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Eric Foner - Give Me Liberty An American History. (2017 ) Book. California State Polytechnic University Pomona. United States History (HST 201 ) Uploaded. Kevin Nguyen. Academic year. Give Me Liberty!: An American History (Third Edition) (Vol. 2) by Foner, Eric (Paperback. MCCKC History 120-121: United States History. Chapter Outlines - Eric Foner's 'Give Me Liberty!' 2nd Edition, Volumes I and II 'Give Me Freedom!' Volume 1 - The United States to 1865. The American Revolution, 1763–1783. Chapter 6: The Revolution Within.
Eric Foner’s brief Author Interview videos provide an over-arching thematic context for every chapter. These interview segments are also available in audio and video streaming format and each question and answer is transcribed and printer friendly.
Author Interview Videos
http://media.wwnorton.com/showcase/givemelibertyap/media/fonerbrief/sample-chapter.jpgSample Chapter
Give Me Liberty An American History Seagull Fifth Edition Vol 1 by Eric Foner. This video is about Eric Foner's Give Me Liberty Chapter 16: Parts 1 and 2 and is intented to accompany a reading of the text for AP US History classes at DSA. For educational use only.
Chapter 15:
'What Is Freedom?': Reconstruction,
1865-1877.Read Chapter 15.
'What Is Freedom?': Reconstruction,
1865-1877.Read Chapter 15.
Give Me Liberty An American History 3rd Edition Pdf Download
Sample Chapter
http://media.wwnorton.com/showcase/givemelibertyap/media/fonerbrief/imap-screenshot.jpgInteractive Maps
These interactive maps allow students to learn and explore the geography, historical context, and demographics of specific regions.Explore an Interactive Map.
Interactive Maps
http://media.wwnorton.com/showcase/givemelibertyap/media/fonerbrief/worksheet.jpgSample Worksheet
Building on strategies developed in the textbook, 40 worksheets target basic history skills for analyzing cartoons, primary documents, visual documents and maps—all drawn from the book.View a sample.
Sample Worksheets
http://media.wwnorton.com/showcase/givemelibertybrief/powerpoint-screenshot.jpgLecture Slides
Lecture slides include a suggested lecture script in the notes field. A separate set of art slides features all the illustrations, maps and drawn figures from the textbook. View sample slides.
Lecture Slides
Give Me Liberty An American History 3rd Edition Pdf Book
![Give me liberty an american history 3rd edition pdf printable Give me liberty an american history 3rd edition pdf printable](https://metropolishaven.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/cover.jpg)
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These interactive tours use Google Earth™ to trace historical developments across time, touching down on locations that launch images and primary source documents.
U.S. History Tours
- Contested meanings of freedom at end of Civil War
- For southern blacks, an expansive quest
- Self-ownership
- Autonomous institutions
- Family
- Reuniting families separated under slavery
- Adopting separate gender roles
- Church
- Worship
- Social events
- Political meetings
- Schools
- Motivations
- Backgrounds of students and instructors
- Establishment of black colleges
- Family
- Political participation
- Right to vote
- Engagement in political events
- Land ownership
- For southern whites, an imperiled birthright
- Postwar demoralization
- Loss of life
- Destruction of property
- Draining of planters' wealth and privilege
- Psychic blow of emancipation
- Inability to accept
- Intolerance of black autonomy or equality
- Postwar demoralization
- For northern Republicans, 'free labor'
- Middle approach between aspirations of freedpeople and planters
- Ambiguous role of federal government; Freedmen's Bureau
- Achievements in education and health care
- Betrayal of commitment to land reform
- Post-emancipation labor systems
- Task system (rice)
- Wage labor (sugar)
- Sharecropping (cotton, tobacco)
- Subversion of independent white yeomanry
- Spread of indebtedness, dependence on cotton production
- Sharecropping and crop lien systems
- Urban growth
- For southern blacks, an expansive quest
- Presidential Reconstruction
- Andrew Johnson
- Background and character
- Humble origins
- 'Honest yeoman' identity
- Political career
- Hostility to southern secession and racial equality
- Approach to Reconstruction
- Pardons
- Reserving of political power to whites
- Background and character
- Southern white response
- Restoration of Confederate leaders and Old South elite
- Violence against freedpeople and northerners
- Black Codes
- Northern reaction
- Johnson satisfaction
- Republican outrage
- Republican goals and principles
- Moderate and Radical Republicans
- Equality of races before the law
- Federal enforcement
- Radical Republicans only
- Dissolution of Confederate-run state governments
- Enfranchisement of blacks
- Redistribution of land to former slaves
- Moderate and Radical Republicans
- Congressional Republicans vs. Johnson
- Passage of bill extending life of Freedmen's Bureau
- Passage of Civil Rights Bill
- Vetoes and override
- Fourteenth Amendment
- Terms and significance
- Approval by Congress, transmission to states
- Controversy in North
- Democrats vs. Republicans
- Congress vs. Johnson
- 1866 midterm election
- Bitter campaign
- Republican sweep
- Growing breach between Johnson and Republicans
- Andrew Johnson
- Radical Reconstruction
- Reconstruction Act
- Placement of South under federal military authority
- Call for new state governments, entailing black right to vote
- Tenure of Office Act
- Impeachment of Johnson
- Charges
- Acquittal
- 1868 presidential election
- Republican waving of 'bloody shirt'
- Democratic race-baiting
- Ulysses S. Grant victory
- Fifteenth Amendment
- Reconstruction Act
- Significance of 'Great Constitutional Revolution'
- Idea of national citizenry, equal before the law
- Expansion of citizenry to include blacks
- Empowerment of federal government to protect citizens' rights
- New boundaries of American citizenship
- Exclusion of Asian immigrants
- Exclusion of women
- Unfulfilled campaigns for women's emancipation
- Split within feminism over Reconstruction amendments
- Radical Reconstruction in the South
- Black initiatives
- Mass public gatherings
- Grassroots protests against segregation
- Labor strikes
- Political mobilization
- Forming of local Republican organizations
- Union League
- Voter registration
- Reconstructed state governments
- Composition
- Predominance of Republicans
- Black Republicans
- Officeholding at federal, state, and local levels
- Varied backgrounds
- White Republicans
- Carpetbaggers
- Scalawags
- Varied motivations of each
- Achievements
- Public education
- Affirmation of civil and political equality
- More equal allocation of public services and resources
- Measures to protect free labor
- Fairer system of justice
- Improvement in public facilities
- Shortcomings
- Uneven enforcement of laws
- Economic stagnation
- Persistence of black poverty
- Composition
- Black initiatives
- Overthrow of Reconstruction
- Southern white opposition
- Grievances expressed
- Corruption
- Incompetence
- High taxes
- Black supremacy
- Underlying motivations
- Antipathy for racial equality
- Desire for controllable labor
- Use of terror
- Against any perceived threat to white supremacy
- Against Republicans, black and white
- Ku Klux Klan and other secret societies
- Grievances expressed
- Northern response
- Measures to protect blacks' rights
- Enforcement Acts of 1870 and 1871
- Civil Rights Act of 1875
- Waning commitment to Reconstruction
- Liberal Republicans; Horace Greeley
- Resurgence of northern racism
- Economic depression
- Supreme Court decisions
- Slaughterhouse Cases
- U.S. v. Cruikshank
- Measures to protect blacks' rights
- Death throes of Reconstruction
- 1874 Democratic gains in South; 'Redeemers'
- Resurgence of terror
- Rise of electoral fraud
- Election of 1876 and Bargain of 1877
- Southern white opposition