Title: History and Government of the United States
1History and Government of the United States
- Chapter 6 Section 1 2
- By G. Gomez
2Creating A Nation
- For thousand of years, the U.S. (North America)
has attracted waves of immigrants who came to
find a better life. - Native Americans occupied the land until the 15th
century then the Spanish arrived. The French
English came next. The Native Americans were
displace. Africans were brought as slaves, the
Columbian Exchange began.
3The Columbian Exchange
- The coming of Europeans also began what
historians call the The Columbian Exchange - This are things that were exchange between the
Americas to Europe, Africa, Asia and the
opposite. - America to E. Af. As. Pineapple, corn, beans,
pumpkins, vanilla, tomatoes, potatoes cacao,
turkeys, tobacco, peanuts, squash. - E., Af., As. to America Citrus fruits, grapes,
bananas, sugar cane, honey bees, coffee beans,
peaches, pears, onions, olives, turnips, grains,
livestock cattle, sheep, pigs, horses, also
diseases smallpox, influenza, typhus, measles,
malaria, diphtheria, whooping, cough.
4Many people settle the Land
- The first people that settle the land where
believe to be Nomads who came from Asia. - These native people occupied the land until the
Europeans came. - Spanish arrived first.
- The French and English came later.
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6Establishing and Maintaining the Union
- The French and English fought over North America
but in 1763, Great Britain won. - The American Revolution led to the founding of
the United States of America. - In 1803 the United States doubled in size with
the Louisiana Purchase. Louisiana Purchase was a
key factor in expanding the nation. (Mississippi
River Rocky Mts.) - In the 1800s immigrants from Western Europe
arrived in great s. They settled in cities in
the Northeast. - Sectionalism was growing, people were placing
loyalty to their region, or section, above
loyalty to the Nation.
7An Industrial Urban Society
- Most American settle in the industrial North
Midwest cities and west of the Mississippi - Westward Movement
- By the 19th century millions move west for better
opportunities. Free, open land lured hundreds of
thousands. - To make way for the new settlers, the U.S. govt.
remove the Native Americans - The first transcontinental railroad across the
U.S. was completed in 1869. - Between the 1860 1900s 14 million immigrants
came from Western Eastern Europe. Immigration
clustered the cities.
8Industrialization and Urbanization
- AS the West was being settled, immigrantsmainly
from Western and Eastern Europepoured in the
U.S. - They came to work in textile, steel, oil, food
processing, and other industries. - THE U.S. change from rural, agricultural nation
to an urban, industrialize one.
9World Power and Domestic Change As the 20th
Century began, the U. S. was the dominant
economic and political power in the Western
Hemisphere.
- Looking Beyond its Borders The U.S. tried to
avoid involvement in foreign affairs during its
decades of growth. - Because of enough natural human resources it
had been self-sufficient. It grew the food
necessary for survival the nations factories
produced the manufactured goods it needed. - It was also protected by two vast oceansthe
Atlantic the Pacific. - But a great depression and two world wars brought
significant changes.
- In the two wars, the U.S. escaped physical
damage. Except for the American Revolution and
the Civil War, all of U. S. wars have been fought
in other countries.
10Social Change and Technological Growth
- The last 50 years was a time of rapid social
change. - American move from the cities to the suburbs.
- Other left the colder climates of the North for
the warmer climates of the south. - Immigrants now came from countries of Latin
America Asia. - Civil rights movement for minority, Equality for
women, students protested the U.S. involvement
in Vietnam. - U.S. economy boomed. Changes in technology
altered the way goods were produced computers
change the workplace.
- Today the U.S. is the sole superpower. It is a
world leader in agriculture, manufacturing,
global trade.
11Living in a Global Society
- American political influence spread throughout
the world after the Second World War. - Cold War main purpose to stop communism that was
spearheaded by the Soviet Union (Russia). - When communism in Europe collapsed in 1991, the
U.S. emerged as the Worlds sole superpower. - It used its military power to try to keep peace
to further American interests in the
international community.
12Governing the People
- One of the strengths of the U.S. is the political
system. - A representative democracy, where people rule
through elected representatives. - A federal republic is a government that divides
power among federal, state, local governing
bodies. - The three branches of government are executive,
legislative, judicial.
13Section 2 Economy Culture of the United States
- The Worlds Greatest Economic Power The U.S. has
one of the worlds largest economy the most
powerful, diverse, technological advanced in
the world. - Three factors available natural resources, a
skilled labor force, a stable political system. - Free enterprise economy, private individuals own
most of the resources, technology, businesses,
can operate for profit with little control from
the government.
14Agricultural Industrial Giant
- Agricultural output is high, the U. S. supply
about 50 of the worlds corn soybeans, 25 of
its cotton other large parts of the worlds
food supply. - Despite some of the problems the U.S. had, its
economy has been transformed. - Changes in technology altered the way goods were
produced. - Computers, providing services information for
industrial production.
15Postindustrial Economy
- The U.S. has gone from an agricultural to a
industrial economy. - We are now a service industry were we
service-related jobs, such as information
processing, finance, medicine, transportation,
education. - It also called a postindustrial economy, where
manufacturing no longer plays a dominant role.
16II. A Diverse Society
- The United States is a nation of immigrants, it
is a nation of different races ethnic
traditions. - 70 trace their ancestry to Europe.
- Hispanic Americans, mainly from Central South
America make up about 13 of the population. - African Americans 12
- Asian Americans 4
- Native Americans 1
- The largest ethnic groups are English, German,
Irish, African, French, Italian, Scottish,
Polish, Mexican.
171. Languages Religion
- English is the dominant language.
- Spanish is the second most commonly spoken
language. - Religious freedom has been a cornerstone of
American society. - 85 are Christians
- 56 are Protestants 28 are Roman Catholics.
- Jews Muslims each account for about 2.
18The Arts popular culture
- The U.S. has a rich artistic heritage.
- 1st artists were Native Americans, that made
pottery, weavings, carvings. - Europeans settlers brought with them the artistic
traditions of their homelands. - Truly American styles developed in painting,
music, literature, architecture in the 19th
century. - Today, motion pictures popular music are two
influential American art forms.
19American life today
- More than 300 million people live in the U.S.
- High standard of living.
- Even through they come from different ethnic
group, they live work together. - They are pursuing the American dream
201. Where Americans Live
- 80 live in cities or surrounding suburbs.
- 1st from the rural areas to cities then from
cities to suburbs. It was made possible because
of the automobiles the development of the
highways.
212.How Americans live, work, play
- 50 of American adults of working age are
employed. - 50 are women.
- 7 out 10 hold service industry jobs.
- Many are skilled positions, which required an
advanced education. - Baseball, basketball, football, golf, soccer,
tennis, skiing. They also visit museums
libraries watch movies television.