Antebellum Sectionalism and Reform (US History EOC Review - USHC 2.3 & 2.4)

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  • Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
  • www.tomrichey.n...
    In this segment of the US History EOC Review series, Tom Richey discusses the ideas of Manifest Destiny and the Monroe Doctrine and how they affected United States policies of Westward expansion and foreign policy toward Europe.
    This lecture addresses USHC 2.3 and USHC 2.4 in the South Carolina curriculum standards for US History and the Constitution.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 21

  • @_M-K_
    @_M-K_ 4 роки тому +16

    Thank you. This was very much needed. The teacher I have doesn’t know how to teach. I actually understand now.

  • @EmeraldWhiteFox
    @EmeraldWhiteFox 8 років тому +8

    For the Second Great Awakening, Peter Cartwright and Charles Grandison Finney could be seen as key figures. They were both important traveling/revival preachers. :) Thank you for all of your videos! You are the reason I passed my Euro Exam!

  • @luvingg
    @luvingg 5 років тому +3

    Excellent facilitator. You're actually educating vs having the students teach themselves.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  5 років тому +2

      Thanks for the kind words!

    • @luvingg
      @luvingg 5 років тому

      @@tomrichey You're welcome!

    • @jaymazzella8667
      @jaymazzella8667 5 місяців тому

      I agree, I go to online school and it's really easy to forget the concept right after learning it. Hopefully this will help for my EOC

  • @abdulazizalserhani7625
    @abdulazizalserhani7625 5 місяців тому

    Speaking of those reform movements in the antebellum, while you listed the four most significant of those movements, I think there was also a fifth movement albeit the weakest of them and that was the labor movement, alongside strikes from craft workers forming craft unions, there were also strikes from unskilled factory workers since the 1824 Pawtucket mill girls strike, But at the time, their influence was often limited to the state level at best and the only labor laws that did exist from it were state laws and there were exactly zero labor laws passed during the antebellum period, that kind of national influence wouldn't exist until the late 19th century and early 20th century.

  • @unboxinghappy918
    @unboxinghappy918 7 років тому +2

    this was very helpful

  • @adventureinc1568
    @adventureinc1568 8 років тому +5

    Do something on The Greco-Turkish wars :^)

  • @thelightofthebodyispineal7137
    @thelightofthebodyispineal7137 2 роки тому

    What is Antebellum...thank you answering this!

  • @zeesaleh4683
    @zeesaleh4683 5 років тому +4

    Dude at 0:52, he didn't even drink anything lmaooo

  • @andytribble1
    @andytribble1 6 років тому

    Temperance was big in the UK too, but not political

  • @danielstashak8553
    @danielstashak8553 6 років тому +8

    blah blah blah blah I'm only watching dis cause I have too it sucks but now that I actually listen to it it is really informational and has helped me better understand the lesson I am learning in school 👍👍👍👍

  • @lordreyna6924
    @lordreyna6924 3 роки тому +1

    I am here after the bachelorette frenzy lol

  • @thegreatestyoutubeuser
    @thegreatestyoutubeuser 3 роки тому

    whos doing this for early graduation

  • @psilocybemusashi
    @psilocybemusashi 2 роки тому

    you really should list tariffs first. slavery is almost a non issue for the north until the fugitive slave act. southern slave holders definitely wanted to move west and bring their slaves with them but the real issue of the civil war was the same as the revolutionary war. taxes. the north wanted to tax imports to pay for their railroads and canals and to protect their industry and they were just fine letting the south pay for all of it.

  • @zaiDaDreamer
    @zaiDaDreamer 5 років тому

    Yo this stuff got me fuckes up