Age of Jackson
Industrial Revolution
The Constitution
Constitutional Era
Early Republic
100

Jackson used this practice of giving government jobs to his supporters after winning the presidency.

What is the Spoils System?

100

This energy source, used in steam engines, helped power factories and transportation during the Industrial Revolution.

What is coal?

100

This agreement settled the debate between large and small states by creating a two-house Congress, with representation based on population in the House and equal representation in the Senate.

What is the Great Compromise?

100

This meeting, held in 1787 in Philadelphia, was where delegates decided to replace the Articles of Confederation with a new Constitution.

What was the Constitutional Convention?

100

This man became the first President of the United States in 1789 and set many precedents for future presidents.

Who was George Washington?

200

This 1830 law forced Native American tribes to move west of the Mississippi River.

What is the Indian Removal Act?

200

Many factories hired these young workers because they could be paid less and fit into small spaces to fix machines.

What is child labor?

200

The first ten amendments to the Constitution, added in 1791, protect individual freedoms such as speech, religion, and the right to a fair trial.

What is the Bill of Rights?

200

This Founding Father played a major role in drafting the Constitution and later became the fourth President of the United States.

Who was James Madison?

200

This 1794 rebellion was sparked by a tax on distilled spirits, and its suppression demonstrated the power of the new federal government.

What was the Whiskey Rebellion?

300

The forced relocation of the Cherokee Nation, resulting in the deaths of thousands, is known by this tragic name.

What is the Trail of Tears?

300

This invention, created by Eli Whitney in 1793, made it easier to remove seeds from cotton, increasing cotton production but also expanding slavery in the South.

What is the cotton gin?

300

This system prevents any one branch of government from becoming too powerful by allowing each branch to limit the powers of the others.

What is checks and balances?

300

This agreement stated that a portion of enslaved people would be counted toward a state’s population for taxation and representation in Congress.

What was the Three-Fifths Compromise?

300

This land deal, made in 1803, doubled the size of the United States and was purchased from France for $15 million.

What was the Louisiana Purchase?

400

This crisis occurred when South Carolina threatened to ignore a federal tariff and possibly secede from the Union.

What is the Nullification Crisis?

400

In 1837, this blacksmith invented the steel plow, which made farming in tough prairie soil much easier for farmers.

Who was John Deere?

400

This first attempt at a national government for the United States, created in 1781, had a weak central government with no power to tax or enforce laws.

What were the Articles of Confederation?

400

This group supported a strong central government and the ratification of the Constitution, while this opposing group feared it gave too much power to the federal government.

Who were the Federalists and Anti-Federalists?

400

These laws, passed in 1798, targeted immigrants and limited free speech, leading to criticism of President John Adams.

What were the Alien and Sedition Acts?

500

This 1828 tariff angered the South because it raised taxes on imported goods, benefiting Northern industries while hurting Southern farmers.

What is the Tariff of Abominations?

500

The movement of people from rural areas to cities in search of factory jobs is known by this term.

What is urbanization?

500

The Constitution divides the federal government into these three branches to ensure separation of powers and prevent tyranny.

What are the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial branches?

500

The U.S. Constitution officially became the law of the land after this number of states ratified it in 1788

What is nine?

500

These two early political parties were led by Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton, with one favoring a strong central government and the other supporting states’ rights.

What were the Federalists and Democratic-Republicans?