Preview

APUSH Ch. 2+3 Notes

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1382 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
APUSH Ch. 2+3 Notes
1. Mercantilism
a. Money = Power
b. As a Moral Revolution
b.i. Trade
b.i.1. Good producing colonies are essential to the economic growth of an empire
b.ii. A fixed supply of wealth exists in the world
b.iii. To augment one’s wealth, one must take the wealth of one’s rival
b.iv. wars of trade now replace wars of religion
c. Principles
c.i. The state must control trade in order to:
c.i.1. Enhance national strength
c.i.2. Provide self-sufficiency
c.i.3. Pay a standing military
c.ii. Favorable balance of trade must exist
c.iii. Concentration on production or marketable goods
c.iv. Limits on importation of goods and services
c.v. Necessary accumulation of hard currency, silver and gold, to support national wealth and power
d. Great Britain
d.i. Four major aims:
d.i.1. Encourage growth of a native merchant marine fleet
d.i.2. Protect English manufacturers from foreign competition
d.i.3. Protect English farmers, especially grain farmers
d.i.4. Accumulate as much hard currency as possible
d.i.4.a. Colonists to pay for everything with hard currency
d.i.4.a.i. Paper script not recognized as legal tender - drains gold from American colonies
2. Jamestown and Plymouth
a. Arrival
a.i. 1607
a.i.1. 104 men
a.i.2. First permanent English settlement in Western Hemisphere
b. 1620
b.i. Mayflower arrives at Plymouth
c. Jamestown
c.i. Economic motivation
c.i.1. 1606 - Virginia Company founded
c.i.1.a. Expand English trade
c.i.1.b. Open markets for English manufactured goods
c.i.1.c. Attain financial profit through sales of stock

c.ii. Settlers
c.ii.1. Young, inexperienced, unwilling to work, no wilderness survival skills
c.ii.2. Internal fighting
c.ii.3. Poor relations with Natives (Powhatan)
c.ii.4. Absence of family unit
c.iii. Of original 104 settlers, only 38 survive the first year
d. Religious motivation
d.i. Move from England to Netherlands (1607-1609)
d.i.1. Felt Dutch were corrupting influence
d.i.1.a. Liberal lifestyle, no

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    A P Chapter 6 Notes

    • 1931 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Elastic Cartilage: resemble hyaline cartilages, but they contain more stretchy elastic fibers and are better able to stand up to repeated bending.…

    • 1931 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Apush Chaper 2 Notes

    • 2506 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Europeans where forced to eat dogs, cats ,rats ,snakes, Toadstool, horsehinds , and corpses of dead men.…

    • 2506 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    APUSH ch 13 notes

    • 2262 Words
    • 10 Pages

    5. Van Buren, squired into office by the close popular vote but by the comfortable margin of 170 to 124 votes (for all the Whigs combined) in the Electoral College N. Big Woes for the “Little Magician” 1. Martin Van Buren, eighth president, was the first to be born under the American flag 2. An accomplished strategist and spoils man—the “wizard of Albany”—he was also a statesman of wide experience in both legislative and administrative life 3. From the outset the new president labored under sever handicaps a. As a machine-made candidate, he incurred the resentment of many Democrats—those who objected to having a “bastard politician” smuggled into office behind Jackson b. Mild-mannered Martin Van Buren seemed to rattle in the military boots of his testy predecessor; the people felt let down and Van Buren inherited the Jackson’s enemies c. Van Buren’s four years overflowed with toil and trouble; a rebellion in Canada in 1837 stirred up ugly incidents along the northern frontier and threatened to trigger war with Britain; the president attempted to play a neutral game d. The antislavery agitators in the North were in full cry; among other grievances, they were condemning the prospective annexation of Texas; worst of all, Jackson bequeathed to Van Buren the makings of a searing depression—hard times ordinarily blight the reputation o the president and Van Buren was no exception O. Depression Doldrums and the Independent Treasury 1. The panic of 1837 was a financial sickness of the times; its basic cause was rampant speculation prompted by a mania of get-rich0quickism—gamblers in western land s were doing a “land-office business” on borrowed capital, much of it the shaky currency of “wildcat banks”—the speculative craze spread to canal, roads, railroads, and slaves 2. But speculation alone did not cause the crash; Jacksonian finance, including the Bank War and the Specie Circular, gave an additional jolt to an already teetering structure a. Failures of wheat crops,…

    • 2262 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    East211 Ch 1 Notes

    • 1644 Words
    • 7 Pages

    o Argues that Chinese civilization originated from a single culture of millet farmers (Yangshao culture) in the North China Plains. Around 5000 B.C.E. they radiated outwards…

    • 1644 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Apush Chapter 2 Notes

    • 851 Words
    • 4 Pages

    A. investor who ousted the original leader of the Virginia Company and instituted colonial reforms…

    • 851 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Apush CH.4 identifications

    • 1041 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Middle Ground: Middle ground refers to the land between the British and French empires. It was located between the Mississippi and Ohio river, and was home to many different tribes of Indians…

    • 1041 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Apush Chapter 2 Notes

    • 1060 Words
    • 5 Pages

    * Raleigh organized an expedition that first landed in the 1585 on North Carolina’s Roanoke Island, off the coast of Virginia named virgin queen to honor Elizabeth.…

    • 1060 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Ch 39 APUSH

    • 1339 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Proclaimed that the U.S. would honor its existing defense commitments that in the future, Asians and others would have to fight their own wars without the support of large bodies of American ground troops…

    • 1339 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Apwh Ch 33 Notes

    • 1321 Words
    • 6 Pages

    20.Pakistan defined itself in terms of religion, fell under the control of military leaders, andsaw its Bengali-speaking eastern section secede to become the independent nation of Bangladesh in 1971. India, a secular republic with a 90 percent Hindu population,inherited a larger share of industrial and educational resources and was able to maintainunity despite its linguistic heterogeneity.30.In Southeast Asia, the defeats that the Japanese inflicted on the British, French, andDutch forces in World War II set an example of an Asian people standing up to Europeancolonizers. In the post-war period nationalist movements led to the independence of Indonesia (1949), Burma and the Malay Federation (1948), and the Philippines (1946.)B0.The Struggle for Independence in Africa10.The postwar French government was determined to hold on to Algeria, which had asubstantial French settler population, vineyards, and oil and gas fields. An Algerian revoltthat broke out in 1954 was pursued with great brutality by both sides, but ended Frenchwithdrawal and Algerian independence in 1962.20.None of the several wars for independence in sub-Saharan Africa matched the Algerianstruggle in scale. But even without war, the new states suffered from a variety of problems including arbitrarily drawn borders, overdependence on export crops, lack of national road and railroad networks, and overpopulation.30.Some of the politicians who led the nationalist movements devoted their lives to riddingtheir homelands of foreign occupation. Two examples are Kwame Nkrumah, theindependence leader and later president of Ghana and Jomo Kenyatta, who negotiated theindependence and became first president of the Republic of Kenya.40.The African leaders in the sub-Saharan French colonies were reluctant to call for independence because they realized that some of the colonies had bleak economic prospects and because they were aware of the importance of the billions of dollars of French public investment.…

    • 1321 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Chapter 23 I.Ds APUSH

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Henry Ford and Fordism- (Page 486) Fordism is the system of standardized mass production attributed to Henry Ford, principles based on assembly-line techniques, scientific management, mass consumption based on higher wages, and sophisticated advertising techniques…

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Apush Chapter 17 Terms

    • 712 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Chinese Exclusion Act- after thousands of Chinese were immigrated to the US to do tedious jobs and entered California, the Chinese exclusion act suspended any further Chinese immigration for ten…

    • 712 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Main reason was to establish a colony and find the Northwest Passage. Some of the difficulties…

    • 418 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Apush Ch 8

    • 1406 Words
    • 5 Pages

    How did promoters of mercantilism (the commonwealth system) use state and national governments to promote economic growth?…

    • 1406 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    APUSH notes

    • 1354 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Coronado, de Soto, St. Augustine, Franciscan Missions, polygamy, “wet heads”, Pueblo Revolt, Pope, Uprising of 1680…

    • 1354 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    APUSH Course Notes

    • 5337 Words
    • 22 Pages

    W knows by end of 1776, men’s enlistments are up- wants to win to convince them to stay…

    • 5337 Words
    • 22 Pages
    Powerful Essays