1492-1865 HONORS, syllabus

Contents Page

China in the Western, syllabus fall 2001

 

United States, 1492 to 1865

HI 1483 section 1

Instructor: Mr. Joe Eaton

St. Gregory’s University

Fall 2001

MWF 10:00 AM

ADMIN317

 

wjeaton@sgc.edu

http://intranet.sgc.edu/People/Faculty/wjeaton/

Phone: 878-5183

Office: 313 Administration Building

 

Office hours: Monday 12:45-3:30, Wednesday 12-1, Thursday 10:45-12 (unless faculty meeting), and by appointment.  My teaching schedule is listed on my office door.  You may also meet me before or after class.  Please feel free to call or send an email if none of these times is good for you. 

 

An office conference with me will be required around mid-term.  More details will be announced.

 

Course description: Students examine the ideas, social, and political events that created the New Republic.  Major components include the exploration of the “New World,” Native Americans, colonial society, the Revolutionary War and Constitution, westward expansion, slavery, the Alamo, Mexican War, gold and silver discoveries, the development of the political parties, and the Civil War. 

 

Please, no food or drink in the classroom.  H2O allowed.

 

Late assignments will be penalized.

 

Make-Up Examinations: Make-up examinations are both burdensome on me and unfair to the remainder of the class, and for both reasons are not readily given.  Exceptions for good cause are allowed, but you should be prepared to provide written verification of any incident preventing you from not taking an exam on the designated day.  Make-up exams tend to be more difficult because the person has had an opportunity to study longer than his or her classmates.

 

Attendance: Attendance is mandatory.   Repeated unexcused absences will result in the loss of course points and may result in expulsion from the course.  I reserve the right to send an absence warning after a third unexcused absence and drop a student from the class for any absences after that.

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Required Books (all available in bookstore).  Failure to procure required books will result in loss of class participation points.  Continued failure to procure required books may result in expulsion from class.

 

Franklin, Benjamin, Autobiography & Other Writings, New York: Bantam, 1992.  ISBN 0-

553-21075-0

 

Oates, Stephen B, Portrait of America, Volume One: To 1877, Boston: Houghton Mifflin,

1999.    ISBN 0-395-90077-8

 

Movies: 

“Amistad” (1997, Morgan Freeman, Anthony Hopkins)

“Last of the Mohicans” (1992, Daniel Day-Lewis)

 

There may also be occasional handouts given in class.

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Course Outline: Subject to Change

Reading must be completed by date indicated.

 

POA  = Portrait of America

 

Semester Week #:

1 – introduction & Pre-Columbian America: reading, Friday, August 24, POA, “Myths that Hide the American Indian,” 2

 

2 – Early Colonies: reading, Wednesday, August 29, POA, “From these Beginnings,” 18

 

3 – [Monday, Labor Day] Slavery and the South: reading, Wednesday, September 5, POA, “Black People in a White People’s Country,” 32

 

4 – Eighteenth Century Colonial Society: reading, Wednesday, September 12, POA, “The Transformation of European Society,” 56

 

5 – Revolution: reading, Wednesday, September 19, POA, “Sam Adams, Firebrand of the Revolution,” 90

 

6 – Revolution continued: reading, Wednesday, September 26, POA, “Thomas Jefferson and the Meanings of Liberty,” 101

 

Exam: Friday, September 28

 

7 – Revolution continued: reading, Wednesday, October 3, Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography & Other Writings, 3-157

 

Reflective paper: Wednesday, October 3 in class, late papers penalized one letter grade

 

Paper Topic: “What is your evaluation of Franklin, the quintessential American?” Please type and double-space your essay.  Your essay should be approximately three pages in length.  Please do not use outside sources.  This is not a research paper.

 

8 – Federalists and anti-Federalists: reading, Wednesday, October 10, POA, “Sunrise at Philadelphia,” 116

 

9 – Washington and the Presidency: reading, Wednesday, October 17, POA, “George Washington and the Use of Power,” 131, [Friday, Fall Break]

 

10 – Nineteenth century social and cultural history: reading, Wednesday, October 24, POA, “The Personal Side of a Developing People,” 144

 

11 – Question of Slavery: reading, Wednesday, October 31, POA, “The Fires of Jubilee: Nat Turner’s Fierce Rebellion,” 200 & “William Lloyd Garrison and the Abolitionist Crusade,” 217

 

Exam: Friday, November 2

 

12 – Age of Progress, Industrialization: reading, Wednesday, November 7, POA, “The Lords and the Mill Girls,” 266

 

13 – Age of Progress, Transportation: reading, Wednesday, November 14, POA, “Hell in Harness”: The Iron Horse and the Go-Ahead Age,” 279

 

14 – Slavery and the Territories: reading, Monday, November 19, POA, “Why the War Came: The Sectional Struggle Over Slaver in the Territories,” 344 [Wednesday, Friday, Thanksgiving break]

 

15 – Lincoln and the War: reading, Wednesday, November 28, POA, “Lincoln’s Journey to Emancipation,” 359

 

16 – Civil War: reading, Wednesday, December 5, “Hayfoot, Strawfoot! The Civil War Soldier Marched to His Own Individual Cadence,” 391

 

Final Exam: Date and time to be announced.

 

There will be two required movies during the semester.  One may view the movie during a viewing time arranged by the instructor or chose to rent and view the movies before class discussion. 

 

I will ask each of you to do a very modest amount of research dealing with one or two of the readings during the semester.  This research can likely be accomplished using Internet sources.

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Method of Evaluation:                   Points:

Reflective paper – October 3         100

Exam – September 28                    100

Exam – November 2                       100

Final Exam                                      100

Attendance, class participation   50

 & occasional pop quiz

 

Grading Scale 90-100% A, 80-89% B, 70-79% C, 60-69% D, 59% and below F