Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, and Harriet Tubman all supported this, a term for the formal end to slavery in the US
What is abolition?
By 1824 there were three "sections" emerging in the United States; those three sections are?
What are the West, the South, and the Northeast?
President Jackson's election in 1828 broke norms as he was the first president to hail from this "section" of the US
What is the West?
This "proclamation" is credited to Lincoln for freeing the slaves; the truth of the matter is more complex...
What is the Emancipation Proclamation?
This decision found that Congress could not prohibit slavery in the territories.
What is Dred Scott v Sandford?
This convention, held in New York, was the one of the earliest conventions held in the Women's Rights Movement
What is the Women's Rights Convention at Seneca Falls?
This doctrine claims that states could alter acts if the national government overstepped its bounds.
What is the nullification doctrine?
This era was dubbed due to the illusion of good times present in Jackson's presidency.
What is the era of good feelings?
Which event, over the issue of popular sovereignty, split the Democratic Party and ushered in a Republican in the election of 1860
What are the Lincoln-Douglas debates?
Compact theory, or the belief that the Union was a set of compacts between states, was challenged by what action, started off in South Carolina.
What is the secession?
Due to Andrew Jackson's desire for land, he ignored Supreme Court rulings and forcibly removed Native Americans from their lands in the Southeast, a forced migration know as what?
What is the Indian Removal Act/Trail of Tears?
By ending property qualifications, the West helped lead the way in extending what right to more Americans?
Another term of the politics practiced during the Age of Jackson
What is Jacksonian Democracy
This system was not created by Jackson but it was definitely popularized by him; it was a great reason to become his friend!
What is the spoils system?
This map followed this act, which overode the Missouri Compromise and allowed territories to enter as states based on popular sovereignty, complications that arose in the Civil War
What is the Kansas-Nebraska Act?
Following the Missouri Compromise, this compromise staved off the Civil War for another 10 years.
What is the Compromise of 1850?
This doctrine, issued and drafted by American leaders, prohibited new colonies in Latin America.
What is the Monroe Doctrine?
Despite two Supreme Court rulings, this was enacted between 1831-1840, as President Jackson refused to enforce the courts' ruling.
What is the Indian Removal Act?
"Four score and seven years ago..." is the beginning of this wartime address, in which Lincoln stated "government for, by, and of the people" shall not perish from this earth.
What is the Gettysburg Address?
This amendment made slavery illegal, except as a punishment for a crime.
What is the 13th Amendment?
This doctrine effectively closed the North American continent to further colonization and threatened European powers if they tried to intervene.
What is the Monroe Doctrine
This feature of American elections was created by the Founders who doubted the common-person's ability to choose a leader. Today, not much about that fear has changed...
What is the electoral college?
Postwar nationalism lasted from 1812 until what year?
What is 1819?
This man surrendered at Appomattox Court House, brining an end of to the Civil War
Who is Robert E. Lee?
Ultimately, Lincoln was a loose constructivist, choosing to bend the Constitution in order to preserve this, his reason for entering the Civil War