Who
What
Where
When
Why/Significance
100

Louisiana Purchase                        

Thomas Jefferson

100

Textiles

cloth/clothing 

100

Protective Tariffs

Placed tariffs on imported products to encourage/force people to buy Northern products. Had a large negative impact on the South.

100

Missouri Compromise      

1820

100

Samuel Slater

Slater, a 21-year-old English mechanic, memorized the plans for a machine for spinning cotton thread and escaped in disguise to Rhode Island. With the backing of a wealthy businessman, Slater managed to recreate the machine in 1791 and built the first factory in America.

200

Industrial Revolution


Eli Whitney and Samuel Slater

200

Missouri Compromise

Missouri would be admitted as a slave state; the territory of Maine would be admitted as a free state to reestablish the sectional balance in Congress. The rest of the Louisiana Territory above latitude 36 30’ would be free territory.

200

Whigs

Industrialists, bankers, skilled workers, planters, and northern farmers with free-soil principles from both the north and south

200

Temperance

During the Industrial Revolution 

200

Temperance

Was used to instill the virtues of sobriety and punctuality for a disciplined work force. This was most advantageous for the North. This was another philosophical between the North and South. 

300

Gag Resolution                     

Southern Congressmen 

300

Nat Turner

Bloodiest slave rebellion in US History. When it was over, 60 whites had been clubbed, axed, and shot to death; 55 of Turner’s followers were executed.

300

Cotton Gin

Important invention for the cotton farms in the areas between southwest Virginia and central Texas

300

Cotton Gin

1793

300

Whigs

One of two parties that started to become distinctly sectional political parties -- one Northern and one Southern. If this happened, the country would split in two.

400

Tallmadge Amendment      

James Tallmadge 

400

Henry Clay                   

Created the Missouri Compromise 

400

Free Soilers

Northern states where farmers were worried about the competition with slavery 

400

The Liberator 

January 1, 1831

400

John Deere

John Deere of Illinois invented the polished steel plow capable of breaking the thick layer of prairie grass to expose surprisingly fertile soil. This invention, combined with the expansion of railroads into the west, would soon open the Northern Plains to settlement and establish free states.

500

Democrats

Led by Andrew Jackson. Included unskilled northern laborers, Catholics who rejected efforts to reform their drinking habits and force their children into public schools, poor small farmers who distrusted cities and banks, and planters who feared a strong government might interfere with slavery.

500

Andrew Jackson

Leader of democrats

500

Internal Improvements

Roads, canals and railroad mostly in the north to aid industry

500

John Deere

1837

500

Gag Resolution

Attempting to stop the slavery debate at the federal level, in 1836 Southern Congressmen passed the Gag Resolution in the US House of Representatives. It forbad all discussion of slavery in the House. Northern politicians were outraged by this attack on the First Amendment right to free speech and waged an 8-year battle to repeal it.

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