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UNITED STATES HISTORY AND THE CONSTITUTION South Carolina Standard USHC-2-1
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South Carolina Standard USHC-2 Standard USHC-2 Covers the economic developments and how the westward movement impacted regional differences and democracy in the early nineteenth century.
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Indicators USHC-2.1 We will cover the impact of the westward movement on nationalism and democracy, including the expansion of the franchise, the displacement of Native Americans from the southeast and conflicts over states’ rights and federal power during the era of Jacksonian democracy as the result of major land acquisitions such as the Louisiana Purchase, the Oregon Treaty, and the Mexican Cession.
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Westward Expansion Westward expansion both intensified nationalism and exacerbated sectionalism as competing regional interests agreed on expansion but differed on policies of the federal government such as cheap land, internal improvements, the support for industry through tariff policy and the expansion of slavery.
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Manifest Destiny Expansion fueled the nationalist idea of Manifest Destiny and vice versa. Jefferson pursued the purchase of Louisiana, despite his misgivings over the constitutionality of such a purchase. Jefferson’s loose interpretation of the elastic clause of the Constitution set the precedent for future land acquisitions and secured control of the Mississippi River as a highway for American agricultural products from the old Northwest through the port of New Orleans to world markets. Jefferson’s loose interpretation of the elastic clause of the Constitution set the precedent for future land acquisitions and secured control of the Mississippi River as a highway for American agricultural products from the old Northwest through the port of New Orleans to world markets.
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Louisiana Purchase Napoleon sold the Louisiana Territory and New Orleans to the United States on April 30, 1803 for $15 Million. This included $11.25 million for the land and $3.75 million in debts owed to American citizens.
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Spread of Democracy The Louisiana Territory also provided additional government owned land available for purchase [Land Ordinance]. The addition of these lands insured the spread of democracy as new territories became states of the Union on equal terms as the original thirteen [Northwest Ordinance].
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Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819 In 1918 John Quincy Adams used ongoing boarder negotiations with Spain to acquire Florida, and set the western boarder of the Louisiana Territory.
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Right to Vote The right to vote, originally reserved to property owners, was enjoyed by most American males as the government sold land at increasingly cheaper prices. In the 1820s and 1830s, states dropped the property qualification and expanded the franchise to all white males and specifically disenfranchised African American property owners.
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Fun Times at the Polls Political campaigns became a popular pastime and voting a festive occasion. The first president elected from the West was Andrew Jackson, a Democrat and self described champion of the common man.
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Westward Expansion Westward expansion strengthened the Democratic Party. As Americans moved west, they continued the displacement of the Native American population, just as they had in the original colonies. President Andrew Jackson announced a formal policy of removal of natives to the west to make room for opportunity for the common white man.
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Native Americans Native Americans of the southeast responded to this encroachment through both resistance (Seminoles in Florida) and assimilation (Cherokee in Georgia). Neither of these methods was successful. The Seminoles were defeated and the Cherokee eventually lost their legal fight to retain their lands.
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Trail of Tears Native Americans of the southeast were forced to move to the Indian Territory in Oklahoma on the Trail of Tears in the late 1830s. Trail of TearsTrail of Tears
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Human Property, Families Split The westward movement also had an adverse impact on enslaved African Americans as slave owners took only part of their human property with them on the trek west and left the rest of a slave family behind.
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Nullification Crisis The increasing economic differences and the growing conflict between the North and the South over the right to extend slavery to the territories led to a conflict between states’ rights and federal power in the nullification crisis of the 1830s.
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High Tariffs Northern manufacturers favored a high tariff that would protect their infant industries from foreign competition. Southerners, as producers of cash crops and consumers of manufactured goods, wanted those goods to be available at a cheaper price and viewed a high tariff as an “abomination.
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Tariff Null and Void? The West sided with the North in order to get support from the Northern states for their favored issues, internal improvements and ever cheaper land prices. In the 1830s, South Carolina used the states’ rights argument to declare the tariff null and void
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Andrew Jackson President Andrew Jackson was determined to uphold the right of the federal government to collect the tariff in South Carolina. A compromise reduced the offending tariff.
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Compromise This compromise and the threat of federal force led South Carolina to rescind their nullification of the tariff but not to repudiate the right of the state to nullify an act of Congress. The immediate threat to the Union was averted.
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The United States’ claim to Oregon was based on the explorations of Lewis and Clark which took them beyond the boundaries of the Louisiana Purchase to the Pacific Ocean.
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Americans had moved to the Oregon Territory in order to trade in furs and farm. The area was also claimed by the British with whom the U.S. had joint occupation rights until a treaty was negotiated in the 1840s.
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Texas was acquired through annexation of the Republic of Texas nine years after American-born Texans had declared and won their independence from Mexico. The rest of the present southwestern United States was acquired by treaty that ended the Mexican War.
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Westward movement impacted the relations between the regions as Southerners sought to protect their ‘peculiar institution’ by pushing for the expansion of slavery and would ultimately threaten national unity in the Civil War
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Vocabulary Sectionalism Jacksonian democracy Manifest Destiny DisenfranchisedEncroachment Trail of Tears nullification crisis
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