Jackson
Market Revolution
Religion & Reforms
Westward Expansion
Miscellaneous
100

Jackson initiated this system which rewarded loyal followers with federal jobs.

Spoils system
100

This invention by Samuel F.B. Morse forever changed communication by transporting messages along wires almost instantaneously. 

Telegraph

100

These outdoor revivals, where people met for days to pray and hear preachers, attracted thousands of people during the Second Great Awakening.

Camp Meetings

100

Thomas Jefferson's purchase of this land in 1803 from the French doubled the size of the United States.

Louisiana Purchase

100

This famous black abolitionist spoke out against the inequalities of the Women's Rights movement with her speech, "Ain't I a Woman?"

Sojourner Truth

200
Jackson ignored this supreme court case which had ruled that Georgia had no power in Cherokee territory.

Worcester v. Georgia (1832)

200

The creation of this machine led to an increase in cotton production and a rise of enslaved labor in the south.

Cotton Gin

200

This idea was core to the Second Great Awakening, as it gave people the opportunity to directly ask for forgiveness for their sins.

Redemption

200

As America continued to expand, this area represented an area of possibility and a fresh start. It promised greater freedom for all ethnic groups.

The Frontier

200

Lucretia Mott & Elizabeth Cady Stanton hosted this event in 1848 after they were barred from speaking at anti-slavery conventions.

Seneca Falls Convention

300

This political party, made up mostly of New England professionals, formed in direct opposition to Andrew Jackson.

Whigs

300

This man-made innovation allowed these to transport goods throughout the county, making shipping both faster and cheaper. 

Canals and Steamboats

OR

Railroads/Trains

300

Inspired by the Second Great Awakening and led by women, this reform tried to persuade drinkers to abstain.

Temperance

300

One of the first of many compromises, this admitted states North of the 36-30 line as free states, and those below as slave states.

Missouri Compromise (or Compromise of 1820)

300
The encounter of Americans and Mexicans at this river was an immediate cause of the Mexican American War.

Rio Grande River

400

Depending on your perspective, Jackson could be considered by these two titles.

Man of the People or King Andrew (or, expander of Democracy) 

400

As a result of increased urbanization, job opportunities, and wage labor, this new social class emerged in the US.

Middle Class

400

This anti-slavery society formed in 1817 and proposed gradually sending African Americans to the newly independent Liberia.

American Colonization Society

400

Jackson issued this act to allow for white settlement in indigenous Cherokee territory.

Indian Removal Act

400

Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau led this movement which questioned religious institutions and valued individualism, reforms, and mystical, intuitive ways of looking at the world.  

Transcendentalism
500

Name two of the ways Jackson asserted federal power and expanded the role of the executive branch of the US.

Indian Removal Act, Vetoing the Second Bank of the US, The Tariff of Abominations, Nullification Crisis

500

Young farm women were recruited to work in these. The Lowell Mills are an example.

Textile Factories

500
Name three abolitionists.

Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, William Lloyd Garrison, Grimke Sisters, David Walker, Nat Turner, Harriet Tubman

500

This treaty ended the Mexican-American war and gave the US over 500,000 square miles of south and western territory.

Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

500

Industrialization changed family roles and contributed to this idealized view of women as moral leaders in the home.

Cult of Domesticity 

M
e
n
u