What was Madison v Madbury?
Allowed for judicial review.
What was the Monroe Doctrine?
Whatever Garnett was saying about George Bush
What was the Indian Removal Act of 1830?
Enforced removal of Natives from the Southeast to the West
This President ignored the Judicial branch of the government
Andrew Jackson
What was the abolitionist movement?
A movement in the North, specifically towards getting rid of slavery
What was Fletcher v Peck? (Hint connected to Madison v Madbury)
Allowed for the Judicial review of the constitution.
What Country was the Louisiana Purchase from
The objectively worst country on Earth, and Colin hates it for no reason. (France)
What was the Missouri Compromise?
Created the Missouri line that allowed for no new slave states above that line?
This president instigated a war between the US and Mexico
Mr James K Polk
What were the economic differences between the North and the South?
Colin will judge your response because I don't want to write that out
What was Commonwealth v Hunt
Legalization of labor unions
What court case was ignored by Andrew Jackson for the Trail of Tears? (Starts with a W)
Worcester v. Georgia
What was the Embargo Act of 1807?
Didn't allow for ships to leave for foreign ports
This president died 31 days into office
William Henry Harrison
How did Westward Expansion spark conflict about slavery?
Whether slavery should be legal in the new territories
What was the significance of McCulloch v Maryland?
States have less power than the Federal government
What is Transcendentalism?
A movement between 1830 and 1851 that emphasised literacy and individualism
What was the Non Intercourse Act?
Replaced the Embargo Act and allowed for trade with everybody but Britian and France
This president led the party that paved the way for Jacksonians
Thomas Jefferson
What was the Free Soil party?
What was Cherokee v Georgia?
What was the corrupt bargain?
What was everything involved in the Compromise of 1850?
Colin will judge your response because that's a lot to write and I don't feel like it
This precedent sparked the idea of the "corrupt bargain."
John Quincy Adams
What was the Nullification Crisis?
South Carolina argued that states' rights could nullify federal laws.