Front | Back |
Election of
1800
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Adams, Jefferson, and Burr: Adams lost, Jefferson and Burr tied, Hamilton convinced other Federalists to vote for Jefferson to break the tie
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Barbary Pirates
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North African Muslim rulers solved budget
problems through piracy and tributes in Mediterranean,
obtained fees from most European powers
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Midnight
judges
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Judges appointed to Supreme Court by Adams in
the last days of his presidency to force them upon Jefferson, Marshall among those appointed
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Marbury v. Madison
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John Marshall declared that the Supreme Court
could declare federal laws unconstitutional
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Lewis and
Clark expedition
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Two individuals sent by Jefferson to explore the Louisiana Territory on “Voyage of Discovery” |
Non-Intercourse
Act
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Sought to
encourage domestic American manufacturing
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Macon’s
Bill No. 2
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President
has power to cease trade with any foreign country that violated American
neutrality
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Embargo Act
(1807)
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Prohibited exports (and imports) based in
American ports, most controversial Jefferson
legislation
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War hawks
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Clay and Calhoun, eager for war with Britain (War of
1812)
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The American System
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Henry Clay aimed to make the US economically independent from Europe (e.g., support internal improvements, tariff
protection, and new national bank)
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John C.
Calhoun
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Opposed
Polk’s high-handedness, avid Southern slave-owner (right to own property,
slaves as property)
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William Henry Harrison
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Military hero from War of 1812; elected
president 1840, died of pneumonia a month later, gave presidency to Tyler
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Battle of
Tippecanoe
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Decisive victory in the War of 1812 by Harrison
over Tecumseh, used in Harrison’s campaign for
presidency
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Hartford
Convention
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December 1814, opposed War of 1812, called for
one-term presidency, northern states threatened to secede if their views were
left unconsidered next to those of southern and western states, supported
nullification, end of Federalist Party
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Essex case
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Declared that US merchant ships could not claim protection under neutral rights when they took French or Spanish goods via American ports to a final destination; Federalist case leading up to Hartford
Convention
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