Vocabulary
People
Events
Nullification Crisis
100

This term refers to strong feelings of pride and loyalty to one’s country, a sentiment that grew in the United States after successful foreign negotiations.

What is Nationalism

100

Known as “the Liberator,” this Latin American revolutionary helped free multiple nations from Spanish rule and inspired U.S. policymakers as they shaped doctrines opposing further European colonization.

Simon Bolivar

100

When the Cooper publish The Pioneers 

1823

100

This is the name given to the 1828 tariff that angered Southern states.


Jackson and his allies believed the Second Bank of the United States primarily favored this group over ordinary people.

200

Proposed by Henry Clay, this economic plan aimed to make the United States self-sufficient through internal improvements, a national bank, and a single currency.

What is the American system

200

Identify the person whose policies reflected the same anti-colonial spirit that inspired independence leaders like Simón Bolívar.

James Monroe

200

It was a time of peace, pride, and progress

Era of Good Feelings

200

The South Carolina Exposition and Protest, which argued states could void federal laws, was secretly written by this man.

Jackson vetoed a bill to recharter the bank, in part because he believed the bank was unconstitutional. What year did he issue this pivotal veto?

300

This period from 1815 to 1825, marked by peace, prosperity, and national unity, gained a nickname suggesting harmonious political feelings.

Era of Good Feeling

300

This future president, serving as secretary of state, negotiated the treaty that secured Florida from Spain and helped craft the foreign-policy principles later expressed in the Monroe Doctrine—even though the doctrine itself was announced under a different president.

John Quincy Adams 

300

An exclusive statement of American policy warning European powers not to interfere with the Americas

Monro Doctrine

300

During the Nullification Crisis, Jackson issued a proclamation that explicitly stated states were forbidden from taking this action against federal laws.

Nicholas Biddle responded to federal deposit withdrawals by contracting credit and stockpiling reserves, a move intended to force Jackson into a compromise, but which ultimately led to this financial situation in late 1833.

400

This road was the first road built by the federal government

Cumberland Road

400

This president, who oversaw the acquisition of Florida and strengthened ties with Latin America, issued a doctrine warning European powers not to establish new colonies in the Western Hemisphere.

James Monroe

400

The period of expanding democracy in the 1820s and 1830s

Jacksonian Democarcy

400

This person, nicknamed the "Great Compromiser," helped negotiate a tariff bill that gradually reduced rates and ended the crisis.

These "pet banks" were the state institutions where federal government deposits were moved during the Bank War.

500

It settled conflicts that had arisen from Missouri application for state hood 

Missouri Compromise

500

This  statesman, nicknamed the “Great Compromiser,” promoted a plan of economic nationalism involving tariffs, internal improvements, and a national bank—later known as the American System.

Henry Klay

500


A federal law signed by President Andrew Jackson that authorized the relocation of Native American nations living east of the Mississippi River to lands in the West.



the Indian Removal Act of 1830.


500

This was the final act of defiance by South Carolina after the crisis was resolved, nullifying the federal authority to enforce the collection of duties

After removing deposits, Jackson was formally subjected to this disciplinary action by the Senate in March 1834.AnswerThe wealthy/rich (or Northern interests)1832A financial panic/recessionState banksCensur

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