TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Adams Administration.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
John Adams as President
Advertisements

Objectives Discuss the reasons for tension between the United States and France. Describe the main provisions of the Alien and Sedition acts. Explain.
Objectives Discuss the reasons for tension between the United States and France. Describe the main provisions of the Alien and Sedition acts. Explain.
Aim: How effective was the Presidency of John Adams?
The Presidency of John Adams. John Adams succeeded Washington as President in Adams immediately faced a crisis over relations with France.
Troubles at Home and Abroad
4-3: Troubles at Home & Abroad 4-4: The Presidency of John Adams
The American Nation Section 1: Washington Takes Office Section 2: Creating a Foreign Policy Section 3: Political Parties Emerge Section 4: The Second President.
The Presidency of John Adams The XYZ Affair Hurts John Adams’ Presidency.
John Adams’ Presidency John Adams John Adams - 2 nd President ( ) Federalist Federalist - Thomas Jefferson Vice- President Democratic-Republican.
Chapter 8 – A New Nation. TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Terms and People inauguration – a ceremony in which.
The New Nation- The Adams Presidency. The Election of 1796 The Federalists turned to Washington’s Vice President, John Adams. Democratic- Republicans.
The Federalists in Charge
Major Events of John Adams Presidency
THE FIRST POLITICAL PARTIES AND JOHN ADAMS PRESIDENCY.
The Presidency of John Adams 9.4. Why it Matters John Adams tries to reduce the country’s political divisions and to create a NEUTRAL course in foreign.
John Adams Conflict With France After John Adams is elected president, he faces a crisis with France. In 1797 French ships began to seize American ships.
Troubles at Home and Abroad Ch. 8 Section 3. Conflicts in the NW Territory British supplied Natives with guns and ammunition Hope to limit American settlement.
The Second President Chapter 9, Section 4 Conflict With France Describe John Adams. Describe John Adams. As soon as Adams becomes President he is faced.
Federalist In Charge CHAPTER 9 p John Adams became President / Thomas Jefferson became Vice President Because they were from different parties.
According to the diagram below, who do you think has more power, the State or the National Government? Explain in 3-5 sentences. End.
Chapter 4, Section 4 The Presidency of John Adams p BITTER Political divisions grew BITTER during the presidency of John Adams, as he struggled.
CHAPTER 8: LAST SECTION The XYZ Affair and the Alien & Sedition Acts.
Chapter 8 Section 1 Washington takes Office. Discuss how the new government was organized during Washington’s presidency. Explain why the new nation faced.
The Presidency of John Adams
Major Events of John Adams Presidency
The Presidency of John Adams
Chapter 8 Launching a New Nation Section 4: The Presidency of John Adams LEQ: What issues with foreign nations were not resolved after the American.
John Adams Administration
The Presidency of John Adams
The Presidency of John Adams
The XYZ Affair.
The Presidency of John Adams
John Adams as President
Second President of the United States
Chapter 9 Section 4 “the second president”
The John Adams Presidency
John Adams Presidency.
Presidencies: Washington to Adams
The XYZ Affair.
The Federalists in Charge
Monday – Do Now During the founding of the United States was the American Indian seen as a foreign nation like Britain and France? Explain.
Chapter 8 Review.
The Federalists in Charge
2nd President of the United States
Chapter 8 Section 3 – John Adams Presidency
Notes on John Adams’s Administration
Aim: How did The Presidency of John Adams Differ from the Presidency of George Washington? Do Now:What did Washington warn the nation not to do in his.
Aim #20: What were the key events during John Adams’ presidency?
Political Parties and the Peaceful Transition of Power
Adams Administration.
The Revolution of 1800.
Did you know? John Adams was the only president of the first five U.S. presidents not to be a slaveholder? He was the first president to live in the White.
The Presidency of John Adams
THE PRESIDENCY OF JOHN ADAMS
Unit 4: A New Nation - John Adam’s Presidency
Chapter 9 Lesson 4 The Second President.
FEDERALIST ERA John ADAMS Our 2nd President NOTES Page 14.
The Presidency of John Adams
Section 4 – pg 172 The Presidency of John Adams
The Presidency of John Adams
Notes on John Adams’ Administration
Objectives Discuss the reasons for tension between the United States and France. Describe the main provisions of the Alien and Sedition acts. Explain.
5.3 John Adam’s Presidency
Understanding John Adams’ Presidency
The First Political Parties
The First Political Parties
In his “Farewell address,” Washington warned about the danger of parties. But was anyone listening? NO!
Vice President Thomas Jefferson was a Democratic-Republican
The Election of 1796.
Presentation transcript:

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Adams Administration

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Discuss the reasons for tension between the United States and France. Describe the main provisions of the Alien and Sedition acts. Explain how controversy arose over states’ rights. Objectives

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Terms and People alien – an outsider or someone from another country sedition – activity designed to overthrow a government nullify – to deprive of legal force states’ rights – the idea that the union binding “these United States” is an agreement between the states and that they therefore can overrule federal law

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. How did problems with France intensify the split between the Federalists and the Republicans? John Adams succeeded Washington as President in Adams immediately faced a crisis over relations with France.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. U.S. neutrality the Jay Treaty Recent actions by American leaders provoked angry responses from the French people. The French snubbed a U.S. diplomat and attacked U.S. ships.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. In 1797, Adams sent a mission to France. This led to a scandal known as the XYZ Affair. French agents demanded that the United States pay them a large bribe. The Americans refused. The French agents were anonymously known as X, Y, and Z. bribe $$

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. The XYZ Affair caused war fever in America. Adams asked Congress to increase the size of the army and rebuild the navy. From 1798–1800, the United States fought an undeclared naval war with France.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Adams opposed a full-scale war with France. He sent a new mission to France to meet with dictator Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1800, Napoleon agreed to stop seizing American ships. Adams had avoided war.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. In 1798, war fever drove Federalists to pass laws to destroy their political opponents. The Sedition Act targeted Republicans. The Alien Act was directed at aliens, such as immigrants. aliens Republicans

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Alien Act Increased the duration, from 5 to 14 years, that a person had to live in the United States to become a citizen. Gave the President power to deport or imprison any alien considered dangerous.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Sedition Act The harshest law limiting free speech ever passed in the United States Made it a crime for anyone to write or say anything insulting or false about the President, Congress, or the government.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Passage of the Alien and Sedition acts renewed the debate over federal versus state power. Arguments for State’s Rights Arguments for Federal Power The federal government derives its power from rights given to it by the states. Because the states created the United States, individual states have the power to nullify a federal law. The federal government derives its power from rights given to it by the American people. States have no power to nullify federal laws. States cannot revoke federal powers set forth in the Constitution.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Republicans fought the Alien and Sedition acts. Kentucky and Virginia passed resolutions that declared the acts unconstitutional. These state resolutions had little immediate impact, but the Alien and Sedition acts did not last long. The Sedition Act expired in The waiting period to become a citizen was restored to 5 years in 1802.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. The Virginia and Kentucky resolutions were far more important than the laws that provoked them. They claimed that states could nullify a law passed by Congress. The resolutions also boosted the idea of states’ rights.