FYI for the Missouri Compromise slide on 11:42, you made a slight mistake on the bullet points. Missouri was a slave state while Maine was a free state. But thank you tho, you're really helping me a lot for my APUSH class :)
Thanks for this great review! Also, letters/speeches would you suggest I read for period 4 tests? For example my last test was on The end of period 3 and the start of period 4, and some of the questions gave excerpts from Washington's Inaugural Address, Jefferson's Inaugural address, and a letter from Jefferson to someone. For future tests, I want to have read some famous stuff like those so I can have a better idea of the context. Do you know any other documents for period 4 I could try reading?
I think the most common and important documents from period 4 are: Monroe Doctrine, James Monroe, 1823 King Andrew the I (political cartoon), 1832 Slavery as a Positive Good, John C. Calhoun, 1837 Declarations of Sentiments, Seneca Falls Convention, 1848 Civil Disobedience, Henry David Thoreau, 1849 (could also go with period 5) If you struggle on any of them I have explanation videos. Links are in the Google Doc in the video notes above.
FYI for the Missouri Compromise slide on 11:42, you made a slight mistake on the bullet points. Missouri was a slave state while Maine was a free state. But thank you tho, you're really helping me a lot for my APUSH class :)
Thanks for this great review! Also, letters/speeches would you suggest I read for period 4 tests? For example my last test was on The end of period 3 and the start of period 4, and some of the questions gave excerpts from Washington's Inaugural Address, Jefferson's Inaugural address, and a letter from Jefferson to someone. For future tests, I want to have read some famous stuff like those so I can have a better idea of the context. Do you know any other documents for period 4 I could try reading?
I think the most common and important documents from period 4 are:
Monroe Doctrine, James Monroe, 1823
King Andrew the I (political cartoon), 1832
Slavery as a Positive Good, John C. Calhoun, 1837
Declarations of Sentiments, Seneca Falls Convention, 1848
Civil Disobedience, Henry David Thoreau, 1849 (could also go with period 5)
If you struggle on any of them I have explanation videos. Links are in the Google Doc in the video notes above.