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TEST BANK
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James W. Fraser
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Comprehensive Test Bank for Instructors and
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Students
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© James W. Fraser
All rights reserved. Reproduction or distribution without permission is prohibited
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©STUDYSTREAM
, CONTENTS
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PART 1 Contact and Exploration, 1491–1607
1. The World before 1492 1
2. First Encounters, First Conquests, 1492–1607 24
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PART 2 Settlements Old and New, 1607–1754
3. Settlements, Alliances, and Resistance, 1607–1718 48
4. Creating the Culture of British North America, 1689–1754 73
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PART 3 A New Birth of Freedom—Creating the United States of America,
1754–1800
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5. The Making of a Revolution, 1754–1783 99
6. Creating a Nation, 1783–1788 124
7. Practicing Democracy, 1789–1800 149
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PART 4 Crafting a Nation, People, Land, and a National Identity, 1800–1848
8. Creating a New People, Expanding the Country, 1801–1823 174
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9. New Industries, New Politics, 1815–1828 203
10. Democracy in the Age of Andrew Jackson, 1828–1844 231
11. Manifest Destiny: Expanding the Nation, 1830–1853 259
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PART 5 Expansion, Separation, and a New Union, 1844–1877
12. Living in a Nation of Changing Lands, Changing Faces,
Changing Expectations, 1831–1854 288
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13. The Politics of Separation, 1850–1861 308
14. And the War Came: The Civil War, 1861–1865 327
15. Reconstruction, 1865–1877 348
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, PART 6 Becoming an Industrial World Power—Costs, Benefits, and
Responses, 1865–1914
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16. Conflict in the West, 1865–1912 367
17. The Gilded Age: Building a Technological and Industrial Giant
and a New Social Order, 1876–1913 388
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18. Responses to Industrialism, Responses to Change, 1877–1914 407
19. Progressive Movements, Progressive Politics, 1879–1917 424
PART 7 War, Prosperity, and Depression, 1890–1945
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20. Foreign Policy and War in a Progressive Era, 1890–1919 445
21. A Unique, Prosperous, and Discontented Time, 1919–1929 464
22. Living in Hard Times, 1929–1939 486
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23. Living in a World at War, 1939–1945 505
PART 8 Fears, Joys, and Limits, 1945–1980
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24. The World the War Created, 1945–1952 531
25. Complacency and Change, 1952–1965 551
26. Lives Changed, 1961–1968 572
27. Rights, Reaction, and Limits, 1968–1980 592
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PART 9 Certainty, Uncertainty, and New Beginnings, 1980 to the Present
28. The Reagan Revolution, 1980–1989 615
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29. A New World Order, 1989–2001 635
30. Entering a New Time, 2001–to the Present 654
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, By the People: A History of the United States (Fraser)
Chapter 1 The World Before 1492
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1) While there is great debate about just when the FIRST Americans migrated from Asia to
North America, modern anthropologists agree that the following made the trip possible:
A) ice holding so much water in glaciers, making it possible to walk from Siberia across what is
now the Bering Sea into North America and then down through passageways in the glaciers.
B) large boats facilitating transoceanic contact between the Jomon culture of Northeast Asia and
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the Valdivia culture of Ecuador.
C) an underground tunnel connecting the northern tip of Asia in Siberia and North America
making the earliest American migration possible.
D) large boats facilitating transoceanic contact between Polynesians in modern American Samoa
or Tonga and the Pacific coast of modern California.
Answer: A
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Question Title: TB_01_01_The Peopling of North America_Understand the Connections_LO 1.1
Learning Objective: 1.1
Topic: The Peopling of North America
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
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Difficulty Level: 2 –Moderate
2) When does geological evidence indicate that various peoples were living in every part of
North America and South America?
A) 36,000 years ago
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B) 32,000 years ago
C) 25,000 years ago
D) 14,000 years ago
Answer: D
Question Title: TB_01_02_The Peopling of North America_Remember the Facts_LO 1.1
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Learning Objective: 1.1
Topic: The Peopling of North America
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Difficulty Level: 1 – Easy
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