First President of United States
George Washington
Favored strong central gov't
Federalists
Young females who lived in factory villages and worked in New England textiles.
Mill Girls
Used Veto more than any other President
Andrew Jackson
What versions of Historical Thinking Skills have we unpacked this year?
White men (mainly rich and powerful) who created the foundational laws of the United States.
Founders/ Framers
Warning against political parties and foreign involvements.
Farewell Address
1793 Invention by Eli Whitney that quickly and easily separated fibers from their seeds.
Cotton Gin
Tax imports that upset the south after congress attempted to protect American interests by making foreign goods expensive.
Tariff of Abominations
What three steps are required in Thesis Statement?
Restate the Question, two sub-claims (SIG)
Group of people that opposed a strong Federal Gov't and prioritized state rights
Anti-Federalists
Undeclared naval war fought at sea with U.S. and France
Quasi-War
Idea that woman's sphere was at home and should not work outside the house.
Cult of Domesticity
Minstrelsy
These group of people felt the fundamental changes of democracy after property qualifications were dropped.
Poor White Men
Forcing a group to adopt customs that fit into white norms
Forced Assimilation
4th U.S. President, close to Jefferson and led the nation into the war of 1812
James Madison
An economic system where citizens not government own and run companies.
Capitalism
This removal resulted in the deaths of thousands of indigenous people
Trail of Tears
Transition from agriculture to industry from 1790s-1830s.
First Industrial Revolution
Author of the Declaration of Independence
Thomas Jefferson
Gives congress implied powers which allows them to create laws not directly stated in the constitution.
Elastic Clause
Phrase that justified white settlement of Western North America.
Manifest Destiny
A feeling of pride, loyalty, and protectiveness toward your country
Nationalsim
The internal selling and relocation of enslaved people across the American states in the early 1800s
Domestic Slave Trade