Sydney Singleton and Emily Cranney
Events in which Georgians could “gamble” for land. Winners could purchase acres of land from the state government.
Land Lotteries
Republican president, elected in He apposed slavery in the new territories upsetting southern leaders. His election inspired South Carolina, Georgia, and a number of other southern states to succeed from the Union.
Abraham Lincoln
Statement issued by Georgia’s government, when it elected to support the Compromise of It stated that, while the state supported the compromise, it would not hesitate to resist any effort by congress to outlaw slavery in the new territories.
Georgia Platform
System in which white males considered to be the heads of families were entitled to purchase a certain amount of land with the understanding that they would settle it within a few months and make it productive.
Head Right System
Factories that began to open in the south where cotton is used to produce finished products.
Textile Mills
Georgia’s first state university, first charted, and state-supported university in the nation.
UGA
Cherokee chief who served as head of the Cherokee Nation. He served as chief even through the Cherokees march to Oklahoma
John Ross
The belief that states have the right to ignore (nullify) any federal law they believe violates the Constitution.
Doctrine of Nullification
Episode in which gold was discovered in parts of Northern Georgia.
Gold Rush of 1829
President of the US at the time of Worchester vs. Georgia. He supported Indian removal and would not come to the Cherokee’s aid. His unwillingness to help the tribe eventually led to the Trail of Tears.
Andrew Jackson
Incident in Georgia’s history in which the state legislator approved selling large portions of Georgia’s western territory for roughly 1 cent per acre in exchange for bribes to government officials.
Yazoo Land Fraud
Main cash crop in Georgia and through out the south through out most of the 1800’s.
Cotton
City that served as the capital of Georgia between 1786 and 1804.
Louisville
Nickname given to the Us south’s cotton industry because it was the basis of the region’s economy.
King Cotton- Cotton Kingdom
Georgia congressman who played a key role in getting Georgia to accept the Compromise of He was also a cooperationist who voted against secession at the State Convention in He eventually became vice president of the confederacy and served in that capacity through out the war.
Alexander Stephens
Georgia city that grew because it became a major railroad hub during the mid 1800’s.
Atlanta
Major Native American tribe in Georgia. They were prominent in the south and western Georgia, and were eventually forced of their land by the treaty on Indian Springs.
The Creeks
Signed between the Creeks and the state of Georgia in It gave all, of the Creeks’ land to Georgia and made many Creeks very angry.
Treaty of Indian Springs
Major Native American in northern Georgia; had their own written language and were eventually removed from their land, in part due to the discovery of gold. They ultimately were forced to march the Trail of Tears all the way to Oklahoma.
The Cherokee
Political compromise reached in 1820 that stated all new northern states would be free and all new southern sates would allow slaves. It also admitted Maine to the union as a free state and Missouri as a slave state.
Missouri Compromise
Cherokee that developed a syllabary that allowed the Cherokee to have their own written language.
Sequoyah
Churches that had the most impact in post- revolutionary Georgia due to their willingness to use new methods to reach people along the frontier.
Methodist and Baptist
Chief Justice of the Supreme court at the time of Worchester vs. Georgia.
John Marshall
Federal law that reignited the slavery debate by allowing popular sovereignty to decide the issue of slavery in the previously free territory of Georgia.
Kansas Nebraska Act
The name given to the journey the Cherokee were forced to take from Georgia and the Carolinas to Oklahoma it got its name because the Cherokee were forced to leave their homes and many died along the way.
Trail of Tears
The idea that states should be allowed to settle most matters themselves. The power states have to govern what goes on inside their border.
States Rights
New invention in 1739 that made the process of harvesting cotton easier and led to cotton becoming the key cash crop in Georgia and throughout the South.
Cotton Gin
Made it easier and more efficient to ship goods to port cities and other cities/states.
Railroads
Institution in which African Americans were owned like property. It caused great division between the north, where the economy didn’t depend on slave labor, and the south, where it did.
Slavery
City that served as the capital of Georgia between
Milledgeville
Political compromise that admitted California as a free state in 1850 and allowed other western territories to decide the issue of slavery by popular sovereignty.
Compromise of 1850
Supreme court case in which the court ruled that Georgia Law doesn’t apply on Cherokee land. Although the Cherokee originally thought that it would allow them to keep their land it ultimately couldn’t prevent their forced removal.
Worchester vs. Georgia
Supreme Court case in which the court denied a slave named Dred Scott both his freedom and the right to sue. It also struck down the Missouri Compromise by stating that no state could deny a slave owner of his “property” with out due process.
Dred Scott Case
The new “country” formed by the southern states that seceded.
Confederate States of America
Creek chief who signed the Treaty of Indian Springs. His actions so outraged many Creeks that some of them stabbed him to death and took his scalp.
William McIntosh
Circuit riders where associated with whom?
Methodists
Events in which Georgians had the chance to win the right to buy land from the state was known as…….
Land Lotteries
Atlanta formed MAINLY as:
A railroad hub
What is a statement that a secessionist would most likely say……………
“ The south must break away from the union before the Federal Government rips away our rights.”
What did president Andrew Jackson mean when he said “John Marshall has made his decision now let him enforce it.”
He would not act to ensure Georgia respected the decision of the supreme court.
The Georgia Platform was important because it what?
It stated that Georgia would not support the Compromise of 1850, so long as the federal government did not outlaw slavery in the western territories.
What election most upset the Georgians?
The election of Abraham Lincoln