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THE NEW STUDENT'S REFERENCE WORK

c. Jefferson's administration:  Chart VIII;  968.

(1)  The purchase  of Louisiana:   1119.

(2)  The expedition of Lewis and Clark:   1060.

d. The War of 1812:  Chart VIII.

(1)  its causes:   1980;   Chesapeake  377.

(2)  Land   Engagements:    Limdy's   Lane,   1124;   Sackett's  Harbor,

1651;   Tippecanoe,   1915;    Harrison,   844;    Tecumseh,  1879; Scott, 1710;  Jackson, 952.

(3)  The struggle about Lake Erie: 1454.

(4)  Naval Battles: Chesapeake, 377; Porter, 1530; Lawrence, 1039;

McDonough, 1135;  Decatur, 512.

(5)  The victories of the Constitution: Bainbridge, 157;  Hull, 896.

(6)  Fort Dearborn Massacre:   380.

(7)  Unpopularity of the war in  New England:   845.

(8)  Capture of Detroit:  524;  Oswego, 1399.

(9)  The burning of Washington:  2047.

(10) The Peace of Ghent: 763; United States, 1980; Clay, 407 ,

e. The industrial development from 1790 to 1812:

(1)  New cotton machinery:

(a)  Eli Whitney and the cottongin: 2080; Cotton, 464.

(b)  Other inventors: Hargreaves, 838; Crompton, 481;

Cartwright, 343; Arkwright, 102.

(2)  Growth of factories:  464; Pawtucket, 1432.

(3)  Use of steamboats:  Fulton, 722;  Watt, 2056;  Hudson, 894.

f. Western emigration:

(1)  New homes beyond the Alleghanies:  1980.

(2)  Building of roads and digging of canals:  1980;  Railroads, 1581;

New York, 1334;  Ohio, 1374;   Canal, 321.

(3)  The settlers:

(a)  Foreigners and natives: 1976-7.

(b)  Reasons for going west: 1375; United States, 1981.

(c)  Their life in the west: Agriculture, 28.

g. The admission of new states:  See Charts VIII, IX, X and XI.

h. The discovery of gold and the movement to California: 309; United States,

1981. i. The Mexican War:

(1)  Its causes: 1216; 1896.

(2)  The addition of territory It gave to the U< S.:   1216;  United

States, 1981; Texas, 1896; Arizona, 100;  New Mexico, 1329. j. The slavery question:

(1)  How slavery seemed to the North:  1766;  to the South:  1766,

967;  and to the slave:   546.

(2)  The Abolitionists and their work:   1766.

(a)  William  Lloyd Garrison:  738.

(b)  Wendell Phillips:   1471.

(c)  Harriet  Beecher Stowe:  1834.

(d)  Frederick Douglass:  546.

(3)  Fugitive  slaves  and  the   laws  concerning  them:   722;   S. A.

Douglas, 546;  Missouri, 1242.

(4) The admission of Missouri: 1241.

(5)  The Compromise of 1850: 438.

(6)  The Underground Railway: 1966; 1834.

(7)  John   Brown:   275.

(8)  The Nullification Act:  1785.

(9)  The  question   of  secession:    1814;   846. k. The struggle in  Kansas:  989;   546.

(1) Admission of California:   310;  Omnibus Bill, 1382. 1. The Civil War:

(1)  The election of Lincoln:   U. S., 1982;  Lincoln, 1074.

(2)  Fort Sumter:   698.

(3)  Secession  of Southern  states:  1982.

(4)  The forts on the Southern Coast:   Fisher and Sumter, 698; Du-

pont, 562.

(a) The Monitor and the Merrimac:  1251; 1208; Norfolk, 1355; Ericsson, 6241; Timby, 1913.

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