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Election of 1824 & John Quincy Adams. Election of 1824 Four leading Democratic Republicans: – John Quincy Adams, Secretary of State under Monroe – Henry.

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Presentation on theme: "Election of 1824 & John Quincy Adams. Election of 1824 Four leading Democratic Republicans: – John Quincy Adams, Secretary of State under Monroe – Henry."— Presentation transcript:

1 Election of 1824 & John Quincy Adams

2 Election of 1824 Four leading Democratic Republicans: – John Quincy Adams, Secretary of State under Monroe – Henry Clay: Speaker of the House of Representatives, man behind American System – Andrew Jackson: War hero from Tennessee – William Crawford: Georgia Preferred candidate during the caucus in Congress Caucus: a closed meeting of party members for the purpose of choosing a candidate

3 Candidates

4 John Quincy Adams Son of John Adams (2 nd President) Politician Professor Diplomat Secretary of State under James Monroe

5 Henry Clay Represented Kentucky in both – House of Representatives: Speaker of the House – Senate Man behind the American System

6 Andrew Jackson Politician Successful Army General – War hero in War of 1812

7 William Crawford American Politician – United States Secretary of War (1815-1816) – United States Secretary of the Treasury (1816-1825)

8 Election Results Crowded race produced no clear winner – Jackson won more popular votes – No one won majority of the electoral votes needed for election House of Representatives had to determine the outcome of the election Henry Clay, Speaker of the House, threw his support behind Adams. Adams wins the election and Clay is appointed Secretary of State – Known as the “corrupt bargain”

9 Jackson’s Reaction Jackson is infuriated by this and immediately begins campaigning for the next election – Corrupt Bargain cast a shadow on Adams’ presidency

10 Adams’ Presidency Adams was very supportive of Henry Clay’s American System – Internal improvements: roads, ports, canals – High tariff to pay for improvements – National bank

11 Technology & Industrial Revolution

12 Transportation Pre-Revolution Water was the most effective way to travel and transport goods since all major cities and settlements were located on the water. Overland transportation at the start of the 19 th century: – Carts, wagons, sleights, stagecoaches pulled by horses and oxen on dirt roads Very expensive

13 Road Improvements Hoping to improve overland transportation – Turnpikes Roads that you had to pay a toll to use – National Road Lone, decent route made of crushed rock Funded by the federal government Extended west Maryland to the Ohio River in 1818

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16 Water Transportation Steamboat: – Boats that ran by burning wood or coal to boil water to create steam – Steam turned large paddle that would let the boat move through the water – Designed by Robert Fulton Clermont Cut travel time from 4 months to just 6 days

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18 Water Transportation Canals: built to link farms to the expanding cities – Primarily built in the Northeast – Erie Canal: ran from New York to Lake Erie (approximately 363 miles) – Canals lowered the cost of shipping

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20 Railroads A new method of transportation was introduced beginning in the 1800s: Railroads! Railroads were largely developed in Great Britain, began to appear in US in 1820s. – First trains were pulled by horses – Switched to steam powered engines, could pull more weight 13 miles of tracks in 1830 to 31,000 miles by 1860

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24 Industrial Revolution Developments in technology transformed manufacturing. Industrial Revolution changed nation’s economy, culture, social life, and politics – Began in Great Britain in 1700s

25 Textile Mills Samuel Slater brought technology used in textile mills in Great Britain to the United States in 1793 – Built first water-powered textile mill Pawtucket spun cotton thread Family system: entire families were employed by the mills Francis Cabot Lowell – Built mill in Massachusetts in a town they established, Lowell – “Lowell Girls” were employed to work in the mills and lived in closely supervised boardinghouses

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29 Inventions Interchangeable Parts: individual parts that can be replaced when they break, rather than having to replace the entire item. – Introduced by Eli Whitney Samuel F.B. Morse: electric telegraph – Electric pulses that could travel long distances along metal wires and came out as coded signals Named Morse Code after the inventor

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32 Inventions Agriculture – Steel Plow: invented by John Deere – Mechanical Reaper: Cyrus McCormick – Cotton Gin: Eli Whitney

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