HSTA : Early American Republic

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University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Syllabi Course Syllabi Spring 2-1-2017 HSTA 315.01: Early American Republic Jonathan Hall The University Of Montana Let us know how access to this document benefits you. Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/syllabi Recommended Citation Hall, Jonathan, "HSTA 315.01: Early American Republic" (2017). Syllabi. 4862. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/syllabi/4862 This Syllabus is brought to you for free and open access by the Course Syllabi at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Syllabi by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact scholarworks@mso.umt.edu.

HSTA 315 History of the Early American Republic, 1787-1848 Instructor: Dr. Jonathan Hall Office LA 264 Office Hours: W: 1:30-3:30; or by appointment. jonathan.hall@mso.umt.edu Mailbox located in 256 Liberal Arts Course Description and Goals: Nestled between the American Revolution and the Civil War, the events between 1787 and 1848 have often been overlooked, yet these six decades proved crucial to America s identity and witnessed profound transformations to government, politics, economics, and daily life. Between the inauguration of George Washington and the culmination of the Mexican-American War, the United States population grew by more than five times, and its land area doubled. During these years, Americans debated the future shape of the country and made crucial decisions about democracy and slavery and their limits. In addition, politicians and ordinary citizens weighed in on whether the United States should remain a nation of yeoman farmers or 1

blossom into a buzzing hive of commerce and industry. Westward expansion, cultural upheaval, and economic and technological innovation all combined to make the first half of the nineteenth century one of the most turbulent times in US history as well as one that still has striking repercussions for the present. This course will proceed in a roughly chronological fashion, and we will consider the following key questions: To what extent did the American Revolution and the Constitution secure liberty for all? Did the Constitution succeed in creating a more perfect Union? What were the implications of the rise of democracy for African-Americans, Native Americans, women, and immigrants? Why did slavery vanish in the North but thrive in the South? How did morality and religion manifest themselves in the social and political lives of Americans? How did revolutions in markets, transportation and communication fundamentally alter labor relations and everyday life? How did westward expansion influence national politics? How did nationalism emerge in the early republic? Writing Component: Since this course counts as a intermediate writing course, drafting and revising papers will comprise a significant portion of your final grade. For this course, you will be required to produce approximately sixteen pages of historical writing. You will compose two papers, one of five to six pages in length and one of ten to twelve pages in length. The latter paper will be revised substantially.. At the end of the semester, you will be required to submit electronically (via Moodle) an assignment stripped of your personal information to be used for educational research and assessment of the university s writing program. Your paper will be stored in a database. A random selection of papers will be assessed by a group of faculty and staff using a rubric developed from the following Writing Learning Outcomes: Compose written documents that are appropriate for a given audience or purpose Formulate and express opinions and ideas in writing Use writing to learn and synthesize new concepts Revise written work based on constructive feedback Find, evaluate, and use information effectively Begin to use discipline-specific writing conventions (largely style conventions like APA or MLA) Demonstrate appropriate English language usage 2

This assessment in no way affects either your course grade or your progression at the university. Here s the rubric that will be used to score the papers. Assigned Text, available from The Bookstore at UM: Lee Dugatkin, Mr. Jefferson and the Giant Moose. University of Chicago Press, 2009. Harriet Jacobs. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (any edition). Thomas Dublin. Farm to Factory. Columbia University Press, 1993. Paul Johnson. Sam Patch, the Famous Jumper. Hill and Wang, 2004 Theda Purdue. Cherokee Removal, A Brief History With Documents. Bedford St. Martins, 2016. Amy Greenberg. The Wicked War: Polk, Clay, Lincoln, and the 1846 Invasion of Mexico. Vintage, 2013. Other readings for the course are available on Moodle (Denoted with *). Assignments and Assessment: A. Attendance and informed participation 15 percent B. Weekly Quizzes 15-percent C. Five page paper 15-percent. D. Twelve page paper (rough draft) 10-percent E. Twelve page paper (final draft) 25 percent F. Final Exam 20 percent Grades will be on a plus/minus system with the following breakdown: A (100-93), A- (92.9-90), B+ (89.9-87), B (86.9-83), B- (82.9-80), C+ (79.9-77), C (76.9-73), C- (72.9-70), D+ (69.9-67), D (66.9-63), D- (62.9-60), and F (59.9-0). Assignment Details: Five Page Paper (Due 2-21 or 3-14): You will have the option of writing your paper on one of two assignments based primarily on readings from the course. Twelve Page Paper (Rough Draft due 4-12; Revised draft due 4-28) Take Home Final Exam (Due 5-12): Cumulative exam will consist of short essays and analysis of primary sources. 3

Accessibility and Accommodations: The University of Montana assures equal access to instruction by supporting collaboration between students with disabilities, instructors, and Disability Services for Students (DSS). If you have a disability that requires an accommodation, please let me know as soon as possible. For further information, contact DSS: Lommason Center, 154 Phone: 406-243-2243 Email: dss@umontana.edu A Note on Plagiarism: Plagiarism is defined in the UM Student Conduct Code as representing another person's words, ideas, data, or materials as one's own, a situation that will not be tolerated in this course. Throughout this class, you will be given ample instruction how to conduct historical research, how to paraphrase and quote illustrative material, and how to provide proper citations for all material not your own. Therefore, there is a zero tolerance policy in regards to plagiarism, and any documented cases of plagiarism will result in a failing grade for the class. Course Schedule: The following is tentative please check Moodle for up-to-date assignments. Week I: T (1-24) Introductions R (1-26) Course Themes *Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (excerpts) Week II: T (1-31) Rip Van Winkle s America *Alfred Young, George Robert Twelves Hewes: A Boston Shoemaker and the Memory of the American Revolution R (2-2) The Constitution and the People Out of Doors 4

*Primary sources on ratification of Constitution Week III: T (2-7) Washington: Myth and Memory *Mason Weems, The Life of George Washington (excerpt) R (2-9) Science in the Early Republic Dugatkin, Ch. 1-4 Week IV: T (2-14) Political Crises of the 1790s Dugatkin, Ch. 1-4 R (2-16) The Election of 1800 *Primary sources on election 5

Week V: T (2-21) Jefferson s Empire of Liberty Paper option #1 due R (2-23) The Civil War of 1812 TBD Week VI: T (2-28) Native America in the Early Republic R (3-2) The Economics of Slavery Jacobs, Ch. 1-20 Week VII: T (3-7) The World the Slaves Made Finish Jacobs *James Henry Hammond, Instructions to His Overseer R (3-9) Andrew Jackson and the Rise of American Democracy 6

Week VIII: T (3-14) Film: A Midwife s Tale Paper option #2 due R (3-16) The Market Revolution Read: Dublin, Intro. Ch. 1, 2 ***SPRING BREAK No Class*** T (3-21) R (3-23) Week IX: T (3-28) American Urban Life before the Civil War Finish Dublin R (3-30) Social Mobility Johnson, Sections I and II 7

Week X: T (4-5) Conventions in Historical Writing Johnson, Sections III and IV R (4-7) Citation Discussion Finish Johnson Week XI: T (4-12) Westward Expansion and Sectional Conflict **12 pg. paper due** R (4-14) Indian Removal Purdue, Introduction, section 1 Week XII: T (4-19) Religion and Reform *Primary documents on the Second Great Awakening R (4-21) Westward Expansion and Sectional Conflict, part II Purdue, Sections 4 & 5 8

Week XIII: T (4-26) The Mexican American War Greenberg, first half R (4-28) Women in the Early Republic **Revisions due** Week XIV: T (5-3) Becoming American Read: Greenberg, second half R (5-5) Review; Evaluations Week XV: F 5-12 Take Home Final Exam due by noon 9