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Transcript
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MSL Study Guide: American History I
New Nation
Washington’s Presidency
Whiskey Rebellion:
Washington used federal troops to end farmers rebellion
Proof that a stronger federal gov’t had been established (National troops stopped the rebellion
rather than a local militia).
Jay’s Treaty + Pickney’s Treaty(trade in New Orleans…expand use of Miss. R.)
Jay’s Treaty: avoided war from Britain, eliminated the British threats to the security of the US
with the British agreeing to abandon their military forts in the west
Farewell Address: No foreign entanglements and No political parties
Washington warned against the formation of alliances with foreign nations and the formation of
political parties
US should avoid permanent, entangling alliances.
Hamilton & Federalist vs Jefferson & Democratic-Republicans
Hamilton & Federalist believed in “loose interpretation” of the Constitution
Hamilton favored Federal power: Federal Banks and Federal Debt
Democrat Republicans believed in a “Strict Interpretation” of Constitution
Jefferson argued for more State power: state debt & banks
Jefferson thought that the National Bank was an unconstitutional act that unnecessarily
strengthened federal power
Hamilton’s Economic Plan:
excise tax on whiskey, creation of a National Bank, and Federal Debt from the assumption of the
states’ debt from the Revolutionary War
Hamilton’s financial plan created the most tension b/w the North and the South: the federal gov’t
would assume state debt from foreign nations
Hamilton gained support for his plan to have the federal gov’t pay off foreign and domestic debts
after the Revolutionary War by promising the South to move the Capital to the South
(Washington D.C.)
Adams Presidency
XYZ Affair: French diplomats required payment to talk with US diplomats
Alien and Sedition Act – limit freedom of speech
Federalist passed to limit speech against gov’t and limit immigration, hurt DemocraticRepublican party since they were not the majority party (Specifically designed to limit the
political participation of recent immigrants in the late 1790s)
Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions (written by Jefferson and James Madison) had a lasting
impact on the US in that they introduced the “Doctrine of Nullification” in which states refuse to
follow federal laws they feel are in violation of the Constitution
Both the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions and the SC Exposition and Protest dealt with states
having the right to nullify laws considered to be considered to be unconstitional
Midnight Judges- Adams appoints Federalist the last night of his presidency
Jefferson becomes next president and Madison never sends several of the appoints…Supreme
Court decides in Marbury v Madison
Jefferson’s Presidency
Election of 1800: Hamilton votes for Jefferson, Aaron Burr looses (This election was considered
a “political revolution” because political power transferred from one party to the next for the first
time)
Hamilton vs. Aaron Burr… famous duel that Hamilton is killed
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Property ownership was a requirement for voting prior to 1800
Louisiana Purchase 1803
Jefferson unsure he had the power to buy the land from France since he had a “strict
interpretation” of Constitution…it did not mention the power
Objective of the Lewis and Clark expedition: map out and explore the territory of the Louisiana
Purchase…Sacagawea –Indian guide
Napoleon in Europe: War b/w France and GB continues
Embargo Act of 1807- stopped foreign trade, meant to avoid war by preventing impressments of
sailors, keep US out of war from GB & France (Jefferson wanted to stop Europe’s impressment
of US sailors)
Federalist strongly opposed Jefferson’s Embargo Act because it hurt America more than Britain,
it was a economic disaster for Americans dependent on foreign trade,
Federalist opposed b/c it hurt New England seamen & merchants
President Madison and War of 1812
Causes: War Hawks and Impressment
Foreign policy prior to the War of 1812: British violations of the neutrality of American ships
(Impressment)
War Hawks pushed for war between U.S. and G.B.
John Calhoun, Henry Clay, and Daniel Webster
British Impressment: captured and forced US sailors to work on their ships
Westward Expansion: conflicts b/w US and GB in western territories
War of 1812 Battles:
Low Point: Burning of Washington, GB destroys US capital city
Victories: Lake Erie (Admiral Perry victorious) & Horseshoe Bend(Jackson)
Battle of New Orleans: after treaty signed, Andrew Jackson new Hero
Treaty of Ghent—peace b/w GB and US same as before the war, nothing won/loss
Native Americans
Prior to 1820, the primary conflict between whites and Indians was the use of land
Battle of Fallen Timbers: General “Mad” Anthony Wayne defeats Tecumseh and Little
Turtle…Treaty of Greenville signed Natives pushed in NW Ohio only
Tecumseh gone but his Prophet defeated at Battle of Tippecanoe, last major conflict in the East
Sectionalism, Nationalism, & Reform
President Monroe and Nationalism
Voting before 1820: only white land property owners
By 1820, landless farmers obtained suffrage (right to vote)
Removing property requirements for voting was a political issue for apprentices and tenant
farmers
Sectionalism: division b/w North and South, growing cause of Civil War
Points of Tension: slavery, agrarian economy vs. industrial economy, state rights vs. power of the
federal gov’t
Industrial Revolution: creates differences b/w north and south
Two Major Issues by mid-1800s: slavery and state rights
Henry Clay’s American System
Program for transportation projects, a protective tariff, and a national bank
Henry Clay: “Great Compromiser”…helps easy sectionalism in US
National Road, Erie Canal, Tariff of 1816
Erie Canal and Robert Fulton’s steam engine: helps NY city replaces Baltimore as major port in
US
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Nationalism: Supreme Court Cases
Chief Justice Marshall: empowered national government through decisions
Marbury v. Madison = (power of Judicial Review), Gibbons v. Ogden, & McCulloch v.
Maryland: all 3 secured the power to Federal gov’t
Nationalism and Foreign/Domestic Policy
Adams-Onis Treaty: gained Spanish Florida and claims to Oregon
Monroe Doctrine: warned European Powers that the US considered the Western Hemisphere
within its sphere of influence
Nationalism in Literature and Art:
Hudson River School for the Arts- focused on American scenic beauty as being superior than that
of Europe
Washington Irving, Edgar Allen Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and James Fennimore Cooper:
writers created distinct American literature
US painters offered affordable portraits of US landscapes to the public
Webster’s Dictionary (1806) English to American language
Missouri Compromise 1820
attempts to solve slavery issue in W. Territories
Slavery prohibited north of the 36, 30 parallel in the Louisiana Purchase Territory
Maine admitted as a free state and Missouri a slave state
Henry Clay: “Great Compromiser”
Jackson’s Presidency
Adams vs. Jackson 1824, Jackson looses,House votes for Adams/Jackson wins next
Log Cabin President and Spoils System
1st Log Cabin President... “common man” appeal
Spoils System example: loyal supporter given gov’t job as a reward
Indian Removal Act 1830
Allowed white settlement of Indian lands: Cherokee people/5 civilized tribes
Worchester v. Georgia: sided with Cherokee but Jackson said, “Marshall has made his decision,
now let him enforce it.”
Bank of the United States (BUS)
Jackson wanted to do away with the National Bank in favor of state level “pet banks” that ended
up printing excessive amounts of money, creating a Recession and after the Panic of 1837
South Carolina Nullification Crisis
South Carolina challenged the US authority on the issue of the tariff act of 1828 and 1832…
South called it the “Tariff of Abominations” b/c it helped the North more than the South
President Jackson sent federal troops to S.C. to end the Nullification Crisis
Reforms in societies and the arts
2nd Great Awakening – 19th century religious movement in which individual responsibility for
seeking salvation was emphasized, along with the need for personal and social improvement
Reforms: Education: Horace Mann …Prison and Mentally Ill: Dorthea Dix
Women’s Rights: early 1800s
Seneca Falls Convention: first women’s rights convention… “All men and Women are created
Equal”… Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony
Sojourner Truth: “Ain’t I a Woman” speech
Abigail Adams had asked her husband (John Adams) to remember the ladies when they were
writing the Constitution
Abolitionist: movement against slavery,
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William Lloyd Garrison: editor of the “Liberator” newspaper against slavery; it increased
sectionalism
Garrison angered Southerners by condemning slavery on moral grounds and demanding
immediate emancipation and racial equality without compensation to slave owners
Transcendentalism: Literary movement focus on: Nature, Truth, Individualism
Civil Disobedience: Thoreau—impacted Gandhi and MLK
Famous Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau
Religions impact on debate of slavery: Southern women got involved in the abolition movement
Expansion
New Nation and Texas
Texas’s Independence
Austin: empressario – sells land, put in prison Mexican leader Santa Anna
“Remember the Alamo” Davy Crockett and Jim Bowie die defending a fort, all are killed, no
prisoners, becomes the war cry for Texas freedom fighters
Sam Houston defeats Santa Anna at the Battle of San Jacinto
Texas gains independence and becomes the “Lone Star Republic”
The annexation of Texas caused sectional feelings because it might become a slave state.
President Tyler adds Texas to the Union last days of his presidency
Mexican American War
Tyler to Polk Presidency
54, 40 or Fight: Oregon Territory
Northern boundary of US peacefully decided at 49th parallel
Polk, election in 1844: his campaign appealed to both the North and the South b/c he supported
territorial expansion
Manifest Destiny- America has a destiny and right, by God, to expand from the Atlantic Ocean
to the Pacific Ocean
Mexican-American War
President Polk favors expansion of US
The outcome of the Mexican-American War increased sectional tensions throughout the 1850s
because territorial expansion led to debates about the extension of slavery into the new areas.
Wilmont Proviso – Increased sectionalism: stated that any land taken from the war would be free
territories, no slavery (Failed to pass Congress)
Henry David Thoreau was jailed for refusing to pay taxes for a war which he believed supported
the expansion of slavery westward. This motivated him to write “Civil Disobedience”
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
New Mexico, Arizona, Cali., Utah, and Nevada gained by the US, Mexico lost ½ its land, US
paid 15 million
Result: increased sectionalism and tension between North and South because of slavery question,
large tracts of land would be open to slavery
Territorial expansion led to intense debates about the extension of slavery in the new areas
Gadsden Purchase: US paid 10 million for small piece of land set final Southern border and build
transcontinental railroal
Slavery in America
Middle Passage and Slave Trade from Africa to America
Underground Railroad secret transportation to help slaves escape North
Harriet Tubman secretly returned to the South 19 times to help free slaves
Abolition Movement Leaders—end slavery
Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglas, and William Lloyd Garrison
Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Autobiography of Frederick Douglas
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Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” which showed Northerners the
horrors of slavery: “so you’re the little woman who wrote the book that made this great
war”
 The Quakers believed that Gods “inner light” shined in everyone
Economy of the South: plantations and cotton
Cotton Gin help expand slavery become a thriving institution by 1820
Invented by Eli Whitney
Because of the Cotton Gin, it was profitable and desirable to expand slavery further west
and south.
Crisis, Civil War, and Reconstruction
Sectionalism and Division
Compromise of 1850
 California admitted as a free state, Utah and New Mexico Territories would decide slavery by
Popular Sovereignty -people have power to decide/vote
 Slave Trade abolished in Washington D.C.
 Extension of slavery westward increases sectionalism
 Daniel Webster, “state rights and liberty, one and inseparable.”
 Fugitive Slave Law: enabled slaveholders to recapture slaves who had fled, required free states to
help capture and return escaped slaves
 South believed that slavery, its way of life –was threatened
Dred Scott Decision:
 Dred Scott vs. Sandford: regardless of location, slaves were not citizens and had no right to sue in
the U.S. courts
 Supreme Court Decision said that Congress had no power to deny slavery in the territories—
Declared Missouri Compromise Unconstitutional
Bleeding Kansas
 Kansas-Nebraska Act: Violence in Kansas (1854-55) symbolized the growing sectional division
in the US because it represented a struggle between pro-slavery and free-soil advocates over the
extension of slavery
 Kansas-Nebraska Act led to bloodshed: the legislation left the issue of slavery to be determined
by popular sovereignty, so pro-slavery and anti-slavery radicals clashed over the issue
Harpers Ferry
 John Brown, Harpers Ferry, Virginia: he hoped to steal weapons from a federal arsenal for use in
a slave revolt (this renewed fears of slave revolts throughout the South).
 John Brown hanged: The North was shocked at the Southern decision to hang Brown, The South
was shocked that the North didn’t realize that Brown tried to kill them
Political Parties
 Know-Nothings opposed immigration, Nativist-support people born in US
 Democrat Party split between North and South on slavery issue
 Republicans: new party, against slavery for territories and new states, formed from Whigs, FreeSoilers, and Northern Democrats
Lincoln v. Douglas debates
 Freeport Doctrine- Douglas’s argument for Popular Sovereignty
 Lincoln lost election but gained a reputation as a strong Republican candidate for the Presidency
in 1860 Election
Election of 1860: Lincoln and S.C. Secession
 South Carolina warned they would secede if Lincoln was elected
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Southern states seceded b/c they thought it was only a matter of time before Lincoln & the
Republicans would move to abolish slavery and they wanted to protect their state sovereignty
Please remember that the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, the Hartford Convention, and the
Webster-Hayne Debate all dealt with the issue of states’ rights.
Lincoln argued that secession was illegal and the establishment of the Confederate States of
America had no legal foundation under the Constitution on the basis that the Constitution of the
United States, which formed the Union, represented the collective will of the people and could
not be destroyed by state legislatures…once a state ratified the constitution they surrendered their
power to the federal gov’t
Civil War
Lincoln president: Beginning of Civil War
Abraham Lincoln’s main goal at the beginning of the Civil War was to Preserve the Union
Lincoln struggles to find a General of the Union Army
General Lee offered to command of Union but couldn’t bring himself to fight against his home
state of Virginia
Generals McClellan, Hooker, Burnsides, & Meade didn’t attack
Finally finds General Grant…Policy of Total War: attack and force the South to surrender
unconditionally
Anaconda Plan – Union strategy of blockading southern ports, controlling the Mississippi River,
cutting the South in half, and surround and cutting off South from supplies and communications
Turning Point Battles
1st Battle of Bull Run: Confederate victory showed war would not be short
Vicksburg 1863: Union victory that split the Confederacy in half and the Union could use the
Mississippi River
Gettysburg – Union victory, last battle in the North, bloodiest battle
Gettysburg Address –Lincoln’s speech unified nation
Antietam- bloodiest single day battle
Sherman’s March to the Sea – Gen. Sherman burns Atlanta, and everything in his path on the way
to and through South Carolina…enforces Total War
Helps Lincoln get re-elected
Result of the Civil War: confirmed power of National Gov’t and made by making succession
illegal
Emancipation Proclamation: Lincoln freed slaves in the South
Encouraged African Americans to serve in the Union Army as they now saw the war as a battle
for people’s freedom
Paved the way for the 13th Amendment: abolished slavery
Military Technology:Monitor vs. Merrimack: iron clad ships, submarine, rifle
Income Tax and Military Draft
Income tax first time enforced by the Federal Gov’t to pay for war
Rich could buy their way out of Conscription (draft)
Other than the sale of land, the main source of revenue for the federal government before 1860
was the collection of tariffs.
Reconstruction
Lincoln assassination hurt the South after the Civil war because Radical Republicans gained
more influence over Reconstruction policies such as the establishment of military districts – 5 in
the South
Amnesty Act – pardoned former Confederates and returned the right to vote and hold public
office
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Johnson’s Presidency
Radical Republicans wanted to control Reconstruction
Reconstruction Act: divided south in military districts: help stop Black Codes that regulated the
lives of free blacks
Former slaves voted Republican, some elected into Congress – Hiram Revels
Civil War Amendments 13th, 14th, & 15th
13th -- freed slaves, 14th—“Equal protection under the Law” (citizenship), 15th – right to vote
Civil Rights Acts 1866—passed to stop black codes and give rights to African
American’s…vetoed by Johnson but passed with Radical Republicans
Johnson tried to limit Congressional Reconstruction by vetoing reconstruction laws passed by
Congress
Jim Crow Laws, Black Codes, Grandfather Clause
Jim Crow laws were passed by Southern States as a reaction to Radical Republicans to undermine
the 14th and 15th amendments (Violated the equal protection clause of the 15th Amendment)
Blacks could not vote because of Poll Taxes, Literacy tests, and Grandfather Clause
Black Codes restricted the rights of newly freed slaves.
Sharecropping is introduced (a landowner dictated the crop and provided the sharecropper with a
place to live, as well as the seeds and tools, in return for a “share” of the harvested crop
KKK created following reconstruction, viewed as terrorist organization
Johnson Impeached: 1st President to be impeached
Johnson angered Radical Republicans by vetoing Civil Rights Acts
Congressman Thaddeus Stevens led the call to impeach Johnson after he violated the Tenure of
Office Act
Johnson needed permission to fire cabinet members
Johnson’s presidency was spared by one vote
President Grant was surrounded by corruption
Compromise of 1877
1876 election: Rutherford B. Hayes made a deal in order to defeat Tilden in the presidential
election which ends Reconstruction; Republicans gained the presidency, Democrats gained
Home Rule in the South; Southern Democrats strongly supported the idea of an early end to
Military Reconstruction
Civil War and Reconstruction were victories for the supremacy of the National Gov’t, no state
has seceded since the war
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