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200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 I IIIIIIVV
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New Forms of transportation, a factory system and more available capital fueled this revolution in the first half of American history.
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Market Revolution
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This movement’s goal was to end the sale and use of alcohol in America.
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Temperance Movement
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President Jackson’s policies towards this group included the following: opposition to their assimilation, the Removal Act of 1830, and his refusal to enforce the Worcester v. Georgia decision.
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Indians
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Reforms under this president included expanded male suffrage, people having a greater political voice through parties, and the rotation of office holders.
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Andrew Jackson
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President Jackson opposed this because he believed that it was controlled by the rich.
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The Bank of the United States
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The doubling of agricultural production, the growing urban population and work force all contributed to the growth in this sector in the 1840s and 1850s.
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Economy
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The growth of railroads in the 1840s prompted the growth in these two industries.
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Iron and Coal
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Seventy Five percent of the immigrants to the United States in the 1840s were from these 2 countries.
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Ireland and Germany
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Finish the statement: “In the 1840s, America was _____ rich and ______ poor.”
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Land/Labor
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The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, the Hartford Convention, and the South Carolina Exposition and Protest were all based on
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States’Rights
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This is the belief that America had the god given right to spread its civilization.
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Manifest Destiny
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Leaders of this movement included Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass.
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Abolitionists
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The meeting at which reformers met to organize their fight for equal rights was known as this.
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The Seneca Falls Convention
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Individuals who sought to create alternative lifestyles to the industrial world created these in the mid 1800s.
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Utopias.
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Polk used the slogan “54 40 or Fight” to acquire this territory.
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Oregon
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Until this invention in the 1700s cotton was not as profitable to produce.
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The Cotton Gin
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The south pushed westward primarily to acquire more lands for the production of this crop.
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Cotton
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After the election of Polk the annexation of this territory led the US into a war with Mexico.
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Texas
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This region in the US (in the early 1800s) had the following characteristics: fewer cities, no public school system, and few immigrants.
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The South
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These were the small farmers who grew food and some cotton believed in the supremacy of whites.
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The Plain Folk or the yeoman farmers
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Slavery did not become a lasting institution in this areas because it was unprofitable on the small farms there.
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The North
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The Southern states were opposed to the election of this man in 1860 for he hoped to stop the spread of slavery into the new territories.
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Lincoln
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The Missouri Compromise, the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act attempted to solve this issue.
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Extension of slavery into the Western territories.
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This relationship was the Constitutional secession issue of 1828 and 1860.
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Federal and State relationship.
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Southerners used this as a defense of slavery.
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They were better cared for than the Northern factory workers.
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