Neutrality & Washington
Marbury v. Madison
Civil War Causes/Effects
The Bill of Rights
Nullification Crisis
100

Main purpose of the 1793 Proclamation.

To keep the U.S. neutral in the war between Britain and France.

100

The power established by this 1803 case.

Judicial Review (the power to declare laws unconstitutional).

100

A major cause of sectional tension.

Slavery, states' rights, or economic differences.

100

The five freedoms protected by the 1st Amendment.

Speech, Religion, Press, Assembly, and Petition.

100

The policy/action that sparked this crisis.

Protective Tariffs (specifically the Tariff of Abominations).

200

A foreign policy precedent set by Washington.

Avoiding permanent foreign alliances (neutrality)

200

The Chief Justice who wrote the decision.

John Marshall.

200

The 1863 proclamation regarding enslaved people in the Confederacy.

The Emancipation Proclamation.

200

What the 4th Amendment protects against.

Unreasonable searches and seizures.

200

The state that declared the tariffs "null and void."

South Carolina.

300

How this proclamation affected relations with Britain and France.

It created tension with both; France felt betrayed and Britain continued impressment.

300

Why Marbury sued and the final Court decision.

He sued for his commission; the Court said he was entitled to it but the law allowing the Court to order it was unconstitutional.

300

Two immediate effects of the Civil War.

Abolition of slavery (13th Amendment) and increased federal power.

300

Government actions prohibited by the 8th Amendment.

Cruel and unusual punishment; excessive bail.

300

The President and his threatened action.

Andrew Jackson; use of military force (Force Bill).

400

One domestic political consequence of this decision.

It helped solidify the two-party system (Federalists vs. Democratic-Republicans).

400

How this strengthened "Checks and Balances."

It gave the Judicial branch the power to check the Legislative and Executive branches.

400

The connection between states' rights and slavery in starting the war.

Southern states argued they had the "right" to maintain slavery and nullify federal interference.

400

The principle emphasized by the 10th Amendment.

Reserved powers; powers not given to the feds belong to the States/People.

400

The constitutional argument used by the "nullifiers."

States' rights/Compact Theory vs. Federal Supremacy.

500

Connection to Washington’s Farewell Address.

It established the "avoiding entangling alliances" principle.

500

An example of Judicial Review in action.

The Court striking down a federal law that violates the Constitution.

500

A long-term effect on the U.S. Constitution.

Passage of the Reconstruction Amendments (13th, 14th, 15th).


500

During the 1790s, the Sedition Act led to the arrest of several journalists, an action that many argued was a direct violation of this specific First Amendment protection.

Freedom of the Press

500

How it shaped future state-federal relationships.

It reinforced federal authority but foreshadowed the secession movement.

M
e
n
u