Reprint: The History of
the USA c. 1840–1968
This paper focuses on key
developments that transformed the USA from an isolated agrarian society to the
world’s leading superpower in terms of economic strength, military power, political
and diplomatic influence, and cultural and social impact on other nations and
peoples. The themes are:
Source-based study: The Road to Secession and Civil War, 1846–61
This topic focuses on the
reasons for the breakdown of consensus regarding the American Union, between
the end of the Mexican War and the outbreak of Civil War in April 1861.
Candidates must study the protracted arguments as to whether slavery should be
allowed to expand into the new territories acquired by the USA, and understand
why this was such an intractable problem. They need to be familiar with the
unsuccessful attempts to find a stable basis for compromise. They also need
to look at
the shifting political alignments of the period, and the debate on whether
states were entitled to secede from the United States.
Particular attention
should be paid to:
• the
evolving views of the leading political figures of the period, such as Cobb,
Calhoun, Douglas, Seward and Lincoln
• the
key crises of 1848–50 and 1860–1
• differing
historiographical interpretations of the sectional
conflict.
Theme 1:
Westward Expansion and the Taming of the West, c. 1840–96
•
The doctrine of ‘Manifest Destiny’
•
The annexation of Texas
•
The Mexican War and its consequences
•
The Mormons and Utah
•
The Oregon Question
•
The railroads and their significance
•
The displacement of Native American nations
•
The Gold Rush of 1849 and Californian statehood
•
The 1850 compromise, the Kansas-Nebraska question
•
The myth of the ‘Wild West’
•
Cattlemen and farmers, the mining boom, the destruction of the
Plains Indians
•
Closing of the frontier and Turner’s Frontier Thesis.
Theme 2:
Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861–77
The Civil War: strengths and weaknesses of the Union and the
Confederacy
•
Lincoln and Davis as war leaders
•
The border states’ key decisions
•
Different strategies of the armies, key campaigns and battles
•
European attitudes and diplomatic initiatives
•
The Emancipation Proclamation and its effects
•
Weaknesses of the Confederate political system
•
Wartime politics in the Union: civil liberties, the 1864 election
•
Grant and Lee as generals
•
Why did the South lose?
Reconstruction: legacies of the war; devastated South and booming North
•
Lincoln’s program for rebels
•
Johnson’s Reconstruction program, Congressional opposition
•
Radical Congressional Reconstruction, impeachment of Johnson
•
Effects of Reconstruction on freedmen, and on the White South
•
Grant’s administrations, changing emphasis
•
Erosion of black rights, reinstatement of white supremacy
•
Compromise of 1877 and the end of Reconstruction
•
How far did Reconstruction advance the position of the former
slaves?
Theme 3:
The Impact of Economic Expansion, 1865–1917
•
Reasons for the expansion of US industry and commerce after the Civil
War
•
Effects of mass immigration
•
Effects of technical innovations
•
The impact of railroad expansion
•
Steel, oil and finance
•
Trusts and monopolies, attempts at regulation
•
Cult of the business ethic
•
Agrarian revolt and populism, the rise of trade unions and
increasing industrial conflict
•
Ford and the production line revolution
•
The Progressive Era and its impact on business.
Theme 4:
Civil Rights, 1895–1968
•
The position of African-Americans in 1900, the contrasting
strategies of Booker T Washington and W E B du Bois,
•
The founding of the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People (NAACP)
•
World War I and black Americans
•
Revival of the Ku Klux Klan and lynching in the 1920s
•
The persistence of denial of civil rights in the South and
discrimination in the North
•
The New Deal and civil rights
•
World War II and black Americans
•
The end of racial discrimination in schools, the Brown case and
the Supreme Court
•
The rise to prominence of Martin Luther King through the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference, the tactic of non-violent protest against
segregation
•
Militant approach of other groups: Malcolm X and the Black
Muslims, Stokely Carmichael, Eldridge
•
Cleaver and the Black Panthers
•
The Civil Rights Act (1964) and the 24th Amendment
•
Assassinations of King and Malcolm X
•
The 1967 riots and Johnson’s civil rights policies
•
The civil rights of Native Americans
•
Assessment of the extent of gains made in civil rights by the end
of the 1960s.
Theme 5:
Boom and Bust, 1920–41
•
Post-war reaction against internationalism and progressivism,
•
The election of Harding and the cult of ‘normalcy’
•
Prohibition and its consequences
•
Corruption scandals
•
The Coolidge presidency and the business boom
•
American society in the ‘Jazz Age’
•
The origins of Depression, the Wall Street crash, Hoover’s failed
policies
•
FDR and the First New Deal, the second phase of the New Deal
•
American society in the Depression
•
Opposition to the New Deal, the Supreme Court
•
The New Deal – an evaluation.
Theme 6:
The USA’s Rise as a World Power, 1890–1945
•
The rise of American imperialism and its causes, war with Spain
and its consequences
•
Far Eastern policy and the acquisition of the Panama Canal Roosevelt’s
policies in the Western hemisphere
•
The policy of neutrality and the First World War, the failed peace
efforts of Wilson, reasons for entry of the USA into the war
•
The contribution of the USA to victory
•
Wilson’s role in peacemaking, rejection of the Versailles
Settlement by the Senate
•
Return to partial isolationism
•
War debts and reparations
•
The Washington Conference and the Kellogg Pact
• FDR’s
‘Good Neighbour’ policy, and policy in the Far East
•
New Deal diplomacy
•
US neutrality in World War II, Lend-Lease
•
Pearl Harbor, war with Germany and Japan
•
The US contribution to the war effort
•
Conferences at Yalta and Potsdam
•
The San Francisco Conference, founding of the United Nations
•
Assessment of the position of the USA in the world by 1945.
Theme 7:
Social Developments, 1945–68
•
The effects of the war
•
Population growth, changes in demographic structure and mobility
•
The decay of the cities and the urban crisis
•
The social consequences of technological change and economic
growth
•
The role of religion
•
Expansion of higher education, student radicalism
•
Revolution in lifestyles in the 1960s: changes in the workplace,
the roles of women, families
• Developments in mass culture: film, literature, the TV age, the
growing influence of the mass media.
Reprint: Previous
Examination Questions
Source-based study/Question #1: The Road to Secession and Civil
War, 1846–61
a.
‘There was never any real prospect
that the 1850 Compromise would satisfactorily resolve the sectional tensions
which arose out of the Mexican War.’ Use Sources A-E to show how far the
evidence supports this statement. [2002 June]
b.
‘There
was never any real prospect that the 1850 Compromise would satisfactorily
resolve the sectional tensions which arose out of the Mexican War.’ Using
Sources A–E, discuss how far the evidence supports this statement. [2006 Nov]
c.
‘The slavery issue undoubtedly
caused the American Civil War.’ Use sources A-E to show how far the evidence
confirms this statement. [2002 Nov]
d.
‘When Douglas put forward the principle
of popular sovereignty he made a disastrous error.’ Using Sources A-E discuss
how far the evidence supports this assertion. [2003 June]
e.
‘Douglas’s
arguments were more practical and realistic than those of Lincoln’. Using
Sources A-E, discuss how far the evidence supports this assertion. [2005 Nov]
f. ‘The
Dred Scott decision made little practical difference to sectional divisions
over the slavery issue.’
Using Sources A – E, discuss how far the evidence supports this assertion.
[2004 June]
g. ‘Republicans did not
oppose slavery, they simply opposed its extension.’
Using Sources A–E, discuss how far the evidence supports this assertion. [2005
June]
h.
‘John
Brown was not an heroic martyr but an irresponsible
criminal.’ Using Sources A–E, discuss how far the evidence supports this
assertion. [2009 Nov]
i. ‘The 1860 Party Platforms proved that
no further compromises between North and South would be possible.’ Using
Sources A–D discuss how far the evidence supports this assertion. [2007 Nov]
j. ‘By 1861 attitudes towards the Union
differed so strongly as to make compromise, in practice, impossible.’ Use
Sources A-E to show how far the evidence supports this view. [2001]
k. ‘The
sectional conflict which led to the Civil War was about the clash of competing
economic interests and not the rights and wrongs of slavery.’ Using Sources A –
E, discuss how far the evidence supports this explanation of the causes of the
Civil War. [2004 Nov]
l. ‘It
was the complete breakdown in trust between North and
South that made compromise impossible.’ Using Sources A – E, discuss how far
the evidence supports this assertion. [2005 June]
m. ‘The secession
crisis of 1860–1 only led to civil war because of President Buchanan’s weakness
and indecision.’ Using Sources
A-E, discuss how far the evidence supports this assertion [2003 Nov]
n.
‘The
South seceded reluctantly.’ Using Sources A–E, discuss how far the
evidence supports this Assertion, [2007 June]
o.
‘Lincoln
was the only President capable of dealing with the basic issues underlying the
sectional conflict in the United States.’ Using Sources A–E, discuss how far
the evidence supports this assertion. [2008 June]
p.
‘Lincoln
was an opponent of slavery.’ Using Sources A-E, discuss how far the
evidence supports this assertion. [2009 June]
q.
‘Lincoln’s
election meant that armed conflict between North and South became avoidable.’
Using Sources A-E, discuss how far the evidence supports this assertion. [2010
June]
r.
‘The
Dred Scott decision demonstrated the Supreme Court’s inability to deal with
sectional issues in a satisfactory manner.’ Using Sources A–E, discuss how far
the evidence supports this assertion. [2008 Nov]
s. ‘The Wilmot Proviso provided the basis for a
solution of the sectional issue.’ Using Sources A-E, discuss how far the
evidence supports this assertion. [2011 June]
Theme
1/Question #2: Westward Expansion and the Taming of the West, c. 1840–96
a. How do you account for the huge
territorial expansion of the United States in the 1840s? [2001]
b. What caused America’s rapid territorial expansion in the
1840s? [2010 June]
c.
Why was
it that the 1850 Compromise had started to unravel by 1856? [2004 Nov]
d.
Why did
the Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) produce such a storm of political controversy?
[2008 Nov]
e.
Explain
how and why the belief in America’s Manifest Destiny proved so strong in the
1840s and 1850s. [2002 June]
f. Explain
how and why the belief in America’s ‘Manifest Destiny’ proved so strong in the
1840s [2006 Nov]
g.
Explain
how and why, and with what consequences, the belief in America’s Manifest
Destiny proved so strong in the 1840s and 1850s. [2010 June]
h. How
influential a factor was the doctrine of Manifest Destiny in the huge
territorial expansion of the United States in the 1840s? [2003 June]
i.
Assess
the consequences of the Mexican War for the United States. [2004 June]
j. Assess the consequences of
the Mexican War for the United States. [2009 June]
k. ‘Mexico will poison us.’ How accurate was
this prediction of the effects of the Mexican War on the United States? [2005
June]
l.
Evaluate
the impact of the ‘Gold Rush’ of 1849 on America’s westward expansion. [2008
June]
m. Assess the main factors involved in
taming the ‘Wild West’ between 1865 and 1896. [2002 Nov]
n. Assess
the main factors involved in taming the ‘Wild West’ between 1865 and 1896 [2011
June]
o. How significant in
the period to 1890 were the social and economic consequences of the westward
expansion of the United States? [2003 June]
p.
How far
did the USA benefit economically from westward expansion after 1865? [2007
June]
q. How valid is the
assertion that improved transportation was the basic reason for America’s
dramatic westward expansion during the period 1840-96? [2006 June]
r. How far were the displacement of the Native American
nations and the destruction of their way of life in the period 1840 to 1896 the
consequence of deliberate government policy? [2005 Nov]
s.
How
valid was [Jackson] Turner’s frontier thesis on the connection between the
conquest of the frontier and the democratic national character of America?
[2007 Nov]
Theme
2/Question #3: Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861–77
a. Evaluate
the factors that secured the victory of the Union in the Civil War. [2003 June]
b. ‘The
victory of the Union in the Civil War was inevitable.’ How
far do you agree with this view? [2004 Nov]
c. How
close did the Confederacy come to ‘winning’ the Civil War? [2008 June]
d.
Why did
the South lose the Civil War? [2007 June]
e. Compare
Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis as war leaders. [2001]
f.
Compare
Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis as war leaders. [2004 June]
g. ‘I
claim not to have controlled events but confess plainly that events have
controlled me.’ (Abraham Lincoln, speech in 1864). Do
you agree with Lincoln’s assessment of his Presidency? [2005 June]
h. ‘I claim not to have controlled events but
confess plainly that events have controlled me.’ Do you agree with Lincoln’s
assessment of his Presidency? [2010 June]
i.
Examine
the view that Lincoln’s contribution to the Union victory in the Civil War has
been greatly exaggerated. [2009 June]
j. How true is the claim that Gettysburg was the
turning point in the Civil War? [2005 Nov]
k. Why were the gains made by the Freedmen
during Reconstruction both superficial and short-lived? [2006 June]
l. To
what extent did the former slaves benefit from Reconstruction policies between
1865 and 1877? [2002 June]
m. Assess the respective
strengths and weaknesses of Presidential and Congressional Reconstruction
policies. [2003 June]
n.
‘Johnson’s
real offence was his constant determination to thwart the will of Congress as
expressed in the Reconstruction Acts.’ How far does this explain his
opponents’ efforts to remove him from office? [2006 Nov]
o.
To what
extent was Reconstruction a failure? [2009 Nov]
p.
How was
it that the original high ideals of post-war Reconstruction ended with the 1877
Compromise? [2007 Nov]
q.
‘He was
completely unfitted for the office of President.’ To what extent is this a fair judgment on Grant during his two Presidential
terms? [2002 Nov]
r.
‘He was
hopelessly unfitted for the office of President.’ To what extent is this a fair judgment of Grant’s two Presidential terms
(1869–1877)? [2008 Nov]
s. Explain why in
September 1864 Lincoln appeared to be facing defeat in the Presidential
elections of that year. [2011 June]
Theme
3/Question #4: The Impact of Economic Expansion, 1865–1917
a. Explain
why trade unionism made only limited progress in the United States from 1865 to
1914. [2001]
b. Why did organized labour
have so little impact on American society from 1865 to 1917? [2009 Nov]
c. Assess the impact of organized labor on
American politics and society from 1865 to 1914. [2005 Nov]
d. Was the trend towards monopoly in the
American economy beneficial or harmful in the period to 1914? [2004 June]
e. Why
was it so difficult for governments to regulate big business effectively in the
period 1865 to 1890? [2003 June]
f. Why did it prove so difficult for both
Federal and State governments to regulate big business effectively in the
period 1865–1913? [2008 Nov]
g. How serious were the problems caused by the vast
expansion of US industry and commerce in the period 1865-1901? [2006 June]
h. Evaluate the effectiveness of Progressivism
on the United States politically, socially and economically from 1901 to 1916.
[2004 Nov]
i. ‘Progressivism was
simply a set of superficial reforms which evaded rather than addressed the ills
of American society.’ How far is this judgment valid? [2008 June]
j. How
far is it justified to speak of an agrarian revolt among American farmers in
the period 1865-96? [2002 June]
k. How
far is it justified to speak of an ‘agrarian revolt’ among American farmers in
the period 1867–1896? [2006 Nov]
l. Account
for the rise and fall of the People’s Party (Populists). [2009 June]
m. How successful were attempts
to deal with the problems of farmers in the late nineteenth century? [2003
June]
n. Assess the impact of
immigration on American social and economic life in the period from 1865 to the
First World War. [2002 Nov]
o. Assess the impact of
immigration on American social and economic life from 1865 to 1914. [2007 June]
p.
Assess
the role of technical innovation in the rapidly expanding US economy from 1865
to 1914. [2007 Nov]
q. Assess the part
played by technical in inventions and innovations in the development of the US
economy during the period 1865-1914. [2010 June]
r.
Explain
why the United States became the world’s leading industrial nation in the
period 1865-1900. [2005 June]
s. Analyse the
impact of immigration on American social and economic life in the period from
1865 to 1914. [2011 June]
Theme
4/Question #5: Civil Rights, 1895–1968
a. How was it possible, in
spite of constitutional protection, for the Southern States to deny basic civil
rights to African-Americans from 1895 to 1964? [2005 June]
b. How different were the philosophies and
policies of Booker T. Washington and W. E. du Bois on how best to attain full
emancipation for Afro-Americans? [2004 June]
c. Account
for the dramatic rise and fall of the revived Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s. [2004
Nov]
d. Explain
the principal factors which secured successes for the Civil Rights Movement between
1950 and 1968. [2003 June]
e. Assess
the effectiveness of the different tactics used by the various branches of the
Civil Rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s. [2001]
f. Assess
the effectiveness of the different tactics used by the various wings of the
Civil Rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s. [2005 Nov]
g. Analyze
the factors which led to the passing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. [2003
Nov]
h. Analyze the principal factors which secured
major successes for the Civil Rights movement between 1945 and 1968. [2008
June]
i.
Evaluate
the leadership role of Martin Luther King in the civil rights movement of the
1950s and 1960s. [2002 Nov]
j.
Compare Martin
Luther King and Malcolm X as leaders of the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s
and 1960s. [2006 Nov]
k.
‘Although
highly skilled in self-promotion and networking with politicians and the media,
Martin Luther King’s [sic] role in obtaining civil rights for African-Americans
has been overstated.’ Discuss this view. [2009 June]
l.
Examine
the contention that President Lyndon Johnson did far more in practice than
Martin Luther King for the civil rights of African-Americans. [2007 Nov]
m.
Examine
the changing role of African-Americans in the nation’s economic, social, and
political life from 1900 to 1968. [2007 June]
n.
Consider
the view that the dramatic legal gains for African-Americans from 1945 to 1968
did little in practice to improve their social and economic position. [2008
Nov]
o. Why, in the great battles over Civil Rights in the 1960s,
was the plight of the Native American Indians largely ignored? [2002 June]
p. Why were the civil rights of Native Americans largely
overlooked for most of the period 18951968? [2006 June]
q. Examine the reasons for the civil rights of Native
Americans being largely overlooked for most of the period 1895–1968. [2009 Nov]
r. Why was so little progress made in securing
the civil rights of Native Americans in period 1890-1968? [2010 June]
s.
Evaluate the effectiveness of the different tactics used by the various
branches of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s. [2011 June]
Theme
5/Question #6: Boom and Bust, 1920–41
a.
How far were the 1920s in the United States a
period of prosperity and optimism? [2002 Nov]
b.
How far were the 1920s in the United States a
period of prosperity and optimism? [2011 June]
c.
Which
were the more typical of 1920s America: Prohibition
and intolerance or the Jazz Age and increasing social freedom? [2008 June]
d.
‘The
revolt of rural and small town Americans against the cities’. Discuss this
assessment of the 1920s. [2003 June]
e.
How
accurate is it to describe the 1920s as a decade of conformity, intolerance and
conservatism? [2007 Nov]
f. Account for the Republican ascendancy in the
1920s. [2004 June]
g. ‘The business of America is business’; ‘The
ideal of America is idealism.’ How far do these sayings of Calvin Coolidge
reflect the policies of his Presidency, 1923-9? [2006 June]
h. ‘The wasted years.’ How fair is this
judgment on the three Republican Presidents in the period 1921-33? [2010 June]
i.
Evaluate
the factors that caused the Great Depression in the United States. [2002 June]
j. Why
did the Wall Street Crash occur in 1929? [2003 June]
k. How
different were the policies adopted by Hoover and Roosevelt to deal with the
Great Depression? [2005 June]
l. ‘Shapeless and
chaotic, with no clear philosophy.’ How valid is this critique of the New Deal,
1933-1940? [2005 Nov]
m.
Consider
the view that the New Deal was more significant politically than economically.
[2007 June]
n. How far did Roosevelt’s
second term of office demonstrate that critics of the New Deal had been right
all along? [2008 Nov]
o. Why
was opposition to the New Deal so fierce? [2004 Nov]
p.
‘Flexibility
was both his strength and his weakness.’ How valid is this assessment of F. D.
Roosevelt as President? [2009 June]
q.
Why did
some groups benefit more from the New Deal than others? [2001]
r.
Which
groups benefited most from the New Deal and which the least [2009 Nov]
s.
Evaluate
the impact of the Depression on American society, 1929-1939. [2006 Nov]
Theme
6/Question #7: The USA’s Rise as a World Power, 1890–1945
a. Discuss the view that the Spanish-American
War marked the emergence of the United States as a world power. [2001]
b. Discuss the view that the Spanish-American War marked the
emergence of the United States as a world power. [2009 Nov]
c. ‘Gradually and rather reluctantly, the United
States became an imperial power and a military presence on a global scale.’ Is
this a fair assessment of American foreign policy, 1890-1919? [2005 June]
d. ‘To walk softly but
carry a big stick.’ To what extent is this an
accurate portrayal of Theodore Roosevelt’s conduct of foreign affairs,
1901-1909? [2006 June]
e. Why,
in spite of its stated policy of neutrality, did America enter World War I in
1917? [2002 June]
f. Why, in spite of
President Wilson’s policy of neutrality, did America enter World War I in 1917?
[2006 Nov]
g. How successful in foreign affairs was President Wilson?
[2005 Nov]
h. Why is it that both Congress and the American
people rejected the Versailles peace settlement negotiated by President Wilson?
[2009 June]
i.
Assess
relations between the United States and Europe from 1919 to 1941. [2003 June]
j. To what extent did the
foreign policy of the United States from 1921 to 1941 follow consistent
principles? [2004 June]
k. To what extent did the
foreign policy of the United States from 1921 to 1940 follow consistent
principles? [2010 June]
l. To
what extent were Roosevelt’s policies towards the ‘aggressor states’ between
1933 and 1941 weak and ineffective? [2004 Nov]
m.
To
what extent was American foreign policy ‘isolationist’ between 1920 and 1941?
[2007 June]
n. To what extent was isolationism the key
doctrine of US foreign policy from 1921 to 1941? [2003 June]
o.
To what
extent was isolationism the key doctrine of US foreign policy, 1919–1941? [2008
Nov]
p. Analyze the reasons why the United
States was unable to sustain its policy of neutrality in World War II. [2002
Nov]
q.
‘President
Roosevelt’s war policies from 1940 to 1945 were a mixture of the ruthless
pursuit of US national interests and high-minded idealism.’ To what extent is this a fair judgment? [2007 Nov]
r.
‘Though
always expressed in terms of high moral principles, US foreign policy from 1913
to 1945 was in fact driven by the relentless pursuit of US national interests.’
How accurate is this comment? [2008 June]
s. Why having entered the First World War, did the United
States not join the League of Nations. [2011 June]
Theme
7/Question #8: Social Developments, 1945–68
a. ‘In the 1950s and 1960s
religion permeated every aspect of American life but how far there was a
genuine religious revival remains uncertain.’ Assess the accuracy of this
contention. [2002 Nov]
b. ‘The
apparent religious revival after 1945 was superficial and served mainly to
justify the American way of life.’ Evaluate this contention.
[2006 June]
c. Examine the influence of the
mass media on American society from 1952 to 1968. [2001]
d. Examine the influence of the mass media
on American society from 1952 to 1968. [2004 June]
e. Evaluate the impact
of the mass media on America’s political and social life from 1945 to 1968.
[2007 June]
f. Assess the impact of television on American
society and politics from 1950 to 1968. [2008 June]
g. How
true is it that the quality of life for most Americans rose
dramatically between 1945 and 1961? [2003 June]
h. How true was it that
the quality of life for Americans improved dramatically from 1945 to 1968?
[2009 June]
i.
How far
was increasing national prosperity from 1945 to 1968 shared by all Americans?
[2005 June]
j. Examine
the consequences of the great expansion of higher education in the United
States from 1945 to 1968. [2002 June]
k. Assess the
consequences from 1945 to 1968 of the great expansion of higher education in
the United States. [2006 Nov]
l. Analyze
the reasons for the dramatic change in social attitudes and lifestyles that
occurred in America in the 1960s. [2003 June]
m.
Analyze
the reasons for the dramatic change in social attitudes and lifestyles that
occurred in America in the 1960s. [2009 Nov]
n. How
far is it true to say that there was an ‘urban crisis’ in
America by 1968? [2004 Nov]
o. Account for the
profound changes in the composition and location of the US population in the
period from 1945 to 1968. [2010 June]
p. How much did US society change between 1945 and 1968?
[2007 Nov]
q. Analyze the reasons for the changing roles and status of
women in American society from 1945 to 1968. [2005 Nov]
r.
How far
did the role of women in US society change from 1945 to 1968? [2008 Nov]
s. Why
did a feminist movement emerge in America in the 1960s.
[2011 June]