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Ch. 6-7 Review Ms. Stacks U.S. History
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National Nominating Convention practice of selecting presidential candidates at a meeting of state delegates
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Caucus System practice of selecting presidential candidates at a meeting of the party’s congressional members
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Panic of 1837 The chaos and economic crisis that saw many farmers lose their land and banks fail
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Indian Removal Act Andrew Jackson pushed this bill through Congress in 1830 which would provide money for relocating Native Americans – wanted to relocate them to the Great Plains or the “wasteland” according to John C. Calhoun to stop the conflicts
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Trail of Tears Painting
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Tariff of 1828 (Tariff of Abominations) South Carolina threatened to secede (leave) the Union Made trading too expensive
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In the early 1800s, many white men gained the right to vote because states lowered or eliminated property ownership as a voting qualification
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Nullification declaring a federal law invalid
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Spoils System practice of appointing people to government jobs on the basis of party loyalty and support
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Secede to withdraw from the Union
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David Walker published the pamphlet Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World
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William Lloyd Garrison founded the American Anti-Slavery Society
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Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton organized the Seneca Falls Convention, which marked the beginning of an organized women’s movement Lucretia Mott Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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Frederick Douglass African American abolitionist who was a brilliant thinker and electrifying speaker; published an antislavery newspaper
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Emma Willard founded a girls’ boarding school in Vermont
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Elizabeth Blackwell first woman to earn a medical degree in the United States
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Force Bill use the military to enforce acts of Congress.
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Worcester v. Georgia The Supreme Court ruled that state officials must honor Cherokee property rights.
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The Whig party Advocated a stronger federal government.
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Temperance Movement the temperance movement achieve a major victory in 1851 when Maine and Illinois prohibited liquor sales and distribution
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Webster-Ashburton Treaty Disputes over the Maine-Canadian border established a firm boundary
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The Second Bank of the United States played an important role in keeping the money supply of the United States stable
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German immigrants arriving between 1815 and 1860 settled in Pennsylvania and Ohio
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Large numbers of Irish immigrants began leaving their homeland in 1845 because they were fleeing famine in Ireland.
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Romanticism Emphasized feeling over reason, inner spirituality over external rules; and nature over environments created by humans
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Dorothea Dix Prison Reform Underlying the prison reform movement was a belief in rehabilitating prisoners rather than just locking them up
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Gradualism wanted slaveholders to be compensated for their loss when slavery ended
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Many residents in the South defended the institution of slavery because they believed it was the key to the economy in their region.
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Abolitionist Leaders Frederick Douglass Theodore Weld Prudence Crandall Sojourner Truth William Lloyd Garrison Lucretia Mott Sarah and Angelina Grimke’ (Grimke’ sisters)
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Manifest Destiny idea that God had given the continent to Americans, and wanted them to settle western land
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After winning independence from Mexico, most Texans voted for annexation to the United States.
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James K. Polk Supporters of James K. Polk cried “Fifty- four Forty or Fight,” which meant they wanted all of Oregon to the 54º 40’ north latitude line. In 1845 President Polk sent John Slidell to Mexico City as a special envoy, or representative. In order to carry out Polk’s ambitious plan for war against Mexico, the United States needed to expand its army
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Mormons Seeking religious freedom, the Mormons traveled west, settling in what is now Utah
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Preemption Act Allowed squatters to buy land from the government at a minimum price of $1.25 per acre Squatter: someone who is living on the land they do not own
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The Alamo abandoned Spanish mission where a small force of Texans held off the Mexican army for 13 days before being overrun
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Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna captured in the Battle of San Jacinto Leader of Mexican government at time of Texas independence
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Stephen Austin went to Mexico City to negotiate with the government The Mexican government imprisoned Stephen Austin for treason (offense of acting to overthrow one's government)
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Sam Houston first president of the Republic of Texas
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A: Mormon Trail B: Oregon Trail C: California Trail D: Sante Fe Trail
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An uprising by the settlers in northern California resulted in victory for the settlers, who declared the region an independent republic
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In 1834 the Mexican government secularized its missions, meaning that it transferred them from religious control to civil control
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The Santa Fe Trail connected Santa Fe, New Mexico, with Independence, Missouri
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Texas at time of Mexican Independence a sparsely populated buffer zone between the United States and Mexico
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Gadsden Purchase In 1853, boundary disputes with Mexico still remained. President Franklin Pierce sent James Gadsden to settle the problem and to purchase land for a southern transcontinental railroad. Gave the U.S. parts of present day New Mexico and Arizona in exchange for $10 million
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