Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Ch. 6-7 Review Ms. Stacks U.S. History. National Nominating Convention practice of selecting presidential candidates at a meeting of state delegates.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Ch. 6-7 Review Ms. Stacks U.S. History. National Nominating Convention practice of selecting presidential candidates at a meeting of state delegates."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ch. 6-7 Review Ms. Stacks U.S. History

2 National Nominating Convention practice of selecting presidential candidates at a meeting of state delegates

3 Caucus System practice of selecting presidential candidates at a meeting of the party’s congressional members

4 Panic of 1837 The chaos and economic crisis that saw many farmers lose their land and banks fail

5 Indian Removal Act Andrew Jackson pushed this bill through Congress in 1830 which would provide money for relocating Native Americans – wanted to relocate them to the Great Plains or the “wasteland” according to John C. Calhoun to stop the conflicts

6 Trail of Tears Painting

7

8

9

10 Tariff of 1828 (Tariff of Abominations) South Carolina threatened to secede (leave) the Union Made trading too expensive

11 In the early 1800s, many white men gained the right to vote because states lowered or eliminated property ownership as a voting qualification

12 Nullification declaring a federal law invalid

13 Spoils System practice of appointing people to government jobs on the basis of party loyalty and support

14 Secede to withdraw from the Union

15 David Walker published the pamphlet Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World

16 William Lloyd Garrison founded the American Anti-Slavery Society

17 Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton organized the Seneca Falls Convention, which marked the beginning of an organized women’s movement Lucretia Mott Elizabeth Cady Stanton

18 Frederick Douglass African American abolitionist who was a brilliant thinker and electrifying speaker; published an antislavery newspaper

19 Emma Willard founded a girls’ boarding school in Vermont

20 Elizabeth Blackwell first woman to earn a medical degree in the United States

21 Force Bill use the military to enforce acts of Congress.

22 Worcester v. Georgia The Supreme Court ruled that state officials must honor Cherokee property rights.

23 The Whig party Advocated a stronger federal government.

24 Temperance Movement the temperance movement achieve a major victory in 1851 when Maine and Illinois prohibited liquor sales and distribution

25 Webster-Ashburton Treaty Disputes over the Maine-Canadian border established a firm boundary

26

27 The Second Bank of the United States played an important role in keeping the money supply of the United States stable

28 German immigrants arriving between 1815 and 1860 settled in Pennsylvania and Ohio

29 Large numbers of Irish immigrants began leaving their homeland in 1845 because they were fleeing famine in Ireland.

30 Romanticism Emphasized feeling over reason, inner spirituality over external rules; and nature over environments created by humans

31 Dorothea Dix Prison Reform Underlying the prison reform movement was a belief in rehabilitating prisoners rather than just locking them up

32 Gradualism wanted slaveholders to be compensated for their loss when slavery ended

33 Many residents in the South defended the institution of slavery because they believed it was the key to the economy in their region.

34

35 Abolitionist Leaders Frederick Douglass Theodore Weld Prudence Crandall Sojourner Truth William Lloyd Garrison Lucretia Mott Sarah and Angelina Grimke’ (Grimke’ sisters)

36 Manifest Destiny idea that God had given the continent to Americans, and wanted them to settle western land

37 After winning independence from Mexico, most Texans voted for annexation to the United States.

38 James K. Polk Supporters of James K. Polk cried “Fifty- four Forty or Fight,” which meant they wanted all of Oregon to the 54º 40’ north latitude line. In 1845 President Polk sent John Slidell to Mexico City as a special envoy, or representative. In order to carry out Polk’s ambitious plan for war against Mexico, the United States needed to expand its army

39

40 Mormons Seeking religious freedom, the Mormons traveled west, settling in what is now Utah

41 Preemption Act Allowed squatters to buy land from the government at a minimum price of $1.25 per acre Squatter: someone who is living on the land they do not own

42 The Alamo abandoned Spanish mission where a small force of Texans held off the Mexican army for 13 days before being overrun

43 Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna captured in the Battle of San Jacinto Leader of Mexican government at time of Texas independence

44 Stephen Austin went to Mexico City to negotiate with the government The Mexican government imprisoned Stephen Austin for treason (offense of acting to overthrow one's government)

45

46 Sam Houston first president of the Republic of Texas

47 A: Mormon Trail B: Oregon Trail C: California Trail D: Sante Fe Trail

48 An uprising by the settlers in northern California resulted in victory for the settlers, who declared the region an independent republic

49 In 1834 the Mexican government secularized its missions, meaning that it transferred them from religious control to civil control

50 The Santa Fe Trail connected Santa Fe, New Mexico, with Independence, Missouri

51 Texas at time of Mexican Independence a sparsely populated buffer zone between the United States and Mexico

52

53 Gadsden Purchase In 1853, boundary disputes with Mexico still remained. President Franklin Pierce sent James Gadsden to settle the problem and to purchase land for a southern transcontinental railroad. Gave the U.S. parts of present day New Mexico and Arizona in exchange for $10 million


Download ppt "Ch. 6-7 Review Ms. Stacks U.S. History. National Nominating Convention practice of selecting presidential candidates at a meeting of state delegates."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google