Nationalism & Sectionalism ppt
... encouraged nationalism through the tariff, bank, and internal improvements (canals and roads) The tariff encouraged sectionalism when South Carolina threatened to secede b/c it believed the tariff was ...
... encouraged nationalism through the tariff, bank, and internal improvements (canals and roads) The tariff encouraged sectionalism when South Carolina threatened to secede b/c it believed the tariff was ...
PPT015 - Nationalism and Sectionalism
... slavery to the back burner: both sides agreed – though not formally and publicly – to ignore the subject in public for the foreseeable future Neither Southern nor Northern majorities endorsed the key elements Southerners turned from the possibility of eventually accepting the demise of slavery t ...
... slavery to the back burner: both sides agreed – though not formally and publicly – to ignore the subject in public for the foreseeable future Neither Southern nor Northern majorities endorsed the key elements Southerners turned from the possibility of eventually accepting the demise of slavery t ...
CH 15-16 Review
... Terms of the Treaty included: • Mexico recognized Texas as part of the U.S. • Mexico gave up all claim to territory between Nueces and Rio Grande Rivers • Mexico ceded 529,000 square miles of territory ...
... Terms of the Treaty included: • Mexico recognized Texas as part of the U.S. • Mexico gave up all claim to territory between Nueces and Rio Grande Rivers • Mexico ceded 529,000 square miles of territory ...
sectional strife 1850-1851
... Henry Clay and several other old Whig stalwarts presented legislation to settle not only the future of Mexican Cession, but several other sectional issues as well. This legislation was offered in a so-called Omnibus Bill to be accepted or rejected as a package. It included the following: 1) Californ ...
... Henry Clay and several other old Whig stalwarts presented legislation to settle not only the future of Mexican Cession, but several other sectional issues as well. This legislation was offered in a so-called Omnibus Bill to be accepted or rejected as a package. It included the following: 1) Californ ...
Pre Civil War
... Whig leaders Henry Clay and Daniel Webster initially rejoiced when Harrison was elected, for he shared their support of higher tariffs, internal improvements, and a revived Bank of the United States. To their surprise, though, Tyler ruined all their plans. Tyler, a former Democrat, had become a Whig ...
... Whig leaders Henry Clay and Daniel Webster initially rejoiced when Harrison was elected, for he shared their support of higher tariffs, internal improvements, and a revived Bank of the United States. To their surprise, though, Tyler ruined all their plans. Tyler, a former Democrat, had become a Whig ...
Sample
... bait. A patriotic fervor swept the U.S. as American and Mexican forces bravely faced off against each other. Quickly, American forces captured New Mexico and the short-lived California Republic. At war's end, after the U.S. had captured its capital, Mexico surrendered. The hard terms of the deal tha ...
... bait. A patriotic fervor swept the U.S. as American and Mexican forces bravely faced off against each other. Quickly, American forces captured New Mexico and the short-lived California Republic. At war's end, after the U.S. had captured its capital, Mexico surrendered. The hard terms of the deal tha ...
Chapter 17
... Results of the Mexican War? 1. The 17-month war cost $100,000,000 and 13,000+ American lives (mostly of disease). 2. New territories were brought into the Union which forced the explosive issue of SLAVERY to the center of national politics. * Brought in 1 million sq. mi. of land (incl. TX) ...
... Results of the Mexican War? 1. The 17-month war cost $100,000,000 and 13,000+ American lives (mostly of disease). 2. New territories were brought into the Union which forced the explosive issue of SLAVERY to the center of national politics. * Brought in 1 million sq. mi. of land (incl. TX) ...
8.8 Manifest Destiny
... 22. After claiming dictatorship of Mexico, this former general and president personally led the fight against Texan Independence, killing every man at the Alamo and angering Americans into all out war. 24. Receiving a Spanish land grant for recruiting 300 American families to settle in Texas, this e ...
... 22. After claiming dictatorship of Mexico, this former general and president personally led the fight against Texan Independence, killing every man at the Alamo and angering Americans into all out war. 24. Receiving a Spanish land grant for recruiting 300 American families to settle in Texas, this e ...
Did the Benefits Outweigh the Negative Consequences?
... as the settlers did little to adhere to the provisions mandated by the Mexican government for settlementCatholicism, no slavery, and Mexican citizenship. Texans won their independence from Mexico in 1836 and promptly asked the US for annexation. Controversy grew over Texas, its annexation, and its b ...
... as the settlers did little to adhere to the provisions mandated by the Mexican government for settlementCatholicism, no slavery, and Mexican citizenship. Texans won their independence from Mexico in 1836 and promptly asked the US for annexation. Controversy grew over Texas, its annexation, and its b ...
File - Mrs. Phy-Daly
... It was in this heated political environment that Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas began a series of debates in an effort to secure the Illinois Senator position. During these debates the two Republican candidates both revealed themselves to be anti-slavery candidates and the Republican Party b ...
... It was in this heated political environment that Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas began a series of debates in an effort to secure the Illinois Senator position. During these debates the two Republican candidates both revealed themselves to be anti-slavery candidates and the Republican Party b ...
Growth and Industry - Cherokee County Schools
... Mexico was angry with the US for annexing Texas. President Polk still believed in Manifest Destiny, so he sends General Zachary Taylor to the Texas border. Polk also sends John Slidell to Mexico to settle disputes over the border between Mexico and US, and the purchase of California and New Mexico. ...
... Mexico was angry with the US for annexing Texas. President Polk still believed in Manifest Destiny, so he sends General Zachary Taylor to the Texas border. Polk also sends John Slidell to Mexico to settle disputes over the border between Mexico and US, and the purchase of California and New Mexico. ...
US History/Westward Expansion and Manifest Destiny
... Indian Removal and Massacre The United States, as it expanded to the west, forcibly removed or killed many Native Americans from their lands as it violated the treaties and Indian rights which both parties had agreed upon. In this way, the concerns of white landowners were considered above the inter ...
... Indian Removal and Massacre The United States, as it expanded to the west, forcibly removed or killed many Native Americans from their lands as it violated the treaties and Indian rights which both parties had agreed upon. In this way, the concerns of white landowners were considered above the inter ...
APUSH Final Exam Review Project
... boundaries over a vast area, that included but was not restricted to the continent of North America 22. Mexican Cession - a historical name in the United States for the region of the present day southwestern United States that Mexico ceded to the U.S. in 1848, excluding the areas east of the Rio Gra ...
... boundaries over a vast area, that included but was not restricted to the continent of North America 22. Mexican Cession - a historical name in the United States for the region of the present day southwestern United States that Mexico ceded to the U.S. in 1848, excluding the areas east of the Rio Gra ...
civil war dbq - Stanwich School
... Compromise of 1850 introduced into Congress by Henry Clay was designed to settle the slavery question arising from the new western lands acquired after the Mexican War. The Compromise gave some satisfaction to both the North and the South. The bill passed after it was divided into several parts: Cal ...
... Compromise of 1850 introduced into Congress by Henry Clay was designed to settle the slavery question arising from the new western lands acquired after the Mexican War. The Compromise gave some satisfaction to both the North and the South. The bill passed after it was divided into several parts: Cal ...
Statehood for Texas
... Ended the Mexican War. Mexican Cession: the Southwest is claimed by the United States. Mexico accepts Texas as part of the United States, and the United States paid $15 million to Mexico. The Rio Grande River is the border of Texas. ...
... Ended the Mexican War. Mexican Cession: the Southwest is claimed by the United States. Mexico accepts Texas as part of the United States, and the United States paid $15 million to Mexico. The Rio Grande River is the border of Texas. ...
US History/Westward Expansion and Manifest Destiny
... Indian Removal and Massacre The United States, as it expanded to the west, forcibly removed or killed many Native Americans from their lands as it violated the treaties and Indian rights which both parties had agreed upon. In this way, the concerns of white landowners were considered above the inter ...
... Indian Removal and Massacre The United States, as it expanded to the west, forcibly removed or killed many Native Americans from their lands as it violated the treaties and Indian rights which both parties had agreed upon. In this way, the concerns of white landowners were considered above the inter ...
Part IV-Essay Questions
... 12. Native-born Protestant Americans distrusted and resented the Irish mostly because these immigrants a. were poor. b. were thought to love alcohol. c. were Roman Catholic. d. frequently became police officers. 13. German immigrants in the early nineteenth century tended to a. settle in eastern ind ...
... 12. Native-born Protestant Americans distrusted and resented the Irish mostly because these immigrants a. were poor. b. were thought to love alcohol. c. were Roman Catholic. d. frequently became police officers. 13. German immigrants in the early nineteenth century tended to a. settle in eastern ind ...
Unit 3 Process Work #4
... Many Americans in Mexico had lost their property or had been injured because the Mexican government could not keep order. Mexico had paid some of the claims of these Americans but stopped such payments when Texas was admitted to the Union. That event brought the two nations to the verge of war. The ...
... Many Americans in Mexico had lost their property or had been injured because the Mexican government could not keep order. Mexico had paid some of the claims of these Americans but stopped such payments when Texas was admitted to the Union. That event brought the two nations to the verge of war. The ...
Pre-Civil War and Mental Map
... Democratic candidate popular with Southerners Government should allow slavery everywhere in the West. ...
... Democratic candidate popular with Southerners Government should allow slavery everywhere in the West. ...
APUSH: The Crisis of Union
... • How were the values and platform of the Free Soil Party different from that of the abolitionists? • What was the significance of the Dred Scott decision in the developing sectional split? • What were the main factors driving continental expansion in the antebellum era? • How did the spirit of “man ...
... • How were the values and platform of the Free Soil Party different from that of the abolitionists? • What was the significance of the Dred Scott decision in the developing sectional split? • What were the main factors driving continental expansion in the antebellum era? • How did the spirit of “man ...
Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy Chapter 17 1841-1848
... Texas became a leading issue in the presidential campaign of 1844. The Democrats were proexpansion and were for annexing Texas. President Tyler signed a resolution in 1845 that invited Texas to become the 28th state in America ...
... Texas became a leading issue in the presidential campaign of 1844. The Democrats were proexpansion and were for annexing Texas. President Tyler signed a resolution in 1845 that invited Texas to become the 28th state in America ...
Terms and People
... Indians who harbored runaway slaves. •Sec. of State John Quincy Adams guided by nationalism- makes treaties with Britain on the Great Lakes. •Spain cedes Florida to US in Adams-Onís Treaty – •Gives up claim to Oregon Territory. • In 1819, Missouri sought admission as a ______________________. •Accep ...
... Indians who harbored runaway slaves. •Sec. of State John Quincy Adams guided by nationalism- makes treaties with Britain on the Great Lakes. •Spain cedes Florida to US in Adams-Onís Treaty – •Gives up claim to Oregon Territory. • In 1819, Missouri sought admission as a ______________________. •Accep ...
Statehood for Texas - Pleasant Grove Middle School
... The U.S. believed Texas border was at the __________. Mexico said the border was the ___________, since they didn’t recognize the Treaties of Velasco. The dispute was also about the U.S. wanted to gain control of California and all the land between Texas and the Pacific ...
... The U.S. believed Texas border was at the __________. Mexico said the border was the ___________, since they didn’t recognize the Treaties of Velasco. The dispute was also about the U.S. wanted to gain control of California and all the land between Texas and the Pacific ...
Nationalism v Sectionalism PPT
... create a North-South sectional divide • Henry Clay hammered out an agreement in Congress whereby Missouri would be permitted to enter as a slave state and Maine would enter as a free state (to keep the balance between North and South in the U.S. Senate) • The Compromise deal also identified the sout ...
... create a North-South sectional divide • Henry Clay hammered out an agreement in Congress whereby Missouri would be permitted to enter as a slave state and Maine would enter as a free state (to keep the balance between North and South in the U.S. Senate) • The Compromise deal also identified the sout ...
Lesson: Prelude to the Civil War Author: Joe Waite Grade Level
... was forced to give up claims to the New Mexico Territory, but was given control of the Texas Panhandle and cash as compensation. Rather than say that states that might be formed out of the New Mexico and Utah Territories would automatically be called slave states, it was decided that those new state ...
... was forced to give up claims to the New Mexico Territory, but was given control of the Texas Panhandle and cash as compensation. Rather than say that states that might be formed out of the New Mexico and Utah Territories would automatically be called slave states, it was decided that those new state ...
Compromise of 1850
The Compromise of 1850 was a package of five separate bills passed by the United States Congress in September 1850, which defused a four-year political confrontation between slave and free states regarding the status of territories acquired during the Mexican-American War (1846–1848). The compromise, drafted by Whig Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky and brokered by Clay and Democratic Senator Stephen Douglas of Illinois, reduced sectional conflict. Controversy arose over the Fugitive Slave provision. The Compromise was greeted with relief, although each side disliked specific provisions.Texas surrendered its claim to New Mexico, as well as its claims north of the Missouri Compromise Line. It retained the Texas Panhandle and the federal government took over the state's public debt. California was admitted as a free state with its current boundaries.The South prevented adoption of the Wilmot Proviso that would have outlawed slavery in the new territories, and the new Utah Territory and New Mexico Territory were allowed, under the principle of popular sovereignty, to decide whether to allow slavery within their borders. In practice, these lands were generally unsuited to plantation agriculture and their settlers were uninterested in slavery. The slave trade (but not slavery altogether) was banned in Washington D.C.The Compromise became possible after the sudden death of President Zachary Taylor, who, although a slaveowner, had favored excluding slavery from the Southwest. Whig leader Henry Clay designed a compromise, which failed to pass in early 1850, due to opposition by both pro-slavery southern Democrats, led by John C. Calhoun, and anti-slavery northern Whigs. Upon Clay's instruction, Douglas then divided Clay's bill into several smaller pieces and narrowly won their passage over the opposition of those with stronger views on both sides.