Washington and the Early Republic
Expansionism and Manifest Destiny
Jacksonian America
Reform and Social Change
Sectionalism and Causes of the Civil War
Civil War
Early Reconstruction/ Presidential Reconstruction
100

This cabinet member advocated for a national bank and a strong federal government

Alexander Hamilton

100

This phrase described the belief that Americans were destined to spread across North America.

Manifest Destiny

100

The "common man" president who expanded democracy for white males.

Andrew Jackson
100

This reform movement sought to end alcohol consumption

Temperance

100

This compromise admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state

Missouri Compromise
100

This is considered a turning point in the Civil War, making the Confederacy unable to launch further attacks into Northern territory.

Battle of Gettysburg

100

Lincoln's plan required this percentage of a state's voters to take a loyalty oath before readmission to the Union.

10%

200

Washington warned against permanent alliances and political parties in his famous address

Washington's Farewell Address

200

This document reflected growing American nationalism by declaring the Western Hemisphere off-limits to future European colonization

Monroe Doctrine

200

This transportation project connected the Great Lakes to the Atlantic ocean

Erie Canal

200

This religious movement inspired many reform efforts in the early 1800s

Second Great Awakening

200

This principle allowed settlers to vote on slavery in a territory

Popular Sovereignty

200

Before the Emancipation Proclamation, enslaved people who escaped to Union lines were often classified by this term.

Contraband

200

This amendment abolished slavery throughout the United States.

13th Amendment

300

This Supreme Court case established judicial review

Marbury v. Madison

300

This territory's annexation in 1845 helped spark tensions with Mexico.

Texas

300

This crisis involved South Carolina claiming states could ignore federal laws

Nullification Crisis

300

This author wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin

Harriet Beecher Stowe

300

Violence in Kansas after the Kansas-Nebraska Act became known by this nickname

Bleeding Kansas

300

This executive order framed freeing enslaved people in rebelling states as a war measure

Emancipation Proclamation

300

One major goal of these laws made during presidential reconstruction was to control the labor of freedmen after emancipation.

Black Codes

400

This historian's term describes the period after the War of 1812 characterized by one-party dominance and a temporary decline in partisan conflict.

Era of Good Feelings

400

This president aggressively pursued western expansion and led the US into the Mexican American War

James K. Polk

400

Jackson vetoed the recharter of this institution.

Second National Bank

400

This reformer escaped slavery and became one of the most influential abolitionist speakers, delivering the speech "What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?"

Frederick Douglass

400

This Compromise admitted California as a free state and strengthened the Fugitive Slave Act

Compromise of 1850

400

This Union general's March to the Sea sought to weaken Southern morale and destroy the Confederacy's ability to wage war.

William Tecumseh Sherman

400

This was a method by which the former Confederacy tried to replace slavery using an exploitative system surrounding tenant farmers.

Sharecropping
500

This Treaty ended the War of 1812

Treaty of Ghent

500

President Polk claimed that Mexican troops had shed American blood on American soil in this disputed region.

Between Nueces River/ Rio Grande (I will take either River)

500

This was an illegal treaty between Cherokee people with no authority and the US government and became the legal basis for the Indian Removal Act and Trail of Tears.

Treaty of New Echota

500

This was a new religious group during the Second Great Awakening that would eventually become the Seventh Day Adventists and Jehovah's Witnesses after the "Great Disappointment" when they thought Jesus would return and he did not.

Millerites

500

John Brown led a raid on this federal armory in 1859 that resulted in his arrest and execution

Harper's Ferry
500

This battle between the USS Monitor and CSS Virginia demonstrated the importance of ironclad warships.

Battle of Hampton Roads

500

Johnson frequently granted these to former Confederates, allowing them to regain property and political rights.

Pardons (I will take synonyms)

600

Jefferson justified the Louisiana Purchase using this constitutional power for the president, despite concerns that the Constitution did not explicitly authorize acquiring territory.

Power to make treaties
600

After the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo which cost the US $15 million, this was a second purchase of land at the bottom of the new territory sold by Mexico for $10 million.

Gadsden Purchase

600

This Supreme Court case recognized Cherokee sovereignty, though Jackson ignored it.

Worcester v. Georgia

600

Unlike the First Great Awakening, the Second Great Awakening reflected this broader democratic trend during this time period that emphasized the importance and moral responsibility of ordinary individuals in politics.

expansion of democracy/the rise of the common man (Any variation of this will count)

600

This Supreme Court ruling declared that Congress could not ban slavery in the western territories, and that Black Americans cannot be citizens and have no right to sue in court.

Dred Scott v. Sandford

600

This Civil War battle marked the bloodiest single day in American history, made it impossible for the Confederacy to receive foreign support, and gave Lincoln the opportunity to announce the Emancipation Proclamation.

Battle of Antietam

600

This was a method by which the former Confederacy tried to replace slavery by arresting freedpeople using the Black Codes and other minor offenses, then having prisons rent prisoner's labor out to plantations.

Convict Leasing System

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