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Fantabulous Friday, September 11

Learn how to make your goals a part of your everyday life by building good habits. Discover the power of relationships and how they can support you in achieving your goals. Explore the expansion of democracy in the United States in the early 19th century and the importance of remembering 9/11.

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Fantabulous Friday, September 11

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  1. Fantabulous Friday, September 11 Why not make your goals a part of your life so you can start achieving them with daily habits.  Matthew Lewis Browne, Better Habits: How to Build Good Habits and Make Them Stick Warm-Up Why is it important for Americans to remember 9/11? 3-5 sentences Agenda: Warm-Up Healthy Note – importance of Relationships FN: Expansion of Democracy Home Fun: FN: Expansion of Democracy If you haven’t completed the question on google classroom it is due tonight at 10pm.

  2. The Importance of Relationships • Relationships fulfill your most important need of all – love and acceptance • Relationships are the place where your greatest joy comes from – giving • Only through relationships can you give lasting impact to others – what they say matters and we actually listen • Through relationships you have the people to support you in times of trouble – they provide guidance and encouragement. • Eventually, relationships are the only things that matter – as we grow older people have more regrets regarding people then things.

  3. Thursday, September 10 2015 • Warm-Up • Answer both questions in at least one sentence. Use the question in your answer. • Agenda: • Warm-up • The Story of Us - Westward • Home Fun: • Complete time machine assignment at end of video handout The class with the best sub report gets 2 bonus pts on their next quiz

  4. The Expansion of Democracy Essential Question: How did the United States expand the practice of democracy in the early 19th century?

  5. Louisiana Purchase, 1803 • Thomas Jefferson bought Louisiana from Napoleon for $15 million (3₵ an acre) • It doubled the size of the US and added a lot of resources to the nation. • It led to the Lewis and Clark Expedition and further expansion across the continent. CSS 11.1.3

  6. War of 1812 • First official War as a nation • Fought against British, Canadians and Indians • Causes • British attempts to restrict trade • Incitement of Indian Attacks • Impressment of American sailors • 1814 – British burned down the White House • Ended with Treaty of Ghent

  7. Marvelous Monday, Sep. 14, 2015 Why not make your goals a part of your life so you can start achieving them with daily habits.  Matthew Lewis Browne, Better Habits: How to Build Good Habits and Make Them Stick Precious Time – Read over, Highlight notes, add ?’s/pics/comments in L. Margin Warm-Up What were two things you fund interesting about these notes? What is one thing you need more information on? 3-5 sentences Agenda: Warm-Up Words of Wisdom FN: Expansion of Democracy Home Fun: Read Ch. 2 Sec. 1 – Answer question on google classroom – due tomorrow 9/15 by 10pm

  8. Monroe Doctrine, 1823 • James Monroe insisted that European nations not interfere in the western hemisphere. • No more colonies. • No more wars. CSS 11.1.3

  9. Extension of Voting Rights – Jacksonian Democracy • In the early colonies only wealthy white men who went to church could vote. • Jacksonian Democracy: • early 1824-1840’s • voting rights were given to all white men regardless of religion or wealth. • Power shifted from the super wealthy to a more dynamic process. • It changed who got elected. • Politics was to this time what sports, tv, movies, and music are today. CSS 11.1.3

  10. CSS 11.1.3

  11. Indian Removal Act, 1830 • called for the “voluntary” removal of all Indians living on the east side of the Mississippi River to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) • the Supreme Court ruled it illegal but President Jackson did it anyway • Trail of Tears, 1835-1839 • 100,000 Indians moved and 4,000 died on the way • A Bureau of Indian Affairs was created protect Indian rights and Indian land CSS 11.1.4

  12. Draw in Mississippi River, trails used to move natives, shade in the ceded lands and dates of cession, and the new Indian Reservations

  13. Manifest Destiny, 1840s • A belief that the United States had a divinely-inspired mission to expand, across the continent to the Pacific Ocean. • It leads to expansion into Oregon, Texas, and to war with Mexico. • The phrase was coined by New York journalist, John Sullivan, in 1845. "it was the nation's manifest destiny to overspread and to possess the whole of the continent which Providence has given us for the development of the great experiment of liberty and federated self-government entrusted to us." CSS 11.1.4

  14. Second Great Awakening, early 1800s • A movement by Charles Finney that re-emphasized personal conversion, especially highly visible “signs.” • Led to social reforms in abolition, temperance, women’s suffrage, and more humane treatment of criminals and the insane. CSS 11.3.1

  15. Slavery 1619 First slaves brought to VA 1775 1st anti-slavery group formed 1808 slave trade banned 1822 Denmark Vesey rebellion 1830 Garrison’s Liberator published 1831 Nat Turner’s Rebellion 1834 attacked Tappan house in NY 1835 Garrison dragged through streets 1837 Rev. Lovejoy killed by mob 1847 Wilmot Proviso 1850 Fugitive Slave Act 1854 Uncle Tom’s Cabin 1856 John Brown at Pottawatomie 1857 Dred Scot decision 1859 Harper’s Ferry 1865 13th Amendment 1868 14th Amendment 1869 15th Amendment 1965 Civil Rights Act “The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the . . . most unremitting despotism on the one part, and degrading submission on the other . . . Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep forever.” --Thomas Jefferson, 1782

  16. Abolitionism, 1830s – 1860s • This movement tried to end slavery in the United States. • They pushed for legal, financial, and social reform. • Hardcore members like William Lloyd Garrison and Wendell Phillips burned the Constitution in protest. • Most early vocal abolitionists were seen as freaks and were beaten, threatened or even killed. CSS 11.3.2

  17. Seneca Falls Convention, 1848 • This meeting was the beginning of the women’s rights movement in America. • The leaders were Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. • They wrote a document called the Declaration of Sentiments to explain why women should be equal to men. • They borrowed heavily from Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence. CSS 11.10.7

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