AP United States History Review #8 Nationalism and Economic Development.
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Transcript of AP United States History Review #8 Nationalism and Economic Development.
![Page 1: AP United States History Review #8 Nationalism and Economic Development.](https://reader035.fdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022070413/5697bfbb1a28abf838ca0f71/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
AP United States History
Review #8
Nationalism and Economic Development
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Effects of the War of 1812
• U.S. gained respect of other nations• Federalist party came to an end• U.S. took steps toward industrial self-
sufficiency • Andrew Jackson and William Henry
Harrison become political leaders• Rise of nationalism• Future of the U.S. lay in the west (Manifest
Destiny)
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Era of Good Feelings
• Described James Monroe’s two terms in office (1817-1825)
• One party in power – Democratic-Republicans
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Sectionalism
• Loyalty to a part of the nation but not the nation as a whole
• Especially true of the interests of the North, South, and West
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James Monroe
• 5th president – 1817-1825
• Supported growing nationalism
• Acquired Florida (Adams-Onis Treaty)
• Missouri Compromise
• Monroe Doctrine
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Cultural Nationalism
• Era of unlimited prosperity
• Westward expansion
• Promoted in art by Gilbert Stuart, Charles Wilson Peale, and John Trumball
• Parson Mason Weems wrote about Washington
• Expanding public education promoted patriotism
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Economic Nationalism
• Protecting U.S. industries and subsidizing internal improvements
• Tariff of 1816 – first protective tariff to protect against British goods. Supported by South and West. New England opposed
• Henry Clay’s American System – protective tariffs (1816), national bank (1816 – Second Bank of United States), internal improvements. First two already in, last would be viewed as unconstitutional.
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Panic of 1819
• Caused by Second Bank of U.S.• Tightened credit to control inflation• State banks closed• Value of money fell• Unemployment, bankruptcies, debtors’ prison • Worst in West – call for land reform, opposition
to BUS, and debtors’ prison• Nationalism shaken
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Decisions of the Marshall Court
• Fletcher v. Peck (1810) – declared a state law unconstitutional
• Dartmouth College v. Woodward – contract for a private corporation could not be altered by the state
• McCulloch v. Maryland – U.S. government had implied powers to create BUS
• Gibbons v. Ogden – federal government controls interstate commerce
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Missouri Compromise (1820)
• Tallmadge amendment– No further slaves in Missouri– Slave children freed at 25Henry clay proposes Missouri Compromise– Missouri a slave state– Maine as free state– No slavery north of 36 30– Preserves the sectional balance– Increased sectionalism
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Rush-Bagot Agreement (1817)
• Limited naval armaments on the Great Lakes b/t US and Great Britain
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Florida Purchase Treaty (1819)
• AKA Adams-Onis Treaty
• Spain gave Florida and all claims to Oregon territory
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Monroe Doctrine (1823)
• British wanted to be in it with us
• Sec. of State John Adams advised against it b/c Britain would restrict U.S. opportunities for further expansion
• Doctrine declared the US was opposed to any foreign intervention in the W. hemisphere
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National (Cumberland) Road
• Maryland to Illinois
• Used federal and state money to build it
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Erie Canal (1825)
• Linked western farmers to eastern markets
in New York
• Canals stimulated trade, improved transportation, and lower food prices
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Robert Fulton
• Steamboat travel
• Made shipping faster and cheaper
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Eli Whitney
• Cotton gin made cotton profitable
• Increase in slavery
• Interchangeable parts
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Samuel Slater
• Established first factory with cotton-spinning machines
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Factory System
• New England
• Ran on water system
• Banking and insurance grew as a result
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Lowell System
• Used women in factories and housed them in dorms
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Unions
• Around by 1790s
• Discontent among factory workers
• Wanted a ten hour work day
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Market Revolution
• Specialized jobs on farms, growth of cities, industrialization, and modern capitalism
• Female labor increased – domestic labor or teaching
• Wages improved for most workers and greater economic opportunities
• Slavery grew as a result of the increased value of slavery