Chapter 8. March 4, 1801 “pomp and circumstance” Race mixing Accusations Educated small...

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Jeffersonianism and the Era of Good Feelings, 1801-1824 Chapter 8

Transcript of Chapter 8. March 4, 1801 “pomp and circumstance” Race mixing Accusations Educated small...

Jeffersonianism and the Era of Good Feelings, 1801-

1824

Chapter 8

March 4, 1801

“pomp and circumstance”

Race mixing

Accusations

Educated small farmers

A New President

Jefferson’s Revolution

Dealing with Hamilton’s economic plan

The Alien and Sedition Acts

Reducing Taxes and the national debt

Jeffersonianism

The Judiciary Act of

1801

Federalist Judges

Marbury V Madison

John Marshall

Judicial Review

Fighting the Judicial System

Napoleon Bonaparte

The Louisiana Territory

James Monroe and Robert Livingston

Napoleon’s offer

The “backbone of the nation”

Expansion

Thomas Jefferson

Aaron Burr

George Clinton

Charles Pinckney

Reasons for Republican Victory

The Election of 1804

Lewis and Clark

The Louisiana Purchase

Results

Exploring New Land

The Napoleonic Wars

Aaron Burr

Quids

John Randolph

The Yazoo Land Scandal

A Second Term

Seizing US ships

Impressment

HMS Leonard

USS Chesapeake

Jefferson’s Reaction

Economic woes

The Embargo Act of

1807

Impact of the Embargo

James Madison

The Non Intercourse Act

War Hawks

Economic Woes

Canada

The role of Native Americans

Tecumseh and the Prophet

William Henry Harrison

Tippecanoe

Foreign policy

Madison goes to

War

June 1, 1812

Reasons for declaring war on Britain

The War of 1812

Americans try to take

Canada

Detroit

Oliver Perry

William Henry Harrison

The Battle of the Thames

The War of 1812

The British Offensive

Burning Washington

Baltimore

The British break off the campaign

The War of 1812

The Treaty of Ghent

December 1814

The Battle of New Orleans

Andrew Jackson

The War of 1812

The Hartford

Convention

James Monroe

The Federalist Party

The Era of Good Feelings

The Era of Good Feelings

John Marshall

Dartmouth College V Woodward

McCulloch V Maryland

Interpretations

The Supreme Court

National Harmony

Missouri

Balancing the Senate

The Missouri Compromise (1819-1820)

Results of the compromise

Slavery

Rush-Bagot Treaty

British American Convention

Florida

The Adams-Onis Treaty

The role of Andrew Jackson

Monroe’s Foreign Policy

1823

The Monroe Doctrine

European Affairs

The Western Hemisphere

“unfriendly acts”

Monroe’s Foreign Policy