The Star-Spangled Banner
The term given to the years 1815-1825 characterized by nationalism, unity, and confidence in American culture and innovation.
Era of Good Feelings
This president won the election of 1824 in the "Corrupt Bargain" and sparked the uprising of Jacksonian democracy.
John Quincy Adams
Manifest Destiny
This reform movement pushed for making alcohol illegal.
Temperance
This president won the 1812 election and presided over the War of 1812.
These two states joined the union as a consequence of the Compromise of 1820.
Maine and Missouri
This president won the elections of 1828 and 1832 and lent his name to the era of his presidency.
Andrew Jackson
The name of the 1803 land purchase that more than doubled the size of the United States and which Lewis and Clark were commissioned to explore.
Louisiana Purchase
This literary movement emphasized self-improvement and overcoming one's sinful nature to become a better person. Authors included Thoreau and Emerson.
Transcendentalism
This building in Washington was burned during the War of 1812.
The White House
A feeling of pride and loyalty to a nation.
Nationalism
Spoils System
This former-republic-now-state fought the battles of Gonzales and the Alamo against the Mexicans to win their freedom.
Texas
This invention of Eli Whitney's almost singlehandedly revived slavery.
Cotton gin
Andrew Jackson first gained fame at this battle during the War of 1812.
Battle of New Orleans
The name of "the Great Compromiser" who helped keep the union together through most of the 19th century (Hint: He was named Secretary of State after the Corrupt Bargain of 1824).
Henry Clay
The 1832 crisis sparked by the Tariff of Abominations in which South Carolina refused to acknowledge federal laws.
The Nullification Crisis
The discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill in sparked this 1849 move westward to California.
Gold Rush
These THREE forms of transportation replaced canals.
Trains/Steamboats/Clipper Ships
This treaty ended the War of 1812.
Treaty of Ghent
The American policy warning Europe away from meddling in American and South American affairs.
The Monroe Doctrine
The institution for which Jackson refused to renew its charter.
Second Bank of the United States
This trail (really, series of trails) west took the name of one of its northernmost points. (Hint: There would later be a video game named after it.)
The Oregon Trail
What was the difference between the Rhode Island and Lowell mill systems?
Rhode Island= milled yarn, farmed it out to be woven in the households of factory workers.
Lowell= entire process in the same factory complex; workers lived in a "mill village".