Documenting United States History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

B


y the mid-eighteenth century, conflict in North America between the
colonial empires of Great Britain and France came to a head. During the
French and Indian War (or the Seven Years’ War, as it became known in
Europe), colonists fought alongside imperial troops, while native peoples
often found themselves caught between the two imperial powers.
When the war ended in 1763, the victorious British empire was in control of
the North American continent but also saddled with debt beyond what any had
imagined possible at the beginning of the conflict. To offset the costs of defeating
the French, the British Parliament instituted a series of revenue-raising measures
(including new taxes like the Stamp Act) that sparked colonial anger and set the
path toward conflict between Great Britain and the British colonists in North
America.
After American independence, George Washington’s administration continued
its expansion into native territory in the West and sought neutrality in the renewed
wars between France and Great Britain in the late 1700s. Support for and against
France’s democratic revolution, especially when it turned violent after 1793,
divided Washington’s cabinet and, ultimately, divided the United States into two
broad factions whose conflict threatened to undermine the new nation.

Seeking the Main Point


As you examine the documents in this chapter, keep in mind the following
broad questions. These questions will help you understand the relationship
between the documents in this chapter and the historical changes that they
represent. As you reflect on these questions, determine which themes and which
documents best address them.

Document


AP® Ke y
concePts
PAge

4.12 Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Thomas Pinckney 3.1 III A–B 105

4.13 Thomas Jefferson, Letter to James Monroe 3.1 III A–C 106

4.14 Anti-Jefferson Cartoon, “The Providential Detection” 3.1 III C 107

Applying AP® Historical Thinking Skills
Combining Skills: Historical Causation and
Historical Argumentation

Thinking Skill 1.1,
Thinking Skill 3.6,
Thinking Skill 3.7

108

86 ChApTEr 4 | an atlantiC eMpire | period three 175 4 –18 0 0 Seeking the Main point^87

05_STA_2012_ch4_085-114.indd 86 26/03/15 10:11 AM


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