The Making of America 1789–1900
This is one of the optional non-British period studies for OCR Paper 2. It covers the United States from its founding documents through westward expansion, the Civil War and Reconstruction to the near-completion of the frontier by 1900.
Westward Expansion
"Manifest Destiny"
The 19th-century belief that the United States was destined (even divinely ordained) to expand across the North American continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific:
- Coined by journalist John L. O'Sullivan (1845).
- Justified displacement of Native Americans as part of a "civilising mission".
- Drove the Louisiana Purchase (1803, doubled US territory), Mexican-American War (1846–48, added California/Texas), Gadsden Purchase (1853).
The Oregon Trail and migration
- From early 1840s, thousands of settlers travelled the 3,200 km Oregon Trail from Missouri to Oregon/California.
- Motivations: free land (Homestead Act 1862 — 160 acres free after 5 years' residence), gold (California Gold Rush 1848–49), religious freedom (Mormons to Utah).
- Impact on Plains Indians: migration routes disrupted buffalo migration and traditional territories.
Transcontinental Railroad (completed 1869)
- Linked the east and west coasts.
- Built by two companies: Union Pacific (westward) and Central Pacific (eastward), meeting at Promontory Summit, Utah.
- Workforce: largely Chinese immigrants and Irish immigrants.
- Impact: opened the West to settlement; accelerated the destruction of buffalo herds (sportsmen shot from trains); undermined Plains Indian way of life.
Slavery and the Civil War
Slavery in America
- By 1860: c.4 million enslaved African Americans, almost entirely in the South.
- The cotton economy of the South was entirely dependent on enslaved labour.
- Moral challenge: the Declaration of Independence ("all men are created equal") vs the reality of slavery — a tension at the heart of American identity.
Causes of the Civil War (1861–65)
- Missouri Compromise (1820): attempted to balance slave and free states as the nation expanded west.
- Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854): allowed new territories to vote on slavery ("popular sovereignty") — led to "Bleeding Kansas" violence.
- Dred Scott case (1857): Supreme Court ruled enslaved people were property, not citizens — outraged the North.
- John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry (1859): anti-slavery militant seized a federal arsenal; hanged — became a martyr in the North.
- Election of Abraham Lincoln (1860): Southern states seceded rather than accept an anti-slavery president.
The Civil War (1861–65)
- Confederacy (South) vs Union (North); 11 Southern states seceded.
- Emancipation Proclamation (1863): Lincoln declared enslaved people in Confederate states free — war aim now explicitly included ending slavery.
- Key battles: Antietam (1862); Gettysburg (1863 — turning point); Sherman's March to the Sea (1864 — total war).
- Appomattox (April 1865): Confederate General Lee surrendered. Lincoln assassinated days later.
- Cost: c.620,000 dead — the deadliest war in American history.
Reconstruction (1865–1877)
The attempt to rebuild the South and integrate formerly enslaved people as citizens:
- 13th Amendment (1865): abolished slavery.
- 14th Amendment (1868): equal citizenship for all born in the US.
- 15th Amendment (1870): voting rights regardless of race.
Why did Reconstruction fail?
- Black Codes: Southern states immediately passed laws restricting Black freedoms.
- KKK (Ku Klux Klan): terrorist violence against Black voters and Republican officeholders.
- Compromise of 1877: Northern Republicans abandoned Reconstruction in exchange for the presidency — federal troops withdrawn from the South.
- Jim Crow laws: segregation laws established across the South; "separate but equal" upheld by Plessy v Ferguson (1896).
The Plains Indians
Way of life
- Great Plains tribes: Sioux, Comanche, Cheyenne, Arapaho — nomadic, following the buffalo.
- Buffalo: central to Plains Indian life — food, clothing, shelter, tools, spiritual significance.
- Plains Indians were highly effective cavalry warriors.
Conflict and destruction
- Indian Removal Act (1830): earlier forced relocation of eastern tribes to "Indian Territory" (Oklahoma).
- Battle of Little Bighorn (1876): Sioux/Cheyenne warriors defeated General Custer's 7th Cavalry — the last major Native American victory.
- Massacre at Wounded Knee (1890): US Army killed c.250 Lakota Sioux — men, women, children. Marked the end of organised Native American resistance.
- Destruction of the buffalo: from c.30 million buffalo (1800) to fewer than 1,000 (1890s). The US government encouraged hunting to eliminate the Plains Indian food supply.
- Dawes Act (1887): broke up tribal reservations into individual plots — aimed to force assimilation; took 90 million acres from Native Americans.
Common OCR exam mistakes
- Saying the Civil War was only about slavery — it was also about states' rights, economic differences and political power — though most historians see slavery as the fundamental cause.
- Saying Lincoln freed all enslaved people in 1863 — the Emancipation Proclamation only applied to Confederate states; border states' enslaved people remained enslaved until the 13th Amendment (1865).
- Forgetting Wounded Knee (1890) — a crucial endpoint for Native American resistance.
- Confusing the Compromise of 1877 with the end of the Civil War — they are 12 years apart; Reconstruction lasted from 1865 to 1877.
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