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December 2: Congressional Reconstruction, 1867-77

Review Henretta, Chapter 15. Visit the website Toward Racial Equality: Harper’s Weekly Reports on Black America. Find a cartoon and, using your knowledge from Chapter 15 and your examination of the cartoon, comment in response to this blog post on what the cartoon illustrates about the nature of Reconstruction. What view does the cartoon take? What were the implications of the situation that’s depicted in the cartoon?

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November 20: Secession, Unionism, & the Outbreak of Civil War

Read Henretta, Chapter 14. Southern secession, while hardly surprising given the deterioration of sectional relations in the 1850s, was hardly the only thinkable sentiment for many southerners. Following Abraham Lincoln’s election to the presidency in 1860, people in the Upper South (Virginia, Maryland, Missouri, Arkansas, and Kentucky) debated a course of action. Constitutional Union candidate John Bell won Virginia’s electoral votes in the election. Many Virginia counties clung to unionism (support of the United States government), however precariously. As a result, Lincoln’s decision to fortify Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina in April 1861–and his subsequent call for U.S. troops to retaliate after Confederate cannons fired on the fort–held tremendous implications for the president’s ability to hold on to Virginia. With these events in mind, read the following documents about sentiments toward southern secession in Augusta County, Virginia, in the Valley of the Shadow online exhibit: “God Save Our Union” and “A Southerner on Secession,” “Policy of the Border States,” and “Seventeenth Volume.” Augusta County is located near the Blue Ridge of the Appalachian Mountains and stood uneasily between the stronger unionism of the mountain region and the stronger secessionism of the Piedmont and Tidewater regions. In a comment to this blog post, write a paragraph in which you explain the views about secession that each author holds.  What conclusions can you draw about the state of public opinion in Virginia in early 1861?

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The Death of John Henry and the Birth of Rock & Roll

Below is an event that I think you may enjoy attending.

Scott Reynolds Nelson
The Death of John Henry and the Birth of Rock and Roll
Wednesday, November 18 at 6:00 pm
Parker Hannifin Hall, 2258 Euclid Avenue
Reception at 5:30 pm

Dr. Scott Nelson Reynolds, Leslie and Naomi Legum Professor of History at The College of William & Mary, will deliver a lecture on November 18th at 6:00 p.m. in CSU’s Parker Hannifin Hall, 2258 Euclid Avenue. The lecture, entitled The Death of John Henry and the Birth of Rock and Roll, investigates the life and legend of John Henry as a way of exploring the tradition of work songs and their evolution into blues and rock and roll. The event is presented by the CSU Department of History and the Center for Public History & Digital Humanities. It is free and open to the public. Students, teachers, and scholars from all levels and fields are invited to attend. Professor Nelson is the winner of the Arts Club of Washington’s inaugural National Award for Arts Writing for Steel Drivin’ Man: John Henry, The Untold Story of an American Legend (Oxford University Press). The book also received a 2007 Merle Curti Prize from the Organization of American Historians. The official announcement may be viewed here.

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November 13: Manifest Destiny & the Texas Question

Read Henretta, Ch. 13. Also, for today’s blog assignment, please view John Gast’s painting American Progress and analyze it in the context of westward expansion, especially in the context of “Manifest Destiny,” the idea that it was inevitable and desirable for the U.S. to expand across the American frontier. What clues do you see in the painting?

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November 9: The Women’s & Abolition Movements

For today, review Henretta, chapter 12. Today we’ll discuss two more important social movements of the early-mid 19th century.

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November 6: The Spread of the Southern “Cotton Kingdom”

In this exercise you will examine the demographic changes associated with slavery between 1790 and 1860.  You’ll learn to access the appropriate data and create and edit maps to display your findings.

1. Go to the Historical Census Browser.

2. Go to the box labeled “Choose a category to begin examining data:” and click “Slave Population.”

3. On the next page, change the end date from 1960 to 1860.  Then click to highlight “Total Slaves (1790-1860).”  Click “Submit.”

4. On the next page, “Census Data Over Time,” check one of the boxes by any state that had a slave population during the period.  Then scroll to the bottom of the table and click “Retrieve County-Level Data.”  Choose a first year (I recommend 1790 for northern states or 1820 for southern states) and click “Map It!” beneath it.  A smaller window will appear, and within a few seconds a map in it.  This indicates relative concentrations of slaves in different counties in that state.

5. Returning to the county-level data page, repeat step #4 with a different year (I recommend 1820 for northern states or 1860 for southern states).  Map this data as you did above.

6. Because each map initially divides the data into four quartiles, it is difficult to compare two maps unless you change these quartiles into a more standardized set of ranges.  The lowest and highest numbers must remain constant, but you should change the others to rounder numbers like 2000, 4000, 6000, etc., or 5000, 10000, 15000, etc., depending on the data.  Make your decision based on the population ranges you note on both maps.  Your goal is to have two maps that enable you to compare the slave population in two years and draw some conclusions.

In a comment to this blog post, write a paragraph or two about the changes you see between the first and second year. Make sure you note the state and years you analyzed. Referring to your textbook, pp. 268-70 and pp. 383-86, speculate on how the changes you note may reflect larger patterns. What do you think accounts for the changes you see?

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November 4: Southern Slavery and Resistance

In many ways Nat Turner’s rebellion was both a culmination of white fears about slave insurrections and a catalyst for harsher measures to prevent a recurrence of uprisings. Today we will discuss Stephen Oates, The Fires of  Jubilee.

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November 2: Revivalism & Reform in the Age of the Market Revolution

Today we will examine four responses to the transformative changes wrought by the market revolution: the second great awakening, moral reform, religious and secular utopian movements, and aesthetic reforms. Also, note that your essay is due today.

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October 30: Immigration, Labor, and Urban Life

In class we’ll examine the rise of immigration, especially German and Irish, in the early to mid 19th century, as well as the rise of the labor union movement and some aspects of urban life in growing American cities.

For today’s blog comment:

Examine documents linked below. Comment on what you think were the main arguments of nativist doctrine (the idea that immigrants were inferior to native-born Americans) in the first two documents below and the ways in which nativists depicted Irish immigrants in the three cartoons that follow.

Know-Nothing Platform 1856: http://www.yale.edu/glc/archive/974.htm
Nativist Reaction: http://www.hsp.org/files/anticatholicpress.pdf
“The Day We Celebrate” Cartoon: http://www.haverford.edu/engl/faculty/Sherman/Irish/stpat’s.jpg
Harper’s “Black and White” Cartoon: http://chnm.gmu.edu/courses/omalley/120/alien/harpers.jpg
“Uncle Sam’s Lodging-House” Cartoon: http://www.hsp.org/files/unclesamslodginghousecover2.jpg

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