartford Convention
  182. 11-5 The Aftermath of War
  183. 11-6 Nascent Nationalism
  184. 11-7 “The American System”
  185. 11-8 The So-Called Era of Good Feelings
  186. 11-9 The Panic of 1819 and the Curse of Hard Times
  187. 11-10 Growing Pains of the West
  188. 11-11 Slavery and the Sectional Balance
  189. 11-12 The Uneasy Missouri Compromise
  190. 11-13 John Marshall and Judicial Nationalism
  191. 11-14 Judicial Dikes against Democratic Excesses
  192. 11-15 Sharing Oregon and Acquiring Florida
  193. 11-16 The Menace of Monarchy in America
  194. 11-17 Monroe and His Doctrine
  195. 11-18 Monroe’s Doctrine Appraised
  196. Chapter Review
  197. Chapter 12: The Rise of a Mass Democracy 1824-1840
  198. 12-1 The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824
  199. 12-2 A Yankee Misfit in the White House
  200. 12-3 Land and the “Five Civilized Tribes”
  201. 12-4 Going “Whole Hog” for Jackson in 1828
  202. 12-5 “Old Hickory” as President
  203. 12-6 The Spoils System
  204. 12-7 The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations”
  205. 12-9 Indian Removal
  206. 12-10 The Bank War
  207. 12-11 “Old Hickory” Wallops Clay in 1832
  208. 12-12 Burying Biddle’s Bank
  209. 12-13 The Birth of the Whigs
  210. 12-14 The Election of 1836
  211. 12-15 Big Woes for the “Little Magician”
  212. 12-16 Depression Doldrums and the Independent Treasury
  213. 12-17 Gone to Texas
  214. 12-18 The Lone Star Rebellion
  215. 12-19 Log Cabins and Hard Cider of 1840
  216. 12-20 Politics for the People
  217. 12-21 The Two-Party System
  218. Chapter Review
  219. Chapter 13: Forging the National Economy 1790-1860
  220. 13-1 The Westward Movement
  221. 13-2 Shaping the Western Landscape
  222. 13-3 The March of the Millions
  223. 13-4 The Emerald Isle Moves West
  224. 13-5 The German Forty-Eighters
  225. 13-6 Flare-ups of Antiforeignism
  226. 13-7 Creeping Mechanization
  227. 13-8 Whitney Ends the Fiber Famine
  228. 13-9 Marvels in Manufacturing
  229. 13-10 Workers and “Wage Slaves”
  230. 13-11 Women and the Economy
  231. 13-12 Western Farmers Reap a Revolution in the Fields
  232. 13-13 Highways and Steamboats
  233. 13-14 “Clinton’s Big Ditch” in New York
  234. 13-15 The Iron Horse
  235. 13-16 Cables, Clippers, and Pony Riders
  236. 13-17 The Transport Web Binds the Union
  237. 13-18 The Market Revolution
  238. Chapter Review
  239. Chapter 14: The Ferment of Reform and Culture 1790-1860
  240. 14-1 Reviving Religion
  241. 14-2 Denominational Diversity
  242. 14-3 A Desert Zion in Utah
  243. 14-4 Free Schools for a Free People
  244. 14-5 Higher Goals for Higher Learning
  245. 14-6 An Age of Reform
  246. 14-7 Demon Rum – The “Old Deluder”
  247. 14-8 Women in Revolt
  248. 14-9 Wilderness Utopias
  249. 14-10 The Dawn of Scientific Achievement
  250. 14-11 Artistic Achievements
  251. 14-12 The Blossoming of a National Literature
  252. 14-13 Trumpeters of Transcendentalism
  253. 14-14 Glowing Literary Lights
  254. 14-15 Literary Individualists and Dissenters
  255. 14-16 Portrayers of the Past
  256. Chapter Review
  257. Chapter 15: The South and Slavery 1793-1860
  258. 15-1 “Cotton Is King!”
  259. 15-2 The Planter “Aristocracy”
  260. 15-3 Cotton Capitalism
  261. 15-4 The White Majority
  262. 15-5 Free Blacks: Slaves without Masters
  263. 15-6 Plantation Slavery
  264. 15-7 Life under the Lash
  265. 15-8 Resistance
  266. 15-9 Early Antislavery
  267. 15-10 Radical Abolitionism
  268. 15-11 The South Lashes Back
  269. 15-12 The Abolitionist Impact in the North
  270. Chapter Review
  271. Part 5: Testing the New Nation 1841-1877
  272. Chapter 16: Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy 1841-1848
  273. 16-1 The Accession of “Tyler Too”
  274. 16-2 John Tyler: A President without a Party
  275. 16-3 A War of Words with Britain
  276. 16-4 Manipulating the Maine Maps
  277. 16-5 The Lone Star of Texas Shines Alone
  278. 16-6 The Annexation of Texas
  279. 16-7 Oregon Fever
  280. 16-8 A Mandate (?) for Manifest Destiny
  281. 16-9 Polk the Purposeful
  282. 16-10 Misunderstandings with Mexico
  283. 16-11 American Blood on American (?) Soil
  284. 16-12 The Invasion of Mexico
  285. 16-13 Fighting Mexico for Peace
  286. 16-14 Profit and Loss in Mexico
  287. Chapter Review
  288. Chapter 17: Renewing the Sectional Struggle 1848-1854
  289. 17-1 The Popular Sovereignty Panacea
  290. 17-2 Political Triumphs for General Taylor
  291. 17-3 “Californy Gold”
  292. 17-4 Sectional Balance and the Underground Railroad
  293. 17-5 Twilight of the Senatorial Giants
  294. 17-6 Deadlock and Danger on Capitol Hill
  295. 17-7 Breaking the Congressional Logjam
  296. 17-8 Balancing the Compromise Scales
  297. 17-9 Defeat and Doom for the Whigs
  298. 17-10 Expansionist Stirrings South of the Border
  299. 17-11 The Allure of Asia
  300. 17-12 Pacific Railroad Promoters and the Gadsden Purchase
  301. 17-13 Douglas’s Kansas-Nebraska Scheme
  302. 17-14 Congress Legislates a Civil War
  303. Chapter Review
  304. Chapter 18: Drifting toward Disunion 1854-1861
  305. 18-1 Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries
  306. 18-2 The North-South Contest for Kansas
  307. 18-3 Kansas in Convulsion
  308. 18-4 “Bully” Brooks and His Bludgeon
  309. 18-5 “Old Buck” versus “The Pathfinder”
  310. 18-6 The Electoral Fruits of 1856
  311. 18-7 The Dred Scott Bombshell
  312. 18-8 The Financial Crash of 1857
  313. 18-9 An Illinois Rail-Splitter Emerges
  314. 18-10 The Great Debate: Lincoln versus Douglas
  315. 18-11 John Brown: Murderer or Martyr?
  316. 18-12 The Disruption of the Democrats
  317. 18-13 A Rail-Splitter Splits the Union
  318. 18-14 The Electoral Upheaval of 1860
  319. 18-15 The Collapse of Compromise
  320. 18-16 The Secessionist Exodus
  321. 18-17 Farewell to Union
  322. Chapter Review
  323. Chapter 19: Girding for War: The North and the South 1861-1865
  324. 19-1 The Menace of Secession
  325. 19-2 South Carolina Assails Fort Sumter
  326. 19-3 Brothers’ Blood and Border Blood
  327. 19-4 The Balance of Forces
  328. 19-5 Dethroning King Cotton
  329. 19-6 The Decisiveness of Diplomacy
  330. 19-7 Foreign Flare-ups
  331. 19-8 President Davis versus President Lincoln
  332. 19-9 Limitations on Wartime Liberties
  333. 19-10 Volunteers and Draftees: North and South
  334. 19-11 The Economic Stresses of War
  335. 19-12 The North’s Economic Boom
  336. 19-13 A Crushed Cotton Kingdom
  337. Chapter Review
  338. Chapter 20: The Furnace of Civil War 1861-1865
  339. 20-1 Bull Run Ends the “Ninety-Day War”
  340. 20-2 “Tardy George” McClellan and the Peninsula Campaign
  341. 20-3 The Western Theater
  342. 20-4 The War at Sea
  343. 20-5 The Pivotal Point: Antietam
  344. 20-6 A Proclamation without Emancipation
  345. 20-7 Blacks Battle Bondage
  346. 20-8 Lee’s Last Lunge at Gettysburg
  347. 20-9 The Confederacy Divided
  348. 20-10 Sherman Scorches Georgia
  349. 20-11 The Politics of War
  350. 20-12 The Election of 1864
  351. 20-13 Grant Outlasts Lee
  352. 20-14 The Martyrdom of Lincoln
  353. 20-15 The Aftermath of the Nightmare
  354. Chapter Review
  355. Chapter 21: The Ordeal of Reconstruction 1865-1877
  356. 21-1 The Problems of Peace
  357. 21-2 Freedmen Define Freedom
  358. 21-3 The Freedmen’s Bureau
  359. 21-4 Johnson: The Tailor President
  360. 21-5 Presidential Reconstruction
  361. 21-6 The Baleful Black Codes
  362. 21-7 Congressional Reconstruction
  363. 21-8 Johnson Clashes with Congress
  364. 21-9 Swinging ‘Round the Circle with Johnson
  365. 21-10 Republican Principles and Programs
  366. 21-11 Reconstruction by the Sword
  367. 21-12 No Women Voters
  368. 21-13 The Realities of Radical Reconstruction in the South
  369. 21-14 The Ku Klux Klan
  370. 21-15 Johnson Walks the Impeachment Plank
  371. 21-16 A Not-Guilty Verdict for Johnson
  372. 21-17 The Purchase of Alaska
  373. 21-18 The Legacy of Reconstruction
  374. Chapter Review
  375. Part 6: Forging an Industrial Society 1865-1900
  376. Chapter 22: The Industrial Era Dawns 1865-1900
  377. 22-1 The Iron Colt Becomes an Iron Horse
  378. 22-2 Spanning the Continent with Rails
  379. 22-3 Binding the Country with Railroad Ties
  380. 22-4 Railroad Consolidation and Mechanization
  381. 22-5 Revolution by Railways
  382. 22-6 Wrongdoing in Railroading
  383. 22-7 Government Bridles the Iron Horse
  384. 22-8 Miracles of Mechanization
  385. 22-9 The Trust Titan Emerges
  386. 22-10 The Supremacy of Steel
  387. 22-11 Carnegie and Other Sultans of Steel
  388. 22-12 Rockefeller Grows an American Beauty Rose
  389. 22-13 The Gospel of Wealth
  390. 22-14 Government Tackles the Trust Evil
  391. 22-15 The South in the Age of Industry
  392. 22-16 The Impact of the New Industrial Revolution on America
  393. 22-17 In Unions There Is Strength
  394. 22-18 Labor Limps Along
  395. 22-19 Unhorsing the Knights of Labor
  396. 22-20 The AF of L to the Fore
  397. Chapter Review
  398. Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age 1869-1896
  399. 23-1 The “Bloody Shirt” Elects Grant
  400. 23-2 The Era of Good Stealings
  401. 23-3 A Carnival of Corruption
  402. 23-4 The Liberal Republican Revolt of 1872
  403. 23-5 Depression, Deflation, and Inflation
  404. 23-6 Pallid Politics in the Gilded Age
  405. 23-7 The Hayes-Tilden Standoff, 1876
  406. 23-8 The Compromise of 1877 and the End of Reconstruction
  407. 23-9 The Birth of Jim Crow in the Post-Reconstruction South
  408. 23-10 Class Conflicts and Ethnic Clashes
  409. 23-11 Garfield and Arthur
  410. 23-12 The Blaine-Cleveland Mudslingers of 1884
  411. 23-13 “Old Grover” Takes Over
  412. 23-14 Cleveland Battles for a Lower Tariff
  413. 23-15 The Billion-Dollar Congress
  414. Chapter Review
  415. Chapter 24: America Moves to the City 1865-1900
  416. 24-1 The Urban Frontier
  417. 24-2 The New Immigration
  418. 24-3 Machines and Reformers Compete and Clash
  419. 24-4 Narrowing the Welcome Mat
  420. 24-5 Churches Confront the Urban Challenge
  421. 24-6 Darwin Disrupts the Churches
  422. 24-7 The Lust for Learning
  423. 24-8 Booker T. Washington and Education for Black People
  424. 24-9 The Hallowed Halls of Ivy
  425. 24-10 The Appeal of the Press
  426. 24-11 Apostles of Reform
  427. 24-12 The New Morality
  428. 24-13 Families and Women in the City
  429. 24-14 Prohibiting Alcohol and Promoting Reform
  430. 24-15 Postwar Fiction, Lowbrow and High
  431. 24-16 Artistic Triumphs
  432. 24-17 The Business of Amusement
  433. Chapter Review
  434. Chapter 25: The Conquest of the West 1865-1896
  435. 25-1 Indians and Whites on the Plains
  436. 25-2 The Indians Fight Back
  437. 25-3 Bellowing Herds of Bison
  438. 25-4 “Kill the Indian and Save the Man”
  439. 25-5 Mining: From Dishpan to Ore Breaker
  440. 25-6 Beef Bonanzas and the Long Drive
  441. 25-7 The Farmers’ Frontier
  442. 25-8 The Far West Comes of Age
  443. 25-9 The Fading Frontier
  444. Chapter Review
  445. Chapter 26: Rumbles of Discontent 1865-1900
  446. 26-1 The Farm Becomes a Factory
  447. 26-2 Deflation Dooms the Debtor
  448. 26-3 Unhappy Farmers
  449. 26-4 The Farmers Take Their Stand
  450. 26-5 Prelude to Populism
  451. 26-6 Cleveland and Depression
  452. 26-7 Cleveland Breeds a Backlash
  453. 26-8 Coxey’s Army and the Pullman Strike
  454. 26-9 Golden McKinley and Silver Bryan
  455. 26-10 Class Conflict: Plowholders versus Bondholders
  456. 26-11 Republican Stand-pattism Enthroned
  457. Chapter Review
  458. Part 7: Struggling for Justice at Home and Abroad 1890-1945
  459. Chapter 27: Empire and Expansion 1890-1909
  460. 27-1 America Turns Outward
  461. 27-2 Spurning the Hawaiian Pear
  462. 27-3 Cubans Rise in Revolt
  463. 27-4 Dewey’s May Day Victory at Manila
  464. 27-5 The Confused Invasion of Cuba
  465. 27-6 America’s Course (Curse?) of Empire
  466. 27-7 Perplexities in Puerto Rico and Cuba
  467. 27-8 New Horizons in Two Hemispheres
  468. 27-9 “Little Brown Brothers” in the Philippines
  469. 27-10 Hinging the Open Door in China
  470. 27-11 Imperialism or Bryanism in 1900?
  471. 27-12 TR: Brandisher of the Big Stick
  472. 27-13 Building the Panama Canal
  473. 27-14 TR’s Perversion of Monroe’s Doctrine
  474. 27-15 Roosevelt on the World Stage
  475. 27-16 Japanese Laborers in California
  476. Chapter Review
  477. Chapter 28: Progressivism and the Republican Roosevelt 1901-1912
  478. 28-1 Progressive Roots
  479. 28-2 Raking Muck with the Muckrakers
  480. 28-3 Political Progressivism
  481. 28-4 Progressivism in the Cities and States
  482. 28-5 Progressive Women
  483. 28-6 TR’s Square Deal for Labor
  484. 28-7 TR Corrals the Corporations
  485. 28-8 Caring for the Consumer
  486. 28-9 Earth Control
  487. 28-10 The “Roosevelt Panic” of 1907
  488. 28-11 The Rough Rider Thunders Out
  489. 28-12 Taft: A Round Peg in a Square Hole
  490. 28-13 The Dollar Goes Abroad as a Diplomat
  491. 28-14 Taft the Trustbuster
  492. 28-15 Taft Splits the Republican Party
  493. 28-16 The Taft-Roosevelt Rupture
  494. 28-17 The “Bull Moose” Campaign of 1912
  495. Chapter Review
  496. Chapter 29: Wilsonian Progressivism in Peace and War 1913-1920
  497. 29-1 Wilson: The Idealist in Politics
  498. 29-2 Wilson Tackles the Tariff
  499. 29-3 Wilson Battles the Bankers
  500. 29-4 The President Tames the Trusts
  501. 29-5 Wilson at the Peak
  502. 29-6 New Directions in Foreign Policy
  503. 29-7 Moralistic Diplomacy in Mexico
  504. 29-8 Thunder across the Sea
  505. 29-9 America Earns Blood Money
  506. 29-10 Wilson Wins Reelection in 1916
  507. 29-11 War by Act of Germany
  508. 29-12 Wilsonian Idealism Enthroned
  509. 29-13 Wilson’s Fourteen Potent Points
  510. 29-14 Manipulating Minds and Stifling Dissent
  511. 29-15 Forging a War Economy
  512. 29-16 Workers in Wartime
  513. 29-17 Suffering until Suffrage
  514. 29-18 Making Plowboys into Doughboys
  515. 29-19 America Helps Hammer the Hun
  516. 29-20 Wilson Steps Down from Olympus
  517. 29-21 An Idealist amid the Imperialists
  518. 29-22 Wilson’s Battle for Ratification
  519. 29-23 The “Solemn Referendum” of 1920
  520. 29-24 The Betrayal of Great Expectations
  521. Chapter Review
  522. Chapter 30: American Life in the “Roaring Twenties” 1920-1932
  523. 30-1 Putting America on Rubber Tires
  524. 30-2 The Advent of the Gasoline Age
  525. 30-3 Radio Waves and Filmland Fantasies
  526. 30-4 The Mass-Consumption Economy
  527. 30-5 The Dynamic Decade
  528. 30-6 Seeing Red
  529. 30-7 Hooded Hoodlums of the KKK
  530. 30-8 Stemming the Foreign Flood
  531. 30-9 The Prohibition “Experiment”
  532. 30-10 The Golden Age of Gangsterism
  533. 30-11 Monkey Business in Tennessee
  534. 30-12 Cultural Liberation
  535. 30-13 Wall Street’s Big Bull Market
  536. 30-14 The Republican “Old Guard” Returns
  537. 30-15 GOP Reaction at the Throttle
  538. 30-16 The Aftermath of War
  539. 30-17 America Seeks Benefits without Burdens
  540. 30-18 Hiking the Tariff Higher
  541. 30-19 The Stench of Scandal
  542. 30-20 “Silent Cal” Coolidge
  543. 30-21 Frustrated Farmers
  544. 30-22 A Three-Way Race for the White House in 1924
  545. 30-23 Foreign-Policy Flounderings
  546. 30-24 The Triumph of Herbert Hoover, 1928
  547. 30-25 President Hoover’s First Moves
  548. 30-26 The Great Crash Ends the Golden Twenties
  549. 30-27 Hooked on the Horn of Plenty
  550. 30-28 Rugged Times for Rugged Individualists
  551. 30-29 Hoover Battles the Great Depression
  552. 30-30 Routing the Bonus Army in Washington
  553. 30-31 Japanese Militarists Attack China
  554. 30-32 Hoover Pioneers the Good Neighbor Policy
  555. Chapter Review
  556. Chapter 31: The Great Depression and the New Deal 1933-1939
  557. 31-1 FDR: Politician in a Wheelchair
  558. 31-2 Presidential Hopefuls of 1932
  559. 31-3 Hoover’s Humiliation in 1932
  560. 31-4 FDR and the Three Rs: Relief, Recovery, Reform
  561. 31-5 Roosevelt Manages the Money
  562. 31-6 Creating Jobs for the Jobless
  563. 31-7 A Day for Every Demagogue
  564. 31-8 New Visibility for Women
  565. 31-9 Helping Industry and Labor
  566. 31-10 Paying Farmers Not to Farm
  567. 31-11 Dust Bowls and Black Blizzards
  568. 31-12 Battling Bankers and Big Business
  569. 31-13 The TVA Harnesses the Tennessee
  570. 31-14 Housing and Social Security
  571. 31-15 A New Deal for Labor
  572. 31-16 Landon Challenges “the Champ”
  573. 31-17 Nine Old Men on the Bench
  574. 31-18 The Court Changes Course
  575. 31-19 Twilight of the New Deal
  576. 31-20 New Deal or Raw Deal?
  577. 31-21 FDR’s Balance Sheet
  578. Chapter Review
  579. Chapter 32: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Shadow of War 1933-1941
  580. 32-1 The London Conference
  581. 32-2 Freedom for (from?) the Filipinos and Recognition for the Russians
  582. 32-3 Becoming a Good Neighbor
  583. 32-4 Secretary Hull’s Reciprocal Trade Agreements
  584. 32-5 Storm-Cellar Isolationism
  585. 32-6 Congress Legislates Neutrality
  586. 32-7 America Dooms Loyalist Spain
  587. 32-8 Appeasing Japan and Germany
  588. 32-9 Hitler’s Belligerency and U.S. Neutrality
  589. 32-10 The Fall of France
  590. 32-11 Refugees from the Holocaust
  591. 32-12 Bolstering Britain
  592. 32-13 Shattering the Two-Term Tradition
  593. 32-14 A Landmark Lend-Lease Law
  594. 32-15 Charting a New World
  595. 32-16 U.S. Destroyers and Hitler’s U-boats Clash
  596. 32-17 Surprise Assault on Pearl Harbor
  597. 32-18 America’s Transformation from Bystander to Belligerent
  598. Chapter Review
  599. Chapter 33: America in World War II 1941-1945
  600. 33-1 The Allies Trade Space for Time
  601. 33-2 The Shock of War
  602. 33-3 Building the War Machine
  603. 33-4 Manpower and Womanpower
  604. 33-5 Wartime Migrations
  605. 33-6 Holding the Home Front
  606. 33-7 The Rising Sun in the Pacific
  607. 33-8 Japan’s High Tide at Midway
  608. 33-9 American Leapfrogging toward Tokyo
  609. 33-10 The Allied Halting of Hitler
  610. 33-11 A Second Front from North Africa to Rome
  611. 33-12 D-Day: June 6, 1944
  612. 33-13 FDR: The Fourth-Termite of 1944
  613. 33-14 Roosevelt Defeats Dewey
  614. 33-15 The Last Days of Hitler
  615. 33-16 Japan Dies Hard
  616. 33-17 The Atomic Bombs
  617. 33-18 The Allies Triumphant
  618. Chapter Review
  619. Part 8: Making an American Superpower 1945-1980
  620. Chapter 34: The Cold War Begins 1945-1952
  621. 34-1 Truman: The “Gutty” Man from Missouri
  622. 34-2 Yalta: Bargain or Betrayal?
  623. 34-3 The United States and the Soviet Union
  624. 34-4 Shaping the Postwar World
  625. 34-5 The Problem of Germany
  626. 34-6 Cold War Deepens
  627. 34-7 Girding for the Cold War
  628. 34-8 Reconstruction and Revolution in Asia
  629. 34-9 The Korean Volcano Erupts
  630. 34-10 The Military Seesaw in Korea
  631. 34-11 The Cold War Home Front
  632. 34-12 Postwar Economic Anxieties
  633. 34-13 Democratic Divisions in 1948
  634. 34-14 The Long Economic Boom, 1950-1970
  635. 34-15 The Roots of Postwar Prosperity
  636. 34-16 The Smiling Sunbelt
  637. 34-17 The Rush to the Suburbs
  638. 34-18 The Postwar Baby Boom
  639. Chapter Review
  640. Chapter 35: American Zenith 1952-1963
  641. 35-1 Affluence and Its Anxieties
  642. 35-2 Consumer Culture in the Fifties
  643. 35-3 The Advent of Eisenhower
  644. 35-4 Desegregating American Society
  645. 35-5 Seeds of the Civil Rights Revolution
  646. 35-6 Eisenhower Republicanism at Home
  647. 35-7 A “New Look” in Foreign Policy
  648. 35-8 The Vietnam Nightmare
  649. 35-9 Cold War Crises in the Middle East
  650. 35-10 Round Two for Ike
  651. 35-11 The Continuing Cold War
  652. 35-12 Kennedy Challenges Nixon for the Presidency
  653. 35-13 A Cultural Renaissance
  654. 35-14 New Cultural Voices
  655. 35-15 Kennedy’s “New Frontier” Spirit
  656. 35-16 Foreign Flare-ups and “Flexible Response”
  657. 35-17 Cuban Confrontations
  658. 35-18 The Struggle for Civil Rights
  659. 35-19 The Killing of Kennedy
  660. Chapter Review
  661. Chapter 36: The Stormy Sixties 1963-1973
  662. 36-1 The LBJ Brand on the Presidency
  663. 36-2 Johnson Battles Goldwater in 1964
  664. 36-3 The Great Society Congress
  665. 36-4 Battling for Black Rights
  666. 36-5 Black Power
  667. 36-6 Vietnam Vexations
  668. 36-7 Vietnam Topples Johnson
  669. 36-8 The Presidential Sweepstakes of 1968
  670. 36-9 The Cultural Upheaval of the 1960s
  671. 36-10 Nixon Vietnamizes the War
  672. 36-11 Cambodianizing the Vietnam War
  673. 36-12 Nixon’s Detente with Beijing (Peking) and Moscow
  674. 36-13 A New Team on the Supreme Bench
  675. 36-14 Nixon on the Home Front
  676. 36-15 The Nixon Landslide of 1972
  677. 36-16 The Secret Bombing of Cambodia and the War Powers Act
  678. 36-17 The Arab Oil Embargo and the Energy Crisis
  679. Chapter Review
  680. Chapter 37: A Sea of Troubles 1973-1980
  681. 37-1 Watergate and the Unmaking of a President
  682. 37-2 Sources of Stagnation
  683. 37-3 The First Unelected President
  684. 37-4 Defeat in Vietnam
  685. 37-5 Feminist Victories and Defeats
  686. 37-6 The Seventies in Black and White
  687. 37-7 The Bicentennial Campaign
  688. 37-8 Carter’s Humanitarian Diplomacy
  689. 37-9 Economic and Energy Woes
  690. 37-10 The Turn toward the Market
  691. 37-11 Foreign Affairs and the Iranian Imbroglio
  692. Chapter Review
  693. Part 9: Sustaining Democracy in a Global Age 1980 to the Present
  694. Chapter 38: The Resurgence of Conservatism 1980-1992
  695. 38-1 The Election of Ronald Reagan, 1980
  696. 38-2 The Reagan Revolution
  697. 38-3 The Battle of the Budget
  698. 38-4 Reagan Renews the Cold War
  699. 38-5 Troubles Abroad
  700. 38-6 Round Two for Reagan
  701. 38-7 The Iran-Contra Imbroglio
  702. 38-8 Reagan’s Economic Legacy
  703. 38-9 The Religious Right
  704. 38-10 Conservatism in the Courts
  705. 38-11 Referendum on Reaganism in 1988
  706. 38-12 George H. W. Bush and the End of the Cold War
  707. 38-13 The Persian Gulf Crisis
  708. 38-14 Bush on the Home Front
  709. Chapter Review
  710. Chapter 39: America Confronts the Post-Cold War Era 1992-2000
  711. 39-1 Bill Clinton: The First Baby-Boomer President
  712. 39-2 A False Start for Reform
  713. 39-3 The Politics of Distrust
  714. 39-4 Clinton Comes Back
  715. 39-5 Racial Progress and Perils
  716. 39-6 Globalization and Its Discontents
  717. 39-7 The Feminist Revolution
  718. 39-8 Searching for a Post-Cold War Foreign Policy
  719. 39-9 Scandal and Impeachment
  720. 39-10 Clinton’s Legacy and the 2000 Election
  721. 39-11 E Pluribus Plures
  722. 39-12 Culture and Society at Century’s End
  723. 39-13 Niche Nation
  724. Chapter Review
  725. Chapter 40: The American People Face a New Century 2001-2018
  726. 40-1 Bush Begins
  727. 40-2 Terrorism Comes to America
  728. 40-3 Bush Takes the Offensive against Iraq
  729. 40-4 Owning Iraq
  730. 40-5 Reelecting George W. Bush
  731. 40-6 Bush’s Bruising Second Term
  732. 40-7 The Presidential Election of 2008
  733. 40-8 Obama in the White House
  734. 40-9 Back to Backlash
  735. 40-10 New Directions in Foreign Policy
  736. 40-11 The Politics of Inequality
  737. 40-12 Battling for the White House in 2012
  738. 40-13 Second-Term Stalemate
  739. 40-14 The Immigration Impasse
  740. 40-15 Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
  741. 40-16 An Age of Distrust
  742. 40-17 Obama’s Troubled Last Years
  743. 40-18 The Astonishing Election of 2016
  744. 40-19 Trump in Power
  745. 40-20 The World Warily Watches Washington
  746. 40-21 The American Prospect
  747. Chapter Review
  748. Documents
  749. Tables
  750. Glossary of Key Terms
  751. Index

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