Matching 1 – 5 A  Andrew Jackson’s opponent in 1828  Mistrusted strong central government  Wanted strong central government  Ruins a reputation 

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Presentation transcript:

Matching 1 – 5 A  Andrew Jackson’s opponent in 1828  Mistrusted strong central government  Wanted strong central government  Ruins a reputation  Promised “equal protection and equal benefits”  Andrew Jackson  Mudslinging  National Republicans  Democrats  John Quincy Adams

Matching 6 – 10 A  Defended “liberty & union”  Invented Cherokee alphabet  Sauk leader  Bank president  First Whig president  Daniel Webster  Sequoya  Black Hawk  Nicholas Biddle  William Henry Harrison

11A  This 1824 Republican presidential nominee was weakened by his poor health.  Henry Clay  Andrew Jackson  John Quincy Adams  William H. Crawford

12A  The 1824 presidential election was decided  By popular vote  By the Electoral College  In the House of Representatives  By the political parties

13A  This 1824 presidential candidate believed the nation should shift from a farming-based economy to a manufacturing one.  John Quincy Adams  Andrew Jackson  Henry Clay  Martin Van Buren

14A  This president’s popularity with the “common man” changed politics in Washington D.C.  Martin Van Buren  Andrew Jackson  John Quincy Adams  William Henry Harrison

15A  Some Southerners wanted to break away from the United States or to  Nullify  Caucus  Secede  Expand suffrage

16A  Congress passed this act in order to relocate Native Americans  Naturalization Act  Alien Act  Relocation Act  Removal Act

17A  The Cherokee Trail of Tears began in  Georgia  Florida  Alabama  Kentucky

18A  The Bank of the United States was chartered by  Private bankers  The president  Congress  Republicans

19A  President Van Buren’s belief in the principle of laissez-faire prolonged the  War  Period of inflation  Whig’s power  depression

20A  John Tyler became president because  Of popular vote  He was appointed  President Harrison died  He was elected

Matching 1 – 5 B  1828 Democratic- Republican candidate  1828 National-Republican candidate  An overwhelming victory  Birthplace of Andrew Jackson  System in which nonelected officials carry out laws  Landslide  Bureaucracy  Andrew Jackson  Log cabin  John Quincy Adams

Matching 6 – 10 B  Relocated to Indian Territory  Friend of Nicholas Biddle  Inaugurated in 1837  Began with the Panic of 1837  Whig’s campaign slogan  Depression  “Tippecanoe and Tyler too”  Native Americans  Daniel Webster  Martin Van Buren

11B  This was NOT a favorite son candidate in the 1824 election  Henry Clay  Andrew Jackson  William H. Crawford  John Quincy Adams

12B  This president was raised in poverty by his mother.  John Quincy Adams  Martin Van Buren  Andrew Jackson  Henry Clay

13B  This presidential candidate won the 1824 election  Andrew Jackson  John Quincy Adams  William H. Crawford  Henry Clay

14B  By 1840 the expansion of suffrage had grown so that more than 80 percent of these Americans voted in the presidential election.  White males  Women  African Americans  Native Americans

15B  The practice of replacing government employees with the winning candidate’s supporters became known as  Mudslinging  The spoils system  Bureaucracy  Suffrage

16B  This sent the message that the federal government would not allow a state to go its own way without a fight  Suffrage  Bureaucracy  Force Bill  Spoils system

17B  This Seminole leader went to war against the United States in order to keep his nation’s land.  Black Hawk  Sequoya  Speckled Snake  Osceola

18B  A government permit to operate the Bank of the United States was called a  Charter  Bank permit  Congressional permit  Bank loan

19B  This man and federal troops led the Cherokee west in the Trail of Tears  Andrew Jackson  Winfield Scott  William Henry Harrison  Oliver Hazard Perry

20B  To win the election of 1840, William Henry Harrison needed the support of  Wealthy landowners  Bankers  Laborers and farmers  Native Americans