| Title's for History Papers |
1.1 |
The American culture is something that originated with the early colonies’ approach to such values as language, literature, and law . These advancements of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries set the standard for what is to be known as American Culture today. |
3.4 |
In the past fifty years, many people have sought out the American Dream . ... The dream has been affected and changed throughout the years, but still not all can achieve it to this day, though it may be easier. |
3.4 |
And The American Dream Goes On The journey to America was long and hard . ... They shared a dream . They were all searching for the American Dream. |
1.5 |
In the course of the 1950’s businesses stretched out rapidly . Blue collar workers those who manufactured and sold goods were now white collar workers those that do clerical, managerial, professional occupations. |
7.6 |
The American Dream or Nightmare ? ... The American Dream advocates social mobility and makes financial success the purpose of people’s existence . ... Challenging this all pervasive myth, Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Nickel and Dimed, calls America a dictatorship with low-wage workers who dwell in a place that is neither free nor in any way democratic Ehrenreich, 173. |
2 |
Dont Tell Me What to Do Dad In American Dreams, Carl and Fritzi Crown, children of Joe Crown, struggle withtheir professions . ... Fritzi Crown dreams of being an actress, not a suitable profession in the early twentieth century. |
2.9 |
American Education When one first thinks about schools during the 1800’s, we automatically think about slavery in the south . ... The southern people had less education opportunities based on the difference in population, the availability of educators, and the location of slaves and non-slaves. |
1 |
Ever since the World Wars, America’s role as a peacekeeper in the world, has become the basic foundation of our past, present, and hopefully our future as well. |
4.9 |
Much of United States history the pendulum of American foreign policy has swung between the extremes of isolationism and active engagement in world affairs . American foreign policy developed in response to a number of factors, including popular sentiments within the United States, international events, and the opinions of American thinkers and policymakers. |
66.7 |
AMERICAN MILITARY HISTORY Summary This 2 . 5 page essay is an overview of American military history, analyzing its early development as an effective fighting force and reasons for this effectiveness. |
3.8 |
I started American History without much knowledge of our history . I was confused on all the events, facts, and the reasoning behind the Civil War. |
2.4 |
The New England and Chesapeake regions, which were both settled largely by people of English origin, had evolved into two distinct societies by 1700 . The difference in development occurred due to religion, money, and government. |
2.1 |
Ratifying the Constitution Federalists in favor of the constitution and a strong federal government . Anti-Federalists against the constitution and in favor of the Bill of Rights. |
1.8 |
When the colonists came they all had the same basic goals in mind, to run away from religious oppression in some cases repay debts . Even with the same overall goal the regions of Massachusetts Bay and the Chesapeake became two very distinct populations and even from the onset had different priorities. |
2.1 |
------------------------------------------------------- American History Immigration and Discrimination in the 1920's Beginning in the early nineteenth century there were massive waves of immigration . These new immigants were largely from Italy, Russia, and Ireland. |
6.8 |
... Howell Chapter 24 The 1920s After a short postwar recession, the US economy grew exceedingly . ... By the mid 1920s electricity was in more than 60 percent of all homes, and with the availability of electricity came the need for electrical appliances. |
5.7 |
American History Module Two Chapter 2 Assessment and Activities Reviewing Key Terms On a sheet of paper, use each of these terms in a sentence. |
1.7 |
American political rights ad institutions are derived from British political traditions, 18th century Enlightenment thought, and developments during the colonial period . ... These two documents were highly affected during their fabrication by British influence, 18th century Enlightenment idealist such as John Locke, and Thomas Hobbes, and lessons learned from failures in previous governments. |
1.2 |
WAYS OF LIFE Men in the New York colony kept busy with by helping around the household and by making a living . ... ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE The people of New York depend on trade routes. |
1.6 |
In the course of the seventeenth century, British North America was able to develop a region characterized by rising worldliness, individualism and competitiveness after being free from the English government. |
2 |
American Ideology The Riga and Yalta Axioms I . Yergin identifies two sets of American assumptions that clashed in the early Cold War period . ... the Riga axioms named for the Latvian city where many American diplomats had studied Soviet affairs before 1933 emphasized the intractability of the ideologically bound, authoritarian Soviets. |
9.8 |
American Imperialism The United States of America is probably the only superpower in the world today . ... American overseas intervention has been both a blessing and curse to America. |
1.6 |
American Imperialism What is imperialism ? ... Is the United States of America another example of Imperialism ? ... once again is playing the game of imperialism, this time in Iraq. |
3.2 |
... If you still haven’t worked out who you are, you’re an American Indian . ... The Indians were very religious people, they believed in good and evil spirits. |
8.9 |
In the three score years following a devastating civil war, the shattered United States evolved into a phase of industrialization and transformation which significantly reorganized the economic and social structure of America. |
1.4 |
... If we do not send troops to Vietnam to stop this spread, neighbouring countries will be communist ruled and that trend will continue . ... We, the United States of America, need to support Australia, in South Vietnam, under the ANZUS agreement, as they have supported us on many occasions as our allies. |
6.5 |
... On December 7th, 1941, Japanese Americans took a terrible blow from the country of their ancestry . Japan had bombed Pearl Harbor and started a huge battle for all Japanese Americans, a battle of prejudice and questions of loyalty. |
3.6 |
Edward Hopper 1882-1967 has been described as drawing a strong link between people and the emotional influence of the environments they inhabited 1 . Hopper’s paintings can be used to infer aspects of everyday life and history in the landscapes he portrayed. |
2.2 |
... Living in one state and not having the advantages or disadvantages of a law in another state would not be that unfair or unequal . This is true because if you don’t like a law in your state you could always fight it and try to change it or you could always move out of that state and go to one that has the laws that you like. |
3.6 |
American Liberty Assess Ambrose’s and Brinkley’s consideration of America’s expanding foreign policy goals and concerns between World War II and Vietnam, and the subsequent reassessment of those goals and concerns in the 1970’s. |
7.2 |
... The Cold War was also about being the best . ... The Cold War, although believed to have won by the U . ... America won the Cold war by default, by the USSR’s economic and politic strife. |
8.5 |
American Middle East Foreign Policy 1973 Its Success and Its Effects On October 6th, 1973 Egypt and Syria invaded Israel, using Soviet weaponry, crushing the Israeli military. |
2.8 |
Political culture A . ... s view on American democracy 1 . ... Moral and intellectual characteristics, today called political culture B . Definition of political culture distinctive and patterned way of thinking about how political and economic life ought to be carried out, for example, stronger American belief in political than in economic equality C. |
3.5 |
Subsequent to Washingtons unanimous election as the first president, American politics have been divided along party lines . During the 1790s, the Federalist party controlled the newly formed republic. |
4.5 |
... Between 1864 and 1877 Reconstruction was taking place in an attempt to solve these issues, yet when Republican President Rutherford B . Hayes took office there was an end to Reconstruction known as the Compromise of 1877. |
1.3 |
Chapter 6 Book American Record Title Creating the Constitution Author Alfred F . Young Both the Constitution of 1787 and the plans for building the nations capitol reflected the values of the founding fathers. |
1.9 |
Battle of the Sexes Women have always been restricted to the home and considered inferior to their husbands . They cannot vote, cannot retain property, and can be legally beaten. |
3 |
The newly ratified Constitution presented a challenge to the leaders in America in 1789 . The daily operations of the national government would substantially change over the next few years. |
1.8 |
In this Essay I will point out the different causes that led up to the American Revolution . ... In my opinion of the American Revolution the Political reason was the most important, because for the most part the colonists did not agree that the Parliament had the right to make laws for American colonists and to tax them when the colonists had no elected representatives in the Parliament. |
3.1 |
The American Revolution was a big part of American history . The American Revolution lasted from 1775-1783 and during that time it represented many changes in political ideas such as all men are created equal and natural rights. |
5.7 |
American Revolution Among the many complex factors that contributed to instigating the American Revolution, two stand out most clearly England’s imposition of taxation on the colonies and the failure of the British to gain consent of those being governed, along with the military measures England took on the colonists. |
5.4 |
... Also, if they were independent, American Soldiers would no longer be traitors but prisoners of war . ... The American Soldiers also did fairly well against the British Soldiers at Breed’s Hill and Bunkers Hill. |
2.8 |
Starting in 1750 talk of rebellion began in the British Colonies in North America . The colonists believed that Great Britain was wrongfully taxing the colonists because the colonists did not have representation in Parliament. |
4.4 |
If, as is often said, history is the study of change over time, then the American Revolution is an ideal case study for historical understanding. |
1.5 |
Although the American colonists were loyal subjects to the King in England, by 1775, Britain’s use of arbitrary power led the colonists on the verge of an American revolution. |
1.3 |
The American Revolution Contrary to popular American sentiment the American Revolution was not a justifiable war . By studying the major points of contention preceding the war we can better understand the relationship between the colonies and Great Britain in the years leading up to the American Revolution. |
3 |
The unfair treatment of the Americans from the British was accountable for the American Revolution . ... In 1765, the English Parliament imposing the first direct tax on the American colonies passed the Stamp act. |
3.8 |
... There were many events that led up to the American Revolution . The most significant causes of the American Revolution were economic, social and political events. |
7.7 |
Causes of The American Revolution When history looks beyond the immediate cause of the American Revolution for the justifying principles, it is very soon brought back to the spirit of English liberty. |
1.2 |
Even before the American Revolution started the whole makeup of the change lie dormant in the hearts and minds of the colonists . ... The real revolution was how the way of thinking changed in the people of the colonies took part in. |