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APUSH periods 1-9 (1).

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APUSH periods 1-9 (1).

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  • June 5, 2024
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  • 2023/2024
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APUSH periods 1-9
Period 1: 1491-1607 - ANS-This period is basically everything that happened prior to
the arrival of the English. The start of the period, 1491 (the year before Christopher
Columbus "sailed the ocean blue"), is really shorthand for "before the Europeans
showed up." The end of the period is 1607, the year that the English landed in
Jamestown, Virginia and founded the first permanent English settlement in the New
World. In a nutshell, this period focuses on Native Americans and on early, non-English
exploration of the New World, especially that of the Spanish.

The big concepts for this period are:

Native American societies, especially the way they adapted to their environments
Spanish exploration and the affect it had on native populations (e.g., disease, warfare,
the encomienda system)
The Columbian Exchange

Period 2: 1607-1754 - ANS-The next period is largely focused on European (including
the British this time) exploration and settlement. The beginning date is the founding of
Jamestown, as discussed above. The end date is the start of the French and Indian
War, which totally changed the game in the British colonies.

The big concepts for this period are:

Motivations for and patterns of immigration by the Spanish, English, Dutch, and French
Interactions between Europeans and Native Americans
Characteristics of the 13 British colonies (including regional distinctions between the
Southern, Middle Atlantic, and New England colonies)
Economic policies: mercantilism, the slave trade, salutary neglect

Period 3: 1754-1800 - ANS-Here we start to focus exclusively on the British colonies
that will turn into the United States. The starting year, 1754, is the beginning of the
French and Indian War. This marked the end of salutary neglect and the beginning of
growing tensions between the colonies and Great Britain. The period takes you through
the tumultuous revolution and its aftermath to the year 1800, in which the new
democracy is solidified by its first official peaceful transfer of power between two political
parties.

The big concepts for this period are:

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