Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Reviewing Jackson
2
Tomorrow’s Quiz 8 Multiple Choice Questions (4 points)
2 Short Answer Questions – 2-3 sentences (4 points)
3
In-Class Today—Review by Doing
Some Multiple Choice Questions The Questions The Answers The Reasoning Behind them Some Short Answer Questions How to Fully Answer Them
4
Which of the following is not associated with Andrew Jackson's presidency?
a firm belief in the mandate of the president from the people to rule opposition to the power and influence of the U.S. Bank a deep and respectful view of John Marshall and the decisions of the Supreme Court, particularly in the area of Indian affairs a challenge to the states' rights forces in South Carolina during the tariff crisis of the 1830s a challenge to the power of the Bank of the U.S.
5
The theory that the Union is a compact among the states and that a state has the right to override a federal law is known as statism federalism nullification sectionalism popular sovereignty
6
Which of the following objectives best describes Andrew Jackson’s policy toward Native Americans?
Complete Destruction Assimilation and, if not, Removal Removal Based Upon States Rights Allowing Them to Keep Their Lands Cultural Exchange
7
The Missouri Compromise dealt with the problem of Western lands and slavery by creating a system which would make new states: Slave States Free States Both Slave and Free States Decide for Themselves Part of a new country called Calalalaland
8
When he vetoed its recharter bill, Jackson argued that the second Bank of the United States
overextended financial credit was too lenient in its loan policies Was a privileged monopoly of the rich favored only frontier states Refused to pay off the National Debt
9
Which of the following is not associated with Andrew Jackson's presidency?
a firm belief in the mandate of the president from the people to rule opposition to the power and influence of the U.S. Bank a deep and respectful view of John Marshall and the decisions of the Supreme Court, particularly in the area of Indian affairs a challenge to the states' rights forces in South Carolina during the tariff crisis of the 1830s a challenge to the power of the Bank of the U.S.
10
Which of the following is not associated with Andrew Jackson's presidency?
Jackson strongly believed that the people chose him and gave him power. This was his “mandate.” Jackson saw the bank as northeastern money interest John Marshall made the Indian Removal decision… So… uhhh…. Not exactly deep and respectful. Jackson stood against nullification and the states’ righters despite that they were mostly Democrats. Again, Jackson hated the Bank
11
The Separation or Power Between State and Federal Government
The theory that the Union is a compact among the states and that a state has the right to override a federal law is known as Statism Federalism Nullification Sectionalism popular sovereignty The Separation or Power Between State and Federal Government Yup, this is right The Separation of the Country Along Sectional Lines (North-South in this case)
12
Which of the following objectives best describes Andrew Jackson’s policy toward Native Americans?
Jackson actually saw his method as “humane” Complete Destruction Assimilation and, if not, Removal Removal Based Upon States Rights Allowing Them to Keep Their Lands Cultural Exchange This was the government’s policy before Jackson Yeah, Jackson didn’t care enough about the Indians for d or e.
13
The Missouri Compromise dealt with the problem of Western lands and slavery by creating a system which would make new states: Slave States Free States Both Slave and Free States Decide for Themselves Part of a new country called Calalalaland Dui!
14
When he vetoed its recharter bill, Jackson argued that the second Bank of the United States
overextended financial credit was too lenient in its loan policies Was a privileged monopoly of the rich favored only frontier states Refused to pay off the National Debt Jackson hated all banks but he especially hated the National Bank because it gave a special privilege to one private bank
15
Did Jackson stand for or against states’ rights? Use two examples.
Possible Examples (For) Indian Removal (fought for Georgia’s rights despite Federal Treaties) Bank War (fought against a national bank with privileges above state banks) Possible Examples (Against) Nullification (enforced federal law when South Carolina claimed it didn’t apply) Expansion of his own powers as president (growing his own branch through veto, Indian Removal laws, etc.)
16
How did the conflict over Nullification illustrate sectionalism in America during the Jacksonian Era? Disagreement over the tariff Freedom or Union is more important? The differing ideas about federal / state power The way in which it was resolved (needing force to subdue South Carolina)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.