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The United States 温稼糸庄岳壊沿艶看沿鉛艶.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1X4IglIo_YThe Native Americans
In thepast.SometribesBLACKFOOTCHEYENNESIOUXNAVAJOAPACHECHEROKEESEMINOLE
HOUSES..Each Native American tribe needed a type of housing that would fit their lifestyle and their climate. Tribes that moved from place to place needed houses that were portable or easy to build, while tribes that stayed in one place wanted to build houses that would last a long time.TepeeWigwamLonghouseGrass houseEarthen housepueblosPlankhouseasiChickee
EUROPEAN COLONIZATIONOriginal Population: 18 million (but somehistorianssay 50 million)From the 16th through the 19th centuries, the population of Native Americans declined in the following ways: - epidemic diseases brought from Europe like:  chicken pox  measles -    smallpoxwars between European explorers and colonists, as well as between tribes:Some important wars: Seven Years War 1754/1763 between French and British
 American Revolutionary War (War of Independence): 1775  1783
3 SeminoleWars (1816/18  1835/1842  1855/58)
 Great Sioux War of 187677
 Battle of Little Bighorn (1876): General George A. Custer and 250 soldiers under his immediate   command confronted Sioux warriors on the Little Bighorn River and were wiped out in the fight.
 Wounded Knee (1890):  Big Foot took command of the final band of fighting Lakota  (Sioux). They were trapped at Wounded Knee Creek and destroyed by the U.S. Army.
 Last conflicts in 1918displacement from their lands:1830 the Indian Removal Act was passed  tribes  in the east were forcibly removed to lands west of the Mississippi1833 On January 12, a law was passed making it unlawful for any Indian to remain within the boundaries of the state of Florida1834 Indian Intercourse Act - Congress created Indian Territory in the west that included the land area in all of present-day Kansas, most of Oklahoma, and parts of what later became Nebraska, Colorado, and Wyoming.1838 Trail of TearsPresident Jackson sent federal troops to forcibly remove almost 17,000 Cherokee who had refused to move westward and had remained in Georgia: native americans walked about 1200 miles and 4000 died.- internal warfare -   enslavement. Many Native Americans were exported to work in plantations in the Caribbeans
What Native AmericanstaughttheEuropeans:Howtogrowcropslike: corn, squash, beansHowtogrowtomatoesandpotatoesMedicine: medicines that treated some of the oldest known diseases were used and spread by Native Americans; many had important medical uses and are still used todayDemocracy: Benjamin Franklin was an admirerofIroquoisconfederacy, whichcouldbeconsidered a kindoffederalsystem (theywere 6 tribeswith a representativeeach, electedbythetribe  womencouldvoteas well!)
Native Americans NOWNow (2003 Census) thereareabout 2.7 million Native Americans in the United States Manyofthem live in a reservation (thereare 310 reservations in the United States)In 2000, eight of ten Americans with Native American ancestry were of mixed bloodThere are 562 federally recognized tribal governments in the United States. These tribes possess the right to form their own government, to enforce laws (both civil and criminal), to tax, to establish requirements for membership, to license and regulate activities
The PilgrimFathersIn 1620 one hundred Puritans boarded the Mayflower for the New WorldThey landed near Cape Cod in MassachussettsIn the autumn of 1621, they produced their first successful harvest and in gratitude, celebrated their first Thanksgiving . Thanksgiving became a national holiday in the United States in 1863
The earlyPioneersPioneers were the first people to settle in the frontiers of North America. Although many of the pioneers were farmers, others were doctors, shopkeepers, blacksmiths, missionaries, lawyers, and so on.Many went to Oregon, Texas, and other areas of the frontier for the inexpensive or even possibly free land. This land was available for homesteading.They wanted the rich, fertile land for their crops. Other people went to the frontier in order to prospect for gold, to hunt and trade fur pelts, and for many other reasons.Pioneers on the prairies built houses out of sod if they could not find trees to use for wood.
WhatisHomesteading?In 1862 The Homestead Act was passed.  Applicants had freehold title to up to 160 acres (65 hectares) of undeveloped federal land west of the Mississippi River.Homesteading was ended in 1976
Glossarymatchthewordstothecorrespondingmeaning:ChickenpoxSmallpoxMeaslesTowipe outFightFrontierBlacksmithCropFurpeltharvestOrecchioniCancellareBattagliaRaccoltoPelliccia6.    Raccolto7.    pelliccia8.    vaiolo9.     varicella10.  fabbro

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People in the U.S.A.

  • 1. The United States 温稼糸庄岳壊沿艶看沿鉛艶.
  • 4. HOUSES..Each Native American tribe needed a type of housing that would fit their lifestyle and their climate. Tribes that moved from place to place needed houses that were portable or easy to build, while tribes that stayed in one place wanted to build houses that would last a long time.TepeeWigwamLonghouseGrass houseEarthen housepueblosPlankhouseasiChickee
  • 5. EUROPEAN COLONIZATIONOriginal Population: 18 million (but somehistorianssay 50 million)From the 16th through the 19th centuries, the population of Native Americans declined in the following ways: - epidemic diseases brought from Europe like: chicken pox measles - smallpoxwars between European explorers and colonists, as well as between tribes:Some important wars: Seven Years War 1754/1763 between French and British
  • 6. American Revolutionary War (War of Independence): 1775 1783
  • 7. 3 SeminoleWars (1816/18 1835/1842 1855/58)
  • 8. Great Sioux War of 187677
  • 9. Battle of Little Bighorn (1876): General George A. Custer and 250 soldiers under his immediate command confronted Sioux warriors on the Little Bighorn River and were wiped out in the fight.
  • 10. Wounded Knee (1890): Big Foot took command of the final band of fighting Lakota (Sioux). They were trapped at Wounded Knee Creek and destroyed by the U.S. Army.
  • 11. Last conflicts in 1918displacement from their lands:1830 the Indian Removal Act was passed tribes in the east were forcibly removed to lands west of the Mississippi1833 On January 12, a law was passed making it unlawful for any Indian to remain within the boundaries of the state of Florida1834 Indian Intercourse Act - Congress created Indian Territory in the west that included the land area in all of present-day Kansas, most of Oklahoma, and parts of what later became Nebraska, Colorado, and Wyoming.1838 Trail of TearsPresident Jackson sent federal troops to forcibly remove almost 17,000 Cherokee who had refused to move westward and had remained in Georgia: native americans walked about 1200 miles and 4000 died.- internal warfare - enslavement. Many Native Americans were exported to work in plantations in the Caribbeans
  • 12. What Native AmericanstaughttheEuropeans:Howtogrowcropslike: corn, squash, beansHowtogrowtomatoesandpotatoesMedicine: medicines that treated some of the oldest known diseases were used and spread by Native Americans; many had important medical uses and are still used todayDemocracy: Benjamin Franklin was an admirerofIroquoisconfederacy, whichcouldbeconsidered a kindoffederalsystem (theywere 6 tribeswith a representativeeach, electedbythetribe womencouldvoteas well!)
  • 13. Native Americans NOWNow (2003 Census) thereareabout 2.7 million Native Americans in the United States Manyofthem live in a reservation (thereare 310 reservations in the United States)In 2000, eight of ten Americans with Native American ancestry were of mixed bloodThere are 562 federally recognized tribal governments in the United States. These tribes possess the right to form their own government, to enforce laws (both civil and criminal), to tax, to establish requirements for membership, to license and regulate activities
  • 14. The PilgrimFathersIn 1620 one hundred Puritans boarded the Mayflower for the New WorldThey landed near Cape Cod in MassachussettsIn the autumn of 1621, they produced their first successful harvest and in gratitude, celebrated their first Thanksgiving . Thanksgiving became a national holiday in the United States in 1863
  • 15. The earlyPioneersPioneers were the first people to settle in the frontiers of North America. Although many of the pioneers were farmers, others were doctors, shopkeepers, blacksmiths, missionaries, lawyers, and so on.Many went to Oregon, Texas, and other areas of the frontier for the inexpensive or even possibly free land. This land was available for homesteading.They wanted the rich, fertile land for their crops. Other people went to the frontier in order to prospect for gold, to hunt and trade fur pelts, and for many other reasons.Pioneers on the prairies built houses out of sod if they could not find trees to use for wood.
  • 16. WhatisHomesteading?In 1862 The Homestead Act was passed. Applicants had freehold title to up to 160 acres (65 hectares) of undeveloped federal land west of the Mississippi River.Homesteading was ended in 1976
  • 18. African Americans (or Black Americans)The majority of African Americans descend from slavesMassachusetts was the first colony to legalize slavery in 1641In all, about 10-12 million Africans were transported to the Western coastSlave Market, Public Square, Louisville, Georgia
  • 19. In 1787 Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance and barred slavery from the large Northwest TerritoryIn 1808 importing slaves into the United States became illegalIn 1863, during the American Civil War (18611865), President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, freeing slaves in the southern states at war with the North. The 13th amendment of the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1865, outlawed slavery in all the United States.In 1868, the 14th amendment granted full U.S. citizenship to African-Americans. The 15th amendment, ratified in 1870, extended the right to vote to black males.
  • 20. But discriminationcontinued..: 1955: Historic bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala., marking the emergence of Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. and the beginning of the end of segregation on buses in Southern cities. This marked the beginning of the Freedom Movement, which continued through the '60s with the Sit-In Movement and Freedom Rides.
  • 21. Aug. 28, 1963Some 300,000 people participated in the March on Washington, the largest civil rights demonstration to that date.April 4, 1968Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tenn., triggered a national crisis with rioting in more than 100 cities.
  • 22. The Asian Americans1850sMany Chinese wererecruitedtoworkforthe Transcontinental railroad1858 California passes a law to bar entry of Chinese and "Mongolians.1859 Chinese excluded from San Francisco public schools1862 California imposes a "police tax" of $2.50 a month on every Chinese.1882 Chinese Exclusion Law suspends U.S. immigration of laborers for ten years. (It was renewed in 1892, 1902, 1912)1924- Immigration Act denies entry to virtually all Asians.