Washington & His Cabinet
Hamilton & Economics
Democratic-Republicans V. Federalists
Government & Effects
Foreign Affairs
100
President Washington created this even though it wasn't provided in the Constitution.
What is the Cabinet?
100
Hamilton modeled the Bank after this.
What is the Bank of England?
100
Hamilton's domestic policies stimulated the creation of these political parties.
Who are the Jeffersonian Democratic-Republicans and the Hamiltonian Federalists?
100
Many anti-federalists sharply criticized the Constitution because of this.
What is the lack of protection of individuals' rights?
100
The Alien and Sedition Acts were this.
What are laws made by Federalists to really weaken the Democratic-Republicans, some of whom were immigrants, and would imprison or deport?
200
As Secretary of the Treasury, this was Alexander Hamilton's first objective.
What is bolster the national credit?
200
The purpose and function of the National Bank.
What is to be only place that can coin money and provide a sound and stable national currency?
200
The differing positions on public policy of Hamilton and Jefferson respectively.
What is supporting the upper classes, wanting to make an alliance with the British, wanting a potent central government, and thinking government should support businesses or supporting the common people, wanting to keep an alliance with France, and favoring universal education?
200
This caused the Whiskey Revolution.
What is the high excise tax on whiskey?
200
The Spanish enabled America free navigation of the Mississippi River using this.
What is Pinckney's Treaty of 1795?
300
President Washington's decision in regards to fulfilling the Franco-American alliance.
What is the Neutrality Proclamation?
300
Hamilton believed in this and regarded a limited national debt as a "national blessing" because of it.
What is the union working together to get rid of the debt?
300
Jefferson favored a political system where power resided at this level.
What is the state level?
300
The rights guaranteed in the first 10 amendments.
What is the rights of individuals(freedom of speech,press, petition, assemble, and religion...to bear arms...to not quarter troops...not illegal search/seizure...to not self incriminate...speedy, public trial by jury...trial by jury in a civil case for over $20...no cruel/unusual punishment...rights not written in the constitution...rights reserved to states)
300
The embroilment with Britain that was happening on land and sea.
What is the refusal of abandoning British forts on American soil, encouraging Native Americans to fight colonists, and the capturing of American goods, ships, and men?
400
Advocations in Washington's Farewell Address
What is avoid permanent alliances, political parties, and establish a military academy?
400
Hamilton was able to win the argument to build the Bank of the United States by this
What is the loose interpretation of the Constitution and the elastic clause?
400
The Kentucky and Virginia resolutions were written because of this.
What is so people could see that the Federalists are controlling the government and the Alien and Sedition Acts was going against the Constitution?
400
The importance of the Whiskey Rebellion.
What is George Washington's government strengthening, and commanding new respect?
400
The Franco-American alliance of 1778 bounded America to do this.
What is to aid France with defending their West Indies against foes forever?
500
The 4 original members of the Cabinet, their position and duties.
Who are Thomas Jefferson, the Secretary of State for foreign affairs advice; Alexander Hamilton, the Secretary of Treasury for economic advice; Henry Knox, Secretary of War for military advice; and Edmund Randolph, Attorney General for legal advice?
500
The parts to Hamilton's economic plan.
What is Create a National Bank, establish tariffs, and putting an excise tax on whiskey?
500
The summarization of the central argument of the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions.
What is the thirteen states created the central government and it is the states job to say if the government had exceeded its constitutional powers, and if so then the states don't have to follow the federal law. The government has over stepped it's powers with the Alien and Sedition Acts, so it's the right of the states not to follow these acts.
500
It's the comparison and contrast between loose and strict constructionism.
How do they both follow the constitution but loose constructionism can bend the rules if the Constitution doesn't mention it but strict constructionism cannot use it unless it says so?
500
The event that caused America's unofficial was with France.
What is Jay's Treaty, from which France thought America and Britain were making an alliance?
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