1. Period Four
1.1. Jeffersonian Era
1.1.1. Marbury v. Madison
1.1.2. Foreign Policy
1.1.2.1. Embargo Act 1807
1.1.2.2. Non-intercourse Act 1809
1.1.3. Domestic Policty
1.1.3.1. Louisiana Purchase
1.1.3.2. Hartford Convention
1.1.3.3. Clay's American System
1.1.3.3.1. Tariffs
1.1.3.3.2. 2nd National Bank
1.2. Era of Good Feelings
1.2.1. McCulloch v. Maryland
1.2.2. Panic of 1819
1.2.3. Acquisition of Florida 1819
1.2.4. Monroe Docterine
1.2.5. Missouri Compromise
1.2.5.1. 36 30' slave/free divide
1.3. Jacksonian Era
1.3.1. "Era of the Common Man"
1.3.2. Indian Removal Act 1830
1.3.2.1. Trail of Tears
1.3.3. National Power
1.3.3.1. Tariff of 1832
1.3.3.2. VETO of 2nd Bank
1.3.4. universal white male suffrage
1.3.5. Emergence of Whig Party
1.3.6. Nat Turner's Rebellion
1.3.6.1. Black Codes
2. Period Five
3. Period Six
4. Period Seven
5. Period Eight
6. Mayflower Compact
7. Period One
7.1. Reasons for Colonization
7.1.1. Money
7.1.1.1. Mercantalism
7.1.1.2. Joint-Stock Companies
7.1.2. Religion
7.1.2.1. English Reformation
7.1.2.2. Puritans
7.1.2.3. Quackers
7.1.3. European Stability
7.1.3.1. Black Death
7.1.3.1.1. Reinassance
7.1.3.1.2. End of Feudalism
7.2. Systems of Colonization
7.2.1. Labor Systems
7.2.1.1. Slavery
7.2.1.2. Indentured Servants
7.2.2. Spanish
7.2.2.1. Mestizos
7.2.2.2. Encomiendas
7.2.2.3. Black Legend
7.3. Before
7.3.1. Sedentary Farming
7.3.2. Mobile Societies
7.4. Columbian Exchange
7.4.1. Native Americans
7.4.1.1. After
7.4.1.1.1. Disease
7.4.1.1.2. Genocide
7.4.2. Europeans
7.4.2.1. Gain of Crops
7.4.3. Africans
7.4.3.1. Change in Slave trade
8. Period Two
8.1. American Economics
8.1.1. Bacon's Rebellion
8.1.2. Cash Crop: Tobacco
8.1.3. Starving Time (Jamestown)
8.1.3.1. Congretionalism
8.1.4. Indentured Servitude
8.2. American Government
8.2.1. Blue Laws
8.2.2. House of Burgesses
8.2.3. Virginia Company
8.3. Native Americans
8.3.1. Headright System
8.3.2. Pequot War
8.3.3. Borderlands
8.4. Development of American Values
8.4.1. "city upon a hill"
8.4.2. Toleration Acts
9. Period Three
9.1. Escalation of Conflict
9.1.1. End of Salutary Neglect
9.1.1.1. French-Indian War
9.1.1.2. Currency Act of 1764
9.1.1.3. Mutiny Act of 1765
9.1.1.4. Sugar Act of 1765
9.1.1.5. Iron Act of 1750
9.1.1.5.1. Salem Witch Trials
9.1.1.5.2. Saugus Ironworks
9.1.1.6. Stamp Act of 1766
9.1.1.6.1. Repleament of Stamp Act
9.1.1.6.2. Declaratory Act
9.1.1.7. Townshend Act of 1767
9.1.1.7.1. Repleament 1769
9.1.1.8. Coercive Acts / Intolerable Acts 1774
9.1.2. Reactions to British Shit
9.1.2.1. Boston Massacare
9.1.2.2. Boston Tea Party
9.2. Proclamation of 1763
9.3. Colonist Independance
9.3.1. Colonial Assembelies
9.3.2. Albany Plan
9.4. Revolutionary War
9.4.1. Military Action
9.4.1.1. Battles of Lexington and Concord
9.4.1.2. Franco-American Alliance
9.4.1.3. First Continental Congress
9.4.2. Evolution of Government
9.4.2.1. 2nd Continental Congress
9.4.2.2. Declaration of Independance 1776
9.4.2.3. Treaty of Paris
9.4.2.4. Articles of Confederation
9.4.2.4.1. Lacked ability to tax or do anything
9.4.2.4.2. Showed fear about strong fed gov
9.4.3. Social Sphere
9.4.3.1. Common Sense by Thomas Paine
9.5. The New United States of America
9.5.1. Constitutional Convention
9.5.1.1. NJ (small) vs Virgina (big) plan
9.5.2. Bill of Rights
9.5.3. George Washington
9.5.3.1. Hamiltion
9.5.3.1.1. Debt for Vested Interest
9.5.3.1.2. 1st National Bank
9.5.4. John Adams
9.5.4.1. XYZ Affair
9.5.4.2. Alien & Sedition Acts
9.5.4.3. VA & KY resoultions
9.5.5. Development of Ideas
9.5.5.1. Social Contract
9.5.5.2. Antifederalists