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Mad, Mon, Ad
James Madison 1809 - 1817
• Non-intercourse Act
• Fletcher v. Peck
• War of 1812
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Click pic for Song of the Battle of New Orleans
Impressment
Tecumseh
Battle of Tippecanoe
Battle of Lake Erie
Battle of Thames
Battle of Ft. McHenry
Hartford Convention
Treaty of Ghent
Battle of New Orleans
Perry Monument,
Put-in-Bay, OH
World’s tallest Doric
Column
(click pic for google maps)
James Monroe 1817 – 1825
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“Era of Good Feelings”
Rush-Bagot Agreement
Convention of 1818
Panic of 1819
Dartmouth College v. Woodward
McCulloch v. Maryland
Adams-Onis Treaty
Missouri Compromise
Monroe Doctrine
Election of 1824 “corrupt bargain”
John Quincy Adams 1825 – 1829
• Gibbons v. Ogden
• 1828 Tariff of Abominations
• Election of 1828
Andrew Jackson 1829 – 1837
• Fletcher v. Peck, (1810) For the first time the
Court struck down a State law as
unconstitutional. A State legislature (in this
case, Georgia) can repeal a previous, corruptly
made law, but not void valid contracts made
under this law.
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• Dartmouth College v. Woodward, (1819)
extended contract rights to corporations and
established the differences between public
and private corporations .
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• McCulloch v. Maryland, (1819). The court stated
the doctrine of implied powers, from the
Necessary and Proper Clause at Article I, section
8. To fulfill its goal, the federal government may
use any means the constitution does not forbid.
State government may in no way hinder the
legitimate action of the federal government
(here, Maryland cannot levy a tax on the Bank of
the United States). The court has varied in time
on the extents of the implied powers with a
markedly narrower reading approximately from
the 1840s to the 1930s).
• Gibbons v. Ogden, (1824) The power to
regulate interstate navigation is granted to
Congress by the Commerce Clause of the
Constitution.
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