SS10.5.5.2
Identifying influential leaders in colonial society
Identifying influential leaders in colonial society
Identifying influential leaders in colonial society
Describing emerging colonial government
Examples: Mayflower Compact, representative government, town meetings, rule of law
Describe colonial economic life and labor systems in the Americas.
Recognizing centers of slave trade in the Western Hemisphere and the establishment of the Triangular Trade Route
Determine causes and events leading to the American Revolution, including the French and Indian War, the Stamp Act, the Intolerable Acts, the Boston Massacre, and the Boston Tea Party.
Identify major events of the American Revolution, including the battles of Lexington and Concord, Bunker Hill, Saratoga, and Yorktown.
Describing principles contained in the Declaration of Independence
Explaining contributions of Thomas Jefferson, Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, Patrick Henry, Thomas Paine, George Washington, Haym Solomon, and supporters from other countries to the American Revolution
Explaining contributions of ordinary citizens, including African Americans and women, to the American Revolution
Describing efforts to mobilize support for the American Revolution by the Minutemen, Committees of Correspondence, First Continental Congress, Sons of Liberty, boycotts, and the Second Continental Congress
Locating on a map major battle sites of the American Revolution, including the battles of Lexington and Concord, Bunker Hill, Saratoga, and Yorktown
Recognizing reasons for colonial victory in the American Revolution
Explaining the effect of the Treaty of Paris of 1783 on the development of the United States
Explain how inadequacies of the Articles of Confederation led to the creation and eventual ratification of the Constitution of the United States.
Describing major ideas, concepts, and limitations of the Constitution of the United States, including duties and powers of the three branches of government
Identifying factions in favor of and opposed to ratification of the Constitution of the United States
Example: Federalist and Anti-Federalist factions
Identifying main principles in the Bill of Rights
Analyzing the election of George Washington as President of the United States for its impact on the role of president in a republic
Describe political, social, and economic events between 1803 and 1860 that led to the expansion of the territory of the United States, including the War of 1812, the Indian Removal Act, the Texas-Mexican War, the Mexican-American War, and the Gold Rush of 1849.
Analyzing the role of the Louisiana Purchase and explorations of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark for their impact on Westward Expansion
Explaining the purpose of the Monroe Doctrine
Identifying Alabama’s role in the expansion movement in the United States, including the Battle of Horseshoe Bend and the Trail of Tears (Alabama)
Identifying the impact of technological developments on United States’ expansion
Examples: steamboat, steam locomotive, telegraph, barbed wire
1Identify causes of the Civil War, including states’ rights and the issue of slavery.
Describing the importance of the Missouri Compromise, Nat Turner’s insurrection, the Compromise of 1850, the Dred Scott decision, John Brown’s rebellion, and the election of 1860
Recognizing key Northern and Southern personalities, including Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee, Thomas Jonathan Stonewall“ Jackson
and Joseph Wheeler (Alabama)“
Describing social, economic, and political conditions that affected citizens during the Civil War
Identifying Alabama’s role in the Civil War (Alabama)
Examples: Montgomery as the first capital of the Confederacy, Winston County’s opposition to Alabama’s secession (Alabama)
Locating on a map sites important to the Civil War
Examples: Mason-Dixon Line, Fort Sumter, Appomattox, Gettysburg, Confederate states, Union states (Alabama)
Explaining events that led to the conclusion of the Civil War
Summarize successes and failures of the Reconstruction Era.
Evaluating the extension of citizenship rights to African Americans included in the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States
Analyzing the impact of Reconstruction for its effect on education and social institutions in the United States
Examples: Horace Mann and education reform, Freedmen’s Bureau, establishment of segregated schools, African-American churches
Explaining the black codes and the Jim Crow laws
Describing post-Civil War land distribution, including tenant farming and sharecropping