Your paper should be ten to twelve pages long, double-spaced, with one-inch margins in twelve-point font, Times or Times New Roman. Draw specific examples from your readings and lecture to support your argument.
Analyze a specific form of hierarchy, for example race, class, or gender, in America from 1607 to 1845. In your paper you might explore how hierarchy changed over time, what conditions made hierarchy possible, and how groups attempted to combat hierarchy and what opposition and constraints they encountered.
Should use more primary sources and should have 8 or more sources.
Have 6 pages need 4 to 6 more and for the first 6 to be edited and more detailed and include more sources and to be re-written to flow with and include the entire time from 1607-1845.
HAVE TO USE: Kingdom of Matthias by Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz
Should use the readings and known knowledge:
Readings:
Jack Hitt, “Mighty White of You: Racial Preferences Color
America’s Oldest Skulls and Bones,” Harper’s, July 2005, pp. 39-55
on Canvas
04: Wednesday, January 25: Creating the Atlantic World
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 24-37, 51-66 on Canvas
Documents: Christopher Columbus, The Diario of Christopher
Columbus’s First Voyage to America, (1492-1493), on Canvas; Bernal
Diaz del Castillo, The Conquest of New Spain, (1632), on Canvas;
Mexican Accounts of Conquest from the Florentine Codex, (c. 1547),
on Canvas; Bartolomé de Las Casas, The Devastation of the Indies: A
Brief Account, (1542), on Canvas; “Two Views on Columbus Day,”
(1991 and 2005) on Canvas
05: Friday, January 27: Sections
Week 3:
06: Monday, January 30: The Atlantic Slave Trade
Readings:
“Why Were Africans Enslaved?” in David Northrup, ed., The
Atlantic Slave Trade, Second Edition (New York: Houghton Mifflin,
2002), pp. 1-29 on Canvas
Documents: John Hawkins, “An Alliance to Raid for Slaves”
(1568), Willem Bosman, “Trading on the Slave Coast” (1700), Olaudah
Equiano, “Kidnapped, Enslaved, and Sold Away” (c. 1756) on Canvas
07: Wednesday, February 1: An English Empire in the
Americas
Readings:
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, The Many Headed Hydra:
Sailors, Slaves, and Commoners, and the Hidden History of the
Atlantic (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000), pp. 8-35 on Canvas
Documents: George Peckham, “A True Reporte of the Late
Discoveries,” (1583); Richard Hakluyt, the Younger, “Discourse of
Western Planting,” (1584); Richard Hakluyt, the Elder, “Inducements
to the Liking of the Voyage Intended towards Virginia,” (1585) on
Canvas
08: Friday, February 3: Sections
Week 4:
09: Monday, February 6: Encounter
Readings:
Kathleen Brown, “The Anglo-Algonquian Gender Frontier,” in
Negotiators of Change Historical Perspectives on Native American
Women, ed. Nancy Shoemaker (New York: Routledge, 1995), pp. 26-48
on Canvas
Documents: John Winthrop, “But What Warrant Have We To Take
That Land” (1629) (See document collection in “08”); John Smith,
“Description of Virginia” on Canvas; Father Paul LeJeune,
“Encounter with the Indians” on Canvas
10: Wednesday, February 8: Colonial America: Chesapeake
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 138-157 on Canvas
Documents: [Virginia Company], “A True Declaration of the
Estate of the Colonie in Virginia,” (1610) (See document collection
in “08”); James Revel, “The Poor Unhappy Transported Felon’s
Sorrowful Account of His Fourteen Years Transportation at Virginia
in America,” (c. 1680) on Canvas; “Servitude and Slavery in
17th-Century Virginia Courts,” (1630-89) on Canvas
11: Friday, February 10: Sections
Week 5:
12: Monday, February 13: Colonial America: New England
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 158-186 on Canvas
Document: Mary Rowlandson, from “The Narrative of Mary
Rowlandson” (1682) on Canvas
13: Wednesday, February 15: Colonial America: Lowcountry
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 222-244 on Canvas
Document: “The Stono Rebellion in South Carolina” (1739) on
Canvas
14: Friday, February 17: Sections
Week 6:
15: Monday, February 20: Colonial America: Middle Colonies
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 246-272 on Canvas
Document: Gabriel Thomas, “Pennsylvania, The Poor Man’s
Paradise” (1698) on Canvas
16: Wednesday, February 22: Colonial (Dis)Order
Readings:
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, “Sailors and Slaves in the
Revolution,” in The Social Fabric, ed. Thomas L. Hartshorne (New
York: Longman, 2006), pp. 131-49 on Canvas
Documents: “New Jersey Land Riots” (1746 and 1748) on Canvas;
William Livingtons, “The Vanity of Birth and Titles; with the
Absurdity of Claiming Respect without Merit” (1753) on Canvas;
Paxton Boys, “Manifesto” (1764) on Canvas; North Carolina
Regulators, “Shew Yourselves to be Freemen” (1769) on internet
(Links to an external site.); J. Hector St. John Crèvecoeur, “What
is an American?” (1770) on Canvas
17: Friday, February 24: Sections
Week 7:
18: Monday, February 27: War and Rebellion
Readings:
Documents: Thomas Paine, Common Sense, Section I (Links to an
external site.), Section II (Links to an external site.), Section
III (Links to an external site.) on internet; Ann Hulton, “Loyalist
View of Colonial Unrest” (1774) on Canvas; Thomas Jefferson,
“Declaration of Independence” (1776); Abigail and John Adams,
“Remember the Ladies” (1776) on Canvas; Joseph Brant, “Mohawk
Loyalty to Britain” (1776) on Canvas; John Dickinson, “A Speech
Against Independence” (1776) on Canvas; Slave Petitions for Freedom
during the Revolution (1774-79) on Canvas
19: Wednesday, March 1: Founding of a New Nation
Readings:
Documents: William Finlay, “On Democracy, Banks, and Paper
Money,” 1786 on Canvas; Shay’s Rebels, “Grievances,” 1786 on Canvas
20: Friday, March 3: Sections
*First segment of paper due at the beginning of class*
Week 8:
21: Monday, March 6: “We the People”
Readings:
Alfred F. Young, “The Pressures of the People on the Framers of
the Constitution,” in Major Problems in American History, Volume I,
3rd Edition, eds. Elizabeth Cobbs-Hoffman et al., 139-146 on
Canvas; Ron Chernow, “The Founding Fathers Versus the Tea Party,”
New York Times (2010) on internet (Links to an external site.)
Documents: Constitution (1787) on internet (Links to an
external site.); Bill of Rights (1791) on internet (Links to an
external site.); Elbridge Gerry, “The Danger of the Levilling
Spirit” (1787); George Clinton, “To The Citizens of the State of
New York,” (1787); James Madison, “The Federalist, No. 10,” on
Canvas
22: Wednesday, March 8: Competing Visions for the Early
Republic
Readings:
Drew R. McCoy, “The Fears of the Jeffersonian Republicans” on
Canvas; Linda Kerber, “The Fears of the Federalists” on Canvas
Documents: Governor Thomas Mifflin, “Proclamation on Unlawful
Combinations,” 1794; Judge Alexander Addison, “On the Whiskey
Rebellion” (1794) on Canvas
23: Friday, March 10: *Mid-Term Exam*
Week 9: Spring Break – Class Canceled
Week 10:
24: Monday, March 20: American Expansion and Indian Removal
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
3-48
Document: Tecumseh’s Plea to the Choctaws and the Chickasaws
on Canvas; James Tallmadge, “Denunciation of Slavery in Missouri”
(1819) on Canvas
25: Wednesday, March 22: Market Revolution
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
49-90
Documents: James Flint, “Panic of 1819” (1822) on Canvas;
David Crockett, “Advice to Politicians” (1833) on Canvas
26: Friday, March 24: Sections
Week 11:
27: Monday, March 27: Northern Working Class
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
91-164
Documents: B. Julianna, “Factory Life as it Is” (1845) on
Canvas; “Accounts of Urban Riots” (1835) on Canvas; William Sanger,
“New York Prostitutes” (1858) on Canvas
28: Wednesday, March 29: Northern Middle Class
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
164-180
Documents: Excerpt from David Walker’s Appeal to the Coloured
Citizens of the World (1829) on Canvas and William Lloyd Garrison’s
“On the Constitution and the Union” on the internet (Links to an
external site.)
29: Friday, March 31: Sections
Week 12:
30: Monday, April 3: Creating the “Old South”
Readings:
Stephanie McCurry, “The Two Faces of Republicanism: Gender and
Proslavery Politics in Antebellum South Carolina,” Journal of
American History, Vol. 78, No. 4 (Mar., 1992), pp. 1245-1264 on
Canvas
Documents: Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, from Georgia Scenes
on Canvas; Daniel R. Hundley, from Social Relations from Our
Southern States on Canvas; Mary Boykin Chesnut, from The Private
Mary Chesnut on Canvas; Reverend Thornton Stringfellow, A Brief
Examination of the Scripture Testimony of the Institution of
Slavery, 1841, on Canvas
31: Wednesday, April 5: Life in the “Quarters”
Readings:
Brenda Stevenson, “Distress and Discord in Virginia Slave
Families, 1830-60,” in In Joy and In Sorrow: Women, Family, and
Marriage in the Victorian South, 1830-60, pp. 103-124 on Canvas
Documents: Harriet Jacobs, from Incidents in the Life of a
Slave Girl on Canvas; Frederick Douglass, from Narrative of the
Life of Frederick Douglass on Canvas
Your paper should be ten to twelve pages long, double-spaced, with one-inch margins in twelve-point font, Times or Times New Roman. Draw specific examples from your readings and lecture to support your argument.
Analyze a specific form of hierarchy, for example race, class, or gender, in America from 1607 to 1845. In your paper you might explore how hierarchy changed over time, what conditions made hierarchy possible, and how groups attempted to combat hierarchy and what opposition and constraints they encountered.
Should use more primary sources and should have 8 or more sources.
Have 6 pages need 4 to 6 more and for the first 6 to be edited and more detailed and include more sources and to be re-written to flow with and include the entire time from 1607-1845.
HAVE TO USE: Kingdom of Matthias by Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz
Should use the readings and known knowledge:
Readings:
Jack Hitt, “Mighty White of You: Racial Preferences Color
America’s Oldest Skulls and Bones,” Harper’s, July 2005, pp. 39-55
on Canvas
04: Wednesday, January 25: Creating the Atlantic World
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 24-37, 51-66 on Canvas
Documents: Christopher Columbus, The Diario of Christopher
Columbus’s First Voyage to America, (1492-1493), on Canvas; Bernal
Diaz del Castillo, The Conquest of New Spain, (1632), on Canvas;
Mexican Accounts of Conquest from the Florentine Codex, (c. 1547),
on Canvas; Bartolomé de Las Casas, The Devastation of the Indies: A
Brief Account, (1542), on Canvas; “Two Views on Columbus Day,”
(1991 and 2005) on Canvas
05: Friday, January 27: Sections
Week 3:
06: Monday, January 30: The Atlantic Slave Trade
Readings:
“Why Were Africans Enslaved?” in David Northrup, ed., The
Atlantic Slave Trade, Second Edition (New York: Houghton Mifflin,
2002), pp. 1-29 on Canvas
Documents: John Hawkins, “An Alliance to Raid for Slaves”
(1568), Willem Bosman, “Trading on the Slave Coast” (1700), Olaudah
Equiano, “Kidnapped, Enslaved, and Sold Away” (c. 1756) on Canvas
07: Wednesday, February 1: An English Empire in the
Americas
Readings:
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, The Many Headed Hydra:
Sailors, Slaves, and Commoners, and the Hidden History of the
Atlantic (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000), pp. 8-35 on Canvas
Documents: George Peckham, “A True Reporte of the Late
Discoveries,” (1583); Richard Hakluyt, the Younger, “Discourse of
Western Planting,” (1584); Richard Hakluyt, the Elder, “Inducements
to the Liking of the Voyage Intended towards Virginia,” (1585) on
Canvas
08: Friday, February 3: Sections
Week 4:
09: Monday, February 6: Encounter
Readings:
Kathleen Brown, “The Anglo-Algonquian Gender Frontier,” in
Negotiators of Change Historical Perspectives on Native American
Women, ed. Nancy Shoemaker (New York: Routledge, 1995), pp. 26-48
on Canvas
Documents: John Winthrop, “But What Warrant Have We To Take
That Land” (1629) (See document collection in “08”); John Smith,
“Description of Virginia” on Canvas; Father Paul LeJeune,
“Encounter with the Indians” on Canvas
10: Wednesday, February 8: Colonial America: Chesapeake
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 138-157 on Canvas
Documents: [Virginia Company], “A True Declaration of the
Estate of the Colonie in Virginia,” (1610) (See document collection
in “08”); James Revel, “The Poor Unhappy Transported Felon’s
Sorrowful Account of His Fourteen Years Transportation at Virginia
in America,” (c. 1680) on Canvas; “Servitude and Slavery in
17th-Century Virginia Courts,” (1630-89) on Canvas
11: Friday, February 10: Sections
Week 5:
12: Monday, February 13: Colonial America: New England
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 158-186 on Canvas
Document: Mary Rowlandson, from “The Narrative of Mary
Rowlandson” (1682) on Canvas
13: Wednesday, February 15: Colonial America: Lowcountry
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 222-244 on Canvas
Document: “The Stono Rebellion in South Carolina” (1739) on
Canvas
14: Friday, February 17: Sections
Week 6:
15: Monday, February 20: Colonial America: Middle Colonies
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 246-272 on Canvas
Document: Gabriel Thomas, “Pennsylvania, The Poor Man’s
Paradise” (1698) on Canvas
16: Wednesday, February 22: Colonial (Dis)Order
Readings:
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, “Sailors and Slaves in the
Revolution,” in The Social Fabric, ed. Thomas L. Hartshorne (New
York: Longman, 2006), pp. 131-49 on Canvas
Documents: “New Jersey Land Riots” (1746 and 1748) on Canvas;
William Livingtons, “The Vanity of Birth and Titles; with the
Absurdity of Claiming Respect without Merit” (1753) on Canvas;
Paxton Boys, “Manifesto” (1764) on Canvas; North Carolina
Regulators, “Shew Yourselves to be Freemen” (1769) on internet
(Links to an external site.); J. Hector St. John Crèvecoeur, “What
is an American?” (1770) on Canvas
17: Friday, February 24: Sections
Week 7:
18: Monday, February 27: War and Rebellion
Readings:
Documents: Thomas Paine, Common Sense, Section I (Links to an
external site.), Section II (Links to an external site.), Section
III (Links to an external site.) on internet; Ann Hulton, “Loyalist
View of Colonial Unrest” (1774) on Canvas; Thomas Jefferson,
“Declaration of Independence” (1776); Abigail and John Adams,
“Remember the Ladies” (1776) on Canvas; Joseph Brant, “Mohawk
Loyalty to Britain” (1776) on Canvas; John Dickinson, “A Speech
Against Independence” (1776) on Canvas; Slave Petitions for Freedom
during the Revolution (1774-79) on Canvas
19: Wednesday, March 1: Founding of a New Nation
Readings:
Documents: William Finlay, “On Democracy, Banks, and Paper
Money,” 1786 on Canvas; Shay’s Rebels, “Grievances,” 1786 on Canvas
20: Friday, March 3: Sections
*First segment of paper due at the beginning of class*
Week 8:
21: Monday, March 6: “We the People”
Readings:
Alfred F. Young, “The Pressures of the People on the Framers of
the Constitution,” in Major Problems in American History, Volume I,
3rd Edition, eds. Elizabeth Cobbs-Hoffman et al., 139-146 on
Canvas; Ron Chernow, “The Founding Fathers Versus the Tea Party,”
New York Times (2010) on internet (Links to an external site.)
Documents: Constitution (1787) on internet (Links to an
external site.); Bill of Rights (1791) on internet (Links to an
external site.); Elbridge Gerry, “The Danger of the Levilling
Spirit” (1787); George Clinton, “To The Citizens of the State of
New York,” (1787); James Madison, “The Federalist, No. 10,” on
Canvas
22: Wednesday, March 8: Competing Visions for the Early
Republic
Readings:
Drew R. McCoy, “The Fears of the Jeffersonian Republicans” on
Canvas; Linda Kerber, “The Fears of the Federalists” on Canvas
Documents: Governor Thomas Mifflin, “Proclamation on Unlawful
Combinations,” 1794; Judge Alexander Addison, “On the Whiskey
Rebellion” (1794) on Canvas
23: Friday, March 10: *Mid-Term Exam*
Week 9: Spring Break – Class Canceled
Week 10:
24: Monday, March 20: American Expansion and Indian Removal
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
3-48
Document: Tecumseh’s Plea to the Choctaws and the Chickasaws
on Canvas; James Tallmadge, “Denunciation of Slavery in Missouri”
(1819) on Canvas
25: Wednesday, March 22: Market Revolution
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
49-90
Documents: James Flint, “Panic of 1819” (1822) on Canvas;
David Crockett, “Advice to Politicians” (1833) on Canvas
26: Friday, March 24: Sections
Week 11:
27: Monday, March 27: Northern Working Class
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
91-164
Documents: B. Julianna, “Factory Life as it Is” (1845) on
Canvas; “Accounts of Urban Riots” (1835) on Canvas; William Sanger,
“New York Prostitutes” (1858) on Canvas
28: Wednesday, March 29: Northern Middle Class
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
164-180
Documents: Excerpt from David Walker’s Appeal to the Coloured
Citizens of the World (1829) on Canvas and William Lloyd Garrison’s
“On the Constitution and the Union” on the internet (Links to an
external site.)
29: Friday, March 31: Sections
Week 12:
30: Monday, April 3: Creating the “Old South”
Readings:
Stephanie McCurry, “The Two Faces of Republicanism: Gender and
Proslavery Politics in Antebellum South Carolina,” Journal of
American History, Vol. 78, No. 4 (Mar., 1992), pp. 1245-1264 on
Canvas
Documents: Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, from Georgia Scenes
on Canvas; Daniel R. Hundley, from Social Relations from Our
Southern States on Canvas; Mary Boykin Chesnut, from The Private
Mary Chesnut on Canvas; Reverend Thornton Stringfellow, A Brief
Examination of the Scripture Testimony of the Institution of
Slavery, 1841, on Canvas
31: Wednesday, April 5: Life in the “Quarters”
Readings:
Brenda Stevenson, “Distress and Discord in Virginia Slave
Families, 1830-60,” in In Joy and In Sorrow: Women, Family, and
Marriage in the Victorian South, 1830-60, pp. 103-124 on Canvas
Documents: Harriet Jacobs, from Incidents in the Life of a
Slave Girl on Canvas; Frederick Douglass, from Narrative of the
Life of Frederick Douglass on Canvas
Your paper should be ten to twelve pages long, double-spaced, with one-inch margins in twelve-point font, Times or Times New Roman. Draw specific examples from your readings and lecture to support your argument.
Analyze a specific form of hierarchy, for example race, class, or gender, in America from 1607 to 1845. In your paper you might explore how hierarchy changed over time, what conditions made hierarchy possible, and how groups attempted to combat hierarchy and what opposition and constraints they encountered.
Should use more primary sources and should have 8 or more sources.
Have 6 pages need 4 to 6 more and for the first 6 to be edited and more detailed and include more sources and to be re-written to flow with and include the entire time from 1607-1845.
HAVE TO USE: Kingdom of Matthias by Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz
Should use the readings and known knowledge:
Readings:
Jack Hitt, “Mighty White of You: Racial Preferences Color
America’s Oldest Skulls and Bones,” Harper’s, July 2005, pp. 39-55
on Canvas
04: Wednesday, January 25: Creating the Atlantic World
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 24-37, 51-66 on Canvas
Documents: Christopher Columbus, The Diario of Christopher
Columbus’s First Voyage to America, (1492-1493), on Canvas; Bernal
Diaz del Castillo, The Conquest of New Spain, (1632), on Canvas;
Mexican Accounts of Conquest from the Florentine Codex, (c. 1547),
on Canvas; Bartolomé de Las Casas, The Devastation of the Indies: A
Brief Account, (1542), on Canvas; “Two Views on Columbus Day,”
(1991 and 2005) on Canvas
05: Friday, January 27: Sections
Week 3:
06: Monday, January 30: The Atlantic Slave Trade
Readings:
“Why Were Africans Enslaved?” in David Northrup, ed., The
Atlantic Slave Trade, Second Edition (New York: Houghton Mifflin,
2002), pp. 1-29 on Canvas
Documents: John Hawkins, “An Alliance to Raid for Slaves”
(1568), Willem Bosman, “Trading on the Slave Coast” (1700), Olaudah
Equiano, “Kidnapped, Enslaved, and Sold Away” (c. 1756) on Canvas
07: Wednesday, February 1: An English Empire in the
Americas
Readings:
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, The Many Headed Hydra:
Sailors, Slaves, and Commoners, and the Hidden History of the
Atlantic (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000), pp. 8-35 on Canvas
Documents: George Peckham, “A True Reporte of the Late
Discoveries,” (1583); Richard Hakluyt, the Younger, “Discourse of
Western Planting,” (1584); Richard Hakluyt, the Elder, “Inducements
to the Liking of the Voyage Intended towards Virginia,” (1585) on
Canvas
08: Friday, February 3: Sections
Week 4:
09: Monday, February 6: Encounter
Readings:
Kathleen Brown, “The Anglo-Algonquian Gender Frontier,” in
Negotiators of Change Historical Perspectives on Native American
Women, ed. Nancy Shoemaker (New York: Routledge, 1995), pp. 26-48
on Canvas
Documents: John Winthrop, “But What Warrant Have We To Take
That Land” (1629) (See document collection in “08”); John Smith,
“Description of Virginia” on Canvas; Father Paul LeJeune,
“Encounter with the Indians” on Canvas
10: Wednesday, February 8: Colonial America: Chesapeake
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 138-157 on Canvas
Documents: [Virginia Company], “A True Declaration of the
Estate of the Colonie in Virginia,” (1610) (See document collection
in “08”); James Revel, “The Poor Unhappy Transported Felon’s
Sorrowful Account of His Fourteen Years Transportation at Virginia
in America,” (c. 1680) on Canvas; “Servitude and Slavery in
17th-Century Virginia Courts,” (1630-89) on Canvas
11: Friday, February 10: Sections
Week 5:
12: Monday, February 13: Colonial America: New England
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 158-186 on Canvas
Document: Mary Rowlandson, from “The Narrative of Mary
Rowlandson” (1682) on Canvas
13: Wednesday, February 15: Colonial America: Lowcountry
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 222-244 on Canvas
Document: “The Stono Rebellion in South Carolina” (1739) on
Canvas
14: Friday, February 17: Sections
Week 6:
15: Monday, February 20: Colonial America: Middle Colonies
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 246-272 on Canvas
Document: Gabriel Thomas, “Pennsylvania, The Poor Man’s
Paradise” (1698) on Canvas
16: Wednesday, February 22: Colonial (Dis)Order
Readings:
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, “Sailors and Slaves in the
Revolution,” in The Social Fabric, ed. Thomas L. Hartshorne (New
York: Longman, 2006), pp. 131-49 on Canvas
Documents: “New Jersey Land Riots” (1746 and 1748) on Canvas;
William Livingtons, “The Vanity of Birth and Titles; with the
Absurdity of Claiming Respect without Merit” (1753) on Canvas;
Paxton Boys, “Manifesto” (1764) on Canvas; North Carolina
Regulators, “Shew Yourselves to be Freemen” (1769) on internet
(Links to an external site.); J. Hector St. John Crèvecoeur, “What
is an American?” (1770) on Canvas
17: Friday, February 24: Sections
Week 7:
18: Monday, February 27: War and Rebellion
Readings:
Documents: Thomas Paine, Common Sense, Section I (Links to an
external site.), Section II (Links to an external site.), Section
III (Links to an external site.) on internet; Ann Hulton, “Loyalist
View of Colonial Unrest” (1774) on Canvas; Thomas Jefferson,
“Declaration of Independence” (1776); Abigail and John Adams,
“Remember the Ladies” (1776) on Canvas; Joseph Brant, “Mohawk
Loyalty to Britain” (1776) on Canvas; John Dickinson, “A Speech
Against Independence” (1776) on Canvas; Slave Petitions for Freedom
during the Revolution (1774-79) on Canvas
19: Wednesday, March 1: Founding of a New Nation
Readings:
Documents: William Finlay, “On Democracy, Banks, and Paper
Money,” 1786 on Canvas; Shay’s Rebels, “Grievances,” 1786 on Canvas
20: Friday, March 3: Sections
*First segment of paper due at the beginning of class*
Week 8:
21: Monday, March 6: “We the People”
Readings:
Alfred F. Young, “The Pressures of the People on the Framers of
the Constitution,” in Major Problems in American History, Volume I,
3rd Edition, eds. Elizabeth Cobbs-Hoffman et al., 139-146 on
Canvas; Ron Chernow, “The Founding Fathers Versus the Tea Party,”
New York Times (2010) on internet (Links to an external site.)
Documents: Constitution (1787) on internet (Links to an
external site.); Bill of Rights (1791) on internet (Links to an
external site.); Elbridge Gerry, “The Danger of the Levilling
Spirit” (1787); George Clinton, “To The Citizens of the State of
New York,” (1787); James Madison, “The Federalist, No. 10,” on
Canvas
22: Wednesday, March 8: Competing Visions for the Early
Republic
Readings:
Drew R. McCoy, “The Fears of the Jeffersonian Republicans” on
Canvas; Linda Kerber, “The Fears of the Federalists” on Canvas
Documents: Governor Thomas Mifflin, “Proclamation on Unlawful
Combinations,” 1794; Judge Alexander Addison, “On the Whiskey
Rebellion” (1794) on Canvas
23: Friday, March 10: *Mid-Term Exam*
Week 9: Spring Break – Class Canceled
Week 10:
24: Monday, March 20: American Expansion and Indian Removal
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
3-48
Document: Tecumseh’s Plea to the Choctaws and the Chickasaws
on Canvas; James Tallmadge, “Denunciation of Slavery in Missouri”
(1819) on Canvas
25: Wednesday, March 22: Market Revolution
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
49-90
Documents: James Flint, “Panic of 1819” (1822) on Canvas;
David Crockett, “Advice to Politicians” (1833) on Canvas
26: Friday, March 24: Sections
Week 11:
27: Monday, March 27: Northern Working Class
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
91-164
Documents: B. Julianna, “Factory Life as it Is” (1845) on
Canvas; “Accounts of Urban Riots” (1835) on Canvas; William Sanger,
“New York Prostitutes” (1858) on Canvas
28: Wednesday, March 29: Northern Middle Class
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
164-180
Documents: Excerpt from David Walker’s Appeal to the Coloured
Citizens of the World (1829) on Canvas and William Lloyd Garrison’s
“On the Constitution and the Union” on the internet (Links to an
external site.)
29: Friday, March 31: Sections
Week 12:
30: Monday, April 3: Creating the “Old South”
Readings:
Stephanie McCurry, “The Two Faces of Republicanism: Gender and
Proslavery Politics in Antebellum South Carolina,” Journal of
American History, Vol. 78, No. 4 (Mar., 1992), pp. 1245-1264 on
Canvas
Documents: Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, from Georgia Scenes
on Canvas; Daniel R. Hundley, from Social Relations from Our
Southern States on Canvas; Mary Boykin Chesnut, from The Private
Mary Chesnut on Canvas; Reverend Thornton Stringfellow, A Brief
Examination of the Scripture Testimony of the Institution of
Slavery, 1841, on Canvas
31: Wednesday, April 5: Life in the “Quarters”
Readings:
Brenda Stevenson, “Distress and Discord in Virginia Slave
Families, 1830-60,” in In Joy and In Sorrow: Women, Family, and
Marriage in the Victorian South, 1830-60, pp. 103-124 on Canvas
Documents: Harriet Jacobs, from Incidents in the Life of a
Slave Girl on Canvas; Frederick Douglass, from Narrative of the
Life of Frederick Douglass on Canvas
Your paper should be ten to twelve pages long, double-spaced, with one-inch margins in twelve-point font, Times or Times New Roman. Draw specific examples from your readings and lecture to support your argument.
Analyze a specific form of hierarchy, for example race, class, or gender, in America from 1607 to 1845. In your paper you might explore how hierarchy changed over time, what conditions made hierarchy possible, and how groups attempted to combat hierarchy and what opposition and constraints they encountered.
Should use more primary sources and should have 8 or more sources.
Have 6 pages need 4 to 6 more and for the first 6 to be edited and more detailed and include more sources and to be re-written to flow with and include the entire time from 1607-1845.
HAVE TO USE: Kingdom of Matthias by Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz
Should use the readings and known knowledge:
Readings:
Jack Hitt, “Mighty White of You: Racial Preferences Color
America’s Oldest Skulls and Bones,” Harper’s, July 2005, pp. 39-55
on Canvas
04: Wednesday, January 25: Creating the Atlantic World
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 24-37, 51-66 on Canvas
Documents: Christopher Columbus, The Diario of Christopher
Columbus’s First Voyage to America, (1492-1493), on Canvas; Bernal
Diaz del Castillo, The Conquest of New Spain, (1632), on Canvas;
Mexican Accounts of Conquest from the Florentine Codex, (c. 1547),
on Canvas; Bartolomé de Las Casas, The Devastation of the Indies: A
Brief Account, (1542), on Canvas; “Two Views on Columbus Day,”
(1991 and 2005) on Canvas
05: Friday, January 27: Sections
Week 3:
06: Monday, January 30: The Atlantic Slave Trade
Readings:
“Why Were Africans Enslaved?” in David Northrup, ed., The
Atlantic Slave Trade, Second Edition (New York: Houghton Mifflin,
2002), pp. 1-29 on Canvas
Documents: John Hawkins, “An Alliance to Raid for Slaves”
(1568), Willem Bosman, “Trading on the Slave Coast” (1700), Olaudah
Equiano, “Kidnapped, Enslaved, and Sold Away” (c. 1756) on Canvas
07: Wednesday, February 1: An English Empire in the
Americas
Readings:
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, The Many Headed Hydra:
Sailors, Slaves, and Commoners, and the Hidden History of the
Atlantic (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000), pp. 8-35 on Canvas
Documents: George Peckham, “A True Reporte of the Late
Discoveries,” (1583); Richard Hakluyt, the Younger, “Discourse of
Western Planting,” (1584); Richard Hakluyt, the Elder, “Inducements
to the Liking of the Voyage Intended towards Virginia,” (1585) on
Canvas
08: Friday, February 3: Sections
Week 4:
09: Monday, February 6: Encounter
Readings:
Kathleen Brown, “The Anglo-Algonquian Gender Frontier,” in
Negotiators of Change Historical Perspectives on Native American
Women, ed. Nancy Shoemaker (New York: Routledge, 1995), pp. 26-48
on Canvas
Documents: John Winthrop, “But What Warrant Have We To Take
That Land” (1629) (See document collection in “08”); John Smith,
“Description of Virginia” on Canvas; Father Paul LeJeune,
“Encounter with the Indians” on Canvas
10: Wednesday, February 8: Colonial America: Chesapeake
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 138-157 on Canvas
Documents: [Virginia Company], “A True Declaration of the
Estate of the Colonie in Virginia,” (1610) (See document collection
in “08”); James Revel, “The Poor Unhappy Transported Felon’s
Sorrowful Account of His Fourteen Years Transportation at Virginia
in America,” (c. 1680) on Canvas; “Servitude and Slavery in
17th-Century Virginia Courts,” (1630-89) on Canvas
11: Friday, February 10: Sections
Week 5:
12: Monday, February 13: Colonial America: New England
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 158-186 on Canvas
Document: Mary Rowlandson, from “The Narrative of Mary
Rowlandson” (1682) on Canvas
13: Wednesday, February 15: Colonial America: Lowcountry
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 222-244 on Canvas
Document: “The Stono Rebellion in South Carolina” (1739) on
Canvas
14: Friday, February 17: Sections
Week 6:
15: Monday, February 20: Colonial America: Middle Colonies
Readings:
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America
(New York: Penguin Press, 2002), pp. 246-272 on Canvas
Document: Gabriel Thomas, “Pennsylvania, The Poor Man’s
Paradise” (1698) on Canvas
16: Wednesday, February 22: Colonial (Dis)Order
Readings:
Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, “Sailors and Slaves in the
Revolution,” in The Social Fabric, ed. Thomas L. Hartshorne (New
York: Longman, 2006), pp. 131-49 on Canvas
Documents: “New Jersey Land Riots” (1746 and 1748) on Canvas;
William Livingtons, “The Vanity of Birth and Titles; with the
Absurdity of Claiming Respect without Merit” (1753) on Canvas;
Paxton Boys, “Manifesto” (1764) on Canvas; North Carolina
Regulators, “Shew Yourselves to be Freemen” (1769) on internet
(Links to an external site.); J. Hector St. John Crèvecoeur, “What
is an American?” (1770) on Canvas
17: Friday, February 24: Sections
Week 7:
18: Monday, February 27: War and Rebellion
Readings:
Documents: Thomas Paine, Common Sense, Section I (Links to an
external site.), Section II (Links to an external site.), Section
III (Links to an external site.) on internet; Ann Hulton, “Loyalist
View of Colonial Unrest” (1774) on Canvas; Thomas Jefferson,
“Declaration of Independence” (1776); Abigail and John Adams,
“Remember the Ladies” (1776) on Canvas; Joseph Brant, “Mohawk
Loyalty to Britain” (1776) on Canvas; John Dickinson, “A Speech
Against Independence” (1776) on Canvas; Slave Petitions for Freedom
during the Revolution (1774-79) on Canvas
19: Wednesday, March 1: Founding of a New Nation
Readings:
Documents: William Finlay, “On Democracy, Banks, and Paper
Money,” 1786 on Canvas; Shay’s Rebels, “Grievances,” 1786 on Canvas
20: Friday, March 3: Sections
*First segment of paper due at the beginning of class*
Week 8:
21: Monday, March 6: “We the People”
Readings:
Alfred F. Young, “The Pressures of the People on the Framers of
the Constitution,” in Major Problems in American History, Volume I,
3rd Edition, eds. Elizabeth Cobbs-Hoffman et al., 139-146 on
Canvas; Ron Chernow, “The Founding Fathers Versus the Tea Party,”
New York Times (2010) on internet (Links to an external site.)
Documents: Constitution (1787) on internet (Links to an
external site.); Bill of Rights (1791) on internet (Links to an
external site.); Elbridge Gerry, “The Danger of the Levilling
Spirit” (1787); George Clinton, “To The Citizens of the State of
New York,” (1787); James Madison, “The Federalist, No. 10,” on
Canvas
22: Wednesday, March 8: Competing Visions for the Early
Republic
Readings:
Drew R. McCoy, “The Fears of the Jeffersonian Republicans” on
Canvas; Linda Kerber, “The Fears of the Federalists” on Canvas
Documents: Governor Thomas Mifflin, “Proclamation on Unlawful
Combinations,” 1794; Judge Alexander Addison, “On the Whiskey
Rebellion” (1794) on Canvas
23: Friday, March 10: *Mid-Term Exam*
Week 9: Spring Break – Class Canceled
Week 10:
24: Monday, March 20: American Expansion and Indian Removal
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
3-48
Document: Tecumseh’s Plea to the Choctaws and the Chickasaws
on Canvas; James Tallmadge, “Denunciation of Slavery in Missouri”
(1819) on Canvas
25: Wednesday, March 22: Market Revolution
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
49-90
Documents: James Flint, “Panic of 1819” (1822) on Canvas;
David Crockett, “Advice to Politicians” (1833) on Canvas
26: Friday, March 24: Sections
Week 11:
27: Monday, March 27: Northern Working Class
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
91-164
Documents: B. Julianna, “Factory Life as it Is” (1845) on
Canvas; “Accounts of Urban Riots” (1835) on Canvas; William Sanger,
“New York Prostitutes” (1858) on Canvas
28: Wednesday, March 29: Northern Middle Class
Readings:
Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz, Kingdom of Matthias, pp.
164-180
Documents: Excerpt from David Walker’s Appeal to the Coloured
Citizens of the World (1829) on Canvas and William Lloyd Garrison’s
“On the Constitution and the Union” on the internet (Links to an
external site.)
29: Friday, March 31: Sections
Week 12:
30: Monday, April 3: Creating the “Old South”
Readings:
Stephanie McCurry, “The Two Faces of Republicanism: Gender and
Proslavery Politics in Antebellum South Carolina,” Journal of
American History, Vol. 78, No. 4 (Mar., 1992), pp. 1245-1264 on
Canvas
Documents: Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, from Georgia Scenes
on Canvas; Daniel R. Hundley, from Social Relations from Our
Southern States on Canvas; Mary Boykin Chesnut, from The Private
Mary Chesnut on Canvas; Reverend Thornton Stringfellow, A Brief
Examination of the Scripture Testimony of the Institution of
Slavery, 1841, on Canvas
31: Wednesday, April 5: Life in the “Quarters”
Readings:
Brenda Stevenson, “Distress and Discord in Virginia Slave
Families, 1830-60,” in In Joy and In Sorrow: Women, Family, and
Marriage in the Victorian South, 1830-60, pp. 103-124 on Canvas
Documents: Harriet Jacobs, from Incidents in the Life of a
Slave Girl on Canvas; Frederick Douglass, from Narrative of the
Life of Frederick Douglass on Canvas











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