Events in the United States from 1790 to 1850 2011-2012 USVA SOL Part V.
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Transcript of Events in the United States from 1790 to 1850 2011-2012 USVA SOL Part V.
![Page 1: Events in the United States from 1790 to 1850 2011-2012 USVA SOL Part V.](https://reader035.fdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022070403/56649f285503460f94c4127e/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Events in the United States from 1790 to 1850
2011-2012 USVA SOL Part V
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This man created the Cotton Gin
and Interchangeable parts
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Eli Whitney
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The presidential election of 1800, won by, was the first American presidential election in which
power was peacefully transferred from one political party to another.
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Thomas Jefferson
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Led by John Adams and Alexander Hamilton, this party typically believed in a strong national government and commercial
economy. They were supported by bankers and business interests in
the Northeast.
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The Federalist Party
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Led by Thomas Jefferson, this political party believed in a weak
national government and an agricultural economy. They were supported by farmers, artisans,
and frontier settlers in the South.
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Democratic-Republican Party
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These two US Supreme Court cases are the foundation
blocks of the Supreme Court’s authority to mediate
disagreements between branches of governments, levels of government, and
competing business interests.
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McCulloch v. Maryland and
Gibbons v. Ogden
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• 1803 agreement with France to buy all of Louisiana (the French name for all of the land in the Mississippi River Valley) for $15 million
• Doubled the size of the United States• Negotiated by James Monroe• Approved by Thomas Jefferson in a
massive departure from his usual adherence to strict construction
• Explored by Lewis and Clark
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Louisiana Purchase
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• Two explorers sent by Thomas Jefferson to map and document land acquired in the Louisiana Purchase
• Expedition lasted from 1804 – 1806• Journeyed west from St. Louis all the way
to the Pacific Ocean and back• Received assistance from Indian guide
Sacagawea (who is commemorated on the new dollar coins)
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Lewis and Clark
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fourth president of the United States
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James Madison
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• War fought between the United States and Britain from 1812-1814
• Fought over trade rights• Called Mr. Madison’s War by critics, who
blamed President James Madison for the war’s failures; led critics to meet at the Hartford Convention
• Occasion for the composition of “The Star Spangled Banner”
• Ended on a high note for Americans after the Battle of New Orleans
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War of 1812
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• Written by Francis Scott Key during the War of 1812 as a battle took place over Fort McHenry near Baltimore
• Later adopted as the National Anthem of the United Sates of America
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“Star Spangled Banner”
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The treaty that ended the War of 1812
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Treaty of Ghent
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• Fought in 1814• Last battle in the War of 1812• Fought two weeks after the British
and the Americans had agreed to a treaty.
• Massively outnumbered Americans routed an immense British army while sustaining almost no casualties.
• Vaulted General Andrew Jackson to national fame
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Battle of New Orleans
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As part of the plan known as the American System, President Madison proposed this tariff.
The tariff increased the cost of foreign-made goods and thus make American goods more attractive.
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Tariff of 1816
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5th President of the United States
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• Nickname for the years during during James Monroe's presidency
• Known this way because America was at peace and had only one political party (the federalists having dissolved)
• Not an entirely accurate moniker for a period with its share of problems, including those that led to the issuance of the Monroe Doctrine
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Era of good feeling
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• Foreign policy position during James Monroe’s presidency
• Declared that the United States would not brook European interference in affairs of the Americas, just as the United States would not muddle in European affairs
• Greeted by most European nations with silence, which the United States interpreted as acquiescence
• Later served as the basis for the Roosevelt Corollary
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Monroe Doctrine
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Under this compromise, Maine was admitted as a free state
and Missouri as a slave state?
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Missouri Compromise
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Treaty that settled a border dispute between Spain and US.Spain handed over Florida to
the United States in the treaty.
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Adams-Onís Treaty
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6th President of the United States
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John Quincy Adams
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• Nickname for the back-room agreement that allowed John Quincy Adams to win the presidential election of 1824
• When none of the four candidates received a majority of the votes in the electoral college, the final decision fell to the house of representatives
• Henry clay, who had received the fewest votes of the four candidates, threw his support to the second-place finisher, John Quincy Adams, giving Adams enough votes to defeat the first-place finisher, Andrew Jackson
• Adams then appointed Clay to be his secretary of state, a powerful post from which the last four presidents had advanced to the presidency
• Jackson’s supporters cried foul, labeling the machinations the “corrupt bargain”
• The outcry weakened Adams and Clay, preventing Adams from accomplishing any thing as president, and preventing clay from mounting a credible campaign to become president
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“corrupt bargain”
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Who became the 7th president of the United States? He brought in the “Age of the Common Man”
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Andrew Jackson
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Andrew Jackson personified the “democratic spirit” of the age by
challenging the economic elite and rewarding campaign supporters with public office. What is this known as?
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Spoils System
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In 1830, this law ordered all Native Americans to move west of the
Mississippi river?
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Indian Removal Act
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• Name for the forced removal of the Cherokee tribe of Native Americans from North Carolina to Oklahoma by the United States Army in the 1830’s
• The Cherokee were forced to walk 1,200 miles west through the winter
• More than 25 percent died along the way
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Trail of Tears
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In response to the actions taken by president Andrew Jackson
during his time in office this newly formed party wanted to limit the
power of the president?
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The Whig party
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John C. Calhoun opposed the Tariff of 1832. He called it this,
because he believed that it hurt the South.
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Tariff of Abominations
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Jackson viewed this as an agent of the wealthy and elite – a group he
deeply distrusted. He vowed to destroy it
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• 1832 crisis that tested the power of the federal government as designed by the Constitution against states’ rights
• Precipitated by congressional renewal of a high tariff on imported goods
• South Carolina passed an ordinance of nullification, declaring the tariff void and threatening secession if the federal government attempted to collect tariff revenue in South Carolina
• President Andrew Jackson, who himself supported lowering the tariff, declared nullification “incompatible with the existence of the Union” and sought permission from Congress to use federal troops to enforce the tariff law id necessary
• In this effort, South Carolina drew heavily on the example of Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
• Andrew Jackson’s response set some precedent for Abraham Lincoln’s reaction to secession at the beginning of the Civil War
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Nullification Crisis
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The National Bank
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The belief that Americans were meant to control the West.
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manifest destiny
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In 1831, this Virginia slave named led a violent slave
rebellion.He and his followers attacked
five plantations.They killed several people.
Eventually they were captured and executed.
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Nat Turner
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One of the most famous battles of the Texas revolution occurred at
the a mission in San Antonio.In February of 1836, a small group of American forces tried to defend it from Mexican troops. What was
the name of the Mission?
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Alamo
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When the 31st Congress opened in December 1849, what did they accuse the North of failing to
enforce?
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Fugitive Slave Act of 1793
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Kentucky congressmen Henry Clay proposed this compromise which
aimed to please the North, by calling for California to be admitted as a free state.
It attempted to satisfy the South, by calling for a stricter fugitive
slave law.This law required Northerners to return escaped slaves to their
masters.
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Compromise of 1850
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allowed the territories to decide for themselves whether to be a slave or
free state?
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popular sovereignty
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In 1852, novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe that showed the horrors of
slavery. The book prompted Northern abolitionists to increase their protests
against the Fugitive Slave Act.Southerners criticized the book as an
attack on their way of life.
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Uncle Tom’s Cabin
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abolition
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Famous abolitionist publisher of the newspaper The
Liberator?
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William Lloyd Garrison
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The term which means the freeing of the slaves?
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emancipation
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Well known African American abolitionist who wrote and
spoke powerfully in favor of achieving emancipation through non violence?
He founded an antislavery newspaper called The North
Star.
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Frederick Douglass
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This party split over the issue of slavery
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Whig Party
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This proposed bill banned slavery in the new territories
acquired from Mexico?
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Wilmont Proviso
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Was the Wilmot Proviso passed?
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NO
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The Southern states threatened to secede, what does that mean?
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To leave the union
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This law required harsh punishment for escaped slaves – and for anyone
who helped them.
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Fugitive Slave Act
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These laws banned the imprisonment of escaped slaves;
they also guaranteed that escaped slaves would have jury trials?
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personal liberty laws
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This was a secret network of volunteers who hid fugitive slaves on
their dangerous journey north to freedom?
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Underground Railroad
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This escaped slave, was a famous leader of the Underground
Railroad?
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Harriet Tubman
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This became law in 1854. It repealed the Missouri Compromise line, giving people in Kansas and Nebraska the choice whether to allow slavery in
their states or not “popular sovereignty”.
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The Kansas-Nebraska Act
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A result of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, fighting erupted in Kansas as
pro- and anti-slavery forces battled each other. The territory
acquired the nickname
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Bleeding Kansas
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a fierce opponent of slavery who triggered dozens of violent actions throughout the Kansas territory by
killing five people in a raid
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John Brown
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In this 1857 court case a slave who had lived in the free state of Illinois and the free territory of
Wisconsin before moving back to the slave state of Missouri, had
appealed to the Supreme Court in hopes of being granted his
freedom. The court ruled that slaves were considered property according to the Constitution.
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Dred Scott v. Sanford
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In 1859, after setting off “Bleeding Kansas” he tried to start a slave rebellion by
attacking a federal arsenal in Harpers Ferry, Virginia.
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John Brown